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Show la ' '. :f : ,oPROVO, UTAH COUNTY. UTAH, Bditorial.... t M A a 7 . a am a a B Mm .. obi uu stranger coat aweuem wtut yqn nuu onto jroa u on born among yea. and thou -ahalt love him as thyself; for re were strangers In the bad of Egypt: I am the Lord your od. Leviticus 1:S4 r ' THon cronflv eron .vamp hiftthAt man I Still gentler sister woman; Tbo' they may gang a kenin wrang, i To. step aside is human. 1 Burns. Canada9 s Surplus9 Certain stalwart and presumably hungry hun-gry citizens in and out of congress have been uttering some piteous complaints against our English and Canadian Allies -which, as potential sources of ill will and suspecion, would do credit to Dr. Goebbels himself. The Canadians, it seems, are a fat, beef-engorged, beef-engorged, people who pile up great civilian supplies of meat while we go hungry trying ' TUESDAY, 1 1 APRIL 3, 1945 The Washington Merry-Go-Roun By JBrww Pearson (Col. ttoeert S Allen en active ; dvtyl A Daily Picture of What's Going On in National Affairs WASHINGTON For months the Albanian radio has been broadcasting daffy appeal to the outside world for ipod, clothing and medical sup plies. J3ui aimougn ,unKA is supposea to care (or the war-torn countries, and although Albania has suffered more than most, UNRRA still has been 'unable to enter Albania. Backstage reason, according to UNRRA of ficials, is that the British want to send 1,200 British Brit-ish army officers into Albania to supervise UNRRA relief for UNRRA. This, m turn, horrifies the Albanians. A total of 1,200 British officers in tiny Albania could mean a throtle-hold on the country, if they wanted to exercise it. And knowing all to vividly what happened when Great Britain went Into neighboring neigh-boring Greece, the Albanians refuse to admit the British military. ; - Faced with starvation or military domination. they have chosen starvation. The British proposal to send 1.200 officers into Albania is based upon an agreement that Fruit's Almost Ripe to feed the English and ourselves. And -this,! whenever a country is liberated, relief supplies the stalwart hungry citizens say, is being done with England's connivance. For the English can get free meat from us through must be the responsibility of the Allied military (or the first six months and UNRRA must work under the military. However, Albania was never occupied by any lend-lease, while they hae to pay Canada j Allied army. Neither British nor U. S. troops cash on the barrel head. These accusations are not inhibited by a scruplous regard for fact. Records show that Canada's meat consumption in 1944, without rationing, was 141 pounds per capital. - Our per capita consumption last year, under rationing, ra-tioning, was 147 pounds. Canada has a lend-lease arrangement with the United Kingdom which is known as mutual mu-tual aid. Value of these mutual air shipments ship-ments to Britain is nearly $5,000,000,000. The June 1944 value of United States lend-lease lend-lease shipments to Britain was nine and a third billion dollars. Canada hasabout one-twelfth one-twelfth our population and one-fifteenth our national income. Canada also has an arrangement to ship all surplus processed meat to England. At present a shipping shortage has built up that surplus, but Canadian authorities describe des-cribe it as temporary. But why doesn't Canada send this temporary tem-porary surplus to the States, for our own consumption or shipment overseas ? Fpr one reason, we have a tariff on cessed meat and a quota on live animals from Canada. Canada also has placed an embargo embar-go on meat and cattle shipments to this country. But it seems likely that Canada might be willing to lift the embargo. At least Canada's minister of agriculture stated a few days ago that both Washington authorities and St. Paul meat packers were asked last fall if they would take shipments of live cattle to relieve congestion in Canadian Cana-dian stockyards. And the minister said that he was told in Washington and in St. Paul that we would not be able to handle the shipments. ship-ments. Canadians do eat more beef than we do these war days. One reason is that Canada has few. big cities, with most of them concentrated con-centrated in the east. Range cattle are fattened fat-tened on eastern farms adjacent to these cities. Hence transportation isn't the problem prob-lem that It is here. - Canada has comparatively few restaurants. restaur-ants. Most of its beef goes into butcher shops and thence to homes. Suppose we asked Canada's 11,800,000 people to reduce their meat consumption by 20 pounds per capita in 1945, and give us the difference. This dividend, equally distributed, distribut-ed, would give every American for the whole year less than two additional pounds of meat. And that's what all the vituperative shouting's shout-ing's about. Speaking of Things Inconceivable Speaking of the job-freeze bill in congress, A. F. of L. President William Green said, 'It is inconceivable that having reached a war stage where it is clearly evident that the German armies are decisively defeated, con-jgress con-jgress would even consider passage of a bill Iwhich smacks of slavery." J We think Mr. Green would admit that it is (inconceivable that General Eisenhower khould issue some such manifesto as this: V With the evident defeat of the German Irmies I am freeing all soldiers who wish to Wave from the slavery which requires them p risk their lives for substandard wages. we shall use only volunteers to complete the efeat of Germany and prosecute the war gainst Japan." fWe had the Germans "evidently defeated" 1st summer. Remember, Mr. Green? At lat time jthere was a bolt from war in-istries in-istries to peacetime jobs. And the army id navy paid for it. The army and navy aren't letting down. her are the Japs. They're preparing for 10 years war. entered it. But now that the Nazis have been completely chased out, the British want to come in under the excuse of administering UNRRA relief. re-lief. . The Albanians see no .excuse for trading one set oi foreign troops tor another, Note The British also demanded of Tito that they send more than a thousand British officers to handle UNRRA relief inside Jugoslavia, but Tito refused. Finally Russia backed him up and Tito got his UNRRA relief without British troops only 40 UNRRA workers and 00 British workers. work-ers. UNRRA officials are hoping that the British will make some similar compromise in regard to Albania. BYRNES AND BATTLESHIPS Secretary of the Navy Forrestal was irked when war mobilizer Byrnes chopped 72 warships off the navy's program, but the admirals were not merely irked. They were fighting mad especial ly Admiral Ernie King. Byrnes had found out that the navy was planning these ships for post-war, not this war. He knew their construction would take away valuable valu-able steel from the army and other strategic uses. For instance, the tractor and farm-machinery program is scheduled for a cut of about 40 per cent because the army claims it is already short of steel. This, despite the desperate need of pro ducing more food. So Byrnes figured the post war ships could wait until after the war, since they won't be finished for two years or so anyway. any-way. Also he figured that it was perhaps the job of congress not the admirals to decide how big the post-war navy should be. All of which nearly broke the heart of Admiral Ad-miral King. 'He had been talking for months of starting now to build a post-war navy; also had been indiscreet regarding the country now an ally against which those ships might be used. Maybe this also' got back to Byrnes. CIRCUS GOES TO J ALL The circus stopped in Washington to water the animals the other day on its regular trip north. It stopped a little sorrowfully. There was none of the blare and fanfare and braggadocio of the old days. It was going north to open a new season and try to pay several million dollars to the victims of the Hartford fire, after which its vice-president, its manager, its canvasman, its seatman. and several others will surrender in Hartford to go to jail. These top executives looked visibly different this year. Jim Haley, vice-president and director, is a long slab-sided chap from Alabama, who is called "Slim 'and is thin anyway. But now he has lost thirty pounds and is literally wasting away. Twenty years ago he came down to Sarasota, FinHrta from the Alabama sandhills without a nickel In his pocket, educated himself and slaved his way up until he was appointed general manager man-ager of the Ringling estate. It was his careful handling which reduced the estate's debt to the government fsom $4,000,000 to around $850,000. He even took over the Red Cross chairmanship, pulled pull-ed the chapter out of debt, and made it one of the first counties in the umtea states to mpie i quote for three straight years. .. Slim Haley went into the circus as financial manager at the request of several factions of the Ringling family, whose descendant iwve un fighting each other. He never pretended to be a circus man. Hewas a iiscai agent, out m in Hartford on the dav of the fatal lire, was ar rested, and sentenced to a maximum of five years Re-Education Of Germany By PETER EOSON NEA Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON. April 3 Plans for dealing with the German people after the collapse of the Nazi army are again being talked oi in Washington. QWI Directors Elmer Davis and his deputy for the European theater, Wallace Carroll, have quietly left Washington for Lon don and Paris. They will visit Supreme Allied Headquarters, comer witn Military uovernment officials, and bring back details on the final phases of psycholoai cal warfare which must be con- tinued even after the German armies are defeated. L.asi summer, wnen it was thought the Nazis would fold before be-fore the snow flew, there was a whole shelf of plans made for dealing with the German peonle Some 1400 people were trained in the OWI school outside New York City, for a variety of jobs in European outposts. But when the G e r m a n s didn't immediately throw in the sponge, the plans were Kept on the shelf and the training school was closed. Now new plans will have to be made to meet changed 'conditions and OWI must do additional recruiting. recruit-ing. The job apparently cut out for OWI in Germany will be entirely different from what it will be in any other country. Its function will be pretty much in the nature of combined censorship and pub lic relations in connection with military government. It will be a part of the government govern-ment of occupation in a country where for the last 10 years there have been no privately owned newspapers or radio, all informa- The seatman on the fatal day had set up the scats exactly as he had before, day-in-and-day- out, for yars. Also me canvasman. men wu the fire, the tragic stampeae, ana scores w .-dren .-dren crushed. . Jim Haley and the other circus men go rouna the lot with a haunted look, remerbering that day. They look as if they themselves were now dying after thev eet the circus launched for the season they hope to pay several millions in damages they are going up to Hartford and jail. U. S. GOVERNOR FOR NAiCIS Th nresident has discussed with advisers a plan to send live-wire assistant secretary of war MeCloy to be the top man in the American occu pied-Germany set-up. MrClov would outrank Maj. Gen. Lucius Clay, recently appointed on Eisenhower's staff to run the military end of Germany after the war. However, How-ever, following the tough and critical report which Imm HonHorcnn pave FDR regarding the manner . i i . .tmklA nlans fori Se in wnicn me ors-iuw -- i to VOUP T v jefiKii t "a a ,ar.rfh aw Altfllian Q T Tn t - ' mf J W M Miauilll T Your G I Rights BY DOUGLAS LARSEN NEA Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, April v Regulations Reg-ulations governing National Service Serv-ice Life Insurance have been changed. Reinstatement of insurance insur-ance which has lapsed because of failure to make premium payments pay-ments has been made easier. Only two monthly premiums have to be paid. That is, one for the month in which the policy lapsed and one for the month in which reinstate- ment is requested. Formerlv it was required that all intervening premiums had to be paid. Here are some other questions on veterans'" insurance: Q. Since my discharge from the army I have had an aceident and the doctors say I will be unable to work for a year. Do (have to pay the prenilams on mjr National Service Life Insurance while I can't work? A. No. All policies contain a provision for waiver if the vet ern is disabled and unable to work. Inform VA that you are unable to pay the premiums as a result of your disability. VA will sena a representative to look in the conflict is prolonged and all Ger- iiy's resources are destroyed, it will be of avail for the German people to sav that 'ausp wp ha vp rnnmiprpH them Jf io ftxmsibility to feed them. Rep. Albert e (U) of lennessee. Ve have received somber warnings of the Imendous numbers of men who by reason the war nave become neurotic or have ?reloped mental abnormalities. Investiira- Rns have shown that the principal causes I maladjustment occur among those who I ered the service with a neurotic or phy-I phy-I (logical imbalance. ''rank H. Bowles, director of admissions, s Columbia U. f governing Germany, he favors a. civilian at me VioaH nnt an armv officer. Henderson recommended a four-power civu-ian civu-ian commission U. S. A.. Britain. Russia, France snvorninir all Germany, with military men op-J erating in lour dinerent secwons unoer mem. McCloy, who has won a reputation for fair-minded fair-minded forthrightness as assistant to Secretary Stimson, would be U. S. representative on this commission. CAPITAL CHAFF If FDR can't make the Jackson day dinner, he intends to pay tribute to Ellis Arnall of Georgia, leading governor of the south, by asking him to 4ke his place as main speaker Joseph E. Davies, ex-ambassador to Russia, is, leaving on another "Mission to Moscow" Wayne Chatfield Taylor, Jessie Jones' under secretary of commerce but better known for his seizure of the Montgomery Montgom-ery Ward plant the first time, Is transferring to the state department. .. .Assistant Secretary of State Archie Macleish has brought some good men into the state department, among them Chester Williams and Adlai Stevenson, grandson of the vice-president of that name In .the Cleveland administration ad-ministration Sentiment is Increasing among war veterans for a new veteran's committee in congress to handle veteran problems of World War II. Present veterans committees face entirely different problems from World War I, and the u. I. Joes would like to deal with some fresh faces. . . The justice department finally induced the two Nevada senators, McCarran and Scrugham, to get together on the new U. S. judge for Nevada. Roger Foley. . . .-When Mayor LaGuardta got sore at the army because it refused priori- j continues for six consecutive months, you will be granted apr proval of your request for waiver. And all the premiums- you paid aner uie aisaDimy was incurred will be refunded. As soon as you are able to work again, you must notify VA that you are able to pay premiums again. Q. Will waived payments be deducted from the settlement of the policy? A. 'No. And the face amount of the policy will not be decreased by reaspn of any premiums having hav-ing been waived. - Q. Will I get any dividends on my National Service Insurance? A. Yes. . Policies may participate partici-pate in dividends from gains and savings as determined by the fairs. You will get such dividends automatically without having to Administrator of Veterans' Af-apply ties to let him build a new airport, air-port, he threatened to kick the army off of LaGuardia Field. Whereupon the army quietly warned the mayor that the army had the right to condemn all of LaGuardia field if he didn't behave. be-have. The mayor behaved. (Copyright, 1945, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc,) tional activities being run by the propaganda ministry of Herr Goebbels, staffed with a choice collection of grafters, extortionists, extortion-ists, and thugs. Personnel Problem Difficult-All Difficult-All these media will have to be restaffed and the Germans finally approved for the jobs will have to be handpicked. The question is where to find the personnel. Prisoners of war may furnish a few eligible candidates. Refugees wanting to go back may not be welcomed. Whom to trust in Germany Ger-many is indeterminable in advance. ad-vance. There are bound to be many sad experiences. For a time, therefore, it is obvious ob-vious that there will have to be an American sitting ih every newspaper office, every radio station permitted to do business in the U. S. zone of occupation. Furthermore, every book menu script offered for publication will have to be carefully censored. The ability to re-educate the German people through control ling their sources of information is a big question for debate. While its desirability cannot be questioned, such realists as Doug las Miller, who wrote "You Can t Do Business With Hitler." long before the United States got into the war, are extremely skeptical about being able to do .much re education. Miller, a former con sular officer in Germany and now head of OWI's German division, broadcasting regularly to Ger many from . Washington, puts greater hope in the possibility that enough good Germans will appear to do the re-educating job themselves. ' German Schools To Be Closed Schools will be under the Civil Affairs division of the Army. All schools will be closed at the beginning be-ginning of the occupation. An interesting in-teresting sidelight of the Soviet army occupation of eastern Germany Ger-many is that the Russians closed all the schools but opened up the churches, which were centers of Nazi resistance. Universities will probably be kept closed indefinitely. Elementary Elemen-tary schools will be the first to be opened,f for the big hope of the future is in starting a coming generation off on the right track as soon as possible. At first, it may be necessary to re-employ many teachers with Nazi records, but it is believed that -they can teach safe subjects like arithmetic till the records of enough new teachers can be investigated to broaden the instruction. One of the few nice things about the Nazis is that they have taught the people to accuse each other, ahd that has already helped considerably ih weeding out the most undesirable characters in German official life. With the pug-uglics of the old ministries of propaganda, enlightenment and education, there can of course be no truck. 8 High Schools To Compete In Drama Festival Committees have been set up for judging, entertainment and other details of the traditional Brigham Young university dra matic festival as the university department of speech prepares to welcome high school participants from all over the state to the first war-time sponsoring of the west's oldest drama festivaL Eight high schools, including Ogden, South Emery, Weber County; Logan; Springville, Pro-vo, Pro-vo, Lincoln, and B. Y. High, have entered the one act play compe tition thus far, Dr. T. Earl Pardee, general cnairman, said today. Besides these hiah schools. Wa satch, Spanish Fork and Jordan will enter the other divisions of the festival including retold stories, dramatic and humorous readings, and radio skits. Awards will be made immediately immedi-ately following the final play, and will not be according to the tra ditional first or second place, but oy merit rating as superior, excellent, ex-cellent, or honorable mention. Members of Theta Adpha Phi. national dramatic fraternity, under un-der Mrs. Katherine B. Pardoe, will sponsor each of the one-aet plays, and Ralph Ungerman of the department of speech will supervise su-pervise all staging of the one- acts. Dr. Alonzo J. Morley. of the department, will supervise regis tration, and Miss Margaret Clay-, ton is general secretary. Morris M. Clinger, also of the department, depart-ment, is in charge of room schedules sched-ules for the competition. President Neil Welling, Farm-ington, Farm-ington, and vice president Ada Moulton, Delta, of the university student-body, will be in charge of entertainment for the group. u no more schools enter the one-act play division of competition, competi-tion, the plays will be presented Saturday afternoon and early Saturday evening. Competition in the other divisions will begin at 9 a. m.. and all activities will be on the. lower campus. All contestants and their coach es will be guests of the university at a round-table discussion during a noon-day luncheon, Saturday, Dr. Pardoe said. ' In the Chips WW Pictured In Chicago, Ensign S. J Tamkin. 18, and his bride, Rita, also 18. are ill smiles over his $10,000 yearly income from royalties of his Invention oi a tas detector tube, cow ready for use On Navy combat ships, which reveals the presr ence of gas before explosions occur. JEAN S FAME SPREADS RANGER, Tex. U.R) Looks as if the Germans thought "Bud" Russell, former agent for the Texas penitentiary system, was coming after them. Gordon Taylor, Tay-lor, With the army in Germany Wrote home that he found a magar zlne clipping with Russell s photo graph among effects of a German prisoner oi war. LONG WAIT ENDS FORT WORTH, Texas (U.R) Three years after the date originally orig-inally set, Pfc. WillianyH. Barker and Ann McDonald are renewing plans for their wedding. An un- avoidance circumstance set the event behind scheduled Pfc Barker was delayed for three years at the Cabanatuan prisoner of war camp in the f nuippines. Traveling- from Seattle to Wash ington, DC, in 6 hours 3 minutes 50 seconds, the Army Air Forces Boeing C-97 broke the coast-to- coast marx oy nearly an nour while flying t n .altitude of 30,- I WHY BE FAT without exercs Von may lots pounds aMtevt a more slender, craceiiu nzun. No oerdsing. No laxative. Nodrof. With this A YDS plaa you doa't .cut oat aay mal, tarcbaa, potatoes, po-tatoes, swats or batter, yam mm-ply mm-ply cat thsm dorn. It s easier when yon anjoy delictou (vita mhi ferttAed) A YDS before meals. Abaslutelv harmless. is cunxau lest cenaueiea or meattsi aoenn. mere Uum N persons lost 14 to 1$ lbs. srarv to te fsw wveka with A YDS Vfcsaua Candy RHueins. Plan. . Try a 304ay supply of A YDS, ealy Sjl.Sf. Money backoa lbs vary first bostf yon dealt Ret results. Phone 144 Save-Way Drug Stores, 129 West Center. adv. am Operation of Carrier Stumps Ernie Pyle By ERNIE PYLE IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC- The main thing I never, understood under-stood about how an aircraft car rier operates, is what they did with all the rest of the planes while one was landing or taking; off. I had thought the flight deck had to be entirely clear of planes. I thought that as soon as one took off, they brought the next on up from the lower deck by elevator, and sent it off. It isn't that way at all. There are always idle planes standing on deck during landings and take-offs. take-offs. Three have to be, for the hangar deck down below isn't big enough to hold all the planes. But these idle' planes are never along the side of the deck they are at one end or the other. Here's how it's done: Planes always take off and al ways land from stern to bow of the ship or from rear to fox- ward as you simple landlubbers would say. For the takeoff, all the planes are parked tightly together at the rear of the deck. All nave zoiaing wines, which has been one of the great contributions to this wit Without them a carrier could hardly carry enough planes to justify itself. . These parked planes take up maybe one-eighth of the flight deck the rear one-eighth. When they get ready to launch planes, all the engines are started and warmed up while the planes are still parked tightly together. The noise is terrific. ) Angry propellers whirl within inches of the tall of the next snip, "riane- nushers" by the dozen crawl around, pnder, and amidst these flying propellers, adjusting chocks and untying the lines that hold the planes down. When they are ready, the cen ter plane in the front- row Is taxied out a few feet. His folded wings are unfolded. The pilot tests his controls, puts down his flaps. A signalman standing' ahead and to the right of him indicates by motions when he is to start He holds, on his brakes, speeds up his engine until the noise is ear-splitting, ear-splitting, and then the signalman leans over and -dramatically swings his arm forward, as though personally to give the plane im-Detus. 0 The plane starts rolling. The deck behind him is packed with planes. But the seven-eights of deck in front is clear. Not a plane or man on it. No sooner has one plane gone than the next one is ready, has his wings unfolded, and is run ning up his engine. They take off one right after the other, less than a minute apart, until the whole flight is in the air. a The moment the last plane of the flight is off, a klaxon signals the fact, and the great flight deck instantly becomes a swarm of men. Usually there are several planes left on deck, - which weren't scheduled to go. And these are immediately towed to the for ward end of the deck, and re- parked there, v For, when the planes come back to land, they must use that -rear end of the deck. While they are landing, the whole front end of the deck is full of parked planes. A barrier of steel cables, stretched head-hifih across the deck, stops any wild-landing plane irona crashing into the bunch of tightly parked ships ahead. As soon as a plane lands, the barrier is dropped, the plane taxies over it, and the barrier is raised again for the next auv conung in. xne plane that has lust landed is parked among the other inert ones up front, and the pilot anuis oxx nu engine. wnen the last Plane is down the klaxon squawks, all the men rush out, and all the planes are towed back to the rear of the deck, ready for the next takeoff. Almost never, during actual landing of the planes, is the elevator let down. It is used only oeiween xiignts, to iaxe planes down to the ,arae"'or brine up iresn ones. This moving of planes from one end, of the flight deck to the other is called "re-spotting." It goes on all day longback and wnn, Dacx ana lorin. . The planes are Dulled by tiny Fordson .tractors. As they run around they look like these little electric cars you bump each other witn at carnivals. At night probably two-thirds of the planes are "spotted" en deck. They are parked tightly together, to-gether, and tied down to gratings in me nignt aecK by heavy rope it we re sailing into a storm they're tied additionally with steel cable. And all night long men are posted among them, to see that nothing breaks oi goes wrong. Despite all this, there have been times wnen the ocean was so rough and the deck careening at such a steep angle, that planes would break all their moorings ana go screeching over the side. That would be when I was down in my cabin, very seasick. 303.1CO Japs Accounted for In Six Months By H. D. QUIGG united Press War Correspondent MANILA, April 3 (U.R) Ameri can troops killed or caprurea 308,180 Japanese in; seizing control con-trol of 32 islands fh the Philippines Philip-pines during the last six months, it was announced today. Gen. Douelas MacArthur's com munique, in disclosing the Japanese Jap-anese casualties, also announced continued gains by U. S. forces on Luzon, Negros, Cebu and Mindanao. In the last five days throughout the- Philippines the Japanese casualties amounted to 10,971 killed and 5185 captured, while the American losses for the same period were 340 killed, 48 missing and 919 wounded. The heaw - casualties on the Japanese were inflicted, by the U. S. Sixth and Eighth armies which reconquered the main portion por-tion of the Philippines, including the . capital of Manila, and left only one major island Bohol still under Japanese control. On Luzon, ground forces-! con tinued to compress the Japanese pockets while Fifth air aorce bombers again hit -the shal tered port of Legaspi, on the southeastern south-eastern tip of the island, witn 200 more tons of explosives. ' Elements of the 11th (corps pushed into the Santa Maria river valley east of Manila at a point nine miles southeast of Tanay, but were meeting increasing re-, sistance. , I Two columns of American troops were moving slowly over the rugged terrain in nortnern Luzon against Baguio, former summer capital and Japanese headquarters in the Philippines. One force was less tthan three miles south of the city and the second contingent had moved within five miles from the north. ' Q's and A's Q Where is the Petain government govern-ment now? A Moved from Sigmaringen to Garmisch, Germany, south of Munich, reports say. Sigmaringen is only 75 miles east of the Rhine. Q What famous inventor was born at recently captured Mainz, Germany? A Johann Gutenberg, credited with inventing movable type. How are the two Frankfurta in Germany distinguished, A Frankfort-on-the-Main and Frankfurt-on-the-Oder. , Q What was the Diet of Worms? A The diet held in 1521 before which Martin Luther defended his religious beliefs. (Worma's prewar pre-war population was 47,000.) Q How many submarines has the U. S. lost In the war? A 41, officially announced as of March 27. Burrowing owls do not burrow; they use the burrows made by prairie dogs and other animals. A future paint is hot only fire- proof but fire extinguishing. CAN'T STAND DAGEI PAOP? Heat relieves arascle aaVtiy, sgif tmtj To get welcome, codtianed heat relief, for days, right at toe sore spot, apply ne big Johnson's RED CROSS PLASTER or the. heavier, wanner Johnson's Back Platter. . ; The mild, active medication gently heats the back, stirs p blood circu-lstion. circu-lstion. fifhtt contortion, esse as is. . . . Warm doth covenuj retains hod Vest, protect! pro-tect! hack against chilling, provides contin-dous contin-dous support. . . .Try Uim clean, easy, proved way to "heat treat" simple backache and other masculsr psins TODAY. 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