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Show THE BULLETIN. BINCHAM. UTAH To Wed Hopkins x?""Wl '""wnj'm mjf KT "V It , I I l A i fr if Mrs. Louise Gill Macy leaves her home In New York after confirm-ing news of her betrothal to lend-leas- e administrator Harry Hopkins. She revealed that the wedding may be held in the White House "prob-ably around noon on July 30." USS Shaw Ready to Go on Warpath I ! V ill winl i : s v x Here is the USS Shaw, after being entirely reconditioned at a West coast navy yard, on her first trial run. The Shaw, which was heavily damaged in the Pearl Harbor attack on December 7, came to this navy yard with a false bow. A new bow was waiting for her upon her arrival. The Shaw is now ready to go on the warpath to avenge Pearl Harbor. vA Lp55.x1 tint f'"0' 'ATkr AT kkockrm White Fawn Flour Leads Them All Auk your Friendly Grocer OFFICE EQUIPMENT NEW AND l!SKD duka nd chalra, Hlt. typrriKr. adding mch'a. hIm, B. l BBHK EX.. W,Briilw, 8. U C. PERSONALS DBA FN ESS. mImw Adclrwa DR. USED CARS TRAILERS USED CARS TRAILER COACHES Liberal Cradlt Terma JKHSK M. CHASE Bur - Sll Trarfa 161 So Main Stiwt Silt Lk City M'hnlrxnle Retail BLUEPRINTS & DESIGNS Blueprint A nMlirnn of Mechanical Move-ment fir d Wtr Turbine A Vump. Send for Information. ANTON OUKHG, PERSONALS OR LEVI DEI.K, foot iieclihit, oorn, eU Ituea. Ingrown club nailn, bunion, flat fwt. weak archen eorreeted. Complete treatment, both fwt fl.HO 04 Felt MM. Sill Uk CALLOUSES To rliT painful olloum, bura-- I J tag or tandanwH oa bottom ol fMt fVJ and ramoTO eailoiuaatat than thin, soothing, cushioning pada, JI HELP AVENGE PEARL HARBOR AND WIN THE WAR! THE AMERICAN SUPPLY OF VEGETABLE OILS FROM THE PHILIPPINES AND DUTCH EAST INDIES HAS BEEN COMPLETELY CUT OFF. THIS MEANS THAT THIS COUNTRY FACES A SEVERE SHORTAGE OF FATS AND OILS- -A SHORTAGE WHICH ALSO AFFECTS OUR ALLIES. SAVE ALL FATS AND GREASES! There it approximately 12 of glycerin extracted from til animal and vege-table greases. Thil glycerine ii vital in tht manufacture of munitions. The War Production Board hat therefore asked us to help in a program for increas-ing the production of fats and oils to help offset this shortage. SAVE ALL COOKING FATS AND GREASES USUALLY WASTED! YOUR COUNTRY NEEDS THEM Housewives, lunch room operators, restaurants, and hotels, can all do their part by saving all their scrap fats and cooking greases. Taka same to your "rt- - Most of the meat markets in Utah and Idaho are supplied with suitable containers for handling this grease. They will weigh it, pay ynu on basis of 4 cents per pound clean basis. Use the money to buy Defense Savings Stamps and help lick the Axis. Colorado Animal By-Produ- Company OGDEN - SALT LAKE CITY - LOGAN SPANISH FORK - HEBER CITY - GARLAND And its affiliated companies. IDAHO HIDE & TALLOW CO., Twin Falls, Idaho IDAHO FALLS ANIMAL PRODUCTS CO., Idaho Falls IDAHO ANIMAL PRODUCTS CO., Nampa, Idaho Ct- -S Enfoy Better Results when VNPVA you us Clabbor Girl for luic,t ' iff"T? 3r breads, biscuits and other nour-- VtuSfovtt ishing foods... Enjoy Better V,Sufr !Skm V'ue when you buy Clabbor a rknA Girl. Jdlk 7flcketWl KNOWS I,- - ,. - ,l II Il.llll-- f 'Home. Was Never Like This." H In our travels throughout the country we have many times seen the advertising: slogan of a hotel to be "A Home Away From Home." Here at the Newhouse, we pride ourselves on making you feel at home but also we surpass the services obtainable in the average home. By way of comparison, there are very few homea in which instant service ia at near as your tele-phone. In no home can you purchase railroad and airline tickets, have a public stenographer , at your service, eat your dinner without having to wash the dishes, have your clothes pressed and returned in thirty minutes, have your house-work done by stepping out for a few minutes, have mail service four times daily, have a dinner ' for 20 to 100 persons prepared on an hour's notice, and finally have at your call experts in every phase of housekeeping to aid you. Yet, all these services and many more are available H at the Newhouse. And so we do not feel that "a I home away from home" is a true criterion of the H condition at the Newhouse, rather here we want H you to feel at home, but home was never like this. Takes Two Months It takes a baby about two months to learn how to control his eye muscles to see large objects. Washington, D. C BEHIND RAF RAIDS Few people outside the inner cir-cle know it. but the recent bombing raids on Bremen, Cologne, Essen, have been accomplished in pnrt through the farsightedness ol Ed Stettinius Jr., who. long ago saw the Importance of high octane gas and demanded that the administration start large scale production. Stettinius has taken it on the chin regarding the Blowness of aluminum production and has admitted he was wrong. (Real reason for the tragic error was his reliance on Aluminum Corporation of America figures). But on two other vital commodities he was way out in front One of these was rubber. Stetti-nius was the first to see the need ol building synthetic rubber factories to prepare for the fall of Singapore and began dinning on Jesse Jonei for nearly a year before he could get Jesse to move. The other commodity was high oc-tane gasoline, without which the cur-rent bombing raids could not take place. One bomber takes about ,000 gallons of gasoline to fly from England to Germany and back, so with 1,000 bombers staging a raid, 1,000,000 gallons of fuel Is used up In one night. U. S. PRISONERS IN BATAAN of the Interior Jack Dempsey has taken up with the American Red Cross the prob-lem of getting a Red Cross repre-sentative in Manila to look out for U. S. prisoners from Bataan and Corregidor. So far, the Japs have not permit-ted a Swiss Red Cross representa-tive in Manila, though they have ad-mitted Swiss representatives tc Tokyo, Shanghai and Hong Kong. No excuse has been given by tht Japs for not permitting a Swiss representative in Manila, but U. S. officials presume it is because they don't want anyone from the outsidt world to see what Is going on there. Meanwhile, however, the treat ment of U. S. prisoners in Japan and China Is reported to be good. The Swiss representatives mak regular reports, state that Ameri-can prisoners have no complaints, that sheets on the beds are changed frequently, and that married men are allowed to go to see their wivei every week-end- . ROYAL PRESS CONFERENCE At King Peter's conference with the press, the Jugoslav monarct was completely poised, though ad-mitting the camera men fazed him a bit. With characteristic zeal they monopolized the proceedings with popping flash-bulb- s. A reporter asked Peter what hli outstanding Impressions were of the U. S. "One that stands out ' ,youI friendliness," he answered prompt-ly. "Everywhere I have gone I hav noticed that." "Does that include photogra-phers?" "Well, they are persistent, aren't they? I wouldn't mind if they didn'1 keep shooting off things in my face." TANKER-SAVIN- G PIPELINE American automobile owners don'l know it, but indirectly they bad the British to thank for the final deci-sion to build a new pipeline from the South to the Middle West. Secretary Ickes had been urging construction of this pipeline foi more than a . year always being rebuffed by the War Productior board. Part of Ickes' argument was thai it was foolish to waste Americar tankers by having them carry oil all the way to England from the Gulf of Mexico. If, on the othei hand, tankers could load oil and gasoline at a Middle Atlantic port, they could save 1,000 miles ol travel and reduce the exposure tc submarine attack. Tankers are get-ting scarce these days, and tht shorter the distance they have tc ' steam, the more trips they can make. Ickes put forth this argument em-phatically at the last hearing before the War Production board, but wai rebutted by Lieut. Gen. Brehon Som-ervell, head of the army's service ol supplies. Somervell pooh-poohe- d the idea that England was hard up foi oil or gasoline, said- - he had just re-turned from there, and that Ickes' argument was pure poppycock. Ickes made no immediate reply, but cabled the British government. The British were boiling mad, and the reply he received clinched the matter. The War Production board decided Somervell didn't know much about British oil supplies. The pipe-line was ordered built MERRY-GO-ROUN- D X Capitol insiders are betting that before the tax bill finally emerges from congress lt will contain some kind of provision for compulsory war savings ' as an anti-inflati-measure. Secretary Morgenthau has been opposed to this, but recently seems willing to shift his view. C Former OPM boss William Knud-sen- , in his new role as a lieutenant general in the army, has inspected 285 war plants and in many of them he has recommended changes which have increased production. The world has 700,000 kinds of insects that have been named and described. And new ones turn up ever now and then. In North America there are 50,000 kinda and 6,500 of these are consistently de-structive year after year. Home Again (w L V Mrs. Ruth Mitchell Knowles, sis-ter of Gen. "Billy" Mitchell, is embraced by her daughter, Mrs. Robert Yohn, upon Mrs. Knowles' arrival in the U. S. after 14 months spent in Gestapo prisons and con-centration camps in Jugoslavia and Germany. A Little Rest for the Weary American fighter pilots are shown as they rest at an alert station while waiting for an attack warning, somewhere In northern Australia. It is U. S. airmen like the ones pictured here that have kept the Japs away from the northern territory of Australia. Before Sevastopol Fell to Nazi Hordes Li fryhj L iva ''J xLr i ffaiintlv defended Russian bastion, added another history before fell to the invading Nazis. More than anSCh to the Russians. Photo at top shows mm v J lfnhMTsclnTfO discussing plans for an all-o- ut lava-2- n. Below: Nazi shown In one of their charge, against the key city. Crican Bund: t betraying yourselves Have been hollering:U f i Bund was a school IVFBI just snatched teuri from Berlin who That was very help-- f eVen shut the mouths (distinguished American Lt bet on it From the h-- always argued that i be a sneak and a cut--i into the Bund. We flg-- f hired to sell out a juy It sheltered, fed and wel-- had to be a 100 per cent The dopes claimed you Ljjust misunderstood. ,'gain lor coming forward I yourselves rats. ,t of the dynamiters un-- L were Bundists, they see where that go you ,i, don't you? It puts ,1 Nasi stamp on your It comes out that the Lis to New York, San ' New Orleans, etc., jo. It doesn't Jell with n that you ganged op lies and to improve Imerican relations. I suppose you can get a I out of fooling those dopes. Those ,od citizens who squatted atforms and orated how jouwere. I'll bet you felt ight in Madison Square en they came right out .emember the Incident? lompson (the canny girl) for scum so you threw cu must have been proud you tamed those Ameri-rooste- d on the rostrum I get away with it. They id that Miss Thompson That must you: Americans calling hompson from a Bund m--i trouble-make- ' ion Uke that $170,000 the eurs carried over here? They had to explain it oney, you know, to pay ersives for help to blow nts, bridges, stores, etc. like something that You can bet lis that if the saboteurs subversive people, they at Bund rallies. See aves you? You have no record Mr. Whiskers has He used to jot down when you came fps. your car. Ach! Dot 4 of It is this: Yon don't how much J. Edgar s on you. He's so wily, ever. He puts out so the papers, then holds I lot to work on. That's don't know when your ' Is going to be kicked on'll have to explain e. It was a bad day wasn't It, when you op with those eight? te they're in trouble 7 drag you into it. A lor the Master Race to pect a lift from ts are cheap labor. ' you in herds. He uses e minute you can't take "rself he throws you to What makes you think mean anything to him Jtchers his own generals M to deliver the goods? w he left Fatzo Fritz a limb. Fatzo was worked hard. Worked but the minute things ' what did Der Fuehrer ' "The Reich cannot e with stupid failure." Mdn't even send you a Jal Justice to while away jail. Jon been reading about Jt suicides right here And can you be sure .ides? Lots of the ' better od dead, espe-to- e FBI's roundup. They f to tell, in case the m. So they were fiver. Or maybe they ri into YorkviUe. How And you, too. Jou too informed? Be L e bosom Pal ls P In some night and through the square Working for Hitler wy to make a pfennig. N look at It, ifa . pee you're going to pay f in brown shirts I Pd about being the ffcn can,t be very f doing that. Those y0larmed ,nd con" 8rmed buDie to f when they were Inert1 n wh0 8ent CZ than 800 of 'p they'd please 1 'I I Red Cross Meet Mrs. Dwight Davis of Washington, D. C, national director of volunteer services of the American Red Cross, is shown in Los Angeles shortly after her arrival to attend the first Red Cross conference to be held since the start of this war. More than 60 women leaders of Red Cross volunteer activities attended the three-da- y conference. Patten Brothers Survivors of Lexington 1 Patten brothers, all survivors of the Borne on 1OT'onf h' .even with their father In a local aircraft carrier Lefnnw;Vondrnd stamps. Left to right: Clar- - igT!1mBon" Broce' MBayandCUrence, Farmerette """ JJ"ir mj- .- ( ' "' "i assistant this Formerly a ""op member of Br lain TirI is now. The tr"or land army. fusing is.Ptri ia' nsed for plowing and handle, a. economical en fuel saslly as a baby carriage. |