OCR Text |
Show THE BULLETIN, GINGHAM. UTAH War 'Down Under' I " W J Australian soldiers are pictured concreting a gun emplacement near Darwin, In northern Australia, as they prepare to meet the onslaughts of the'lnvading Japs. This is in the MacArthur theater of operations, where sizeable U. S. fighting forces have joined with their Aniac broth-ers. Note the colorful campaign hats. Parade Ground in Northern Ireland There are'now many V. S. troops stationed In Northern Ireland, sev-er- al A.E.F.s of considerable siie having landed safely. This photo, taken somewhere in Northern Ireland, shows part of the U. S. troops on the parade ground as they were reviewed by MaJ. Gen. Russell P. Hartle and his officers. CLASSI PEP AjiW person) Will th. UnuITSJS th answer "WiXmM Copy Mc postpaidA8B5lV LATTER DAJ g,0H 3 3 fll '' tooieh, indigeition. Your dniiit bat ADLA TabltU. MIDDLE WOMEN HEED THIS A If you're cross, restla suffer hot flashes, caused by this. W woman's life -t- in1 ham's Vegetable Made especially forv to relieve distress t functional disturbs sands upon thousand report remarkaw low label directions. V LEND FOR VK Make Your Mc Buy U.S.Dei Help Them Clean of Harmful H Your kidneyi re tf waste matter from kidneyi ometimeiM; not act as Nature ut move impuritief tl1 poison the iyitemM body machinery. Symptoms mr persistent headsch,"' getting up mgnU. the ey- e- ' anxiety and Iom V Other signs o kid order are somet.ma lb too frequent There should be no d treatment U wiser W new friends for sj!J They have .?Z Are recommended WNU W J I HOTEL Bfll OQDEN, UTAH I ICS Beems-- 15 Faaillr BooiM ta Air Cooled I""' Blnlni Room Wj Chamber of Co""" Hotel Ben LJ WJhl.Phillipr P THE WINNERS The Kellys, the Lockards, the Ca-reys, the Anderson! and the Lieu tenant Coxes will win this war I . . . They and, the other American kids, bred in the daredevil full-swingin- g, tra-- " " anion . . . The smash-that-lin- e, block-that-kic- k, pickle-that-appl- e, drive-the-gree- n, clear-the-bas-youngsters. The boys too cocky, confident and courageous to doubt, quibble or hesi-tate ... The youngsters who have not lived long enough to lose an illusion, to figure the percentages or to ques-tion their own impulses. The Tom Saw-ye-the Peck' Dad Boys, the Slats McGonigles and the Kayo Me Canns ... The Yanks who are still young enough to believe C.nlinth was a pushover for David, that Jack the Giant Killer was under-writte- and that Super-ma- n can be seen in any mirror . . . The buckoes who have had no dreams shattered, no hopes battered and no words destroyed ... The boys who, with two strikes on 'em, can say, "Here's where I pickle one, ya bum!" The Butch O'Hares, the Joe Moores, the "Jake" Schwartzes and the Grant Mahoneys they will do the job. The boys too full of high hopes and to worry about costs . . , i The lads with pink cheeks and flashing eyes, ready for a fight or a frolic, able to sing before a rendezvous with death, able to look disaster in the face and give it the Bronx cheer. The kids whose impulses are for- - eign to the conference room, the staff huddle, the parleys; and whose minds say "Lemme at 'em!" and never, "Suppose the plan goes wrong?" They'll sew It up . . . the "Skln-nies,- " the "Reds," the "Spikes," the "Mickeys" and the "Freckles" of the sandlots, farms and cam-puses, born and raised in the spirit of high competition, split-secon- d re-flexes, hair-raisin- g exploits and The kids who have never learned to play safe . . . The bimboes who swing from the floor, set ud when they're crogey. put over the hay-maker, pole out the homer with the bases full, race the length of the grid for a touchdown, hole out with a bras-si- e shot . . . The boys who are too young to ask "Suppose this doesn't work out according to plan?" "It's a good idea but will it stand analysis?" or "What's in it for me?" The youngsters who have never known the meaning of expediency. They will finish this war . . . The boys who rate many things above influence, prestige, cash, pow-er and transportation by beach-wago- n .. . The kids who are not protecting a past, trimming sails to meet the present or worrying about the fu-ture ... The fellows who have never learned to compromise, haggle or defer ... The ones with all the flaming Imagination of children, the su-preme confidence of the kid pitcher, the gusto of the boy socker who comes to bat in the ninth with the bases full and two down ... e e The kids who have never had to have their blood pressure taken and who think a fallen arch has some-thing to do with Pompeii. The youngsters who can nev-er be Imagined saying "Let's talk this over." "Hadn't we bet-ter wait for the breaks?" "Let'a check and doublecheck before we do anything." The boys who rate "Zowiei" "Pow!" and "Wham!" as the three most expressive words in any lan-guage. HERO I jumped into the icy lake And dragged him in the boat No hero's bows I want to take I just had signed his note. Merrill Chilcote. "Japs Use Elephants in Surprise Attack." headline. How anybody can make a attack surprise with elephants baffles El-mer Twitchell, who is so nervous ht gets easily alarsmeedeby mice. Put this sign on your jaw, "Closed for the War." COM. GENE TUNNEY is LIEUT. expert in the art or science of winning competition. And this happens to be the day and time when great competitors are needed, at the front or back of the front. We caught the roving commander on the run to get his slant in this general direction. "Just what," we asked Tunney, "is needed to make a winning com-petitor, in war or work or sport?" "There are two main sections to this matter," Tunney said. "One Is physical the other Is mental. Cer-tainly, physical condition Is a big Item. No one, physically unfit, can be of much help in any form of competition and we are now In the middle of the toughest competitive struggle the world ever bas known. This Is an all-o- scrap for every-body now living. And it Is no part of a push-ov- er or a sure thing. "In my own case, I gave seven years to the matter of getting ready for Jack Dempsey. I never tried Iff LIEUT. COM. GENE TUNNEY . Not thousands , . , but millions . . . to ease up or spare myself. I knew the job it would take even to have a chance. "We were supposed to be a nation of athletes. But when this war broke out everyone was amased to know how unfit physically so many mil-lions were. I didn't say thousands I said millions. Millions and more millions. There had been too much ease, too much softness, too few willing to pay the price needed to get In shape. "By shape or condition 1 mean . legs and stomach, eyes and ears, especially. To me exercises that develop the right stomach muscles, plus the right diet, are among the most important factors. I have nev-er quit these exercises since my last fight with Tom Heeney, years ago. We have needed more perform-ers and fewer spectators, fewer in proportion. Not for Granted "You can't take condition for granted. It is something for which you have to work. But as some philosopher once said, 'It is better to train today than to wait for to-morrow to be outclassed.' "We'll have to get more iron into our bodies and our hearts and souls." "There is another big side to the making of a winning competitor," Tunney said. "This is the mental angle. "In the first place, no smart per-son ever underrates, a rival or an enemy. This is especially true In war. A team can afford to lose a football game or a pennant race. But no nation can afford to lose a war. That means losing every-thing. The only smart thing to do is to figure you have a strong, tough, able opponent In the road who can only be beaten by greater strength, toughness and ability. . "It would be Interesting to know Just how many contests have been lost through overconfldence. I don't believe there can be a greater shock than to find, suddenly, you are up against more than you looked for and not be ready for it It is too late then to have your regrets. No one pays off on regrets. "We are today in a much rougher, tougher war than we expected to meet. Toe many of ns have under-rated the enemy two enemies whe have had tea years' preparation against our tea months'. Other Angles "No winning competitor," Tunney continued, "can afford fear or dis-couragement or self-pit- 'Cowards,' as Shakespeare put it, 'die many times before their deaths; The val-iant never taste of death but once.' There must be confidence, but not overconfldence. There must be full determination to win, whatever the price to be paid. "In my own case, I worked as hard on the mental side, on the side of nerve control, as I ever worked on the physical when I was boxing. For example, I had full respect for Jack Dempsey, but no fear of him. I had made up my mind in advance that 1 would let him kill me before I would quit. I was prepared men-tally to be knocked down. But I also prepared myself to be ready to get up again and keep on fight-ing. "Someone has said that 'each must suffer to grow strong.' I be-- j lieve in that theory or idea." ALTHOUGH the Chicago White too pleased with the pre-seas- build-up- , they're the one team picked to make life slightly miserable for the Yankees during the coming months. No less an authority than Connie Mack mentioned them as the team to knock off the Yanks. Two years ago Connie said the Yankees would finish third. They did. Last year he said they'd win the pennant, they did. The Sox are hoping the 1942 season will enhance his reputation as a seer. Jimmy Dykes, manager of the Pale Hose, is a hustling, scrapping, smart individual whose main idea is to win ball games. He refuses to concede the pennant to the Yankees. He knows he can't overwhelm such men as DiMaggio, Gordon, Keller, Dickey and Henrich. But he knows his pitching staff can do much to silence their bats. Dykes Is quite certain that the Sox have the best chance to beat the champs if they are to be de-feated. Last summer his mound staff was the most effective, as a whole, in the American league, pitching the team Into third place. This third place standing takes on added significance when It Is re-membered that the team chalked up no better than a .255 batting average. Hitless Wonders The Sox greatest need, of course, Is offensive power. They need one or two .300 hitters to bolster their attack. The present Sox crew is slightly reminiscent of the 1906 "Hit-les- s Wonders," with Walsh, Altrock r i v V J A I f ro JIMMY DYKES and White. The team, with a bat-ting average in the neighborhood of .230, managed to win the American league pennant Then they proceed-ed to demolish the famous Cubs, who, in turn, had wrecked the sen-ior circuit Getting back to the pitching staff Dykes probably will start the sea-son with nine hurlers. As starting pitchers he has Thornton Lee, Dunk Rigney, Edgar Smith, Bill Dietrich, Johnny Humphries and Ted Lyons on Sundays. Fighting for the relief berths are Orval Grove, Lee Ross, Joe Haynes and Ed Wieland. Ted Lyons, who has spent 19 full seasons with the Sox, rates Thorn-ton Lee as the greatest pitcher in baseball today. In 1941 Lee won 22 games and had an earned run mark of 2.37, topping all regular hurlers. Rigney, who won 13 and lost 13 last year, is a good bet to hit the 20 mark this summer. Last spring he was bothered by the flu and a strep infection. In addition, his personal life was not on its customary even keel. The Outlook Smith could win 20 games without the aid of a miracle. He pitched same excellent ball last year and is working hard to keep his weight down. Dietrich should play a bet-ter brand of ball than Is indicated by his five victories of last year. Lyons, at 41, will win his share of games and Humphries, who didn't get in many games, should win con-sistently. The Sox catching staff should be stronger. Mike Tresh is one of the best in the league and Turner and Dickey will have improved to a con-siderable extent Dykes Is well known for his ability to get the best out of a player. He isn't the gentle, soft-soapi- type. He doesn't worry about offending those on the other side. He has the idea that a man must be able to take it to belong. He knows his players aren't odds-o- n favorites to cop the American league pennant, but he knows too that they'll go down swinging if they go down. A great deal will depend on the infield. Joe Kuhel is still a real ball player at first While Hollo-wa- Lodigiani and Kennedy aren't the strongest hitters in the game, they may take fire if the club is pointing towards the top. Taft Wright is the shadow of a rock in a weary land. He is superb-ly confident that he will bat around .350 this season and his reasoning has logic behind it He spent three weeks in a hospital last spring and didn't regain his strength until the middle of June. He was hitting around .200 late in June. To retain the ft" pickles, keep the ered and in the rek not in use. ' Are you sure y011I properly insulated , near woodn walls' asbestos or other L prevent a fire. Don't drop that irot. chief reason irons h; paired. ' V That new waffle k brushed of! with i wiped with a damp with a soft cloth, into an oilskin bag a.1 Enameled bathtub cleaned with a table salt, moistened with j pentine not too wet, over with a clean cit Always iron ecru 5 wrong side. Ironing side robs them of tt To remove a fresh on a rug, cover the s? ting paper, then prea flatiron. Cover the magnesia, let it re hours, then brush of Army Pursuit Planes Crash in Ohio This picture shows the wreckage of one of the four army pursuit planes which, caught In a heavy snow storm, crashed and burned within a half mile radius on farmlands near Lima, Ohio. Their pilots, out ol Detroit on a ferrying mission, were killed. Philippine Leader "t Recent photo of MaJ. Gen. Jona-than M. Wainwright, now senior of-ficer with the embattled American and Philippine troops in besieged Bataan. Do You Like Jingle Raleigh Cigarettes i ning another series oi tests for those who a best last line to a jqi liberal prizes each this paper for details- Has Rubber Answer? iiniiiiiiii fiiiiiMiiiiMriftiiiiifrii Homer Pilkington, a former stu-dent In Heidelberg, believes he has found a substitute for rubber. Pil-- , kington said he used a plant from bis farm at Salisbury, Md., for the base and treated It with chemicals. Samples have been sent to Washing-ton for analysis. Photo shows the farmer with a sample ol bis product. Report on Far Eastern War Situation """rnr aHrtma1itllMn"tMttm Three navy men pictured on their way to the White House to confer with President Roosevelt on the Far Eastern war situation. They are, left to right, Adm. Ernest J. King, commander-in-chie- f of the U. S. Beet, who has been placed in charge of the activities of the navy; Secretary ol the Navy Frank Knox, and Adm. Thomas C. Hart, retired commandei of the Allied forces in the Far East With Kai-she- k W vl rT-y-f ''-- 4 Lieut. Gen. Joseph Stillwcll of the U. S. army who was appointed at chief of staff under Genrralissimo Chiang Kai-she- k In Chungking. China. Hatfield-McCo- y Feud Buried 'for Duration' It 'ul 'i Two members of the famous feuding families, the Hatfields and McCoys, take the pledge to bury the ax in the Axis. They are Cabell Hatfield and Edward La Port, whose mother was a McCoy. They are shown at Charleston, W. Va., where they signed up with the marines. Both are 19 and come from Matewan, W. Va. |