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Show IV l i i V A. it .i ,'-.'. 7 77, it 4 r AuV rJ r 7. :, - ? X.- v ' , ! V ' ' M 7 tin Jflk: ' .aft Tai i T m is i ii iiMi ""a.JF" vNa" II ifc TJ . la, B 1 APRIL 28, . 1M4 i "vffFROVO, UTAH" COUNTY, UTAH, FRIDAY 7j7 v jct ditorial V' aboos Go Overboard Woriiwiraft ! wit tabooa that vi nor tvmled yfarogress in many fields of thought ot several generations. ,. For instance $hr w the use of the wora fmH.. Fo manv years no person of re ent would admit that women naa legs. MiiviW Th distinction seems , tiiniti. TtAw ttut it wasn t then, mere - i vvpB v --, " . , - is the siory gi a woman, uuucu m fof a train wreck in the early '80s. A ioc- fiHrflnted hv her screams oi pain, asKtu wtwre she was injured. She; replied it her 'limb." Many precious minutes iroent trvinff to find out which umn. 4n desperation he asKea ner wnemer le rilmb" with which sne sewea the "Hmb"' on which she walked. It hii i!mhn which she walked. But JVwas 'then inn 1fttA for treatment and She C For many tears in America we permitted one of our reat medical problemsto grow to alarming proportions because w wer4 un- v. illinflfto use nublicly the , word "aypMUs :? and "gonorrhea." In recent ears, tnanxs largely to the realistittitud6f theUftited ; States Public Health Servicer we have brok-' L en through that taboo. " But still we have not reaiiy iacea ine v'lVmhlem. Venereal disease is on the in- ' crease, in ijmo, ouvuv coaef b were retorcea. s si er cenv jtucrease suver those reported in 142. The increase ih the cases of cronorrhea reported was z per cent. It Is obvious that unless this situation is brouffht. undercontrol by concerted , action ' it mav soon aasume serious proportions. To V day it is a genuine menace to our civilian 'r tvnrVArsi arrn tn. our armed forcea. ' V To fight this menace people 74nust know X what itis. This is no time ,to soft-pedal it Vi. BUI in xpw we aon i cau ickb unius. , should we avoid the .words "syphilic "ffrtnorrhfift" when thev &re such deadly ' UJ A- Z. enemies vo our national newui t A Firit, doht be afraid to recognize the seriousness of this problem and don't be 'that it Must be brought under control and : '"help in every wayyou can in ypur local prob-f, prob-f, Jem to bring it under control. , - Both of these dread diseases can now be "' Vtured. Clinics have been provided where 17 examinawon aim trganucm, wo yuuic. 5ee"that victims get to .-these clinics. But! rMiiomlw. too. thai: this isn't iust the prob- ' xt- :rxi J ...... T4- la iem di inevicuui w www uiowow. w vour oroblein. too. If typhoid or diphtheria m pr sjmaupox Of inian.ue.parijri v" the increase in the proportion mat venereal disease is gaining you-would be in the fight tb protect your community' and yenr family. You can fight venereal disease if you will face the problem of its spread with equal .anxiety for the welfare of the nation and with equal frankness. The Men Who Have Been There The man who has been in strange lands has always enjoyed prestige among the stay X 1 .. T., Mnn4 MAititiaiA. a htav "Indira been a pilgrim visiting some distant shrin" or a crusader forcefully seeking the right e among distant wrongs, or a soldier or a navi-eator. navi-eator. Or he may have' been a trader with a bent for adventure, likMarco Polo. -An earlier world got ita whole knowledge of distant localities from such men. They rere disbelieved in a good many details, but their Vogue did not suffer. A ' Today we have millions of 'books and V " periodicals to tell us all that print and pic- v liures can ten auouievcrjr pail, oi me wwiw. ;Butrnothing-takes the place of the first hand ' oral reoort. To be able to sav. "I was talk- ' ,'ing to a man who wab in the Arabian Gulf ; country means more than reading: descnp- : tiohs and studying maps. ' wivnin a lew years-a great many Amen- ' cans will be returning from every locality under the sun, each telling his own version The Washington Merry C .oun A Daily Picture of What's Going On in Natio Br Drew PeMm (Col.; nowrt Copyrlfht. 111. NSA gnrle, two. i man - Aoi, things he saw? colored by his own dis- comforts or comforts, his own opportunities for seeing. Such stories will make America uch more conscious of the world and may aye a marked effect on national aloofness. Anyway, it will supolv conversation- for a kcuciowvii wiijo aim, uu vno uasia 01 re' ports to date, it does not seem to be making '. Americans dissatisfied with their country. mack Miracle Brought To Light ) A lump of coal is not dramatic compared 'to battleships "'and tanks plunffinor throuch .fuemy defenses with guns blazing. But be- fore there could be f oday s battleships and ' v.t,aiiK mere naa ro oe coai. moreover, iv naa to be available in a quantity and form which search on the part of the coal industry. Thanks to such research, coal is one of the ftnivay luiiAUMUiit auu wjueiy usea materials ri? wax VlXUtb. large steel company recently devoted a tg advertisement to the part coal nlava in akimr steel. This sinfirle . comoanv com sumeS 17,000 tons of coarevery dav of the Jyaf-enough to heat 2.600 family dwel. flings during a log, cold winter. Modern .vcci is irttc xc&uiu di Dienoinfr coats ai van types, grades and ages to obtain strong cleaner btitning fuel for the blast f ur- ampling, testing and blending is mines. A ton and seven-tenths squired to make one ton of steei. WASHINGTON Secretary of War SUmson has received Bstwr from Senator Kilgore of Wert Vlnrlrila. hard-hltllnr member of the military ai falra commltteir and of tnft Truman committee, which may help tb save Uvea yrhen it comes to fu-turevpantehute fu-turevpantehute operations over,Europe. After calling attention to the fact that Allied. naval Kunhers shot down our paratrooper trans port planes ; over : Sicily, Senator "Kllgore inquired of Stimson as to what had toeen done to equip this type of plan with self -sealing gasoline tanks Kllcrire oointed out that the U. S. transport car paratroopers over Sicily pad nd self-sealinjl and that as a result, some of them burst flames almost immediately, riving- no chantfe to the paratroopers to bail out. The West Virginia Senator also asked the Sec retary of war what steps had been taken to put armor Around the 'pilot s seat in tnese transport planes. , Kllgore said that he appreciated the arguments against self-sealing gasoline tanks and armor namely, that they may increase the plane's weight and lessen its range and maneuverabUityy also that when a plane is shot down at low altitude, the paratroopers Inside have.litUe chance to ball out. However, Kllgore also touched on an amazing, situation inside the army wherein many officers have dons their best to improve the safety of troop-carrying troop-carrying transports, only to be thwarted. The argument inside the . army began shortly after the two tragic incident over Sicily when. on two separate nights, V- S. and British para troopers were ' shot down by Allied naval guns Immediately afterward a committee of inquiry was appointed in North Africa to ascertain the causes of the tragedy. One recommendation inserted in the report was that self -sealing tanks be installed In troop-carrying transports. Since that time. MaJ. Gen. P. L. Williams has recommended self-sealing tanks. So also have Col. Ralph Bagby, chief of staff for airborne infantry ini the North African theatre, and Brig. Gen, Mike Dunn, who participated in the Sicilian' campaign but has since been transferred. , However, nine months have passed and nothing has happened. ORDER FOR TANKS COUNTERMANDED Finally, a member of the DuPont family, Lt. Col. Felix Du Pont, assisted by Lt. Col. David Laux, had the nerve to go over the heads of their immediate superiors and take' the mater directly to General "Hap" Arnold, commander of the air forces. Arnold sputtered about the .division of opinion inside the troop carrier command, but finally final-ly agreed- that self sealing tanks should be in-installed in-installed inside troop-carryine transports. In fact. he wrote out an order to General Benny Meyers to this effect. But before- more than about 75 self-sealing tanks could be delivered, the order was countermanded. counter-manded. It was blocked . primarily by General Bar ney Giles, chief of staff to General Arnold, who sent a carefully worded telegram to General "Toughy" Spaatz In England Indicating that self-sealing self-sealing tanks could not be produced last enough, that there was no adequate means of installing them, and that they would curtail the range, of the plane. He asked General Spaatz - what he thought, and Spaatz wired back that he agreed. Concurring with them is General H. A. Craisr. of the air forces office operations, commitments and requirements, despite the fact that he I sat on the Sicilian investigation board and is - familiar with that board's recommendation for- self 'Sealing tanks. Many officers of the air carrier command disagree dis-agree and point out that self-sealing tanks only displace a small amount of gasoline and probably don't cut the plane's range more than a very small margin. They also argue that there are ample facilities in England for installing the tahksJ and that they were already being delivered before Generals Giles and Spaatz countermanded the order. They also point out that air force generals think primarily in terms of fighting planes and fighting pilots, that they view paratroop transports trans-ports as mere cargo planes taken from commercial channels (which in fact, they are), and view the paratroopers they carry as infantrymen, not members mem-bers of the air forces. So, despite the losses oyer. Sicily, the. debate still goes ' on insie. the army, nine months later, as to taking protective measures, MERRY-GO-ROUND Busy, as he is. President Roosevelt will soon be called Upon to setUe the problem of whether a rail Worker s vacation week is six days or seven. Rail road workers were granted ,a week's vacation as part of the waee. compromise last year, but the railroad executives now contend that PDR. meant the vacation should be six days, not seven. If the railroad workers get seven 'days,' they -can stay away Sunday, which is a holiday anyway; plus Monday, or an actual total of eieht days. So the President will have to step in again and decide what's what. . . . A. "plot' to blow up the Panama Canal recently was discovered by the Army. It was a Hollywood movie, plot concocted by Columbia Pictures and submitted to the Army for its ap proval before shooting the picture. The plot was so good that , the Army grilled the author to see if anything else was behind it, finally was satisfied that it was pure' Hollywood. However, in order to prevent suggestive ideas, the- picture was ban ned. . . . Of 109 applications for ne.w broadcasting stations filed with the federal communications commission this year, 68 were for frequency modulation mod-ulation stations, .25 for commercial television 'sta tions; and only 18 for new standard broadcasting stations,. The industry has no doubt but that the broadcasting stations which most of us hear today will be a comparatively unimportant factor in post-war broadcasting. Their function will be mainly main-ly to service rural listeners, with 'the city dwellers tuning in frequency modulation and television broadcasts. TUB RTORTi itcat. ! Belt. Armr .Air Cmh nilMS twM ta Ml Jl MlM, Vtkcktlit. Is aaal mt tk Tr-Irli4M f Cajptala AwmU maaaaa tka MteM wk ia-rltea Ltalt to kla far Slaaer. Ha la fartaar .amaaa at tela laraaS (! atacr wa gmtttm, TflSa Crtrla;a aa4 Nanaa Craesw Bath am rkl waa(a. Narata reseats Ms facer tloms ressarks. v v ; TLDA COURIEtGtlT ' Y vn-... T0 LbK's Relief, dinner WJ v serveu urunu-ictui. svyic. The food presented, problem, for be had been on starvation rations ra-tions for weeks. The thing to do, when j;ou were as, Hungry as he wasf was to take t easy. Gobble, and you were agoner. To take .bis tortured mind off the food he looked across the table at Norma Greer. Ske was an effective thought-diverter. She was .quite a mystery. 1 ' He wondered about her nationality. nation-ality. Was it German? Vichy French? She looked and talked like an American girl, but he couldn't see how that could be. . "Please- pass the ber,, Norma said. This gave;'tink an Idea for a test, and he Vaid, ".What would you think of some Cornbread right now?w. ' -The idea being that it she-liked cornbread, she was plenty enough Americaii for anybody. f'Why don't you call lt corn dddger'j Norma countered. Link grinned at her like an ape. Now, was she from Iowa, Illinois Unk was so absorbed that he Jumped when Azaraskl clapped his hands. As a result of the hand-clapping, hand-clapping, some musicians filed in, They carried the traditional koto, shankuhachi and the three- 7t : aone atvtnn 7 OI COai JST Vductedih; .Some people advocate a policy of enforcing war controls until such time as big, business and small business can, re-enter civilian production simultaneously, r cannot agree with such .a policy it points the road to rum of small business Maury Maverick, chairman Smaller War Plants vorp. . ... jX . r You'll find an awful lot of religion where men are scared to death. They've found themselves In a situation which will determine who shall live and who shall die. Rabbi Barnett R. Brickner, after war front tour. ! Today we feel that the World wil be so weakened weak-ened 'after this war that it surely will, have learned Its lesson. Yet In 1919 we thought the world must surely have been convinced that not even to the victor could war bring rewards to outweigh its cost. criusn Ambassador' Lord vHamax. : The coat naa lain war. research now beinsr con-1 hundred ;jcoai win Dnn unareamea oi Dene-mas at veryone. For example, experiments miracle. are Veingj made on pipeless heatinir units; Homes and apartments eventually Twill be heated by stoves no larger than small radios. g consumed7 in this country ant tin the ; iirround for three illion ysars. X Modem industryl SSS&SSSrS: brought it to 'light -4- a black way tb London, thinks, there should agt MmlsenV - lnstrttfe- strwged banjo called Courtrlght explained the ments to Link. The musicians rendered some sad sounding native pieces, then made a horrible mess of the American thing about spurs that went jingle Jangle, link closed his eyes in agony. So did Azaraskl, "Couldn't you furnish- then) with a short-wave radio they can hear something on, it they've got, to Jceei up to date on American; a ak aa w a ' oiur una asseo, Azaraskl looked sheepish. "Say, it was awful, wasn't it? And I was only trying to make you feel at home." a a . a OURTRIGHT made a speech on the subject of Japanese music. "The Japanese," she said ora- torically, "are taught that any expression ex-pression of emotion is Vulgar, which probably explains why they are a backward people musically." She glanced at Link. "Or maybe may-be some old batueax of a teaoner such as myself told you. thit in high school?" i ' . "If she did, I forgot it, God bless her," said Link, giving Courtrlght a big grin. , Why he . should be so glad to find out she was a school teacher, he didn't know. But he was glad. Ther;e was a delay between the entree and whatever course was to follow. "We might as well have some music," said Azaraskl. He opened up a big cabinet ra-i dio phonograph combination. It was one of those huge jobs that sell for about $500, and it had a recording attachment It developed that Azaraskl had i cuy wm i kuiui ot American programs. He played them yiuuuijr, a tuvvua cares bu dance," he said. Link asked the. angular Court-right Court-right to dance. She was the older lady, so ha asked her first to be oolite. He wanted to show Norma he had some manners. ; wuusni; sras a natter lancer than Link was. "Young she said, "you must i have learned this weQrmgranowshoes.f "I thoughtl waixgood,' said He tried to be casuaOand asked. "Have you known Miss Greer longrv . : : a . v - "NotmMl- said CouTtrlghVSoh, bep father proposed tb me before he et her mother. I was fool enough to turn him down." Courtrlght sighed and soueezed Link's hand, apparently in tributei Mj .a oevujsn: memory. . Link said, ; 'Norma's old inak J was okay, ehj" j . right laughed deeply and pleasantly. pleas-antly. "But you take a .woman my age, a woman who is the wreck of an Idealist;; she begins to 'think the rascals make the best' husbands." hus-bands." . ( Link wondered what she meant by a rascal. He miljt as well ask her. "What do you mean by rasi. caj7", he asked. , Bennjr Goodman's, muslti wai coming out of . the radio. Court-right Court-right did a special shake in response re-sponse to a drum roll. "Rascal," she said. "Well, he came to the East in the old days.! He wasn't too careful of ' other people's property. He' even lost my savings ohce To make as much money: as he made, you had to sprout' a set of horns." -. "That's the kind of horns I'd like to sprout," Link said. "Is her father still auVe?" ! "He died in a plane accident about five year? ago," . Courtright Said. , She looked up atTLink thought fully. "You're like him, I suspect," she said. Link returned her to theSable. There was a cup of hot sake at his plate. He picked it up. The act made his head swim. : "Yippee," he murmured. He felt detached from his surroundings, sur-roundings, like a spook. A moment mo-ment later, he blurted, "Excuse me," and lurched to his feet. He'd overestimated the adaptability adapta-bility of a famine-ridden stomach. Desk Chat Editorial Colurrih . . .. A Certain gentleman of our ac-i Two screwball ' cavalry rookies qualntance, call him Mr. Jones, was the proud possessor fcf s?! bass voice. Meeting a f riehd one aay, ne confided that he had had a remarxaDie dream. - .- . 'Dreamt I was in a mhty eholr,'. ne explained- "Oh, but It vwag splendid! There was such a choir as you've never seen. Five 'thousand 'thous-and .sopranos, 8,000 altos, 5.000 tenors all singing at once double iione. un magnificent! ,!But what's so remarkable aoout tnatr HWell, you see," continued the singer, "the conductor stopped the lot aid turning to me. said: "Not so loud in the bass, Mfc Jonesi" i ( ooo i Three small bova. as all hov eventualj do, Were talking about tnetr lathers The son of a certain columnist skid: "My dad Just writes a few Words on a pece of pape and' gexa $zo.uo iorjt." The lawyers son said: "Oh. my father lust sits in a room and tells people what to do, and they give Mm $50,000 for It A ( maw iiuuuicce K (To Be Continued) Invasion Talk Is All Wrong BY PETEU EDSON Daily Herald Washington Correspondent All this talk about the com in e "invasion" of Europe is wrong 'to see all the islands between among the United Stations when it comes to dividing up the islands of the Pacific formerly mandated! SALT to Japan. Personally, he would like Stanley J. Stephenson, form- according to the experts in sem antics. When armed forces go into an enemy country, that's an invasion. in-vasion. When they go into a friendly friend-ly country which has already been invaded,, that's a counter-invasion. Germany, properly speaking, in- ; vaded France, and U. S. forces in vaded Italy when it was a declared enemy country. V. 8. forces will there-fore counter-invade France,' and the campaign in Italy is now! a counter-invasion. Eventually, U. S. forces will invade Germany and Japan., There never was a national election el-ection year in which so many men did not want to .be president, but Senator-HarTy Flood Byrd's ex pressed dlsirfterest in the move to put him at the head of the anti-foundation. anti-foundation. Most of the anti-New Dealers are southerners, Who have taken an extreme position on the negro question. Byrd, lt is felt, cannot go along on this position. The Virginia senator is extremely proud of the - anti-lynching law which the Old .Dominion state passed under ' jils leadership, and his moderate views oil where to draw the color line are not in harmony, with, those of the llly-whitea. llly-whitea. . ' . On the othefe hand, Mississippi politicians, say Sen- Theodore G. Bilbo's recent oration before the state legislature in Jackson, in which he went all 'out on race prejudice, was just what he needed to put hira in solid with the voters vot-ers of the state. Before tiiat speech, it was thought ,Bilbo would have difficulty m Being re-elect Hawaii and the Philippines put under the U. B. flag. But even so, he points out that there are so many, of these islands that every country could have all it wanted or needed for air bases, naval bases, or commercial development and still leave enough for every body else. The idea of joint sov ereignty by two' or more Pacific powers he rejects flatly. It hasn't worked out at all in the few Islands where it has been tried, after the Japs were driven out Stephenson tb Be Manager of UMA LAKE City, April 28, er executive secretary of the Utah Manufacturers Association, today naa Been appomiea association manager. Reed Stevens, president, an nounced today that .StephensoA has been directed to carry out an extensive public relations (pro gram, including a series of icon' ferences, with labor leaders, farm ers and educators, In order to devote more time to his new duties, Stephenson an nounced he would resiern his posi tion as a mem Per of the regional war laoor Doard f'That nothing," said the mln-ister's mln-ister's son; "Myypapa gets - up in the pulpit, preaches far; a few mSnutes, and when he's finished itj takes eight men to take, up the mrnia i -ood-1- CURIOUS CYNIC CANTS . ;j . if she is wise, she is cruel but only that you may yahie more her sweet surrender. .- .1 . there, is but one thing less appreciated than giving advice wnn noi asKea .... wars giv lnt lt when it is asked for. . .1 . . would you avoid I boring l- Avoid chatter. . . . .1 wonder what wiu be con aidered 'moral turpitude' fifty years xrom now? I ooo TRADE As we pav others, we are bald: JJf e gives us back just what we give. And so we do not live to trade, But trade that we may truly ive . Sales may be made ifl money, yes, utt they are always made to ten? ' T And so good will controls success, Bring folks back to buy again He profits most whose every sale Creates a friend, whose kindly thought Serves to perpetuate the tale Of what and where and why he , bought. ed to the Senate in 1M6, because ;time to find out just what . ..ia . . i ii A. - LI - I a oi anii-poa lax pppusiuun 10 jus views. Now he is considered as good as in. "" ' ' The Itch in Lend-Lease Rep. John M. Vorys of Columbus, Colum-bus, O., has : at last found what's really wrong with reverse lend-lease, lend-lease, A GI f in London told him : "You congressmen should ; do something about this reverse lend-leases, lend-leases, underwear we are getting from the British. It doesn't fit and it scratches." "Thus," says the congressman',! "American troops are being brought in contact with, different standards of living among our Allies in a very . graphic! although scratchy way, .through reverse lend-lease.? " , How smalt business men get converted to. post-war planning is related by ' Paul G. Hoffman, president of Studebaker and chairman chair-man of the Committee for Economic Econ-omic Development. The head of. a little outfit in Lansing, Mich., says Mr. Hoffman, was having his troubles. Before the war; he never had more than ,20 employes and Minutia By ItUTll LOUISE PARTRIDGE Indulging in a favorite pastime. browsing through forgotten books I ran across the statement that Lew Wallace, author of the fa mous book "Ben Hur" was ter ritorial governor of " Utah from 1887 to 1881 the year the book came out by the way. Now if I'd seen a lion lie down with a lamb I. couldn't have been more surprised. Could it be this had slipped, by me? ME? Well it gave me an excuse to call Lawyer Booth who knows everything. Why no, that couldn't be! He'd never heard it either. Well, if it came to it. I would take Lawyer Booth's word before I would that of Lewi WallaceVafter all Wallace is deatd and any words from him would naturally. . . . where was I? But Lawyer Booth is going to look . it up, and if Wallace was once our. territorial governor, he, the law yer will admit he didn't know of it and that you will admit is some admittan!e, coming from a lawyer law-yer and all (ntust some day take and all' means in such a case V and I only a lay member-what ever" that is. In the meantime, if Wallace Wal-lace was territorial governor- for Utah and didn't write about it. he made the greatest mistake in hiatory. even If he was U. S- Minister Min-ister to Turkey, a lawyer, a senator, a brigadier-general, a member of the court-martial that tried' the assassins of President Lincoln, and our territorial gov ernor. And so what? I hear the leas enthusiastic among my read ers (if any) say, and to this i reply only "continued net week." Recent statistics credit the U. S. with supplying 85 per cent of tne Allies' aviation gasoline. As we pay others we are paid Life gives us back Just what we give; And. so we do not live to trade, ' But trade that we may truly live. . ' Chas H. MacKmtosh , 0O0 If you want to make friends re- member that approbation is hundred times more effective than reproval. . ; , 0O0 One of Roosevelt's present problems prob-lems is to. find a man; who can solve the labor problems and the manpower shortage without steal ing the show. were each given a horse and they were Considerably worried about how they could tell whidh, was which, and one suggested that he would cut the mane' off. of nis horse. However, the mane aeon . grew out. Then the other said he would crop i his horsels tail; out it, too, soon grew oui Pinally. they' had a bMttlant idea . . . thy would7 measure thexhorses, . i v Sure enough, it I worked! The white horse .wasj two; inched taller than the black horse. .' oQo . . Do not ridicule bad rrlmmar and poor spelling .: . .without them. we would have no humor . 1 . and no column paragraphera. , --opo j YOU CAN TAKE MY WORD FOR IT THAT the boss of the family lis not thei one who gets blamed when the family flashlight is lost. . 0O0-r I -..; Evervbodv can orofitablv see the power of observationi If yiu ne gleet to cultivate this powe, you can expeci, a pinK ticket any aay -ruuu i Overheard on the Geneva Bu: Yeah, I got as much privacy In the boardin' house as a chjiter to oOo LOVE " Poets still seek Vainly to define i" With fragile, i Moon-beam words What love is Ahd what it means. - ReaV love is a 1 warmth or comradeship y Across dark days i . . Love finds expression In many intimate - And small ways. , Love--is a sincere and High regard for another witnout semsh nope or gs And In time of stress. Willingly shares ! A burden or a pain. T ita ? AVfMiaaSnt In some patient service I- Rendered only to satisfy Another's need And unreservedly has' Affection as .its creed. Love speaks to love In mysterious and ; . Often obscure ways A clean; patched garment, A finokia '1ar. th Thoughtfulness of small bouquets. ' And unselfish consideration . t The holy accolade of I Sacrifice and self-denial That brings another gladness, Baniahea remorse, and kindles hac nlnaa ' V i-ooo Even door-to-door brush salesf man will find a courteous person now and then, v rifiUTf Just2 lrpps!n each notol you breathe freer almosn d Jturtanqy. Caution: Usat onvf a directed. Qemand PEXCflO N0SI tROPS Q's and A's ! L amil Q - How man families are there In the United SUtest ' A One estimate sets the figure at 34,854,000. . Q What Is the origin of the term "Uncle Sam" ? A It is generally attributed to the initials "U. S." oh government propertly, now has more than 200. In spite j q what was the 'first dally of his bigger business, , he Umt. newspaper published m the United making any more mony than he made before the war, and he look States? A - The ed forward to the day when he king Post and Daily Advertiser," would be able to fire ISO people and bring to an end ot making out of. a new form every three minutes, every day. Then he got to reading about the dangers of postwar post-war unemployment and what it might lead to. He came into the Lansing CED, admitted that may be he had the wrong idea about I wanting to get back to the good old days, and is now trying to Work out plans to keep his 200 employed. em-ployed. . ! '.'. . ; . Island Idea ; LNew '" Za4ahd' Uberal aad kindly be no cause j for post-war dispute "Pennsylvania - Eve- published in Philadelphia in 1783 by Benjamin j Towne. Q What Is a bateau ? A A flat-bottomed boat ta pered at bow. and stern. - m wnat nauon uses tne largest larg-est amount of corK T A The ,U. S. pre-war imports were ' over, 190,000 tons annually 60 per cent of world output. Michigan automobae and truck registration declined . 4.9 per cent last year,, compared with 1942 license plate flgurea . . Taylor's t II . ' I " Everyone stalkihqabour i Selected groups of -ZyfA ; netn sarin a atulexl VK -TOP yC , i i ? i y I J, I r. i v r IX "go for" a C our sale SUITS $29.50 coat' on . . . . . . 22.00 A flattering newl9.75 suit now yours for . i . . , f .14.75 A stunhingaress-up coat for( merly $39,50, now . . . .29.50 oats, lox coats, fitted dress coats . ailored, cardigan and dress- make suits , ... Sizes for misses and women . i also many half sizes. Fear those, who - really bargain ioats - Suits - Dresses 50 off pl API P - Soothe, eoiol, xslieve I IfaU 1 1 powder. Get Mezsaoa. m 7h ' Visit Taylor Bros. 0o's2 spacious f loors ot 0nefik '41 M 'k I. ' . v. :v4 . v, v j t it . v m. .7 f in 1'7-' C :7-: . tj'j'tM'aiaaiawaaaaajaaB - .. - J |