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Show MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE, DELTA, UTAH , VIRGIL By Len Kiel WHAT KIND OF ' UWhTtE- - 7 IM A NO f f 4' BIRDS ARE VOU ) JJ-gira- BIR0S y EA V HOUSE LIKE ) Vi 1 M V?fc4CT 1 " Chairs, Table Are Simple Home Projects i?A. CHAIR PATTERN 348 f FOLDING CEMENT FLAGSTONES - PATTERN 229 THESE comfortable, light and graceful chairs and the folding table are simple projects for the home carpenter. Pattern 348 for chairs and 349 for the table give actual-siz- e cutting guides. Pattern 229 shows every step for making cement flagstones. Patterns are 25c each. WORKSHOP PATTERN SERVICE Drawer 10 Bedford Hilla, New York Pickles Pickles preserved in brine are susceptible to spoilage. Use about one teaspoon of oil poured on the surface after the jar is opened to prevent the growth of mold. Moist Bread If you want to keep bread moist and fresh, store in a plastic bag and refrigerate. Unless the bag is used, mold may develop on the bread. CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT HELP WANTED WOMEN WOMAN Cook, steady job on ranch, must be clean. Must be able to cook for 10 or more. Completely modern kitch-en, room with bath. John P. Cooney A Sons, Harlowton, Montana. MISCELLANEOUS SONGS and Lyrics wanted by ASCAP and BMI Publishers Agent. Submit for free exam., 20TH CENTURY MUSIC AGENCY, 478 Santa Clara Ave., Oak-lan- Calif. SERVICES OFFERED STOVE REPAIR Repair parts for all make stoves, ranges, heaters, furnaces. Write for prices, give make and model. Omaha Stove Co., 1?fH IongIas. Omaha, Nebr. WANTED TO BUY WANTED Scrap Iron, Steel and Cast ' Also Surplus Items MONSEY IRON & METAL CO. 750 S. Srd fftil Snlt Lnkg City, Utah Buy U.S. Defense Bonds! "Miracle Drug" say SURIN Users Pains of Arthritis, Rheumatism, Neuritis, Lumbago, Bursitis.!. Relief Can Start In Minutes There's no internal dosing with SURIW Nothing to swallow and wait anxiously for relief. Yon simply apply SURIN right at the point of pain and blessed relief starts as penetration beneath the skin gets under way. Of course there's a reason for this wonder-workin- g new external fast pain relief medicine. It's methacholine, a recent chemical bora of research in a great laboratory. It acts speedily to aid penetration of SURIN's ingredients. Methacholine also causes deeper, longer-lastin- g pain relief and increased speed-up of local blood supply. Tested on ehronie rheumatic In lare hospital it brought fast relief to 73 patients and in 77. To- - $ tally different from rubs and liniments, modern SURIN brings faster re-lief, longer without burning or blistering; without unpleasant odor or grease. Simply smooth on SURIN at the point of pain and feel pain ease in minutes. Money-bac- k atyoui drag Btore if SURIN doesn't relieve muscle pain faster and better than anything you've ever used. A generous jar costs $1 .25. 'SURIW ia not a cure for any of theite conditions. McKesson & Robbins. Inc.. Bridgeport 9. Com. By INEZ GERHARD )0 RAY. player, av frogman and town consta-- 5 considered by Columbia Pic-it- s hottest find since John c "Saturday's Hero" was his picture; fellow players and ex-je- s were enthusiastic about him the start. As a reward he ed right into the male lead in Marrying Kind," opposite Holliday, the sort of role that experienced actors would give ears to get. An old knee injury nted his playing football after as discharged from the navy, I townsmen in Crockett, Calif., d him constable. A Columbia res ad prompted him to try his at acting. j Milland, who'll be seen next iugles in the Afternoon," sus- - that his young son, Danny, 'nherited his own restless na- - "He won't even stay in his backyard," said Ray. "I hate ink what he'll be like at my He has not only traveled all - . t I KT 1 ! v; J 1 v 1 1 ' I RAT MILLAND the globe, but is one of the few s who like to work on locations r from home as possible. kl Rogers, Jr., after two months' work, is "almost as good ai :ld man" at swinging a rope, ding to Ben Peaty. Peaty, an ne roping companion of Rog- - Sr., has been tutoring Jr. for ; Story of Will Rogers". iiria McMillan and Dick Crenna, "portray the bright, wholesome school students on the CBS !; Miss Brooks" show, have been :d for radio to ote Sunday school week, April The week's slogan is "Rebuild jcter into our youth of today;" ;n h educational project, "show is heard Sundays at 6:30 ;:, EST. jn Renoir's technicolor "The runs on and on; it's in its ;eek at New York's Paris thea-"ihow- n twice a day. Those who 1 seen it want to see it again; who haven't actually apologize j'.ot getting there. K say Hope, Bob's son, lis to be a comedian like dad. be last year he has made two appearances on his father's a show, one holding a script In ij bandaged hand he'd broken 1 playing basketball. lis sounds fantastic, but actors technicians of RKO's "The Breed" swear it's true. Five, 'ding Robert Young, Frank Wil-jan- d Lee MacGregor, lost their ;s while on location near Sed- - ) Arizona. A doctor prescribed, they'd be well in two days. A -iijo medicine man dosed them kerosene and sugar; they re-ared in half an hour! Hyde Park," a pictorial u which was shot at the late Indent's birthplace at Hyde Park, , has heen accepted by the 11- -f of congress for its permanent Jives. The film, most compres-sive pictorial presentation made i:.e boyhood background and his-J-F. D.R., is being released to t'res and social, civic and his-l!:- associations. s im Berardino, who plays Tony eri in "Alexander, the Big ljuer," was a child actor in "Our f" comedies. Last month he was quitting baseball for Uig, but Manager Hank Green-- 1 signed him again with the yeland Indians; pursuaded him V the telephone to change his However, Berardino insists h return to acting eventually. ij trike It Rich" has drawn more , a million letters from fans in years; now two studios want to a film on it. Warren Hull, its deserted film work for radio TV now may find himself acting i'Jn in Hollywood. i) ,l,)DS AND ENDS . . . Al Crews, Ruction chief for the Protestant :idcasting and Film Commission, J!3o- to Germany to tape-r- e - rd snow dealing with the refugee jlem there, to be broadcast later iBC . . . "Juvenile Jury" may ''ack on the air as a summer Te-nement on both radio and tele-to- r the Groucho Marx show Charlton Heston, circus boss of P Greatest Show on Earth", lied three years as a gunner with Eleventh Air Force. Poultry Industry May Set New Record Output in 1952 May Hit Fourfold of Decade Ago The poultry industry may break all production records during 1952. Production of broiling chickens, for instance, which makes up over half the chicken population, is ex-pected to jump this year to more than 850 million birds. Last year's production was 784 million. Just a decade ago, fewer than 200 million broilers were raised in a year. Turkey productions is forecast at 11 per cent higher than the record 53 million of last year, about 80 per cent above the pre-w- 1941 output. Egg production is expected to stay about the same as last year when some 60 billion were produced. That was 40 per cent above the produc-tion of 1941. Poultry production gains have far outdistanced the U.S. population increase. That means some huge jumps in per-capi- consumption. r '!-.; . . - - V ' ! More and more flocks like the one above will be seen on the nation's farms this year. Last year, the average American downed over 400 eggs, against less than 300 yearly in the 1935-3- 9 period. Chicken eating per person was near-ly 30 pounds in 1951, against a 1935-3- 9 average of under 19 pounds. Tur-key consumption more than doubled in the same period. SUNNYSIDE byClorkS.-Haq- , R1MIN' TIME ' By POSEN $oe Shrink, a timid FUDDy- - Writes he-ma- n novels,rough while Jim Bulk, bis and Writes little children's DUDDY, AND BLOODY. HARD AS NAILS, FAIRYTALES. jgftfr, j BESSIE . By NICK PEN N PID YOU GET YOUR lGiyToN I lyoiAL CATCH 1 I OH, I DUNN- O- HE ALWAVs). I JREPORTCARP) ORSONy I PLUNKED ) IT FROM YOUR WANTED ME TOGOi jyRj yPOP 0 MUTT AND JEFF By Bud Fisher DOtrrT JgfioW WANTSi TORENT HoT p VJ, fcdT MEJg ' J WHERE HAVE BEEN &EL,EVE,,Ni 1'hauMTB.1 OF GHOSTS. ky. NSAtel yrHER Cf f$iyolj sleep in nJ i ain't.' M JM0 M &Vr&rXA LAST oJh Spreading Manure Aids Wildlife, Specialists Say Farmers who spread manure on their fields in late winter and early spring are helping wildlife as well as crops, extension specialists re-port. Value of manure spreading for plant food Is recognized, Tut few people realize that good farming practice also is a wildlife conserva-tion help. Most manure contains weed and crop seeds that make good winter feed for pheasants, quail and other birds. February, March, and sometimes April, are lean months in many northern states for the wildlife pop-ulation. Pheasants and quail are weakened by lack of cover during earlier winter months. Since much of their winter food supply has been exhausted, many birds will not survive lean pickings and rough weather during the last months of winter. Agronomists always have em-phasized that prompt spreading of manure saves plant food that might otherwise be lost through leaching. From now until full spring, manure should be spread when field condi-tions permit. Spreading now will put nutrients in fields instead of down barnyard drains, extension specialists say. TT j yYLDE AND WOOLY By Bert Thomas RvYLpe AW WOXV AR6 R.YIWG 1 I GOOD MORNING. I I OH, HE ALWAYS WEsI1" A OUT WEStVAFTER SPENP1W& WHERE IS YOUR A WALK BEFORE .Ti( f fcSIT S6V5RAL WEEKS AND A LOT OP ' PARTNER? BREAKFAST. , ' JGSSf " 'SvS WONEY IN NEW YORK CITY. ' Corn Crib RAOOAD STOCK CARS- - To solve a bnilding problem, one farmer came up with this idea of using two railroad stock cars in the construction of a double corn crib and overhead granary. The cars were set on a concrete base for nse as corn cribs and the space under the roof served as a granary. STElK&JIAWy.' wwCArrrisoioTHe v SjS TCLenSON BROADCAST ?J BECAUe Jp?5l 5Tk i r HAve I MEHoTUM reueveo his head- - ) ly 'O COLD MISERY, ACHEy CHEST O V' SS fMENTHOLATUM ) Ty- rr for, ySmS ) 1 CHAPPED f5rC-- "How's the house cleaning coming along. Dear?" cBy A II TFt uflGT "But he's a NEW boy friend, Dad! Why CAN'T you pretend to be the butler just this once?" U.S. Farms Have Fewer Phones in '50 Than 1920 According to the 1950 census only 38.3 of America's farms have tele-phones as compared to 38.7 per cent in 1920. Twenty-eigh- t states reported fewer farm telephones. Those showing declines contain 80 per cent of the country's farms. Among the states suffering sharpest declines were Texas, Missouri, and Illinois. Connecticut leads in per-centage of farms with telephones. Iowa is second. |