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Show r THE BULLETIN. BINGHAM. UTAH As 'Enemy' Captured Fort Tilden " """"" ,"" m .. " ' . - il - - V' J . .ft. , Illlllll ill H 1 itliHIMll H1WIII Mill eoftrittmiI?'rnefJhe dc'crse8of Ne,w f""s to the "luvader," from Fort Hancock. Men of the 52nd C"W 'U, vf Marlne Parkwty br,de on rMd FoH Tilden Is shown, bands aloft, In token of surrender, when surprised by "enemy raiders" during- - a realistic test. 'Local' Comes to Grips With Express r . ' si r-?- -. ! j f.-:-v A! l --S f i Wrecked engine of a Philadelphia-Ne- w York local train Is ahown pilled over on Its side after crash with the crack Embassy express, new New flyer, outside Pennsylvania station. Railway, N. J. Twenty-fiv- e persona were Injured In the crash, most of them passengers on this local train. ! rflfc (25000, for the Gehrig film. !J icreams is too prob'ly pay it. Thimusf in any '.Si the head of a tuiltinN.Y.The wealthy French Jering where to invest planned film ii'iWl hit. "Best V . For Mickey fti Nice-Wor- k Dep't: Adltor who was or-- J rt least two weeks a profile ;E;fway .dded twenty pounds out" of Sing Sing t, British radio pounds (lipping morale with Votdcasts urging the jhtch WseW from Ber-- reply prob'ly is: . to us? Take it up da!" ... The sev-lid- s, on the verge of 4 who flew to Califor-residenc- es there at the So that when their 3e up they'll go to a jyCiL Dumb, huh? .bootlegging racket in ; gt more bootlegging i clothing field than in men's attire 1 m.- - IPald Hitler," by Fritz .industrialist who first suii in Germany . . . 4 Howe, the Chinese md Rabbi Edgar Mag-,j- t speeches for a short a (or Irish Relief . . . sa( news about Hen-;Ta- a Loon, whose docs - siim to stop all activity : six months . . . The itho came to the aid i the Duke. His letters sred. - rat of the pro-Naz- is stsmarted themselves. U saved on postage by lifmns of bate franked mails doesn't begin to jti of lawyers and bail Dorsey's check for $40,-tt- t, as his royalties for , 1 i 1941. In short, he ( 'vrfandVr: Mors: Clifton Fadi-- you know that he's to, not a literary crit- - out the big difference Mewing Business," in , 'iterary criticism is an s, "like the writing of le making of love and, n not pay. Book re-- i device for earning . Charles Poore also ' --See slant at the prose a Times mag, in his the Pulitzer Prize. The 'prize, he says, is "a ;&s in cash to those . land ten thousand dol--tit- y for those who re-- s ; - , s Nes: An editorial in " Tribune epigrams the : armies have put the " Russians," the daily "have only to survive irierto win; Hitler has to survive" . . . :t the Fascists' weari-wa- r in their weakening 'tagging. Recently they J to have damaged the carrier, Ark Royal. In naval scraps, both the ' the Fascists have of that vessel. - 'tifce Thi$: where after you've top at least a dozen M claim having played lt . . . But when you blames you ... And w "breaks" instead of lob where your talent iittted-s- uch as waiting ing president of a J mtter how nice you Always be others who Mrom sheer force of 4 fellow who is consid-Porta- nt than Roosevelt " We who can pick at Jer out of seven ."Jou don't talk about you run the risk of listening to others .oemselves . . . The have done more to ; t famous than any of " on it. - 'J ,8UU the 2iPPiest . . Remember ,We wrote articles al-'w-a feW years back? :'J1Sltors come to The . J shows when the New York itself . . . nere many people are 51 of restaurants . . . .' to disillusion your staSe-struc- k is to girls staggering ' ' No Playboy C, awns and ,ma11 I sister Washington, D. C. FARMER PRICE VICTORY Louis J. Taber, National Grange president, and other farm leaders didn't come away empty-hande- d from their conference with the Pres-ident on price control. While he would not agree to their proposal that wages be included in the price control bill drafted by Price Administrator Leon Hender-son, Roosevelt did make one impor-tant concession. He said he would have no objection to a "parity aver-ages formula" being put in the bill to limit the dumping of government-owne- d wheat and cotton when the prices of these commodities threaten to soar out of bounds. Under this formula, to insure farmers an average parity price for the full crop year, restrictions would be placed on the amount of wheat and cotton that could be sold. Also, the dumping could not begin until prices reach certain above-parit- y levels, to be worked out by Hender-son and the department of agricul-ture. Taber and his colleagues had to do some fast talking to sell the Presi-dent on this plan. At first he seemed in no mood to accept any changes in the bill and told his callers that if they had come to debate the ques-tio- n of controlling farm prices they were wasting their time. "We have simply got to head off Inflationary trends," the President declared grimly, "or face the worst depression the country has ever known after this emergency is over." The farm leaders finally won him over to their plan with the assurance that they would not oppose Hender-son's system of selective price con-trols, providing he parity gains won at this session were not lost. Taber pointed out that though the prices of wheat and cotton are now only slightly beJow parity, and live-stock above it, farmers get only 43 per cent of the consumer's dollar spent for farm products, as against 60 per cent in 1917, when defense production was geared to the peak it has reached today. NEW LABOR HEADACHE Strikes are still a serious problem, but the big labor headache currently harrying defense chiefs is the com-plex and mounting difficulty of em-ployment dislocations. Almost every day brings new re-ports of workers let out due to lack of materials, forced curtailment of Official estimates of such dismissals put the number at between one and two million. And the end is not in sight. Some experts anticipate that in the auto industry alone 200,000 workers will lose their Jobs. Aware of the serious economic consequences of such dislocations, OPM heads are making strenuous efforts to overcome them. So far only partial answers have been found. Originally.- - OPM tried to handle such dismissals by local absorption. This worked all right in towns with industries engaged in defense work. They could use the displaced hands and gladly took them on. But in communities where this condition did not exist, other solutions had to be found. Various methods have been used. In some instances defense orders have been granted to reopen shut-down plants. In other cases, where conversion of a plant wasn't pos-sible, an entire new defense plant has been erected in town. In still other instances, workers have been given "retraining" instruction and moved to places where labor was needed. Defense chiefs count on Floyd Od-ium's reorganized subcontracting division to take up most of the slack on defense dislocations. Odium originally estimated it would take two months to set up administrative machinery, but OPM chiefs are urging him to turn his attention to getting subcontracts now and rounding out his organization as he goes along. MERRY The American Association for Eco-nomic Freedom has reprinted an ad-dress made more than 10 years ago by Federal Judge Robert N. Wilkin of Cleveland on "A New Social Or-der" in which he advocated a union of the English-speakin- g countries to resist the totalitarian aggressors. Heavyweight champ Joe Louis, soon to be drafted, is tackling what he describes as "the biggest fight of my career." He has sent a circular letter to every member of congress asking them for help to raise a fund for a movement to improve the eco-nomic condition of Negroes. It isn't advertised, but the army now has a regular military air serv-ice across both the North and South Atlantic, operating on schedule, just as punctually as any commercial airway in the U.S.A. Good news for the troops eaten by chiggers in the Louisiana maneu-vers: Denton Crowl of Toledo had just discovered a chemical Which will make them as scarce as Amer-ican heavy bombers. Jesse Jones is angling to get John Hertz, original king of the Yellow Taxis in Chicago, appointed to the Maritime commission. Commission New Sentinel for Uncle Sam p-- ,x t i 7M M l.yi i ..J,,1tt,,Boim,m. m maiH 1 HMMIMMlf ! T I'TT ' ' Ceremony at the Brooklyn navy yard, as the raising of the stars and stripes symbolised the official commissioning of the U. S. destroyer Bris-tol, sister ship of the torpedoed U.S.S. Kearny. The commissioning ad-dresses referred to the dangers that might He ahead. The ahlp is com-manded by Lieut. Com. Chester C. Wood. In Backwash of War on Eastern Front Barefooted Soviet peasant women are shown (top) with the few belongings they managed to utow machine. Right: Soviet peasant returns home after his when they fled the Nazi war cipZli by Germans. Below: This Heinkel III bomber, shot down in Russia, ha. no terror, for the Russian children who cluster about It. Ruins of London Town ff'TMWWX'. mjWpNMiiVmimmitn i - This photograph, just released by the British censor, shows some of the devastated section, in the great business center of London after air raid clearance work. An entire block of demolished building, ha. been completely removed, leaving nothing but vacant lots, a. shown In the pic-ture. Hardly a building escaped damage. Friendly Chat Gen. Charles de Gaulle (left), leader of the armed forces of the Free French, gave a luncheon In London where he is shown chatting with Anthony J. Drexel Biddle, U. S. ambassador to the governments-in-exll- e. Pilot Crashed, 1939, Never Found " of Thomas Smith of of plane Canadian filers have .found th "g May 28, 1939, and has Clarksburg, W. Va who left "r .s'nut near wrecked plane, never been found Top'PjJSE. poK the N.W. direction Smith At Neutrality Hearing - -j- -p- Secretary of State Cordell Hull, left, is shown talking with Rep. Sol. Bloom, chairman of the house foreign affair, committee, during the neutrality hearing on Capitol Hill, on the arming of merchant ships. The attack on the U. S. destroyer, Kearny, gave Impetus to the hearings on revision of the law. Meals for a Day ""WWWWMHWW1 jpmpniiiiii jHp '' - The army para-ratio- n is one day', supply of concentrated food per sol-dier. Here Lieut. Col. R. A. Isker of Chicago, father of the Idea, fiU into his shirt pocket. para-ratio- n Battleship Capitulates to Newspaper Gals n r3 '" -- rtfi- Mi. - " when he finds hands in surrender raises his iralning station, Capt. Van Leer KIrkman battIeship 8t the naval ns.r.v Otitis ssxx ---' |