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Show THE LEW SUN, LEIII. UTAH ur Red Land and Sea Moves Mapped After Odessa Kathleen Norris Says: tod CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT of ;hion. ?S, poj. sha SO ct r are s in' ling r, Having a Man Around1 USED PIANOS Bell Syndicate wntj Features. VHir.o riANO FOH SALE In this community. com-munity. Writs 8ummrhy Muili (:., Salt Lk CHr, tub, lor information. - G?-flWlD KAJ JJf ORE W PEAkSDH rr : z 1 made: nd m ons fe ;nt i I sizes. PS for i. k se is . IPEAE' New I altera : cers nesofc o havf at s.' Alas; !stakl: anadi EEDS CO. BCC ' Fred took almost as much By KATHLEEN NORRIS fpvERHAfS there are a riot of wives liKe me, says a letter from Carol Bat in liermamown. ur after, liKe ine wue i was iur lwen years for I am di sced now. Fred and I were batov for a while; it gives me r . . i a arp heartacne now to re- andt hamber our iov in uur urst Me home and our new baby rrld took almost as much are of David as I did: we on-pr;isd to take him off on pic- lis$, come home weary ana i i new J fpy and all freshened up, the baby to bed, ana have gouple of friends come in :cr!a pick-up supper and two ubbers of bridge, in those g pre! ears we made quite a few in itf tfle business trips together; tice. I Wved the trains and the ho- 'dMiM Fred's free time1 was al- teMs e a holiday, and get-JfjDl get-JfjDl back to little Davy's wel-a wel-a t :ogae the best of all. ... flock: "bout four years ago something ien to go wrong. Fred was away , u ift in the evening. I resented it. dy' mother was living with us. He eei tt; ikai her and she liked him, but I presse: sepr she felt that I spoiled him. inropf fe got into wordy spats; I couldn't le toe e'fhone him in the old way and (jta ; m 'All clear?' because Mother apidlj then smile good-naturedly ffl ies- '4 say "There you go again rber. filing under.' Friction Allowed to Pile Up. ,y "Put that wasn't' all, of course, ignst seemed to suffer from complete jing t l4 sympathy. Little things be-on be-on a 1 N to jar on us terribly; we pulled ,rd. ' 3t Whatever Fred wanted to do r iK eemed to be the exact thing I didn't shing" fMt to do; whether it was asking tii acquaintance or that to the wise, using money for this purpose e ir -that, keeping some secret or mr laking some remark, mbet. mother was living with a ltee (' 'j'fcwed sister at this time, and 70 r kh?i quite suddenly Fred and I a me 'greed to a divorce, David and I ent there. David is now eight, he r his father I want him to. I nlie B .to outbursts of affection and often r Miration for his father sometimes Sfa :oe at awkward moments, and my Mei r mother exchange scorn- J glances that sooner or later he'll 4erstand. So I intend to get into J carters of my own as soon as pos-deff pos-deff iible. But even that presents diffl-of diffl-of :es. Fred wanU David. - Tred has married aeain. a nice gn woman ten vears older than !eMo has two little girls; David c to go there. Naturally things lfto't as pleasant here, for my sis-r sis-r boys are only five and three, ? older cousin teases them. I lose Fred's check for David's HPort I will have to take a paying Ja my alimnnw Is J wiuj Jear. ' I had it tn An Trt pit with Fred. He has his faults, r taows, but so have L To have .7 ' ""J-ii-uiues . seiuea, io If I! 7! takei-for-granted approval friends Instead of their gently-llniicaj gently-llniicaj rim,K..i . . . Pin-pricks of our old disputes childish nonsense. 1 more than that. I like to i th' ?an around-1 le his racket ifeiT When he gets home at j 1 1 like him to pay my restau- care of David as I did. DIVORCE SEQUEL The woman over whose letter let-ter Miss Norris weaves this column has found a greater number of answers to divorce and, as in a great number of the cases where man and wife split, her discoveries have been made after the estrangement. And it's usually a pretty bitter bit-ter sequel to those women who find themselves placed in a similar role. The realization of not knowing "when they were well off" torments them and brings them sharp recriminations recrim-inations over the slight frictions fric-tions that caused them to part. And there are the children. The divorcee suddenly finds that it was good having a man around. Not only for herself but for the children. And she also finds now that the connubial con-nubial knot has been untied, that having had one around at one time is not a guarantee, that she will acquire another quite as handily. Yes; if she had it to do over again, she would stick to hubby hub-by and the children. She knows now that despite the difficulty of marriage that it has its advantages. ad-vantages. That for a divorced woman to make it alone in the world is not always a bed of roses and that lonesomeness is a dreadful heartache. As an aftermath she discovers discov-ers that it was good to have had a man around. rant bill, and say How are you fixed for money, kid?' I like to fuss over him when he feels sick, and have him fuss over me when I do. I like sharing David, buying presents for both my men at Christmas, planning plan-ning surprises and trips. A little loneliness as a wife is better than total loneliness as an unattached female. fe-male. A faulty human man, 27 per cent selfishness, is better than no man at all Married Woman Better Oft. "The married woman, whatever her difficulties, has a definite advantage. advan-tage. The divorced woman is cut and humiliated in a thousand ways nobody suspects. 'There were faults on both sides,' society says kindly, even if the husband , beat her, starved her, and threw her into the street. 'I'll get a nice man for you, honey,' says the hostess, with some infatuated married lad of 20 in mind, who will talk all evening about his wife, now in the hospital having a baby. "Worst of all," concludes this letter, "is the little loyal David, with his anxious, When's Dad coming home?' Am I to tell him that Daddy is a cruel stupid failure, or to shut up about Dad?" So the woman who wrote this letter let-ter would perhaps give other wives contemplating divorce the advice I always do; the advice Punch-gave Punch-gave in a single monosyllable to the young man about to be married- "Don't" That was merely in joke; we are in earnest Nine times out of ten a woman divorces for imaginary or easily curable trou-bios trou-bios Then she finds out what real trouble IS. Consumers Paying Debts There are increasing signs that American consumers are Pf their debts. Latest figures show that the total consumer credit outstand-fcg outstand-fcg at the end of 1941 has been marked by the sharp decline of 51 per cent The greatest portion of his drop is accounted for by the shrinkage in installment credit The shrinkage is said to indicate that a Urge postwar market w,D open for autos. refrigerators, furniture furni-ture and household equipment fre-quUy fre-quUy sold on the installment plan. ROMANIA OPLOESTI BUCHAREST OC0NS.TN tgfitai, VARNA oULOAKIA f. d dramatio strokes came In the wake of the great Red victory at Odessa. By sudden thrust at the Perekop isthmus the Russ had undertaken a move to cut off Crimea and gain Sevastopol. Action from sea, as well as land, was expected alone the Romanian and Bulgarian pnasU well, fnllnulno- thn Crimea of- tensive. Ships of the Black sea fleet wu.a tut me rau une at Uvidopol to General and f' 4 I ff 4 i ', A I i i - ! " tH I - ? 'V -W1J I , Three scenes from the Burma front and what makes it tick: Left: F. Messerbey, commander of the 7th Indian division of the British 14th army. Center: A U.S. tank and American-trained Chinese tank crew who demonstrated to the Japs in the battle of Walumbum just bow well-trained they were in the use of modern weapons of war. Right: Chinese boy of American-trained transport unit enjoys his meal of rice, girded gird-ed with a captured Jap battle flag for an apron. Training for a 5 immf Corp. Walter C. Wojtas (weaving) of Cleveland, Ohio, and Pfc. Andrew An-drew Kundla (in bed) of Scranton, Pa., two Americans blinded In action, are shown at the Valley Forge General hospital, PhoenixviUe, Pa. There the government has undertaken the task of rehabilitating American men who lost their sight In this war, and preparing them for brighter future. Princess Inspects ....J .WIJll.im.1 ' I I I .M.J... . MIIH.I I.JWI..WJJLI ' - ' ? ' 'i ? i j0 S" " "Sr ,' ,, ,' i ''-' f ""' r " i - t v i f J ' I ' - fr VI is rictured here with bead turned to a charming ..d'KSTiS- daughter. The phof was made during a ,nd toterestea p rf lhe princess when she accom- armored infantry outfits. OVIDOPOL AKKERM) aV M If-.- f 77 had stood by for amphibious operations. Another move was a quick dash trap Nazi forces hoping to escape. Fighting Men of Brighter Future Troops With Dad f r i- 1 ' ' TURKEY Burma Front Hula Girl on Ice! "Steady, we'll help you!" and who doesn't need help when donning Ice skates for the very first time? Lieutenants Wilms Kaimlcn, Monroe, Mon-roe, Mich., and Agnes Malone, Mas-sillon, Mas-sillon, Ohio, army nurses, are used to Ice-skating back home, so they volunteered to teach Miss Kuiulcl Kehakcloa few tricks on an indoor in-door rink in Hawaii. Yes, there's nothing backward about Hawaii, aa this skating rink proves. ' 'Stopped' J r ) Boxer Fraddie Kramer, 35-year-old "ret" of ring wars, bows In defeat. de-feat. Kramer's fistio march was halted by "K. 0." Morgan tn fifth ronrid of Detroit boot. I j .iifci-- , Washington, D. C. BITTER DEFERMENT FIGHT The backstage fight over who is to direct the deferment of essential war workers is approaching white heat. It is being waged between certain cer-tain of the biggest war chiefs in Washington, having developed into a row between the army-navy, WPB boss Donald Nelson, his vice chairman Charley Wilson, and Paul McNutt Only the White House will be able to straighten out the tangle. Trouble began when Undersecre tary of War Patterson and the army proposed that the question of Indus trial draft deferments be placed In the hands of the Production Executive Execu-tive committee of which WPB Vice Chairman Charley Wilson is chief. The army-navv. which started out by trying to cut Wilson's throat, now loves him, but continues to hate Donald Nelson. So their recom mendation of Wilson to handle draft deferments was a slap at Nelson. Nelson immediately slapped back, He and War Manpower Commis sioner Paul McNutt went to the White House and told the President that industrial deferments were the Job of the War Manpower commissioner. commis-sioner. In fact, McNutt hinted that, if the President didn't consider the War Manpower commission competent compe-tent to handle the question, he could get another Manpower Commissioner. Commis-sioner. Donald Nelson backed him up. Since this meant taking the defer ment Job away from Nelson's own War Production board, it was a direct slap at Charley Wilson. Nelson Nel-son even went further and Indicated that Wilson and the Production Executive committee were controlled con-trolled by the army. More Civilian Goods? This row over essential war-worker war-worker deferments also has brought to light another important inside debate de-bate over reconversion for civilian production. Chief battlers in this row are Nelson and Wilson, with the army-navy rooting for Wilson. Wilson would like to begin production produc-tion of 200,000 automobiles soon, but Nelson flatly opposes. Aside from autos, however, Wilson does not favor getting back into too much civilian production any time soon. To study the problem, he appointed a committee to formulate a policy on reconversion which brought no enthusiasm at all from his nominal boss, D. Nelson, who disbanded the committee. Nelson's cancellation, In turn. roused the ire of General Lucius Clay, General Somervell's chief pro duction man, and Clay is now threatening to appoint an army-navy committee to study reconversion and make Wilson its head. Behind this Nelson-Wilson row over reconversion is the basic conflict con-flict between big business and little business. Big business doesn't want any reconversion until it is finished with its war orders and, at present, it is chock-a-block with war orders. On the other hand, little business which didn't get so many war or ders, would like to begin right now making alarm clocks, electric irons, bicycles and a lot of small stuff which the public needs. Big bus! ness, however, doesn't want little business to get a head start In this row. Nelson sides with little business. His friends also claim that Wilson favors the big business viewpoint and wants to wait until the war is over, so everybody can line up at the starter's tape and get an equal start The army sides with Wilson and big business for fear the second front may take more production than we realize. Those are the Issues. Meanwhile, some insiders, especially the army, are out again to get Nelson's scalp. ARMY FURLOUGHS Young Congressman Henry ("Scoop") Jackson of Washington has Just been mustered out of the army to go back to congress. One of his first acts after getting into civilian clothes was to call on Lieutenant Lieu-tenant General McNair, head of army ground forces, and effect a major change in handling men about to go overseas. He told McNair that one big gripe of the boys was that they often got no chance to visit their homes before being shipped abroad. AH men were given seven-day furloughs regardless of where they lived even if their homes were on the West Coast and they were in camp on the East Coast So the army has now agreed to the following: 1. No man will be sent overseas without getting a ten-day furlough. 2. This furlough provides that be will actually get ten days at home, plus time to travel from his base and back. CAPITAL CHAFF CKing Carol of Rumania is reported re-ported readying himself for a Soviet call back to Bucharest by way of NataL The diplomatic grapevine has it that be will be reinstated by the Russians. C Loyal General Jim Ulio, who served as best man to Captain All Heiberg when he married Mrs. Louise A twill, the former Mrs. Douglas MacArthur, later was kidded kid-ded about his wedding duties. He replied: "If Louise can come down from four stars to two bars, I can." PLANTS 10 TOMATO PI ANTS. Asiorted vnrletle. Postpaid $1 00. Krdured prlrea on Urger order. Lake Maa 1'tmi, Ovrrtoa, ). CHICKS Mountain rrownandaarllmiitod forbitaltbtnd tmxluoiioo. U.S. apprured, O. 8. Vullorum loahd too.. Heavina, loithorna All popu lar b mod. Hoicd or a ral ght run. Capacity over 76.WU weakly. CI r Wrtf V. . APPROVED BI.OOD TE8TFD extra quality chicks from prlie winning flocka. Leghorn! $14. hrnviea $15, Leu-horn Leu-horn pullets $25. TOWI.Hl, Wit Third Eaat St., Salt Lak City, Utah. WHITE LEGHORN SPECIALISTS Ovrr 30 yrari' production of tupcrior chk-ka. A llJO' o pure, top ranking, munry making Leghorn strain. Slraiulit run, $14.00, or pullet chicks, $28.00 per hundied or cockerel chicks, to.OO per hundred. Volume discount. Order Dow. Write tor tactual (older. GRAHAM HATCHERY A PULLET FARM Hayward, Calif. CHIROPRACTIC r CAN CHIROPRACTIC REALLY HELP YOU GET WELL? ResuHsinChiropractic are based on two things: (1) is your condition recovei able, anil (2) pow-tivo pow-tivo accuracy in securing the correct adjustment. adjust-ment. By the new, cicntilic use of X-Kay, Neurocuometeranaotherscientilicproctdure, a 1'recision -Chiropractor determines if he can really help you. And then by this same scientific met hod.accuratcly adjusts misplaced vertehrae, definitely removing the nerve pressure, pres-sure, the m unary cause of your sickness thus restoring normal function and health. This applies not only to stomach and heart trouble, neuritisandlumbago, but to most all ailments. Let X-Kay reveal the cause of your trouble. See and judge for yourself. Only chronic or problem cases invited. Dr. Roderick E. Kosh, Exclusively Precision Chiropractic Health Service, 2:i5 South Main St., Salt Lake City. By appointment only ... l'hone 5-4al0. AUTOMOBILES BEST BUYS Citck lot your$tlf 60 cars to choose from All males, all models Trade and Terms Complete line house trailers Morgan Motor fend rinance Co. tint linn, Sir. 714 Is. Mali ft. tall Liii City aiiLojnoBiiEs OFFICE EQUIPMENT WE BUT AND SEtX Office Furniture, Fllea, Typewriters. Adding Add-ing Machines. Safes, Cash Keglsteri. SALT LARK DKBK EXCHANGE SB Wsst Breadway, Salt Laks City. LUau BEAUTY SCHOOL Investigate the Qllfctl SCHOOL OF CXt'J BEAUTY CULTURE It Pays to Learn the Quish Way 8md far Frt Catalog THE QUISH SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTURE sas main at. alt Lak City, Utall Prehistoric Horses The earliest known member of the horse family is from rocks deposited in intermountain basins of western North America during the Eocene epoch, some 55,000,000 years ago. Hyracotherium, the rather imposing name given this earliest of horses, was tiny, little more than a foot in height It bore four toes on its front feet and three on the hind. So different dif-ferent was it from its modern descendant, de-scendant, In fact, that were it not for the intergrading forms that are found in the successive rock layers, it is extremely doubtful if this primitive prim-itive animal would be recognized at all as a member of the horse family. EE PEEPAEED to relSera ooldV achy muscles, sore tiroat with 8t Joseph Aspirin, world's largest seller at 10f. No aapirin can do more iue you. Big 100 tablet fise for only S5t- Heavier at Poles Due to the centrifugal force of the earth's rotation, the force of gravity is less at the equator than at the poles. An object which, weighs 190 pounds at the equator will weigh 191 pounds near the poles, scientists say. WNU-W 1744 -YOU WOMEN WHO SUFFER FROM .107 FLASH If you suffer from hot flashes, weak, nervous, cranky feelings, are a bit blue at times due to the functional "middle-age" period peculiar to women try Lydia E. Pinkhara's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms. Taken regularly Plnkham's Compound helps build up resistance against such distress. It help nature! Also a fine stomachic tonic. Follow Fol-low label directions. LYDIA LPINKHAM'SckI I I |