OCR Text |
Show WIE BULLETIN. !1(N(JUAM. UTAH Ready for Another Crack at Hitler's Huns - v 1 f AL2 1 i. . .. Picture at left shows Polish volunteers who recently arrived In Britain from South America to join their free Polish compatriots against the Nails. They are learning the technique of operating a Bren gun car-rier. Right: These strapping soldiers, marching along an English country road, are some of the Polish volun-teers who came te Britain from South America to Join In the fight for freedom. Kathleen Norris Says: mien Pay Great Price for Indiscretion ' (Bell Syndicate WNU Service.) narried life was perfect until a man 1 knew in college turned up in our hood. The ttory of our affair it not new. All the lessons in the world i me from what Is going on now. ' ATHLEEN NORRIS ) LANGUAGE is strong enough to convince young boys that theft rgery are wrong. And ;rely wrong in being ible crimes. Wrong be-- of what they do to a haracter, even if he is found out. Wrong in d, because the stolen T or the forged school are steps to more seri-geri- es and thefts, and chooled well in those ms it takes heroic forti-- t takes indeed a com-hang- e of personality, ;t later temptations, e same way I wish I ind words impressive to help girls to see w great is the price hav.fi to pay for that I "giving in" to the lovers of school and days. husband told you, one of y winter evenings, that dur-seni-year at college he I himself entirely by steal-Corgin- g, you would be hor-b- u couldn't laugh it off, tell it didn't make the slightest s to you. You could not say, "I love you for what dear, not for what you sold his honor once, you 1 and the world would feel tit sell it again. .And in ex-sa-way a man knows :L who was reckless in giv-ivo- rs in girlhood, is not to attain an nt position toward what rays to be the sacred sym--X honor. are phrases, :lg mine seems an But I can assure t viewed in the light of rs,jthey will see the whole erently. It would be easier ing wife to explain to her Jiat she lifted some money tie department-stor- e cash trhen she was working there ore her marriage, than to lat she was intimate for a hs with one of the men who to her husband in business, led Secrets Reappear, se, if she can avoid it, and nanently to avoid it, a girl II her prospective husband gs. But that security isn't sound as it seems. Hardly 5 by without bringing me te letter from some young has supposed her secret tten and buried. f these women say that, would be more comfort-dm-it to the affair before and start on an apparent-basi-s, they have softened by saying that the man teone you never met He following year.,r es smooth things over for ;nt Few men, especially pation of an Immediate to an adored woman, will is) on Jealousy of a dead t matters are much worse perverse turn of events it man Into contact with ' again, and the unsuspect-ed is perhaps cordial to that the wife must either :lean breast of the whole put up with the insuffer-itio- n of having a secret of the guests of the house Id crush her husband's NOT WORTH IT No amount of good advice tvill keep some girls from say-ing to themselves "Everyone else does it, why shouldn't I?" So they willingly give away their future security and peace of mind. Perhaps they do "get away with it" for a while. But sooner or later they must come face to face with their earlier indiscretion, only to find that it really wasn't worth it after all. Be sure to read Kathleen Norris' advice to the "J. G." of this letter, a happily married woman whose girlhood folly threatens to destroy her home and the love of her invalid husband. pride and faith in her if it were made known. Such a case is that of "J.G.," who writes me from Georgia: "When I married my husband, I loved him," says her letter, "but now after 11 years if unclouded hap-piness I know that my early love was only a shadow of whet real love could be! He is not a strong man; we live for our garden, our books, and our one daughter. "Reggie was invalided after a terrible bout with pneumonia four years ago, and we took what capital we had and bought a tiny farm, which my nine-year-o- Rachael and I have brought to the point of being an asset rather than a liability. Meanwhile Reg had started writing, little bookish essays at first, for which he was not paid; later more ambitious literary studies, one of, which is to be published in book form , in the spring. Our lives were per-- ! feet perfect perfect until a man I used to know as a college student, turned up in the neighborhood. "The story of our old affair is no' new one to you. I thought it con-cerned only ourselves. I was away from home for the first time, and every other girl did it, why not I? The 15 years between that time and this have been disciplinary years, and I know they have made me a finer and wiser woman than anything that was promised by the nature of that girl of 19. "But all the lessons in the world can't save me from what is going on now. I suppose you would call it blackmail. Victor amuses Reggie, who calls him a 'rough diamond,' and Victor wants to come and live with us. He has no Job, no money, no ambition. He has grown heavy and lazy, but on the three occasions when he has called he has, as I say, made himself amusing, and outlined what he would like to do with the farm to develop it "Oh, Reg wouldn't divorce me or leave me," the letter concludes, "but his faith in me, his pleasure in what he calls my 'lily girlhood, would re-ceive a terrible shock. He is not strong; he cannot go about as other men do. He has so few pleasures! His utter pride in Rachael and me is the greatest of them all." I've written "J. G." telling her that the only way out is the way of full confession. That means she can dismiss the odious Victor in no un-certain terms and then resume her happy way of life, with no further reference to the cloud that has come up so suddenly. Victor will have her old letters, of course, and she the sting of old memories. And Reg will have to replace his idealistic love for his wife with something less fragile less perfect. I wonder what her answer would be today if she could hear that girl, j of 15 years ago, asking, "What's the difference?" Older folks kf U say it's cemmon W'yO sense., 't&sy ALL-VEGETAB- LE Y LAXATIVE In KR (Nature's Remedy) Tablet, there are na chemical S, no minerals, no phenol derivatives. N R Tablets are dif-ferentact different Punh tegetabltm combination of 10 vegetable ingredients formulated ever 50 years ago. Uncoated or candy coated, their action is depend-able, thorough, yet gentle, as millions of .N.R. 'i have proved. Get a 25 box today or larger economy size. MR TOMORROW ALRIOHT Relief At Last For Your Cough Creomulslon relieves promptly be-cause it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender. In-flamed bronchial mucous mem-branes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulslon with the un-derstanding you must like the way It quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION For Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis tsjj sJ I T7ii A ii ii "imrii ujv 4oy DASH IN MATHERS C A I MIDDLE-AG- E WOMEN GSS) HEED THIS ADVICEII If you're cross, restless, nervous suffer hot flashes, dizziness-cau- sed by this period in a voman'8 life try Lydia Pink-barn- 's Vegetable Compound. Made especially for women. Helps to relieve distress due to this functional disturbance. Thou-sands upon thousands of women report remarkable benefits. Pol-lo- w label directions. c J I HOME gggSTHOME nail; meani omethinc when the whole family it agreeable. But it takee only ONB to ipoil the harmony. Nervous train from over-wor- k cauaee EXCESS ACID and indigeatien, eour stomach, follow. ADLA Tablets with Bismuth and Carbonates QUICKLY relieve these dis-comforts. Druggists have ADLA Tablets. WNU W a 43 (HOTEL BEN LOMOND I i . . ; -- : " l til Bosau SSI Bathe . fill te M.N FsjbIIt Booms far I persease 14.11 Air Cooled Leemre aad Lobby Dining Eeeas CeaTeeShoa TapBeeui eaie sf Ketary Ktwaabj KroCTdvee SzohaaseOptiatiata Cbaasbet cf Ceeaaieree aad Ad Club Hotel Ben Lomond OCDKN. UTAH Hubert & TUek. Xn V IIP Innocent Bystander: "Dear Walter; Here Is a sugges-tion you might pass on. Why don't the theater orchestras which play The Star Spangled Banner' at the end of the night, play it in a key that the average person In the audi-ence can sing? Everyone known that our National Anthem has a wide range that Is difficult for the un-trained voice. But It isn't so hard when played in a lower key. Even the recordings used in theaters are too high. For Instance, last night at the Roxy the recording of the An-them was played in the key of t, much too high for the average voice. A key of G would enable many hundreds of others to sing it 11 the way through. Kitty Car-lisle." John Klcran nominates (in Cosmo-politan) as his pet peeve the guy who talks out of turn. Info, Please, where John Is starred, would be less exciting if the pop-o- ft was outlawed. Major James Roosevelt was in Hollywood the other day, the lunch-eon guest of the Freres Warner in their executive dining room, if you please. During the Harry Warner said: "How are your mother and father bearing up under all this?" "I think," replied James, "that my mother is a little more tired." Phil Baker, relates a Sun inter-viewer, once lectured to some col-legians on "The Ad Lib and Its Importance in Everyday Life." One of the upstarts sprung a Joe Miller on him and asked for a sample ad lib topper. Baker, stumped, gagged his way out by saying: "The best way I could reply to that line would be to ad lib ten seconds of silence." One of B'way's hits, "In Time to Come," honors President Wilson. Now the movies plan to revere his memory with a biog . . . Excuse the finger-pointin- but drop into the Public Library some day and be reminded how many honored Amer-icans made a good living out of at-tacking Woodrow Wilson's peace ef-forts. iVett York Newsman: The capture of the German ship (Odenwald) in the South Atlantic recently (despite its disguise as an American vessel) happened, we hear, because of a boner. When the warship first encountered it it was certain the stranger was American but asked for identification, anyway. Promptly came a breezy reply-typic- ally Yankee Doodle in spirit and zing but it contained one word that trapped it The word was Broadway slang and the Germans used it wrongly. That aroused the suspicion of the U. S. warship and the rest is now in the history books. What was the slang word? Sorry. That's a naval secret. Manhattan Murals: The air-rai- d siren on Broadway standing silent-ly waiting to scare a few thousand people out of their wits and off the streets . . . The oldest clock in town in the tower of St Paul's on B'way and Vesey Street It was made in 1798 . . . The dejected young men at 90 Church Street (Nuvy H' quarters) when they don't pass the physical . . . The hamburger joynts all over midtown giving the hot dog stands an inferiority complex . . . The Rose Bowl Cafeteria on 44th, the Sugar Bowl on Pell Street and the Orange Bowl on 45th . . . Short-est street in New York Edgar Street where Greenwich Street meets Trinity Place near the Bat-ter- y . . , The epidemic of huge-size- d clocks all over Times Square . . . Correct Time Square. Newspaperman Stuff: If we ever own or help run a newspaper, no matter how inconsequential it is, we will have the editor nail the follow-ing to the masthead. It was written in the 1700s by John Adams: "Be not intimidated, by any terrors, from publishing, with the utmost free-dom, whatever can be warranted by the laws of your country; nor suffer yourselves to be wheedled out of your liberty by any pretenses of politeness, delicacy or decency." Our Berlin correspondent (your what?) just phoned us this in code . . . Hans and Fritz were discuss-ing conditions there. "Der Fuehrer," said Hans, "has done great work. We now haf more living space than ever." "Iss dot so?" asked Fritz. "Vy because we haf more land?" "No," was the retort. "Because we haf less soldiers." A Norwalk w&g says that "the commander in chief of the Jap fleet is looking forward to dictating peace in the White House in Washington. They get that way, sometimes, after the fourth glass of saki." Fergoodnessaki! Hitler, always a plugger for paganism, has injected a religious note into his whimperings, now that the going is tough. He's sorry his armies destroyed so many churches. He'd find them useful to hide be-hind. Publlo History What is public history but register of the successes and dis-appointments, the vices, the fol lies, and the quarrels of those who engage in contention for power.-- Paley. . New Hawaiian Guard in Training PiTOl ' W ' '" 1 '' '' 1 l&j iSr'M, m tm ft- - ' ' : - . :...,.:...., ...... Troops of the newly formed Hawaiian territorial guard drilling near Honolulu. Japanese and Filipino children, natives of the islands, squat la the foreground. Inset: Janet Ishlyma, seven, holding her ld brother, Rudy (both are Japanese residents of the Hawaiian islands and loyal to the V. S.) places a flower behind the ear of Private A. Sambueno, pure Filipino member of the newly formed Hawaiian territorial guards. Mere Important "We trust, Sir, that God is on our side." ' "It ia more important to knovr that we are on God's side." Re-ply by Lincoln. Apprehension The mere apprehension of coming evil has put many into a situation of the utmost danger. Lucan. From Distant Lands wars?1 ITTTTPTH Little Pedro Iladhandia, seven, Maria Rosa, seven, and her sister Anainda Rosa, nine, warm their hands as they arrive In New York. They came aboard an unidentified ship from some distant land. They are Americans, and await aid from Traveler's Aid society. U. S. Avengers in Formation i . i s V . -9-- fzi wBililii sLrrtiaiftiiftiF. awiwiWTO 'v w stt ts' s ,,t . , if This TJ. S. navy photo shows group of dive bombers flying in close formation. Look out Nippon! Pleasure Through Toil Pleasure comes through toil. When one gets to love work, hi life is a happy one. Ruskin. , Depressing Others Stop shallow water still running, it will rage; tread on a worm and It will turn. Robert Greene. These Cadets Are Officers Now ..... - -T-maMIWi r fi iihllr'1-- - f ill'oT' nf i'ii i j There's good reason for the smiles worn by these young men as they surrender their rifles to the seated sergeant. They have Just changed status from cadets to commissioned officers at Randolph field, "West Point of the Air." They don't need the drill rifles any more, and are plenty happy about it High Commander f ' V ' i ft i 4j 1 y - f 1 r ' i I ' ' 1 i " ' ' '--1 j jr Vj-- t i Generalissimo Chiang Kai-she- k of China, supreme commander of all land and air forces of the United Nations operating In the Chinese theater of war against the Axis. |