OCR Text |
Show r THE LEHI SUN. LEIII. UTAH Ancient Egypt in Role of Modem War Non-Profit Organization The American Automobile associa tion is a non-profit, civic association which belongs to its members. Its president is a non-paid official. This great organization now has approximately approxi-mately a million members. fPPB 1 i-mntfi?! ' PI aseesassmi 3 e for trans'! u motift e at la transfer t m 3x9 ti 1 require raft Dei :oins for imalef f&s askt e horse, I imal of louth as ! obedia lerally f Iso use! ian or :arriaga run as. got no I rs staS nee is J e horse! ;he sant rally horses itesgofflf analyst ji r..;-! Paste It fit lioai. tlx' f-2 11 . ould have '........ntinjf ( KUruber o PAPERS you be cable to Berlin m ft Bodgers. rirt m after : "Better of San hearing to Pay Axis.' I t 4az4 VA. from London, is auto-of auto-of his new book, Wnn't Cry." to girl ' memory of a glorious 5:stLakeComo." . L.ir s crowded with 'Lrrfaee like: "That heard we . ,., T.nndon had been Lw the German bombers. ,,1)16 irom - rt here that London in jere was uamos's jbf there will be further '?7r .wt think London Led or that London will iei They never pamtu wpsey, did they? Sure they hurt him and London "ki .nd hurt In fact, it is 'd hurt today. But what Hese people Know uiey urc and know tney ve got vu toting before they've won mow that lots of them . killed. Every time ibers come over they shake krii out ol tneir eyes, go vu estpuD, nave nau. a jjuh u ujsay; "Owmany ma we .n.mnir annparpci in uanaaa: JWlunu -ri bell always be an taigiana M shall be tree, mere u tie i acoxiana aim liuim-is :e free." Lit roup called "Alcoholics Win Hew xorK, uie mov i being a well known trans- . . . me group s aim ten out any fellow who m admit he drinks too much' Ttey meet at an illustrator s :i have bis "rallies." These Is" are attended sometimes by is of lushes, many of whom 'seen in institutions for alco- ttc . . . They've succeeded r h doctors and psychiatrists flailed, working on the theory 'M i drunk knows how to talk ke One Heroes don t last long. fcaber how we cheeredj the . , . Well. Finland's Minister bechanced upon reporters and ied that he hadn't seen them fj country isn't interesting be said unhappily, "nowadays . ..... . i just fighting cold and hun NEW YORK SCENE: fork Novelette: Everyone i sew him in St Louis liked his air voice. He led the commu- at local bazaars, county !ni in churches . . ; A visitor Sew York heard him one dav atod him to study for the After a few years the . - vugafttu "soloist . . . Last season he 1 Concert field wrth Jnhn a Thomas ... In New York 'Sial friends arranged on nnrti. 11 Met. . . He didn't keen 'PPointment-stage fright-or 8 -..If those kind friends '"locate their nrnAio-o thmi iJUBudy Madison singing with tmop4 at Bill's Gay 90s. orchids; Thomas Mitchell's "ts in Warner's "'RUtrht T . . niiun Tiff 4 Ti J new 13-year-old find. A ee night esrfnl tv,. TBlossoms on Capitol Hill" -w Are These Refugees?" -"el Lundberir ,. a House Mouse" in the Jan. ' CosmoDolitan mono. arresting issue. .ter Ribbons: Elbert Hub-; Hub-; God will not examine you Bu7!?mblems, but for scars m& Johnson's- filial. uiiuiias ; universal binge of decen- autier's: To love is With the hM ..Vs ;,?th the mind . . . Dou. s T.rere,are two kinds ianr r 8 through d those who let ja(;. .. w "iauey s: E?errldwithitsi ''throa Ul o",leIt a lumP , dre rarer tVior j: St-atchthe s eyes. About , House for lovely Mary 'as h vUtFy' 800 oo em- r-'J sur,n r scn01 femme k ound him in the sam ;t'tITan her Gaylord tto?.1 in iden- r "San p"P De a news- J" Pelican V ' ule gtosee"-'- J.Unmy Walk" "4" BU Da,?Jay 111 7116 Stork ce Ik-is true. STETT1NIUS STOPS DENYING SHORTAGE OF STEEL WASHINGTON. Edward R. Stet-tinlus Stet-tinlus Jr., handsome raw materials chief of the Defense commission, apparently has become gun-shy. Having seen his denials of shortages short-ages in strategic materials blow up In his face, he is resorting to a new technique in the case of steel. It took only a few days for his solemn statement that there was no aluminum shortage to be refuted by Sen. Joe O'Mahoney, chairman of the monopoly investigating committee. commit-tee. Even less time elapsed be-tween be-tween his denial of a zinc and brass deficiency and the issuance of a presidential order barring their export ex-port The hotly controversial steel issue is-sue has been a Stettinius worry for months. As far back as last summer sum-mer he was warned by experts that the nation's vast defense program, to say nothing of frantic British orders, or-ders, required an immediate expansion expan-sion of steel plant capacity. It was pointed out that present U. S. ingot capacity is approximately 83,000,000 tons, of which normal consumer needs for 1941 would be around 60,000,000 tons, leaving only 23,000,-000 23,000,-000 tons for armament This obviously was far from enough. The British - alone will have to get at least 18,000,000 tons of American steel this year to keep their war industries supplied. With several notable exceptions, the steel industry balked at building build-ing new plants. It insisted it could take care of all requirements without with-out the 15 or 20 per cent expansion that was urged. In this stand it was vigorously supported by Walter S. Tower, president of the American Iron & Steel Institute, also a dollar-a-year adviser on Stettinius staff. But the pooh-poohing of Tower, salaried official of the steel industry, indus-try, was sharply challenged by Prof. Melvin G. d'Chazeau of the Univer sity of Virginia, another Stettinius steel adviser. An outstanding authority without any industrial tie- ups, D'Chazeau urged immediate plant enlargement. This inner battle raged for weeks, with Stettinius sitting blinking in the middle while deliveries continued to fall further and further behind. He finally did move after the Pres ident took an indirect poke at the steel barons in his message to con gress, and the "Big Four" defense chiefs followed him up with their demand that "industry must subor dinate its concern over possible fu ture effects of tremendous expansion."' expan-sion."' - " - Stettinius acted by passing the buck. He designated Gano Dunn, head of the J. G. White Engineering company, and a dollar-a-year man on his staff, as a "neutral arbiter" to decide between Tower and D'Chazeau. Dunn is the "impartial" expert who last year slashed a proposed TVA power expansion for defense purposes nearly 75 per cent, and was overruled by direct order of Roosevelt on the insistence of other defense heads. Some insiders are betting that it won't be long before steel is put on the priorities list and consumer use sharply curtailed. They base this on the fact that even if new plants are ordered, it will take a year be fore they get into production. BUY BRITISH MOVEMENT Behind the flood of "Help Britain Buy Something British" window posters, which have sprung up all over the country, is an amazing story of a nation-wide movement started singlehanded by a young Portland, Ore., advertising man only two months ago. His name is Robert Smith and the idea came to him when he took out his wallet for a bill to donate to the British relief fund. He noticed that his wallet was tattered, and It struck him that by buying a new one of British make he would be making a definite contribution to England'i war resources. Young Smith figured mere must be thousands of others who felt the same way, and decided then and there to call it to their attention. The first thing he did was to team up with a close friend, David Robinson, Rob-inson, an attorney and leader in Portland welfare organizations. With Robinson handling organization and Smith promotion the move-menf move-menf gathered strength like a rolling roll-ing snowball. In the two months the movement has been under way it has prairie-fired prairie-fired to 28 states with more than 150 local branches. Dazed by the phe nomenal success of his idea, young Smith attributes it entirely to the strong feelings of the "average mai. in the street" THINGS DIPLOMATIC A career in the U. S. Foreign Service begins at $2,500, plus an average av-erage cf $1,000 for rent. Top pay is $10,000 and rent . . . While there is no requirement that candidates be college graduates, one third of the U. S. foreign service officers are graduates of Harvard, Yale and Princeton . . . About 500 young hopefuls try to get into the service each year; about 30 are chosen . . A total of 155 foreign service officers are listed in Who's Who. In the fo-eign fo-eign service there arp but 2 women. f: wl J - . .'.wv.v.-.-. .Vv. .. .tn . - . V . M iAsaB. .i3f i pliililplllllls ' ' '"" t The picture at the left shows British pilots hurriedly donning their uniforms and helmets from a kit rack when "the alert" sounds at a fighter station In the western desert of Egypt. Right: In the shadow of the sphinx these Australian war correspondents pause In their advance on the fleeing Italian army, to tell a few stories. 6War' in Snow Here and War in Sand Over There If"-- -'- -n --n ff-r '- -- "T-"- J- : mn"Vf in " "i vn i mi'Mfii M,t,rf----J--J-"-------" -'-a.j.uim.w.. -- ...jJj.i.'.v.v.-..vl....jl. ., .,. ttLwriiiwrfr'-iifitij? -rfn'-n'i'i.iVM The picture at the left looks like the real thing, winter warfare as it is probably being waged in the mountains of Greece, but it was made at Lake Placid, N. Y., aftd the troops are of the U, S. army engaged in winter maneuvers. To the right a British soldier posted as a lookout somewhere in western Egypt, looks as though he is buried in snow. The white sand of the desert and his white overalls form an effective camouflage. London Took This But Fights On hi kJiff fl4'l ki, i 1 tilt fe -4ri 1 fi vviS V Y 7;-; ' - The very core of London, the "ancient city," presents this woeful aspect as famous old buildings and modern structures gape to the sky frcrm which German raiders rained down thousands of fire bombs. Crumbling Crum-bling walls, flame weakened timbers, and twisted steel attest to the fury of the raid. This photograph was made from the dome of St. Paul's cathedral. Seem' Double in the Navy Better Bomb? v '4" j i f:; : ' Russell Hart, inventor, demonstrates demon-strates In Los Angeles the effectiveness effective-ness of his new type bomb, which may excel any device now used against submarines. The new bomb, Hart said, has one-third the weight of depth bombs now used, and equaJ power. It costs less, too. Rearranges Anthem The navy will be seeing double from now on. Two sets of identical tw'ns. whose names are quite similar, are shown taking the oath as they enS! in New York city. They are. left to right, Charles B. P ierpont and William Charles Pierpont, 19, of Woodstock, N. Y.. and Charles Francis HeU and Francis Charles Heil, 17, of Newbnrgh, N. Y. ('" y ) YYi 1 Due to deadlock between broadcasters broad-casters and ASCAP our national anthem an-them must be rearranged. Abov Is Albert Chiafferelli working on th4 anthem for Broadcast Music, Inc. (KcJeued by Western Newspaper Union.) BACK IN 1876, U. S. MONEY ALSO WENT SOUTH-AMERICAN THE UNITED STATES government, govern-ment, through the Import and Export Ex-port Bank, loaned the Brazilian government gov-ernment fifty million dollars. With a portion of that loan Brazil will pay two American firms, using American Ameri-can materials, for rehabilitating and electrifying a part of the railways of Brazil. In time the American government will get its money back through taxes paid by the contracting contract-ing firms and those employed by them In this country, and in other ways. The system is all too complicated com-plicated for us ordinary mortals to understand, but it is the process through which creditor nations, of which we are now the greatest encourage en-courage foreign trade. "None of the American money put into the attempt to build the first railroad in South America ever came back," explained J. P. Clark, believed to be the only man now living who participated in that ill-fated ill-fated project To his cronies in the Adventurers' Club of Chicago, he is known as "Dad" Clark. The expedition, of which he was a member, left Philadelphia Phila-delphia in 1876, bound for the headwaters head-waters of the Madeira river, to build a railroad around the falls and rapids rap-ids along the border between Brazil and Bolivia. Of the 941 men In the expedition, 250 died as victims of Jungle fever or the poisoned arrows of Bolivian head-hunting Indians. The project was bankrupt before the road was completed. Another American expedition finished the job In 1912, with American capital. It is a narrow gauge and its one train makes one round trip over its 225 miles of track each week. Mason Warner, a Chicago advertising adver-tising executive, made a trip over the line this past summer and brought back movies to show "Dad" Clark the railroad he helped build. STRAY CATS' TOO HAVE THEIR DAY IN THE HOOVER-ROOSEVELT campaign of 1932, Gov. Henry Allen of Kansas headed the Republican publicity department. At the opening of the campaign he was quoted as saying, "the party would not seek, did not need or want the support of the rural press." Early in September of that year that statement was being discussed by a group of rural newspaper men in a Chicago hotel. Ollie Little of the Alma (Kan.) Record expressed the predicament in which rural Republican Re-publican editors found themselves. "Politically, we are a bunch of stray cats, with no place to hole in," said Little. Two days later that statement and the reason for it was expressed to President Hoover. He took immediate imme-diate steps to correct the situation by directing Everett Saunders, the national Republican chairman, to communicate with all rural newspapers news-papers and seek their support. In the recent campaign, the Republicans Re-publicans created a rural press section, sec-tion, under the direction of Herman Roe, editor of the Northfield (Minn.) News. Serious consideration is now being given to making the rural press section a permanent feature of the Republican committee organization. organ-ization. The statement about "political "po-litical stray cats" made by Ollie Little back in 1932 started the recognition rec-ognition of the rural press as a medium me-dium which molds public opinion in America. MORE PRODUCTION, NOT MORE COST WHEELER McMILLEN. editor of Farm Journal, tells me that while running a weekly newspaper at Covington, Ind., he learned practical economics was the application of horse sense to a problem. I am not an economist, but it looks to me that America is forcing inflation infla-tion by attempting to force prices beyond their intrinsic value. If we get two dollars instead of one, but must spend the two dollars to buy what we formerly bought with one, what have we gained? It does not even take "horse sense" to realize it is much easier to increase outgo than to increase income. American prosperity will be measured by production of things people want more than by charging higher and still higher prices for the things produced. Forcing prices beyond a point that represents intrinsic value creates a demand for more and cheaper money. More and cheaper money represents toe first steps In inflation. infla-tion. Extreme inflation means individual in-dividual and national bankruptcy. That Is a bit of Wheeler McMil-len's McMil-len's "horse sense" economics. JOY OF JOURNALISM HON. GUY U. HARDY is editor and publisher of tho Canon City (Colo.) Daily Record. He was nominated nom-inated for, and elected to congress in 1918. It was my privilege to be the first to advise him of his nomination nom-ination by a Republican convention, a nomination be did not seek and did not want He continued as an influential member of congress for 12 years. Now he finds more pleasure pleas-ure in running his small city daily than he found in Washington. Lawyer Roosevelt President Roosevelt practiced law with Carter, Ledyard & Milburn of New York, from 1907 to 1910, and was a member of the firm of Roosevelt Roose-velt & O'Connor from 1924 to 1933. Cleaning Gold Tlcture An heirloom picturs frama with pure gold leaf edging and trimming may be cleaned by going over It (including the gilded portion) with a small sponge that has been moistened moist-ened with alcohol or spirits of turpentine. tur-pentine. The sponge should only be wet enough to take off the dust and fly specks and the frame must not be wiped, but permitted to dry of itself. Otherwise the gold leaf may be damaged. Lots of Color Although scientists have only tabulated tab-ulated 7,000 of such colors and shades, the human eye is capable of noting differences among 2,000,000 different colors and shades. New Zealand Leader The leader in legislation to establish estab-lish minimum wages was New Zealand Zea-land In 1894. Strong Heels on Socks To strengthen heels on hand-knitted socks, knit one, slip one, all along the front side fo the heel ending end-ing with knit one. Then purl every stitch on back row of heel, continuing continu-ing until heel is ready to torn. This Is stronger and looks much nicer than knitting a thread of wool or cotton in as it is sometimes difficult to make a good match. Kathleen. Divided Wastebaskets A woman in Lena Ray, Aurora, HI, wants to know why wastebaskets wastebas-kets are not divided into two sections, sec-tions, one section to hold burnable waste matter and the other section to hold non-burnable articles. Shaping Baby's Cap After washing a baby's or little girl's hat, blow up a toy balloon to the size of the bonnet, insert inside bonnet and leave to dry. It will dry in correct shape. Telling the Bees Telling the bees is an old superstition super-stition that when a death occurs in a family, some one must go to the hives and tell the bees of it, else the bees will become spiteful and hard to manage. A further phase of this belief is that just before the funeral of one who owns bees tin hives must be turned around. HOTELS When In RENO, NEVADA atop at tht HOTEL GULDEN Reno's Urge.t and ' moat popular hoteL NON-SURGICAL TREATMENT NON-SUSfilCAL INJECTION TBEATMENT Piles - Hernia PAINLESS PERMANENT Special reduced feel for out-of-town patient. THE LAWRENCE CLINIC 144 Eaat Soonth Temple gait Lake WRITE FOR FREE BOOKLET BOOKS WANTED FOR CASH Early Western and Mormon booka wanted, fiend list of titles for a-ppraisal befora ahipplnir. Highest prices paid. Wilson's Book Exchange 111 E. 2nd So., Salt Lake WASHING MACHINES Hartaff Apex - Dexter f 10 - 120 . (30 Rolls Repairing, All makes HOMES HANSEN MAYTAG SHOP 421 So. Stat Street Salt Lake City OFFICE EQUIPMENT NEW AND USED desks and chairs, ales, typewriters, addint; inch's, safes, bk-csies. 8. L. DESK EX.. 35 W. Broadway, Salt Laks WHEN IN SALT LAKE The best food in Salt Lake ia served by The MAYFLOWER CAFE t 164 South Main POPULAR PRICED WNU Week No. 4104 SALT LAKE HOTEL BEN LOMOND 08DEN, UTAH fW m l Room, lit Bsths 12.(0 to 14 M Family Reems for 4 persons S4.M Air Ceokd Leance and Lobby Grill Reesa Coffee Shop Tsp Boss, Home ef Rotary Kfwni Executives Exchange Optimists "2 a-M" Chamber ef Commerce and Ad Club Hotel Ben Lomond OGDEN. UTAH Come as oa are T. E. Fitxrerald. Mgr. |