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Show vi nmniinirf , urnnnnnnnn , nmn nn .niniBrr riranninn r.inTarini ywiiiiiiuiiii I ivjjuijuiiuu miiivmivj tjuiu.wi? iiwuuuiij I'luiyuui h'('t Cy D.;W, prmffiB . tmost of'the statements attributed united CTess stair correspondent P-o swwicow kwuuw wwb kko ' .' . , j' Innri Mmaalt tn frftm half truths tftrbugh , ianuendos 'to wASHtwcTON. Afcrtf r mp, lona range ue way irom naii ' v? . ' 'ill 7" . '17 4 ,! Itrutiui tarougit innuenai A'.consreBslonal eaminjttse liovmright IriaScuracies, , Chanred ;todav that , i & . booklet 1 Tin (nmrirv Into th narrmMt U4 fVSto ;Reti' -of Manktndj" began "after certain southern: m arxeren oy ul army, aft reading tgressman Charged, that it convey- 14" material ' to soldiers, , atyuiedfed the messagethat northern ne- kviui - iu uic, lecaiuquca 'more iCToea oiumea were uu uiiejiect- nrAjess ; subtlV Presented . of Jjommunist ; propag-anaa." kial equals" of iwmtes. ' Thevchanres wer made" bv at. Tliif rnort aald that whH Mia tee. headed bVk Reol Carl' T. 'Dur-lth .races of mankind ara .?M lJiAHMiliK.G,'id engaged in Ibrbthera it. failed to take Into -.; iiyusa,imy ue - lnimxaiion r m- taccount inai even . Drowers tn -v.iopmeB . "inimical to the- Interestsl ally. ,cf !,the ; people ' and ' the' t govtrnJl "Tlie authors 'see no objection A,tnentr , V . Ito cohabitation and Intermarrfasre liVArjejwrt on1 the 'Yacea olbetween member of different xnaiiKina," written oy Kuui Bene-traces," tne suDcommittee said, -yei lUE'ina ur. uene weiumn orrcney aamit uiat wnen ine ver- jmans and Czechs tried it, tliat did ev.Tork, , the subcommittee said iA w...ii.iii, II, ,)i ,fi , , , , some flouthern r not make the two countries like eaca ouer. . . . , It charged that the ilhistrations were crude, grotesque; jwid frivolous, friv-olous, entirely Incongruous With the text of a real pcienUficI treatise," and. it -addedj ' "Adam and Eve are deplete $ wita navels.' It aaid the authors etiart their "thinly diBjrulaed sophiijtriesM as antlirooolosrists. but "drop an- WOpoigy for . politics, sociology J tttwor. uiuwiiMUuiii ouut euuiwi subjects employed by propagand iais ,v( miuuiuueui. . .1 - r. According to the report. 55,000 copies of the booklet ere ; pur chased by the; War Department. for distribution among students or the army "orientation coWse. but that as a result of the committee's action the army decided against this plan, although still permitting distribution for Voff-duy discussion." discus-sion." ' .. i . wra TMlTt V:vrPPKYT THTJRSDAT, APRIL. ZJ. Hit V? T Mobile Hospitals, With World's. Best Equipment Are Ready fprnvcUm, -l n Iv. : m i a r- - i s, Bimntir i-Army ivieoicBJi verps iitdf St lafe&Ic Yaliie for Long Time fJ By SANDbR S. KLEIN ,,Uliited Preaa Staff Correspondent A)Asmijfi April "21 (EE) M ----Admiral Ernest, J. King, com-; com-; inandr-in-We' of the U. . fleet, Ojgards therAUantic bases leased t f irom threat Britain under the his- xegie importance to the United States for a, long time to come. . ? This iew expressed - in Ms war t progress report to SecreUry of dicftte that he favors retention these; bases when the war is , Tne deal, was made in 1940 v ',w?hen the Battle of Britain) was in its initial suges and the German BUDmarine campaign was having ' aNaerious effect, on Britain's At-, At-, lata tic -supply line. States transferred M) over-age de-J "change for 9-year leases on base V ' eites in Antigua, Jamaica and St .'.-.uucia in me rtusu west males: r British Guiana, in South America; Creat Exhumax in the Bahamas, 'kmn& Trinidad. , x t , In adldion, the U. 8. was granted ?reely and w-ithout con-jBlderaUo4y con-jBlderaUo4y BimJlar-iJight- with re-y re-y spect to the leasing- of bases in Newfoundland and Bermuda. ' "This; acquisition - of bases," ' Klng'S report said, 'operated to . - ' advance . our sea frontier several i hundred miles in the direction of ' ouT potential 'enemies lit. the At- lantic,' and as the bases were - tease for a term of. 99 years, we . ' 4tu4 profit by their strategic im- , ' portance ' to the United States not " 'enly- immediately, but long ifter tVtva crisis responsible for the ex-s ex-s change.' , - V ' . King further implied that the United States should maintain d&- fepslve establishments at these ty or to be acquired by this coun- ; , JDicuasing this country's, fall-' fall-' Wre to fortify Guam properly, -tSteflr -'sald: T, ' f"we appear to have had an ob- we are to hare outlying posses sions we must be prepared to de fend them Apparently mindful, of recent criticism that full use is not being made of . the leased bases, King reported: Ail MX LJ UUCS WljUUCU HWM Great Britain In exchange for the 50 destroyers have been in constant con-stant use, and are of great value." Mrs. Roosevelt Presides dt Fete For Australians PROBLEM WASHINGTON, April 27 (C.E) The distaff side of Washington officialdom was present at a White Hduse state dinner last night for the first time since the start of the war' when Mrs. Franklin U. Roosevelt presided at a formal function h o n or i n g Australian Prime Minister and Mrs. John Curtin. . The White House entered a period per-iod of social austerity when this country went into the war, and state dinners since have been strictly stag affairs no ladies in- vied. . But with the president va cationing, trs. , Roosevelt was compelled to ' do the honors last Lnight. The dinner was held after the first lady and the Curtins return ed to Washington from the south ern vacation retreat wnere jur. Roosevelt is resting and 'shaking off the effects of. a series of recent re-cent iilnesaeif. A White House- announcement said that the president received the Curtins at a luncheon which was also joined by president elect and Senor Teodoro Picoda of Costa Rica who were enroute to -Wash ington. Mrs. Roosevelt accom- Ipanied the -Curtins. ok the president's luncheon pArty had the incidental etrect or starl ing ."invasion" rumors in the capi tal. It happened this way: Ai iu:su a. m., tne wmie nouse notified correspondents that it; would have en anouncement nature' na-ture' unspecified around 6 p. m. Somehow, speculation began tn some ' Quarters that "something big" was to be made public, and some suspected an invasion flash. .The luncheon announcement, issued is-sued at 6:40, put an effective stop to it all. RIGHT NOW FOR $50 PER MONTH HERE IS OUR PLAN WE WILL DELIVER A NEW GENUINE 4Riht fiovr at the new IoV pnee of $75.50 and if you ' are hot satisfied in every m. Aijt inu una will tate back the 75.5(H6ss $2.50 per month S, Rental en toe purcnase 61 NEW REFRIG1 JCTRIC LTOR jWe will give ypika wrif- yttn bond covering the 7 ttgreement and , gu i iee you first choice r new Electric Refriae pfter the" war is ened find they are -avaUabl. Band Festival Slated at Lehi LEHT The annual band festival fes-tival of the Alpine school district will be held at Lehf.on Wednes day, May 3, when the bandh of the Lehi, American Fork, Pleasant Pleas-ant Grove and Lincoln schools will coriSpete in band numbers and. maneuvers. The festival will be held in the Lehi stake tabernacle at 4 p. m.; when the band will entertain with band music. Following the eon-cert eon-cert the? bands will march from the tabernacle to Main street and back to the school campus where maneuvers of the various band groups will be given. Twirlers of the Various schools wil give dem- Future Inductees To Be Under 26, Members Predict By D. XV. DITTMEJl United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON,' April 27 (UJ! House military affairs committee members 'predicted today that barring unlorseen military emergencies emer-gencies .men inducted into service serv-ice for the rest iof the year iwill consist largely oft those under! 26. They emphasized, however, that their forecast covered only men in essential', industries--that older old-er men and fathers in non-essential Jobs have no assurances and may possibly be clalled jep in sizeable size-able numbers. t Chairman John M. CpsteUo, D, Calif., of a military affairs subcommittee sub-committee on draft deferments, said April' 1 manpower figures submitted by selective service, indicated in-dicated that: 1. The nation still has a "tremendous" "tre-mendous" manpower ppol available avail-able for military, service. 2. Virtually all men.' inducted this year will be non-fathers and vounrer men unless 'strateeic 1 plans require unusually large calls in Some months. ' Men tn nonessential, non-essential, work are exceptions. CosteUo gave this pictjure of the draft situation: From how until fec. 31, the armed forces will need 1,385,000 men. ; Between 585.000 and 630.000 will' be available avail-able by then from the ' ranks of r'iths reaching the draft ageU lie duierence must te made up from oWer men now 'in or to be classified A. Costello- said that as of April 1,- the 1-A classification Included 2,259.000 of. which 750,000 were non-fathers. Added to that were 648.000 men in 3-A and 3-B 627.000 of whom were fathers who are being reclassified. ' Aside from youths rcachine the arart age, selective service concentrate on heretofore defer red men in the under 26 bracket Then Will come the older men. Including In-cluding non-fathers, in non-essential- Jobs. These are expected to fill the bulk of the needs, indicating indicat-ing that most rifen 26 and over In essential Jobs will not be called. By TOM WOLF, NBA. Staff Correspondent V lmte)X, April 27 The U. S. is ready. when invasion begins, to give the sick and wounded the best medical Care -in the world. It's easy for. a civilian to forget the medics un til the Jbattiea start.. But the Army doesnt forget this vital service. and battles don't begin until it is ready, The Medical Corps In the Eu ropean Theater of Operations began' be-gan' building hospitals for the Second front Just as soon as America Am-erica entered the war. , Before the hospital program could get into full swing, the medics had to know the plans of the pending operation in detail. How many -casualties must they and How many . sick and non-battle injured? What types, of sick nessesT v ' Built Huge Hospitals The number of hospital beds required depends not.&rily n t number of patients admitted, but on the jwigth of time each stays in - the hospital. Injuries from small arms require a shorter pe riod of hospitalization than dol wounds from shells. There is a higher percentage of head wounds in trench warfare than In warfare war-fare .of maneuver. These are a few of the factors the Medical Corps has had to reckon with in preparing its hospitals hos-pitals for the coming invasion. Hospitals had to be found, or built, to provide tens .of thousands of beds. The British provided them either turned over existing hospitals hospi-tals or built new ones for us on reverse lend-lease. Then there wasxjlie question of supply. A general hospital in the United Kingdom Is the size of the biggest hospitals in the biggest American cities. Its equipment must be the most modern and complete in the world. Biggest Task Ahead But the-hospital program in the United Kingdom, 'gigantic . as it has been, is only one aspect of the Medical Corps' problem'. There's the even more immense problem of medicine in the field. . Battlefield medicine starts at the battalion aid station the for- wardmost medical unit literally on the edee of the field : where twoiinded can be given, plasma immediately. Next comes the col lecting company; more thorough treatment of wounds; more plas 16 Gorman bhips Sunk or Damaged Off Norway Coast lNDONr.April 27 CE) Brit lish and Russian , planes were re veal ea loaay 10 nave wnx or damaged 16 perman ships in i series of attacks on enemy: con' voys off the Norwegian coast. A British admiralty communl que reported' that naval planes from an alrcraftcarrW had scored scor-ed bomb' tuts on four' ships and an escort Vessel tn a convoy off Bodo, at -the entrance ?f Vestr- jorden 120 miles below Narvik. yesterday. "Further details are. awajted.' the communique' said. . German broadcasts yesterdSy said 25 to 30 single-engined planes made the attack, setting fires On twoVships tnat were coniroueq quicxxy v Invasion Orders On U.S. Radio LONDON. April 27 CE) In vasion orders to the peoples of occupied oc-cupied Europe will be broadcast over "Ihe first America owned and operated, radio station In England, Eng-land, the London bureau of the. United States Office of War Information Infor-mation disclosed today. The new station, constructed during the last, two months under super - secret .conditions, will go on the air with its first! program at 11:30 a. m. iewt) i sunaay April 80. ma; ambulances. A . collecting company s equipment, including vehicles, weighs over 65 tons. Back of the collecting company is the clearing company, where the 'wounded are sorted the, crl tical going to field hospitals near- WilkJv.' f. l-.lr- An.. lecting company can perform emergency em-ergency operations if necessary. There's one collecting company for every division. Its equipment weighs nearly 75 tons. The, field hospital's equipment less vehicles, weighs nearly 25 tons. It takes 19 two-and-a-half ton trucks to move It from place to place, still larger are evacu ation and general hospitals. Do you know about the crusade to lower the cost of hearing? ...........?....,. .. If you find yourself straining to hear ... if you can't "get" all that's said at home, at business, at theatres thea-tres or social gatherings, you owe it to yourself to try fhis sensational , new bearing aid. At its low price, it is helping thousands who could not "afford" to hear. Let your own ears' decide you will not be pressed to buyf New . Radionic Hearing Aid plwtu tMth - radioniir tubaav crystal mxiero-phoo. mxiero-phoo. A-pomtim eat. ndatana eaolnl l4v tcrlM Mel batttrrt-mvic batttrrt-mvic dreait. Libr gnmnatm. Ou mod! ityZtnith't Hnrrt. No mxtrnrfo "d- " ' Aeotpted by American Mmi-ical Mmi-ical Aociation CoumrU o Phical Therapy Wt Ihvtu Vou-Come Vou-Come in for Demonstration Use Standard's Easy "Fay As You Go" rian STANDARD OPTICAL CO. ffx HO 161 West Center J I Penney s is a onstratlons with music furnished by the bands. ' ' " In charge of the bands will be Frank Shaw of Lehi, K J. Bird of American Fork, Irwin Jensen of Pleasant Grove and E. B. Terry of Lincoln. Leo Hansen will be supervisor of the festival and L. B. Adamson will act as chairman. Special bleachers will be erected erect-ed on the school campus to accommodate ac-commodate the vistlag public. -6ml mmmwm PERFECT FOR DYED OR BLEACHED HAIR Chjfftn-Kurl ve dyi Kitriss be- wwy noes sranf oav. 11 yvut hair it (ray. dyed e bleached. Charm-Kurl Charm-Kurl av nll'uk" . . . Sad kaep MM COMPUTE HOME KIT 8 Reasons Why 1. SArC-EASY TO USE z. NO HARMFUL CHCMIC I. FOB W0MKN AND T. NOM4I S. WAVES DYED MAI 9& apSHSSSm AtS CHtKMEH fsca CftaniMrsrf KH Centsitos Vsve Imtmi, Cart, hmmp TInum, Wy Set enaf Cawnpti unnumfa fnstracuoAS Ncnr, give youre!f a cool. inablRelesa Uiarm-Kurl permanent wave irt complete coaifort at home. IV t easy Ad safe Kith inarm-Kurl. e quires no hfal, electricity. or previous bair vaNingtxperience. The reeult will be positively torilliHg, and lopg- asung, ioo. , DO IT YOURSELF At ffQUift In 9 fwfc ? Cbaxm-KuH (iva yea natural looking corU aixl Tvca which are aoft and easy to raanate- TryyCharm-Karl today Uw remit ia gvarantced 6 pleaak you aa well any $5.00 pnfcmonal permanent Dt your money tack on . . . icqueei. SAFI Coot for EVery Type of Hair aa harmfiU fhwnirala or "'"'' Ra aoteachioat el dryers, deairable for both cutiarm, oet WbarmKurl Kit today. hould Use Charm-Kur! . HO KXFCWICNCCnECUSARY S. CONTAINS NO AMMONIA S. NO HEAT.NO ELCCTKICITV ON DKYZItS MOUIHEIi7! BEAUTIFUttY ASftATURAt HAIR IITY DRUG SpringviUe . Payson - Spanish Fork Work Pleasant Place to We need . part-time and full-time salesmen and saleswomen for apparel and accessories, s&oes, hom needs. We welcome, experiencr Jpepple. but will be glad to train you if you haven't done store work before. We will consider new high school graduates, with a career to begin; wives of. men in service; rxien past draft ag, or with iome phytieil limitation. Penney s is z good place to work, a place where interest, loyalty and .good work get substantial returns ; a place with a congenial, neighborly atmosphere. Youpwill be s doing a worthwhile ; wartime job iere, distributing needed civilian merchandise mer-chandise . . . you will be working for a solid, reliable organization, whose people, all over . the country, are proud to be associated with It. ' .; Let us hear from you if you'd like to know; more about this. 4 ProTo Store - their they haves actions shown they (employer) do respect the law their promises and probably not their God!" -Allegation against management of Sutton s Cafe circulated on handbills hand-bills carried by Union picjkets. 7 Such charges as that quoted above, arc an injustice to the management man-agement of Sutton's Cafe. We present the second in a series of factual discussions on the Current situation. This advertisement' presents specific charges made agaitist Cafe Management and Management's answer- to those charges. Union Charge No. 1: The Facts: "Sutton's Cafe employees were organised by die A. F. of L. Local UnionxNo. 128. Mr. (R. A.) loorefield, Manager, interfered with organization of employees, which a . violation of state and natipdal laws.'- i ; uhtb Metal Traces News' - VJ plume 1, Number '2 In an advertisement voluntarily written, paid for and signed by 12 employees of Sutton's Cafe die following statement appears: "We, the undersigned employees of Sutton's Cafe, want the; people and all union officials and members to know that we feel there is no unfair practice of labor in our restaurant ; that we are .paid . above union wages and i working conditions are entirely ' satisfactory. . .,. . "It is not true that Mr.fMoOrefield persuaded us to withdraw with-draw from the Union kt ny time nor has he forbid us joimng one. Provo Herald, April 20 Union Charge No. 2: "Sutton's CafeWas placed on the unfair list in ponfrmity with the laws of the State of Utah and the Ujoited States because of the management's refusal to comply with legal ..rulings and dedioiys. . . .. N- ' A Labor Handbill, April 16 The Facts: At no time has. Sutton's CafWrefused to comply with legal rulings and decisions, la a decision and order issued April 21, 5uttons Cafe wadirected to begin bargaining on or before April 27.' We have filed an application with the Utah Labor Relations Board foe a rehearing, and hope to prove to the . board that we have in no sense violated any part of the Utah Labor Relatutos act. Union , Charge No. 3: Tne Fads: Union f Charge No. 4: He (Mr.Moorefieid) refused to meet with the Union . I ! He has clisregarded.the laws of the:State of Jftah in taking this action." - 4 Labor Handbill, April 14 The Decision and Order of the Utah -Labor Relations Board issued April 2 1 makes no mention nor does it refer in any manner to this charge. That Mr. Moorefield had shown discrimination (against Union members) in hiring and tenure of employment, . Charge made in March' 20 bearing 'before Trial Examiner at Utah " " Statp Capitol. The Fads: 'Th respondent. (Mr. Moorefield) did not discriminate m rcgaxu 19 mre ana tenure employment. " . . . - .. . - . - Decision and order of the Utah Labor Relation Board, April 21 These are the charges made agaiW Sutton's Cafe Ibgcther With the background given you in yesterday's advertisement, you now are in possession of all facts concerning the difficulty which has resulted kin picketing of this Provo institution. Tomorrow the final advertisement of this seria wHl appear. us holcl to weigh then, form our enting facts in. information an opinion. ith su -It is an American privilege all facts in all controversial matters own opinions. Our purpose in this difficulty i to provide you from which you can arrive at ; V y - -.V ' l; SUTTON'S CARE A. MOORFILD. Manager V. A v. ! .av'. t . .- A: 1 v IV a ORomst ado sos fox rosTAGt, rrc a. h- . A- N 7 7.-M a |