OCR Text |
Show THE PROGRESSIVE OPINION . " i By Ruth Wyeth Spears y Treat Constipation This Gentler Way ! Many folks say that almost as bad as constipation are harsh cathartics and purges. That's because many medicinal laxa-tives work this way: they either prod the intestines into action or draw moisture Into them from other parts of the body. Now comes news of a gentler and plcasanter way of treating constipation, for the millions of people with normal Intestines whose trouble is due to lack of "bulk" in the diet. This way Is by eating KELLOGG'S a crisp, delicious cereal, and drinking plenty of water. unlike many medici-nal laxatives, acts principally on the contents of the colon and helps you to have easy, normal elimination. Is made by Kellogg's in Battle Creek. If your condition Is not helped by this simple treatment, better see your doctor. i also gives directions 0fm .sup covers, dressing Uble skirti 12 different styles of curtains Sding a simple rigging for draw cur-- S t get a copy of Book 1. send your order to: I MRS. RUTH WYETH SPEARS New York Bedford Hills Drawer 10 Enclose 10 cents for Book 1. Name Address PERSONALS DR LEV! DELK. foot specialist, corns, cal-luses, injrrown club nails, bunion9, flat feet, weak arches corrected. Complete treatment, both feet. 11. SO 304 Felt Bide. Salt Lake OFFICE EQUIPMENT NEW AND USED desks and chairs. Mies, typewriters, addinft mch's, safes, 8. L. DESK EX., 35 W. Broadway. 8. L. C. PERSONALS DEAFNESS, noises relieved. Address DR. TAYLOR. Ear Specialist. Cameron. Texas. USED CARS TRAILERS USED CARS TRAILER COACHES , Liberal Credit Terms JESSE M. CHASE Buy Sell Trade7 ' 151 So. Main Street Salt Lake City also locations in BOISE. POCATELLO. BLACKFOOT USED TIRES W hove a limited number of Rood ased tires 17" to 23" for use on farm wagons Build a wajron from your old car. LYMAN MOTOR COMPANY B87 South Main St., Salt Lake City. Utah First in Flavor JZlJ Tops in Quality. INS .V' AT CR0CERS I EVERYWHERE EVERY kind of cotton goods dainty chintz to bold plaid gingham is being used for bedspreads. Most of these ma-terials are about 36 inches wide and you will need 11 yards for a bed 54 inches wide. See diagrams for cutting dimensions. Cut the center portions first; then the side sections for the pillow cover; then the strips for the pillow cover and spread. This leaves a strip for the side ruffles of the spread. If you make your own seam welting, cover cord with bias strips basted, as at A, and stitched with the cording foot, as at B. NOTE: This bedspread Is from BOOK 1 of the series of booklets which Mrs. Spears has prepared for our readers. This UsUrJ-xJc;- H Applicator I DASH IN FiATIuTlsV""t",'""! 1 CAUOUSESfS . relieve painful callouses, J ing or tenderness on bottom of feet w)fojr and remove callouses get these Uvt thin, eoothing, cushioning pads. jfI W$$S .Results count, but socio,. " yr&N t. cost ... Save, when you buy I vFLks Clabber Girl; save by using n "Z-- HOT "C t more Clabber Girl than your V 'avorite recipe directs. g Xrfj TtldtkeiWL KNOWS jwTA -- iUti II ..rTzTrr-:-. .. - 1 White Fawn Flour Leads Them All Ask your Friendly Grocer W.N.U. Week No. 4224 SALT LAKE As a rule experience cannot be disposed of at cost price. f 'l'li SURE DEATH EXTERMINATOR in lh iljS ALL-OU- T VICTORY ij Effort on Your Part to Kill Rats. Mice and Cockroaches and Conserve Health and Foodstuffs 35c and M OO AT ALL DRUGGISTS on "certain days" of month If functional monthly disturbances make you nervous, restless, high-strun- g, cranky, blue, at such times try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound famous for over 60 years to help relieve such pain and nervous feelings of women's "difficult days." Taken regularly Pinkham's Compound helps build up resist-ance against such annoying symp-toms. Follow label directions. Well DON'T LET CONSTIPATION SLOW YOU UP When bowels are sluggish and you feel irritable, headachy and everything you do is an effort, do as millions do chew the modem chewing gum laxative. Simply chew before you go to bed sleep with-out being disturbed next morning gentle, thorough relief, helping you feel swell again, full of your normal pep. Try Tastes good, is handy and economical. A generous family supply FEEII-A-LIII- IT To it 1 ' AFRICA'S FAVORITE H Jj yv'-- l READY'T0'EAT lmi1 r Get several packages today and enjoy the SELF-START-ER breakfast' A big bowlful of Kellogg's Corn Flakes with some fruit ond lots of milk. fyai4frSlfOU (VITAMINS! PROTEINS! yr7 ( MINERALS! FOOD ENERGY! If you're concerned about what sort of gift to send a friend or rela-tive in one of Uncle Sam's branches of the services, your worries are over. If he smokes a pipe or the answer is a pound of tobacco. Numerous surveys made am,ong soldiers, sailors marines, and Coast Guardsmen show that tobacco ranks first on his gift list. Local tobacco dealers are featuring Prince Albert in the pound can for service men. Prince Albert, the world's largest-sellin- g smok-ing tobacco, is a big favorite among many men in the service. Adv. Don't Neglect Them I Ksture designed the kidneys to do a marvelous job. Their tuk is to keep the flowing blood stream free of an excena of toxic impurities. The act of living lift ittelf is constantly producing waste matter the kidneys must remove from the blood if good heath Is to endure. When the kidneys fail to function as Nature intended, there Is retention of waste that may cause e dis-tress. One may suffer nagging backache, persistent headache, attacks of dizziness, getting up nights, swelling, puffiness under the eyes feel tired, nervous, all worn out. Frequent, scanty or burning passages are sometimes further evidence of kid-ney or bladder disturbance. The recognized and proper treatment Is a diuretic medicine to help the kidneys get rid of excess poisonous body waste. Use Doan't Pills. They have had mors than forty years of public approval. Are endorsed the country over. Insist on Doan's. Sold at all drug stores. WNU W 2442 ' - - . i t . v vK - - fcwW,.fa iYl. Wtw,m,r UkUik fltaOO Ciy, fjj Tbu photo taken in action in Bataan hV.S. Amy Snnsl llie War isn't fought in Fox Holes alone IT'S fought in the mind. It's fought with a will tc It's fought with a belief in a cause worth Possessions fr01" Alaska to the Caribbean, dying for. Today itJ work far netd gfeater evef( ;ts That will, that belief, is known as morale fUdS t0 0n more than doubIei Our enemies have had years of indoctrination The Mp ""' h"! have been conditioned to believe themselves part of High overnmeQt military officials-includ- ing new order" ... to which the contribution of their Geeral MacArtlnn--bav-e praised the work done by hves is small but USO and the war elves They believe them "Agnized its importance in cogs in a vast machine. ffort Our soldiers do not fight that way-bec- ause But h needs "cognition from in do not live that way. Theirs is the belief in the san7' W"y f doUars and s. For the six national My ot the individual. agencies which comprise the USO are publicly sf" To maintain their P01. morale in the USO has devoted aU its time and American energy since wav thr 7 abVe aU times- - t0 mak y" dolIarS bcaUy the beginning of conscription. P Slve to the USO! It has done this by staffing and y0Ur USO Com- - houses near aU training camp, and iTZS Send T"? Na&nal Headquarter, USO. S Biuldmg. New York, N. Y. Give to the USO Honey Icing. Since sugar rationing has gone into effect, household ers will begin to look for substitutes to satisfy the sweet tooth. Honey and molasses will be used more often and for more purposes in the kitchen than they were in pre-w- days. Yet cakes, which call for large amounts of sugar, may still be made if other sweets are used for the trimmings. Here honey has 9 a good use, for as a frosting it is light, not too sweet, 9 and an attractive delicate yellow in color. , ' Directions:, Measure one cup of honey, and heat it on the top of the stove until it pours easily. While the honey is warming, beat up one egg white to which teaspoon salt has been added. When the honey is warm enough to pour easily, driz-zle it into the egg white and continue .beating the mixture. Beat until the frosting is stiff. Flavoring may be added if desired, Blue Cheese Dressing. For something a little different in Salad Dressings, the Blue Cheese Dressing will add a variety to your salads that will delightfully surprise the family. Here Is the recipe: Mix cup of oil with a half pound of mashed Blue Cheese. Let it stand for a short time and add two tablespoons of white wine vinegar, tarragon or malt. Add salt and pepper, a tablespoon of lemon juice and a few drops of Worces-tershire. Stir before using and keep cold. - Rust Heaves Builjj As iron pyrite begins to h exposure to air, and thi. U cupies 13 times as muchVoc. ; the pyrite itself, buiMn structed on soil c contain!,, sulphide soon have a "L foundation," says Collier' lr! trouble has been experiJ' one large factory ij, Ctt bj where the basement flo0eVelaH raised as much as 12 JsLe'( the first 12 years. ch it ' WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS Jap Naval Losses Off Midway Island Strengthen U. S. Position in Pacific; Terrific Bombing Attacks by British Stun Nazi's War Effort in Rhineland (EDITOlt'S NOTE When opinions are expressed In these j!!J'.?;iJ?rT lire those or the news analyst and not necessarily of this J Released by Western Newspaper Union. I h' J' - ill v y I ' f "t" fx This unusual photo shows representatives of the British common-wealth gathered at the Washington airport to welcome Sir Owen Dixon, new Australian minister to the United Stales. Left to right: Walter Nash, New Zealand; Sir Owen Dixon, Australia; Ralph W. Close, Union of South Africa; Sir R. I. Campbell, British embassy, and Leighton McCarthy, Canada. MIDWAY: Melee "Pearl Harbor has now been par-tially avenged. Vengeance will not be complete until Japanese sea pow-er has been reduced to impotence. We have made substantial progress in that direction." With these blunt, stirring words, Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, command-er in chief of the Pacific fleet, an-nounced a decisive United States na-val victory at Midway Island. In a remarkable demonstration of the co-ordinated power of the three Ameri-can services navy, army and m-arinesa Japanese invasion fleet was repulsed with the greatest losses of the current war. From 14 to 17 Japanese warships were sunk or damaged, according to early reports. Included were two or three aircraft carriers sunk and one or two lost; three battleships damaged, four or six cruisers dam-aged, three transports damaged and one destroyer sunk. Continuing at-tacks on the fleeing enemy made it impossible to state whether the ships bombed in pursuit had been dam-aged previously. At the conclusion of the four-da- y action, Adm. Ernest J. King, com-mander in chief of the American fleet, hinted that the United States has a chance to knock out Japan as a sea power. The battle, he said, may determine the outcome of the war in the Pacific. Hawaii, he said, "must be held at all costs," because it is the key-stone to the entire Pacific defense system. Midway, 1,312 miles from Pearl Harbor, is a vital outpost in the Hawaiian defense. MENACE: On the Run? Axis submarines operating along the Eastern seaboard have been driven out into the Atlantic, accord-ing to Chairman Carl Vinson (Geor-gia) of the house naval affairs com-mittee. His disclosure came in a formal statement which added that the warfare organiza-tion has passed through its period of growing pains and is now well established and functioning effec-tively." "In dealing with submarines we have a tough and clever enemy," the statement said, "and it does not pay to be unduly optimistic. ' How-ever, the fact remains that in the last few weeks the submarine has largely withdrawn from our eastern seaboard and is operating farther at sea . . "The committee has full con-fidence that we shall defeat the submarine." For Soldiers U. S. army units in England and Northern Ireland are now using a new and unique mail system for contacts . with the United States. Known as this system pro-vides that letters may be dispatched to a central station, censored and then photographed on small rolls of microfilm. Under army direction these rolls are then sent to the United States where they are developed and pho-tostatic copies are presented to the postal service and sent through reg-ular mails to the addressee. Value of plan lies in the fact that microfilm saves cargo space in eliminating mail shipments. POISON GAS: Another Warning Within a month after Winston Churchill had warned Germany that any use of gas warfare by the Nazis would be met with the same tactics. President Roosevelt has warned Ja-pan that if she persists in using gas against China the U. S. will re-taliate in "kind and full measure." This statement by the President came as a confirmation of reports that Japan was using noxious gases in battles with the Chinese. He said sternly that if the prac-tice continued the United States would deal with Japan in the same way. This applies, said the President, whether the Japs use gas against China or any other of the United Nations because "such action will be regarded by this government as though taken against the U. S." In what manner this retribution might be carried out continued to be a matter of secrecy. However, Mr. Roosevelt's hearers immediate-ly thought of the American bomb-ing attacks upon key Jap cities. SEA RAID: On Australia The cities of Sydney and Newcas-tle on Australia's southeast coast were shelled by Japanese forces in the first sea raid on that country's mainland since the beginning of the war. Termed "nuisance" raids by Gen-eral MacArthur's headquarters, these first attacks caused little dam-age and there were few casualties. Submarines were used for the at-tack. At Sydney the shells whistled over the city so fast it was impossible to estimate their number. Newcas-tle was shelled for 30 minutes. Both cities were blacked out and resi-dents hustled 'to their air raid shel-ters. The attacks came only a week after four of the enemy's midget submarines were destroyed as they attempted a sortie into Sydney's harbor. Also in the same week three and possibly four other subs were destroyed in the' southwest Pa-cific. Increased submarine activity off the lower Australian coast was be-lieved to be aimed at cutting Al-lied communications and supply lines as well as anattempt to divert United Nations' naval units from the more major scenes of action, I.E., between Alaska and Hawaii. SECOND FRONT: In Germany's Air The stunning effect of the monster RAF bombing raid upon Cologne known to the world when the first newspapers from that historic Rhineland city reached neutral ter-ritory. Cologne, as its people knew it, is forever lost, according to the dis-patches. Whole quarters of the town are empty, and a Stockholm news-paper, quoting a German dispatch, reported that all the property of at least 10,000 persons had been de-stroyed completely. The central dis-trict of the city was ruined and damage reached far into the city's outskirts. The Koelnische Zeitung, Cologne newspaper, said: "Those who survived the night . . . and who on the morrow looked at the city were fully aware that they had bade farewell forever to their Cologne, because the damage is enormous and because the integral part of the character and even the traditions of the city are gone for-ever." While the Cologne bombing was followed by a attack on Essen, home of the great Krupp armament plants, a complete pic-ture of the damage to that industrial center is lacking. However, Eng-land was jubilant over these "sec-ond front" activities. The initial raid on Essen was followed the next night by a second "mopping up" raid, employing an estimated 400 bombers. BRIEFS: DAUGHTERS: Cautioning that se-vere labor shortages may develop, Secretary of Agriculture Claude Wickard has urged rural families to keep their daughters on the farm to help with war food production. INDEPENDENT Despite Adolf Hitler's surprise visit to Finland, a government spokesman stated that the nation would "continue to steer a strictly independent course." LOSS After two months of opera-tions over Burma, the U. S. air forces have announced the loss of their first heavy bomber in that area. Meanwhile they have been doing a terrific job of blasting Japa-nese offensive plans. FOOD Approximately 1,300 fac-tories employing 20,000 workers will be closed by orders originating in Vichy, France. The workers will be diverted to a labor pool to man farms expected to produce food re-serves for next winter and to pro-vide volunteers for labor in German war factories. CHARTER All ships under the Dutch flag are being requisitioned for the duration of the war by the Netherlands government - in - exile. These ships are to be chartered by the United States under an agree- ment reached between lease-len- d of-ficials, British and Dutch authori-ties. EXTENDED The Netherlands and Norway were offered the bene-fits of U. S. lease-len- d activities as these governments were presented with a master agreement similar to ones previously accepted by Great Britain and China. WWmM Could Be Teacher How was iron ore first discovered? Jimmy I believe they smelt it. False and True Jensen You can't judge a thing by what it costs. Johnson That's true. My false teeth were very expensive, while the real ones I got free. As a rule experience cannot be disposed of at cost price. Memory Good "Have you forgotten that $5 you owe me?" "By no means. Didn't you see me try to dodge into that door-way?" Somehow Tramp Knew He Wasn't Addressing George A tramp, coming down a country road in England, stopped a mo-ment in meditation before a sign on which was written: "George and the Dragon." He then en-tered the tavern to which the sign was affixed and asked for the land-lady. "Noble lady," he began, "have you a meal and some old clothes to spare for a poor, tired and hun-gry man?". ....... "Not for the likes of you. Now go!" she said sternly. Then, see-ing he desired to get another word with her, "Well?" ".Then please, ma'am, could I speak to George!" r j Sargasso Sea The Sargasso sea, a part of the North Atlantic which covers an area as large as that of the con-tinental United States, is unique in that it is relatively motionless and that it far exceeds in size any other water or land area in the world devoted exclusively to the growth of a single species of plant, which is a floating seaweed, says Collier's. Incidentally, this weed is also unique because it grows, at the tips as it dies at the base. Power of Horse Under normal working condi-tions, the average horse does only two-thir- as much work as a engine. In cases of emergency, however, this animal has produced 21 horsepower, or more than 30 times as much energy. |