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Show ' " MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE, DELTA, UTAH SCANNING THE WEEK'S NEWS 7. " - - Fertilizing Important ; In Balanced Farm Plan j Lime, Fertilizer Pays . Off in High Hay Yield Farmers in every part of the nation are realizing more and more the importance of fertilizing programs to build pro-- i duction and soil structure. Ben Vossen, who farms near Watkins, Minn., believes his in-vestments in .lime and fertilizer have done more for his farm than anything, in his career. The results of one of his in--I vestments are shown in the above picture. At the right is a run- - down field of bluegrass overgrown with buck grass. At the left is a field of oats after the buck grass was sprayed to kill it, grubbed and plowed under. Farmer Vossen inspects his field of oats. At the right is the field of bluegrass over-grown with buck grass. Ferti-lizing has turned the oat field into a high producer. Vossen limed and fertilized the oat field with plant food carrying nitrogen, phosphate and potash be-fore he seeded it. He keeps the field in oats two years, then seeds down to an alfalfa crop. He takes hay and pasture off as long as the stand is productive. He helps lengthen its life by regularly with manure. The use of lime and fertilizer pays off in much bigger hay yields, Vossen reports. He harvest-ed eight tons of hay on two acres that used to produce about one-ha-ton of timothy. ; f ' i " '! s y" .' ROUGH SOLON . . . Rep. "at Sut-ton (D Tenn.) tells Capitol news-men how he downed an armed thug with one punch after the gun- man accosted him In an alley near the home of a friend he was visit-ing. When he returned with the police thug was gone. Ornamental Shelves Are Easy to Make fcM?" WALL SHELVES PftTTE RN 336 THE smaller brackets are espe- - cially good for spaces betwe'en windows. Or use the three sizes for an attractive group arrange-ment. These shelves are easily made by tracing patterns onto quarter-inc- h material, then cut-ting them out with coping saw. Patterns are 25c each. WORKSHOP PATTERN SERVICE Drawer lit v Bedford Hills, New York Keep Posted on Values By Reading the Ads CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT WANTED TO BUY WANTED Scrap Iron. Steel and Cast Also Surplus Items MONSEY IRON & METAL CO. 7SU S. ard Wtm Salt Lnkf CKy, Utah U. S. SAVINGS BONDS Are Now U. S. DEFENSE BONDS CATCH E3ABS I WHAT A "V.AFTER. BIX FINAUy '77MTOP ASKED XXJ FOR. TV, CATCH "JVOSJT SU. AW PE HERE'S A JOS FOR. MENTHOA7UM RELIEVES I MEWTHOLATLIM SWELL )f " It's Wonderful the Way Chewing -- Gum Laxative STTI Acts Chiefly to . I'll REMOVE WASTE stiil!l 'M GOOD FOOD Here's the secret millions of folks have discovered about the mod-ern chewing-gu- laxative. Yes, here Is why i"een-- a --mint's action Is so wonder-fully different! Doctors say that many other laxatives start their "flushing" action too soon . . . right In the stomach where food is being digested. Large doses of such laxatives upset digestion, flush away nourishing Jood you need for health and energy. You feel weak, worn out. But gentle taken as rec-ommended, works chiefly In the lower bowel where it removes only waste, not good food! You'avold that typical weiSk, tired, worn-o- feeling. Use nt and feel your "peppy," energetic selll Get feen-a-mi- nt No Increase In price sUU 25. 50 or only 10. W FEEN-A-IIAIIHST- lp jK FAMOUS CHEWIHG-GU- IAXATIVE Ajf WNU W 4451 KIDNEYS MUSTREK EXCESS WASTE When kidney function slows down, many folks complain of nagging backache, loss of and energy, headaches and dizziness Eep suffer longer with these discomforts if reduced kidney function is getting you down due to such common causes as stress and strain, or exposure to cold. Minor bladder Irritations due to cold, dampness or wrong diet may cause getting Up nights or frequent passages. Don't neglect your kidneys if these condi-tions bother you. Try Doan's Pills a mild diuretic Used successfully by millions for over 60 years. While often otherwise caused. It's amazing how many times Doan's give happy relief from these discomforts help the 16 miles of kidney tubes and filters flush out waste. Get Doan's Pills todayl Doan's Pills ' ' ' ' '" SAVES CHILDREN, DIES . . . Firemen lower a basket containing body of Mrs. Irma Randall, 35, a Brooklyn mother who died in flames after she had rescued four of her nine children; The mother was at home with the four youngsters when the fire broke out and spread quickly up to their apartment 50 feet above the ground. A crowd held a blanket and the mother tossed the children into it. All landed safely, but after the rescue Mrs. RandaU's body lay across the burning window sill. pfMain Street and the World 1 Agriculture Department Considers U few Program for the Small Farmer I Ut NEW FARM PLAN As a result of a XMfi 0( the small American farmer, the Truman adminisIration th prbIems mH farm program in the near future ay come up gn Plan and which could become of the maTo? it f952 presidential campaign. in the , ? survey was conducted with nf A f3Znt could do to help the small farmed WS? i A of inadequate land, machinery, livestock "gtdlfflcu'es Lusands of meetings have been held in the home towns "aToss the Wt,0n . PnCe SUPPrt' fa l0ans other sma! Hrf (arm proDiems. iWV As a result, a major question has 5hij u up land, redivide it into ''economic" orTffic K8!,6"! Ljt ?tT farmers? Also, should present cfoTltrT MES Brannan beUeves that if productivity of 5 ceased many agriculture problems tend Tod s'ap l STtte dher hand many farm leaders have remained aloof and have not part in the meetings, enhcizmg Brannan's methods more than his lilffl objectives. JM Two possible legislative proposals may come from the survey (1) A (l technical assistance program for the less efficient farms JP and (2) a farm-loa- n program designed to help such farmers acquireTand Jg?U, jmaramcsh. inery, equipment, livestock and the know how to operate efficient Whatever the final form, any new farm plan, whether it incorporates tbe government buying and redlvision of land or not, is bound to become s major campaign issue. Much of the opposition will come from toe T farm bureaus who have long resented Brannan as trying to usurp the roles jH of the private farm organizations and regimenting agriculture u Poor ' , ? - s i , , iriMers d Meeting Place ' few Panmunom, is the proposed ste for new Korea cease-fir- e talks oiuili. Meanwhile, figbtmg continues on tbe central front with Allied forces pSi making limited advances. BOYLE RESIGNS The big question in political circles since William ghS M. Boyle, Jr., close friend of President Truman resigned as chairman of oughs c- - Democratlc National Committee, is whether or not Guy Gabrielson roi c' G0P natlonaI chalrman, will be the next to go? testis Byle and Gabrielson have been under fire as having used their srseenc;.. Psltlons to influence the Reconstruction Finance Corporation into okiosas sranlng loan to companies they represented or were connected with And although Gabrielson insists he will stay on, political observers Duroclei belleve hls number is up, too. it topda In his letter of resignation Boyle gave health as lus reason, insisting (m he had at all times conducted himself with "honor and propriety." He Thil'm did admit m testimony during the congressional hearing that he accepted ie neil il eight law cases involving government agencies, at fees totaling approxi- - flNU mately $158,000, while serving as chairman of the national committee for lit It (id,!, LESS CIVILIAN GOODS Defense Mobilizer Charles E. Wilson pacilk announced a cut m civilian goods production, effective January 1, that j H will be felt in the home towns across the nation. thelEr. back in civilian production, 10 per cent for washing machines '; snd stoves and even more in the automobile industry, will provide steel --' for the armament program which will hit full stride during the first "lree months of 1952- ants L11 The hme t0Wn that has a scho1 or hospital under construction will souii? etenough materials to finish the project, but there will not be materials lands ib" SVaUable t0 start new ones- - As for 'arm machinery, so vital to agricul- - ,,, ture and home town economy, there will be enough to support production "at a healthy and adequate level." MIDDLE EAST BLOWUP There is shaping up in the Middle East jers! t' an explosion that could be felt in the smallest American community. The noAi-- j situation has developed as Egypt has increased pressure in recent weeks to remove the British from the Sudan and strategic Suez. SeptcV As a compromise, the United States, Britain, France and Turkey ptaEi have asked Egypt to become the center of an alliance in the area against loon jn communism, but the proposal was received cooly by King Farouk's e puraci lovernment. h This dispute is important to home town Americans because of the I X, b nation's interest in Suez, which if placed under Egyptian protection, piaa S would be a prize the Russians could take with little difficulty. The British, genE? under present treaties with Egypt, have the legal right to maintain o J. fe: troops in the canal zone which is her economic life-lin- She will not by Pi back down in her determination to remain in the zone. Thus, if the iir bit Esyptian government attempts to remove them by force the British will resist, if the Russians should decide to step in at this point, the world b(!tS would become involved in World War III. torp There is a chance that Egypt may accept the west's proposal of Buterc Joint defense of the area, but only because she is not in a position to Ma defend horif jWii:; eclarii' NEW DECLARATION In a major speech last week President luman aSain declared American foreign policy is "based upon the hope oodsfcs ?at 11 W1U be possible to bve, without a war, in the same world as the hey Vlet Union if the free nations have adequate defenses." And he again offered to "sit down with the Soviet Union" and other nations to work out tijt: aSreements to relieve mankind of "the horror of another 'world war" and Ufii: prov"le the basis for "a durable peace." spiff? e President pointed out the central theme of America's present eailM )reiSn pokey and defense program: "So long as one country has the setit: JOWer an the force to overwhelm others and so long as that country 'as aggressive intentions real peace is unattainable. The stronger we . ecome, the more possible it will be to work out solid and lasting i arrangements that will prevent war. Our strength will make for peace." 01' IRAN'S OIL Mohammed Mossadegh, premier of Iran, who has iTTJ 'aken the British-Irania- n oil dispute to the United Nations Security 33 UmcI1, told UN diplomats to keep their hands off the dispute and I amed "we will not be coerced." In presenting the Iranian point of view he said there are only two jWestions open to negotiations: (1) Compensation for British investments fK now nationalized Anglo-Irania- n OH company, and (2) possible sale I " on to Britain. He then made his strongest point: "We will not take action and will ' ) T0t en2age in negotiations affecting our internal affairs under pressure. do so would not only constitute an admission that we are not a ''ereign and equal nation, but would eventually be fatal to our dependence." The question remains who will operate the huge Anglo-Irania- n Oil "Wpany refineries. The Iranians do not have the technical know-ho-a! Jd the British experts have already been sent home. How can Iran sell when it can't produce it? ' f ' - - RED RETURNED . . . Gus Hall, fugitive national secretary of the U. S. Communist party who jumped bail to escape prison, was arrested by Mexican secret service agents near Mexico City, and is being de-ported back to the United States, Pw!wWWWyMMV-'vft''-- T.. V. mf . BRITISH OIL WORKERS QUIT ABADAN . . . British oil technicians are shown boarding one of the launches that ferried them from Abadan to the British cruiser Mauritius during the evacuation of Anglo-Irania- n company employees from the billion-doll- British-bui- lt plant now na-tionalized by the Iranian government. A total of 315 Britons were evacu-ated with a government order that followed an Iranian ultimatum. ' ' ' v;'?.j 1 Kit tTf AA ftHA. I Ai '' ' i ; A I .3 i " - y 'J ' - ' I . . . Korean war veteran, SSgt. Thomas Da-vie- Dover, N. J., who was felled by frostbite last winter In Korea, looks out from a cold chamber at Brooklyn navy yard as he tests navy - developed uniform for the coldest temperatures. Total Feed Supply Will Be Higher Than Last Year With the approach of the 1951-5- 2 feeding season, livestock feeders will be interested to know that the i'expected total supply of feed grains and concentrates will be greater than last year, according to the bureau of agricultural economics. The available supply of feed will permit livestock to be fed at about the same rate per unit as last season. The number of animals to be fed, however, is also expected to be greater. An estimated 174 mil-lion animals will be on hand as compared with last year's 168 mil-lion. A larger acreage and a fair carry-over is expected to provide a larg- er corn supply. About 4 billion bushels is expected to be available for the 1951-5- 2 season. The total supply of corn, oats, grain sorghums, and barley for the coming season is estimated to be 127.1 million tons. This compares with last season's total of 125 mil-lion tons of grain. The department reported total crop production may be the second highest in history in 1951. 1 1 r v I """ ' I g3: I , . - f j . a a DRAFT BOARD WON'T LEAVE HIM ALONE . . . Ernest Houde, Jr., Bridgeport, Conn., has the most persistent draft board in the U.S. He fought in the Korean war, was wounded, came back home and got mar-ried. Twice while he was hospitalized in Korea, the draft board pub- lished his name as a delinquent with orders to report for induction. Recently, arriving home from a veteran's hospital, he found a notice for him to report for a physical. With him is his wife. :$ ' a , I J - I j; ; ; : (A , i . i vavwiu - j joAL& jWm. WARNS ON ATOMIC RACE . . . Rep. Henry Jackson, Washington, warns that intelligence reports re-veal that Russia is making an all-o-effort to surpass the U. S. in atomic weapons. Be says it will be "national suicide" for the U.S. to fall behind. Tractor Drawbar I PRAWBAR V1 A heavy piece ol angle iron bolted to the rear of a tractoi and extending well beyond the wheels makes harrowing easier fastening the harrow with a long chain bitch, especially when making turns at ends of the field, doited to tbe drawbar it can be removed when not in use. w',w""""'y'"'-'y'- ' w ; " " '. . 4 - ' - ", ; , '.'" A-"'AA- J I j I A 1' ' i v i SUSPENDED . . . Jack Molinas, Columbia University net star, was suspended for one semester for hurling a glass tumbler from a dormitory v.indow on a dare. The tumbler struck the windshield of a car owned by a professor. IChWU?, K ft 1 - A XA t l i RUSSIAN PRIESTS FLEE THEIR COUNTRY . . . Five Russian priests who fled Communist Russia are shown as they made a brief stopover in Rome, Italy, in their quest for freedom. From Rome they are go-ing to Naples, where they will board a ship for Palestine. Left to right, they are Vladimiro Lindemana, Andreil Krisolov, Ivano Raskcha, Sergei Turanski, and Lescei Kravchenko. They are just one example Of the yearning of the religious to escape from the Communist yoke. THUMB-SUCKIN-A Natural Habit Noted Doctor Says Smce the beginning of time "s have tried to stop their "s from sucking their thumbs. liev"OW aPPears, if one is to be-- 2 Dr' Newton Kugelmass, not j Pediatrician of New York, t 'tnurnb-suckin- is as normal as jk alhing" and is not to be worried ut until the chHd is over two ye"s age. usually declines after the .second year of life, the noted physician observes. If it per-sists after the age of two, he has discovered as the result of intensive studies, "the child feels unloved, unwanted, guilty, resentful or in need of consolation." What is the remedy if a child continues to suck his thumb? "Trea the child, not the symptoms," ad vises Dr. Kugelmass. Iowa Tests Show Value Of Alfalfa for Swine Everyone knows that alfalfa pasture is good for hogs But Just how good? The Iowa experiment station thought that one way to find out would be to feed one batch iOf hogs on dry lot; and another on alfalfa. They found that the biggest value in alfalfa comes from a sr.ving in high-co- protein and mineral sup-plement. Hogs gained fster on alfalfa. |