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Show , MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE, DELTA, UTAH Building Program Far Behind Schedule All-Purpo- se Barn Has Priority on Many Farms Although American farmers have undertaken considerable construc-tion in recent years, the farm building program is still far behind schedule. Farm authorities report that farm buildings have a high average age, with the average barn dating back to 1910. For this reason the building, has first priority with many farmers who are interested in greater labor efficiency and a better return on their farm invest-ment. The building pictured above is 48 feet long, 34 feet wide and 35 high. In addition to being soundly planned subject to the individual farm-er's own requirements it will make a pleasing addition to most farmsteads. The floor plan shows six cow stalls on either side of a driveway. Also provided in connection with the dairy section, are mangers, feed alleys and gutters for each group. The second floor is a hay-mow. Revisions to suit any farm-er's particular needs can be in-corporated readily by the builder. A flexible plan for the barn may be obtained free by writing Farm Service Bureau, 111 West Washington St., Chicago 2, and asking for No. AFB-16- MAHONEY Sa iiw7fl.'''21 ONE DAY, BACK IN 1928, THE FRESHMAN t , I XX fOOTBALL COACH OF THE UNIVERSITY L k ' Jk P OF ILLINOIS TOOK OCCASION TO TELL , VTS. J RAY THAT HE SHOULDN'T PLAY FOOT- - I .V WAS ASEN- - t V 1 v4 SATIONAL LINEMAN BUT WAS SO NEAR- - V i SIGHTED HE OCCASIONALLY TACKLED A fry f ONE OF HIS TEAM MATES. BUT WITH M I DOGGED DETERMINATION HE PLAYED ANY-- . f WAV AND BECAME ONE OF THE GREAT VV, GUARDS OF ILLINI GRID HISTORY! JffL TRNEDHIS'(f yN , i , . - ALMA MATER AND LA . .' , jT THE SAME DETERM- I- ' '" l 1 ty NATION HAS MADE IfPciAJfm J '""ft - HIM DEAN OF BIS M kiy J' pK TEN COACHES. JYfyiZ liljiirlr ORIGINAL MARQUIS ' Q A M A l ..iiidffBa OF QUEENSBERRY f VtCnX kf MVjfiT.'""1 MXING RULES HAS S? (P 5--4 5jR?-flLE- TOURELLE AND SOME M5 J& FRIENDS WERE QUIETLY FISH- - bT5L?S Srvf ij SfjTV3 IN6 AT BAY ST.LOUIS,MISS. ALEX STRUCK A DOmrC iiii O U' MATCH ON A LOG. THE LOG OPENED ITS S?7!?,S?rm VM . ' THE RESTFUL FISHING TRIP TURNED LUWLUJ ),ll ' C JNTC9CHINUT11ICWTJ&ATTLE JM HEAD STUFFY DUE TO COLDSeBsafl TAKEforst HP relief DON'T DELAY DO IT TODAY! Nobody likes to shop when the stores are bulging with people. So do your Christmas shopping early do it today! Check off your list and see how many are cigarette smokers. Then get each one a car-ton or two of America's most popu-lar cigarette cool, mild Camels! It's so easy and so sure to please. Not only is each carton chock full of smoking enjoyment, but each carton comes already d with a built-i- n Christmas card for your personal greeting. If some of the men on your list are rs or like to roll their own cigarettes, then get them the Na-tional Joy Smoke Prince Albert, America's most popular smoking tobacco. The big one-pou- tin comes in a Christmas box and it's a beauty. It's all ready to give. No fuss, no bother. There's a space where you write in your greeting and that's all there is to it. So save time, save hustle and bustle by giving cool, mild Camels and mellow Prince Albert Smoking To-bacco. See your dealer today. Adv. CATCH BABSj WAT A BILL FINAUV 'TIMETOf ASKED ttXJ FOR. 7r CATCH T VVjACyrel'-- J I BILL MA1 BE k HERE'S A JC FOR. MENTHOLATUM RELIEVES 3 MlSER..CHy CHEST MUSCLES 1 MENTHOLATUM SWELL SS. I: WET? MAKE A kT.s.j"' EAT ANYTHING WITH ik FALSE TEETH! Ivoss? If yon have trouble with plates Hflflrp that slip, rock, cause sore gums try Brimms Plasti-Line- One application makes plates 6t snugly without powder or past; because Brimms Plasti-Lin- hardens perma-nently to your plate. Relines and rents loose plates in a way no powder or paste can do. Even on old rubber plates you get good results six months to a year or longer. VOU can eat ANYTHINQ1 Simply lay soft Strip of Plasti-Line- r on troublesome upper or lower. Bite and it molds perfectly. Easy to use, tasteless, odorless, harmless to you and your plates. Removable as directed. Money back if not completely satisfied. Ask your druggtst AT YOUR GROCER'S Bcvsro Ccglis From Cesnsttssi Cdds The! IJASuG Gil Creomulsion relieves promptly becauso it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial membranes. Guaranteed to please you or money refunded. Creomulsion has stood the test of millions of users. CE?EoriuLssrj nlinel Coegtis, Chut Colds, Acut. Bronchltit EVJ easy way fo EXILE. QAS Simply put Black Leaf Warfarin Rat Killer Bait in protected places where rata and mice can consume it regularly. They like it and literally eat themselves to death. Because other rodents are not warned, entire colonies are easily destroyed. Black Leaf Warfarin Rat Killer Bait is the amazing new roden-tici- WARFARIN machine-mixe- d with special bait material that never becomes rancid. It's ready to use. Get it today and get rid of rats and mice the easy way. Directions on package. Win you help In our National Emergency? Ask tti Director of Nursei at I f B your local hospital where you can enroll as a Student Kluri rnrBtciaoaaH AT CHRISTMAS " i'aV JSMWLti 5 lSL bmam we three wise meH f", MS. TH6VWOUREC S fROUan Of SOLD, ' .j.WtJ.AXPRL BEAUTIFUL. WHITE INFAMT JeSU Ct WASc. $ 'I --'Tffn TO MT?WOmO LUWER m C W5T VUAS BORN, THE DEVIL LS OF THE "STAR OF AQAl1 oia CHRISTMAS WRU BETHLtHGM '"Orisrmw cards firs appeared! America lYi875....-W(qratin- herefrom 7 virforiayi 'Enqlaivl- - 6mce then their sparkling desiqn, and cheer-fu- l ) wses, have becorrte tVte Rrst Siirn of Christmas in Homes everywhere.-- - SPORTLIGHT . Football Hall of Fame Missed Two Bv GRANTLAND RICE NEW YORK It was generally understood by everyone concerned or interested that football's Hall of Fame Honor Court was bound to make a few mistakes getting under-way. Oversights were sure to occur in trying to name the first group of entries. The select-ing committee, headed by Bill Cun-ningham, did a first-clas- s job. It made errors of omission. The two notable mistakes were leaving h if i v i Charley Brickley off and not enter-ing Jock Sutherland as one of the great coaches of all time. It w a s ridiculous, of course, to say that Dr. Sutherland didn't belong in the first 20 named. The good Doctor be-longed in the first of the basketball innovation. He was a master of precision. Too Many Stars The group selected to name the first Hall of Fame list was certain to blow more than one great star. This couldn't be helped with so many hundreds waiting to be called. As my friend Dan Parker suggest-ed "What about Elmer Oliphant probably Army's greatest player?" Elmer was also Purdue's greatest star. Football has ten stars to basketball's one. I mean col-lege football. The pros are not listed In this College Hall of Fame scramble. Let the pros set up a Hall of Fame of their own. For example. Otto Graham of Northwestern and the Browns would never have made a college Hall of Fame. Yet he is one of the greatest when you take in his pro career. I would rate Baugh, Graham and Luckman as the greatest of all passers. Bob Waterfield isn't far away. As Al Smith kept saying "Look at the record." I have forgotten the exact num-ber named for the first e squad from the Hall of Fame. But don't forget there have been at least 500 or more great football players. Baugh was also a great kicker along with Strong, Kercheval, Mooney and one or two others. The Hall of Fame Committee has a big job left In correcting Its early mistakes. Es-pecially in regard to Charley Brick-le- y and Jock Sutherland, who should have been high In the first group. The Hotter Sectors Today there are just two hot football sections left. One Is the Midwest the other the Southwest. No matter what teams meet in the Cotton Bowl at Dallas, you'll generally find some 75,000 specta-tors on hand, afternoon or night. Texas, SMU, TCU, Rice, Baylor and Texas A. and M. rarely miss capacity crowds. There are sure signs now that the once tidal-wav- e interest in the East and South is fading. I asked one n director what the reason for this was. "Many reasons," he said. "The game has become too commercial-ized. The system has undoubtedly driven thousands away from the game. The sight of forty-fou- r men romping back and forth on play after play has become a boring sight. The crowds don't like it at all. Granted Rice hea by Rockne and Haugh- - ton. He was one of the best. Rockne and Haughton were the two tops. Unless you bring in Pop Warner who Invented more plays than all the others put together. Pop happens to . be the author of the single and "double wing that is now knock-ing the T cockeyed. "How I'd like to have a sock at that 'T,' " Pop told me last fall. "It would be murder!" You don't think so? How about Princeton, Tennessee, Southern California, Kentucky, Texas, UCLA (the team that wrecked California), Michigan, Illinois in fact all of the good teams in the game all single wing. Or nearly all. It must prove' something. Yes, Rockne, Haughton and Pop Warner would have to head the list. They are the Big Three of the coaches. They gave football more than anyone else. No one can dispute their positions. But I still say Jock Suther-land belongs in the first five. Perhaps yon don't remember the time Jock made Notre Dame break off her schedule with Pittsburgh after Pittsburgh had almost wrecked the South ' Bend Irish through six years? Jock was wrecking most of them at that time. His one mistake was trying to overpower Fordham's great line without a pass. Jock failed to score in three consecutive years. But he was one of the best a master of the running attack. He never liked the pass. That was Jock's weakness. It was the way Howard Jonei wrecked h the air. But Jock was thinking in terms of older and better football of run-ning, tackling, timing, kicking not NewDU Film A new full color and sound mo-tion film entitled "Water is Life," will shortly be released by Ducks Unlimited, C. A. Gross, president of the famed international sports-men's conservation organization announced today. Produced by Ducks Unlimited (Canada) during the past summer months, the film depicts the vital necessity of water not only to wild-life but to the adjacent human life as well. Its theme dramatically portrays the economic value of a marsh. "Water is Life," will be shown throughout the United States at meetings of Ducks Unlimited mem-bers and will also be available to other sportsmen's groups upon re-quest. Producer Ormal I. Sprung-ma- n has employed the use of the breathtakingly realistic commer-cial Kodachrome for the first time in the new picture. Sprungman is the producer of many other Ducks Unlimited pictures during past years. AAA Break for Anglers Two and one-ha- lf dollars of fed-eral aid to make fishing better for the followers of old Ike Walton will be spent by the states during the coming year largely to find out what fish resources they have and what can be done to increase them, according to the National Wildlife Federation. The money comes from an excise tax on sport fishing tackle which was earmarked by a 1950 federal law known popularly as the Dingell-Johnso- n Act. Twenty of the first 26 fund ap-plications received by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service were for pro-jects classified as "research." Ap-portionment of the first year's Dingell-- Johnson collections, $2,574,910, was announced last Sept. 21 and by Nov. 1 project plans had been received from 12 of the 48 states. John S. Gottschalk, assistant chief of the Service's federal aid branch, said when all applications are in be expects the first-yea- r proportion to run about 70 per cent for investigations and 30 per cent for acquisition and development. Utah Is First Utah was first in with a plan to survey the fishing ' pressure, the extent of the angling harvest and its economic value to the state. Virginia will launch a similar study of game fish in impounded waters, going into fish growth rates and other biological factors. New Hamp-shire has been granted funds for two statewide surveys, one cover-ing lakes and ponds, the other measuring fishing pressure and fish populations in streams of the Gran-ite state. Kentucky will experiment with farm ponds and make a scientific study of Kentucky Lake. Maine has filed fund applications for seven research projects, ranging from trout stream management to a creel census of ice fishing. An Idaho project calls for a sur-vey of spawning area in the Sal-mon River and tributaries. One of the purposes will be to estimate the losses if and when proposed Hells Canyon Dam is built on the Snake River, cutting off salmon runs from the Pacific. A preponderance of research is expected at first under the Dingell-Johnso- n program because in most states fisheries investigations have lagged for lack of funds. Develop-ment projects, such as construction of new fishing lakes and stream improvement, will come later. Similar Evolution The older Pittman-Robertso- n feder-al- aid game program, started in 1937 with a tax on sporting arms and ammunition, went through a similar evolution. Most of the money went into research in the early years. During the 1950 fiscal year, how-ever, 50 per cent of Pittman-Robertso- n funds went for development of wildlife areas and game habitat, 25 per cent for acquisition of game lands, and only 20 per cent for re-search. The remaining 5 per cent went for maintenance of prior de-velopments and for coordination within the states. A few states Michigan, Missouri and Pennsylvania are good exam-pleshave been carrying on fish-eries research on their own for several years and are ready to start using federal aid money for development projects. Pennsylvan-ia already has submitted plans for construction of a new fishing lake in the Pittsburgh region. On all Dingell-Johnso- n projects, as with the Pittman-Robertso- n game pro-jects, the states must put up $1 to match each $3 of federal aid. AAA Color Unimportant This will come as rankest heresy to many plug addicts, but we'll stick with the contention that the color of surface lures for bass isn't too important. Of course, most of them are made in a wide variety and pattern as regards color, but as anglers know, the great majority of them have neutral shades on the bottom that portion which alone is visible to the fish. The main factor in fishing sur-face lures is plug action. Just how old is Santa Claus? That is a question that parents are called upon to answer often and it is one that is extremely hard to an-swer. Like everything else related to Christmas tradition, there is a wide difference of opinion. The idea of Santa goes back to Europe, hundreds of years ago. Santa came to life from legends that followed the great St. Nicholas, Bishop of Myra. He adopted dif-ferent forms as suited to the dif-ferent countries, but was mostly pictured as a thin, austere man with a long white beard. The age of Santa, as American children know him, can be almost definitely ascertained. The plump, smiling and jolly fellow is 88 years old this Christmas. Thomas Nast, an American car-toonist, drew the now familiar form of Santa in 1863 to illustrate a book of Christmas poems by J. M. Greg-ory. For the first time in his un-known life span, Santa appeared to have a full stomach under his red suit and a jolly smile on his face. It might well be said that his Ameri-can life began in that year. ike Family Helps - fith Preparations or the Holiday "iy not make this a real Christ- - by having the entire family i in preparing for the great holi-- 1 Follow the suggestions below tfou may be amazed at the fam--" solidarity shown around the ; :ide feast table. First of all, getting the tree. This - in assignment that should fall j: ;he younger members of the J. Going to the woods is the j nacan tradition, and there is a rial thrill in bringing in a tree . lie's choice. City dwellers, how-hav- e to buy their tree, so be . :; to let the youngsters be able ;jy, "We chose the tree." :;corating the home is a project ' k will offer jobs and fun for all. :range a nativity scene, decorate , doorways and windows, and, iere are any sick members of : lamily, decorate a small tree ,. the bedside. But, work together. rr.en, have a party, complete : fames, dancing, caroling, and the exchanging of f:ents. The exchange of gifts ,Jd be well planned, so that no aber of the family is slighted, 'ing names from a hat is an custom in many large families. ' also to add some extra enter-- ; dent. If a member of the clan . iing well, or dance, a solo per-'snc- e should be a highlight. jUy, after the party is well way, call everything to a and give each member of the J a pencil and piece of paper, I them to write in 25 or less is, "What Christmas Means to You may be surprised at the WS turned in by some. Faith sincerity may be found where least expect it. High Production Key To '52 Farm Success High farm production will be the key to success in 1952, agricultural economists report. They point out that operation costs will be higher, especially for labor, machinery and feed. But they feel the best way to beat higher costs is through greater production and efficiency. Increased production can be ob-tained by use of more legumes in the rotation, using more commer-cial fertilizer or by tilling heay land which is poorly drained but which can be made highly produc-tive. Modern machinery makes farming larger acreages possible, and only through making maxi-mum use of equipment can it be-come a profitable buy. Another method of increasing production will be through expand-ing the livestock program. Contin-ued high demand for livestock pro-ducts will keep prices high and open good opportunities for profit. . The year of 1952 will also be a good time to reduce the mortgaged debt, economists say, and farmers who do will be in a better position to weather out any period of financial reverse, if one should occur. Champion Barrow 4 I 'I f "J - ji' L. J I 1 - .ft. - vvJ f-f- r " " 4 i pn ( ';'i) An entry from Earlham Col-lege, Richmond, Ind., was named grand champion of the National Barrow Show at Aus-tin, Minn. The animal bronght $4.25 a pound at the barrow sale which concluded the show, purchasers of the animal were Al Bauer and Virgil Smith (left) representing the Stock-yards National Bank of South St. Paul. Wilson Bryant (right), manager of the college farm, showed the animal. Early Puritans Frowned On Christmas Festivities The early Puritans looked with disfavor upon the celebration of Christmas, preferring instead their own adopted celebration of Thanks-giving. It was thus that in the year 1659 the general court of Massachusetts made a decree that would have startling effect in America today. It read: "Anybody who is found observing, by abstinence from labor, feasting or any other way such day as Christmas Day for each and every offense shall be fined five shillings." toys, adorned with a fresh 3I of paint might make a ierfol gift for the very young, iU can make an attractive apron that would be appreciated by a iiHS housekeeper from a feed or rsack. Alt O 1 , -- l ' ,V' n A CHILD IS BORN Sing forth the honor of his name How tooggl FAMCY BOWS on christmas packages THAT HAVE" TO BE MAILED CAM BE PROTECTED BY PLACING A BOX LID OVER THEM BEFORE WRAPPING PACKAGE FOR MAILING. ggE OLD AND THE NEW f'sitor Finds Two Worlds in Jerusalem 'ijlesUnian merchants still ,cene reminiscent of the i.; Wise men as they carry their ''irta l0ng desert sands bor-'tci-e blue Mediterranean near Tel Aviv. Their camels, FifT101 wares. remind one of ' ;:JrZ 01,5 MaSi brought to the tte Nativity J. . the visitor finds two ' mj. One is the modern city hotels, and s; with street cars, the other the old walled citv with narrow streets passing through many graceful archways and mounting from one level to another by well - worn steps. Donkeys and camels are the only transportation, and he means of changed since the section is little there. Life is time Christ lived much the same. Tests Reveal Lights Increase Egg Production Although they don't have to see what they're doing, laying hens work better if they have lights, tests have revealed. Lights extend the hen's working day. It makes it possible for each bird to eat more. But the main reason for larger egg production when lights are used is stimulation of the pituitary gland by light rays. Lights may be used profitably when the days are short. |