OCR Text |
Show ! , - THE PROGRESSIVE OPINTON j , I SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS Doll's Wardrobe a Delightful Gift Shirtwaist Dress Good Standby CLASSIFIED nEPARTMENT WKDDING RECORDS 7,.,, copl" maie rf any marriage or F?,h cerUficate. tor dependency proof. b"S fv 50c. Army discharge papers 'SAth sides. unharmed. $2.50. extras $1.00. .turned MOUNTAIN PHOTO-ART- S gJh - Spanish Fork. Utah. Used Cars Trailers rt' is required in filling orders for a few ol U't Pt t- - the most popular pattern numbers. TJv' Send your order to: 'mT'' Ay SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. VXVi 149 Ncw Montgomery St. ' V 'YX'' San Francisco, Calif. ' m Enclose 25 cents in coins for each P Pattern desired. $3 y- -' Pattern No Size Name OFFICE EQUIPMENT WE BUT AND SELL rurniture, Files. Typewriter!. Add. ST Machines. Safes. Cash Registers. SALT LAKE DESK EXCHANGE H W..I Br.adw.T. Salt La CUT. UUK TRAPPER'S SUPPLIES Edwards' Wolf SSS' onenifhttbatbronefatfciai.Sfj Free formulas Lnd nstructions. Get Bdwards real Coyote Scent. GEORGE EDWARDS, LIVINGSTON. MONT. SCHOOLS Salt Lake Barber College Formerly "Moler's" Edw. F. Gillette, Mer Classes now starting. Write for inf-ormation. 1"0 Regent St., Salt Lake. RABBITS Attention, Rabbit Breeders Steady market for your friers. Top prices. Babbit pellets and supplies. INTER MTN. RABBIT INDUSTRIES !333 8. State, Salt Lake. Hours, 1 to 1. Vacuum Cleaners, Repairs VACUUM CLEANERS, bought, repaired, parts, guaranteed; low prices, quick servi-ce Send by truck to PROSPERITY SHOP, 2334 State St., Salt Lake S, Utah. Address Little Mother A N entire new wardrobe for her doll will delight every little mother. These adorable doll clothes are fun to make and will be a perfect under-the-tre- e sur-prise. . Pattern No. 8707 comes in sizes 12, 16 and 20 inches included. Size 16 Inches, dress and pantie. requires yard of 35 or material; nightie and slip, V yard; coat and beret, sb yard; jumper and blouse yard. Classic Shirtwaist POR smart good looks, the waist dress is tops. Its trim, well fitting lines make it a stand-by in every wardrobe. Tucks at shoulder and waist, set-i- n belt are distinguishing details on this attractive mo.del. Pattern No. 8625 comes in sizes 34. 36. 38. 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48. Size 36, short sleeves, requires 4,e yards of material. Due to an unusually large demand and current war conditions, slightly more time QUICK RELIEF FOR HEAD r COLD v MISERY Y?f When nostrils are i - vtjr' clogged.nosefeelsraw, J J membranes swollen, 1, reach for cooling , ' v Mentholatum. Speed- - ' ilyit(l)Helpsthinout " , thick, stubborn mucus; (2) Soothes irritated membranes; (3) Helps ; reduce swollen pas- - f ' j 1 sages; (4) Stimulates b. local blood supply, right to "sick" area. i breath brings re- - lie' Jars, tubes, 80. I fp fLOOK FOR 7rT !2 Gf'sfl HANDSOME OOD PACKAGE J Y,,y--- Relieve wv,bww miseries... At bedtime rub throat, chest and back with Vicks VapoRub to ease coughing, loosen up the phlegm, help relieve cong-estion in upper bronchial tubes, invite restful sleep. Relief comes as VapoRub PENETRATES to upper bronchial tubes with its special medicinal vapors, STIMULATES chest and back surf-aces like a warming poultice. Often by morning most of the mis-ery of the cold is gone I Remember ONLY VAPORUB Gives You thisspe- - rial double action. It's time-teste- . . . the n home remedy for reliev- - . ing miseries of T f Q 9 I 5j children's colds. V VAPORUB West Point Grads Of the 13,000 men who have been graduated from West Point be-tween 1802 and 1934, more than 7,000 are living and in the army today. G TONIC ' LAKES jp Scott's Emulsion contains plural A & D Vitamins often needed kelp build stamina and resistance to "Us and minor ills. Helps build strong "ones and sound teeth, too I Give good-"sti- Scott's daily, the year-rou- Recommended by Many Doctors HOUSEWIVES: Yur Waste Kitchen Fats Are Needed for Explosives TRN 'EM IN! ggMvT" 4844 For You To Feci Well 24 hours every day, 7 days every eek, never etoppine, the kidneys filter matter from the blood. VM ore PeoP'e "ere aware of how the alleys must constantly remove aur-P-fluid, excess acide and other waste that cannot Btay in the blood "out injury to health, there would fetter understanding of why the " ystem is upset when kidneys tail 'unction properly, tin ninK' Bcanty or too frequent unna-- li BmGtimeB warnB that something .'i You may Buffer naguing headaches, dizziness, rheumatic ettilg up at nights, awelling. . "y not try Doon'a Pills? You will using a medicine recommended the it,. 7 over- Ooan'a stimulate the func-- of the kidneys and help them to blol Sl Po'Bonoua waste from the Gpt ey contain nothing harmful. yoon'i today. Use with confidence, ore St ID) m my m Wj --PHLOX f?J --s.iiCol. Robert L.Scoff w.n.u. release V. ine story thns far: Bobert Scott, West Point graduate, wins his wing, at Kelly Field, Texas. From Mltchel Field, N. Y., he is sent to Panama where his real pursuit training Is begun in a He begins to train other pilots, but as the war edges closer he wants to get Into combat service. Be writes many letters to Generals pleading for a chance to fight and at last it comes In the form ol a phone call from Washington asking 11 he can fly e bomber. He says he can a white lie. When he leaves his wife and child he realizes that they meant America for him. He picks up his Fort In Florida, asks one of his former students how to fly It, and they are off for Brazil. ished a volunteer force ol American airmen, flying American equipment in China against the Jap. The purpose was fourfold: to test American equipment, to train a nu-cleus of American pilots in actual combat, to furnish air support for the Chinese land forces, and to fight a delaying action against the Japa-nese until the Chinese armies could be equipped with modern sinews of war for offensive action against the stranglehold of Japan. Finally, in the late summer of 1941, the Army, Navy, and Marine Corps permitted a few reserve off-icer pilots to resign their commis-sions and accept jobs as instructors with Central Aircraft Manufactur-ing Company, or Cameo, as it was called. These seventy-od- d pilots and some three hundred ground-crewme- n proceeded in small numbers on ships of various nations Dutch, British, Indian, American, and some unregistered West from San Fran-cisco to Java, then Singapore, and thence to Rangoon, Burma. These "instructors" for Cameo were carried on the passenger lists as acrobats, doctors, lawyers, and probably even Indian chiefs. I imag-ine that after they made their great record with never more than fifty-- Cobb wanted so much to land for a look at the Ubangi wom-en. Then Lake Chad and Fort La-m- y went by. Just before dawn we crossed North of the mountain of At six o'clock the White Nile appeared we had crossed the western part of the Sudan. Our landing was made at Khartoum, where the Blue Nile and the White Nile meet. On April 8, we left Khartoum for an easy run to Aden, on a course which was almost due East over the mountains of Eritrea. We went on over Gura and Massaua to the Red Sea. On our left we could see Yemen, and farther South and to our right, Somaliland. Reaching the South end of the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, the n land- - marks, the Rocks of Aden, appeared about noon. Next day we'd make the run on to India. The British garrison commander took care of us that night. But around the dinner table there sud-denly dropped a blanket of despair. The London radio announced that Bataan had fallen. After the first comment we settled down to worry. Part of our mission was to bomb Jap concentrations around Bataan and Corregidor. Would this develop-ment cause that part of the attack to be called off? Again the fear of being frustrated in our effort to take the offensive clutched my heart. It seemed that once again help had been started too late. , We had caught the last of the 's at Aden, and next morning we got up an extra hour early for the take-of- Our Fortress was straining to get to the initial point Just behind the Success was in sight. At 5:50 we were climbing over the beach of southern Arabia, and as the light improved we all agreed that Arabia was a rugged-lookin- g land. After the terrible stories about the mutilation of forced-dow- n flyers at the hands of the tribes-men, we all were glad that we had the little cards written In Arabic, I. l i--j promising high payment to the Ar- - CHAPTER VII Maybe the meal was really good I've forgotten. But later we were to have some meals which were on the rugged side. Some time just try a breakfast at three a- - m. composed ol warmed-over- , mouldy, then toast, with, slightly sour canned tomatoes. Alter this year and more, I can close my eyes and see Col. C. V. Haynes sit-ting there looking at that delicacy-thinki- ng, no doubt, about Carolina country ham, with brown gravy making a little puddle in the grits. Well led but on the tired side, we lelt the base at 13:35, lor our next destination farther down the coast. For more than two hundred miles we were over friendly terri-tory as we hugged the beaches, but later, along the Ivory Coast, we had to fly out to sea to avoid .the prying eyes that were Vichy French. I must have sworn deeply that after-noon, lor in my diary I note now that I wrote this line: "Damn, we have to dodge those b all the time." We passed a fighter base at 17:00 G.M.T., and one hour later we land-ed at another West Coast base. The sun was setting back to the West In the Atlantic towards home. Easter Sunday was fast coming to a close. I remembered then, from "hearsay evidence," that I had been born ex-actly thirty-lou- r years belore. From personal experience I would be able to recall this Easter as a memora-ble one. Next day, while, the crew worked on the tired airplane, some of us drove into the bush country. With a guide we made about a ten-ho- trip into the interior, to Togoland. En-tering a typical dirty village we heard jazz music and picked our way towards the source. I Imagine all ol us were expecting to find a radio or a victrola; instead we found that we were really in the land that had "birthed" jazz. Grouped about an earthen crock of palm wine was the population ol the village, and the more they dipped the gourd cups into the stagnant-lookin- g liquor, the hotter the music became and the more the sweating black bodies swayed to the beat ol the drums. Their bare leet were moving to the rhythm in the dust, and their naturally musical voices, added to the syncopated rumble that came from black hands thumping many kinds ol drums, made us won-der whether some orchestra like Cab Calloway's hadn't come to Af-rica with us on a USO project. On April 7 we lelt the Gold Coast lor Kano, in Nigeria. Off at 08:00 G.M.T., we flew a course of 90 de-grees to miss more ol Vichy France. Over Lagos, in the clammy heat ol the equatorial jungle, we turned into the continent to a course ol 58 degrees and continued over very thick country until we crossed the Niger. From there on East, the land that was Africa seemed to dry boyhood conception ol up and my how the Dark Continent should look laded away. Instead ol constant jungle we now saw dry desert, like the lower hump of Erazil near Na-tal, or places in our own West. We landed at the old walled city ol Kano that afternoon. Our next would best take-of- lor Khartoum, be made at nightfall, in order that we might land in the Sudan early m abs il we were delivered unharmed to the nearest British outpost. We followed the Arabian coast over the blue waters of the Arabian sea to the Gulf ol Oman, and then crossed to Karachi. Colonel Haynes, with the had gone to Delhi. Our orders were to wait at Karachi. And now lor two weeks we anxiously ' waited, while the rumors flew. I think I shall always associate India with my first impression on getting out of my ship. No one seemed to know anything. Behind us lay twelve thousand miles, which we had made in eight days for what? No one stood there with or-ders to expedite our departure. In-stead they appeared to think we had ferried this ship lor them to use in training. Training, mind you here, hallway round the world and in a country that laced attack any moment! When we explained as much as we could about our secret orders, smiles came to the officers' faces. Bets were laid that we would never leave Karachi with those ships. But we were volunteers, and our combat spirit was still there. I remember that all my crew took the bets, as fast as they were offered. But we lost. Once again we had been frustrat-ed in our effort to go to war on the offensive. Now, lour months after Pearl Harbor, the stencilled word on a 7 in our flight, SNAFU mean-ing roughly, In Air Corps slang, "Snarled-up- " seemed to fit the situ-ation.- We learned the worst when Haynes came back from Delhi with a face a yard long. Sadly he told us the truth. Due to the fall of Ba-taan and the loss of other fields in General Chennault's AVG was composed of three squadrons, func-tioning under the supreme command of China's Generalissimo Chiang Kai-she- shown above. About sev-enty pilots and three hundred ground crew personnel made np this organization, which for nearly four months had been In combat against the Japanese Air Force from Ran-goon np to Lashio, Burma. five airplanes they shot down two hundred and eighty-si- x Japanese planes, losing only eight in combat the complaining Japanese would have been disposed to add the re-mainder of the nursery rhyme, "Rich man, poor man, beggar-ma-thief." Many times I had heard Radio Tokyo complain ol the "cruelty" ol these American guerrilla pilots. Un-der General Chennault's clever lead-ership and tactical genius they had virtually driven the Imperial Japa-nese Air Force from the skies ol Burma, and held the Burma Road for months after it should have fal-len. Against odds of more than twenty to one, they had "saved face" for America and the white race, in this battle against a much-belittle- d enemy. When one considers that the AVG fought in what the British called ob-solete tactical combat aircraft the and their deeds and scores become truly legendary. Throughout China today, General Chennault's AVG are regarded as "Saviors ol Free China Skies." The Chinese sentry on the gate to the "Fijichan" or airfield may shake his head when you show him your pass; he may not understand your hard-wo- n Chinese; but when you smile and call, his lace lights up in turn, and he calls, "Ding-ha- o you are 'number one.' " He holds his thumb up in the old lamiliar signal, and you enter. Then, to show his high regard for Ameri-cans and his vivid memory of Gen-eral Chennault's Flying Tigers, he calls after you, mean Ameri-can Very Good ding-ha- ding-hao.- " We caught up with three more of our thirteen bombers at Kano, and all our crew had begun to feel con-fident that we could not be called back from the mission against To-kyo. To insure this to a greater de-gree, we were trying hard, without appearing to be too anxious, to be the first to reach our initial point-Kara- chi, India. So long as we were the first of the we could claim a moral victory. For after all, Colonel Haynes was boss, and in a ship with longer range than the Fortress and we wanted him ahead. With full service aboard, and the temperature hot and stifling, even after nightfall, we threaded our way through the dust for the take-of- I remember that the heavy ship used the entire runway and some of the sagebrush prairie land too. for there seemed to be no lift whatever to the hot, dead air. Finally reaching a comfortable cruising altitude at twelve thousand, Doug and I breathed the old familiar sigh of re-lief at having once again gotten a loaded bomber in the air, and the sigh echoed around the ship. Down in the dust haze not a light showed as we crossed equatorial Af-rica where Sergeant Aaltonen and eastern China our secret bases coupled with other factors beyond his control, our "dream mission" had come to the end ol the line. During the lourteen days in Ka-rachi, when we had been waiting for Colonel Haynes, it had been a dif-ficult job ol finesse to hang on to the ships. All twelve of the were lined up to be turned over to Base Units on the field. But the personnel responsible for the con-flicting orders had reckoned without the extreme loyalty of the volunteer crewmen to the flight commander and the pilot of each ship. The men stood guard twenty-fou- r hours a day in and around the bombers. This was logical, too, because each ship contained not only the secret bomb-sigh- t but full complements of loaded guns, as well as the personal effects of the bomber crews. At first the crews appeared bewildered; but then their attitude seemed to imply stubbornly that they had been ordered to attack Japanese territory, and no matter il Bataan and all ol eastern China fell, that's what they were going to do. One day the General in charge of the Air Base sent a crew down to my ship with orders for them to take over and search out a Japanese Task Force far out in the Arabian Sea. They were met with the ready Tommy guns ol my men and rough-ly told that no one except members of the crew could get aboard. A Major in the new crew showed his orders. My crew chief replied: "I'm sorry, Sir, but I have mine, too; we are on our way to bomb an ene-my objective. No one gets aboard this ship except the regular crew." (TO BE CONTINUED) the morning before the dust siorm had impaired the visibility. To walked into town to waste time we see the ancient city of Biblical days. Soon we found ourselves dodging camels, lepers, and Ali Baba-w- ith his more than forty thieves. General Chennault's AVG was composed of three squadrons, func-tioning under the supreme command Generalissimo Chiang of China's seventy pilots and Kai shek About mree hundred ground crew person-nel which made up this organization nearly four months had been in combat against the Japanese A,r up to Lashio Foe from Rangoon These American boys had Burma of the the air services American Army. Navy and Marine CSe' General was an old pilot, of single- - and through many years to China, and hrement he had gone ersuaded out ol tm . well. Growing Au: Fore U,e brave Chinese virtually destroye d by toe ufcU'on che, Released by Western Newspaper Union. A HOME-MAKE- R WHO WAS JUST THAT RECENTLY I HEARD a woman say: "Whatever success I have achieved has been as a club wom-an." Knowing that lady and her lamily, I would amend that state-ment. Her greatest success has been as a home-mak- and a moth- - Thinking ol that statement served to recall an incident ol some years ago, in which another club woman. Mrs. John Dickinson Sherman, then president ol the General Federation' ol Woman's Clubs, played a leading role. I had known John Sherman two or three years belore I met Mrs. Sher-man. He was a newspaper man and writer ol much more than av-erage ability. For a number ol years he was city editor ol the Chi-cago Daily Tribune. The only thing ol which he was inordinately proud was that ol being the husband ol Mrs. Sherman. He never wearied ol the subject ol her brilliance and achievements, though during the years in which she was actively en-gaged in club work he saw but lit-tle ol her. Mrs. Sherman's activi-ties caused her to live in Washing-ton. He lived in a room in a Chi-cago boarding house. Their home was a mountain cabin on the side ol Long's Peak in Rocky Mountain Park, Colorado. There Mrs. Sher-man spent her summer months, and he spent his s' summer va-cation with her. From hearing so much ol Mrs. Sherman I had lormed quite a defi-nite idea ol her personality and ap-pearance. To my imagination she was a portly, austere dame with a commanding presence. She would have gray hair, worn in a tight wave "permanent do." Her dress would be a dark colored, severely tailored suit, with a touch ol the leminine in the white ruching at the throat and cuffs. Mrs. Patterson was spending a summer at Estes Park and knew Mrs. Sherman. Dropping off there while on a western trip, Mrs. Pat-terson and I walked down the busi-ness street ol the village, and she was telling me that belore I lelt we must call on Mrs. Sherman. As she talked I noticed a chipper little lady walking toward us. She wore a reasonably broad brimmed light straw hat, cocked jauntily on one side ol a head covered with fluffy, reddish brown hair, and was wear-ing a brightly flowered dress ol light material. As Mrs. Patterson looked up the lady stopped in Iront ol us, and I was introduced to Mrs. John Dickinson Sherman. "Not the president of the Gen-eral Federation of Woman's Clubs?" I said. x "That's me," said the lady. "But woman, it just cannot be," 1 insisted. "You look like yon could cook a meal." "At noon, tomorrow, 1 will demonstrate that I can," she replied. "Mrs. Patterson and you are to be at the cabin for lunch." That mountain cabin was a comly, homey home lor a man and wom-an No trills, no lancy furnishings, but an attractive, comlortable place in which to live. It had every evi-dence ol the home-make- r s delt lor the man o) touch, with a thought the house. The lunch was the kind a man enjoys. A generous quantity ol mountain trout, fried to perfec-tion. Mrs. Sherman had caught cooked them. There them, as well as were trench fried potatoes, hot rolls, mountain berry pie and coffee. She did it all. ..yes woman," I commented, success as a home-mak-e-you are a I car and knowing your son as a mother, and I hac bought ol ,om only as a club worn. an " . ,.. Mrs Sherman explained the first essential to snccess in is abi.ity as woman's club work a home-make- r. She possessed I could un-derstand that first essential. John Sherman's pride. iXaxA Iabob issue NOVEMBER ELECTION AT TOE will vote on a state con-stitutional Ca amendment hat. state rree will insure in that 2 , work without the necessity for tribute to labor bosses of paving j, iU m n0 sense rnvTe labor to organize. rittVrevent the enforced .in- - cause ol labor. EARLY ROARING TN THE malcy we wc g d as tne opportune tOisbuyain five cent faeen held has not been dWown but to duality held up. , . FOR NOTHING SOMETHING ratner thar some h heroT an large a numbe, - 07 the American people. . Human Intake Human adults consume from five to seven pounds of food and liquid and breathe from 30 to 35 pounds of air every 24 hours. Those rolls smell t jjlo so good, I just can't wait fcJt? . c ' for supper Imagine a girl fc,f' 'V" as pretty as you being such Jf4 ,j'J tr Vl a wonderful cook, tool W y J- - .x r ELLEN, 'VVl J VTT'V rt3? .V You're just a flatterer ... 'ijT' J ,,U'-S- " and I love it! These are "SSffl SAVNo y rolls. ?f I ' JC CoN V - ' HTfr They're made with .ffif 17" V,-- Fleischmann's yellowt'pj' ( WHAT A GRAND WAYTO A OCT more vitamins; ) (I'M FREE! SENP FORME! FLEISCHMANN'S IS THE J & 0VR 40 PAGCS OF J f ONLY YLAST FOR iCS?3 RECIPES IN THE NEW BAKING- THAT HAS fjrjfi F f REVISED EDITION Of f ADDED AMOUNTS OF ffliV FLEISCHMANN'S FAMOUS (BOTH VITAMINS A AND DVV V "THE BREAD BASKET.' ) AS WELL AS THE Vji DOZENS OF WONDERFUL VITAMIN B COMPLEX! tpjWS IDEAS FOR BREADS, ROLLS, Va u &v mVny'7 delicious SWEET BREADS -A- '-X-X X' "JA WRITE f0R yoURS T0PAy'J l J For your free v And all those vitamins go right copy, writo i into your baking with no great Standard Brands Jvf loss in the. oven. Always be sure Mffi'l you get Fleischmann's oast With Annex Box 477' :?Ji the yellow label. A week's supply New York 27, keeps in the x. N. Y. |