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Show THE LEHI SUN, LEIII, UTAH Nazi Prisoners Work to Re-Build Wrecked Europe Classified Department Ptrtoos bow tngMtti la tsientlal industry will not tpply without state-meat state-meat of vilbilitj from thur local United Ststei Employment Service. m i i n ivi i rijjuui.7 i VfM7ZMl rmani Justice :uted 1 e-up h( the Rej ro3 is to the 'tag to? Sled si 5xed if ;hnlcal! ish in p I Gov 'rces 4 ' , I explaiij 1 custf ommui 'and Ik instil at th for tit f ntnessj iwgai af the rely; e-Ha a doij the comm. !he ttf i in nt a a !et, art in toll ? off i? aboul ! Lore been i and! i can ist-inlcj Strip purpoi soviet J) emam igton I pitol f "the discjt ition S loubt I issful js been iselled; and iff st of, point I would! our I limmii 1 SOldt ulatedj ,n M ttopf 9 the I the t. r a fj erfaf the ie Toi I: "U t smeJ ;ant j expt wo, rccs y he his"? m M rcar:( ater janesej i led fc cause the da me n imar4 jraise is letter w Western NaPaPr Union. ..VIRGINIA VALE ilSH NOTION," by ihilip cany, "-.7 St up HoUywood's 4rtly because it would a delightful picture, . i .....Kanf itc fact U Bankhead returned Seboat" and "A ttanaai t" " , -- Donald COOK IS Known vu isoers, Is. . ttisItps her staa Jdi Siamv., " L's the daughter of Mar. Wch. She's a Dig El", pre-tier pre-tier mother was when she . j this COUniry, wim a Lund-cream voice and an ob- "jlent for seductive roles. ...,.- oniill sten nntn tha jjJOUUU I"" .flth Its Broadway cast, sue- L. we're used to those nick- y - ... uml . n 1 ,'lbe LOOK, me cearu, lie rest of them. But Para-...inlv Para-...inlv didn't look ahead raring Olivia de Havilland's 100,000 because ita mu- A , -.4 JLITIA DE HAVILLAND a to hit her on it in "The Jroomed Bride." Because ii i flash up came a name ii -"The Jaw." Sounds ie something .belonging to a ihter than a pretty girL llywood, it's a nice gesture Hutton. between nictures. Istandiin, Barbara Cain, to Ifleld, the young Broadway Barbara, star of Broad- wss and Tell," was begin-fflm begin-fflm career, in Paramount'! iisie Slagle." ted as if Penny Singleton was H to play . "Blondie" forever tat Stromberg gave her a to escape in "Young Wid-h Wid-h was a victim of typing, Pat her into this picture, in lane Russell and. Louis Hay- t co-starred. Jean Hersholt :o the same difficulty after he foe Country Doctor"; 'Van n escaped the fate of the "Dr. series, thanks to the bobby Basil Eathbone has to fight 'i eternally playing Sherlock K Typing can make a Holly. and rnin him. Bruce eoes brunette for role In Republic's "Love, and Goodbye." She's blonde r the film, then dons a dis- a brunette French maid to ;f husband's fidelity. In Dri- U Virginia's best Unt is honey five jpouK to rl let M iert bow. to q ?ery had rencf. me 5t ,t.1 years ago, after abandoning vocalist for Harry James' 1 Set a start in films. Dick ! was broke and hungry. He chauffeuring Chick Chan- l 'fork at 20th Century-Fox. handler plays a columnist in 4 on the Keys" starring Dick ' and Maureen O'Hara, near- K8 UD thair rnmannfl on1 ' slated to give his for-BPloyer for-BPloyer a punch in the jaw! Swell Idea nf Rah Rnrns "ome town of Canoga Park, f es for all residents killed "vtag in the armed forces, Wque bearing the war hero'a "cned to each tree. V'i . .. , . I - - bwcu new ramo snow, P nd Collect," launched on prf 13 as summer replacement P heard it, Wendy Barrie and pve ach contestant five wentify his surprise gift. II ho t n D rr Vf i. . - C?T f uy 1AUL1JALLUN Jj? Pri2 guesses it the first fj111 gets the prize even if he -es What it is. -'S A'n rnrrr rw m , Mac. jl u: Anareva & f"p 6y tfce toldien stall sta-ll lr,d?nd. . . . Vote that John rraT . ""ef, Producer S?" M ready to star J produc-, produc-, . Poi'man icay Kings nT"71? John and Lana Turner. IU bm. D..i ti7L- i... ' Poup oj Gershwin tributes W rj one-m ihol; fie i . f.wds aj tolout or tfi ;-'"7 carrot u;ai tocaj j. in top singers oejon U outi commercial CBS Carroll SingsT Released by Western Newspaper Union. ROW PRESIDENT MEETS HIS PROBLEMS WASHINGTON. Mr. Hannegan Is taking nothing for granted. The political pal of the President actually actual-ly sent skilled scouts out into various vari-ous sections of the country to ascertain ascer-tain how the new moves from the White House are regarded. He did not trust polls, even his own, but wished detailed reports. From all sections the answer was about the same. In effect, they amounted to an enthusiastic go-hhead go-hhead sign on the line Mr. Truman Is hewing with his cabinet changes, legislative suggestions and foreign policy. i Mr. Hannegan was told by his selected agents the nation had warmed up to methods of the executive, execu-tive, although the leftwing crowd, embodying the stereotyped New Dealers, was a little restless and inclined in-clined to indulge in a few carom shots. As a matter of observable tact the CIO, for a prime example, did not endorse the Schwellenbach appointment to labor, possibly because be-cause the new cabinet man is a northwest political associate of AFL boss Dave Beck. They did not like Mr. Biddle's invited exit as attorney general either. But Mr. Truman evened It up by presenting the unemployment un-employment pay maximum of $25 a week which CIO devised anl lost at the last session of congress, further by asking the dictatorial government govern-ment reorganization powers Mr. Roosvelt wanted and failed to get, by having his Mr. Vinson go out for the New Deal peace-planning program, pro-gram, by pushing successfully in the house for the Bretton Woods agreement, agree-ment, which the CIO and Mrs. Roosevelt have been promoting as If to put bankers in their place and some other steps. Indeed, there has been nothing for the radicals to complain about. Nothing upon which they could lay their restless fingers in accusation, although a target may be provided shortly, when- the wage increases fail to measure up to their demands. de-mands. In bulk, however, Mr. Truman's Tru-man's program is the one they devised. de-vised. Indeed, while Frankfurter and Mrs. Roosevelt have lost their appointive influence, Mr. Truman has insisted upon keeping their best friends, Treasury Secretary Mor- genthau and Judge Rosenman, domestically, while also holding on to Harry Hopkins and Mr. Stettinius internationally. Different Spirit. Mr. Truman has simply been doing do-ing the same things in a differenl spirit, following the same line but in a different way and evening things up a little. You can see It in the reorganization re-organization proposal. While Mr. T. demanded the power Mr. R. wanted, he did not want to write the bill himself but would leave it to congress. con-gress. He has sent up no prepared bills on any important subject, but is respecting the position of congress. con-gress. The carom shots have so far developed from the Russian-problem. Russian-problem. The country shows signs of breaking into two schools of thought on this. Most people seem to feel Moscow has, treated us obscurely, if not badly, bad-ly, on practically every late issue of the war and peace, except Argentina, Ar-gentina, the one point we have won and they do not like that either. The radical journals In New York have generally become be-come so one-sided that they defend de-fend every Russian interest and attack ever y American step, bitterly bit-terly assailing the state department depart-ment at every opportunity. This shows a rather thoughtless and purely political enthusiasm. Yet even on this problem, the President Presi-dent is being backed by a strong majority In the country as a whole. Mr. Truman has thus managed tc achieve popular unity, which th methods of the Roosevelt regimi prevented. A heavy majority of peo pie have been found willing; to forgei past differences and to close tht ranks of this nation before the world in order to maintain its prestige and smash the Japanese. The Anti-New Deal Democrat' well know Mr. Truman is support ing Roosevelt policies and person ages but are not criticizing him here or elsewhere, in their relief over the way he has been trying to even things up. It is a remarkable job when you stop to think about the difficulties with which he was faced. s: ? s. German prisoners, both war and civilian, are put to work as punishment for Infraction of Allied military government regulations. They are forced to clean up wrecked buildings and to build beds for returning troops and civilians. At the Citadelle of Port Louis, Lorient, France, they uncovered mass graves of French civilians murdered by Nazis. Picture shows (inset, upper left) : German prisoners cleaning up a street In Kitzinger, Germany. Oval: Uncaxfilng a mass grave. Center: An assembly line at Munich making beds. 853 Cadets Graduate From West Point -w'"w"r'-TT V, s - . m -J -J" X, . . .V.V v.SK,,-S s Si,.,". F .' - " &S "J-'' , s ' VS ' , ' 5 ,N i An overhead view showing some of the 853 cadets who graduated from the West Point military academy, as Lt. Gen. Barton K. Yount, commanding general, A.A.F.T.C., gives the graduates their wings. Dwight A. Riley of Athens, Ohio, was selected as honor man of the 1945 graduating class. Among' the graduates was Cadet W. D. Clark, who received his diploma from the hand of Gen. Mark W. Clark, his father. St. Louis Girl Sets', Mail Record . Takes Big Toll Vsi, A . -A3 's 1.1 - f X - k I i ' " x s: '" - ! I Little Rose Marie Chostner, eight, of St. Louis, is surrounded with a part of the 8,000 pieces of mail sent her in just one week after she wrote in to Smiling Ed McConnell asking for at least one birthday card for her birthday. 14 'Beavers' on Coast Guard LST SI : i fe ' J '1 ' 1 The submarine Part-he has sunk 4,500,000 tons of Jap shipping since the war began. Photo shows Lt. Comdr. VV. M. McCory and lookout men as they stand at the conning tower of the Parche, flying Its battle flag after its return to Pearl Harbor. New Twirler I. ...in j II "" ft. COMPLETE VICTORY It was a hard war program u4iirh Mr. Truman put before con gress. His primary point was that we must drive the Japs to unconcu Mnnal surrender. While recognizing the sincerity of those who oppose trus lougn policy, pol-icy, I believe that any procedure except ex-cept the Roosevelt-Truman policy of unconditional surrender is not only impractical but impossible and the hope of many people to save lives by offering conditional surrender. m -lV ,- I; nipsf. rnvi have been dodging the Anoy maie, icitu . j T ex 14 barber long enough. Serving aboard a coast-gua banned L SI. i he M beavers" took part in the assault on Okinawa. A rough and ready band tney carry their hobbies on their chins-tbe same kind of luxuriant toliage that Grandpa used to wear. n It i I A Bill Tilden HELP WANTED WOMEN In winduo action here is Dave Ferriss, sensational new pitcher ol Rostoo Red Sox, who has chalked op his sixth straight victory with a one-hit shutout. BIG Bill Tilden opened up an inter-esting inter-esting angle on the matter of concentration recently in a long discussion dis-cussion we had upon this important topic. It was Tilden's idea that ten-nis ten-nis called for more concentration than golf or any other sport, for this reason: "In golf you play the game stroke by stroke. You know where your tee shot should go and then there's the green. But In tennis you have to map out your tactics or strategy several strokes ahead. You work to get your opponent into a certain cer-tain spot where he can't make a return. re-turn. This may call for many strokes, here and there. In tennis you have extended concentration. concentra-tion. In golf and baseball it is more limited. It is usually only the next play." Greasy Neale, coach of the Philadelphia Phila-delphia Eagles, disagreed with this, as far as football goes. "In football," Greasy said, "we frequently run two or three plays to set up the third or fourth play. This, of courrse, is up to the quarterback, quarter-back, or whoever is running the team." "I know," Tilden said, "but In football you have 11 men to figure with. In tennis you are all alone. Just as you are in a boxing match where it Is man against man not team against team. I still say that tennis, for the individual, calls for more concentration than any other single sport." At this point I recalled a story that Ty Cobb had told me. As a rule baseball is played hit by hit or run by run. The main part of baseball's concentration Is on the next play the pitcher, the man at bat or the defense. But Ty Cobb once told me of three games he had won against the Yankees in the old days three plays he had planned over two months ahead. "All I worked on," Ty said, "was the right opening. You have to wait for that. I just happened to spot certain cer-tain weak spots in their defense and when the right time came it was a push over. But I still had to remember re-member what these weak spots were over a period of two months." This Is what I call the peak of extended ex-tended concentration. But there were never many Ty Cobbs hanging around. Mind on the Game Few people connected with sport, and this includes both coaches and players, quite get the point on concentration. con-centration. Concentration happens to be the ability of thinking of the right thing at the right time. "Do you know," Tommy Armour once asked me, "that not one man in a hundred can concentrate for more than a minute at a time?" I checked later, and found this was true. I mean full concentration. The so-called human brain Isn't equipped any other way. It only operates op-erates In spots or spells. For ex ample, Jack Dempsey could concen trate against a big, slow-moving heavyweight. But Jack was never so hot against a fast boxer such as Tunney, Gibbons or Greb. Concentration is the most Important Impor-tant single word In sport but few even know what the word really means. Knute Rockne used to tell me "I want my teams physically relaxedbut re-laxedbut mentally keen." The angle an-gle bcre is that teams mentally keen are physically relaxed. For the brain or the mind or whatever lt is dominates the muscular system. It is from the brain that the message comes. Certainly the subconscious mind plays its part. But it Is the acting, conscious kind that plays a much larger part. Hurry-up Yost once told me that he would rather coach an Army team at West Point than any other squad. "Why?" I asked him. "Because," Yost said, i"each member of that Army squad was listening to every word I said. This squad was trained in discipline. At Michigan and other places I found no such response." Ask the average golf instructor. He will tell you that 80 per cent of his pupils never concentrate on any lesson. They can't even remember what they were told to do. Who have been the great concentrators in sport? Big Bill Tilden was one. So was Bobby Jones. So was Walter Hagen. So was Rogers Hornsby. So was Ty Cobb, possibly the greatest of them all. So was Harry Greb. And so is Byron Nelson. Victory by Putting During the recent Nelson-Snead golf match for wounded servicemen, we ran across numerous instructors and asked for any tips they might have to offer the unwary swinger trying to break a 90 or an 85. And here were the main -suggestions: 1. On the long approach putt, first decide on the speed of the green- fast, slow or normal. 2. Get what you think Is the line. 3. Now concentrate entirely on stroking the ball. PART TIME INTERVIEWERS To call on local hoiuewivet to set information infor-mation on product ued in the home, no selling. Experienced interviewers preferred, pre-ferred, but will consider school teachers and librarians. Slate ae and experience. Ueply Dept. EAU, FO Box 4o4, Grand Central Station, fsiew York City. HELP WANTED MEN WANTED) Saddle makers, rawhide stitchers stitch-ers and tree makers, journeymen and apprentices. ap-prentices. Excellent pny, good hours and steady employment. Fine modern plunt, vacation with pay and opportunity for advancement, ad-vancement, write or wire Kowell Saddle Co., SiOU Bedweod Koad, Hayward, Calif. AUTOS, TRUCKS & ACCESS. PJ9LS Hjot r-P 0 B SUV stu rsAOi 22 711 4-7 UNRATIONED MOTOR FITEL Available everywhere 10c per gallon. I've used lt lor 25 years. Will send guaranteed complete Information for one dollar, i FRANK WF.TZF.L F. O. Bex 83S Salt Lake City. Utah. BUSINESS & INVEST. OPPOR. , Eight Bowling Alley Beds complete with ball returns, back stops, player benches, spectator seats and 25 bowling balls if desired. An Ideal purchase pur-chase for installation now and be ready for fall and winter play. For particulars twite , K. B. BOWIINE IMS, 248 Si. Hals. Salt laki City INSTRUCTION BARBFRS ARE IS DEMAND Barbering taught in a few months. Learn a permnnent business with a big income, 8AI.T LAKE BARBER COLLEGE Edw. F. Gillette, Mir, 170 Regent 8U YOUR Success In Beauty Culture depends oa "The Scheol yoe Cheoie"22 years of developing develop-ing and training skilled operators, tor oil St any time. Wriforrei calshg. QUISH SCHOOL OF BEAUTY CULTURE S3 io. Main Street Salt Lake City I, Utah MISCELLANEOUS WE BUT AND RELL Office Furniture, "Ues. Typewriters, Add. Ing Machines. Safes, Cash Registers, SALT LARK DESK EXCHANGE SI West Breadway. tall Ls City. LtaJu 1 1 DELICIOUS i fiS 11 FROZEN II I Iff 1 Serves W DESSERTS,' 1 1 1UI I 6to8 i i r: Air I 1 tHs I 1 MMnWlfprill TOOT ECONOMICAL! Cinder Block U fire-proof, stermite proof, permtv Bent. Ideal for homei, saam. dairr boiww. etc. any quantity. Do you suffer from MONTHLY IIERVOUS TEilSIQII with its wsak, tired feelingj ? If functional periodic disturbances) make you feel nervous, tired, restless at such timestry this great medicine Lydl K. Plnkham'g Vegetable Compound Com-pound to relieve such symptoms. Taken regularly lt belps build up resistance) against such Distress. Also a grand stomachic tonic. Follow label directions. WNU W 2445 And Your Strength and Energy Is Below Par It snay be caused by disorder of kid-Bey kid-Bey function that permits poisonous waste to accumulate. For tniiy many people feel tired, weak and miserable whea the kidneys fail to rtnee excess acids sad other waste matter from the blood. . Yon may sutler nagging backache, rheumatic pains, headaches, dullness, getting np nights, leg pains, swelling. Sometimes frequent and scanty urination urina-tion with smarting and burning is soother so-other sign that something is wrong with the kidneys or bladder. There ahould be so doubt that prompt treatment Is wiser than neglect. Lse Doan't Pf-la. It is better to rely on medicine that feas won eonncrywida sp-proTal sp-proTal thaa e something lees favorably known. Don't have been tried and Meted Met-ed many years. Are at all drug atoree. Get Doan t todjy. |