OCR Text |
Show I THE PROGRESSIVE OPINION Aid for Aussies Australian Minister Richard G. Casey, arriving at the White House to confer with President Roosevelt on plans to aid Austra-lia in its battle against Japan. Japanese advance troops have al-ready occupied key island out-posts of the Commonwealth. 'Bear Flag Republic' The State of California, at one time, bore the name "Bear Flag Republic." properly placed pockets-a- na side panels are so shaped that ti 0 p give "a wonderfully slenderi ,7s feet right where you Want a at the waistline! f wl ft Barbara Bell Pattern No. 151a B signed lor sizes 14, 16, 18, 20- 40 1, ,J 44. Corresponding bust measure ' 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44. St ? i quires 2 yards material s I1"1 trimming ric-ra- c or bias fold. 5'- $1 order to: ali. gn SEWING CIRCLE PATTER" 149 New Montgomery Str Epl San Francisco c Gr Enclose 20 cents in coins for . PatternNo ; Size...,' Name "" tut Address "" LISTEN TO . BAUKHAGE The Nat'l Farm & Home Hour 10:30 each morning, Monday through Friday KUTA, Salt Lake at 570 KC and other NBC Blue Network Stations His and Her Towels Quick, Easy to Do! 1 HpHESE smart His, Hers and Mr., Mrs., monograms show who's who and beautify your towels and pillow cases at the same time. You'll be surprised how quickly you'll finish a pair. Pattern 6959 contains a transfer pattern pf 12 motifs ranging from 5 by 10 to 44 by 5 inches; illustrations of stitches; materials needed. To obtain this pattern send your order to: Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dept. 117 Minna St. San Francisco, Calif. Enclose 15 cents in coins for Pat-tern No Name Address yi518B HowToRelt). Bronchitis1 Creomulsion relieves promw-caus- e it goes right to the seat oi I trouble to help loosen and .' V germ laden phlegm, and aid J: J to soothe and heal raw, tender'" flamed bronchial mucous ,"' branes. Tell your druggist to ?,'." a bottle of Creomulsion with thii derstanding you must like their I' quickly allays the cough or W nu to have your money back. CREOMULSION ! for Coughs, Chest Colds, Brond Make a j VICTORY GARDEN HELP YOURSELF AND COUNTRY i For complete information, ' get our I .Ji.,11,,,. .... .J yPJ!& She' """ i7 J?'ft CANT " th" md lesan on them all. So ihc wni herfoodtoohmtily.niiC OB nekAc ivcwi rt--r " digestion, heirtbura, .tom.cn. TheBimi!"! Carbonate, in ADLA Tableti bring relief. Aak your drug- - I girt for ADLA T,bleu-flm- l J Earned Glory Whoever serves his comb ' j has no need of ancestors-tair- e. DO YOU like to sew? Then here is a grand new pattern to try your talents .on an apron which is as simple to make as ABC! Pat-tern No. 1518-- B shows too, an apron which is different, slender-izing, unusually becoming and as efficient as a modern kitchen! The shoulder straps continue as side panels and end as good sized, f 2135iA tXTM rims 4Afv jfmmt pwciots. eveur rr falaLM L W7 REHEMBERJHE N l Pa ohly yeast wt iMWC' VliTH ALLTHESE Per Cake. Vitamin A 3100 Units (Int.) Vitamin B,-- 150 Units (Jt! Vitamin 400 Units (Int.) Vitamin O 40-5- 0 Units (Si. tol Vitamins Bu D and G are not appreciably lost in the otm; Jg; they go right into the bread. arc 1 Til TTT HEAR WHISPERS i H I I 3 Clearly aaiily with 3 rH"- - lha vacuum tub a AU1' TRY E 1 1 1 Home or offica f g Wp) R.E. MORRIS & ASSOCIATES 604 Judge Bldr.. Salt L.ke City Ifrpftoflftro DRINK THEM! ... I AT THEMI YOU'LL FIND Sunkist ORANGES Best for Juice You'll prefer extra-ric- California orange juke! Be-sides its finer flavor, it gives you more vitamins C and A, and calcium, more health in every glass. California Navel oranges ite seedless too. Easy to peel, slice and section for recipes, lunch boxes and between-meal- s eating! Those stamped"Sunkist" are the finest from 14,500 cooperating growers. iRMBprirraT Copyright, 1042, CAlLfonilii Fruit Qrowara Cxduuiga MiaaaBaBBaaIIIIBBMsaBaiallffSSB Tlei WANTED RABBIT SKINS SBarrie. HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR Rabbit Skins Furs Hides Pelts Wool Write or Wire JJjJ Colorado Animal Company 463 South 3rd West ' Salt Lake City, Utah JJM or their nearest branches located at oe J fiat.. OGDEN SPANISH FORK LOGAN HEBERCtfgw FEA1 OFFICE EQUIPMENT NEW AND USED deaka and ehaira, filea, tTpewritera, adding- mch'a. eatea, S. L. DESK EX.. 35 W. Bro.dw.T. Salt Lake BEAUTY SCHOOL ' Quick SCHOOL OP BEAUTY CULTURB Largest in the West. 18 yeara suc-cessful operation. Modern, thorough, prac-tical Enroll anytime. Write for catalogue. S38 South Main Salt Lake City. Utah RANCH WANTED ;! Wanted Good Cattle Ranch Onr client haa $30,000 cash. Send full details of place to MILLER & VIELE, Box 807. Salt Lake City, Utah. JEWELRY EaPVSP L-- D" Relief Society pin VP&Vl m&de n our plant. Mail I KryOivfrl orders to General Board Of- - iHJRbS'in fice' Salt Lake City. jNf? We repair and make new ttfmim aajVll diamond or wedding rings J at small cost. 26 skilled jewelry craftsmen. O. C. TANNER COMPANY U West 2nd South. Salt Lake BYRON HOT SPRINGS CALIFORNIA fttN HEALTH REST RECREATION PLEASbt, World-famou- s Mineral Waters . Mln.rcl, Hot Salt and Hot ""j ' nv 11 I hi'. VS' I 1 - - ' K "EATEP "REPROOF HOTEL OR COTTj' j HESutoW 819 mediCaUy recommended to to A S nb!L Neurihs, Kidney trouble and Liver, Stom"" QuW!mSS5? """J118 Ht6l d surroundings offer At OPPwTi t Rest Comfort. Excellent Cuisine. J?t ALL THE YEAR Under Entirely Ne Uf Jgi r. L DOUCLfl lnfo"Uon-addre- ss j ' 1 SOTTSCHALU Byron Hot Spring Pyroj V , SCRAP IRON METALS Our Government demands from everyone that you sell whatever junk materials you may have NOW to your neraest dealer or Junk Trucker. Wholesale Buyers. V PEPPER'S METAL A SUPPLY CO. i PERSONALS " HEMORRHOIDS, (piles), hernia, rupture treated without knife. OSTEOPATHIC, 8UKGICAL AND NONSURGICAL CLINIC 511 Templeton Bldg. Salt Lake City MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Reconditioned Band Instruments at bargain prices. Liberal trades. BEESLEY MUSIC CJX70JiaM USED EQUIPMENT INTERMOUNTA1N MERCHANTS SUPPLI (Dealers in Bankrupt Stocks) We buy and sell all kinds of business fixtures and equipment. Cash registers, meat scales, office equip 56 E. 4th So Salt Lake City Coal and Electric Used Ranges. Largest selection in the west. $10 to S"5. Fully reconditioned, guaranteed. 1 year terms. IN TEH MO UN TAIN UTILITIES 151 South State St. Salt Lake City. Utah W.N.U. Week No. 4205 SALT LAKE I HOTEL BEN LOMOND OGDEN, UTAH r. ISO Room 350 Baths - 12.00 to Family Rooms for 4 persons - $4.00 Air Cooled Lounge and Lobby Dining-- Room Coffee Shop Tap Room Home of Rotary Kiwanis Executives Exchange Optimists " Chamber of Commerce and Ad Club Hotel Ben Lomond OGDEN. UTAH Hubert E. Vlslck. Mgr. 'It fen'JhJ1 Aim " ' i'1 m k005-10- 5 reR mt1 WV ft- I Tf m mE 61HS I tti I f '"'F A" W"t fxfosire Rooms lk Faith, Hope, Charity Faith, Hope and Charity are the names of three towns in North Caro-lina. WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS By Edward C. Wayne A.E.F. Takes Over North Ireland Base As U. S. and British Pool Supplies; Jap Convoy Blasted in Macassar Strait; Hawaii Report Blames Commanders (EDITOR'S NOTE When opinions are expressed In these columns, they are those of the news analyst and not necessarily of this newspaper.) (Released by Western New.SD.ipar Union.) ' 3" S 1 ' - K ' i I - yi if1:. Justice Owen J. Roberts is shown (left) talking to newsmen after laying before President Roosevelt the report on the Pearl Harbor attack. Made public in its entirety by the President, the report fixed responsibility on Adm. Husband E. Kimmel and Lieut. Gen. Walter C. Short for "dere-liction of duty." Justice Roberts was chairman of the commission of six that visited Hawaii. PAN-AMERIC-Half- Loa- f Won? What had first looked like a half-loa- f victory for American diplomacy at the conference at Rio de Janeiro, was gradually as-suming the proportions of a larger loaf. Most of the South American and Central American countries had gone to Rio intent on a solid-fro-breach with the Axis. Some already had broken relations, some had de-clared a state of war. But Argentina and Chile had re-mained adamant. Whether that meant simply long coastlines to wor-ry about, or Axis leanings, or eco-nomic hopings made little differ-ence. Enormous pressure was brought to bear, but they would not go "whole hog" along with the rest. Finally, in true diplomatic manage-ment, our conferees managed to pull out the plum of a resolution which committed all nations to a breach of relations, but allowed any indi-vidual to do so at a time he might select. Uruguay and Peru were the first to sever relations, followed by Para-guay and Bolivia. The lineup fol-lowing the breakup of the confer-ence was "At War": United States, Canada, Costa Rica, Cuba, Domini-can Republic, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama and Salvador. "Broken Relation": Colombia, Mexico, Peru, Uruguay, Venezuela, Paraguay and Bolvia. Only four maintained any form of normal in-tercourse, namely, Chile, Ecuador, Brazil and Argentina. It was re-garded as certain that the first three would soon sever relations and that the fourth, Argentina, would eventu-ally take this step. AUSTRALIA: Readies for Defense Despite the heroic fight on land before Singapore, and the strenu-ous efforts being made to gain air supremacy and control of the long Malayan coasts, most commentators and observers actually believed the "island city of apathy" would even-tually be besieged from the main-land, and might well be lost. This intensified the belief in Aus-tralia and in many American quar-ters that the real battle of the South Pacific would center on the east coast of Australia. Some trained observers, among them W. W. Chaplin, who had made a year's close study of the East In-dies and Australia, including Singa-pore, publicly expressed the belief that Java and Sumatra constituted a "Maginot line" of defense in the East Indies, and that Japan was in-tent, in taking the Philippines, Singa-pore and Borneo on so surrounding and going behind that line that they might attempt to duplicate Germa-ny's similar feat against France. SQUADRON: Wiped Out Despite the attacks by Japanese and Thailanders in the rear of the main Malaya battle for Singapore upon the defenders of Burma "the modern roads to Mandalay" had reported a two-da- y "bag" of 32 Japanese bomb-ers, believed to be an entire squad- ron. While military secrecy covered the development of the land action, thousands of Burmese, wild with de-light, watched the American and British fighters in mad overhead at mid-da- OVER THERE: New A.E.F. in Erin When Uncle Sam landed an infan-try force of several thousand men at an undisclosed port in Northern Ireland, it marked the first arrival of American troops in a European port since World War No. 1. Com-manded by Maj. Gen. Russell P. Hartle, the Yank army of brawny, clean-limbe- d farm lads from the Middle West proceeded to camps prepared months before. Few doubted that this detachment was but the advance guard of many' more to come. It was believed, too, that the base they occupied might be the springboard from which an invasion of Hitler's Europe would be made. This view was voiced in the ad-dress of welcome by Sir Archibald Sinclair, British air secretary, who said: "This is a coming portent for Mr. Hitler, nor will its significance be lost on General Tojo. "From here, assuredly you will sally forth with us to carry the war to the enemy's territory and free oppressed peoples of Europe . . . You are the vanguard of American arms." SUPPLY COMMAND: U. Pool The creation of a supreme allied supply command that will speed and the production and flow of vital munitions and supplies to the fighting fronts was seen in ' the announcement by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Wins-ton Churchill that the United States and Great Britain will pool all mu-nitions, shipping and war materials to "further of the United Nation's war effort" Three joint boards have been set up to merge the combined war re-sources of the two nations and make them partners in vital fields of sup-ply in addition to joint military and naval commands. These new agen-cies will include a combined war materials board, munitions assign-ment board and combined shipping adjustment board. Board members, it was an-nounced, will confer with represent-atives of the Soviet Union, China and such others of the 26 United Nations as necessary "to attain common purposes." SHIPS: Japan Losing Them The British, Dutch and American bombers and ships of war were not formally coming to grips with large bodies of Japanese naval ships, but they were whittling away at them, and Japan's losses were assuming important proportions. A count of Japanese ships report-ed sent to the bottom in the first seven weeks of the war totaled 100, not counting those damaged and probably sunk. This, it was pointed out, has been an average of better than two a day, despite the fact that when the war started Japan had the jump on the other nations by virtue of the sur-prise, and that opening successes had weakened the allied hitting GUILTY: Verdict on Hawaii The stunning news that an ad-miral and a lieutenant general, the naval and military commanders re-sponsible for the defense of Hawaii, had showed such a lack of compe-tence that they had failed even to talk over with each other deliberate war warnings handed them by their superior officers on November 24 and 27, in ample time to have cir-cumvented the Japanese surprise attack fell sickeningly on American ears. The immediate removal of both Adm. Husband E. Kimmel and Lieut. Gen. Walter C. Short from their commands after the Pearl Har-bor debacle was fully justified by the investigating commission head-ed by Justice Roberts of the Su-preme court. The report had been utterly frank, comprehensive, and left little un-said. President Roosevelt, to whom it was handed,, ordered that it be given to the public without altera-tion or censorohiprr- The words that condemned the commanders were "dereliction of duty." But the astounding revela-tions were twofold that the com-manders had shown a lack of inter-est in performing their duty that they had failed to talk over with each other the measures that each was taking for the defense in the face of a war threat The army man had "assumed" that the navy man was sending out offshore patrols to find where the enemy might be. The navy man as-sumed that the army airforce was on the alert. Neither actually was. Demands for court martial to mete out punishment to those .re-sponsible for the Pearl Harbor dis-aster were heard from members of congress. Demands were likewise made for the expulsion of any "in-competents" holding responsible po-sitions in the war effort. Many senators and representatives asserted that the commission's con-clusions pointed to a pressing need for a supercommand with control over the operations of both armed services. LUZON: Critical Stage That the battle of Luzon had reached critical final stages was ap-parent. General MacArthur report-ed that not only were his troops being subjected to an all-o- Jap-anese land attack by forces of at least ten to one superior strength, but that Japanese warships in Subic bay were able to fire their guns into his positions. Constant Japanese reinforcements were being landed in Subic bay on MacArthur's left flank, where , the heaviest Japanese attacks were be-ing launched, and he reported that the numerical odds were rising con-stantly. Commentators, while declaring the battle of the Philippines was a losing fight from the start, placed the highest importance on the long and brave resistance of the American-- power. Filipino army. A continuation of this rate, ob-servers said, would cost Japan more than 700 vessels of all types, and that no navy in the world, ex-cept the United States, could stand replacing such losses. ' Latest exploit was an attack by air and sea forces of the United Na-tions against Jap war ships and troop convoys in the Straits of Macassar. Reported as the great-est demonstration of combined Al-lied might since the war's begin-ning, this force was revealed to have sunk or damaged at least 26 Japanese ships in a running battle. These straits are of the utmost tactical importance, and are believed to be a passageway for a chief Jap-anese attempt upon Australia itself. All the United States destroyers engaged in the attack came out of the attack undamaged, and suffered only four casualties, one man seri-ously wounded, and three slightly. The successful attack came "at an opportune moment with Japanese thrusts against Australia causing Prime Minister Curtin of that Com-monwealth to issue appeals to both Britain and the United States for aid. ECONOMICS: America's first foodstuff rationing came from the office of Leon He-ndersonsugar. After controversial statements about supplies, and after considerable buying up of sugar by panicky housewives, a ration was set at about one pound per person per week, as against a normal con-sumption of about a pound and a half. The shortage, said Henderson, would be about a third. He said measures would be taken to recover sugar from hoarders. At the same time the tire situa-tion was becoming more acute, with many tire dealers having only a four-mont-h supply on hand, and ab-solutely no more for civilian use in sight. New car production was about to stop, and 450,000 auto workers were to be idle until their factories made the changeover. Labor peace was practically as-sured by a C.I.O.-A.F.- agreement, and the War Production board re-ported no work stoppages in industry, and none in sight. MSCELLANY: New York: A Berlin worker's slo gan, smuggled out of the Reich broadcast: "We're winning our! selves to death." Batavia: The Dutch army air men, in an attack on a convoy m Macassar strait claimed that struck a large transport carrying troops, which turned complete over and rolled about, keel upward Berlin: Hitler's own newspanor printed an article written by officer listing 12 common faults o Amencans-t- hat they had too many automobiles, eat griddle-cak- e Tan grapefruit, and keep grinning aU me time among other things. . New York: The C.I.O and A F L were going ahead with their peacl plans leaving John L. v.? much on the outside, testftTLT that he. who had boa upset former union plans hart gested this latest effort al unUySUg- - Fifth Column The phrase "fifth column' was coined by Gen. Emillio Mola during the Spanish rebellion in 1936. Old Terrapin C. E. Smith of Braselton, Ga., carves his initials and the date on each terrapin he finds. Last year he met one of his old friends still bear-ing the legend, "C.E.S. 1907." Cuts Tooth at 70 George W. Dahman, 70, of Arkan-sas Pass, Texas, had his baby teeth through all his years and when he Jost one recently he quickly cut his first "grown-up- " tooth. Invented Tire Valve ' William E. Gibbs, East Orange, N. J., invented the tire valve now used on very automobile and bi-- ! cycle. i'v Striving for Justice I Our whole social life U f" essence but a long, slow strr, 11 for the victory of justice c force. John Galsworthy. j """ Penalty for Piracy The recognized penalty for piracy on the high seas in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth centuries was con-- fiscaAion of the vessel and hanging of the crew. President Tavern Owner George Washington at one time j owned shares in four taverns and J Bold meat and vegetables to 30. Poor Lenders Great spenders are bad lenders. Benjamin Franklin. ' When Business Interferes "I want to spend the summer fish ing," a Minneapolis man advertised in the paper when he wanted to sell his place of business. Honest Return Every man should make up his mind that if he expects to succeed, he must give an honest ret" f; the other man's dollar.- -t hfii 650 Gallons Average H. Harriman. I I The average motorist uses ap-- proximately 650 gallons of motor i fuel each year. |