OCR Text |
Show THE PROGRESSIVE OPINION I Pattern 7226 contains instructs making slippers in a small, med i, large size; illustrations of W) stitches; materials needed. Sen."1 U der to: Jon, Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dew 117 Minna St. San Francisco, Can, Enclose 15 cents (plus one cover cost of cent, mailing) for palle No Name Address W i u A BETTER WW $ All OF NAVIGATING I S fepVd WAS MADE possible rdL 1 Y4 HADLEY ' i IN 1731 . '!nS HE INVENlfD-- ' laV' Jt OCTANT, wZXf FORERUNNER. Nfi ,,T?2r of the familiar & 6rPk V SEXTANT 'THE BETTER WAY TO TREAT COMSTIPATIOH DUE TO LACK OF PROPER'BULK IN THE DIET IS TO CORRECT THE CAUSE OF THE TROUBLE WITH A DELICIOUS CEREAL, ffois, EAT & rff IT EVERY DAY III flri. AND DRINK PLENTY flM'KHilU ' OF WATER. """Vi'lflll , ifi TWi 7 RUG cotton makes the gayest new crocheted slippers soles and all. Get started now. They're grand for play shoes, too. They're effective in two colors and make them bright as can be! This year, your garden must pro. dace. If s important to your family, health to the nation's welfare! Your time is too valuable to gamble on info, xior seeds. Start right. Plant Ferry Qualitt Seeds because they are bred to pro. duce the best possible results. Over 65,000 tests are made annually to maintain their quality. Buy them tt your local Ferry dealer's. Send for "Ferry's Victory Garden Plan," free. Complete plan and grow, ing directions for vegetable garden. Write Dept. W-- FERRY-MORS- E StED CO. DETROIT SAN FRANCISCO REASON IT OUT AND YOU'LL j zz5$ PREFER THIS In NR (Nature's Remedy) Tablets, there are no chemicals, no minerals, no phenol derivatives. NR Tablets are different act different. Purely vegetable a combination of 10 vegetable ingre-dients formulated over 50 years ago. Uncoated or candy coated, their action is dependable, thorough, yet gentle, as millions of NR's have proved. Get a 10 Con vincer Box. Larger economy sizes, too. I0t V t(nrJ3C0ATtl) li------ or REGULAR! NR TOMORROW ALRIGHT gwou A Good Position All courses have been streamlined to quickly prepare you to answer the bis demand for qualified help. Send for information and free catalog1 today. NEW DAY AND NIGHT CLASSES START EVERY MON-DAY. HENAGER'S BUSINESS COLLEGE iS E. Broadway Salt Lake City Imports All Coal A What Comfort! . What Convenience! Locationlj ' ,7nfji--iit- i time you visit Salt Lake City! Center shops, theatres, business ... 70 g.o.r.geous rooms . . . telephones, radios Car at your door . . . New Coffee Shop . . . Low Rates. Gloversville, N. Y., has some 200 glove factories. . EASY TO MAKE-- LU ?SPfC I delicious- -. rMSHJ4Hoiyl ECONOMICAL! -- &eS7S- Tested and proved in thou- - -J- ZJ- ' II sands of homes. Ideal as a --" ' m - t Is confection a dessert ... a JW a Co'"-- 1911 Kellon Compur I 1 She lust can't seem to carry them. Too bad she's not protected with J! abortionVaccine Mads from th fsmoiia VwTl : ) train la recommended ...J tWA m V by the U. 8. Bureau 'm-;!- V i: I of Animal Indmtry. m- twvfl SALT LAKE BOISE POCATELLO OFFICE EQUIPMENT NEW AND USED desks and chairs, files, typewriters, adding nich's, safes, bk cases. S. L. DESK EX., 35 W. Broadway, S. L. C. BEAUTY SCHOOL Q..J-- L SCHOOL of BEAUTY CULTURE Largest in the West. 18 years suc-cessful operation. Modern, thorough, prac-tical. Enroll anytime. Write for catalogue. 338 South Main Salt Lake City, Utah PERSONALS DR. LEVI DELK, foot specialist, corns, cal-luses, ingrown club nails, bunions, flat feet, weak arches corrected. Complete treatment, both feet. SI. 50. 304 Felt Bldg., Salt Lake BARBER COLLEGE EARN WHILE YOU LEARN. Demand for barbers. Salt Lake Barber College, 170 Regent St., formerly Moler Barber College. ORANGE CHECKER CAB CO. PBBi For You To Feel Well 24 hours every day, 7 days every Week, never stopping, the kidneys filter waste matter from the blood. If more people were aware of how the Iddneys must constantly remove sur-plus fluid, excess acids and other waste matter that cannot stay in the blood without injury to health, there would be better understanding of why the whole system is upset when kidneys fail to function properly. Burning, scanty or too frequent urina-tion sometimes warns that something fa wrong. You may suffer nagging back-ache, headaches, dizziness, rheumatic pains, getting up at nights, swelling. Why not try Doan't Pillal You wffl be using a medicine recommended the country over. Doan'a stimulate the func-tion of the kidneys and help them to flush out poisonous waste from the blood. They contain nothing harmful. Get Doan't today. Use with confidence. At all drug stores. C PASSENGER CAN HIDE IN A CHECK-ER CAB FOR THE PRICE OP ONE. COMFORT AND SAFETY. COURTEOUS DRIVERS. PHONE - SALT LAKE. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Reconditioned Band Instruments at bargain prices. Liberal trades. BEESLEY MUSIC CO., 70 So. Main. Salt Lake City. Utah USED EQUIPMENT INTERMOUNTAIN MERCHANTS SUPPLY (Dealers in Bankrupt Stocks) We buy and sell all kinds of business fix-tures and equip. Cash reRisters, meat scales, office equip. 56 E. 4th So., Salt Lake City USED CARS TRAILERS USED CARS TRAILER COACHES Liberal Credit Terms JESSE M. CHASE Buy Sell Trade 651 So. Main Street Salt Lake City also locations in BOISE, POCATELLO. BLACKFOOT USED TIRES We have a limited number of good used tires 17" to 23" for use on farm wagons Build a 'wagon from your old car. LYMAN MOTOR COMPANY 587 South Main St.. Salt Lake City, Utah Coal and Electric Used Ranges SAVE WASTE PAPER Uncle Sam Needs Your Waste Paper ."' Save It for the Local Collector FOR THE BEST OF LIVING r" -- V " THE BELVEDERE P?fK) 4cfS l APARTMENT HOTEL Ulv j llk' ' REASONABLE RATES' fef L'j f Month - Week - Day fP K 1 ' i MODERN . . . FIREPROOF ... H " t Hf.fe U CENTRAL LOCATION WITH iH1 OR WITHOUT KITCHENS. ISkiSil-- - j The Belvedere Apartment Hotel 29 SOUTH STATE STREET .CALV'N - JACK Ma"9er - SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH T TOim VISIT on t t 1 W I 1 NEW 550.000 f. COFfEE SHOP ' ' needs ! Do Your Pari by Saying Your Tires Largest selection in the west. $10 to $75. Fully reconditioned, guaranteed. 1 yr. terms INTERMOUNTAIN UTILITIES 151 South State St.. Salt Lake City, Utah FEEDS AND SEEDS All kinds of field and garden seeds. Poultry supplies. Baby Chicks, Hardware, Fencing, Motor Oil, Binding twine. Roofing. White Faun Flour. All kinds of case groceries. Honey, molasses, syrup, salt and many other items. Always a saving buy early and avoid disappointment. Don't worry about delivery Our trucks will be by your door. Write us for any information on feeding, seeds, etc Maxfield Feed, Coal, Seed & Flour Co. Whse, ft main office, 8rd So. & 1st West Salt Lake City, Utah BABY CHICKS TODAY TURKEY POULTS TO ORDER COMPLETE LINE OF POULTRY EQUIPMENT Write for free literature RAMS HA W'S UTAH PIONEER HATCHERY S687 SO. MAIN ST., SALT LAKE CITY PH iuimc UTAH MERCHANTS Your Advertising Dollar tnTcJ f re than Space and circulation in SculaZ lh,1S rnewsPaP. It buys space and rSMUS faVOrable consideration of our newspaper and its advertising patrons. LET US TELL YOU MORE ABOUT IT Italians Enjoyed Ice Cream The Italians enjoyed the delights of ice cream at least a few hun-dred years back; and the old Ro-mans, among other advanced ideas, developed the mustard plaster for the same purpose our medical men use it today. i TO YOU GOOD HEALTH By Dr. Jas. W. Barton J (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) ON BECOMING OLD Now that the span of We has been lengthened and the average is now about 66 years of age, it can be seen that there are more older indivjdu- - als in proportion 10 the general popula-tion than at any time in the worlcTs known history. This means that many men past 65, active mentally and phys-ically, are being "retired" from their positions in indus-try. What is going to become of these m-- Dr. Barton dividuals physically aside from any financial considera-tions? Many of them are going to be-come "old" almost immediately be-cause they are removed from their every-da- y habits of life. Some of our older folk are wise in that they have prepared themselves previous-ly to meet their day of retirement by some definite daily occupation or hobby. Dr. E. Breuler, in his book "Text of Psychiatry" states "Senility (old age) often becomes a disease only as a result of the sudden stopping of the ordinary attractions of life." Postponing Old Age. There is a worker in a coal yard In Pittsburgh who, at the end of 50 years service with one company, was called to the office and pre-sented with a suitably engraved gold watch, a present of $500, and told that from that date till he died his wages would be paid but he need not report for work any more. He told bis employers that he would ac-cept the watch and the money but that he would report as usual for work every morning. This work-man knew that his whole life was bound up in that coal yard and his fellow workmen. To remain In bed in the morning, have a late break-fast, or irregular meals, would up-set his normal mental and physical habits indigestion, constipation, de-pression of spirits and bring on "real" old age. The thought then is that while some who are retired may have to find work of some kind, those that can live in their own home or with their children should establish regu-lar daily health habits as to food, exercise and sleep. Asthmatic Children Yield to Treatment When a physician investigating the cause of asthma in 329 cases in children is able to find the cause in 252 or over 75 per cent, it must be admitted that asthma has now passed the place where it can be called an incurable disease. Today, physicians, while giving the usual treatment for attacks, are patiently trying to learn the cause in each individual case. Dr. A. V. Stoesser, Minneapolis, in Minnesota Medicine, reports his study rt 329 cases and found that foods, pollen from plants, and other substances in the air were, as above noted, the causes in three of every four cases. Fifty-eigh- t children had ' attacks of asthma associated with infections of nose, throat, sinuses, and bronchial tubes. Because ton-sillitis occurred often in this group, the tonsils and adenoids were re-moved and 38 obtained definite re-lief. The remaining 20 were not helped by the operation and a few of them were made worse. ' There were 122 children whose asthma was not due to food or pol-len from plants but to house dust, feathers and cottonseed. Trying to desensitize these children by hypo-dermic injection was not very suc-cessful. The children sensitive to house dust were difficult to treat be-cause house dust could not be com-pletely removed from the household. The cases sensitive to feathers re-sponded well to the thorough remov-al of feathers from the home. At first children sensitive to cot-tonseed were also difficult to treat but with the reduction in amount of linter dust, good results were ob-tained. Some of the articles of fur-niture containing linter cotton were replaced by special mattresses and cushions made of materials free or almost free of allergic irritants. Patients sensitive to fur or dan-druff were cured by removal of these animal substances from their surroundings. Sudden changes in the weather did have some influence on the asthma, especially among children sensitive to house dust. Thus it will be seen that the cause of the great majority of these cases of asthma in .ch.ild.ren was found. QUESTION BOX Q. What causes me to become dizzy? A. Dizziness in head Is often due to an ear disturbance and some-times to a liver disturbance. Q. Is it possible to receive inocu-lations for immunization of poison ivy? A. A serum has been made, but the reaction is very severe in some cases, so it is not popular at pres- ent. Chewing the poison Ivy leaves is not recommended. Q. Is uncooked cereal harmful to those with a gall bladder condition? A. General role in gall bladder diet Is to avoid irritating or rough foods. Nothing in uncooked cereal to do harm otherwise. Q. Is it possible to be syphilitic without showing any outward signs' A. It is possible to have syphilid in the blood without any outward symptoms. It may occur without the knowledge of the individual and may be inherited. It is unfortunate but many innocent people are thus afflicted. Take treatment your nhv lcian advises. WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS By Edward C. Wayne McNutt Heads Nine-Ma- n Commission To Conscript Essential War Workers; DeGaulle Urges Countrymen to Revolt As Laval Takes Over Rule of France (EDITOR'S NOTE When opinions are expressed In these columns, they are those of the news analyst and not necessarily of this newspaper.) I (Released by Western Newspaper Trntnn f ,! " ,. . ? & v 1 ! ' f V f i ' H ' - i Gaston Henrl-Hay- e, Vichy French ambassador to the United States (left) as he talked with newsmen at the state department in Washington when he called upon Undersecretary of State Sumner Welles. His visit, occurring a short time after Laval became France's chief of government, was of a conciliatory nature. MOBILIZATION: Of Manpower On the home front President Roosevelt had moved to mobilize the entire manpower of the nation, plac-ing Paul V. McNutt in charge of the commission which would be charged with this duty. It was given pow-ers, and not only to draft and place men, but women into industry which would produce the goods needed to win the war. The commission of nine members was to include WPB chief Donald Nelson, also representatives from the war, navy, agriculture and la-bor departments, the selective serv-ice system, civil service and a new labor section of the WPB. At the time when the older men were to register, the 45 to 64 group, and at a time when some millions of potential selectees were listed in classes not available for military service, it was seen as a distinct probability that the McNutt commis-sion would begin to draw on this reservoir of manpower. At the same time Sidney Hillman, labor chief of WPB, and former part-ner with General IJnudsen in the former war production setup, was called into the White House inner circles as a special adviser to the President on labor matters. It had been thought that Hillman was on his way out. Suddenly the nation discovered that he was not on the way out, but in. BOMBING: Jap Cities Suffer America's spring tonic had been the sensational report, from Japa-nese sources, it was true, but in Allied circles and hence accepted, that American planes, probably carrier-base- had wreaked havoc and destruction on Tokyo and three other great Nipponese centers, including vital Kobe. Some of the angles of the Jap broadcasts had been efforts to gain information as to the source of the attack which apparently had been as much of a surprise to Japan and as much of a mystery as had been the attack on Pearl Harbor. Attempting to pierce the veil of censorship and silence in Allied cir-cles, observers tried to figure the strength and source of the raids, and most of them believed it had been from two U. S. carriers, and might have comprised as many as 100 navy bombing planes. The Japs claimed that nine were shot down. The Japs told of huge fires being started, and 20 hours after the raids had admitted, in their own broadcasts, that the fires in Tokyo had not been completely quenched. From this the American imagina-tion was able to gather a picture of huge blazes roaring through the close-packe- flimsy wood and paper houses of Tokyo's suburbs, the after-math of five hours of bombing. Simultaneous raids on four cities widely spaced geographically could hardly, they had pointed out, have been carried out from a single car-rier. If the raids had been by land planes, observers had said, the gov-ernment would not have kept si-lence, as raids by American planes based in Australia, with a sub-bas- e AUSTRALIA: The d and expected in-vasion move by the Japs against Australia seemed less and less like-ly to come as fuller reports came in of American-Aussi- e air successes. Despite Jap bombings of Port Moresby, the news was dominated by allied raids on Timor, New Brit-ain and New Guinea, with dire re-sults, and it seemed that we had grabbed off air supremacy and the initiative in that part of the Pacific. Reports of American strength in Australia, which had come to this country as being "considerable," were believed to be increasingly large when Marshall's statement about "an army corps" referring to the Ireland troops was given out. This was cheering news to many who expected an all-o- assault on Australia. People said that if we had that sort of strength in Ireland, what must we have in Australia? For it had generally been accepted that that would be our main theater of war in the immediate future. in the Philippines, upon Jap hold-ings there had been promptly re-ported to us, and later by the Japs. A few doubted, because of Allied silence, that the raids had occurred at all, but these were in the tre-mendous minority, compared with those who had accepted the Jap re-ports of their own disaster, and had preened themselves joyously over the avengement of Pearl Harbor and Bataan, and that the bombing of Tokyo had been carried out. LAVAL: And Power Pierre Laval had leaped into the saddle of the Vichy government, and the immediate aftermath had been the recall of Ambassador Leahy and an attitude1 of watchful waiting on the part of Washington to see which way the cat would jump. While it was considered a prob-ability that the eventual outcome would be the recognition of the DeGaulle movement as the real French government, this action was not immediately taken. Laval's first act in forming his government was to put 13 of his closest friends into a cabinet of 21 members. He did submit the names to Marshal Petain, and received the aged general's approval, but this had been considered a mere matter of course, as the feeling was that Petain had actually laid down the reins of government and was simply a rubber stamp. Laval split the civil and military divisions of government, abolished the national defense ministry, and kept three posts for himself, the ministries of foreign af-fairs, interior and information the latter, that is to say, propaganda. DeGaulle's reaction came from London, where he broadcast in French to his people calling on them to revolt, saying "the duty of each one is to fight relentlessly against both the enemy and the men of Vichy, to drive them out and sabo-tage their orders." Secretary Hull had returned to Washington, and pushed prepara-tions in a diplomatic way to frus-trate the Vichy coup against the Western hemisphere. He had had a serious breakdown, and had been convalescing in Flor-ida, but cut short his convalescence to return to the capital because of the critical turn in U. af-fairs. RUSSIA: Holds the Ball The Red army, fighting back Ger-many's spring offensive and turning the tables on the Nazis, were still "carrying the ball." There was no question but that they were being vastly aided by their allies, England and the United States, in two ways by the sending of large quantities of vital supplies, and by the tremendous non-sto- p Royal Air force bombings of Ger-many and occupied France. These latter were being carried out daily and nightly, by average forces of several hundred bombers and fighters, the high water mark being in excess of 400 planes. And these were no baby bombers either, but huge, d ships, some of them American, most of them British built. One raid, the British estimated, cut off the supplies that would have kept five divisions in the field. Despite this great aid, too much credit could not be given the Rus-sians for the magnificent fight they were putting up. Berlin had been admitting break-throughs, and from the Murmansk end of the 2,000-mil- e battle line down to the Crimea, success after suc-cess was reported. There had been a serious break of the German line near the Kare-lian isthmus, a point heretofore not mentioned in Moscow dispatches. UNREST: Not only were the Japs jittery over the bombing of their own main-land, but the Italians were said to be much upset. Premier Mussolini was said to have "fired" several home defense leaders and to have called a con-ference of the remainder. As to Hitler, some circles saw in the Laval coup a hope on the part of Hitler that if forced to make an unfavorable peace on account of. the failure in Russia, he would be better oft with Laval as mediator. First Greek Sorority ' The first Greek letter sorority in the United States was Kappa Alpha Theta, founded in DePaw univer-sity in 1879. 'Divine Sarah' Sarah Bernhardt, in her later years, pulled back her WTinkles to her neck and fastened them with a clothespin device to satisfy her audiences, who always expected to find her the "Divine Sarah." Sacrifice of Self Love is the gift of self. Ds may vary in the degree of inte' sity, but it is ever the same it is always and everywhere the sac rifice of self. Canon Liddon Joseph Washed Face Joseph is the only person of whom the Bible says that he washed his face. But the Christian is commanded to wash his face as a religious duty in Matthew 6:17. Result of Conviction Conviction brings a silent, in-- ! definable beauty into faces made of the commonest human clay. Balzac. LADY, REMEMBER. WHEN C 1 Y0U BAKE AT HOME, THE ( J0 ONLY YEAST WITH ALL C o THESE VITAMINS IS I xx M o.soe-Lo- Vitamin 350 Units (.) Vitamin 0-50 Units (Sb. Bovr.) "t m the oven. Ask for Fleischmann's Fresh YeVst--with the yellow Ubci |