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Show v MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE, DELTA, UTAH M """" in It II IM Mil 1 r . K ,!: .: : r , , ? H . """ -i- i . ii .,,nirrn'iii j,.nmfty. ,,- m,,,,- am nm warn I No matter what hap-n- s to the local football nan o" W Saturday afternoon this , one organization on the field ji jure to come out on ,he right end of the score. That will be the band. A college bands-no- n is made, not born. His career usually starts ;n a grade-scho- class, like the one above, where he learns to play his instrument as part 0f his regular school work. By the time he reaches college age he is usually a good music-ian. At right a clari-netist and an oboist, members of the Univers-ity of Michigan band, practice for a concert. The girl is a member of ' the school's concert band but not the marching 1 I unit, I wmmiipg?i.iii ill ipy ft Ct i V if ' .... , fe; :. m V .y '' : ... '' , ..- n mm O Today's college bands are big enter-prises, often surpassing in manpower and equip-ment the football teams they consort with. But larger still are the con-cert bands. At left two members of the Univer-sity of Michigan band go over the score for a per-formance. Football games draw much of their color and showmanship from the marching bands. , G All is not music and "torching for the college : bond. Trips with the foot--: boll team are high points ' their school year. At "9ht the Michigan band o'tends a banquet in Chi-- : "9, puts on pseudo ; Northwestern helmets-- joins in e I'"" at the morrow's Sadiron opponent. Prec-ision marching and rilling formations go ol"g with the stirring !"sic of the college band '" hundreds of college radio every autumn end. Below the Michigan band denotes Mot love is'in the air with ""arrow-pierce- heart. It s accuracy and timing like this that will provide o'M'me entertainment w games this fall. I -- .J&fel'qtttM AifiaU.Waaad Jis. . .,M1I a.,,,,,,- - " """"""" ' .. ' - Sr-- Cwt. PARTED OUT AS 'A BRILLIANT PROSPCT.HE -' DEVELOPED INTO'HARD LUCK HOUTTEMAN'IN Jvll ''7 t94S WHEN HE WON 2 AND LOST Id .' THE OWiifi. NICKNAME HUNS ON WHEN HE FRACTURED I I HIS SKULL IN AN AUTO CRASH IN IQ4Q. V T5 II U TODAY HE'S "THE COMEBACK KID"... AT 23 . .VV??l HE'S ONE OF DETROrrS BEST PITCHERS KJL X (fj&h WAS HIT rIv CU8S 4fe THtVlWi OUT Of SAM.' iT J( (3r w FACT HE LANDED IN JAIL! fk Tttt " THE MANAGER OF NEFFS TEAM OF feJVUii1 SHAWNEEOKLA., OBJECTED STRENUOUSLY ?Cv C; J I ' TO A DECISION BV UMPIRE LYNf BAKER t IN A GAME WTO STROUD, OKLA. BAKER t( ASOCIED THE MANAGER,LEE GUOYNES0N VV 5 -- THE JAW.GUOYNES CALLED THE POLICE (flLflmJ --7 IWD OUT OF THE fARK WENT THE UMP.' Iw'lllj 5cvt.c vAkjutQiA. TT'S QUICK and easy to crochet this beret in double crochet,' popcorn stitch trim. Use knitting worsted, chenile or straw ma-terial. , Make a set for now. a set for spring tool Pattern 82 has crochet directions for hat and bag. Send 20 cents in coin, your name, ad-dress and pattern number to ... . Sewinr Circle Needleeraft Dept. P. O. Box 5140, Chleaio 80, III. or P, O. Box 162, Old Chelsea Station, New York n, N. Y. Enclose 20 cents for pattern. No Name ' Address L2UPJ i Removes RUST -S- TAINS IX VbA9 BATHTUBS, SINKS, 1 $tSiT THE- - METALS, RANGES SCUIINTED ' OtOCftr. HAtDWAIf. mt ntvwiB ) DIPT and 10 STOIfS V mot uiiwue J mi mni &.s"s.f RUSTAIH rHOPUCI. Inc , ?40 I IS? SI . It t WHEN SLEEP WON'T COME AND YOU FEEL GLUM Use Chewing-Gu- m Laxative REMOVES WASTE. ..NOT GOOD FOOD When yon can't sleep feel Just awful because you need a laxative do as 1U1J.IONS dO Chew is wonderfully different! Doctors say many other laxatives start their "flushing" action too aoon...r1ht In the stomarh. Large doses of such lax-atives upset digestion, flush away nour-Lshl- ng food you need for health and energy . . . you feel weak, worn out. But gentle talcen as rec-ommended, works chiefly in the lower bowel where It removes only nante, not erood foodl You avoid that weak, tired, feeling. Use nt and feel in ' fine, full of life! 25e. 50. or only I U YhK, FAMOUS CHEWING GUM LAXATIVE Are you going through the functional "middle-age- " period peculiar to women (38-5- 2 years) ? Does this make you suffer from hot flashes, feel so nervous, g, tired? Then do try Lydla E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms! Regular use of Plnkham's Compound helps build up resistance against this annoying middle-ag- e distress v LYD1A E. PINKHAM'S cS 1.1AHY IIEVER SUSPECT CAUSE OF BACKACHES As we get older, itren and strain, over-exertion, excessive smoking or exposure to cold sometimes slows down kidney func-tion. This may lead many folks to com-plain of nagging backache, loss of pep and energy, headaches and dizziness. Getting up nights or frequent passages may result fro minor bladder Irritations due to cold, dampness or dietary Indiscretions. If your discomforts ar due to these causes, don't wait, try Doan's Pills, a mild diuretic Used successfully by millions for over GO years. While these symptoms may often otherwise occur, it's amazing how many times Doan's five happy relief help the 15 miles of kidney tubes and altera flush out waste. Get Doan's Pills todayl Boaii's Pills SPORTLIGHT , I Card Castoff Becomes Giant Ace I By GRANTLAND RICE THE STORY of big Jim Hearn is one ot the more interesting baseball yarns of 1950. In addition to its human interest side, it also gives an important sideline on the part that luck or fate or the breaks ui me game ormg to many a ball-player attempting to keep his grip on the game. Young Hearn was a star at Georgia Tech some years ago. He is a big kid, 6 feet, 3 weighing fine ballplayer has been dropped from big league company for var-ious reasons that are beyond his control. Hearn's case isn't the only one I've known about. Case of Sammy Urzetta You may not believe it but Sam-my Urzetta, present amateur golf champion, holds one of the oddest records in the venerable game. For example, in checking back over past champions re-cently I discovered I had played golf with most of them Charles Blair MacDonald, H. G. Whig-ma- Findlay Douglas, Walter Travis, H. C. Egan, S. M. Byers, Jerry Travers, R. A. Gardner, W. C. Fownes, Fran-cis Oulmet, Chick Evans, Jess Sweetser, Jess Guiliford, Bobby Jones, Johnny Goodman and Max Marston. In that long line not a one ar-rived unheralded or as unherald-ed as Urzetta was. Most of those who won were given a chance. Most of them had played winning golf before. Not too much had been heard about Ted Bishop, who won at Baltusrol in 1946. But you knew more than a little about most of the others. Unknowns don't win ama-teur, titles as Francis Ouimet won the Open in 1913. But in checking back through pretournament dope I couldn't find anyone giving Sam Urzetta a chance of any sort. That isn't all of the story. In every amateur championship prac-tically every winner has to have one or two lucky rounds. I mean that he has to win while not play-ing too well. But there was no such rickety playing on the part of Urzetta, who had won the N.Y. state amateur some time before. In round after round he stuck with par or better. Walking into Odds A short while back we were play-ing golf with a pair of who seemed to take double in-terest in all the short holes. One landed a tee shot about 10 inches from the cup and almost picked up a fit. We found out later that both had been insured at 400 to 1 against a hole in one. Which means that they were to get $400 for 1 if they could deposit the ball into the cup in one shot. Well, in the last 16 years the New York World Telegram has put on 16 In this time 11,720 players have taken a crack at the mystic tin, firing a total of 58,600 shots in the vague hope of holeing out. How many have found an open door? Just five golfers. Grantland Kice around 200. He al-so had his share of stuff from the start. He was a good friend of Bobby Jones and played golf in the low 70' s at Druid Hills Course. Hearn is one of the nicest young fellows you'll meet. He is on the quiet or reserved side, although friendly enough at all times. I know a couple of years back that Eddie Dyer had con-siderable confidence In his bud-ding young star. Big Jim had one or two pretty fair seasons. Not big seasons. But not too bad. Then a year ago he wasn't win-ning. He won one and lost three last year, then was sent to Roches-ter to finish out the season. This season Hearn spent most of the time on the bench. He might as well have been left in the minors. He wasn't getting enough work. He lacked control and lack of steady work was largely responsible. Now it could easily have hap-pened that the Cardinals again would ship the Georgia Tech star back to the- minor patrol. But the Giants took a chance and called him in. The keen eyes of Leo Dur-och-had seen things in Hearn's aim, head and heart that others had overlooked. There was no midnight pa-rade for Hearn when he arrived witb the Giants. He was just another Cardinal castoff. But he wasn't to Leo Durocher. He took Hearn from the bench to the rifle range. He put him to work. In short order the big college boy was one of the star pitchers of the league. Oddly enough, he has been outpitch-in- g the leading aces on the Cardinal squad. Just why the Cardinals let such a stout right arm go is beyond us. Eddie Dyer is one of the smartest of the managers. Fred Saigh is a close watchman in the matter of his products. But they let a $100,-00- 0 or a $150,000 pitcher go for $10,000 just as he was heading for .he minors again. More than one Water Policy Wasteful? Probably the most damning indict-ment of our present wasteful na-tional water policy ever to be writ-ten has just been turned over to President Truman's new Water Re-sources Policy commission, ac-cording to the Wildlife Manage-ment Institute. An n commit-tee of the Engineers Joint Council, representing the country's five ma-jor engineering societies, prepared the report, which is couched in clear, sharply worded language About one-thir- d of the committee members have served with federal agencies, and the authority of the report is unimpeachable. Nine task forces made the basic study. The report deplored "ambig-uous, uncoordinated, and conflict-ting- " federal policies concerning power, irrigation, flood control, navigation, and other water re-sources projects. Warning that "evaluation of project is the first requisite," the report attacked g and in stressing such items as local re-sponsibility, need for equitable al-location of costs, and the "fallacy of incentive payments" to landown-ers for soil conservation practices. Although the report did not direct itself to the activities of any one agency, it cited the fact that the Department of the Interior, Corps of Engineers, Department of Agricul-ture, Federal Power Commission, U.S. Public Health Service, Weath-er Bureau, Coast and Geodetic Survey, and many others are con-cerned with one phase or another of water development. As the num-ber of federal agencies involved has grown and "as these have risen in stature their overlapping func-tions have become increasingly striking and their competitions have become impressively expen-sive." The present situation is de-scribed as "chaotic." Haphazard development of vital water re-sources was denounced by the en-gineers who especially decried projects developed and construct-ed, and often operated, by the agen-cy originating them. To alleviate competition between agencies, which is fostered by this practice, and to safeguard the pub-lic against exaggerated intangible benefit claims as well as improper allocation of costs between general taxpayers and project beneficiaries, the report recommended creation of a board for the impartial anal-ysis and appraisal of all federal water projects. Such a board would also serve to protect the public against "the present excessive and economically unsound rate of plan-ning and congressional authorizing of developments," since the board's review would be "prerequisite to the authorization of appropriation by congress of or for projects of this kind." AAA Nobody Barred Dick Miller, famed angler and has come up with a new-typ- e glass rod that makes this fishing instrument, available to al-most anyone who' is interested in owning one. Miller, who is of the Langley outfit, holds several world's records in fly and g events and should and does know what a rod should have to obtain maximum results and enjoyment for the user. Dick says of his new rod which is shown here that by the use of longitudi-nal glass fibers and after exhaus-tive tests for performance he has created a fishing instrument which will stand the heaviest fishing pres-sure and yet permits the use of standard and light lures. Among the most important things is that the rod is priced where any fisher-man can handle the expense of owning one. Thus with Dick's rod, nobody is barred from the glass-ro- d user field. In testing this rod, we found that it had amazingly resilient action, despite the strength so evidently built into it, and frills and have been sacrificed to qual-ity and performance. While not de-signed to handle the e lures, the rod will do it, and satisfactor-ily, if the caster will use one of the "lightning-fast,- " tournament reels and a small-diamet- line. AAA Muskie Hooks Whether you troll, cast or still fish, the hooks you use for musk-ie- s should be very strong. Big muskies are and there's nothing quite so heart-breaking as to lose a good fish be-cause of weak or inadequate hooks. For this reason, it is more practical for general situations to tie on large spoons, wabblers and plugs which are equipped with big enough hooks than to use smaller sized lures. How toErasure PIECE OF . INNER TUBE A s fe " J W CEMENTED TO y Xip, WP5 SUCTION CUPS PIPE RACK. A PIECE OF INNER-TUB- E CEMENTED TO TWO SUCTION CUPS STUCK TO THE WINDSHIELD MAKES A GOOD CAR PIPE RACK. |