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Show THE LEHI SUN, LEHI. UTAH rti; d es a: iom ;yft ke. ike tb iwit:i rienc; n do olida; mo; fine as ;ep-b; siened requiif n ret I lITERV imery reacb Size. Cold's,! Washington, D. C. I invasion m- to Wash- i rie ... j invasion. Even . (prouu ... Its .... oncosts burned fffoVcewa..carcely ive' ... ' ,,. there" uu rec",: ?0D toaw of chasing commission h air commission. The -sn . . ...orvnne officers, :!Se;ndchaufleur.. Htisb embassy and chan- s is the largest "'-7 Lent in Washington, but it ,f.enougn. - -I1' . J. an nvprflow ijflto care io , " " irkMhd officials of the rfare. economy .l . turn British com- rtuie ' 7- . tuor occupy Pace m 1 , v V "-.I ..4V.d out in mod- ,m in niuua " ; ;d to the entire top floor of ard hotel, aaucu -a .jm. tauilding. and h uie U have taken over A- icon's oW eparu " , Massachusetts avenue Uodate the air commis- L the British in Washing- tin addition, he purchasing commin. I Wl r.1n SnO In- L oou persuua, - P ! t .v.nnt thi enun- L the wide assortment of (from snips 10 re being purchased in the Senate Convenes in Old Court Chamber - K - I ' F""' V V .. .... :.. . .(. . P' ' . ' ; .... .. f ill ) Vv . , " ii t 1 3C V M " ' '-"3 Scene A3 senate convenes in tha nrltrlnnl tT e j. -,1, i j , ni . ..... - nuaH. viiainuci uacu uy uicm irom uecemDer, ibis (0 January, 1859, then used by the Supreme court from 1860 to 1935. The move was made because of repairs to roofs of the regular bouse and senate chambers. Photo shows Sen. William King, president pro tem of senate (right) on rostrum. " Navy 'Mosquito Boat With a Sting! S ECBBEE SUPPLIES congress ever aeciae w m-. m-. votinnnl Defense com- E UJC iim unearth some ap- delays in the securing of ;jh'j raw materials par- jart is that a fundamental e exists between the de mmission and Jesse Jones future rubber supplies, mission believes that the . nf svnthetic rubber begin immediately, and give a subsidy oi ?iou,. American rubber com- The subsidy would be nec-b nec-b offset the price of natural khich sells for 18 cents to ia pound, whereas synthetic mid cost about 25 cents. Synthetic Rubbers. eni the defense commis- beeo negotiating with vari- vr rnmranips. and the fol- l'e ready to co-operate if a lis granted: It, which produces Neo- Eia company is by iar tne terienced ih the field, and ct has the highest produc- vi Oil, which produces has the license for U. S. ) of the famous German rubber, Buna. p, which produces Chem- L which produces Amerl- Staies Rubber, which is proQuct, so iar un- Jesse Jones doesn't be- juuieuc ruDDer neeas to id On 1 larco eonlo T-Io hall subsidy to one com- - viuiiciiu ;ase commission counters ui wnai mignt nap- : SU OUr nibbpr ho Pi it rH & Pact Tni.. Tk j. iiiuics, lt em- machinery cannot be Nu'sht tn nin4... pr. Stettinius is really 7 "vpeai w trie White i soon move Jesse. $ VISITS nprrir . ' P Herbert Hoover con- l ao iorth about h m. "ualJ avoias r "e ex-President has Rams TO..u: . "omgion under J Public visit was last Z aPPeared un-kZl un-kZl conSressiona! "battled Fir. ... . day here sub rosa "is swanky Ktlau-k. SUe' Under- (einhi, regime and of hi, time con- Fsh f "1S plan W CHAFF ."Arthur. ;ani T ?er P"s- m; l.0ther can she m ""uny as with . neover f v m'J ;is, " . f 1 fit 1 1 'I k" ' I i 4 s k w - Vjw r ft ft 1. ""Ml Mi fiX -. iVM v-- -"- k- The PT-12, one of the "mosquito boats" of the U. S. navy, buzzing along at about 50 knots with the grand skyline of Manhattan for a backdrop. The little boats carry a deadly sting In the form of turreted machine guns and four torpedo tubes. (Inset) Section of pilot-house on one of the mosquito boats, and the insignia of the mosquito fleet a mosquito riding on a torpedo. The insignia was designed by Walt Disney. Ski Troops Drill on Mt. Rainier I America in Flowers BMW Ul-UWMWWWIM 1, M"V "V-. :f' k j, f, , mm00iiv.si Notes of a New Yorker E. Hemingway will draw $150,000 n-om Paramount for the rights to film his best-seller, "For Whom the BeU Tolls." The sales now entitle (him to $136,000 for those rights (nd from the speed at which it is Jselling the "150" limit will soon be peached . . . The Ups and Downs (of Show Business: "Sealo." the boy with the seal's flippers (Instead of jhands), who was a feature at the j!2nd Street Hubert's Museum, is ,now peddling song sheets along The big Apple. Playwright Elmer Rice, who once rapped the drama reviewers for being be-ing too mean, has a son, Robert, who writes pieces for the drama pages and scolds critics for being too sugary to the biggest hit in town: "The Corn Is Green," starring star-ring The Barrymore . ... Pancho. the slick Copacabandsman from Argentina, Ar-gentina, is so "nuts about the gude or Oo-S-A" that he became a citl-ten citl-ten last week . , . Myrna Loy's beeg admirer is the former Mexican Consul In L. A. . . . Coffee Pot chains out there are changing the names from Coffee Pot No. 1, Coffee Pot No. 2, etc., to Greek Restaurant No. 1, etc., and the biz Is away up . . . Time's movie .man, A. Wright Jr., is on the verge of being summoned to duty, now that he's passed his exam for Flight Ensign. Five famous Washington legislators legisla-tors are being studied for suspected Nazi activities . . . What naughty boys among the War Vets destroyed the printing press turning out the most subversive literature around town? Happened in Queens. Nice going . . . Two Yorkville bums went looking for a brawl in Dave's Blue Room the other dawning. Two Irish cab drivers and a detective in there at the time obliged. A pret-tee theeenngggg , . . WTien "H'ya Gentlemen," Gen-tlemen," the new musical, hits Broadway shortly, the indications are that it'll make Ella Logan a bigger songsess than ever . . . That Margie Hart can think up more angles to get her name In the paper. he's written the army for permish to organize her own girlesk show at her expense . . . Night club owners own-ers are barring each other. That oughta improve the Joynts. Ilollywood carries the snob system sys-tem into unemployment Writers, when they're let out, always "complete "com-plete their assignments" . , . Actors "finish an engagement" . . . Stars are "suspended" . . . You have to be a big executive simply to "get fired" , . . John Barrymore's dot-ter, dot-ter, Diana, is described by an interviewer inter-viewer as suffering "from a debutante's debu-tante's occupational disease: boredom" bore-dom" . . . But boredom isn't the deb's disease. It's her occupation! What's the significance, if any, of the fact that much of the propa ganda mail (sent out by the Bund here) is mailed via half-penny post age, the engraving being of Nathan Hale? . . . Frank Gervasi, Collier's roving correspondent, feared missinghas miss-inghas turned up in Puerto Rico . . They say the inventor of the bomb-sight is not a flier, but a musician-astronomer. Members of the Forty-first division of the United States , armj are here shown on a crosscountry trek on Mt. Rainier, the h gh est peak in the state of Washington, and the second highest kJJ.ttn. States proper. -This is the first group of ski troops wh.ch has been organized for snow work in the army. S120,000 Worth of Dogs Miss Jetsey Posthuma in role c "Liberty" for the Rose Parade a Pasadena, Calif. "America in Flow ers" was named as the 1941 Tourna ment of Roses theme. Ambassador to U. S. These six dogs of movie fame are valued at a tota oi are, with pictures in which they appeared, I .to r.. iro d (Scotty, "Tbe Light That FiSS2f HeigbU"; of Oi." Second row: Prince Carl (Greal , Danel. fc (SL Bernard. Musty (KngUsh mastiff). "Swiss Family Robinson uc "Tie CaU of Ue Wild." "d V"mist Po,Dter, D .. . C-'h f- ' f. ; :. : A new mag about Uncle Sam for South America is being readied by former Time editor, Myron Weiss. A weekly . . . Have some irony: The day after Jesse Livermore killed himself (because he was broke) Gov't agents attached a check for a few hundred dollars waiting for him as royalties on his "How to Trade In Stocks" book. Good Actions Do you act as if you had 10.000 years to throw away? Death stands at your elbow. good for some thing, while you live and it is in your power. What remains but to live easy and cheerful, and crowd one good action so close to an. other that there may be the least mpty space between them. INDIGESTION nay afiect lb Heart Oaa tnwt In U atmack ar fuJM may met Hte i hir ui mi u bran. At Um am ina of iwm Mart aivn and omft dlMfk4 aa H.U-uui Tlblau ta Mt I' No lai.lln but auto ol tko taM. rtlna OH'itlrlnaa kiaai (or irld UidltaMloa II tha KIKMT IXIHH dnwn I arm ll.ll-trii bttlt. totiira buiua U ua aud latwlra iHJUiUJt aliaKi tuck. Active Nature Nature knows no pause In progress prog-ress and development, and at taches her curse on all inaction Goethe. In the old days when a Greek met a Greek they opened a restaurant Today when a Greek meets an Italian Ital-ian Fascist they start a race . . . The Stem's most show-offy actress (a bit more than a bit-player) made one of the clerks in an East Side hotel run out and get change for a $20 bill so she could buy a two-cent stamp. One guess. Marshall Field, the millionaire publisher, was offered Ambassador J. P. Kennedy's post in England and turned it down . . . Joan Crawford Craw-ford defaulted the $25,000 breach of contract action brought by producer Lee Morrison. He now demands full payment La Crawford is busy writing writ-ing her answer (in a Hollywood mag) to a recent critic . . The "Du-Barry" "Du-Barry" premiere in Washington was crowded with fireworks backstage when Frances Williams and stage' manager S. Ledner had it out. Sammy forgot to knock on her undressing un-dressing room before entering. Such a to-do! . . . Rumor has ex-Tammany ex-Tammany leader J. J. Hines in "solitary." Initial German Drlv The Initial German drive against Paris in August 1914, brought them to the town of Claye, about 15 to 17 miles east of Paris. At this place the German cyclists sent ahead to reconnolter the road to the capital were stopped by French outposts. At the beginning of September the French had retreated beyond the Marne and the French government fled to Bordeaux. JofTre collected his forces south of the Marne to check the German drive and from September S to 12, the first battle of the Marne was fought The result of this battle was the withdrawal of the Germans to the Aisne. Toe Much to Count A fiscal statement issued by the New York World's Fair corporation disclosed that the organization has spent a total of $54,712.238 24 for construction, administration and other oth-er expenses from its inception more than four years ago to last Decern-ber Decern-ber 27, while revenues had totaled $31,149,487.85. Of this revenue, $4. 038,711.11 was obtained in 1939 from the fair's participation in concessions. Lights Bother 'Em Kansas City campus sweethearts do longer have a quarrel with the University of Missouri. President Frederick A. Middlebush explains: "We now have the campus fully equipped with benches for two. The only complaints are that electric lights are too near tha benches." Pouring- Cake Mixture When pouring a cake mixture into pant, let it cover corners and sides, leaving a slight depression in the center. If this is done, when the cake Is baked, it will be perfectly flat on top. Cake pans should be filled nearly two-thirds if the coke is expected ex-pected to rise to the top of pan. No Quota Restriction Natives of the following countries are not subject to quota restrictions when applying for admission to the United States: Canada, Canal Zone, 'Internal Sun' ' The discovery of an amazing method of combating infections by blood "sunbaths" has been credited credit-ed to Emmett K. Knott physicist and X-ray expert of Seattle, Wash. He proved his theory first with his own blood. After testing his own blood and that of animals, the apparatus ap-paratus he Invented was tried on a human patient suffering from blood poisoning following a miscarriage. She la alive today although given but 24 hours to live. Dr. Knott's method has successfully responded ' to such dangerous cases as childbirth child-birth fever, streptococci, blood poisoning, poi-soning, lobar and bronchial pneumonia, pneu-monia, and peritonitis. Rats for Research One of the chief reasons why rats are used extensively in biological research re-search is that owing to their size, they require only minimum quantities quan-tities of testing substances. For example, ex-ample, in a recent experiment on a small number of these rodents, protein pro-tein fed to them, in the form of purified amino acids, cost $50,000. If the experiment had been made on the same number of rabbits, this food would have cost $500,000. Serious About Something It is not so Important to be serious se-rious as it Is to be serious about Important things, according to Robert Rob-ert M. Hutch ins, president University Univer-sity of Chicago. "The monkey bss a look of seriousness which would do credit to a college student" he says, "but the monkey Is serious because he Is ' bored, hungry and itches." Milk Most Important Dr. James S. McLester, authority on diet, says: "Milk is the most Important of all foods. It is indispensable indis-pensable to the infant it is essential to the proper development of the young child, and it should form the chief article of diet for the older child. Milk has never been accorded accord-ed adequate place in the American dietary' Narrow Minds Narrow minds think nothing right that is above their own capacity. ca-pacity. La Rochefoucauld, Fool's Curtain Gold is the fool's curtain, which hides all his defects from the world. Feltham, mmfm uifnuw pm'ninnpuwnwi pupwi Jjpiaapaw.aii i sxnbJwdLSjAZ' WBffllJW " 11 II U S fc LM " o -JgLJhlp t kMbraMiaeStlBtaUua . ' a A'l . Vice Admiral Kichisabnra Nome a, who has been appointed to tb important post Japanese amba j sador ts the V. S, succeeding Ben soke HoriDOttrbi. Gee, wbJs. We almost forgot to I mention The Stork Club . . . That publicity-screwy showman who told the papers he Inherited $250,000 was one of five persons to share an inheritance in-heritance of $10,000 . . . What's this about Jolson complaining of his health? Or is it his famously known yen at this time of the season for a Roney-Pleasure cabana? . . . H. Allen Smith is finishing his book, which'D blast all the dizzy celebs he's ever interviewed. He admits that he expects everyone mentioned to sue. Use WEED American Bar-Reinforced TIRE CHAINS When winter dumps snow and ice on road and highways, the crash rate goes up. Lives are lost. People are injured. Cars and trucks require expensive repairs. re-pairs. Accident costs are tremendous. Even the most careful drivers are in danger. A quick safe stop may be necetsary any second. Play safe. Don't gamble. Keep WEED TIRS CHAINS in your car and truck and be ready to use them for stormy weather. With WEED AMERICANS you can start easier, drive safer, stop quicker. Afid you get more than twice the mileage. Ask for the chains with red end hook. American Ameri-can Chain Si Cable Company, Inc., York, Pennsylvania. 4 GREAT FEATURETS 1 aM4n1i konwii'i M craoa Bnfca mora ' ah awMa ml go. Sj) of WoodoflT aomor, awajhaT '.: ::. rolantait tovor-todi t4 MaaU aulfaa DM 4 rn faM9. A tido tfcoaaa hmitnti to aotht cwh - - I , i mm k. n AMiRtCAN CHAIN t CABUE COMf ANT, INC York FanntyWonloi IS BUSINESS POZ XOVX SAFETY I I . .. k. h- -v'-.k-ltJ ) A1?h look rY!f U' (I SNOW |