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Show THE LEHI SUN. LEHI, UTAH , Tin Cans Do Their Bit in War Program 4 &5 k SM HI ' flnf t:-ww! -WfcU about the fea aSf West The utoedthe child. K A? Mummy to Kanytwo. From Jay 'Thrnond,Va S cease to write icMuw. it won't to w . .. npcauoo ill ..H!ta r .. his life and no- t ftem. Mark Sullivan K into Government TdP administer e iknPPto". Dow- fwillfigMitout with K for,, the role of Lor Florence Night- r:.L.r will con- lam w""" PP? onVnrfwork UHolnxne - C Raymond Clapper iward. will emerge as a Hill. "Dear Walter: So Lever become iamous- U eh? i"e wmt"c" Li about Ruby Keeler. Wk, Virginia Bruce, k Ina Claire and Joan Go stand in a corner, dui be wrong. I'm a loruwi tin i' chorine, ana l nave to be nuts about W.W. Banjo Eyes." MANY example of bieil: Wen John Mas Iktfrm England when I tareafe, he refused U per men w ii'eroiew . . ii( paper ran (his ttreamer; bit Reus to Chirp" ttklter story than the in-i in-i bm hem, W Biler captured Our in&efitttenNew York- litoij? . , . Certain names isgwmuul at once. Dora- ; V alter WmcheUf Smith, whose artl- w of great benefit jra an American and nr service the country , We to the National fa: The one Union fabers do more than work ptry, They die for ltl iofyetm": Leona Olsen indBen Bernie's boy, called the whole thing I. Dorsey'i manager lief arranger bare-fisted it . A foreign playboy, 1 B Morocco, Stork, other debbies he was was collared by the V Spring is AH 3 hatcheck gals at ptie brides last week. W. Al Bernio enwa so little of John Nance mi think he was still K biggest laugh in pme when Sec'y Knox's lSra a COmrjetitnr-'e no. " reader. In which . - WV- Ned of many things he me interest of the M0 s oaoer niarorf iki i.ii. "... f r uer ran the head 4 man!-, vn,0 le id . . . 'Tt cv,,,j MU On Thp Ro-tv. tMn """"" r i gy who wraps un a 'atwo-hourvocab- in' . can nostra- " aoseiand Hey, He' gotten to Martinique. "Frns. allys b.k 1 Sivy's: H,ZTOaWe things. 1-5 eyes" r.Uin,V "e Bay life'. ..reof used "as 113 1 V-k!!!011 Eain- F Maestro tee ted her been with: these splaiJ p,s1i Iome 1 too ttteA; rn con- of tt,. pub- Ml MAYBE THIS WILL DO ("Tin Pan Alley if striving to put across war song -to fit the Japanese situation." News Item.) Get back in that klmona! It's there where you belong; It's strictly a la bathrobe That you can do no wrong; Get back in that klmona! And face the simple facts: You rate attention only In acrobatic acts. ' II. , Get back in that kimonal And then await your cue: A blare of circus music. The clowns ... the seals . . . ' , and YOU! . Get back in that kimona - And take in all the slack! You never looked convincing Save flat upon your back! III. .-, . Get back in that kimona And back into your tights! (We'll toss you in some barrels For matinees and nights.) Get back in that kimona And grab a parasol! In any other costume You don't look right at all. IV. Get back in that kimona Onto that platform hop! Your act's done with a ladder And some poor guy on top; Get back in that kimona And hark to our appeals! Your spot and well you know It- Is there among the SEALS. V. Get back in that kimona And climb up on that wire! (You wanna walk the tightrope Not set the world dn fire: Get back in that kimona! Your era was the time When Albee was in flower And Keith was in his prime. Buy Defense Bonds GAS RATIONING Within a few weeks automobile driving will, be "by card only." It will no longer be a question of where you will go for your Sunday auto trip, but how? Week-end motor trips are to be come short distance affairs, and on any summer vacation trip by sedan a bicycle strapped on the back will be compulsory equipment Americans have become accus' tomed to pile into the old boiler, step on the gas and keep driving until the family took pity or the car hit a tree. "Fill 'er up!" have long been the three most common words in the language. And it is going to be quite an experience for the average av-erage man to realize that even his detours are being rationed. Guns must get priorities over joy- rides and no real American will question the justice of putting bombers, bomb-ers, tanks and warships ahead of hot brakes, hot dogs and hot radiators. radia-tors. -J-;, We have driven by ear, by intuition, intui-tion, by habit and by orders, but driving by card will be a new experience. ex-perience. It will not be a question of how many miles does she give to the gallon, gal-lon, but how many gallons does she get to the card. '.V'". "Well," we can hear mom saying Sunday morning, "where will we go for a ride today?" "Look at the ration card and see," we can hear pop reply. WE.IAM WMKItlE TriEWA "You've got it," mom will reply. "No. I haven't I left it right there on the table so you could all make your Sunday plans accordingly." accord-ingly." "It's only got two punches left," sister Susie will observe as she ex amines it. "Then that's as far as we'll go," dad will snap. "How far can - we go on two punches?" little Edgar will ask. "That will get us just " about enough gasoline for one ' bathing beach, four all-hots and two arguments argu-ments with a motorcycle cop," dad will explain. And a motorist already has to carry car-ry so many cards there will be serious se-rious complications. He is practi cally a walking card case right now. Once he empties his pockets it is hard to tell whether he is a motorist motor-ist or a fortune teller. . '- However, war Is war, and from now on most auto trips will be demi-tasse demi-tasse travels. And if yon are an antoist disposed to squawk, forget it. Just think about the lock of the poor fellow who lost bought a rural tavern, a roadside lunch or one of those tourist camps. Oh, man Buy Defense Bonds "Now we know why the Japs wore their kimonos to hide something they had up their sleeves," says Muriel Mu-riel CahilL It's those depressing war dispatches." dis-patches." - v, ..'.MiWfi ,. i , a wmia ":-v.".y A. ffljli'mftr-fn M Lit Carloads of tin cans are pictured at the right, cn route to a de-tinning plant, where they will be reclaimed for their content of that vital metal. San Francisco housewives, co-operating In the nation's drive for tin, saved their tin cans so that 150 tons were gathered on the opening day. In photo at left, Martha Qucnther and Helen Anderson (right) check ingots of tin reclaimed. The ingots weigh 100 pounds each. Merrily They Sail to Continent 'Down Under' Us ft -. -r r-k , .-I ii u'l Jp -j I m 1 r , s' v 1 fel ,IJ '--sOr" i f )l ill '"ICr H EDDIE ANDERSON There's many a happy smile and from their transport ship. They are of the sea a "pollywog" (one who hasn't crossed the equator) should passes the imaginary line. No exception was made on this Australian court are In costumes, officiating. Ladies and Gentlemen, Meet the 'Beep' j - f m, t on the Peen have but there is something new-the "beep." Pretty Elaine Gd"s0.a retary at Gowen Field, Boise, Idaho., delivers a package to ' technical sergeant James Ladd, from the carrying box of a -beep.-W. of 25 m.p.h this auto-glide scooter is the army's answer to the rubber shortage. Chilean Midshipmen Visit Texas f' r-v 1 Cm w Midshipmen of the Chilean navy, on a " crtb of IinK country's naval Teasel, Eancague, watch the reco dtog f trainer at Ellington Field, T!f dtLth Amer can officer, had vis-nm-motor flying schooL The future Sooth American ited Cuba and the V. S. and were i fcc-w 1 U: cheer from these U. S. soldiers - v.. -5. n. now fighting under command of General MacArthnr. Bight: In the lor become famous in Uncle Sam's army, I, .;oj aboard their bomewara nu. I 'V -r V fr J t'' (left) as they look on Australian toil be hazed by a shell-back as the ship convoy. Here Ncptunius Rex and his Dog Sentry ... , ... ,,. . Scenes like this, with a soldier id his sentry dog, may soon be a and realitv at munitions plants. The army has asked for 200 trained dogs for sentry work. Dogs are especially useful as sentries because they cai detect the presence of intruders. Ready for Japs IHf, ... ii fen nnfi urn " f '' I K'; ' ,3 I ! i IIS i S v f , J J1 i-'t. Dressed to kill Is Johnny Boyer metBf wiU 6c reunited in 'Yank al 254-year-old son of Capt B. D. Boy ; Eton" . . . Their last appearance to-er, to-er, stationed In Honolulu. Johnnj fether tens in "Lord Jeff," four year put on this war paint In readinea ag0 . . . "Tish," adapted from Mary for the Japs In case of another sneal Robert Rinehart's delightful stories. raid. STAGESCRE EN'iiADIO By VIRGINIA VALE (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) A STUDIO stage hand stole the spotlight from William Wil-liam Powell and Hedy La-marr La-marr when Wendell Willkie (who ! recently was elected chairman of the board of 20th Century-Fox) visited the stars. Willkie arrived just in time to watch them doing their first love scenes in "Crossroads," and offered to change places with Powell. Pow-ell. The stage hand, Pinky Picciano, had a brother who was a petty tertained Willkie and the cast with anecdotes. Incidentally, in his new position Willkie will not "perform any executive duties or be actively connected with the operation of the company." Eleanor Powell's spun glass hula skirt is scheduled for a tour of the army camps; so are two other costumesa cos-tumesa pink satin tails and top hat and an abbreviated toreador outfit out-fit She's bought the rest of the costumes she wore in "Ship Ahoy," and they'll go along. When Jack Benny takes his Sunday Sun-day night radio show to army camps the member of the cast who has the most fun is Rochester; the soldiers always supply him with a "jeep," and he has the time of his life riding rid-ing all over camp. "No rougher ;than the Maxwell," says he. . William Holden was the first married mar-ried Hollywood man to Join the services; serv-ices; quitting motion pictures at the top of his career, he became a pri vate in the army. You'll remember him as the small-time bookkeeper in "The Remarkable Andrew," for his speech for democratic Ideals. He married Brenda Marshall last July; she is working at Warner Brothers' In "The Constant Nymph." - ;.': ' Virginia Dale went home to Charlotte, Char-lotte, N. C, for a vacation, and re- turned with a husband, one who's j probably unique among Hollywood i husbands. He's 28, his name is ICourtland Shephard, and his business busi-ness is, of all tilings, commercial shark fishing! i :y.;: .,, v-fs:' There's no sound-effect trickery , about it when you hear George or Gracie Allen running up and down stairs. A set of wooden steps 12 of them; count 'em, some time is near the mike, and Ed Lutas, sound-effect sound-effect operator, does the skipping up and down. If it hadn't been for the red polish on ber nails, three-year old Patsy Nash would have played a boy In "I Live on Danger." She was discovered dis-covered when she and her mother were waiting for a bus. Producers William Pine and William Thomas wanted a little boy for the picture, thought she'd do. Then they also discovered the red polish, learned that she was a girl and rewrote the part for her. She was so good optioned her for a fea- tured fo,e th(J Echard Aflea In. tcrccptor Command." It begins to look as if the gentlemen gentle-men have it when correct answers have to be given. During 11 weeks of broadcasting, on Bob Hawk's Friday Fri-day CBS quiz, 14 men have won $4,474 in defense bonds; only 8 women have scored, winning $1,879. : For the past three years Alan Bunce has been radio's popular "Young Doctor, Malone"; during that time he's picked up many fine points of medicine, so many that he was chosen to play Dr. Walters" Wal-ters" in "Chaplain Jim, U. S. A..V the new Monday through Friday dramatization which is being presented pre-sented in co-operation with the radio ra-dio division of the war department. ODDS AND ENDS-lIal Peary, the air' "Great Gildersleeve," hat tigned at RKO to appear with Fibber McGee and Molly in their next picture . . . And RKO ha cast Randolph Scott and Jackie Cooper in top role with Pat O'Brien in "BattU Station," a slory of three V. S. navy gunner ... One of tcreendom't favorite juvenile teams, Mickey Rooney and Freddie Rartknla. it being screened by Metro-. ofllcer on the battleship Mississippi " j whei Willkie's brother Ed was a di-V di-V ' W!k i vlslon officer on the ship, and en- t tl ABiTTfaWW IS Or NAVIGATING WAS MADE POSSIBLE V BY ilOHM MADiir IN 1731. HC INVENTf0.1 THE OCTANT. FORERUNNER CP THE FAMILIAR SEXTANT. THE BETTER WAY TO TREAT CONSTIPATIO DUE TO LACK Of PROPER'BULI IN THE OUT IS.T0 CORRECT THE CAUSI OP THE TROUBLE WITH A DELICIOUS CEREAL, KfLU ALL BRAN. EAT IT EVERY DAY 7 a AND DRINK PLENTY m OF WATER. REASON IT OUT AND YOU'LL PREFER THIS ) In NR (Nature's Remedy) Tablets, there are no chemicals, no minerals, no phenol derivatives. UR Tablets are different act different. Purely vedubit a combination of 10 vegetable ingredients ingre-dients formulated over W) years ago. Uncoated or candy coated, their action is dependable, thorough, yet gcntJe, as millions of NR8 have proved. Get a 10 Convincer Box. 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