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Show l ' THE BULLETIN. BINGHAM. UTAH Soldiers Play at Opposite Ends of Earth .V: i i & If 7; f AM V x IV r H DoBjhboy can now see th preen rrass under the Icelandic snow and Ice, and In the te t him organizing a game of baseball with the use of a Jack i.!nt :M private, at bat with Sergt. Laurence Cumiskev-b- oth from OhliSafchK it left U S ripped to the waist, play a game of badminton In (he heat of Australia In Obedience j The body of all true religion con-sists, to be sure, in obedience to the will of the Sovereign of the world, in a confidence in His declarations, and in imitation of His perfec-tions. Burke. UMWM ' - tvs2 RIU' ount but to doat n vVwvfA tr--i cost... Sava, whan you buy "" nWaiVnAl itf Clabber Girl; sava by using no VAim E3t mor c'ab'tr ri nan your V-"- L favorira racipa direct. 5 IHotk&LSWl KNOWS Sj ssitwt wiy m KNEW IDEAS I By RUTH WYETH SPEAKS a --oto, jgfe P-VERY kind of cotton goods from dainty chintz to boVd plaid gingham is being used for bedspreads. Most of these ma-terials are about 36 inches wide and you will need 11 yards for a bed 54 inches wide. See diagrams for cutting dimensions. Cut the center portions first; then the 18-in- side sections for the pillow cover; then the 10-in-strips for the pillow cover and spread. This leaves a strip for the side ruffles of the spread. If you make your own seam welting, cover cord with bias strips basted, as at A, and stitched with the cording foot, as at B. NOTE: ThU bedspread li from BOOK 1 of the terlei of booklet! which Mn. Speari hai prepared for our reader! . This book also glvea step by step directions for making slip covers, dressing table skirts and 12 different styles of curtains Including a simple rigging for draw cur-tains. To get a copy of Book 1. send your order to: MRS. RUTH WYETH SPEARS Bedford HIUs New York Drawer 10 Enclose 10 cents for Book L Nam Address VIi-V- V I AMERICA'S FAVORITE h H T CEREAL I ' Get several packages today and enjoy the i SELF-START- ER breakfast" A big bowlful of Kellogg'i Corn Flakes with some fruit and lots of milk. foit&SUOV ( VITAMINS! PROTEINSI y9 ( MINERALS! FOOD ENERGY! ThupbillktutnactuiuBaU4ihU.S.AmjSitICrpl The War isn't fought in Fox Holes alone ITS fought in the mind. It's fought with a will to possessions from Alaska to the Caribbean, It'l fought with a belief in a cause worth , k of Today its work is far greater than ever. Its need y for funds to carry on more than doubled. That will, that belief, is known as moral,. JU USQ J0Mf Mp m0ff , Our enemies have had years of indoctrination. They High government and military offidals-indud- ing have been conditioned to believe themselves part of General MacArthur-ha- ve praised the work done by a "new order" ... to which the contribution of their the USO and recognized its importance in the war lives is small but They believe them- - effort selves cogs in a vast machine. But it needs recognition from you recognition in Our soldiers do not fight that way-bec- ause they the way of dollars and cents. For the six national do not live that way. Theirs is the belief in the sane- - agencies which comprise the USO are publicly sup- - tity of the individual. ported. To maintain their morale in the American way, the Now above all times, to make your dollars count; USO has devoted all its time and energy since prac- - give to the USO! tically the beginning of conscriptioa Send your contribution to your local USO Com- - It has done this by staffing and maintaining club mittee or to National Headquarters, USO, Empira houses near all training camps and in our outlying State Building, New York, N. Y. Give to the USO AF Pilots and Red Troops Are Inspected 1 B.ak.AI.IMIUUMU Uh 'fik Cakmak, chief of the Turkish air staff, Is pictured (at left) when he inspected the Royal Air based somewhere In the Middle East. And at the right his royal highness, the duke of Gloucester, King George VI of England, inspects the crack Russian troops billeted in Teheran, Persia. 11 g iLj' .ir Bl jT?NTC?r I, - i '1 Te Private Papers Of a Cub Reporter: Vou probably read, In the stories about John Barrymore, how saddened he was over the loss of his interned Jap valet and the Jap's family . . . On the other hand, some of Charles Chaplin's Jap servants turned out to be spies ... The most ironic situa-tion of all, we think, concerns Eu-genia Clair Flatto, Grand Hostess of the American Gold Star Mothers' annual convention . . . Before the war, Mrs. Flatto had a loyal Jap gardener ... He had been here for many years had even fought for this nation in the last big war . . . But, because he is Japanese he had to be interned . . . Mrs. Flatto now has a new gardener, who is acceptable to the authorities a German, who can't even speak English! One of President Roosevelt's clos-est advisers, a faew Yorker, was feasting in a delicatessen. As he started to leave, the owner handed him a small package . . . "This," he explained, "is for the President It contains some of my best corned beef and pastrami. Please take it to him with my compliments" . . . The next day when the President opened the package, right on top of the spicy cold cuts were two dozen of the delicatessen man's cards . . . FDR sent for Steve Early and, handing the cards to him, dryly instructed: "Here pass these around to the various Embassies." When FDR was assistant secre-tary of the navy, they say, he was visited by some ladies of the Tem-perance Union. They wanted him to christen the ships with soda pop instead of champagne. ,' "The trouble with you ladies," said Mr. Roosevelt, "is that instead of opposing the christening of a ves-sel with champagne, you should en-courage it. And get a great temper-ance lesson." "Why, how can we?" queried one of them. "Well," he replied, "after the first taste of wine, the ship takes to water and sticks to it ever after." Then there's the one about the Mussolini troops, who will so down in history as men who'd rather eat and make love than fight . . . One Italian captain decided to do something about it, and after a pep talk he charged: "Avanti!" - ("For-ward!- ") and so shouting he led them into battle. When he turned, the captain found himself 50 yards ahead-alo- ne! With all his men still seated on the ground applaud-ing and yelling: "Bravo! Bravo!" Admirers of Herbert Bayard Swope were disappointed not to find an anecdote about him in our re-cent pillar called "Newspaperman Stuff." M. Throckmorton Conn, who says Swope is a guy you always find in a photo finish when newspaper-men are discussed, relays this one about him. While exec editor down on the World, Swope formed a habit of de-pending a great deal for the exact time on the clock in the tower of the Tribune which was directly across the way . . . Every now and then the Trib clock would stop. This riled Swope no end ... So one day he got it off his chest by running this on the World's editorial page: "The Tribune tries to tell the administra-tion how to run the government, yet cannot keep its own clock going." For almost a year she has been trying to crash the Broadway heav-ens ... To attract attention she circulated the fable that she is an heiress to millions and that her fam-ily pays her a large sum weekly to keep out of the theater . . . Natur-ally, that kind of a story got her a lot of publicity, and playwrights and producers catered to her as a poten-tial backer . . . The thing exploded right In her pretty face when she was threatened with eviction over a $20 hotel bilL Most top salary players could not squander their money even If they wanted to. The greater part of their salaries goes to taxes and professional and liv-ing expenses. The rest is han-dled by business managers. Hollywood stars are not the gour-mets they are cracked iip to be. They have to eat sparingly of sim-pi- e foods in order to maintain their figures and physieal condition. Most stars' dream of Paradise is to be able to eat steak and potatoes and pie whenever they feel like it but they don't Don't Believe What You Hear About Hollywood: Modern Americans believe more myth and legend about Hollywood than did the ancient Greeks about the boys from Mount Olympus, from Ajax to Zeus, inclusive. Although there is a Hollywood Chamber of Commerce to promote this mecca which doesn't exist there is no Hollywood City Hall or city officials. That vague territory Is just the northwest section of the j city of Los Angeles. Somehow Tramp Knew He Wasn't Addressing George A tramp, coming down a country road in England, stopped a mo-ment in meditation before a sign on which was written: "George and the Dragon." He then en-tered the tavern to which the sign was affixed and asked for the land-lady. "Noble lady," he began, "have you a meal and some old clothes to spare for a poor, hungry man?" "Not for the likes of you. Now go!" she said sternly. Then, see-ing he desired to get another word with her, "Well?" "Then please, ma'am, could I speak to George I" News for Motorists f ' v - ' '4 - """a Anthony Morch, New York Inven tor, exhibils his method for convert ing water into gas for autos. One of the bottles contains water and so-dium. Connected with the battery, the electricity generates hydrogen gas whic h can burn. It costs 5 cents per gallon to produce. Morch's ex-hibit was a highlight of the Inven-tor's exposition in New York. Jny Flamethrower Takes Pillbox I I the timbers set up 'a covering fire while a completely rjiethrower (toP) plays the lethal stream of fire on a pillbox flcl warfare maneuvers at Edgewood Arsenal, Md. Below: P ' the Slst engineers capture the occupants of a fortified 1 1 kme-throwl- raid at Edgewood ArsenaL The U. S. army 'V'ipnient that can be carried by one man. Hail Native Land f i Seymour and Beryl Everett (left t, ,iEht), children of the "aet. of the V. S. embassy at Vichy, Sch the safety ' were born m shores. The children Europe. n and Millions of Travel Miles Hf!!''arks of old tires make rubber mountain ranges over liZf rod-- near the reclaiming plant of a ,aree bb" i, A e are millions of miles of travel represented here ercan wiu now ook back wUh rcfret at the days when fr with his Urea |