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Show MILLARD COUNTY CHRONICLE Delta, Utah, Thurs., Aug. 7, 1952 .'.!'. and I.Irs. Owen Wests nskow and daughters, from Erigham City, Vtah, were Delta visitors during the week with Dr. and Mrs. M. E. Bird. Mr. and" Mrs. William k'niebel were Delta visitors during the week with their son, Otho Eulkley, and family. They have just return-ed from Alaska, where Mr. Knie-b-is in the contracting business. They were 11 months at Anchor- - age and 7 months at Fairbanks. They will return to Alaska after avisit in the states. FOR BETTER RESULTS ADVERTISE IN THE CHRONICLE used on She VorSd's Finest end FiisZdst Ship sssp 'Ht& - v, . ' ' 4 DEVOE also makes Won-S- ? der One-Coa- t, the world's whitest and brightest house paint. Yes, the best is none too good for the S. S. UNITED STATES, the fastest, and most magnificent liner afloat! More than 25,000 gallons of Devoe, enough to paint 6,000 homes, were used in decorating this super-line- r and the same fine quality DEVOE PAINTS are avail-able for home owners. So cut house-paintin- g costs by 40 and time by 50 by using Devoe Wonder . . . the outside paint thafs actually whiter, brighter and longer wearing than two coats of ordinary paint. 87 Spar Varnish Mirrolac enamel Wonder-tone- s rubber-bas- e paint, Velour semi-glos- s. .... n. ... fii.tni .mM 7, sVif 1tii ti ' M EW ! Procter & Gamble's New miracle ingredient, "Naturalizer," used after Lilt's waving lotion MAKES WAVE LOMGEST-LASTIK- G possible today, in the SHORTEST TIME POSSIBLE 1 ' " Mr WITH THOSE NO.NEUTPALI7FP WAVKI ( "Vacations are great - for individuals. But Utah's mining industry as a whole never takes a - vacation. Only year 'round operation at top efficiency can produce the profits that keep my paycheck coming. Our industry works on such a close margin, everyone has to be on the ball ' ft all times to keep things rolling." v-- ; "' " 111111 J . rg(B39H&&t f ' X - :j Even the most dirt-smeare- d little tots come clean when there is plenty of hot v.J I water in the home. And heated with an " "1 electric hot water heater, your hot '". '- 3 water is pure it's pasteurized. It's so ' i low in cqst, too. BUY LOCALLY ' Your electric appliance dealer will be glad J to recommend the size most suited to your family Telluride Power Company now.Vfr SEE H0W MUCH FASTER L,LT S In Very 'TW g,r' ,,art a """ ,ime 3 'tlok Saturday aflrnoon) ' Lilt package ! A WAVE wave' frfd&p She started her Lilt at fj She al.o .Urted.t3oi "Naturdlirr" S o'clock. It took her on'ly : jv Has wound curl. nd about an hour t0 flnih te : appiidwvingioto . ij entire waving lotion ste- p- (v rinsed with water (or IS 111 TI1IS yfr including test curls! ' AJ towel to reraovt MM : lotion). envelope a aaMa--- " ; 1 marked . ?xdm FIXATIVE I tShteA"NatUra'i2en' (which maybene.t y M$L wave really Now ih. must WAIt . ML r-- l ',11" W8Ve ' : with her hair on curls Qr j fSjf ' (With i' e4 Jl products, you nted With "NaturaliTAr " WW ' X1- ' drying on curlen.) Now her hair is set in pin Lilt wave is even curl 'or her hairdo! : m.'' ... : Mi A' STIU WAITINlSh'y- - more like ult wave finished -- and hairdo ' Air nw.c,,u",1!eh,,i V-- du t stvtm 1 Naturally -i- n less than 2 hours ; Curly Hair 4 52 o tlo,l : 5 than ever before! . j 2 hours ooni- -s mom to i -- i PhllfyJbraQiGmOtWeMiKQf ' W$ She "swlhas HOUR! f ..'.VC TO WAITI ' ' 'Xfll ff "Pin curls dry 'st (but hair ' J 5 wound on curlers does not). '. t ftI liltI KAJr "fO;b;8i80,l:,;Hltta : I0O'aOCK-SECONDJTt- XfVli lovely hairdo! : S?' ISlVlirl : 7 hour, after she t St : AndLOOKatthstk And best of all, her Lilt : ff ''"'S 3ifI(J wave i. so permanen- t- IC ?" thf curl6?L, hit (1 will last and last, j f vpcsiu : wh.i .h. .1111 ki o lllj WAVES LAST up to : h wave is oniy still only $1.25 3 TIMES LONOERI i w2 loji nrl !"' 'l plot tax I Batterer Pharmacy "WHERE YOUR DOLLARS HAVE MORE CENTS" Wiiigoveig All The News That's Fit To Print - From The Delta Airport. By Dick Morrison TAKE OFFS AND LANDINGS . . . Don and Dorothy Bothwell re-turned to Delta Saturday, after a month-lon- g vacation in Minnesota. Nate Ward is slated to go on vacation this week. With no first hand information as to how he intends to spend it, but recalling that he built a garage an vacation last, year, I arh guessing that he will make this a Dractical vara- - What Adam Smith, the 1'oUnder of modern political economy, had to say about lotteries. I do this, fur-thermore, knowing that since Hild-in- g Sjostrom won the boat and I didn't, it leavesrrrewide open to a charge of sour graphs. Here's what Father Adam had to say: "The chance of gain is by every man more or less overvalued, and the chance of loss is by most men undervalued . .. "In order to have a better chance for some of the great prizes, some people purchase several tickets . . "There is not, however, a more certain proposition in mathematics than that the more tickets you adventure upon, the more likely you are to be a loser. Adventure upon all the tickets in the lottery and you will lose for certain, and the greater the number of your tickets the nearer you approach this certainty." In other words, the best chance you have in participating is to buy only one ticket, and the only cer-tainty against loss is to not buy any. The quotation is from page 98 of The Wealth of Nations. - HOPE SPRINGS ETERNAL . . . One can hardly ever open one of the great books without stumbling upon a provocative thought. In checking up Adam Smith's com-ment on lotteries, I chanced upon this observation under Hazards and Chances of Military and Naval Life, page 99 of Wealth of Nations. "Young volunteers never enlist so readily as at the beginning of a new war; and though they have scarce any chance of preferment, they figure to themselves, in their youthful fancies, a thousand oc-casions of acquiring honor and dis-tinction which never occur. These romatic hopes make the whole price of their blood. Their pay is less than that of common labour-ers, and in actual services their fatigue is much greater". Is there any GI who, on sever-ance would not say Amen to that? tion, harvesting alfalfa seed, per-haps. Harold Rutherford flew his down from Provo Sunday, to see the boat races. The private plane is by far the fastest means of personal trans-portation, and no form of mass transportation can beat it except the commercial airline. Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Workman, of Long Beach, made a flight Sunday wh-ich bears witness to this. In flight from Santa Ana' to Butte in their they landed here for gas early Sunday afternoon, some sev-en hours out of Santa Ana. Ray Steele, than whom no man ever had a wider variety of adven-tures ani misadventures, narrow-ly missed death or at least being treated for snake-bit- e the other day.. A rattler snagged the cuff of his trousers. Ray says the force of the-- snake's strike was start-ling- . The first was the electrical storm out west late Saturday. It was a play of awesome color and vicious forces; of a cloudburst that swept across Whirlwind Valley; of torrential rain that fell from sunset clouds which ranged from blood-re- d to indigo and black; of nearly continuous forked lightning in persistent, repeated flashes from mile-hig- h clouds to earth and from cloud to cloud. Had this storm hit a populous section , the papers would have been full of stories of damage. Political office holders would have been blamed for not having done anything in advance to guard ag-ainst it. But in our west desert it passed all but unnoticed. The second was the view of our fruitful land, from the air, Sunday. A little flight from Fred Hauman's on the south to Clifford Ashby's on the north revealed a picture of ripening crops in r; pur pie fields of alfalfa 'blossoms; green fields of second crop hay; golden fields of grain. All was ser-enely beautiful Sunday, after na-ture's violent Saturday night blow-of- f. fledglings' . . . Bert and Nina Johnson, and their son and daughter, Gordon, 13, and Eloise, 6, had the thrill of taking their first airplane ride last Wed-nesday, July 30. They flew out over the farming district in the Aeronca Sedan. ' THE REGATTA . . . The JC's Regatta was duly sta-ged last Sunday, and it was quite an affair. Speed boats are as ef-ficiently designed in their way as airplanes are in theirs. They are built to skim over the water fast, and to do nothing else. The races were thrilling to see. Aside from the fun of watching the races however , the two impressions which fixed themselves most firm-ly in my mind were these: First, speed boat motors make JALOPY ... The question of what constitutes the ideal sportsman's car may nev er be finally answered. The latest entrant for that title is a Ford Fordor sedan, just acquired by Tex and Archie Searle. It is a well preserved 1926 model T. The later Henry Ford Sr., who in his day was widely respected as America's most distinguished man-ufacturer, and at the same time widely despised in some circles for his cantankerous intellectual in-tegrity and stubborn individualism, used to say of his cars and cus-tomers: "They can have any color they want just so it's black". "Never mind what they want. I'll give them what they ought to have". "The things the designers leave off of them never cause anybody any trouble". It is perhaps sufficient to say of the Searle's Ford that it is the living embodiment of these pro-nouncements, and more. DESERT IDYLS . . . Nature displayed two of her many moods in memorable scenes of striking contrast last week. an inordinate amount of noise for their size and, j Second, if the reservoir had been filled with sour cream instead of water it would have got thorough-- I ly churned Sunday afternoon. J ADAM SMITH ON LOTTERIES . . . With the JC's sponsoring the sale of lottery tickets on an out-board motor boat last week, he was a rare Delta citizen who was not. accosted at least once by Ward Killpack, Howard Witney, Jim Kelly, or any of the host of ' others, to buy chances. In view of this situation, and after having been practically for-ced to part with a dollar by Len Vodak and N. S. Bassett, I think it appropriate to can attention to Richard Morrison drove to Hunt- - ington Beach, Cal., last week and brought home Mrs. Morrison and their children, who have been vac-- , ationing there since school was out. H'aek Ito( MRS. MERRIU MIL Walter Miller was in City to attend the State Nominating Com" Darro Gismyere of s City was a guest of ,i Millers, Mr. and Mrs.. Hamptc Mr. and Mrs. Merrill den Avery and Darro qL tended the West Milat at Delta. After the boat enjoyed a delicious suPD garden of Mr. and Mrs. R Mrs. Smith's sister Mrs I dy, Mrs. Sebh Jackson Works and their m'ott Ray Smith joined Mrs Sr the preparation of the Wm. C. Moore 'and so. Lake City called at tl Rock Ranch. Hampton Burke was in on business. Mr. and Mrs. David Ste in Delta to attend the K Mr. and Mrs. Merrill V Mr. and Mrs. Hampton 1 tended the dedication of naming Winkler Point Ernest Winkler, a form, Service Regional Forester monies were held near mining town of Kimber is high above Clear Creel The program was under t tion of the Forest Servi the program the party e lunch on Winkler Point f'l REMEMBER" EV THE OLD TIMERS i - - - - From Mrs. Fannie Smith, Stanford, Ky.: I remember the good old times when my grandma baked sweet potatoes and corn bread in the old Dutch oven in front of the ' fireplace. She would cover the top of the lid with fire coals. From C. S. Wyatt .Metamora, Ind.: I remember when I had to grit, or grate, ears of corn on a piece of tin, punched full of holes and nailed on a board, to make meal for bread. From Mable Cox, Larkspur, Calif.: I remember when we had and no root beer. First bicycle I ever saw had large and small wheel and first ones with same-size- d wheels were called "safeties." The first washing ma-chine was the vacuum tin funnel full of holes and on a stick for plunging up and down through the clothers. I made one by nailing a perforated tin can on a broom han-dle. Also made lye soap and hom-iny. From W. A. Morton, Checotah, Okla.: The back of our dirt-flo-log hut was covered with deer hides. You could buy dry salt meat for two cents a pound. From Mrs. S. C. Shore, Richmond, Ind.: I remember my dad decid-ing that coffee above 25 cents a pound was too high and bringing home a 100-l- sack of green coffee. I remember how good the house smelled when mama roasted it in j bread pans in the old wood stove. From Bertha Andrews Phillips, J Randolph, Wise: I remember the "Old Oaken Bucket" and its wind- - lass well. ' Ivan and Jean Judd A. Boise, Idaho, .are announ birth of a son, Aug. l arrival is the eighth gran Mr. and Mrs. Tom Judd, and Mrs. Judd is now' visiting with the Andrus |