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Show ilfl .11 I 0 IU u 11 U ITU La Q D D 0 Stories From Germany American newspapers within the past week have 'printed two more stories of Nazi fear and aisserition, purporting to have cpme from inside in-side Germany. They should be taken .with' the usual dosage of salt, since they may be only the latest propaganda propa-ganda efforts to induce complacency complacen-cy and relax the Allied effort; Yet there is enough plausibility in each to warrant its being looked ,at whether it is true or not One story is the latest in a series dealing with the Hitler-army feud. This series began long before the war. Its latest installment was the rumor, shortly after Mussolini's abdication, ab-dication, that Hitler had been over-, thrown and a military dictatorship established; Since then, however, the military: picture has change in two respects: Italy has made for herself as satisfactory an arrangement with the Allied powers as circumstances will permit, and the prospects of an eventual Nazi victory have become steadily less promising. It is not impossible that, in the light of these developments, Field Marshal Keitel and other top German Ger-man commanders might really believe be-lieve that they could repeat tfie Italian Ital-ian procedure, seize Hitler, and open peace negotiations. The othef story is that Heinrich Himmler, the Gestapo chief, and high officials of the Elite Guard and Storm Troopers are already . planning plan-ning to take the Nazi organization underground, when the political roof caves inr and continue their work. $iese are men who helped Hitler carry his party from a bunch of beer-hall beer-hall crackpots in 1923 to the rulers of Germany 10 years later. And, according ac-cording to the story, they are willing to devote another 10 or even 20 years to a new program of propaganda, propa-ganda, sabotage, reorganization and rearmament. Their disappearance disappear-ance and the emergence of a military mili-tary dictatorship might turn out to be the most expedient solution of their growing predicament. ( Both these plans, if they are true, would hinge upon the hope that Premier Stalin's would be the commanding com-manding voice at the peace table, and that his wish for a "strong Germany" Ger-many" would prevail. They would also presuppose that the conditions of unconditional surrender that President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Min-ister Churchill have repeatedly demanded de-manded would be drowned out. Perhaps both these stories are. pipe dreams. But true or not, they serve to emphasize again one fact of undoubted truth and extreme importance: im-portance: The war. in Europe will not be won with the internal collapse col-lapse of the German nation. It will not be won with the wholesale and still-distant defeat of the German army. The war will only be won, and the world will only be safe, when Hitler, Goering, Goebbels, Himmler and every other high Nazi leader are either in the custody of the United Unit-ed Nations or are dead. No public clamor for early peace or cessation of further hostilities should divert 'Allied 'Al-lied strategy from that goal, a goal on which America, Britain and Russia Rus-sia are agreed. Winter Woolies Alot of us brave souls have borne unflinchingly such war-born hardships hard-ships as eating chicken instead of. steak, riding a -bus to work and spreading olep on the morning toast. But now the ? war really begins to hit home. There is a prospective shortage of winter woolies. Yes, Roy A. Cheney, president of the Underwear Institute, takes a very dismal view of the red flannel situation.. And. with a coal and oil shortage, and winter coming on apace. It isn't yarn -and it isn't price, says Mr. Cheney. WPB and OPA have been kind to the underwear people. No, it's manpower. Workers have been lured to other, , more militarily thrilling jobs, and the scanty outlook out-look is even scantier. Mr. Cheney puts it squarely up to the War Manpower Man-power Commission. WeII don't just stand there shivering, shiv-ering, Mr. McNutt. DO something! TROVO, UTAH M i The Chopping Block ; By FRANK C. ROBERTSON The discussion today is not In tended to be a book review, but what It nay turn out to be re mains ta bee-seen. Up in Boise, Idaho X have a very good friend, Mrs J41na Clark Buhn, who ts kind enough to pass on to me some 'very fine books. Being a very discriminating reader Mrs. Buhn saves me a great deal of literary prospecting. Mrs. Buhn's latest gift to me is a copy 01 Vardis Fisher's recent novel, "The Mothers . To many people in Utah and Idaho the very name of Vardis s n. Fish is Anaine- ma. But say V what you w in r isner is xar ana away the most important writer wri-ter ever to be developed in these parts. In addition to his position in the front rank of novelists Fisher conducts one of the most thought provoking week yl columns being published today. It deserves a wider dist r i b-ution b-ution than it re- " columns fo a Robertson Boise newspaper. There are few books that I have disliked more heartily than some of Fishers. Recognizing the mnn'a undoubted power and genius It has seemed deplorable tn me that nowhere was com passion to be found in his writings. writ-ings. It seemed to me that Fisher's Fish-er's favorite targets, in his earlier books, were the lowly; the weak and the Illiterate who could not strike back. ThTrough everything he did ran, an undertone of intellectual in-tellectual snobbery. He seemed to rise about that momentarily in parts of "The Children of uoq, (a book so widely discussed ta this part of the West that II lam not going to delve into it) only to relapse in City of Elusion to the atitude of a smal boy stirring stir-ring manure with a stick. 'The Mothers" presents an en tirely new Fisher.. I'm not one to go into rhapsodies over the mechanics of writing, which the; addicts of literary clubs fondly tall -style;' but FGisner, long known as a stylist, has in this wk bettered anything he has ever before done in the way of e-ood writing. But ti's the meat of the book itself that concerns me. and the developing of per- aonalitv in an authentic Amer ican cenius. Because no more tender and sympathetic novel than this one has been written for a long itme. Understand me, there is no srush: no maudlin senti mentality whatever no sacrifice of grim realism. But from some source or other Fisher has developed de-veloped compassion. One year before the first Mormon Mor-mon pioneers entered Salt Lak Valley a propHerous, out unor ganized and lu-aavisea. puny w emigrants passed through on their way to California. This was the ill-fated socalled Donner party. Abandoning the safer Fort Hall route the emigrants cut around the south end of Great Salt Lake over the misnamed Hastings cutoff. cut-off. After being forced to abandon much of their supplies, and nearly near-ly perishing from thirst In their travel over the salt beds the oartv faced the grim destiny ot starvation if they failed to get across the Serras before snowfall With intuitive craftsmanship Fisher starts his novel after the emigrants had crossed the salt flats, and still have time to save themselves had they been properly proper-ly organized. Bickering jealousy and avarice ride their wagons. There is murder In the heat of passion, and murder premedlatated and with malice aforethought for the sake of gold. There is selfishness self-ishness and greed from which one shrinks appalled. There is heroism hero-ism and self -sacrifice which makes one weep. Winter overwhelmed the emigrants at the foot of the Sierras. It would have been so easy to mishandle such a book. Reduced to the extremities. of eating hides, and bones, and mice until the survivors sur-vivors became so weak that even the corpses could not be moved from th crudely constructed shelters shel-ters cannibalism became the last desperate extremity. Fisher is too treat an artist to preach; ne neither Justifies nor condemns. The facts are indisputable his tory: Fishers Job is the interpre tation of human misery and desperation. des-peration. Fisher's stress is on the high courage of the mothers. fighting for the lives of their chil dren, but there were also erave men as well as cowards. It is easy to say, "Such people should have died. Under no con ditions wovfd I ever commit can' nibaliam." But suppose yourself under the circumstances of some of these people. Your are trying to break across the mountains to bring help for your loved ones who are starving to death behind you. You have the choice of living upon the bodies of your companions com-panions who have deid, or sent encing, say yur own wife and children, to certain lingering death. Just what would you do 7 Fisher tells you what these people peo-ple did, and why. It's not pretty reading, and you may not enjoy your meals for a while, but you'll come cut of it with the feeling that youn have delved deep Into the fundamentals or human na ture, and that the trappings of civilization are pretty artificial after all. This sems to be a book review, sort of, after all. .. .. Old Home Week 4 , Z'stT- . : Springville Opens Var Fund Drive SPRJNGVTLLE Springville's drive for the United War Fund will get underway Monday eve- nine, when a 'program for all district, covering all of Utah and committee workers will be held, Nevada, has been granted the U. . o r uii .'S. naw "B" for efficiency for O y lit., iuciuui iw iaat cuiu; - final instructions on the drive, the month of October, according Navy Recruiting District Wins Efficiency Award For the second consecutive month, the Salt Lake recruiting will be announced. The program will also feature moving picture slides Beginning Tuesday, every home and all business houses will be contacted. The 'various civic or ganizations of te town have charge to Arthur W. Madsen, specialist first class, head of the Provo navy recruiting office 212 post office building. The award was earned for hav ing the. highest number of enlist- of the drive add representatives! men ts per capita in the entire i Jiiui joint aervite inawuun ww, This includes voluntary enlistments enlist-ments of men and WAVES. If the district wins the "E" flag again this month it wtl gain permanent per-manent possession of it. Full in formation concerning enlistments of men and WAVES may be had at the local recruiting office. will be in charge of each ward district. The drive closes Novem ber 20. V The junior chamber of commerce com-merce will conduct the drive in the First ward with Taylor Burt, chairman. The Klwanis club will have the Second ward, with Clarence Clar-ence Tuttle, chairman; the senior chamber of contaierce the Third ward, with Paul C. Miner, chairman, chair-man, and the Legion the Fourth ward section, with Bert Groesbeck, chairman. The business flection will also be canvassed by representatives of these civic groups dlrectrd by Grant Thorn, G Lowry Ander son, F. C. Packard and Emil Ost- lund. Springville's quota has been set at $4000 and individual contributions contribu-tions at 1. J. Y. Bearnson is general chairman chair-man of the drive, .with John Miller, secretary, and Glenn Hansen, treasurer. Falls killed one-half of the 32,000 persons who died in home accidents in the United States during 1941. Q's and A's Q What is a decathlon? A An athletic contest consisting consist-ing of 10 events. Each contestant takes part in all events. Q What state is known as the voluntere state? A Tennessee. Q How many foreign workers are estimated to be doing slave labor in the German Reich? A About 12,000,000. Q When was New York City's first church erected? f A In 1633. Q What capital letter in the English language appears with the greatest frequency? A The letter S.: Housing Projects Progress In Lehi LEHI With the arrival of the new four-inch pipe tor the main water line on the Victory road of the new Bradshaw homes sub division in Lehi Third ward, it is hoped by the contractors to get underway with the cement sidewalks and walks into the in dividual homes. The lack of this pipe has delayed the completion of the homes in putting them ready for occupancy. With the continuance of good weather the first of the 25 homes should be ready within the next few weeks Construction of the homes on the Hansen subdivision in the Lehi Fourth ward is rapidly tak ing form, the construction forms have all been placed and the superstructures are going up. These homes are slightly larger than the four-room homes of the Bradshaw group and 'will have larger lots included. Work on the conversion of apartments in the State bank and Ross buildings are practically ready for occupancy with the ad dition of a few fixtures and appliances. The 20 apartments In the for mer uansArt are fast near.ng completion. Sewer connections have been made and improve ments of the grounds and exterior of the buildmg made. Construction on the Knudsen apartments is underway and these apartments w also soon be ready for occupancy. The . completion of these hous ing facilities win greatly help tne critical nousing shortage in Lehi. Total valuation of farm land and farm buildings in the United States has been estimated at $48,-000,000,000. -9 .0 By FAITH BALDWIN cownftaHT. 14. NKA SKRVICC INC. . THIS STORTl trkw Doctor Rail aaoaaoos fa aboat to cn-jraare cn-jraare a yoaasr aaalataat, oth of kla 4aaartra ro tatoreoteS. . EbDt, a Vtotttasr- Bfarao. Is srla kntut tt will reltovo bor father t als-at calls. Naaer. fcoato after arr travola water wealthy Aaat Martha's aatroaaic were oat short fcr that Ja4ro remarrUfe, thtaka It mar no aa aattaoto to bore etoat. Mr a Hatfc, however ta 4ia aaare to leera r the yomne; aiaa will live ta, their home. ecaue of Itaaer J ahoaajp. TWO TOtXNO MEN CHAPTER IV "YHTlIancy? Why-not Emily?" the doctor persisted. "Oh, Emily! Her mother shrugged Emily away as hopeless. "But Nancy's different. She's bored, for one thing. And quite susceptible . . . soj with a young man always under foot . . "He's a very decent young man," her husband reminded her gently. "I liked him on sight And Emily gives him a fine recommendation." recommen-dation." I. "Does Emily tajow him?" demanded de-manded Millicent ' David explained. He added soberly, sob-erly, "And you can take her word for it." ,h' Millicent put down the hair brysh. She said flatly, "You think Emily's gold ot course -but poor Nancy." He asked rather sternly, "Are you suggesting that I do not love Nancy equally, Millicent?'' "No, but . . . you and Emily, you're lik! old cronies. You've abetted her in this cursing craze since she was a little thing. I suppose sup-pose she's happy," her mother admitted, ad-mitted, Righiig. "She'd rather be taking care of a hundred dirty little kids-than one or two of her own. It's Nancy jrm thinking about, for she hat nothing to Interest In-terest her and sh isn't happy here." "This Is her; home," said Dr. uau. "But she's been away so much," Millicent said, "first at school and then with Martha. With Martha, she led an entirely different life from the life she'd be expected to lead here. You can't blame her if it's difficult for her to readjust herself, it's a terrific letdown, after all." It was our mistake," said, the doctor, careful to use the plural pronoun, "letting Martha have her in the first place." Nonsense," said Millicent with one of her lightning changes, "it was the best thing that could hap pen to hers" e o e TIKE gong rang for supper and shrugged himself Into his coat He said, ruefully, "I hope X haven't a heavy office tonight I've some lAs usual," hit wife said. "I thought perhaps you'd be home one night, at least You havent been since Nancy returned." . "That's my job." He put his arm around her. And that's why I'm thinking ot taking Jim Thompson to' share it Hell take the night calls, Millie. And perhaps, if things work out, we can manage a little vacation next winter, you and I." Her face was Illuminated. She stoodvon tiptoe to kiss his cheek, crying, "Honestly? Do you mean itDavid?" "Of course I mean it . . I'm getting old. I need to slow down." He wasn't old, he was in his middle: fifties. He hadn't decided tor take an assistant on the spur of- the moment He had been thinking of it for a long time.. In justice to. Millicent . 'Millicent put her hand la his. She said, "If youll stick to that, David, III be a mother to your young man." She thought I hope David's jright apd Jie'a really preaentahle. AT the supper table they talked about Jim Thompson and Frank Edgar . . . Mrs. Han made her announcement of Frank's impending im-pending arrival with a studied carelessness . . . "You remember him, don't you, girls?" They did. "A brat" 'said Nancy firmly, wrinkling her nose, "used to play the most dreadful practical Jokes. I hated him." Emily didn't "He was nice," she said thoughtfully. thought-fully. "Remember the time old King broke his leg, Dad? You set it and Frank helped? I tried to help, but I was too upset . . . he'd been my very own dog for so long." , Cranberry: had seen very little of Frank Edgar, heir to the Edgar Auus, since his preparatory school days. From school to college and on to Oxford and travel. Then the army. Now, according to Mill! cent he was coming home on hon orable discharge and going into tne rniLL ' - - He was a , very eligible young man. The Edgar stockings were known all over the. United States. Ellen, passing the salad, took a hand in the conversation. She had been maid of all work with laundress-cleaning woman In tw3 days a weekfor the Halls since their, marriage. Millicent had never been able to break her of her participation in family affairs. in recent years she had not tried. Why should she? Ellen never took a day oft and she was the best cook in Cranberry: "That Frank," she said, "many a handout I've given him at the kitchen door. Once he stole the pies off the window sill. I gave him the flat of my hand where it would do the most good." Tli. Halls, including Mmieent dissolved' into helpless laughter. "Well," said Nancy, picking at her food, mindful of her figure. at least something's happened in Cranberry, Two new men. "Two?" repeated Ellen alertly. Her employer explained. Ellen. tall and spare, nodded. "ivs about time." she said, and vanished from the dining room.. JLTo lie .ContiauedX SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1943 Aims Drive At Cartels BY PETER EDSON Daily Herald Washington Correspondent When Wendell Berge, the hew assistant attorney .general in charge of the anti-trust division, held his first, press conference to announce the filing ot a civil com- piaint against Merck & Co man uracturing -. chemists accused of maintaining a cartel agreement! with E. Merck Chemical Works of Darmstadt Germany, an assistant iook a box of cigars from Mr. Serge's desk and passed it around to correspondents. On the' lid of the box in big letters was the name Union League Club." What was this ? Was the New oeava anti-trust division going arcn-conservauve ell of a sudden ? It was lust the brand name, Mr. Berge hastened to assure, and the cigars were, from the Union Lea gue .uip. or uucago, not the one in Mew York..JBut this Union League Club of Chicaco is the one that used to have an "anti-New Deal room," all black? with a star for every one of the hundred or more New Deal: agencies: So the laugh was still on Mr. Berge. , . icven it murman Arnold's successor suc-cessor as champion of the Sherman Sher-man antitrust law does like a Republican Re-publican capitalist' brand of cigar, ci-gar, he is giving, no indications that he will ease up. on prosecutions prosecu-tions of illegal cartels, monopolies and combinations in restraint of trade. Post-War Pattern . The Merck . case is the first of wnat Mr. serge says will he a number like It to be developed during the next year to keep alive the American idea of 'free enter prise and open competition as a pattern for planning post-war international in-ternational economy. Ia the Merck case, the charge reduced to simplest terms is that the American Merck company in 1932 made m "treaty" with German Ger-man Merck whereby the "American company had use of the Merck trademark in the sale of some 400 chemicals and pharmaceuticals, including in-cluding quinine, sulpha drugs, and the vitamins, in the United States and Canada, while the German company retained exclusive rights for practically all the rest or the world. The American com pany was, for instance, shut out of the South American market that Is, until the British blockade of 1939 made it impossible for the Germans to deliver. Then the American company revived re-vived an old and inactive subsi diary, Powers-Weigh tman-Rosen- garten corporation, to take over the German business in Latin America Am-erica for the duration, with every understanding that an the Latin American business would be returned re-turned to the German company at the end of the war. The De-' partment of Justice suit is to dis solve the treaty between the two companies and to enjoin American Merck for refusing to fill orders from established dealers in drugs in foreign countries. Meaning of "Aggression" It so happens that while Mr, Wendell Berge was explaining all this in the Department of Justice. and while the actual suit against the Merck companies was being filed in Trenton, N. J., up on Capitol Capi-tol Hill the Senate was about to begin its fourth day- of debate on the Connolly post-war foreign policy resolution. In that debate. Sen. Harold H. Burton of Cleve land, O., made a speech for broad ening the Connolly resolution, and he was questioned by Sen. Abe Murdock of Beaver, Utah, on the meaning of the word "aggression" in the text of the resolution, where it declares: "That the United States . (shall) join ... in the establish raent ... of international auth orty ... to prevent aggression and preserve the . peace of the world." Was it just "military aggres sion," as had been stated in the original draft of the resolution ? Or was "economic aggression a Inn Inrlnriori ? Without perhaps realizing it at the time, the senators were then considering the very essence of the question of international cartel the world-trusts such aa those fostered fos-tered in Germany and participated in by business monopolies of near ly every nation. Economic aggression aggres-sion of this sort has been part and parcel of the Nazi scheme, of world conquest which which made it impossible to do business with Hitler, THB-WASHINGTON RI-GD-ROUi A Daily Picture of What'a Going'on in National Affairs Edg 2 Mrs'. Earl FJrampton entertained Thursday afternoon honoring herl young son, Bllhe, on his lounni birthday- Games were played and refreshments served, a beautifully I decorated birthday cake centering the table. The little guests were Irene Jolley, Jlmrale Gillespie,! Melvin Smith,. Joan, Joyce and Valdia Gillespie and the honoree. All ladies are requested to Ming the most handy gadget in their I kitchen Tuesday to the work anoi business meeting, when the lesson i Tools for Housecieaning tssks i will be given at Relief society. They are also to bring theirl needles and thimbles as a quuti will be made and refreshments served by! district number two. Camp Edgemont, Daughters or i Utah Pioneers JwiU meet Thursday! afternoon at the Relief society! rooms at it o'clock. All members! and those eligible for membership! are invited to attend. " I Mrs. Herman tucaaraa ww mi hostess to the Literary club Fri day afternoon at her home; Mrs.1 Racheal Mecham will give the! book review and all. members are invited to be present. By Dm reartol MmJr RoM 8. Alias Ire daty WASHINGTON Hard-boiled members , c the Diplomatic Corps whose countries' lives hun in the balance at Moscow have now microscopic ally examined the texts and come to certal definite conclusions. These are: 1. Moscow achieved more than the diplomat expected, but less than the window-dressing ha now led the public to believe. - 2-The word "finis" was written under th Baltic states Lithuania; Latvia, Estonlt Though not mentioned in the texts, they will b taken, over by Russia. 3.Poland's future will depend entirely upo how far it "ia wining to cooperate with Russte If it plays ball, Poland can live peacefully beaid Russia as a cooperating Slav state. If it doesn' play pall, it will be largely gobbled up. . 4-Although no definite agreements wer re ached on many things, machinery was orgar ized for future agreement. This may be mos important of all, - Difficult problems have to be threshed ou gradually and the proof of the pudding is in th eating. BALTIC STATES DISAPPEAR Reading between the lines and piecing tc li, gether the diplomatic grapevine reports leakin back from Moscow, diplomats have arrived a the conclusion that Stalin took exactly the earn stand regarding the Baltic states at Moscow he has in the past-rthat the Baltics were ti more up for; discussion than ts the return t Texas,' Arizona, New Mexico and California :t Mexico. The Baltic states, according to th Soviet view, were carved out of the old Russia Empire wheffshe was prostrate and helpless dui tag the last war. and were deliberately cor structed by British imperialists in order to shu Leningrad off from the sea. Stalin has made it clear that he would ft more permit foreign states along the Gulf c Finland than we would permit small independen republics to be set up in Connecticut and Lon Island guarding the entrance to New York hai bor. As reported in this column, in the Spring c 1942, Molotoff secured an agreement from th British at that time for the return of the Balti states and one-half of Poland to Russia. But th United States objected. Diplomats now conclud that at Moscow, Secretary Hull withdrew the objection and fell back on the U. S. declaratiio at Riga of April 6, 1922, when the Baltic state were first recognized. It was then said: Tt is entirely possible or even probable tha sometime in the indefinite future these so-calle states may once again become an integgral car of Russia." POLAND'S POSITION Most significant . portion of the Moscoi pacts, and the only one signed by Stalin, Roost velt and Churchill, was regarding punishmen for atrocities. , Eupled ln the, text of this agreement Is a Insignificant-appearing, but nevertheless mo? Important statement that "Germans who tak part in wholesale shootings of Polish officer . i . will be brought back to the scene of the! crimes." etc. - This settles once and for all the questlo which has bitterly disturbed Russian-Polish re lations, namely the massacre of 10,000-Polls officers at Smolensk, and ' the PoUsh-Germa claim that actually they Were massacred b Russians. Roosevelt and Churchill now hav signed their names to a declaration which put the blame squarely pn the Nazis and leaves n more room for argument. The fact that this one pact singled out abov an the others, for the signature of Stalin, Roose velt, and Churchill indicates the importance th RusaiaLT attached to it. This, plus the fact tha the British had already agreed in 1942 to restor Russian Polland to' Poland, is viewed by diplc mats to mean that Poland's future Is largely u to her ability to keep on friendly terms wit Russia. v , It is believed that Stalin consented to hoi uPJy PFHVn of Poland- as originally agree with the British, and to wait and see how thing worked out This was in return for America) K onuses of security guarantees. But he dii slst that the main sore-spot between the Pole and Russia, the alleged massacre of Polish offil f iivjciidi, oe muea ior au tune. I Thua th fnfuro i vi " . I , . - 4VWUU (frvuBoiy rCDlI largely in the hands of the Polish people them! 5,lve Snd their abmty to 6et oia" with theil MINE UNION FRICTION Curent nimon am that .Tnh, t t -..i- i his daughter Kathryn have had a falling out Thau o ... ii A . . . . 1 c uiiuuc, out. h is true mat tner naa oeen inction inside the United Mine Worker revolving around Miss Lewis. i John L. Lewis's son. John, is like his mothc jujet, amiaDie. lewis's daughter Kathryn 1 like himself areresirfvA. nnfnmu4 eh. and worships her father, n.va. m,,ia with him. But she has had violent rows wiU wa uMraway, rormer president of Dis trie 50. the catch-all branch nf th TTni. . w.m.i. mui Workers, which organized chemical workers dairy farmers, etc. 1 Gassaway is an old coal-mine mule driver! wu un ueww, Doasu inai ne once Knocked ou ' a mule with a blow of his fist Gassaway has had several rows with Rath ryn. He 'went into tantrums, complained tha while he was supposed to be. the head of Distric 60, Kathryn Lewis was the real head. "She dictates those letters and makes nv sign them," he complained. . Aftjir An mar K,(lmni ..vl.ii i leave In Taos, New Mexico, staying away fronf nMuuigwd w Bom ume. un another occasioi Gassaway walked Into her office and let loos. string of epithets, following which she tool another leave and Was retifwrf tn M-fcaiti, T11?" seldom sixdull moment around JohJ a juewia. . MERRT-GO-BOUND , "frs. Henry. C, Wallace, kother of 4he-Vic Fresideflt.' belonca to a. v,n, .vMinrfv. .t..tJ Membership is limited to womenSwho have had six wuwrea; aiviaea equauy Between the aexet Mrs. Wallace had three boys (Henry, James rai). nl three girls (Mary, AnnabeUc and: Ruth) : . ; Tor the first time in years Room for: rent" signs are beginning toappea u nwiugwn winaows . . , uiscouraged orel wc puoucny ior me . current tron-and-stee scrap' drive, WPB officials call it 'our confiden tial drive. - (Copyright, 1943, by . : . United Feature Syndicate, inc.) . f The question Is just this, do wq want ti SUbstitnte law for form In wnrH aMalMf Ti We do. then the TJnitMl fitatMi mmt turtMnatJ And it the United States is to participate, therf Congresa must say so. Rep. Charles A. Eaton oi lectors making it increasingly difficult for thi uivo ua law governmenu, io couecc enough wotee w.carry twu mqy xjevtnn canonataa c Massachusetts,' experience of - the country , as sv. whol is mat many mgn scnooi graauates value a two year couege course m wmcnv general iiDeraf eouraea are combined, with nr.vorjitJnnat mtti,r4 Ordwav Tead: . chairman New Work' Board W Higher Education. i . . ' |