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Show THE RICH COUNTY REAPER, RANDOLPH, UTAH THE RICH COUNTY REAPEB entered cs eecond den matter Feb. 8, 1928 Act of March 3. 187. t the Pest Office, Randolph, Utah, ander tb Wm. E. Marshall. Bittiness Manager 31 .SO Per Year in Advance SUBSCRIPTION Layton Marshall. Editor and Proprietor m Mb ft in WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS Feints and slashes had continued to characterize the action on the Coal Rationing Looms as FDR Asks 65 Released by Western Newspaper Union. g but relatively quiescent Russian front. German ofWith the fensive still in the conversation stage and the Soviet forces still gathering strength for decisive engagements, the rival armies had contented themselves with jabs at localized areas. Thus Russian communiques had reported a series of incidents on the Orel, Smolensk, Belgorod, Staraya Russa and Leningrad sectors. Russian artillery was credited with blowing up the headquarters of an enemy battalion near Sevesk, in the Kursk salient. But nowhere fightalong the front was large-scal- e ing reported. Observers who recalled that a year before the Nazis had already started their i expedition against Stalingrad and their offensives for Caucasus oil believed the current inactivity was due to waning German air power, weakened on the Russ front to bolster areas in western Europe. far-flun- Induction Limit as Strike Curb; long-herald- Allies Mediterranean Guessing Game PIGMENTED SPOTS ON FACE One of the distressing ailments that comes usually toward middle age in women is coffee colored spots, usually on the face, about the eyes and cheeks, on the arms and knees. The cause of these spots is unknown but physicians have found that after correcting any ailments of ovaries and uterus, these spots disappear quite often. Removal of these spots and careful examination of them under the microscope show that they are not the usual pigmented blood spots nor exactly like the spots which occur so often at or during the menopause. In an extract from a medical journal published in Montevideo in the Journal of the American Medical Association, Dr. F. Rocca reports a case of pigmented spots on the face cured by injection and local application of ovary extract. Twice a week, for a period of several months, 5,000 international units of ovary extract (estrone) was administered by injection. These injections regulated the monthly peri-odthe nervousness and shock became less and the spots on the face began to clear up. An estrone ointment was now applied to the facial spots for 20 days. It was observed that some spots disappeared and others became lighter. The ointment treatment of the spots and the injections were continued for several months, when the pigmentation had decreased greatly on the face and in many parts of the Factor in Keeping Axis Off Balance (EDITORS NOTE: When opinion are expressed In these eolnmns, they are those of Western Newspaper Unions news analysts and not necessarily of this newspaper.) Released by Western Newspaper Union. , s, ' body. One year after this ovary or gland treatment was stopped, small spots began to appear about the eyes. Now this is only one case, but when we remember that in some of these cases the spots disappear without treatment and that others disappear with the correction of genital ailments, it will certainly be much worth while for our womens specialists and general practitioners also, to try this treatment on these d spots. When we remember how ovary extract in the great majority of cases gives relief from the symptoms of the menopause, it is not too much to expect that at last a remedy has been found to remove these emspots. barrassing coffee-colore- coffee-color- ed Insulin Injections Stimulate Appetite Just as most overweights have a large appetite and eat much more than they need, so most cases of picky underweight are rather about their food and have a small appetite. And just as the overweights choose the starches and fats (fat builders), so most underweights choose meats, leafy vegetables and fruits (which are not fat builders). There are exceptions to this, of course. I have spoken before of the use in Canada and the United States of insulin in stimulating the appetite. In the American Journal of Sciences, Philadelphia, is a report from Brazil recording the results of using insulin in underweight patients. Dr. J. B. Greer and his associates treated 30 underweight patients with insulin with most satisfactory results. They injected insulin just once a day, beginning with eight units and increasing according to the patients appetite on the previous day; never more than 30 units were injected. The injection was made about 45 minutes before the noon meal, but the patients were advised to eat when they began to get hungry. When the weight became normal for the patients height and build, the injections of insulin were gradually discontinued. This injection of the insulin only once a day and stopping it gradually, protects the glands of the pancreas that manufacture the insulin. It removes the burden of work from them for the time being. The unanimous statement of the patients was that they ate as never before in their lives. There are, of course, many cases of underweight due to infection which uses up some of the food eaten. There are other cases of underweight where too much play, not enough sleep, not enough outdoors are factors in preventing gain in weight. It is gratifying to know that the injection of insulin when stomach is empty will create an appetite in underweights. j RUSSIA: Jabs and Feints ed Cordell Hull , Always The Perfect Diplomat Col. Harold B. Hinton, now with the U. S. army headquarters in London, has written a life of Cordell Hull, United States secretary of state, which is being published in England. He tells the following; Hull has always been famous for his reluctance to commit himself and even at the beginning of his political career disliked making a definite statement about anything. man However, one bet that he could get a direct answer from the cautious statesman. What is the time, Mr. Hull?' he asked. Hull took out his watch, looked at it, and then said: What does your watch say? self-confide- nt DONT LET ill-fat- ed bomb-shatter- ed CONSTIPATION SLOW YOU UP When bowels are sluggish and you feel irritable, headachy, do as millions the modem do chew FEEN-A-MIN- POSTWAR: laxative. Simply chew before you go to bed, taking only in accordance with package Problems Ahead turbed. Next morning gentle, thorough chewing-guFEEN-A-MIN- m T directions Addressing 500 business leaders and army and navy officers in Chicago, Alfred P. Sloan Jr., chairman of the General Motors corporation, declared that he is not worried about the immediate postwar era in the United States, but that he is considerably concerned about the dis- tant future. at An American soldier in a Southwest Pacific outpost has a look-se- e The nation, Mr. Sloan declared, had water tank after the enemy the interior of a shattered Jap vehicular faces a period in which it been driven off. The shell holes in the tank give the answer to its interior. will take postwar at least five years to catch up with the accumulated consumer MEDITERRANEAN: COAL: demand for goods. The letdown will come when this Axis Strikers Draft for Kept Guessing pent-u- p buying power has been exTwo events in the eastern MedCoal rationing for both industrial hausted, unless private industry is and domestic consumers loomed as iterranean had given some observers successful in drawing blueprints for Fuel Administrator Harold L. Ickes support for their view that this winning the peace, he predicted. Mr. expressed doubt that production theater would be the scene of deci- Sloan particularly urged the govlosses incurred by three strikes in sive Allied military activity. ernment to make a frank stateless than two months could be made One event was the bombing for ment of policy now regarding its the first time by Allied fliers of the peacetime intentions to enable inup. Mr. Ickes had announced that he strategic Axis-hel- d Govcity of Salonika, dustry to plan intelligently. was preparing to undertake active Greece. The other was the evacu- ernment, he said, should allow inparticipation in the supervision of ation by Italy of Castelross, eastern- dustry to build up profitable reserves e management and operation of coal most island in the Dodecanese on a basis. mines including possible changes in group, lying between Greece and operating personnel. Turkey. Strategists saw the possi- RAIL PAY: Previously, President Roosevelt bilities inherent in an Allied move Boost Is Vetoed had warned coal miners and other via Egypt and Syria on mainland inIn a move to hold the dikes workers in government-operate- d Greece and the Balkans. j onrdshing inflation, Fred M. dustries that those who walk iut on against Meanwhile steady attention to the strike in future would be inducted task of softening up Italy proper Vinson, stabilization director, disapinto the nations armed forces. The and its neighboring island satellites proved wage increases of eight cents President announced that he would was given by the RAF and U. S. an hour for 1,100,000 railway employees. The proposed ask congress for authority to draft air forces. men up to the age of 65 for. One of the most spectacular Allied increases would have boosted wages service. feats was the inauguration of shut- paid by the railways by $200,000,000 In a statement bitterly denouncing tle bombing service. This was ac- annually. Indications that some solution for the action of the United Mine Work- complished by British Lancasters ers leadership as intolerable, Mr. which had bombed Friedrichshafen the railmens pay demands might Roosevelt had declared that for the in Germany, flown on to African be achieved were seen in official time , being mines would continue bases and returned home to Eng- quarters, however. President Roose- under operation of Fuel Administra- land, blasting Italian naval bases The terms, he said, at La Spezia along the way. tor Ickes. would be those laid down by the War The tenseness of the Axis over Labor board. impending Allied threats was reflected in the action of Italian secret FOOD: police in arresting more than 11,000 Czar After All? persons in a search for possible fifth Food had continued to hold the columnists. Washington limelight as the house GERMANY: agricultural committee had reported on a bill designed to take all Raids Devastating food rationing and pricing powers While militay strategists had defrom the Office of Price Adminis- bated whether aerial warfare could tration and transfer them to War completely knock out the enemy, Food Administrator Chester C. evidence of some of the results of Davis. Allied bombings were dramatically Congressional sentiment for creat- forthcoming in reports from the ing a food czar had increased in Ruhr valley area, where British spite of the opposition of President and American airmen had dropped Roosevelt to such a measure. Dis- 10,000 tons of bombs within a month. satisfied over home front war opOne report disclosed that Gererations, proponents of the new bill many had ordered the evacuation of to vest complete authority wanted FRED M. VINSON 3,000,000 nonessential civilians from over food production, transporta- the No to a million. d reRuhr. Another tion, distribution, pricing and rationvealed that Nazis the had massed velt had indicated his approval of ing of foods under Mr. Davis Who more than 1,000 fighter planes in overtime hitherto has had charge only of pro- western for nonoperating rail to combat the workers. pay Europe duction and distribution. such a basis On g 'Allied raids and had As would be applied to workcongressional temperatures mounted 30,000 pay ft guns ers rose in debate over the proposals, putting in more than 40 hours along a belt 200 miles long by 20 to weather of and improved reports weekly. Those putting in a 50 miles deep. week would receive an average incrop conditions helped ease official Under a new policy of fully pul tension over 1943 food production crease of about six cents ail hour on such a plan. prospects. Particular improvements licizing air raid damage, Germa were reported in midwestem grain, propaganda broadcasts said th The nonoperating railway workers Royal Air force had practicall livestock and dairy regions. include members of 15 organizations erased the city of Krefeld on th Class I railways. western fringe of the Ruhr and ha employed by SMALL BUSINESS: subjected the populations of both th PACIFIC: Reserves for Peace Ruhr and the Rhineland to unb Burma Bombed The National Association of Small lievable raids. Business men through its president, Big scale land offensives against DeWitt Emery, urged congress to MARATHON: Japan were apparently not on the schedule until after the monsoon permit plants engaged in war con- Yanks Hit Macassar e reserves season made Burma operations postracts to set aside Forecasting what will be routine sible, but Allied air forces showed for easing postwar transition back assignments in . months to come, no evidence of lessening their bombto peacetime production. Unless such provisions are forth- Liberator bombers made a 2,000-mi- ing forays against the foe. round trip raid from Australia In China, American fliers supportcoming, Emery told the house naval committee studying war contracts, to the Japanese air and sea bases ed by ground forces of Gen. Chiang k thousands of businesses will be at Macassar on Celebes island, blasted two important Jap shut down after the war, awaiting where Allied airmen dropped 28 tons centers in the Tung Tink Lake area the whim of some bureaucrat as of bombs on enemy objectives, dam- and wrought damage against enemy to whether they can remain in busi- aging shipping installations and hit- shipping on the Yangtze river. ting a Jap cruiser and merchantness. Flying in from bases in India, Liberator bombers of the U. S. air Emery suggested an allowable tax man. The raid marked the first retalu free reserve of 3 per cent of all force, strafed Jap installations at sales up to $1,000,000 and recom- tion on the Japs in the Celebes se( Monywa on the Chindwin river, 60 mended that reserves above that fig- tor since the enemy seized Macai miles from Mandalay, Burma. lf of 1 sar early in 1942 when the Nippones ure be scaled down to Warehouses, railway tracks and seized the Dutch East Indies. per cent. highways were damaged. sleep without dis- being relief, helping you feel swell, again. Try Tastes good, is handy and economical. A generous family supply FEEN-A-MIN- T. FEEN-A-MIN- 1io T BEAT HeaT with its heat rash misery. Sprinkle on Mexsana, formerly Mexican Heat Powder. Costs little, and you save lots in larger sizes. JUST A DASH IN FEATHERS.: fan Find the Scrap to Eliminate the Jap tax-fre- non-operati- ng non-combat- bomb-gutte- time-and-a-h- alf never-endin- anti-aircra- 48-ho- ur tax-fre- le Kai-she- one-ha- If back aches from need of diureticaid Functional kidney disturbance due to need of diuretic aid may cause stabbing backache! May cause urinary flow to be frequent, yet scanty and smarting! You may lose sleep from "getting up nights oftea may feel dizzy, nervous, "headachy." In such cases, you want to stimulat kidney action fast. So if there is nothing systemically or organically wrong, try Gold Medal Capsules. Theyve been famous for prompt action for 30 years. Take care to use them only as directed. Accept no substitutes. 3 St at your drug store. OADAfES1T) for girls who hasten healing of externally caused pimples by relieving irritation with &esiiki2h To relievo distress of MONTHLY WHICH MAKES YOU CRAKKY, NERVOUS! Lydia E. Plnkhams Vegetable Compound has helped thousands to relieve periodic pain, backache,-headachwith weak, nervous, cranky, e blue feelings due to functional monthly disturbances. This is due to Its soothing effect on one of WOMANS MOST IMPORTANT ORGANS. Taken regularly Plnkhams Com- pound helps build up resistance against such annoying symptoms. Follow label directions. Worth trying t 2743 WNU W May Warn of Disordered Kidney Action Modern life with Its hurry and worry. Irregular habits, improper eating ana drinking its risk of exposure and Infection throws heavy strain on th work of the kidneys. They are apt to become d and fail to filter excess acid and other impurities from th over-taxe- blood. Yon may suffer nagging backache, headache, dizziness, getting op nights, feel constantly leg pains, swelling tired, nervous, all worn out. Other signs of kidney or bladder disorder are sometimes burning, scanty or too (requant urination. Try Doans Pil is. Doans help th kidneys to pass off harmful excess body waste. They have bad more than half a century of public approval. Are recommended by grateful users everywhere. Ask tout neighbor! ' |