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Show THE BULLETIN. lUNKHAM. UTAH " . , ammtmm -- Mn"iJsHBssHBl I . Australian Envoy eajjajfiiiasss ' ' ' J - ; 1 f x I: r - ! Nelson T. Johnson, retiring Amer-ican ambassador to the Chinese Nationalist government, and new minister to Australia, shown on arrival In San Francisco. . He left at once for a conference with the President before leaving for j Australia. President Makes Momentous Radio Addres life x$m-:--- if S W -- if' ''- - I t ' 1 1, vi," Sonndphoto showing President Roosevelt as he delivered his momen-tous "fireside chat" to the nation from the East room of the White House. He declared the existence ef "an unlimited national emergency." HisJ listeners In the White House were cabinet members, diplomats of Americas and other democracies and their families. Ipll! fcltCasspbeUUH J. Fuller P Br JERRY lr Old Doo WtgglMusedto man Is rich who's got J pocket" Which reminds mt t your vitamins. Poiu & all: U any one of than j the old vitality i fxaa that'a why this deli KELLOGG'8 PEP, li fc for It's extra-ric- h in the mln that art lacking people's meals Bi ma a PEP'S a Jim-dan- tut: too. Why not have it ton Just know you'll liij u: A anal rick in viiamm rliervoiisli Girls l I easily) Bt( dlstrea Of functional disturbance!) Lydla E. Plnkham'i Vept! pound. Plnkham's Compound i for relieving pain of lrrogub and cranky nerrousneuJc1 disturbances. One of the mi tlve medicines you can to for this purpose mad! t jor women. WORTH TBIE May Warn of Disord Kidney Actios Mode Ie with Its burryi irregular habits, Imp'' drinking ita risk of upon" tion throws heavy strain of the kidneys. They srsspti over-tax- and tail flt and other Impurities Iron urn blood. , . You may suffer MB headache, dizziness, leg paine, "'.T, 0 tired, nervous, all worn of kidney or bladder di time burning, scanty " urination. Try Ooa's kidneys to paw off hsrmM" wasta. They have had ron mended by grateful users p Ass tour ntiehbor! mm, WNU W NEWKThI Salt Lake's I Hi, i 1 I I J It"'-- " J&-i- 5 si i Hotel ' I TEMPLE SQm ,f this beautiful HoPc Is Mains w crime to uv view of the prospeT, country? Why (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) SHOULD BE DIRECT. NOT INDIRECT TAX WHEN WE TAX business we tax production and distribution. When we tax production and distribution, we tax the consumer. Thli 1 the hidden tax we hear about Taxes are a part of the cost of production and distribution. They are a part of the cost of a product That additional cost is added to the selling price of the product, or pre-vents a lowering of the price If econ-omies of production would otherwise lower it. If business production and dis-tributiondid not pass on to the consumer the Increased cost occa-sioned by taxes, business would soon be bankrupt and the consumer would lose by a loss of jobs. We are all a part of American business and all are dependent on its continued operation. All of us are concerned directly or Indirectly with production and distribution. When the politicians tax business directly, they tax all of us In-directly as much, or more, than any direct tax would have amounted to. Politicians looking to their per-- , sonal future a continuance of their Jobs attempt to mislepd the mass of Americans by boasting of their Intention to take from business the money needed to pay for the extrav-agances of government, and they succeed in putting over such a mis-leading idea. Men well versed in finance and Industry, well qualified to speak on the subject, tell us that before we are through with the present world holocaust the federal government will be facing an indebtedness of $150,000,000,000, a sum so great that it is impossible to conceive what it means. In the face of such a prospect, congress does not attempt any economies in the normal opera-tions of the government. Despite the fact that more than a million men are now in the armed forces of the nation, that industries eneaeed in nrovidine imnlements of preparedness for ourselves and war materials for England are provid-ing work at high wages for millions of men, and seeking more help, our relief costs do not come down. We are still spending billions for relief. The politician is not willing to say to those who prefer the meager liv-ing a government dole provides to working for a better living that they must e'ther work or starve. The re-ceivers of relief vote, and the poli-tician will not jeopardize that vote. We must prepare for defense. We must have battleships, airplanes, tanks, merchant ships, all the im-plements needed for war. But we must also prepare for the future and it will be a dark future if we are to face a national indebted-ness of $150,000,000,000. Congress should economize In every practical and possible way, and it should levy an honest tax and collect it in an honest way so each Individual may know what he pays a direct instead of an indirect tax. a PIONEER SPIRIT STILL ALIVE ORANGE, CALIF., is a little city of 8,000 people, typical of the Golden state. It was founded by pioneers who stopped there when it was but a crossing place of trails. Many of its first generation of settlers are still living. They knew it when the spot on which the city stands and all the surrounding country was a sandy desert. Their children see it today as a modern small American city, enjoying all the advantages America offers and surrounded by well-kep- t, prosperous farms, ranches and orange groves. Cut the younger element is not permitted to forget its pioneer origin. I witnessed the parade that is a part of each annual harvest festival The outstanding features of that parade were the covered wagons of Uie pioneers, the prospector and his burro, the cart of the pioneer ped-- d er and handyman-ev- ery possible djsplay of the hardships and simple of the pioneer as the rnmdation on which the city was bu.lt Interspersed with these were the brightly uniformed bands, many o them from the various county high schools, each led by high-step- - em floats representative of city and institutions. But it was the evidences of pioneer days that appealed to Z People and caught and held the crowds. These display, represented toe sptnt that 1. back, notof Orange only but of all the small cities of the West. Sat Sto me. n is the American spirit e Ol'R DEBT THEY TELL US that to maintain .5S?SS55 Nazi bCar wolf' 1 ItS Private Papers Of a Cub Reporter: Here's a story about the time Goering was summoned to Hitler's private chambers to explain the loss of 20 Messerschmitts In a single night's raid . . . Hitler was nervous-ly biting the tips of his paws and moaning over the sour news . . . This disconcerted Hermann . . . "Why are you so worried over 20 planes?" he said. "After all, we still have many more than they" . . . Hitler flew Into a tantrum . . . "You fool!" he screamed. "Can't you see disaster ahead? At this rate we'll soon outnumber them only five to one!" Gene Fowler addressed the school of journalism at the Univ. of Mis-souri , . . Knowing Fowler's color-ful reputation and good nature, the authorities there asked him to lay off "muscle" journalism and other harsh aspects of newsgathering in his talk . . , Fowler agreed, deliv-ered a sugary lecture on the moral code of reporters and the ethics of Journalism, all couched (and sound asleep) In copybook maxims . . . Later, he gathered the students and led them outside onto the lawn , . . "Lissen," he said softly, "every word I said in there was strictly off the pitchfork! The most important thing in journalism is the expense account. And remember this drink-ing and gambling expenses are just as legitimate as cab fares and phone calls to a guy tracking down a atoryl" Genevieve Rowe, the canary, of-fered this repartee between Adolf and Goebbels. Hitler sent for Joe and said: "Did you see what that awful foreign correspondent wrote about me in his piece yesterday? He said I was a murderer, a thief, a butcher well, you must have read It I won't stand for it!' "What'll I do?" asked Goebbels, "have him purged or expelled?" "No," said the mustache, "I'm gonna make him prove itl" Memo to Fulitscr Prixe Losers: In 1933 "Tobacco Road," now in its eighth year, could not have won the Pulitzer ribbon for being the best play because it was a dramatiza-tion of an Erskine Caldwell novel ... In 1934, the Pulitzer play prize went to "The Old Maid" a drama-- ttvntlnn nf a nrw1 Clarke Robinson has been squir-ing a couple of British sailors about town. Took them to the Polo Grounds, the Stadium, Radio City Music Hall, Jamaica racetrack and several night clubs, winding up on the sixty-fift- h floor at the Rainbow room . . , Later they went onto the balcony and looked over New York city by night from the sixty-fift- h story a magnificent sight . . . Rob-inson asked them what impressed and awed them most. "I dunno," said one of them. "I think I should say what awed me most was the way you serve tea in those wee bags." The Japs literally kicked Wilfrid Fleisher, Herald Trib correspond-ent, out of Tokyo several months ago . . . Yet, in his mail the other day came a formal invitation from the director of the Japanese Institute in New York to ship tea at Rockefeller Center "in honor of the returned res-idents of Japan." (Note to that In-stitute: The little man who wasn't there was Wilfrid.) Roland Brown's reminder to all Hollywood celebs (who get big heads) in the current heat wave in Hollywood: "In weather like this, don't forget the cooling system gets the biggest billing!" AVto York Netcsreel: The Inspiring "I Am an American Day" ceremonies in Central park-oc- eans of humanity making public their love affair with America. And the thousands of new citizens open-ing their hearts to the wonderful country that opened its gates to them . . . Carloads of families leav-ing the city every week-en- eager for a whiff of peace and beauty and gathering energy for next week's struggle for existence . . . The chalking on the sidewalk at 45th Street and 5th: "What have the peo-ple got against this world?" . . . People exiting from clubs and fra-ternal groups in midtown, standing on the sidewalk gabbing and saying good-b- y to each other by easy stages . . . The sapboxers in Union square who wear their ignorance on their tongues and can't take heckling, al-though they demand freedom of speech for themselves. Jobless on Sixth Ave. watching the days tick by, as each empty-nande- d minute adds rust to their lives punishment without crime . . Frayed intellectuals in the Vth Ave. library trying to escape barbed wire reality by plunging into the shelter of a book . . . Waitresses holding their smiles like torches, try-ing to please you and trying to hide the fact that their jobs do not please them . . . Celebs taking public ac-claim while trying to avoid private whispers ready o pounce on them and spoil it alL Washington, D. C. RAILROAD TEST For National Defense chiefs, Jun holds a special significance. It wll Indicate whether government opera' tion of railroads may be necessary, In June the nation's railroads wll meet their first crucial test oi whether they are adequatelj equipped to handle the enormoui increase in freight resulting from the defense program. When the wheat harvest starts in the Texas Panhandle and continue! north, the carriers will be on the spot to prove their determined con-tention that there Is no shortage ol: freight cars, and that they can cope with the great demands of the de-fense program without the govern-ment taking them over as In the World war. Railroad moguls are fully aware that they face a decisive showdown, and they are making tremendous efforts to meet it Twenty-fiv- e thousand cars have been mobilized to handle the Texas crop and a strict rule has been laid down that they must be kept rolling. Cars will not be allowed to be used for storage purposes. If a ship-ment can't be unloaded without de-lay, cars will not be released. Cars will be peremptorally re-called if shippers don't load. Cir-cuitous routing is being eliminated. And the railroads themselves are now distributing the materials and equipment they will need months hence, so that the maximum num-ber of cars will be available in the peak season next autumn. This alone is expected to release 20;000 freight cars. Mcchanied Cavalry, It took a war in Europe to do it but the U. S. army is now doing a whirlwind job of replacing cavalry with tanks and armored cars. Even Secretary of War Stimson's aide, Col. Eugene Regnier, has gone In for mechanization. Commenting whimsically on this the other day, Secretary Stimson said: "After riding horses all his life, Gene is now commanding the first reconnaissance battalion of the First Cavalry division. He rides in a bantam scout car and has ar-mored cars and tanks under his command. I tell him this is strange for a man who has sworn that horses are the only thing in life. But he says it takes the brains of a good cavalryman to handle a mechanized unit." Note Colonel Regnier deserted his swivel-chai- r job in Washington for El Paso, Texas, where Gen. Innes P. Swift commands one of the most active army posts in the country. Conscientious Objectors. Announcements that 1,100 consci-entious objectors will report to training camps In the next few weeks are a lot of hooey. Real fact is that only 201 draft registrants have even been classed as genuine religious objectors. Out of the 6,000,000 questionnaires received from draft eliglbles, less than 2,500 sought exemption on the ground of religious scruples. Of this number, 201 have been OK'd so far. They will train in eight camps as follows: Fifty at Camp Patapsco, Elkrldge, Md.; 14 at Grottoes, Va.; 12 at Lagro, Ind. ; 32 at San Dimes, Calif.; 10 at Richmond, Ind.; 40 at Marietta, Ohio; 32 at Colorado Springs, Colo.; 10 at Cooperstown, N. Y. While operated by the govern-ment, the camps are financed by private funds, supplied chiefly by the Quakers, Mennonites, and Unit-ed Brethren. In some instances the men pay their own costs, at the rate of $35 a month. j si a Australian Opinion on War Prime Minister Menzies of Aus-tralia held some very important conversations with high Washington officials during his recent visit In these talks he expressed every con-fidence that Britain would win the war, but he was hard-boile- d and realistic regarding the time neces-sary for a victory. Coming from Australia, which has a detached and unbiased view of the situation, his opinion is impor-tant. "During 1941," he said, "all of Britain's effort must be concentrat-ed on defense. "During 1942 we can really begin to concentrate our efforts on build-ing up a real war machine. "And in 1943 with America's help we can take the offensive, and we will win the war." k MERRY-GO-ROUN- D The appointment of Sherman Minton of Indiana to the U. S. court of appeals makes the third judicial reward for a member of the famous senate lobby investi-gating committee, whose sensation-al exposes of utility lobbying led to the holding company law. Hugo Black of Alabama, chairman, is a Supreme court justice, and Lewis Schwellenbach is a federal district judge in Washington. U. S. Giant of Deep Leaves New York f.. .. ....J-....,..,,- -.. t f1ll ,!,,- in twi.rnr-i--- p'ftiif P. &SA'U ilk jnQs&i 1 4--rJ, View of the 35,000-to- n superdreadnaught "North Carolina," mightiest of the warships in the United States navy, pictured as she slipped down the East river, beneath the Brooklyn bridge, bound for the open sea. Her destination was veiled In mystery. The ship is able to fire a broad-aid-e of 20,000 pounds for 20 miles. Bridges on Stand " if j '"' f il i Harry Bridges, shown as he took the stand in his own defense, In San Francisco, to escape deportation on charges of alleged communistic affiliations. Dark Ignorawi Ignorance is the nig: mind, but a night with or star. Confucius. Testifies ; I Iff s bsg, , , :.: i Mary Spargo, before Dies com-mittee In Washington, testifies that 150 government employees attended an American peace mobilization in New York as official delegates. She said these employees have been sup-porting the Communistio AFM. British Captives of Nazis in Africa f""" ' w.w.W..w-....wJM- r y niM :.'.; '.. ''V; - V w.wv - ssiasjj.-- niftf rtrf j This picture, taken somewhere In Africa, shows a group of British soldiers fresh from the fighting lines of the see-sa-w battle of he continent. They are shown In the prison camp to which they were re! moved after they were captured by the successful Nazi and Italian forces campaigning in Africa. Self Patience Be patient with ever; above all with yoursell-d- e Sales. Economic Advisor SMW..(w,y.i.jp .www in"HivaMMmiv'avRmmB Isadore Lubin, commissioner of labor statistics, who has been called in by President Roosevelt as his economlo advisor on the $7,000,000,-00-0 lend-lea- se program. Ford Employees in Detroit Vote C. I. O. tow awvo.V.. Using secret ballots, more than 83,000 workers of the Ford company in the Detroit area voted overwhelmingly in favor of ,r C. I. O. to do their collective bargaining with Ford for them pLV' i ' workers at the Ford River Rouge plant being checked in bv Pm ill tain Don Leonard as the balloting began. CaD- - |