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Show UINTAH BASIN RECORD. DUCHESNE. UTAn EVERY UNSOUND... AND SICKLY DAME, WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS U.S. Revamps Of Pinkham's, a Snifter Was Quite a Lifter ...SANG ' iment were apt to be in every chest. Jean Burton on Lydia Pinkham brings back memories of a day when the prim face of A book by Mother Sills Seasickness Fills, Swamproot, and Glovers Hair Restorer were in every drug store, too. It was the era when they were pioneer advertisers. Back when the Bear in the Bear that lady stared from billboard, magazine and newspaper. That was away back when Old Mr. Munyon, Father Duffy, Bigelow & Healys Kickapoo Indian Sagwa, Cascarets, Alcotts Kidney Plasters, Paynes Celery Compound and Sloanes Lin 11 Da . Qp Go! The hef1 fceo Usht ofhein B'!m& h Cod ,hc lord ? ShUld Pinkhams In Mind slogan made an old-ticereal famous, when the Winchester calendars were a must in thousands of homes and when the folks went for stick licorice. Old Battleaxe cut plug, snake oil, bay rum. Sweet Caporal cigarettes, snuff and flaxseed poultices. It was the period when mom gave the kids pumpkin seeds for worms, tied an old sock around their necks for sore throat and put an onion bag on their chests for croup. became one of the greatest newspaper advertisers in history. And what a believer .in advertising Lydia was! Remedy y They were all familiar up around New England in our boyhood. We can still in fancy catch the aroma of Kickapoo Indian 'Sagwa, Florida Water, Witch Hazel (still going strong from a base at Essex, Conn.), Porto Rico Bay Rum, Paynes Celery Compound and Sloanes Liniment, good for man or beast. Bur-gome- ODE FOR SEPTEMBER September time is here anew I'll take a bowl of oyster stew; Again Ill ask and ask, How do The crackers always seem so few?" It has been a perfect summer for nocl knew under-FlCTIO- s, ' I 'r HUMPHREY BOGART bias Tokyo Joe. And by the way, dont leap from your seats when you see a 24 by 18 feet cricket filling the screen in that picture. Just an ordinary cricket, it was magnified 26,184 times to fill the screen, to herald menace scenes be- tween Bogart and Hayakawa. Eleanor Parker, who lost some five pounds worrying about Bogart in Chain Lightning, and another four as a convict in Warners Locked In, then headed for a ranch to sleep for weeks and weeks, she said. Mr. Deeds Goes to Town added the words doodler and pixilated to every-davocabularies. In Return of October" Terry Moore called Glenn Ford a schnookle," and it caught on. Now Columbia has done it again. In Miss Grant Takes Richmond, Lucille Ball coins the word doof-e- r a stenographic symbol that will doofer symbols she cant remember. y Barbara Stanwyck has made it a policy not to make screen tests with other actors, but broke her rule for the first time in 10 years to test opposite Ljle Bettger. He got the contract; theyre teamed in Paramounts The Lie. Montgomery Clift, of Red River ami is the No. 1 The Heiress, Star of Tomorrow, nccuiding to Motion Pictuie IV raids annual poll of theatre operators. Kirk Douglas came in second, Betty Garrett third. in - r wun f r"" "" r. Now, top delicious ACROSS I. Harvest 5 9 10. 11. 12 14 15. Butts City (Nev.) River (Russ.) Made into a large package Storms Topaz Keel-Ilk- e part (Bot.) 18 Being on the right side 19. Twofold 20. 21. 23. 26. 27 28. seed vessel 6. Of the country 6. Sandarac tree 7. The Three 21. Stolen Wise Men 8. Slim 24. 4. A 11. 13. Not good Extents of canvas (naut.) 15. A feline 17. Civil wrong 18. A wagon wheel groove 22. or wedge Hastened 25. Indefinite article 26. Russian measure 23. Slice 30. Foun- dations 31. Similar 32. Theater seats 33. Possess All-Br- an fc THESE ADD UP TO HOUSING HEADACHE . . . Across the nation, if there was any relief from the housing shortage, it was spotty, inadequate. The twins (above) born to her in Brooklyns womens hospital made the shortage doubly acute for Mrs. William Buckley. She and her husband, together with another child, apartment. Mrs. add up to five people who- must share Buckley wondered where shed park the twins when she left the hospital. - THE BOMB: Do Reds Have Search for Mountain It? In a line water 41. Colors 41. Oigansof sight arms-to-Euro- KILLER The United States navy was manifesting its efficiency again but in an entirely different field. Veering away from its military side for the " moment, the navy found a pill that was reported DO per cent effective. The fight to control the common cold has been one of the longest, most difficult In all medical A great majority of physi cold-killer- DOW N Long for Undivided beverage 40. Place Does Russia really have the atomic bomb? President Harry Truman said they did; and for once, there was no presidential contradiction when Columnist Drew Pearson said they Navy Discovers Potent Remedy for Colds 41. Sea eagle 42. Body of Take ease plant 39. Malt sti Mather Knows Cripps Gets Tough A. TO KILL Apply Black Leaf 40 to roosts with bandy Cap Brush. Fumes rise, killing lice and feather mites.whilo chickens perch. One ounce treats 60 feet of roosts 90 chickens. Directions on package. Ask for Black Lea!f 40, the dependable insecticide of many uses. Tobacco Corporation o ( dnets Chemical Richmond, Virginia msmamsswaa Yodora checks perspiration odor THE SOQ7?fAf&S7m WAY Made with a face cream base. Yodora is actually soothing to normal skins. No harsh chemicals or irritating salts. Wont harm akin or clothing. Stays soft and creamy, never gets grainy. Try gentle Yodora fed the wonderful difference! ' Goomnis) b Ibenktepini feed - V L$ dPi.V Relieve distress of M0NTHLY FEMALE IMitJESS Are you troubled by distress at female functional periodic disturbances? Dees this make you suffer from pain, feel so nervous, tired at such tlmea? Then do try Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms Pinkham's has a grand soothing effect on one 0 womans most important organs I 'LYDIA E. PINKHAMS comVouko And Your Strength and Energy Is Below Par It may b cauMl by disorder of kidney function that permit poisonous vast to accumulate. For truly many people (eel tired, weak end miserable whan the kidneya (ail to remove enema cuia and other waate matter from the bloods Arrange 3. 35. Crooked 36. Climbing Americas most famous natural laxative cereal for diets ot insufficient bulk try a bowlful , todayl one-roo- m d Rind Map Looks sly!) 29 Gold (Her.) 30. City (N. Y.) 34. A tie 37. Humble 33 British 1. ANSWER 23. A block (prefix) Retired 2 WEEK'S property Electrical Engineer (abbr.) pass 39. LAST All-Br- an All-Br- an EFFECTIVE HD PUZZLE muffins with marmalade before baking. After tastmg, youlf want morel 1 egg 1 cup Kelloggs 1 cup sifted flour cup milk 2 teaspoons 2 tablespoons baking powder shortening teaspoon salt cup sugar orange marmalade and milk; let L Combine soak about 5 minutes. 2. Cream shortening and sugar; add egg and beat well. Add mixture. 3. Add sifted dry ingredients; stir only until combined. full. 4. Fill greased muffin pans Press 1 tablespoonful of marmaeach muffin. of Bake lade into top in mod. hot oven (400F.) about 30 rnin. Makes 9 medium muffins. All-Br- men who do not fly case behind the fireplace. Her eyes scanned the volumes contained therein. She removed a copy of OBriens short stories, leafed it through, found the passage she sought, and underscored it heavily. Glen called an hour later. If he was annoyed at the long interval in the living room before Vidas appearance, be did not betray that fact. Instead, he seemed deeply interested in reading a paragraph from a volume of OBriens short stories, which he found lying upon the table. He read it through twice before Vidas voice disturbed him. He was glad she had come. He welcomed her eagerly. He had something to say, something that could not wait. He said it incoherently, babblingly, but plain enough for Vida to understand and nod her Bran Muffins Marmalade airforce seeking an answer to her problem and, for lack of something better to do, picked up the copy of Oscar Wilde and opened it. Her eye chanced to fall on a paragraph, which had been lightly checked with a pencil. She read through it with a I realrapidly Increasing pulse. ly dont see anything romantic in proposing. It Is very romantic to be tic about a definite proposal . . . . the excitement is all over. The very essence of romance is uncertainty." Vida stood up, and there was a wild look In her eyes. Glen had read that paragraph. He had checked it with his pencil. He had remembered that her faith in books, In the printed word was profound . . . She made her way to the book head in acquiescence . . . doned - as- WJ4(. Sir Stafford Cripps, British finance boss, lost no time in bringing home to the people the import of devaluation of the pound sterling as an effort toward the countrys financial problems. did. His labor government raised the But whether they have it or not, tax on business profits and threatthe Truman announcement stirred ened to restrict dividends by law in defending the devaluation move up a neit of jitters everywhere. DEFENSE CHIEFS backed up at an emergency session of parliafor a new look at the world situa- ment. At the same time, the governtion. Congress reacted as might ment rejected any pay raise propohave been expected. The program hailed the an- sals declaring this must be done to nouncement as added proof of the prevent an inflationary spiral. correctness of their stand. Other Cripps made these moves as he congressmen blamed laxity over opened the cabinets appeal for a the past few years in our state de- vote of confidence from the parliapartment and defense setup for ment. Russias having the bomb now if she does have it. TRUMAN: A noted atomic scientist declared Way Ahead President Harry Truman was still battling vigorously for his domestic program in congress. With his usual expansive attack on critics, he Most tangible result in congress charged present detractors with being 160 years behind the times. NEVERTHELESS, the President was making a strategic approach to agreement by house and senate the congressional races next year in a .drive for women recruits to conferees on the 1.33 billion-dolla- r appropriation for arms to Europe. the Democratic party. In a White House radio address, The legislators got together very beamed at the women of the nation, on cut the to view the that quickly appropriation, as had been first Mr. Truman pointed to certain who denounce his fair planned, would be an unwise move. people IN THE UNITED NATIONS, Brit- deal policies as alien or dangerains foreign secretary, Ernest ous. THEYRE NOTHING of the kind, Bevin, lashed out with a furious tirade against the Russians, Charg- declared the President. In fact he ing them with stalling efforts to asserted, Our program consists of control atomic energy. Like Russia, measures which have come up Bevin said, England wants the from the grassroots. Our program atomic bomb banned, but the is as American as the soil we walk British want effective control first. on. It is a program unshakably Skeptics of the idea that the Reds founded on the principle that .the have the bomb were asking why power of the government should be Russia wanted to outlaw such a used to promote the general welpotent weapon, if she really had it fare. Dissidents might go along with or did she think the western world suckers enough to outlaw and such items of the program as pubforeswear use of the bomb and thus lic housing and expanded social security benefits but on the subgive the edge to any ethics-lackin- g nation who might have the bomb jects of farm price supports, as and would drop it without warning? advocated by the administration, and socialized medicine, there would be some arguments about TITO: these being of grassroots origin. Get Out! TOSSING A BOUQUET to womMarshal Tito or- ans Intelligence, the President deYugoslavias dered nine Hungarian diplomats clared that women are not misled expelled and accused Russia and by political slogans, added: They her Comniform satellites of rat- look beneath the labels to see the tling their arms along the Yugo- facts. slav border. HE STATED that his Comlnform ROCKETS: enemies were digging trenches in Far Targets Hungary and Romania. Just before the end of World War Apparently, the fiery dictator of Yugoslavia was not frightened, still II, the Germans reported experiready to wage war with Moscow, menting with rockets that could We will span oceans. Now, according to verbally or otherwise. permit no one to impose their will information emanating from the Soviet zone of Berlin, German upon us, he thundered. Despite the dramatic atmosphere scientists are producing such rocksurrounding expulsion of the Hun- ets for the Russians. The informants, who were said garians, Titos action was a retaliatory one, since it followed within to have access to the offices of the 24 hours a similiar action against Soviet-packe- d east German police, 10 members of tbe Yugoslav legasaid the mammoth under-grountion in Budapest. munitions plant at Peenemuende on TITO CLAIMED the Russians the Baltic coast was turning out were plotting to stage a revolution rockets at full speed. Allied intelligence officers conin Yugoslavia in order to supplant his government with a regime ser- ceded they knew of certain acvile to Moscow. at Pennemuende, but detivity Whether or not the Russians had clined to elaborate. One of them exthe atomic bomb, as has been re- plained: If Russia is making munitions ported, Tito didn't seem to be any less disposed to quarrel with the In Germany, its a high level matter and not for discussion here. Kremlin. oysters, the oystermen report. It, seems that they thrive in a season when there are few storms and1 little rough water. Still, we are Lydia Pinkham, the new book re- firm believers in environment, and calls, was a Lynn, Mass., gal, we think a summer like this has beautiful and with a perfect figure cost the oysters considerable charin the hour-glas- s mode. She was acter. We prefer an oyster with a one of the pioneers in the rugged upbringing and with a sugca gestion of defiance in its nature. She was a student of medi- These 1949 bivalves may be such cine and for years gave her comsissies it will seem cruel to' squirt pound free. It was not until her lemon on em. husband went broke that she deA Japanese industrialist has been cided to sell it arrested for picking pockets. He ner four children peddled it explained that collections had from door to door first, and it been slow and that he had to meet a payroll. A lot of American busididnt bring home the bacon until one son put a $60 ad on nessmen, knowing how it is, think the first page of a Boston he may just be a little ahead of his time. paper. From that time Lydia all the tricks. You a lot. Books on read see, she every conceivable subject. Unfortunately Vidas facial beauty was next to nil. When, at the age of 18, she 'I came to a full Minute realization of this, n and an standing of its possible come-quenceshe was at first unhappy. But being a sensible person, sensible enough to look at the thing squarely, she sought for other means to achieve her end. The end was a man: love, romance. The other means presented themselves in the form of books, learning how to put yourself across when you werent particularly attractive; resorting to devices and technique that good looking girls didnt have to employ. The results were exceedingly gratifying. Even now, at the age of 22, the man of her dreams was practically within her grasp. Give her another month, two at the most, and he would speak the words that would make her happiness and triumph complete. The man's name was Glen Lam-phieHe was one of those fine, good looking, upstanding specimens of young manhood. Intelligent, gracious, and with a promising career ahead of him. The type who appealed by exerting only a minimum of effort. Vida had aimed high when selecting him as the object of her acquired charms, but the thought of failure had never once entered her head. She had aroused his interest by heeding the dictates of her fiction heroines. And Glen had seen the light. He had come to realize that behind the plain features of this girl were quality, intelligence, breeding. In a word, Vida had been successful in her enterprise up to a point. Unhappily, it appeared now as if that point might prove a stumbling block, an unsurmountable obstacle. Coming into the living room one evening she found him waiting for her, comfortably ensconced before the fireplace, a volume of Oscar Wilde open in his lap. The fact that her entrance did not distract his attention, piqued her no end. She hesitated a moment before making known her presence,' and In that moment the feeling of being piqued gave way to torment. Suddenly she realized that something had happened, that she was losing her hold, that Glen's interest was on the wane. before, he had Always awaited her coming with eager anticipation glowing in his eyes. Tiie thought made Vida unhappy. WEEK LATER, sitting betoie the living room Lie, Vida aban- - 3. r mrdf the compound, telling how the var ious herbs and powders were per colated in fine spirits, giving an 18 per cent alcoholic content to the remedy. A few shots of the compound and any woman felt better. Lydia Pinkham was for the womenfolks. But we remember it in the advertisements and on the labeic. It seemed the only medicine nobody rubbed or dosed us with. We often wondered about Lydia. There were songs about her. One ran: Feeling low and wanna feel giddia? Lady, take a slug of Lydia! l:,w TTUMPHREY BOGART is still clinging to the battered felt hat which has become his symbol of good luck. He first wore it in Treasure of Sierra Madre," and hasnt been without it in a picture since. It will next be seen in Colum- - ji A bulletin Illustrated in fnn color tells you ali you should know about old recipes, new recipes cranberries, how to freeze. For your free how to can, copy, 'krite Post Office Box 1083. York 8, New York. Ad necessarily el this newspaper.! Jean Burton gives the recipe for age of medical specialists in. Doctors were general practice boys who did everything for $2, win, lose or draw. But $2 could be an extravagance in those days if the patient was still conscious, and the folks depended a lot on herbs, potions, oils and patent medicines. As a child we got rubbed with so many things before the doctor was called that we were liniment-logged when be got there. as?! VIDA EDITOR NOTE: IVhea pinion Western Newspaper Unions news analysts Inmnn, they Out of $3,800,000 gross for years she poured $3,000,000 back into advertising. n. BY INEZ GERHARD are expressed in these and not S CRANBERRIES HOW TO COOK THEM mb hadnt set hath ln8 nd fi For Defense on Red Tip; Truman Says Critics Antedated GLORY OF LYDIA'S COMPOUND The lefts' arn W medi-cin- Planning, Policy A-Bo- H. I. PHILLIPS By & FIZZLE NO. 20 his-4or- cians have expressed a conviction that the common cole., like the poor, will always be with us. The navy's cold killer has been named Corcidin," derived from coryza, meaning the common to kill. The pill cold, and cide, must be taken at the first sign of a cold to insure its maximum efficiency. That it was discovered accidentally is beside the point. You may Buffer BRfrfng backacha rhrumatic pama, headaches, diasineaa, getting up eights, leg paina, awelhng. Sometime frequent ana ecanty urine tion with amartinc and bunnnc la an other sign that something ia wron with tbe kidneva or bladder. There ibould be no doubt that prompt treatment te wiser than neglect Use Uoan't It ia better to rely on a medicine that baa won countrywide ap on something lees favorsbly Eroval than Doan have been tried and test ed wisny years. Are at ell drug store Get Loan$ today. |