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Show avoae-a - r m .n,:5 front n ana, nd lid w.tenfej i com fist to as j i with tlxi like to a," 3 0 Th, ftirl in Jim's ClfTiro III -aw I -A. w - - - aw w - - w a I 1 bl III I -tl Bmdlaata WMTT r. ....... I I 2 . VJ I - J I a i- i W I raw v .. "II M fnally persuaded Jim to drive ma out one Sunday to the farm to tee David. it, happy day, lunch under the trees. , KATHLEEN NORRIS is a strange one, although al-though its beginning was hmonplace enough. Lilian tked in a law office seven rs ago; she was pretty, un- Ihisticated, 22 years old the boss was just twice age. The boss told her this marriage was a lonely . that his wife had ceased ove him, and that his three Idren were practically angers. Lilian never toped to think that there is pally some reason why es stop loving their hus- mds and children remain angers to their fathers; hans never do. one gave lympathy and understanding. listened to the boss and present- she loved him. ouit then rented a small apart-at apart-at for Lilian, and Lilian f avt up rythlng in life for him horn, ther, faith, aelf-respect In the trtaln and scattered times that could be with her, she comforted i and flattered Mm to his heart's itent he first wrote me five years ago en a baby was coming. Neither i nor Louis wanted this baby, and ian'i question to me was about jptlon. She didn't even want to i the baby. However, the hospital de her nurse It for two weeks fway, and after that a quiet old-lid old-lid cousin of Lilian'. Marian ick. took the little boy, came to 'e him passionately,' and eventual-adopted eventual-adopted him legally. Marian had ovely farm, some money, and had d a lonely time of it since her sther died. "My fatal mistake." Lilian wrote 8 in her second letter, "was in mting Louis to see his little boy. Unally persuaded him to drive out th me one Sunday to the farm tee David. It was a happy day. pen under the trees, and Marian M Louia liked each other Immedi- lely. kond Leve Scorned, Takes Third. "But I never dreamed that they fould fall in love. Louia' wife died few months later in an accident. hd from that time he began to pay ttention to Marian. Of course tnere as no question as to what Marian ould feel; she is 37 and has never sen in love before. I have threat-itd threat-itd Louia that I will tell Marian wythtng unless he plays fair with )e and makes me his wife,' but he ays that he and I have stopped ving each other, and marriage be-Keen be-Keen us would be a terrible mis- ke." That was the second letter. By hat time Lilian, shocked and an-ered an-ered by Louis' coldbloodedness, eilly had stopped loving him; In-leed In-leed she said she hated him, and rtarlan, too. My advice was to tell ifarlan the truth; poor Lilian took i vicious satisfaction In confessing he whole thing to Marian, and Parian, Lilian wrote me, was "bit-erly "bit-erly grieved." Marian bad a long talk with Louis, had another long talk with Louis, had many more talks; Louis felt deeply repentant, and Marian married him. They have kmc little girL And Lilian killed her- Tmulf Not even drl who falls in love with a married boss has quite so lad a aiorr. But . none of the stories come out happily. The boss holds 13 trumni: ha can t lose. He can lwavs end the affair as dishonor bly as he began it; always explain to his wife that wheir a-siren leada man astray it is the siren's fault. 8torkhn1ilr Gmhimitfl LoVefS. "Neither one of us will ever love nyone else because we simply CAN'T," writes Ursula Davis-, of CRLS i4ND THEIR MARRIED BOSSES A girVs relationships with her married boss, or any other married man, should be strictly strict-ly confined to office work. Kathleen Norris relates the story of a girl who thought she fell in love with her married mar-ried boss. After a series of difficulties dif-ficulties and disillusionments, she committed suicide. Although Al-though all such relationships do not result in such extreme tragedy, none end happily. A married man who carries on an affair with a member of his' office force or any other woman wom-an is not to be trusted. her love for her employer. "His wife is as nice as she can be, but it was never love between them, the letter goes on. "Both of them were married when they met, both got divorces, and there is a daughter to each marriaee. nearly grown. He feels that she will be as willing to eet a divorce as he is. I am not a calculating girl and I am not a baby either, I am 24. I have flirted now and then, but tms is th real thing. When Paul asked for my love I didn't stop to reason or make terms. His mother-in-law," the lev ter continues, "is a stockholder in his firm, and Paul cannot risk an-verbis an-verbis her as she might make a treat deal of trouble. I see the rea son for that: it's not romantic, but it's practical, and I think women too often put their emotional de mands first and forget that a man is a provider as well aa a lover. So we must wait until either his mother-in-law dies, which she may at any time aa the has a bad heart, or until some circumstance makes his divorce and our marriage possible. Will you tell me" what's wrong about a girl trusting fully the man she lovesT Just because he loves me am I not to believe him whn he promises at the first possible moment mo-ment to make me his wife?" To which last question the simple answer Is "No." Any man who takes advantage of a girl's trust In him, her youth and inexperience, her general silliness and softness, to establish es-tablish her in an illicit position, sim ply isn't trustworthy, and the sooner this is discovered by all stenographers, stenogra-phers, bookkeepers and office work ers generally, and all other girls who are tempted by the attentions oi anyone as important as the boss, the better.-' Propinquity can. be a dan- eerous thing, and a girl must recog nize it. and guard against it like any other danger. Men do divorce wives and do marry second loves. But the second love is very rarely a girl from Jim's. office. Boss Pose Problem. "And yet. If the boss wants to be friendly," a girl said to me many years ago, "what can you do? He aska you to stay after hours to take ome letters, then be asks you if you would mind having a bite of dinner with him, and then. If you are seen, ther are questions and criticisms.- A girl knows all the time what his pleasant remarks' and kindly interest are leading up to," went on this wise young woman "but ahe has her Job to consider. too. and once the boss gets the no tion that you are an unfriendly. stiff -Httle- prude, yo don-'t improve vour chances for promotion. So the only " thing 'to do.- she concluded cheerfully, "if you find yourself in an office where all "the girla warn you that the bosa ia too susceptible. is to eet out and get yourself an other Job. But It's too bad."- she said, "that girls have to be bothered that way. There ought to be some way of letting the wives know wha' goes on." Marshall American Leader in Two World Wars . .. . r . . .. dutinrusbei himself as aa eaiaianaing munmrj tew - 4. .k1 . it s .t.ur f .taff MarehaJl wu tanned eTer nor than M Marshall with President Roosevelt at Dill of the English army. KIgnt: wiu uea. jvm . rnwii Troops March Thru Huge Jaws America flrtUwr mea (ween the hug shielding Jaws f a landing ship tank. It to the itlmat carrle. trp, .mmsailttw. Jeep, tank, and J landing crafts. In plctar Ing strip needed a Ana Island. Top ten meet irp awa ov m army tank rail from th opened dean of a LST. Ukrainian Harvest Before Soviet Offensive jjiij Ml ' LI L ? r- M tu -iiii sssssssssssaf o'laffrftf-'' taaaasaW.WTI aUa Rn..i. wuuiii iri Blctnred the Nasia when German armies held i.na r at n nnr warkera. Below: The tide t battle, new steadily flowing In favor of the Bnulant, make the return of the Ukraine t Rasaia Joe Gordon Named 'Most Valuable Player' jlliniiiiirfi m iimiaii iliil Farmer Postmaster Jame Farley the New Yrk Yankees, wo was awarae ine uue oi naai vaiaaoie pir r.nrdon. wha nlava second base, received the award fer his superlative fielding, good hitting average, and low percentage of errors y v.n . MMMldwritlnn fr the i-.j wi. w.m w the Casablanca conference. Bottom hav carried th battl t th f ee, "' """ """" f-v v ,en i I in th Ukraine harvesting grata far that territory. Topt Anti-aircraft uermaa amaras watcn bmycik. almost Inevitable. "1 i ' f 1 aiaaUn present a watch t Jo Gordon of Boat of afohal commander la ehieJ I an it. Wha h wu annotated - ..." . senior efflcere. Top left: General le: Marshall wlthOen. Sir Job ' - - of Sea Monster ; i r forces have marched aar co,MfrT,"T " ,Jr Bbere,pOea np rt Top Price 4-H Calf Thl calf, owned by Robert Jar go of Andover, Iowa, brought M5S.M at th Quad County 4-H Baby Beef hew. Xhla J reported to be the high est price ever paid for a calf In Iowa. Sees 100 -Year Life : ': Cliv M. McCay of Cornell university, uni-versity, who believes proper eating caa Increase our lives to 100 year. Ho increased the life of rate from 60 days to 1.0M days. This corresponds corre-sponds t 100 years In man. Ballad for Americans: If you could buy a spot where you could see How Nature had been lavish lav-ish in its art, If you could buy place where Liberty Is ever dearest to the human hu-man heart . . . If you could buy the road to happiness With little homes that bordered bor-dered on the lane, It would not take a fool a sec ond guess To know that you would buy and buy again; If you could buy contentment through the years And love that grows from fine and decent things, If you could buy an armistice from tears And all the grief and woq that battle brings OK if you could, how quickly you d respond. And yet, what else is bought with every bond? - DON WAHN Th Magic Lanterns: James Cag- ney blew in with "Johnny wmi Lately," his debut as an impresario, and he needn't worry about quitting a good Job. He is breezy ana tougn as the tramp reporter who Pag Ones th town's stuffier gonitis Into being better boys. Grace George and Ed McNamara are part ox tne assets . . . Robert Donat who is i paid off In sighs where Sinatra col lects shrieks, comes back in in Adventures of Tartu," which Is a stylish dish. He plays British officer of-ficer risking his precious neck In Czechoslovakia. The best place to view th tale is from th edg of your seat as if you had any choice. Valerie Hobson Is th girl . . . Abbott Ab-bott and Costello go in for Winter sports In "Hit the Ice," and being th kind of comics they ar. -you know what they hit it with , . . Pola Negri, who was strictly a sad-faced sufferer in her heyday, comes back in a frillv Item called "Bl Diddle Diddle." with Martha Scott, Adolph Manlau and June Havoc. You'll laugh how much being up to you . . Richard Dlx vs. jess James Is the them of "Th Kansaa" This rambunctious Western, full of shoot- 4n Irana atralrht WhlSkeT UM trac of Jlv. Is generally satisfactory. satisfac-tory. Mid town Vignette: She Is th young wife of British, naval of-amp of-amp ... We overheard her talking with a stranger at th fountain f a mldtown drug stor . . . Wnu sn fed her baby a malted . . . "They sent m over her t visit him a little whll." she said. "H had never seen the baby" ... Sh was a soap-and-water type of girl very little makeup, and pretty . . . Th stranger asked about clothing rationing ra-tioning in England ... "I don't mind," sh answered, "I'v been wearing this skirt and blouse for two years very day" . . . As sh start. cd to go, the stranger pressea a ten-spot Into her hand . . . "Buy something for the baby," h said, "and yourself" . . . "Oh, thank you very much," was the reply, "now I may get a new blouse." Manhattan Moral: It war In the Stork Club Sunday evening ... A youthful sailor without a rating or campaign ribbon was dancing with his little old mother ... We have never seen such a lovely portrait In all our sinful years ... No other couple on the floor seemed to be en-Joying en-Joying themselves as much aa this boy and bis proud mother ... She simply beamed and eo did the rest of us taking It all in from the ring-aide ring-aide . . . "Gosh." said fellow, whose chest is crowded with decorations, decora-tions, "that sailor makes everybody in here took sUlyl" . . . Th speaker, was Li Bill Crawford, a grand guy himself, soon returning to the Pacific, Pacif-ic, where be helped bomb to splinters splin-ters so many Jap ahipa. Street Scenery: The gal cab driver driv-er at Madison and 40th manicuring her nails . . . The "A" cars slinking along side streets like rum-runners . . . The new messenger gals at the Stock Exchange with NYSE embroidered em-broidered on their Jackets and some of them very nyse ... me optlclan'a shop on Madison Avenue, which describes its orb-glasses as giving patrons "Specs-Appeal" . . . The dog department in a store which advertises a dog soap as Shampooch. Sounds In the Night: At the Stork: "He's carrying the torch for himself' him-self' ... At La Conga: "Mussolini is no longer lying low Just lying" . Louise's Monte Ckrlo:' "HC has a head like a doorknob any gal can turn it" ... At Leone's: "What he doesn't know is certainly going to .hurthlm'.' ... At the Mayan: "Absence "Ab-sence makes the heart go wander." Broadway Wlseguy: That poster slogan should be changed from "Your Country Needs You" to "You Need Your Country!" Raised Flag in Old World The Stars and Stripes first float-id float-id over a fortress of the Old World hen Lieut Presley N. O'Bannon, t U. S. marine corps officer, raised Did Glory over a fortreaa at Dernr, Tripoli, on April 27, 1805. o Appearance Count Personnel managers know from ong experience that employes who ire immaculate about their own todies and clothes are much more ikely to produce accurate work. o Magnesium Developed Recently The English scientist, Davy, first liscovered majrnesium in 1808; but t was not until 1830, in France, hat Bussy produced the element in netallic form. Commercial exploi-ation exploi-ation of mairr.eslum did not occur n Europe until the early years of -.he 20th centunyT-and It was 1915 efore the Industry had It beguiling begui-ling in this country. 0 ' Cut Drying Time It took six weeks to paint grand-ather'a grand-ather'a carriage, but the drying ;ime on an automobile palntj job las been reduced to en hour and ;he latest furniture finishes will irv in ten minutes. New ceme th irmy with hug war tanks, th paint en which is dried In four ninute by infra-red rays. coooooooccooonnooooooooG. OFFICE EQUIPMENT art BUT AND KU. Offln ranritara. Mm TawTitara Aadina MacMaat. ALT AR OIK BXCHANRB M Waal Kraa4a SaH Lab CH Utah OPERATORS IK DEMAND Uara aomptomatar aparattoa, atathaalaat arithmatk. ia It ta IS waaks. Oaaratora bi atmaa for affiea work at rood pa, Complata eaat taclodin dlalami MS aejra-kla aejra-kla in waakly tiwtallnwnta. Writ ot tall (or datarfte. Th COMPTOMETER SCHOOL It Wart lit Booth, Bait Latka un. utaa. FOR SALE tllrat mdiUoa; ZOO ywuic ww ta hrta to init A1m X8M merm prin ami fall ra&taa and twa form anua, iinim 8Uv Fratopaapa Kraaa Malar Court. Idaha Talla. Idaho. RABBIT SKINS Attention - RABBIT RAISERS Wo are BXAOQUABTKBt tar KABBR KDfB. Skip roar BABBIT SDN! to as sod potato KOHI8T MaBKZT FBICI. NORTHWESTERN Hide and Fur Co. 463 South 3rd Wt USE1 CARSTRAILERS nririysfxrorv,vafij"'i-Mr' - LIVESTOCK FOR SALE FOR SALE, RAMS I have 95 hia size. smooth-tYDe. yearling Rambouillet bucks for im mediate delivery Phone or Write , ODELL M. OMAN RABBIT SKINS WANTED RABBIT SKIN . HEADQUARTERS Get the full market for your domestic rabbit skins R. C. Elliott & Co. 40 N. 3rd West St. Salt Lake City, Utah A TIMELY SERVICE FOR FARMERS & RANCHERS 'Farm A Ranch Bookkeeping SlmpH-fld", SlmpH-fld", a lurtlon'wWo aarviea' EXCLUSIVELY EXCLU-SIVELY for farm en and ranebcra. Created br top-flight iptclaliat ia Book-kaepiric, Book-kaepiric, Tax Procedure and Aceounttna;. A man who waa born and rrared on a farm and knowi your problrau. In-Ureatins In-Ureatins literature FREE about thuj valuable and Inexpensive eervloe that tafee-uarda your intareeta. FARM ENTERPRISES MIS4 S. W. Ninth Avenaa Portland I. Oraraa Taught Chinese U. S. marines are credited with Introducing the art of boxing t the Chinese. White Fawn Flour Leads Them All Ak your Friendly Qrooer nit TltKtUy |