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Show Official Pictures j)f Torpedoed U. S: S. Kearny Bulb. Bloom All n TV AiUCCESSIONoff , Wing bulbs S 11 H , r ,' , ,. Vv.- i m (ill fsi Patten 2945. MY, OH MY, won't the lovt this! A real bride veil and all to be her very awn delll You can make the dress in a sheer or heavier material and, of course, make it white. Pattern IMS contains a pattern and directions di-rections for making the doll and clothes; materials required. Send your erder to: tewlBf Clrcia NeeCeerait DepC lit Miaaa St laa rraaelsee, Callt Enclose 19 cents la coins tor Pat tern No.. Nam .. Addreaa Experience sad Tkeogfei Experience Is the child of Thought, and Thought is the child of Action. Wo oan not lean men from books. Disraeli. A SUPERB HOTEL Oee to Shoe Theatres' ond Mnandai District 250 FINE1Y APPOINTED ROOMS all owttld . . . eH wi kotfc end sKewer Ratu ONE PERSON . . . $2.50 TWO PERSONS. . $3.00 TWIN BEDS $3.50 FAMItY ROOMS FOR FOUR . . $4.00 JOHN T. SHEA, MANAGER PS SUTTER STRUT 7aeti of ADVERTISING ADVERTISING represents the leadership of a nation. It points the way. We merely follow follow to new height of comfort; of convenience, of happiness. Ail time goes on advertising advertis-ing is used more and more, and as it is used more we all profit more. Iff the way advertising has of bringing a profit to " V0rybody concerncct th consumer mcioW Man About Town: Deea The Washington Time Herald know that 24 memberi of congress are' mixed up (in various degrees) in the current Federal Grand Jury's probe into the activities activi-ties of foreign agenti using our mails for propaganda purposes? Not all 24 are involved In guilt Some were merely Innocent bystanders by-standers . . . How can Petain offer of-fer himself as a hostage? How can he give what he doesn't own? oo What two brain-trustera of a certain cer-tain Washington probe are suspected suspect-ed of receiving checks from former Nazi espionage chief Von Bohle in 8. A.? . . . Is there anything to the Capital buzz that Odium may inherit Knudsen'i 0PM headache? . . . Can you guess which one of the highest paid radio stars quit bis clg sponsor because be wouldn't allow al-low him to get a divorce to wed another? an-other? see Isn't Deris Dake going to gefber divorce In Honolulu In May and marry a Naval flier now here? . . . Is it possible that Princess Stefanie Hohenlohe has taken a bouse In suburban sub-urban Beverly Hills, Alexandria, Vs., under the nam de plume she has often used In hotels? And why does she prefer being that near to Washington. D. C? . . . Table conversationalists con-versationalists quote Rauschning, the historian, as saying that, according ac-cording to bis deductions, the war should end in 18 months. 0 0 0 - IX Comdr. Gene Markey sure Has It Bad (and that ain't good!) ever Olivia De HaviHand. Spends all kis Navy coin on pottage stamps to write her . . . Sad, isn't it, the torch Jeff Jones of Princeton is carrying for Gloria VanderbUt? His pals fear it'll make him ill . . . That I gonna be quite a story when the Screen Publicists' Guild explodes ever the oommy element . . . Heavens Heav-ens I Have you heard the dreadful news? Because of metal priorities beauty shops will feel a shortage of bobby-pins I 0 0 0 Be yea want to be an actress, eh? Life recently revealed that 1,500 professional people haunt producers' produc-ers' offices. Of these, 1,000 get Jobs. The average yearly employment is 4 to weeks and the average annual an-nual income (excluding stars) is $200 to $500 ... Be a stenographer, sister. You meet a better class of people In the subway, anyway, o o - Somerset Mans; ham spurned an invite to an affair for Their Highnesses, High-nesses, and didn't send any regrets . . . Peggy Joyce's current is Jimmy Jim-my Wilson, a handsome six-footer. Mutt be love he's poor ... If the Japs get sassier FDR will call out the Boy Scouts e e e -New York Heartbeat: The Big Parade: C. Aubrey Smith as British at a monocle . . . Rita Hayworth the reason eyes were invented . . . Herbert Marshall Marsh-all and Arthur Treacher ring siding at the Riviera, giving each ether the "reallehs" and "y'don't-says!" . . . Louis Bromfleld at Fefe't Beach. Hit latest book. "Wild It the River." is a candidate for the Best-Seller lists . . . Eddy Duchln, curling up with a good bookie in the Waldorf foyer . . . Rosemary Lane signing autographs outside the Barryraore Theater. One of them asked her to get Prlscilla't, too. The crumbs have crust . . . The 3 Andrew Sisters Sis-ters wearing spangled skirts, spangled span-gled gloves and spangled hats. Looked like a Christmas Tree-o . . . Owwwwwch! Who threw that? . . . Wendy Barrie in the Roosevelt Grill with a 10-penny nail dangling from her bracelet. "They say I look like one I might as well wear one," Is the explanation . . . Swlfty Morgan greeting a sucker at the House of Chan with: "Sit down, pal, and have a check." o o o SalUes in Our Alley: In "Back Street" Margaret Sullavan played The Other Woman opposite Charles Boyer. In their latest, "App't for Love," she plays his wife, who bat to contend with two other gals. An interviewer asked Boyer if he or Margaret had given it a thought "Oh, yes." he said. "Miss Sullavan thought of it. She said that this time for her the shoe was on the other foot, but I was tUll the heel!" . . . A hefty sort of lady floated across the Club 18 floor and dared clown Jack White to make fun of her. "Gwan," she dared him, "make a wisecrack and see what happens I" ... Vinoe Curran deflated her with: ' "Say, didn't you used to have "Oood-! "Oood-! year" printed on you?" ... It left her b-lirnp. ooo Memoa of a Midnlghter: Did the TJuke purchase r $30,000" bauble I from Paul Flatofor Wally? Didn't 'pay cath . . FPA't writing book notices now and then for his old Doss, ine irioune . 101 nop, "Good Neighbor," has a good Una , about a nice lady whose goodness ! went tmrepaid: "She puts her foot in it every time she opens her heart" . . . Senator Guffey was talked out of kissing Diana Barrymore on the ground that It wasn't dignified . . . And he's the guy who's supposed to expiess the will ( the people! 5 j3 0 It ' "'S, j v , ft 1 '"! . (ft 'Mi .vJl if l" '"" '" 1 aaaaMaaSaaiT OfflclaJ pic tores released by the nary department show the damage done U the TJ. S. S. Kearny when she was torpedoed by a submarine off Iceland. At left, crew members look at twisted wreckage below decks after the torpedoed destroyer steamed bte part. Right: the Kearny, tied to sister ship, Is showa limping Into unnamed pert. Arrow points to the bole made by the torpedo. A Lesson or Two in Preparedness f h i?" i1 Marines of the royal Netherlands nary, still Uyal to their exiled qaeen, are pic tared above crossing a river, fully dressed, during maneuvers at Sonrabaja, Netherlands East Indies. Japan Is their nearest Axis enemy. Inset: A "casualty" Is floated across a river on a makeshift raft during demonstration staged by Britain's royal army medical corps. Buoyancy is given by empty oil cans. They Watched the Tanks Go By 9 ; ii 4 Standing at attention while the national anthem is being played at the Sohenectady, N. T., plant of the American Locomotive company during a defense day inspection of the plant. M-J medium tank I shown at left. Another tank, on flat car in background, is about to be sent on Its way to army proving grounds Turkey Dinner in the Offing " i'wj ; . , ''it v'-V Turkey, with afl the trimmings, wtir grace the festive board at army cam pa throughout the country en Thanksgiving day. These soldiers sol-diers of Camp Lee, Va., could not resist their battle training aa they creep up oa the all-unsuspecting turkeys at the Wlppernock farm, South-erland, South-erland, Va. ... Not to Market Not to market, but to Saa Fran Cisco's grand national livestock exposition, ex-position, is the destination of these two little pigs chosen as her entrants en-trants by Miss Mllo Kimmerle. The exposition win present a livestock, borse and radio show of national character, November 15-22. After Record Leap 1 y 4 ' Artbw Stars es Is greeted by his wife and son, Robert, oa right, after aft-er plunging six- miles la record free fall" chute leap, lie para chuted less than 1,504 feet la the six-mile drop. Washington, D. C. NAZI SABOTAGE The man to watch in Europe to- ' day next to Hitler Is a tuave and ; charming diplomat in Turkey named Franz von Papen. It it always al-ways s significant omen when Hitler sends Von Papen to a country. It ' meant he has dire and potent in tentions regarding that area. It was Von Papen who went to Austria as ambassador to soften it in preparation for the Nazi occupation. oc-cupation. It was Von Papen who 26 .years sgo tried to do the same thing here. And now, with weather weath-er getting cold in Russia and Hitler running lower and lower on oil, a Nazi squeeze on Turkey becomes almost inevitable. To prepare for it. Ambassador Von Papen hat been working overtime In Turkey. Almost forgotten it Von Papen't attempt to i often and sabotage the United States during the lsst war. But his operations hero indicate the lengths to which he may go in Turkey Tur-key to bring that country into the Axis. In 1915, Von Papen was German military attache in Washington when Count Johana von Bernstorff returned from England with a satchel containing $130,000,000 in German treasury notes. Von Papen, then in Mexico City, .hurried north, snd Immediately began organizing a network of spies. Invasion Via Canada. After selecting hit agents carefully. care-fully. Von Papen laid the following plans: No. 1. To invade Canada through British Columbia with the aid of German warships in the Pacific and German reservists in the United States. This plan was vetoed by Von Bernstorff. No. 2. To blow up the Wetland canaL This tcheme likewise wat abandoned, because the canal wat too well guarded. No. 3. To blow up Canadian railroads rail-roads In an effort to prevent transportation trans-portation of Japanese troops through Canada. (The Japanese were fighting with the Alliet.) No. 4. To blow up the International Internation-al bridge at Vanceboro, Maine. This was accomplished through an agent named Werner Horn. Von Papen was so Industrious and unscrupulous that he over-reached himself, and Wilson demanded his recall. But when he reached home, both he and Bernstorff were awarded award-ed decorations, and both promoted. Subsequently, Von Papen became chancellor of Germany and he took part in the conspiracies which brought Hitler into power. RUSSIAN REQUEST A DRIBLET Averell Harriman's confidential report on Russian requests for aid was vastly different from British requests re-quests after Dunkirk. In comparison compari-son with the British, the Russian orders teemed a mere driblet After the Lowlands debacle, the British had to start from scratch, having lost practically all their armored equipment and most of their field artillery. The Russians have lost tremendous quantities of material, but Judging from their relatively modest requests, they still mutt have a lot left One of the chief things they asked for wat 75 and 105 mm. guns, which, luckily we can tupply. Production Pro-duction figure! are a military secret, but these cannon are now rolling off assembly linet in quantity. quan-tity. The Ruatiant alto asked for machine guns, which we can furnish also in large numbers, since ma chine gun production is at a high , levet One of the biggest, and pleasant- est surprises to Harriman was that the Russians do not need machine tools, at least for the present This took a big load off his mind, as both the U. S. and Britain have few tools to spare right now. Note: U. S. military experts con- i sider lack of co-ordination between the three Russian armies to be one ' of the principal reasons for ine break through in the center against Moscow. Although there has been a shift of Rustian generals, doubt still exists about the co-ordination of the three armies under a central cen-tral command. INFLATION CURE Here It the inside lowdown on Price Administrator Leon Henderson's Hender-son's own private preventive against inflation. He disclosed it to a group of Charlestown, W. Va., business men during s speech on the dangers of runaway prices. One of the audience asked Henderson how a bushiest man could best proteot himself against ' Inflation. 'Wcrlt like hell' was the prompt reply, "and go to church regularly." MERRY-GO-ROUND Introduced to a British production expert who had Just completed a turvey of U. S. defense plants. OPM boss William Knudten tookr Mm' off hit 1eet by mquirmg What impressed you least?" A sports commentator, sponsored by a shaving cream, called the duke of Windsor in Baltimore, inviting him to appear as guest star on the radio program, the money to be paid to British charity. The duke declined even before he was told the offer was only $100. I periods white caJla start Fa Rowers at Different ins? In .Tinnsn. --i . . I and daffodils a little hL Before these andiabshL can always have the irtZ cissus. Just start i! every two weeks in a rjowt, ter and pebbles. KeT. spot until growth rttrt, a sure the lnws i i . ""u tad Our Sz-paf a booklet Mi k J aoa nuBn fmmu kr,irt i--.- . Jem . ' ., 1T0W ttBLl and other material In witerH RKADEK-BOftrt SXlW auau at. saa rrudaai Enelooe 10 cents la cola at eopy of MAKING PLAim FLOWERS GROW INDOOR! Name Addreaa Ton can eaaDT churn tk mmJ misery of a head cold tntoniu mum u 7011 we auaantBt Simply Insert Ifentaolatunn nostrlla and massag yenr tni and temples wttb It TtmwOlstfc reUOTo the snlffltnt, ituffloaa. Ins, running. Uentbolatoa amuwuionTitatiDOMrui,aurt; snranoaa. aweUlnc ttealnt, ndat and mine tha fMlin af MImb TourhcaaJaDUunwaMltrtac Unuoua blowlnc Jars or tab 1 M taaklaUa Our First Stet The first step, my son, wind make in this world, is the orf which deoends the rest i, days. Voltaire. D0NTLCT CONSTiPATIO! SLOW YOU W e Whan bowds art wlM . . . a . 1 L mJ 1 mm llllf I do h an oJfort, do a aaw -j warn lantiTO. Simpiy MINT bofore yoo ! " thorough rolW, acaln, foil of year FEEN-A-MINT. Tastas P and ocooomical. A powsoiM FLxN-A'IillHl 1 I rue rriciwT Friendship is the highest . in (viitT. ' or neriecuuu ' taigne. 1 f RdieveJ Kp V.. - MAthl IUDP ' miaa ui uj . 1 A OlrWI uvwa- t turbmnces dou rA (tn added iron) mMSXZ llero ouch dlatraaa. Tbarwl ptolaUf for t-tntta Taken TtrlT-jt Tablota help anUnat ouch annoyui Theyalao be?bM 5 and thus aid to twrnilk. Folio WJSlUW 1 v. Li . mm l,yaia nna"""-- "7i ara WORTH TBTWO WNU W . ..istioa . :;t is. thankful for the past- ll alS life. with diiiinein?'"2S.t teevoryy'AsK asonded the coun-r eighbori ..aassssBr!i. a |