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Show AMERICAN FORK C ITIZEN CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT Dogs of War Charge Armed 'Enemy' fcf Tuff ion Wffeij tad 1 "14 :bcsf JouJ iin a ttl du !tl trout su tcr.i BAH Bat itmd rill is an ,INDf a l 7 . JrciD I -7'JI III ' n.TJ .T.1IIr4Tr I1 I msjan in fiiiiniiiii M I I a " I r. . M 1 1 I I Li 1 iZt.Kfl j I 1 w Cwtion shows what be-rf! be-rf! ,Jrror and piano A. mirror and stool Hj i two wooden boxes . These were Cd about 18 Inches ?,Sif f t1311"111011 ply; Sicrewe-Jto the top A then screwed to the V. boxes as shown. A f 7.as placed across the I I (tjffisNO HINGCP ARMS - 1 Th 'la-- i , I u An arm was men fiVtht front of each box. Wture is smart and be- . tahlii skirt was . nriA-mrh heading! at iod ucked along the ends able and the hinged arms stacks through a double I iiK plain material. t Itaders Interested In making Ajj, borne furnishing! should rTrf BOOK S which contains LSfdirectionj for 32 useful items it fcicriptions of the . series of Wrtlch Mrs. Spears has prepared Booklets art 10 cents each. W ICTH WTETH SPEAKS siUi New Yorli Drawer le Ua M cents for Book s. Ik........-- kSt-MM JVofei o'ap Innocent Bystander: The Wireless: One famine the Nazzys can't hide from the world Is their famine In Ideas. The way they twisted President Roosevelt's address to hoodwink their people showed how poverty stricken Goeb-bels Goeb-bels has become in lies. That's good news over here, because it lets us know that Berlin doesn't hope to fool the world any more just its own groggy citizens . . . Sen. Lister Hill made a swell speech the other night, but he did pronounce war effort "woffut" . . . Deems Taylor catalogued cata-logued the song smashes in all the American crises and came up with "Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition" Am-munition" as the theme song of the one going on now ... In spite of everything ev-erything he's tried to do to kill the Impression, Jack Pearl is still a funny fun-ny guy. He convicted himself by being be-ing comic on his comeback . . . The About Time Dep't: Variety, reviewing review-ing the new radio programs, now gives credit to the writers, who have been, too often, the muscles for mediocre medi-ocre mouthpieces who got all the Crossley and most of the moola. V I SlJlii eatUetaBaSaBaaM The Magaslnes: The Japs were saps to five J. B. Powell his freedom. free-dom. He will be a powerful witness, wit-ness, against them when the payoff day comes. His account, in The Nation, of their brutalities to him and other prisoners will shock and enrage you . . . Kyle Crichton, enthusing en-thusing over "This Is the Army" in Collier's, practically gets down on his knees imploring Hollywood to let the show alone when it parades before be-fore the kodaks. Fergossakes, begs Crichton, keep the colonel's dotter out of it. USY WAY : TO OPEN STUFFY OSTRILS .Km i mW starts; nose feels jisnbk spread Mentholatum !aaek BostriL Iiitutly it releases vapor jlafsoUtions'' that start 4 Mil) They thin Mil thick ans; tl Soothe membranes; ItMp reduce swollen passacea; i tsBSiits nasal blood supply. an tma tnngt fut rttuJI Jin 30. Withont a Care ilwi of wealth is loss of 4t happiest man is without - WAR N IN CZ ) tan JjW they help develop ffowth, Btronff bones and & 'teeth! Scott's Emulsion is jatural A and D Vita-iT" Vita-iT" w oood-taiting. Also, ntir to digtit than jW liver oil! Buy today 1 Ateunendtl kj Ubj Dcctsrs The Front Pages: An exciting UP yarn from Moscow gives you a clear line on why the Soviets are too tough for Hitler. This piece describes a battle that raged for nine days in Stalingrad for possession of one house. The Huns took countries in less time . . . Raoul Auernheimer recalls a piece of trick journalism by Mark Twain. The humorist caught a cop asleep on his beat. He realized his editor wouldn't print the item, so he sat and fanned the sleeping sleep-ing bluecoat with a "cabbage leaf. That drew a crowd and made the story worth a feature spread. Dogs ef war win charge aa enemy la the face tl gvnflre, la this aeries el pictures a Great Dane leaps fot aa armed "enemy" as be crawls ever a barrier. The "enemy," aslog blanks, Area directly into the dog's face, but the deg sever falters. la second picture the Great Dane has the "enemy" by the arm and Is pnO-inc pnO-inc him down, and la picture at the right the enemy is falling. Although the trainer had gTeat layers of elk hide and weol in his sleeve, the dog's teeth marked his arm. - V High Altitude Tests at Ground Levels Scrambled Eggs: Add Navy Rumors: That the Summer white uniforms may be changed open collar, etc . . . Sir Alexander Korda is quitting films, locals hear, for the duration to take a post with the British Gov't . . . Life will do a feature layout on the "Beat the Band" cast, with special oomphasis on Susan Miller, the oriole ori-ole .. . Allan Prescott of WJZ says his uncle's first wife was so rich she hanged herself with a nylon stocking . . . When Lieut Liudmila Pavllchenko of the Russian Army was officially entertained at the M-G-M commissary, 334 studio at taches got up in spontaneous tribute to the heroine ... The 335th. a top flight author, remained in his chair . . He'll show her! 'i '"" i o''.-;4'' I What is left of the old Capone crowd is most anxious for the gendarmes gen-darmes to collar fugitive Roger Touhy and his mob ... A Chicago rag's fuehrer has instructed his lawyers law-yers to find out if Henry Morgan can be sued for his broadcast, all in Perm an dialect, which lampooned it the other day. Kept calling it The Beobachter . . . Street Scene: Between Be-tween 5th and 6th on 52nd: The Sukl-Yaki restaurant which is closed and the prospering Chinese laundry next door . . . Columbia's "City Without Men" will be the first movie to tackle the ticklish problem of prisoners' army eligibility . . . British Brit-ish statistics show ex-cons in the last war distinguished themselves. Aviation gasolines mast perform as efficiently seven miles op as they do at sea level. Thanks to this high altitude test room (right) the high-flying performance can be Judged at ground level. A technologist Is shows studying instruments outside the test room. Left: Control room of the fluid catalytic cracking plant at location which must remain a military secret. Here a wide variety of switches, dial and gauges assist technologists tech-nologists la the constant control el temperatures, pressures and flow rates which affect the quality and amount of high octane aviation gasoline produced. With U. S. Fighting Men in New Guinea IMUkltW Commander Vincent Astor Is felling fell-ing the valuable timber on his Maryland Mary-land estate to give to the Navy gra tis .. . Gas rationing is working in reverse English at local racetracks . . . Attendances are bigger ... The better steak houses welcome the meatless Tuesday. Unless they can get $2.50 or better for a steak it doesn't pay to go to the ootner. The Writers War Board, which started a movement to popularize the last stanza of the Anthem, probably prob-ably got, the idea liearing Kostelan-etx Kostelan-etx ""do i tTon a CBSTrogntnT.---. Veloi & Yolanda will produce their own revue. "Highlights of 1943," in San Francisco late in December with an all-star cast . . . N". Y. State railroads will not increase I their commutation rates. The ICC lood that idea ... The gov t is discouraging women from working on night shifts. iVeii York Heartbeat: The ElntsWe: Leon Henderson and his wife at the Copacabana . . . Bernard Baruch at the Storque-and Storque-and G-Man Hoover at the Versailles, winning the Bingo (a big Veddy bear) yalt-yak-yak! . . . Lieut Burgess Meredith telling Lieut. Comdr. J. J. Bergen: "I don't know If I am help-tag help-tag the war effort but I do more traveling than anybody t? ... Ed Stettinius of the War Production Board, in the Savoy-Plaza foyer, looking more like a matinee IdoL Buy War Bonds-i- ' " f ' ' ' ' . " .. i..ny, 5 ; t J ' There is no timber In New Guinea, and so, when it comes to building, the American soldiers learn a trick or two from the natives near Port Moresby. Before the grass thatch is put oa, the beams are securely tied with strips of bark which the natives are shown Decline. la the background back-ground the framework of one house Is ail but completed. Little forks that two of the natives wear in their hair are solely for pleasure the pleasure of scratching. Army's 'Big Boy' r ' fT""' f- , . K :- ! RAZOR BLADES KENT BLADES Vmftmtrl Ifc. Obi SU4 Vatae Chow Between Japs on Guadalcanal TT XA.t t a. .Tfff l HI I? nil itfatii r .ftJasMittiVtiTfain ivm'Yiil'i i-ii. tmfcYiitifji i i i"ir--,Jt TJ. 8. marines line np at a field kltchea In-between onslaughts against Jap positions on strategio Guadalcanal island la the Solomons group, where the Japs opened up big push to reclaim the Island. Pvt. William Ford of JanesvUle, Wis., Is feet S inches tall, and weighs 320 pounds. Officers at Fort Sheridan, HI., where he was inducted, induct-ed, aay he is one of the largest men ever to don a uniform. Photo shows him having uniform trouble. Enemy Photograph Lhr-t ja" J it; J, . This photo was received in America Amer-ica from aa enemy sodroe, with caption cap-tion stating that the two German soldiers were members of a Fanser division In Stalingrad. One mans the machine while the other peers through field glasses. Washington, D. C. DEMOCRACY STREAMLINING If the President and the country want to get a full realization of how democracy is streamlining for ac tion they should think back to the summer of 1941, just one year ago, when, for what seemed like unending unend-ing weeks, the congress stewed over extension of the selective service act Senate and house Isolationists were haranguing the galleries on the iniquities iniq-uities of keeping the boys mote than one year In camp; telling the public how the navy was already convoy ing ships; revealing in advance that Roosevelt had sent troops to Iceland. Finally by the thin margin of one vote, 203 to .202, and thanks to the sage generalship of Speaker Sam Rayburn, the selective service act was extended. Had it not been for that narrow victory, we should have had no army to rush to Australia, and the whole war effort would have received a tragic set-back. But last week, a war-geared bouse of representatives passed the 18-19 year draft extension act in three days; and it should be passed by the senate and signed by the President Presi-dent inside the week. Politically and personally, nobody wanted the 18-19 year draft extension. exten-sion. It was the worst time to pass it, just before elections. But congress con-gress is doing a much better job than most people realize for streamlined stream-lined democracy. ATROCITY PICTURES A strong debate is raging among propaganda chiefs oven the question of atrocity stories and pictures. The government has received a lot of such material from Allied sources, especially the Chinese and Poles, in eluding such horrible scenes as Jap anese attacking Chinese women, and pouring oil on live bodies before setting the torch to them. upponenis oi publication argue that the atrocity stories of the last war were largely invented, and when so exposed left the public disillusioned; dis-illusioned; thus the people might now react unfavorably and charge the government with pulling the same tricks. Other officials argue, however. that the material is authentic, that it is not posters and rumors, but actual ac-tual photographs, and the public should know what sort of enemies we are fighting. It is apparently a part of the Ger man psychological warfare to treat British and Americans with reason able humaneness in order to keep us lulled in a state of moderate war fare. They save their worst tricks for the conquered nations and the Russians. The Poles and Chinese are urging use of the material as a necessary means of fully arousing the American Ameri-can public to the menace. Elmer Davis' Office of War Infor mation is set to go, once the debate la settled. DAIRY MANPOWER Forthright Sen. Berkeley Bunker of Nevada had a long talk with the President the other day on the war manpower problem, in which he emphasized em-phasized the need of swift action to meet the labor shortage on dairy farms. "I m frpm a farm area myself and I know what these dairy people are up against said Bunker. "Un less we move fast we will have serious shortage next year. Already many farmers are beginning to slaughter their dairy herds because they can't get help to tend them The President admitted the prob lem was serious, and assured Bunk er that the War Manpower commis sion was aware of it. He added however, that he doubted any steps the government might take to relieve re-lieve the farm labor shortage would be a complete answer. "The government can't solve this alone, said Roosevelt we are going to have to depend on the farm ers themselves for individual initia tive. I'll give you an example of what I mean." The President then told how a neighbor of his In New York state, owning a large dairy farm, had partly solved his labor shortage by employing students from a near-by high school to milk the cows. "Boys did the milking in the morning morn-ing and . a group of girls from the same school took over in the afternoons," after-noons," he said. - "That sounds like a good idea. Mr. President," observed Senator Bunker, Bunk-er, "but it Isn't exactly a new one. When I was a boy on a Nevada farm. I used to milk 10 cows every' morning before school and 10 at night. And I had to ride eight miles to school on a bus." - MERRY-GO-ROUND Congressman Eel Izac or California, Califor-nia, who is crusading against army and navy "cellophane commissions," is the only sitting member of congress con-gress to receive the Congressional Medal of Honor In the last war. Taken Tak-en prisoner after his ship was sunk by a TJ-boat Izac four ftmes tried to escape, once jumping from a 40- miles-an-hour train. He still bears the scars of German prison camp beatings. -Buy War Bonds UOUSEHOLD I MIS Ta make pumpkin pies bake a rich golden brown, add a tablespoon table-spoon of molasses to the filling. . Coeoa tastes best when the cocoa, co-coa, sugar and salt are mixed well with the water, and then boiled for from 0 to 10 minutes before adding the soalded milk, and all heated together. Shoes that are eld and do not polish satisfactorily should be well rubbed with methylated spirit or petrol. Allow to dry thoroughly out of doors, apply paste, and pol ish in the usual way. When a sponge cake is turned upside down in the pan to cool, it clings to the sides of the pan, and is kept stretched in position until t cools and becomes firm. This prevents shrinking or settling. Cooking apples are inclined to be white and tasteless when the best of the summer crop is over. But add a little lemon juice to your next apple pie, or put a strip of lemon peel in the pot when stewing apples, and it will give them a delicious flavor. The real test of a gift is how well it is received. Which puts Camels and Prince Albert Smoking Tobacco Tobac-co right at the top of the list as gifts sure to please any smoker. And they're ideal as last-minute gifts. It's a convenient and economical eco-nomical way to remember all your smoking friends particularly' men in the service who prefer to- ( bacco and cigarettes to any other gifts. You have your choice of the Camel Christmas Carton, containing contain-ing 10 packages of 20's or the Camel "Holiday House," containing contain-ing four "flat fifties." Both are ' colorfully-wrapped, ready to give, without any additional Christmas wrapping. Also the pound canister 1 of Prince Albert is handsomely! gift-wrapped. Your dealer is fea-! turing all these welcome gifts now. 1 Adv. PCOLDS'MISERIES FOTOold'eoasMsaalooBws4Joeimueole achMtPwtro modradioauooina mutton oust baas. iU, double aupplsfis. 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Follow label directions. Plnkham'a Plnk-ham'a Compound la worth trying I WNU W 4443 For You To Feel Well tl keen every dar. T 'aye every eTer-etoppwc. ' ttaaeye vumt uttar from th blood. If eHtre Deotile ware aware of hew the kMBere Bint constantly remove eur ploa fluid, exome acid u4 ether wute autter that eunot (tiy la the Wood withont lajory to hoalta. there would be better oadenrUndini of wkf the whole eyetem. ia apart whea kidnen fail ,. hwctloA property. Boruliif , ecaacy or toe uauaaut anna-tloa anna-tloa eomatimae warn that eomethlnc tl wroaf. Yon may eufor aafsins back-aehe, back-aehe, headaches, diialneea. rheumatic pair, setting up at Why aot try Doan i PW1 Yoo will be Balnc a medicine reeommendad the eouatry over. !' atlmulata the function func-tion ol the kldaeya and help thea ta Snah ant aileeeo waste trea the blood. They eoatain aethtac harmful. Uet pesnrt assay, van wusi At aB drag aaoraa. it t |