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Show ) THE RICH COUNTY REAPER. RANDOLPH, UTAH - SEEK ORIGIN OF DISEASE search will be conducted In northern Canada for the source of the rabbit disease, tularemia, this ' winter, by Dr. Robert G. Green, bacteriologist of the University of Minnesota, and a party Including Dr.'J. A. Allen, pathologist for the province of Manitoba. Doctor Green, says the Literary Digest, believes that tularemia and other diseases of small animals may have a northern center of origin. He seeks to find out what causes dieoffs of such animals on a continental scale about once every ten f Is due next years. The next year. A die-of- Why Children Need a Liquid Laxative The temporary relief children get from some synthetic, cathartic may cause bowel strain, and even set-u-p irritation in the kidneys. A properly prepared liquid laxative brings a perfect movement. There is no discomfort at the time and no weakness after. You dont have to give the child a double dose a day dr two later. Can constipation be corrected in children? Yes I say medical men. "Yes I say many mothers who have followed this sensible medical advice: 1. Select a good liquid laxative. 2. Give the dose you find suited to the system. 3. Gradually reduce the dose until the bowels are moving regularly without aid. An approved liquid laxative (one that is widely used for children) is Dr. Caldwells Syrup Pepsin. The mild laxative action of this excellent preparation is the best form of help for children and grown-up- s, too. -The dose can be regulated for any age or need. Your druggist has Dr. Caldwells Syrup Pepsin. Member N. R. A. habit-formi- . ng Bronchial Troubles Need Creomulsion Persistent coughs and colds lead to serious trouble. You can stop them now with Creomulsion, an emulsified creosote that is pleasant to take. Creomulsion is a acnew medical discovery with two-foltion; it aoothes and heals the inflamed membranes and inhibits germ growth. Of all known drugs, creosote is recognized by high medical authorities as one of the greatest healing agencies for per--1 eistent coughs and colds and other forms of throat troubles. Creomulsion contains, in addition to creosote, other healing elements which soothe and heal the infected membranes and stop the irritation and inflammation, while the creosote goes on to the stomach, is absorbed into die blood, and attacks the seat of the trouble, o, , t Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfactory in the treatment of persistent coughs and colds, bronchial asthma, bronchitis, and is excellent for building up the system after colds or flu. Your own druggist is authorized to refund your money on the respot if your cough or cold is not (adv.) lieved by Creomulsion. d . , PARKERS BALSAM HAIR Hair Dandruff Bomoves -- Stops EUliog Imparts Color and and Faded Hair Beauty to Gray .. 60c and 1.00 at Druggists. 'XHiscox Chera. Wks. . Fatchogce, N.Y, Ideal for use in FLORESTON SHAMPOO connection with ParkersHair Balsam.Makes the hair soft and fluffy. 60 cents by mail or atdrur gists. Hiscox Chemical Works. Patch ogue, N.: itiliiffrefflQ It May1 Vfem of Some Disordered Kidney or Bladder Condition backache with bladder and a fired, nervous;) depressed feeling may warn of some disordered kidney or bladder function. Don't delay. Try Doan s Pills) Successful 50 years! Used die world Snagging over. At all druggists. Doan's PILLS Howe About: HowTo See A Loafers Utopia The Final Average Leading a Normal Life O. 1933. Bell Syndicate. Sally Sez Peiping WNU Service. By ED HOWE SJO NEWSPAPER manager can pos-slbl- y keep aonsense out of his columns, out he should be careful to carry along every day a suggestion of the old conservative common sense necessary In properly distinguishing right rom wrong. Most newspapers do this with considerable faithfulness In spite of the Increasing demand for sensationalism. Sorm of them call it humor, but the common sense is suggested, and may be worked cut by those who care for IL As an example of this 1 note a recent syndicated article by Westbrook Pegler, and appearing in a good many first rate papers. In introducing Mr. Pegler the paper I see regularly says: "Pegler Gives a Humorous Slant on the New Deal. What Is called a humorous slant is actually the most Important piece of wisdom I have seen printed in many months. Mr. Pegler says: The trouble with the Russian Soviet system has been that It sought to compel the citizens to work, sometimes resorting to enforced labor, whereas under the American plan enforced loafing will be held over the heads of the comrades as a' threat to work hogs who endanger the success of the new deal by indulging a selfish passion for toil Mr. Pegler works out the idea to the extent of a column, which is not too much; many others would have made it into a book, and thus buried the good Idea. I cast my vote for a wreath to Westbrook Pegler for writing the most Illuminating piece of American wisdom in 1933; possibly for all time. Im rather an enIn such when mood, and rethusiast; ceive an Important paper or letter, I put it away so carefully I cant find it later. . Altogether my average In exercising care is low, although I believe such virtue one of the first a human being (constantly in danger) should exercise. . . . The time to lock the stable door, of course, is when the thought of thieves first occurs to you, but so many delay that a warning maxim was written centuries ago. The wisdom conveyed by the maxim is so important that all careless men have been familiar with and frequently- - repeated It hundreds of years without it doing them any good. In being careful A young man went to a doctor for Have advice, and the doctor asked: you been leading a normal life? The Well, young man replied that he had. continued the doctor, you must cut out liquor and women for tt least six . This may be a good months. joke I confess to a smile myself but It displays a fault common to most American Jokes, in that it gives the impression that all normal men drink too much Intoxicating liquor. Not one In twenty of them do. How many confirmed drunkards do you know? I have asked myself the question. My reply is, I do not know to exceed three or four, and these so widely scattered they annoy me rareIn thinking over that part . ly. of the joke referring to women, I become more serious, but risk no figures. . .. A new word lately becoming popular is moron. (Meaning a man suffering from arrested mental development.) It is rather a better word than fool, which seems to mean a man who is not a full shilling; who never had any sense, and never will have any. But a moron means one born with sufficient and average intelligence, and. or thirty, after reaching twenty-fiv- e becomes shiftless as to his mind, and quits developing tt I estimate there are hundreds of morons to one fool; the number. of complete fools is actually not great; there seems tittle doubt that the mind may be developed as naturally and easily as the muscles, by proper exercise; but as we grow older our nat ural disposition is to become flabby in Millions are today flesh and mind. 'supporting doctrines as foolish as perpetual motion. (Inflation, as an example; It is the same thing.) All such are suffering from arrested mental development; they do not take a proper'datly dozen for their heads. Men die unnecessarily every day be cause of arrested physical develop ment, and morons develop in the same way: they become poorer thinkers became they do not fairly and properly exercise their minds, and shuffle shiftlessly along to the bread line or poor house when they might have easier lived fairly respectable and successful lives, and finally achieved a very good obituary In the local papers. The more young men act tious old men, the better they will get along. like cau- Curbstone Market Prepared by National Geographic Society, Washington. D. C. WNU Service. enumerators recently CENSUS some 3,000 foreigners the residents of Peiping, exclusive of foreign legation guards. Japanese led the list with 991 and 340 Koreans. There also were 509 Americans, 308 Russians, 282 British and 170 Frenchmen, 167 Hermans, and a sprinkling each of Italians, Danes, Swedes, Belgians, Turks and Finns. Drama has continued to march In cycles since Marco Polo visited Peiping, then Khanbaligh, and brought back to unbelieving Venice tales of its incredible magnificence. The city recently gave way again to Nankings predominence as Chinas political center, and has reassumed the name of Peiping, which It possessed in the sad days before the later Mings and Manchus ruled from the Dragon throne. But Peking (or Pei Chlng, if one takes the northern pronunciation), meaning Northern Capital, it will continue long to be called, even though th turn of political events has robbed It of that rank and has reduced it to the City of the Northern Plains. y To see the city best Is to gain first a view of Its entirety. An excellent vantage point Is one of the high towers of the massive city wall, or Coal Hill, a mound back of the Forbidden city a panorama once denied lest one happen to peep at the Imperial palaces. Better yet, see It from the air. From above you discover that Peiping is a city beside a city and cities within a city. As one approaches from the south, the Chinese section Is In the foreground, and stretching back from it Is the old Manchu or Tatar district, within the center of which Is the Imwalls, yellow perial city. Pinkish-retiled on top. In turn set apart the Purple Forbidden City In the heart of the moated Imperial enclosure. Center of the Universe. Down theres the Altar and Temple of Heaven, the pilot shouts in your ear, as he Indicates the massive circular, marble platform and adjacent round,' 4temple below you In the center of a large park at the southern part of the Chinese city. The old emperors believed that the center of that altar was the center of the whole universe. Why not? Considering the extensiveness of the domain over which those monarchs ruled, there seems pardonable justification for their d yellow- -roofed blue-roofe- egotism. Your plane banks sharply and hangs edgewise, filling the air with exhausted gasoline fumes over that three-tiere- d marble from which disk of pure-whit- e once ascended annually the smoke of burnt offering "a bull calf of unwhile mixed color and without flaw the Son of Heaven knelt in rever- ence and prayed for a blessing to descend on his people. Nature worship under the dome of sky. old as time. Americans learn with pride that the triple roofs of azure tile which crown the Impressive Temple of Heaven are supported on mighty columns of Oregon pine, supplied at considerable ex pense of transportation when local wood of sufficient size could Dot be obtained, at the time the temple was re built. As the plane swings again toward the Tatar city you skirt the Temple of Agriculture. The grounds around the decaying buildings and the square altars have reverted to grass and weeds ; a flock of sheep or goats feeds calmly in the neglected courtyards. The walls around the Chinese city f as much embrace only about area as Is included within the Tatar fortifications ; the shops and homes of the Chinese district are crowded near the communicating gates. The Forbidden City. Roaring over the Chien Men, massive central gate through which a .arge part of the traffic between these two sections passes, people and carts one-hal- In Peiping. coursing through Its arches look like a milling army of ants, and the tram-car- s and autos like darting cockroaches. Almost Immediately the Forbidden city is beneath you. Only from such air perspective can come the full appreciation of the symmetry and expansiveness of Yung Los building operations. Boldly planned and executed, even surpassing the courts of Kublai Khan, were the palaces and the capital of the mighty Ming emperor. The whole plan, history says, was conceived In detail by a Taoist monk, a close friend of the haughty Yung Lo. lelow lie rectangles of courtyards, some cut by curving streams, and a patchwork of red gates, halls, reception rooms, and living quarters of the emperor and his countless retainers, under roofs of shimmering Imperial yellow. Each was built according to all the regulations of astronomic and geoman-tl- c influences. The palaces stand today essentially as their construction was commanded more than five centuries ago. You circle the three lakes Nan Hal, Chung Hal, and Pel Hal (the South, Central, and North seas) that cut down through the Imperial city, to d the west of the inner palaces. blue waters and Irregular b. nks of green, studded here and there with yellow and green roofs, are marvels of landscape gardening, large even from the air. Yung Lo gets credit for those, too. The Drum and Bell towers soon slide under as you zoom and head north again. Marco Polo beard the watches of night boom from this same Drum tower. The drumheads were strong, then, having served but three years when he arrived. Today the tower has become an educational library and a propaganda center, and la plastered with Kuomlntang posters, health suggestions, displays, and other notices. marble-bridge- d Lotus-mottle- Some Modern Groups. Swinging over the Confucian and Lama temples, their golden tile roofs still bravely flashing up the fact that they once had royal support, and then back over the Forbidden city, you catch a glimpse of green roofs far off beyond either wing tip. The group near the lakes Is the new National library; the other, off Hata Men street, is the Peking Union Medical college. Both are attempts to preserve the beauty of Chinese architecture In modern building construction. Under the roof of the former Is housed a fine collection of rare Chinese books and other facilities for scholarly Peiping, and within the walls of the latter foreign doctors and Chinese trained abroad are teaching new students how to help the blind to see, the lame tc walk, and the sick to be- The home producer on the square. Hi kindneas never ends, He aells to please, we know his roods. Its fun to buy from friends. PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY Rare Books to Harvard A large collection of books and maps recently presented to Harvard university includes some rare accounts of early vegetables and explorations in America. THIS WEEKS PRIZE STORY character; and Loyalty strengthens strong characters are most essential to great states and institntions. We can strengthen our characters by buying homemade products, especially those that merit such loyalty; and thereby bring our beloved home states forward in all their beauty, power and rightful popularity. MRS. IVY GENTRY, Beaver, Utah. AT 400 Utah Oil Refining Service Stations in Utah and Idaho Size of Russia Russia is a land of more than eight million square miles, about a seventh of the total land area of the world, and has a population of approximately one hundred and fifty million persons. Church Built of Wine Casks Originally a conservatory built of old wine casks, a quaint little church stands in the redwood region of California. The structure, surrounded by a vineyard, is in the center of a grapegrowing area. Popular Mechanics Magazine. ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR APEX COUGH SYRUP NOSE DROPS AN INTERMOUNTAIN PRODUCT Similar to U. S. Laws A curious anomaly has been discovered in New Zealand law, at Auckland. It was that the maximum penalty for stealing any article from a vessel in port is fourteen years imprisonment, but the maximum penalty for stealing the vessel itself is only two years imprisonment. Utah High School of Beauty Culture 3rd Floor Clift Bldg., Balt Like Till Beauty Culture Profession City, Utah Keows no Depressiei Yon can now learn a profession that will make yon independent for the res' of yonr days. 15 per month only for the complete coarse of six months. Phone o,-- writ for onr catalogue. Mail in ctapon. - NAME come whole. ADDRESS The plane banks sharply over the Reserved City of Emperors to get yet another look at Its symphony of color and plan mathematics blended with esthetic beauty then turns toward the several flags that wave over the foreign legations. Finally you dart over the Chinese city, which from your height appears like a jumble of nursery building blocks. The dust mantle follows fast in your wake, as you return to the landing field. From the ground, detail and size are added to your perspective. Fourteen miles In circumference, fifty cubits In, height and fifty In breadth, the whole circuit having battlements and embrasures that was the completed task of the brick and stone masons more than 500 years ago. The city wall remains much the same today as when it was piled together. Wars, time, and prying tree roots, however, have caused it to crumble and bulge In places; spots show where repairs have been made. Few of the nine gates are Intact, and all but two of the corner towers have been destroyed. Tides in Rivers The Amazon river is perceptibly affected by the tides as far up as the town of Obidos, State of Para, Brazil, 400 miles from the mouth. The Mississippi river is tidal to Red River Landing, Pointy Coupee Parish, La., 307 miles above the mouth. sun-gilde- sky-ma- p d Need to Know Antarctic Weather The most practical work that explorers can do in the Antarctic, says one geographer, is to study the weather-makin- g phenomena there, which so vitally affects Australia and other southern continents. per week will be paid for the best article on Why yon should use Intermountain made Goods Similar to above. Send your story in prose or verse to Intermountain Products Column, P. O. Box 1555, Salt Lake City. If your story appears In this column you will receive check for rd $3.00 Week No. 334t W.N.U. Salt Lake City iy t |