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Show THE Itm.I.ETlN. lNfillAlUTAII Honored at Yale j r ' ..." J," Viscount nalifax, British ambas-sador to the U. S., and Wendell L. Willklc (rear) shown In the aca-demic procession at Yale unlversliy, New Haven, Conn. Both were given honorary doctor of laws degrees, Halifax was honored as "an envoy of the people from whom our Pilgrim Fathers sprang" and Wilikle as "a gallant loser." New York Air Raid Wardens r too ftwt Mayor LaGuardia of New York city (right), national director of civilian defense, la shown giving New York city police officials their final instructions for the registration of 63,000 air raid wardens. Registrations were held in all police stations under police supervision the first activity of its kind in America. mil internum COMSTmtQHDix TROUBLE Wm7 TEV(?yy in) fiUODRlHKPlHT M I OF VVATCg. 6 Delicious Flavors I MixiMAiirrr III HonJtmorintnry glut fi Perfect for PicaicivIlaiM in H IS BIQ CLASSES Si DON'T BE Bl BY YOUR LAXATIVE-- CONSTIPATION THIS MOD When you feel gaiiy, bex due to clogged-u- p bowtlt, t do take Feen-A-Mi- nt it be morning thorough, comiori helping you start the daj f; normal energy and pep, k million! Feen-A-Mi- nt dor your night'i rest or interfdtti next day. Try ,: gum laxative, youtseIC It and economical... ifr FEEN-A-MIN- T 11 WITH WEAK, CRM NERVOUS FEELING! Tou women who suffer pals c ular periods and are nenoti due to monthly functional: ances should find LydH ham's Vegetable Compoui! marvelous to relieve Meat symptoms. Plnkham's Compound ! especially for women to be.; such, distressing feelings t: help them go smiling tt: "difficult days." Over 1,000 have reported remarkable a WORTH TBYXNGI An? I'- Salt Lake's NEWESTjjj Hi ftp-- ' Hotel J TEMPLE SQIW sssssss Rates $150 to $300 It's mark ofdistinctio at this beauHful ERNEST C. BOSyi COMMIT ADVERTISING is a gfea! lance committee, esta1"; and maintained in lonS the m est, to see that aspire to sell to always be worthy of (Released by Western Newspaper Uiuoo.l WE SHALL BECOME WORLD'S FINANCIERS ENGLAND WAS the greatest ol the creditor nations for generations, in fact, for centuries. To maintain tli at plan, England was forced to finance debtor nations. She did it by supplying the funds for develop-ment of those nations. She devel-- I oped their resources, she built railroads, she provided shipping fa-cilities. Large quantities of English money were invested in many coun-tries of the world. Such funds were provided not so much by the Eng-lish government, as by the English people as individuals, with the gov-- ! ernment back of them to minimize their chance of loss. That will be America's Job when the present world conflict Is over. It was our job after the close of World War No. 1, but we did not do it effectively. We did not know how. It is a problem our financial leaders must study now if America is to achieve that world dominance which is her destiny. SOUND ADVICE THE AMERICAN BANKERS magazine says every man or cor-poration or institution that In any way depends upon public patronage for support should never permit any issue of its hometown newspaper to go to press without containing a mention of his or its name and busi-ness. To that it adds: "The man who does not advertise his business does an injustice to himself and his town. "The man who insists on sharing the business that comes to town, but refuses to advertise his own, is not a valuable addition to any town. "The life and snap of a town de-pends upon wide-awak- e liberal advertising men." The wise business man will follow the advice of the Bankers magazine. DIVIDE AND GET FIFTY CENTS A YEAR A WOMAN CLERK in one of the retail stores rides the same suburban train I take each morning. She is - married and every day tells me of the small wages, $25 a week, her husband receives, all because others " are paid such unwarranted salaries, t from $25,000 to as much as $200,000 1 a year. I became rather "fed up" on her daily complaint and looked , up a few figures. "How much do you think your husband should be paid?" I asked. "He could have at least $100 a week if they would divide up the unwarranted salaries paid in this country," she said. "Would you place the limit at say $10,000 a year?" I inquired. "That would be too low," she re-- 1 plied. "Many people are worth more than that." Then I pulled out my figures. "Do you know," I asked, "that if all salaries of more than $10,000 a year were divided between peo-ple of the United States it would mean less than 50 cents for each one of us each year?" She refused to believe it, though it is true, but I have heard nothing more about the salary her husband Is entitled to. IS THIS DEMOCRACY A CONTRACT the C. I. O. was one of the big aviation plants must siRn, or that the else, provides company cannot discharge any member of the union because he is a communist; it must pay a maximum wage scale of $1 15 an hour; compel all employees to join the union; collect all initiation fees, dues and fines for the union; pay Tor time off for sickness; grant two. week vacations with full pay; pay any member of the union the dif- ference between his earnings as an employee and his pay as a soldier during his period of conscription That plant is working exclusively on defense orders and NLRB sup-Por- the union's demands la America still a democracy' M' DAY DEMAND WE ARE NEARING that much- - jtalked-o- f "M Day" when all of our man power and resources m b. d ln that aII our coyfl.ct WMhen lIts ncoowmesengulfing the world. there will be no question of profits, hours, or wages PreSPnt diies with a demand for production, for SACRIFICES UP TO THE present time the l tS"" Wh h3Ve e y p-- T::e cur "P good jobs or lives of JZt t l lilies met" BLESSINGS HEKE .v other th, g ' ?vaethIf and under normal V,r.epre8ent- - out50 Per cenHTSe r '"8 Power of the world In lhe fac such fact, h -u- id cnan,e our';'6 Pe"Ple Who 'mocracy. our otalHariiS JropT ' Private Papers Of a Cub Heporter Dorothy Thompson, the columnist, refused to sit at a dinner table the other night where the guests were lauding the achievements of Hitler. She said she couldn't sit with her enemies . . . "Enemies?" asked one of them, "but you are a pure Aryan Journalist!" , . . "Perhaps," was her volley, "but I'm also an American, and you people are so you are my ene-mies!" That isn't the first time she's done that . . . During the recent cam-paign she found herself with dinner guests among whom sat a sena-torial "dark horse," who made some remarks that made her innards somersault. "You Tour syllable!" Dorothy ihouted as she got up and left. The following amazing story about Hitler is credited to one of his for-mer intimates now in the U. S. It is passed on to exercise your eye-brows . . . The one-tim- e intimate of Hitler says it came from Hitler's personal pilot . , . The legend: That Hitler maintains a secret hide-away in Bogota, Colombia ... It Is said to be a 50 acre estate, and the front gate is two miles from the main house, which, above the ground, is a plain flat building. The building underground is five stories deep and there is enough food stored there for two years. A Hitler aide inspects the plape every two months, etc. 6portswrlter Chas. Scully and some of the boys were reminiscing . . . When Heywood Broun was cov-ering big league ball games (before he took up colyuming) he casually mentioned, in one of his reports, that a large and Intelligent crowd witnessed the contest . . . What, his sports editor wanted to know, was the idea of writing that a large and intelligent crowd had attended the game when the Associated Press coverage of the same tussle men-tioned that the attendance was slightly less than scanty. "Crowd at game was large and in-telligent," wired back Broun, "Fat-ty Arbuckle was In stands. He is large. I am intelligent" The Damon Runyons were doing the town the other midnight with Hazel Forbes, the girl, who married Harry Richman . . . It was the night the stories broke announcing the split of the Rich-man-s, and Hazel's plan to go to Reno . . . "Tell me a love story," Hazel said, "anything to show me that romance can bloom on this darn old street or that marriage can sur-vive." Patrice Runyon, who rarely gabs, then revealed how 6he met Damon and how she almost didn't ... It was at the Silver Slipper many years ago, and Patrice was in the new show as featured dancer . . . Runyon came in for the premiere, nd the manager asked him if he'd like to meet Patrice. "She's a nice girl," he said . . . Then he went backstage and asked her if she'd like to meet a nice Broadway guy . . . "If there Is such an animal," she said, "lead me to It I never met one beforel" ... In the mean-time, the star of the show sat with Runyon . . . "I'm going to meet the dancer," Damon remarked . . . "Oh, you won't like her at all!" the star said, "she'll bore you stiff. I'll have you meet some of the pretty ones" . . . But Patrice met Run-yon first and They Lived Happily Ever After. "The star," Patrice dramatically added, "was Harry Richman." Notes of an Innocent Bystander The Big Parade: F.P.A. and John Kieran of "Info, Please" getting more lauchs Dlayins tennis at For-- est Hills than they'll ever get with their typewriters . . . Just a duti-ful wife Leelee Pons gingerly blot-ting Andre Kostelanetz's damp brow on E. 57th, with her little silken hanky . . . Gloria Swanson looking more glamorous eating cheesecake in Reuben's than most Hollywood hopefuls look in a bathing suit. rallies In Our Alley: One of the locnl ham actors was complaining about the way the New York press refused to admit he existed. "Amaz-ing," he intoned, "the way they all ignore me!" ... It reminded some-one of the guy who made a similar squawk to Oscar Wilde. "It is a comple 'e conspiracy of silence against me," he said, "what vignt I do abcut their silence?" ... To which O.car counseled: "Join it!" The Ho-hu- m Dep't: Cudahy says he submitted his interview to Hitler, and Adolf didn't change a word . . . Which is the worst criticism that interview has ree'd! . . . Maxie Rosenbloom is now taking dancing lessons . . Meaning that he's re-turning to thf ring? . . . The League of American Writers, mostly Left-ists, met a while back and agreed that they still disliked the people they didn't care for last year . . . If they didn't get better surprise twists in their yarns than they get in their politic,' they'd starve. I Washington, D. C. GOOD NEIGHBOR The United States Is getting much better from some of our South American neighbors than has leaked out to the public. When Portugal protested to the United States against Roosevelt's fireside chat hinting the seizure of the Azores, the Brazilian govern-ment immediately got in touch with the U. S. state department. The Portuguese had sent the Brazilians a copy of their protest, and Brazil asked us what reply we were going to make. Ambassador Caffrey in Rio da Ja-neiro immediately showed Foreign Minister Aranha a summary of our proposed reply, and Aranha volun-teered to send Portugal exactly tha same answer telling them it was vital to the safety of the Western hemisphere that the Azores be in friendly hands, and that Brazil could not afford to see the islands taken by the Axis. This message was sent: which means that Brazil will with the United States if and when the time cornea to occupy the Azores. Argentina also has been more co-operative than ever despite the die-hard efforts of our Rocky Mountain Coneressmen to nrevpnt the Imnnr. tation of Argentine canned beef. Ar-gentine sentiment is overwhelmingly anti-Hitle- r and lt. The Argentines are much stronger for Roosevelt than for the United States, and have their fingers crossed as to what may happen after Roosevelt leaves olTlce. Dakar and Robin Moor. For approximately one month, however, all White House advisers have agreed that the Azores were far less important than Dakar and the coast of West Africa. That is what makes the sinking of the Robin Moor by a Nazi submarine so dou-bly significant Despite the menace of Dakar, presidential advisers have been wor-ried as to what we should do about it To take Dakar from the French and to hold it against all comers would require more men than the 50,000 in the U. S. marine corps. It would require an expeditionary force from the regular army. And while such troops are avail-able, the bottoms to transport them are something else again. Once be-fore, the British urged us not to get mixed up in the South Atlantic be-cause it would divert our navy from the North Atlantic. The sinking of the Robin Moor, however, has played directly into the hands of those who have been urging the President to adopt the strongest policy in the South Atlan-tic and, if necessary, land troops on the bulge of Africa. CATIIEDRAL OF AGRICULTURE Paul II, Appleby, diminutive, di-dactic undersecretary of agricul-ture, made a flying trip to Nebraska the other day which had some in-teresting inside background. Purpose of the trip was to set up what some agricultural hands call a "Cathedral of Agriculture" in Lincoln, Neb. What Appleby was working on was a plan to pool all of the different federal agricultural agencies under one roof and under one director at Lincoln. These were to include the AAA, Rural Electrification administration, soil conservation, farm security, ex-tension service, farm debt adjust-ment, and so on. The plan was to make the stale of Kebraska a guinea pig to test the idea. All of these different farm representatives would then report to one director in Lin-coln rather than to Washington. However, the proposed Nebraska director was Cal Ward, regional supervisor of farm security. And al-though working for a Democratic administration, he is branded as a staunch Republican. His selection therefore caused opposition from va-rious federal farm representatives any "Cathedral of Agriculture" un-der Cal Ward. Chief objector was Fred Wallace, chairman of the Nebraska AAA, and it was to bring him into line that Appleby flew out to Nebraska. Appleby had first ordered Wallace to Washington. But Wallace refused. Even after Appleby flew out to see him, h could not make Wallace budge. "I'm interested in an agri-cultural program, not a lot of bu-reaucracy," Wallace said. Appleby stayed an extra day, finally flew back to Washington. His "Cathedral of Agriculture" for Ne-braska definitely side-tracke- Note Secretary of Agriculture Wickard has been looking around to find a new berth for his undersecre-tary outside of the agriculture de-partment Army Movies. Movies are the top amusement of the boys in camp and the army gives them all they want at bar-gain prices. For this purpose the war depart- - I ment has organized the Army Mo-- & tion Picture service, which in t few months has become one ef the L largest theater chains in the coun-try- , with about 300 theaters in op-eration. There is at last one movie theater in every army camp, with shows seen nights a week, plus Sat-- urday and Sunday matinees. Indifference Sh Affection can withst vere storms of vigor long polar frost of ir.i Sir Walter Scott. The Knockout nil illiliiiiJ.il. in mill Joe Louis, after the hardest figh of his championship career, look! down on Billy Conn as Billy sag! down to stay down for count of ten at Polo Grounds in New York. Back From Missions, See F.D.R. : tinH t iitiiJ .' iXMl SUL t i.3lWMJ :i,,.rfi Ben Cohen, legal adviser, American embassy in London, and Col. William J. Donovan, who had been on special missions abroad as they entered the White House to report to the President, accompanied by Secretary of Navy Knox. L. to R.: Richard A. Mahar, assistant to Colonel Donovan; Colonel Donovan, Secretary Knox, and Ben Cohen. Painfully Good Some people are so good that they would: right than be pleasant.- -: More Power to U. S. 1 I i Two new destroyers, the U. S. S. Fitch and the U. S. S. Forrest, were launched within a few minutes of each other at Boston navy yard. Im-mediately after the launching, keels for two new ships were laid on the ways just vacated. The Fitch, shown above, was sponsored by Mrs. H Walter Thomas of Salt Lake City Utah, and was named in memory of her grand-uncl- e, commander Leroy Fiteh. Family of Skipper of Robin Moor fcrl ,';, H7ff-.- t .1 Family of Capt. Edward Myers, skipper of the S. S. Robin Moor, sunk in the South Atlantio by a German view his picture at the Myers home in Baltimore, Md. The picture was taken before the rescue of the second boatload of survivors, at Cape Tower, Union of South Africa, which included Capt. Myers. Shown are, Edward Jr., 16; Marie, 13; Flor-ence, 10; and Mrs. Josephine Myers. Early Arrival I owe all my success having been always a c an hour beforehand.-L- c: Cynic's KnowleoV The cynic is the one ' the price of everything, value of nothing. Oscar a j uwi.i.-- mi u .11 n,fT'q Speakers Address Housing Committee u -- I o iL:v ruinT iiriiifinii uTiii t'i tiYi vrrrr iihinftT IhifiiiniA-in ifi'Viwir lTfliftrwr iHNa rMfcuaiM -- ; tfvAifaa Hih government officials led the discussion in a "National Housing Inventory" at the convention of the national committee on the housing emergency. Principal speakers at the opening session were, I. to r., William S. Knudsen, production chief; Mrs. Dorothy Roscnman, com-mittee chairman; and C. F. Palmer, of defense housing. i Honored r... f ,x i A f I c L ' - i ' ' ' lii ! Er.s: Gen. Robrrt Ri(.h(,lh West Point head, J !' cadet wnIiam(,imS; Texas, rPndprln(f th(1 n,IM; able serv.ee to athletics. I |