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Show - ( t PROGRESSIVE OPINION Entered u Second Class Matter at the Post Office at Salt Lake City. UtaB, under the Act or March 3, 18 Alired Sorcnen, JPEroWgrEesLsEivRe 75 East 2nd. South s Jewelry, Watch, Kodak Repairing 40 Years In Salt Lake City, We can serve you better than ever IF YOU WANT O.K. SHOE REPAIRING J You must fro to the 01 SHOE SHOP V.icJ 4l4 gtate str--et Have your Shoes Repaired Jobs at Moderate PrlC(s J. OLIN KING OPTOMETRIST IDr.Complete Optical Service NAT'L BANK BLDG. Phone,Dial r-A-N URGENT MESSAGE : to women who suffer j FEMALE WEAKNESS ; Pew women today are free from some sign ",n-""--- " ' (0 of functional trouble. Maybe you've noticed YOURSELF getting restless, moody, ner- - &: : Y Sl tous, depressed lately your work too much te:-,- v for you f. ' Then why not take Lydia. E. Pinkham's- - jc j ( x - Vegetable Compound to help quiet weary, 't hysterical nerves, relieve monthly pain c& j ) w (cramps, backache, headache) and weak ;: J f V dizzy fainting spells due to functional ir-- ' j tlf regularities. V t '" For over 60 years Pinkham's Compound Ny 'I m has helped hundreds of thousands of weak nervous "ailing" women to go v smiling thru "difficult days." Why not give this wonderful "woman's friend" a chance a" nrc to help YOU? Try itl ' ' Vto H phr I inc NOW IS THE TIME To SUBSCRIBE Send or Bring Your $1.50 to the office of PROGRESSIVE OPINION 217 David Keith Bldg Enter the Building at 248 So. Main. Take elevator to 2d floor Come in and put a dollar or two to work for a Good Cause. Scrdtchinii b For quick relief from itching of eczema t athlete's foot, scabies, rashes lot, ternally caused skin troubles, use ort Qii cooling, antiseptic liquid D.D.D.h:i Greaseless, stainless. Soothes irnu W0! quickly stops intense itching. 35c tr. I Jw proves it. or your money back, druggist today for D. D. D. Prekf Wnf thn ARTHRITi 1 Don't despair f -- " corat bv of relief from Don t Arlt terrible Arthri- - to S. F tie aches or fine. pains. The QIV6 to. ore NEW Colloidal ey ts .. trip Iodized Sulphur UP relief capsules called daji WON SULPHO-KAP- S ho often bringwel- - nope To;. Btj:-- to k YourDruggisthaaSULPHf ther but who AjllimaM:- '- LoojcnodFin! r; For Thousands of Sufi L Choking, Rasping, wheezln? r I Bronchial Asthma ruin sleep and e: ffredlents In the prescription Mud ly circulate through the Wood sc Jy help loosen the thick stranei-th-first day, thus aiding nature id the terrible recurring chokim promoting treer breathing t: 1 i sleep. Mendaeo Is not a smoK, o: nrir lection. Just pleasant, tasteltM :' Will tablets that have helped ttioujaG. lerers. Printed guarantee with tit I back unless completely u Ask your druggist lor MentWo wdi; ( Gelling Up lights IkiesfknyFcslOld Do feel older fc pf,?.P hts.Bick.ch..fieru" 8:1 wJ2"?"Be1.? ft"0- - "memb?? Yhat yo to your health and thl these symptoms may &e due to noiSmrinlo lht IflDIGESTI ? may affect the Heart Oai trapped In the stomach er full! if on the heart. At the QOlIlr mart man and women depend on IWi- i: aat fas free. No laiatlTa but made iV'" awdlelnes known tor acid Mr h DOSE doean't ptore . Ku f botue to oa and receive DOUBLS ktootf- 13 Pecml id "Diamond Jim" f cunti Stomach or Ulcer F gress. tt Is hardly likely that Dlam y Brady could have eaten I rjij . ciously if he cjuffered aft 1 pains. Sufferers who havf the penalty o( stomach f Pains, indigestion, gas pains n . burn, burning sensation, ! 1JJ other conditions caused acid should try a 25c box ' Tablets. They must help refunded. , Mountain Chief MINERAL WATER The Wonder of the Age For External & Internal Use . For Rheumatism, Kidney or Bladder Trouble, Prostrate Glands, Tonsiiitis, Sore Throat, Swollen Joints, Stomach and Varifcose Ul-cers, Hay Fever, etc. A.WJIN8ERG & CO. 1833 So. 4th East, Salt Lake City, Utah NEW! "BACTESIOSK "FEMINIK HYGIEf'j ,u now finding great'"" . among women." "n ra Many doctors recommend nt trjj,, j of douches as a precaution ure for women who wantw troubled K or women lng odor or discharge. Some products may be M- rMrirU delicate tissues. But r" ' P n . Pinkham's Sanat ive Was" '' Q I Sanative Wash is gaininS S'.: J because it's NOT a harm D , Instcad-i- fs tcriostatic"(the7NOii'rtrfl a mighty glsl only discourages bacteria p. . infection but thoroughly' , t dorizes. Very soothlng-r- e" ty irritations and discharge tonic elTect on delicate " M Inexpensive! All drugs'5"- - DON'T FORGET US When you need any-thing in the line of neat and attractive PRINTING perhaps even death shall stand aside. Then truly people shaj live and act like they were literally made in the image of God and they shall walk with lifted heads and animated spirits, with the light of higher stages of human life on their counte-nances. That coming Age will be worth all the sacrifices that humanitvis now making. Let everyone. make ready to mett and hail its coming as a veritable heaven for mankind. You must get the vision for where there is no vision people perish. Some Things Worth Think-ing About Read and Ponder If the nations only could see how much better it would be if they would turn their money and their efforts to making peace and plenty, creating harmony, beauty and usefulness, building and perfecting, what a world they might have. But they will not. They, would rather destroy and make uglythan build up and beautify; rather feed on hate than on love; rather bring death than life; rather make widows and orphans than make happy homes and firesides. Woe be u to them for their ignorance and folly. One f the warring nations spent about as much money conquering Greece and Crete as a certain man named Pericles spent in making Athen?, the capital of Greece, the wonder of all the world from that day to this. He spent money and time and work to create harmony, undying beauty, the world's finest architecture, sculpture and painting; to develop the highest possible culture, and in an effort to attain for his peo-ple physical and mental perfection. He worked for the uni-versal good of his people and as a result both he and his works have been immortalized- - At the end of his career he remark ed : "I nevercaused. a single Athenian to wear mourning. "' Destruction of food stuffs is an unforgivable sin, and real scarcity and actual famine are sure follow such a course. I the wise ones were really wise they would let producers raise as much grain as they possibly can and store it up against the days of coming scarcity when it will be sorely needed. 4s surely as we live the Horseman riamed Famine will ride the earth before the war is concluded and after it is finished When millions of starving children and woman and men will be crying for bread it wouid be a mighty good thing if great storehouses could be opened to feed them. May the good Lord give leaders the sense and wisdom to prepare against terrible times of famine. The appeasers and obstructionists were very busy in th days of Abraham Lincoln. There were those who made his way a literal path of thorns. W en he was running for reelec-tion, The Cleveland Plain Dealer on Sept. 6, 1864, said, among many other vile things: "Who is it stands like a specter of death in the way of an honorable peace with the Union restored? Abraham Lincoln Who is Abraham Lincoln? A third rate lawyer who once kept a whiskey still up a hollow, split 3,000 rails and now splits the American Union." In its' issue of Sept. 13, 1864, the same paper said: "Lincoln is a miser able faiiure, a coarse, filthy joker, a disgusting politician, mean, cunning and cruel tyrant, and the shame and disgrace of the nation." That is the way some of Lincoln's enemies looked upon him when he was winning the war and saving the Union. Cannot men be just as mistaken today as some of them were then? Yes. No wonder that brave, patient, wise and God-lik- e man said that often he was driven to his knees coaskfor help because there was no other place to go. Won-der if there are any today like Secretary Stanton, who' stood at the bedside of the dead Emancipator and blotted from . his own soul all the hatred and bitterness he had shown for him, and in repentence cried out: "Now he belongs to the age9." And Lincoln passed on to immor lity while his detractors and defamers passed to inglorious oblivion. ' i Maybe you'll have to walk. - Discomforting prospects of . gascline rationing that might make enforced pedestrians of motorists are discussed by a prominent podiatrist, who gives timely advice about conditioning our pampered feet for the emergency. Read what he has to say on this timely subject in The American Weekly, the magazine distriduted with neit week's LOS ANGELES EXAMINER. Those who would have everything, will lose all. The only s fe investments today and tomorrow are character, tol-erance, unselfisnes and benevolence, (the things of the spirit) Those who try to develop these qualities will ride out ahead. Take your inventory today. Discard habits of thought and life that will bankrupt you tomorrow. Re-invest iu realities. Every bit of material, wealth finds its source in mother earth. Get a share of her but do not try to get too much. All you need while alive, is acreage sufficient for your family's sustenance. All you Deed after you are dead is enough for your grave. Enlist in the army of optim-ism and opportunity, realize that progress is eternal. Today's storm will be followed by tomorrow's sunshine." Fellow citizens, you believe our government is sa e, but is it? Let Us tell you te truth. In every city in this land today there are men and women, part of national organiza-tions which are ready at any moment to strike down the gov-ernment and set up a tyranny equal to those in Europe. They are prepared to the last detail and they'ro not communists. How we wish we could show them what a wreck they will make of themselves and their country when they try. In the hell they will make they will lift up their eyes and long for the condition they have blotted out. We know their aim! We plead with them not to dye their hands red with the blood of their countrymen and thus stain their family record for all time. Mr. Babsoh advises people to get out of the big centers and get a few fertile acres on some side road a few miles from any major highway, take along some canned goods, dried fruits, etc., and some oil and gas against the breakdown that it coming. In our writing of so many prophesies which foretell evil, we ait not unmindful that juft bsyohj all billows of disas-ter that loom before the nations there is a day of promise1 a day that will be golden for humanity, that will blossom with all the long-hope- d for things and conditions for which h "inan-ity has yearned through all the cruel centuries. You can i what the pure, cool water the green and the shade of an oasis in the desert can mean to thirsty, over-heate- d and travel-wor- pilgrims So the New Day to follows Armeged-do- n will be to all the bowed down and heavily burdeued men, merj and children who survive. While events will be bad enough.and all that the prophets have said they would'te, the life of man is not going out in night; it is going into the Dawn that is bright with all that humanity at Its best has desired. Then shall men build and live in and own and enjoy the cit-je- s t'f their dreams. There shall be no more exploiting, no more war, no more poverty. Disease shall be conquered, and 'Right Eyed' Pass Best Reading Test Trick Mirror Used in Tests To learn Sight Defects. EUGENE, ORE. To be right-eye-d makes reading easier. Furthermore, this advantage is so marked that being left-eye- d largely accounts for many persons, particu-larly children, being defective read-ers. Eight-eye- d or vice versa means that one or the other eye is used mainly in the work of seeing. Most persons, in using their eyes, favor one, much the same as being right or although the eyes do not necessarily class the same as the hands. The discoveries about the effect ol eyedness on reading were, made by Dr. H. R. Crosland, associate pro-fessor of psychology. University of Oregon. A - mirror device showed what was happening. In the mirror there was flashed a short line of printed matter. Each flash lasted h of a second, just long enough to be seen clearly. The lines, however, were not full length. Each contained some let-ters grouped in one of three posi-tions, either at the left end where printing starts, in the middle, or near the end of the line. The mirror could be used so that only one eye at a time could see these flashed lines. When this was done the right-eye-d persons saw the left, or starting-lin- e side, most clearly. In reading, these eye habits would mean that right-eye-d persons could a little more easily and quickly read the Startj-of each line. Mr. C. N. Lund. Editor Progressive Opinion, Dear Mr. Lund: 1 am indebted to you for many fine thoughts some of the finest that I have ever read. Outside of the general authorities of the church I (Jo not know of any man in the church who has done more, through his paper, to prepare the way for the kingdom of God, who has said more to develop in men's liv s the Christ like attrib-utes; who has done more to transform society and make this world a better place in which to live than C. N. Lund, Editor of Progressive Opinion. In season and out of season he has preached the doctrine that human na-ture must change if civiliza-tion is to survive. If Christ-ianity and civilization are to survive then papers like this one should receive suffient support to survive George E. Manwaring S.S. Teacher TOWNSEND CLUB MEETS ! Attend the regularTownsend j meeting at the Legion Hall Friday' evening 7:30 p m. OLD AGE PENSION . Utah State Old Age Pension Group in ets weekly Tus3da 2:30 P. . Chapman Library Branch iner6th South and 8h West. Wednesday 7. 30 City HallBranch. City and Co Bid Room 206. Thursday 2.p m Salt Lake City Branch at 41 Post Office Place. Watches One IraaH Ctecks Watchaa originally war imaB locka and wtra worn hung from th girdle becatua tha? war toe larga for th pocket NEWS FACTS george Africa! TOKAtVW . THREE ALBATROSS HAVE BEEN FOLLOWING A. COASTAL STEAMER FOR THIRTY --THREE PAYS AND NIGHTS, ON IT'S REGULAR STOPS ALONG THE AFRICAN COAST- -- MANY SAILORS HAVE LEFT THEIR JOB ON THE BOAT, BELIEVING THAT THIS IS A f S'SgT SIGN OF DEATH.' WHW IS HOUR 1tFi the last y &0STON,m&$$. qCr ptA THE WILL OF A LATE MILLION- - MP "AlRE RWIRES H15 SON TP h (fm$L WoRK AT A laborious ir? ffhSJ 4Si J0B During e l&st ! fflg TWO WEEKS IN AUGUST :gg OR BE DISINHERITED f The following is from our good friend and .Neighbor, Hon. Geo. A. Christensen, a State Senator and a Stake President. S. L. City, Aug. 1, 194 1 Progressive Opinion, Dear Mr. and Mrs. Lund I saw the red cross on my paper today and am glad you reminded me that my subscru ption is past due. I am anx-ious that the paper be con tinually delivered to my desk. I read every issue and have clipped more choice bits of sound and practical philoso-phy from Progressive Opin-ion than from any other pap-er or magazine. If it is necessary to double the price of subscription please bill me. In the mean-time I enclose my check gladly. Success and thanks to you both. Respectfully, Geo. A. Christensen I LITTLE MOMENTSIN BIS LIVES , |