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Show PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, 1944 Editorial . . . . The Washington Merry-Go-Round "More Than Complacency? Lags in' production of vital war materials mater-ials are worrying- military leaders. Most of the blame has been put on workers, who are accused of complacency and a desire to get back to peacetime jobs while the get ting is good. But a statement which appear. cd in the White River Valley (Vt.) Herald the other day suggests that there may be other reasons. The statement 4s in the form of an ad inserted by the Fyles & Rice Co., plywood producers of Bristol ,Vt. This, briefly, is the story: On July 27 the company was ordered to . appear in U. S. District Court on charges of violating, between May 15 and June 5, ceiling prices on logs. Ths pi ices v.vro issued by OPA on May 15. The company claims not to have received a copy of the order untir the latter date, when it hastened to comply with the rulings. However, the OPA order prevented the company's buying types of aircraft-grade logs needed in its war production. After a month's correspondence, OPA in Wash ington authorized the company to pay high er prices for this grade of logs. But this month the federal court enjoined the com pany from buying logs in Vermont above the original OPA ceiling prices. Thus two orders countermanding each other. What to do? Well, the company closed down for a week to try to find out what the score was. To follow written OPA instruc tions would be in contempt of court. To fol low the court orders would be to stop work on over $250,000 worth of government or ders for aircraft-grade playwood. The story ends, in the company's state meht. with the manufacturers about ready to cancel the contracts and convert to lower- grade plywood for civilian uses. They had promised their mployes work of some sort after seven days. The Fyles & Rice Co. has been turning out material for Army, Navy and Marine aircraft, including B-29 bombers, for PT boats and landing craft, for ship-to-shore communications and radar. It is the only New England firm engaged in this type of manufacture. If this is an isolated case it is at best re grettable. But if this is an example of simi lar confusion in other places and other in dustries, then it is time for rapid rectifica tion. If OPA can't do it, then what used to be called the Truman committee should take look. It is time that the government found out whether, in its earnest effort to step up pro duction of the tools of final victory, it has been barking up more than one tree. Remember the Dates A Daily Picture of What's Going On in National Affairs Bf Draw hMM moot M. A 1 1 m . WASHINGTON Most Important collesre of amateur pnysicians anywnere in the world .approx imately 200 strong, now meets Tuesdays and Fri day at tne white House. . . . These are newsmen assigned to cover the president. They assemble, make careful scrutiny, write lengthy analyses of the president, s complexion, nervousness, every facial expressionr try to interpret these in relation to his health. . . . Actually the president looks thinner. not too well tanned, but calm and fit, though he shows obvious sign of wearying at the scores of questions tnrown at him during press tussles FDR still knows how to turn charm on and off, calls newsmen by their first names, teases them about "dope stories". . . . Since his return from the Alaska trip. Roosevelt is seeing more people than in the last six months, is growing more aware of domestic issues, though, he would like to keep aioor rrom pontics. Henrv Wallace ".till vice president has lust -returned' from a very -unusual trip" through the south, almost unpubhoized. put with a definite po litical aim Wallace is already laying ground work for 1948. has mended fences with bankers, businessmen, educators and editors in Georgia, LKentucky, Louisiana and Texas. . . . He called on delegates who voted for him. was the house guest of Mayor Wilson Wyatt In Louisville, Mayor Tom Miller in Austin, spent a week-end at the home of Georgia's Governor Arnall Wallace told one and all that the big job of liberals and Democrats was re-election of Roosevelt. In Austin. Texas, Wallace learned that Gov emor Coke Stevenson gets -up at 5:30 every morn ing. brews his own coffee in th kitchen. Next morning, mor-ning, Wallace and portly political adviser Harold Young showed up at the governor's mansion at 5:30 a. m.. found the governor was sleeping late At 6 a. m. Stevenson came down Wallace and Young traveled all night by plane from Aus tin to Louisville, arrived haggard and weary at 6 a. m., went to Mayor Wyatt s home. . . . Wal lace ducked upstairs, dozed for three hours, leav ing Young to handle newsmen and callers while Mrs. Wyatt kept Young awake with large cups of coffee Later, press stories commented on how fit Wallace looked, while his aide "Harold Young couldn't take it.". . . . Wallace, who prides hfmscJr on wearing out traveling companions added these clippings to his scrap-book. Dumbarton Oaks Secretary Hull's message to the opening Dumbarton, oaks peace parley had whole paragraphs paralleling Woodrow Wilson's statement of Jan. 16th, 3920, on the even of the first League of Nations Council meeting. . . . "It is our task here." Hull said, "to help lay the foundations foun-dations upon which, after victory, peace, freedom and growing prosperity may be built for gener a tion s to come". . . . Twenty-four years ago Wil son said: "It will bring the League of Nations into beinr as a livin&r force devoted to the task of as sisting the peoples of all countries in their desire for peace, prosperity and happiness." Peace Talks While the Russians don't at tach too much importanae to Dumbarton Oaks Stalin thought enough of the meeting to send his personal interpreter along with the delegation. . John Foster Dulles. Dewey's foreign affairs ad viser, brought Dewey's personal publicist,' Jim Hagerty, to Washington with him Cracked one newsman on greeting Hagerty: "You weren due here until Jan. 20th" ReDlied Hagerty "I'm here to case the Joint" Folks who tried to pin Dulles down on the question of the secrecy surrounding Dumbarton Oaks conferences caught Dewey's adviser in a trap7,. . , Dulles tried to condemn secrecy to newsmen, but was reluctant to be quoted on the question. Lidice has become a name that will never be forgotten. That village was burned to to the ground, and its male inhabitants were murdered, on June 10th, 1940. That date and act are since annually remembered, in horror, as a testimonial to German conduct There is another name for us to remem ber now. It is that of the village of Czech Malin. Like Lidice, it too was burned to the ground. But, here the inhabitants, o all ages and both sexes, were penned within the flaming buildings. Three hundred and seventy-four Czechs, of whom one hundred and nine were children, and twenty-six Poles were thus burned alive or shot as they tried to escape. One man and two women escaped to tell the tale. The date of this German act was July 13th. It is a date we can easily remember. It falls, ironically, one day ahead of that famous fam-ous one which, in 1789, the French began their Revolution for the freedom of the little lit-tle men of France, with the fall of the prison of the Bastille, symbol of oppression. July 13th is then historically next door to July 14th, the great day of a France now again liberated in part from the same Germans who penned children within the consuming fire of Czech Malin. Day by day, item by item, these savage German doings come to light, are documented document-ed by those who miraculously escaped from thgm, are patiently listed and recorded against the day when the United Nations shall have crushed Germny into total surrender. sur-render. What shall we do with these documented murders, with the murderers, on that day? Shall we raise our voices for a soft peace for that Germany which emblazoned June 10th, July 13th? Which erased July 14th? Softness in peace for Germany will breed another and another Lidice, another and another an-other Czech Malin, a generation hence. There will be on German softness then, as there has never been. Not even in mercy for children. Plenty of Food for Thought JrPjr11 War SurDlus Publicity Set By ANN STEVICK Dally Herald Washington Correspondent The goldfish bowl in which Surplus Sur-plus War Property Administration's Administra-tion's doings are supposed to take place for all to see is being wired for sound. Mr. Allen Walker, old-timer old-timer in public relations and for many years an officer of New York Guaranty Trust Co., has been appointed by Administrator Will Clayton to beam policy information. The information setup will have the confounding two-way Job of handing out technical information to potential buyers of a stock ranging from multimillion-dolIar plants to girdles and toothbrushes, while keeping the public contented con-tented with news of what goes on. Desk Chat How Are You On Thought Twisters? They arc not so difficult if you have the key. . . .because all are buUt on the same, general pattern. pat-tern. Perhaps one of the first and best known is: "Good Morning. Madam," To Eve said Adam. "Good morning. Sir," To him said her. Simple, isn't it? Now memorize memor-ize it and then repeat it slowly to friend and see how difficult it I is r him to reoeat it correctly. It is our self-assurance thatl justifies the confidence our friends! have in us. Little Johnnie had always been backward in arithmetic, so while attending summer school, the teacher took special pains to drill him in simple sums, such as: "What vi-nliM vnur father nav in ing Mr. Walker see the solution he owed the baker $2.15l the! Policy-maker at SWPA includ- First Biography of America's Groat General Cyrts. 144, Ann Woodward Mlllen Dla4rlbae, NBA Service, tae Galloping Senility A Swedish correspondent predicts that Hitler may replace von Kluge with a younger young-er field marshal. That's wasted effort, to our notion. The way things are going for the Nazid in France would make an old man of any commander and quickly. Mosquitos have trimmed their bills down for summer boarders. Others have trimmed them up. " - ' An optimist is anybody who starts out to work a crossword puzzle with pen and ink. Isolationist Toboeean Judging by the tele mm and phone calls colleagues are getting, from Nevada's Senator Pat McCarran, he is racing against political death. He has been frantically calling senators, some of whom vigorously disagree with him, imploring thm to endorse him for re election This is nationally significant. It in dicates a complete reversal of his position six vears aeo. when he bellowed that his renomina- tion was purely a state matter and pulled aU sorts of wires to keep administration forces out. isow, like fellow-isolationist Bennett Clark in Missouri he has suddenly clutched FDR's coat-tails Running against McCarran is dynamic Lieutenant Governor Vail Pittman, Nevada newspaper pud-lisher pud-lisher and younger brother of the late senator Key Pittman. As chairman of the senate foreign relations re-lations committee the elder Pittman was the leading lead-ing advocate of stopping thje Jap war lords by economic measures, way back in 1936. before It got too late. .... Younger brother Vail Is like him McCarran was a leading senate isola tionist, played into Hitler's hands along with Wheeler, Nye, Clark The world will be watching Nevada in the September primary to sec whether the Far West is isolationist. War Production Row You could have knocked knock-ed Donald Nelson over with a feather when Charles E. Wilson popped his resignation. . . . Here is the inside storv of what happened. One day before leaving leav-ing for China. Nelson called in top WPB executives for an arms-around-each-other love feast. He said he wanted no hard feelings: he loved everybody Then he called on Charley Wilson, who was to be acting chairman while Nelson was away.. ..... Wilson got up. slightly flustered at this show of friendship, hemmed and hawed. Then he got madder and madder, ripped out a hot attack on Nelson's aides for sniping at him. Finally, he announced he was resigning. . . . What Nelson didn't know was that Wilson had had a secret meeting with his own personal staff the day before, had pounded the table, said he wasn t going to take it any longer and was getting out. . . . WPB insiders say Wilson chiefly couldn't take cross-questioning from congressional committtees. . . . Actually, Nelson's aides were only being loyal to him. They refused to jotn the wolf pack which attacked him. Indian Typhoon When Ambassador William Phillips' famous letter advising Roosevelt that India was a U. S. problem leaked into print the firillsh government sent instructions to all British consuls in this country to inspire letters to editors, plus editorials in the local press. One man in New York alone wrote 76 letters to different newspapers. . . Later British consuls sent copies of editorials etc., to the British Embassy, with accompanying notes, showing what a good job they had done. . . . In the embassy, Jossleyn Hennessy. British public relations re-lations man for India, left off the accompanying notes, sent the editorials to Sir Olaf Caroe in New Delhi, so Sir Olaf could see what a good job Hennessy Hen-nessy had been doing. Sir Olaf then sent them to London. . . . Sir Olaf also cabled London that he had been able to keep the Phillips letter out of India so far. but "under exisiting conditions" it was sure to be smuggled in. in which case it would be published by the Indian press and there was nothing he could do to stop it. . . . By "existing conditions." Caroe meant anti-British subversion on the part of Indian officials who smuggle news into India despite censorship. Once inside India, the British can't prevent publication in Indian newspapers. Merry -Go-Round Senator Hiram Johnson, who, rarely, appears on the senate floor any more, still occasionally attends night baseball games at Griffith stadium Other ball fans are Senators Sen-ators Chandler of Kentucky, Walsh of New Jersey. Stewart of Tennessee, and Mead of New York, all frequent box-holders at the ball park. (Copyright. 1944, by United Syndicate, Inc. J LANDING IN SICILY , XXII TT7ITH North Africa safely in " his possession, General Eisenhower Eisen-hower cast his eyes towarc -ope. Working indefatigably Tor "ve weeks, Ike and his staff planned every detail of the job. V. hen nc was questioned about his chances for success, he pointed toward Sicily and remarked, "We'll be in there going well in a month." Day and night his bombers were creating havoc over the 5-lands of the Mediterranean and far into Italy. The island of Pantelleria, after 20 days of incessant bombing and co-ordinatea bombardment by naval forces, was reduced to shambles. The garrison of 10,000 troops surrendered without an Allied loss on June 11, 1943. The island of Lambedusa surrendered on the following day and then Linosa. General Eisenhower sat at his headquarters, with his staff, working work-ing out the details in accordance with a general plan which had been decided upon at the Casablanca Casa-blanca conference. Through long hours of ceaseless discussion the strategists surveyed charts, blueprints,- and maps involving every problem. The minutest details were analyzed. Tedder, Cunningham, and Alexander were given the responsibility re-sponsibility for strategy and supply. sup-ply. At the oblong council table, with Eisenhower sitting at the head, they shot questions back and forth in verbal volleys. When a technical techni-cal problem arose they called in experts and other generals to ad vise with them. After the day s session, Ike would remain working alone until far into the night. He was now rising at 4 o'clock in the morning and staying on the job till midnight. While the campaign was being organized. Anthony Eden back in London, affirmed his complete confidence con-fidence in them. "Not enough has been said about the invaluable work of General Eisenhower in North Africa. Literally there is no parallel for it in history. It is not a joint Allied staff that ne has created, but one single staff working toward one objective. What can be done in North Africa in war can be done elsewhere in peace." ON July 4 Ike made an Independ- laration of Independence was made 167 years ago, after a long and bitter battle," he said. "The three nations involved are now represented here. Unhappily they were not on the same side in that war. But today we are marching side by sire to defeat an enemy which is trying to defeat everything our Declaration of Independence stands for." The invasion of Sicily on the night of July 9 was now but a matter of hours. The warships and transports had sailed. General Gen-eral Eisenhower watched the departure de-parture of an Allied air fleet raid then went to his headquarters. He spent the night tracing the course of the invasion on charts in his office and in the Fighter Command room which had charge of the air umbrella covering the action. A few hours before the Sicilian invasion a terrific wind swept over the Mediterranean. Ike watched and gauged it with his weather-trained plainsman s eye, He went to headquarters and found a message from General Marshall: "Is it on or off and what do you think?" "It's on!" Eisenhower wired back. "There's a high wind but I think we'll be able to report success in the morning." Throughout the work of the night, Ike sustained himself by sipping tea. Turning to an aide he smacked his lips and re marked, "The English k.iow what they're doing. This tea habit is not so bad!" It was revealed at this time that Ike always carried seven good- luck pieces in his pocket They were old coins which he rubs when in a particularly ticklish action. The officers, watching him with his hand in his pocket, nodded nod-ded and said, "We'll win Ike's rubbing his good-luck pieces." o AT 1:30 Ike was convinced from that the "boys are doing a good job." While he vited he lay cown and took cat naps until 4:30, when an orderly announced. Ocneral, the invasion is a suc cess. The Doys nave landed in Sicily." 'By golly!" shouted Ike. They've done it again!" Immediately he began to broadcast broad-cast his messages to the besieged peoples. Sicilians listened enthralled as the proclamation of their American Ameri-can liberator came to them over the radio in their own language. Always thinking far ahead of his enemies, and knowing that Hitler would use the invasion of Sicily to excite fear in France that they, too, were about to be invaded, Eisenhower sent this message to the French people and listened in the broadcasting room as it went out over the air: "Anglo-American armed forces have today launched an offensive against Sicily. It is the first stage :n the liberation of the European continent. There will be others. "I call on the French people to remain calm, not to allow themselves them-selves to be deceived by the false rumors which the enemy might circulate. The Allied radio will kep you informed on military developments. de-velopments. "By remaining calm and by not r -.posing yourselves to reprisals through premature action, you will be helping us effectively. When the hour of action strikes we will let you know. Till then, help us by following our instructions; instruc-tions; that is to say, keep calm, conserve your strength." NEXT: Victory in Sicily. Minutia Forum'n in em By RUTH LOUISE PARTRIDGE - J want to Know now me raut cv Bunyan tales got started? Well 1 j UTILITY BOARD SECRET think I can give you. an idea. Very' POLICY IS DISAPPROVED recently in a movie travelogue We acknowled recci t about Salt Lake City, the com- of intercst evWenced , .,. j J-b lhank the numerous citizens who quite caimiy tnat Bngnam l ounglcallcd on the phone and made was the architect for the Mormon tabernacle in Salt Lake and not content with this, he went on to say without turning a hair, that Brigham Young was also the architect for the Mormon temple in Salt Lake City. Shades of personal contact in regard to the present policy of the Provo utility util-ity board as set forth in my article of August 22nd. If such interest and protests continue pur city commission and various other public pub-lic agencies should begin to real ize that the purpose of their ap- Tniman AncrMnH othor -ho pointments and election was to . .. , . , ... iscrvo the public's best interest as were the real parties responsible.! whole be accom. And this doesnt end it. Over theiDiished by allowing our loyal and radio not long ago a Speaker talking talk-ing about the Geneva plan and so on et al said, and I quote ,"it. . . (the mining industry. . . has fulfilled ful-filled one of Brigham Young's fondest dreams." Egad! Brigham Young fought the mining industries indus-tries in Utah all his life, and bitterly. bit-terly. There was one feeble at tempt to get an iron mine going experienced employes to be dis placed by those with questional qualifications and motives. This docs not apply exclusively to the power plant employes where high efficiency and good morale is disintegrating from within because of infiltration of those who should not be there. If these conditions are not cor for church purposes, but Brother j rccted we are in a position to Brigham broke out in a rash (of invective) at the mention of mines, mining, and, miners. How do ..these things get started ? Ask Paul Bunyan. I was further edified edi-fied to read in a paper last time I was east and at the end of air interview with me a visiting Mormon Mor-mon that Brigham Young is buried in Vermont. How did they get'that notion? I don't know. I'm sure I didn't give them any such idea. I think that the reporter was simply addled at the close prox furnish the public with an abund ancc of evidence to substantiate these charges together with con siderable other evidence of . mal practice and corruption that, in our estimation amounts to virtual sabotage. Our power plant as well as all other public interests should be maintained as institutions belonging belong-ing to the people, to be operated by our people, for the benefit of our people. Let us transact our city business in a public way and "imity to me. I don't think he wasjpct away from the military secret used to talking to Mormons. 1 mistvle now in vogue. Business thai sure, he wasn't by the questions hcjjS not transacted openly is not to asked. Well, anyhow, I think u too bad that the idea grows that there was only one man in Utah in the early days, for it just isn't true. There were a lot of us who weren't named Young and scores who were, by the way Once when some friends of mj parents returned east from a visit to Utah, they sent a paper they had written an article for about their trip: It the best interest of the public L. E. WAID the people from going to and from the mountains." . Well , tfcerejfou have it. Why did they say it? Don't ask me. ask Paul Bunyan. They didn't see any wall, for there's no wall there, and so far as I know nobody elves a thin said there was a j dime whether the people go to Q'S and A'S Q What common product Is used in liquid foam fire fighting equipment? A Soy-bean meal. Q Does the Greek government-in-exile have any postwar territorial terri-torial claims? A The Greeks want especially the Dodecanese Islands, off the Turkish coast. Now Italian, the Dodecanese are populated mostly by Greek-speaking people. Q What is especially noteworthy note-worthy about Orleans. France, taken recently by the Allies? A Orleans (pop. 75,000) was freed from the English by Joan of Arc in 1429. Q What is the population of Chungking, China's wartime capi tal? A Latest census says 928,000. Q What sport draws the greatest great-est attendance each year? A Basketball. 90,000,000; baseball, base-ball, some 30,000,000 less. in Mr. Walker's general informa tion office, plus "spot" informa tion offices to hand out specific details from seven or eight designated desig-nated disposal agencies, including includ-ing Treasury Procurement, Reconstruction Re-construction Finance Corporation, Corpora-tion, Navy, War Food Administration. Adminis-tration. Mr. Walker won't guess with you at the value of the surplus wares about which he's to inform the nation. Others estimate goods actually to be turned over from military stocks for disposal here is worth from six to 123 billion dollars overall surplus at home and abroad. While Mr. Walker informs on surplus war property being dispos ed under Mr. Clayton s administration administra-tion set up by presidential edict of February, 1944, congress is worrying worry-ing out legislation known as the Conner bill to establish it. Some congressmen, including Mr. Jerry Voorhls and Mr. Chet Holifield of California, are stumping: for sales methods that will give veterans small farmers and businessmen a better chance. The Mattress Case Mr. Walker believes that sur plus must go through existing merchandising machinery, can t be parceled out over a nationwide nation-wide bargain counter. In practice this school of though prevails in SWPA. While congressional exponents of small-lot sales urge their beliefs be-liefs in the House, members have brought in reports of a sale of 100,000 mattresses, sold in mini mum lots of 600 and up. Lots of 600 sold for 94.25, bigger lots( 13.85. That, the small-Tot expon ents point out, pulls the mattress out from under a veteran or the corner retailer who'd like . to replenish re-plenish his stocks with a dozen mattresses. Mr. Voorhis amend ment to give small business a bet' ter chance is temporarily in the bill, to be bandied about later. Some other two-faced troublesome trouble-some things in the bill lead mem bers of Congress to sing the policy blues. Mindful of possible aid to monopolies by selling vast war plants to certain enterprises, con gress requires that no aluminum or synthetic rubber plants shall be sold without a preliminary re port to Congress Mr. Voorhis points out that wnats good for aluminum and rubber is good for petroleum products pro-ducts and chemicals. They Want To Bypass Section II Small business watchdogs also want to fix the clause allowing an owning agency such as Army or War Food Administration to dispose dis-pose of property for war production produc-tion or as designated by the surplus sur-plus administrator without being restricted by Section II, which demands first consideration for public, educational, or charitable institutions, veterans or small business, and is supposed to prevent pre-vent unusual and excessive profit pro-fit and fostering of monopoly. Mr. Walker cited one such sale. Army rented 10 million dollars worth of equipment to General Motors for war production, GM decided to buy it before it was declared surplus In order to make firm their reconversion plans. Army as owning agency said sure,- we'll give you the customary custom-ary 5 per cent discount. GM said what customary 5 per cent discount? dis-count? We'll take the regular 15 per cent disposal deterioration. No matter how the legislation emerges, Mr. Walker foresees other transactions that will give him grief. There may be a milion gallons of camouflage paint, a fairly costly product, especially composed to rub off easily. Mr. Walker doesn't know anyone who wants it bad enough so taxpayers won't scream "Gyp!" at the price. With diverse disposal problems. Mr. Walker says speed is ths most important factor. He plans to keep his information setup in high gear to help get rid of government property prop-erty while there's demand enough to create a- seller's market. butcher, $7.35; the grocer, J12.37r and the milkman. ..." I "Nothing, ma'am," interrupted Johnnie, "we'd move!" wall around Salt Lake to "keep and from Uie mountains or not. Ration Calendar BEEFSTEAKS. AND ROASTS, FATS, OILS, BUTTER AND CHEESE ..Red stamp. A8 through D5, ration book 4, valid indefinitely. PROCESSED FOODS Blue stamp A2 through F5, ration book 4. Valid indefinitely. GASOLINE A12 gasoline stamps, good for three gallons each, valid through Sept. 21, B3, B4, C3, and C4 coupons good for five gallons.' LIQUOR No. 2 for one fifth or one pint if fifth not available; No. B two fifths or one-half gal lon wine; expires Aug. 31. Certain types wine, and all rum, brandies and gins unrationed. SUGAR Stamps Nos. 30, 31 and 32 ration book 4. each valid Indefinitely, Stamp No.. 40 .ration Wa-aavlr A. a"kf . AaHfllni- M1IMI VAa1!! indefinitely. Spare, stamp No. '37, book No. 4, good -for 20 Lbs. -can ning sugar. See your local ration: ing board. SHOES Airplane stamps 1 and 2, book 3, good indefinitely. AEOMAN QUEST A queen once lived In Babylon A weary time age . So many moons Have overpassed It's little v? can knowf So many conflicts Have come and gone. So many battles fought About gods. And creeds And kings How can any Queen remember Older, happier things? Still, Men march up And down the land Or, over and Under the seas-Did seas-Did the Queen Who lived in Babylon Think of Such as these? At home, Some women sit And gossip Of frivolity And sins. While men Resting from battle. Night by night. Are unmindful That ever and always The planet Earth Twists, and rolls And spins. Have we forgotten beauty? Is science understood ? Do we still think The ancient gods Were merciful and good? Yes, Tis little we remember About dragons, Wood-nymphs, And such Because now, These do not seem To matter overmuch. Yea, Only old philosophers And crabby Bibliolaters Know what Queen Lived in Babylon In those forgotten years. Did' ja ever know an individuf who thought out all his belie! himself ? ALL FOR ONE Reign of ruin At an end. Sons of France On the march again. Rhythmic cadence Of marching feet Stirring the breeze And making dead leaves dancfl Foreign legions Shall liberate France Storming the beaches, Across the meers. Comes the battle cry Of the musketeers. Hark to the roll Of the drums As the Yanks advance. Marching side by side With the soldiers of Trance. This is is the sound The enemy fears Planes overhead. The boom of guns. . . . They come again The musketeers. L'ENVOL Yank and Canadian cavaliers, A kinship of freedom and romance . Thumbing their nose at the GJ of Chance 'One for all' with the musketea They march again for the land France. We are told that there were 1 ports of Jap submarines prowls off the west coast of Califoni while President Roosevelt was his three weeks' cruise ... if Japs knew the president was ing to Hawaii, they know md than the American people did. FURNITURE & FLOOR COVERINGS 60 EAST 1ST NORTH PHONE 313 KIDDIES CHAIRS CANE SEAT 00 LIMITED QUANTITY ! U BABY WALKERS FOR BABY OR DOLLS a Solid Hardwood. While They Last SWING ROCKERS NYLON. COVERS If AH ft REG. $64.50 - SALE |