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Show THE LEIII SUN. LEIII. UTAH mm Mpw ; e tXSEti Click i niiu"e f V"ejclusively" report M ,J.,m shelve Hitler for Oh. Mr. Secretary '. ..nk Knoxl nave r,,yatton-or Navya-. Navya-. u-tnnlev Bryant Ja!LnY with seven gals P fllains things 33ll interested? Don't klv and then?" he rr "Yes. I do." he said rlhatelse is there but V " . live young- It keeps an" ! , Tlcker-Tape: Quent ities to the boys over .' Press Assn. To .they are simply George ' .... Tho winasor . ooinir the reDe- with Ub.h." It's , . The feud between 3eebe ana Ben netui wv .-ad dudes) has the mid-M-ga-gog. The controversy lied New York like nothing ;ied shoes came in. Lb supporting FBK'a for mer has Deen pracucaujr .Lirat! bv the G.O.P. for tit Republic ahead of the .m , , . wiUKie-B support "president surprised many of who find it hard to un- aj bow a man wouia raurer immcan than a politician then a few New Yorkers are streets by gangsters it a universal indignation . . . cands of people are killed .jar-gangsters in the streets -,4. and you find many Araer- rith so-what attitude about FDR's physician reports b health is the best it's been , So is America's! & About Town: James J. and George Jessel, twin asters at the dinner for "Jim- ih in excellent form. And hj the ex-Mayor parried di sports, to wit: "Life would 7 dull if Jessel and I didn't someone every once In , . . Mrs. F.DE., Jr.. at a :bana ringside with ' her comfortably kicked off and ag on an apple . "... . Ger- Lawrence, a bundle of talent Britain . . . Winthrop Rocke- The lowdown on why he en- ii a buck private: He has a youth plan In the 'mak- 'o keep finger-pointers from "He was rich so he got a i) during the war!" he enlistee enlist-ee could have had a big Gov't 'i an oil expert astn Pilot Sammy Kaye al- overheard this repartee-hee 'its the other midnight. Two -ise-guys were mangling a ! in contemplative silence suddenly started dreaming f "Boy," he mused, "I ' "ere at Hialeah where it's "iwarm. We'd play the races - Some doush down nn on t. The nag would win and bet the winnings rn a Then for the third rsxA the winnings and bet on ,;ng at 4-to-l. And then tainute," interrupted his l think we oughta skip the ;JCM don't like that horse f A NEW YORKER: r"win: The Book of "Ji Club has selected "Blood. Tears" (Churchill's i? tpra petai sat the Warron ft ,.; , agrati on their recent ; ent ... The femme edi-nart edi-nart fashion mags are at Mach TT i a . . m .r rT dn Ior Ws show. . 'the Dark". . . Dorothy ,2" hinted here long ago. fe H??w syn. 3, ' er in the Post on NberWT ,auQWDUt Jr- Just l-frgh an umbrella whk -ooden handle... . federal iijJj Eemhardt because tte te F. ih "f?11 recall. h;tookme j Wat i didn't id thi. ... . Ib-rdrenewal by Con- Ask . tuuscription -liSmethe broad- I That -"jr ill t 1. , lnat Was mm w ... ... Ollt r.f" 1 Washington, D. C. WILLKIE AROUSES G.O.P. CfflEFS While Wendell Willkie made front page news in London favoring the lend-lease armament bill, a group of potent midwestern Republican leaders met to discuss what to do about him. That most of the G.O.P chiefs art hot under the collar because their erstwhile standard-bearer is behind the Roosevelt measure is putting it mildly. They are so sore they could bite nails. He put the Republican party on the spot on this highly, charged issue the last thing the boys wanted to happen. i THE NEW BRAIN TRUSTER 1 Tom Corcoran is famous for many things, one of them being his lack of punctuality. Always rushed with innumerable Jobs, he got hours behind be-hind with his engagements, and his favorite time for catching up with correspondence was Sunday afternoon and night Corcoran's first-born daughter arrived ar-rived several days after the doctors had predicted, and the dynamic braintruster took the delay very hard. But not his beauteous wife, Peggy. She was calm and certain everything every-thing would be all right Afterwards After-wards a friend asked her why she had been so confident "Oh," smiled Peggy, "who ever heard of a Corcoran being on time for an appointment?" LORD HALIFAX POSES ' From the point of view of the press. Lord Halifax has got off to a good start. After his talk with Hull, Halifax invited in-vited the press into the diplomatic reception room, where with his one good arm (his left hand is missing) he lit a cigarette and answered questions ques-tions with a deep voice and a wan smile. Oddity at this conference was the presence of the German newsman, Kurt Sell, correspondent for the official of-ficial Nazi news agency, D.N.B. Sell busily took notes while Halifax was saying, "When the history of this war comes to be written, it will say that Hitler lost the war in June of 1940." PERKINS VS. EVANS Agriculture department liberals, led by Milo Perkins, aggressive chief of the surplus marketing administration, administra-tion, have been gunning for Evans' scalp ever since the European war shut off cotton and wheat export markets, thus aggravating the economic eco-nomic plight of small farmers who make their entire livelihood from these crops. Perkins wants to meet the loss of foreign markets by less emphasis on "cash income" the guide-rule of big, commercial farmers and greater emphasis on the food stamp plan for disposal of surpluses at home. His group contends that small growers should be made more self-sustaining self-sustaining by less crop control, and by more diversified farming for domestic do-mestic consumption. Evans looks coldly upon any departure de-parture from the "cash income" principle as rank heresy, and views the food stamp program as a deterrent de-terrent on farm prices, rather than a benefit to needy in the cities and a way to dispose of surpluses on the farm That Perkins program stands high in the favor of Wickard was shown when the latter publicly advocated ad-vocated the policy, as soon as he was sure he would remain as secretary sec-retary o agriculture. NEW AAA WAR The Agricultural Adjustment administration, ad-ministration, has long rocked by backstage rowing. This year's is the fourth since the AAA was created in 1933. AAAdministrator Rudolph M. Evans Ev-ans plus certain aides have been accused of being in opposition to Secretary Claude Wickard's announced an-nounced policy of increasing federal aid to small, under-privileged farmers farm-ers and tenants. Evans has never enthused over such a program. He has consistently consistent-ly preached that the way to achieve higher commodity prices was through government loans and AAA benefit payments a system that has netted handsome dividends to large commercial farm operators but has reduced few mortgages for the little lit-tle fellow. Before Evans, there were the explosive ex-plosive George Peek, first AAA boss, who departed in 1934; Chester Davis, Da-vis, who rowed with Wallace; and Howard R. Tolley, Evans' immediate immedi-ate predecessor, who was shifted to the bureau of agricultural economics. econom-ics. All were "Liquidated" following follow-ing bitter policy rows over this same issue. MERRY-GO-ROUND Among the habiliments Jack Garner Gar-ner packed up when he left Washington Wash-ington was a suit of evening clothes. "What use will you have for those fancy duds in Texas?" a friend asked. "Oh," replied Garner, "we still have weddings and funerals there." The Capital Times, Madison. Wis , official daily of the LaFollette Progressive Pro-gressive party, and once a staunch supporter of Senator Wheeler, is now blasting his position on Ihe lend-lease lend-lease bilL ,,,, in Defense Experiments in Panama Canal Zone Pvt.? v - y v H - : v 1 .. . . . V V v fit - 1 Left: Machine gun-armed scout cars being unloaded from a barge at Gamboa, C. Z., after transportation from Gatun through the Panama CanaL The army is experimenting la moving cavalry forces and mechanized mech-anized equipment from Atlantic to Paciflo defense sectors by water because there is no highway across the Isthmus. Right: Mechanized cavalry, brought from Gatun to Gamboa by barge, speeds through Panama, Where French and British Are Still Allies '-mm ! .. . a . s'. 1 ''frfr'l Left: The famous desert-bred cavalry of France, proud and fearless fear-less men to whom freedom is the breath of life. After the French collapse they rode from Syria and Joined the forces of "Free" France under General De Gaulle. Swooping Swoop-ing like eagles, these spahis spur their Arab horses aver a desert dune: Right: To men like these hard-bitten Australian shock troops Mussolini's fortified Libyan bases of Bardia, Tobruk and Derna fell. These Aussies take time out for a snack before continuing their drive into Italian Libya. J.- mmmmm 4 v4 18 Drown, Fisherman Sinks After Crash i.i . :'': !'. vV'. -- '.1 Eighteen of the 23-man crew of the fishing schooner, Mary E. O'Dara, were lost when the craft struck an unknown vessel outside Boston bar-bor, bar-bor, and sank. Many ef the missing were drowned In their bunks, and others dropped to death ia the icy waters. This airplane view shows the masts of the sunken schooner above the waters, as a coast guard craft stands by. 350 Get Anti-Flu Vaccine Tests - mtjii e iispi'iiyljWIimW'ssW'LWl.'1 .W.'J'M I-111 .'lrrr"r Jl'1" 11 I 1 1 - I l I II ij vr- -;, -.-:; I 1 L-.- - Li Lz, '.h1- i-t. fciufc-tijt , u-av Bid for Loyalty t i ' 'I I t ' Is ' t li i i f r- , i '' i i' 1 1 - 'ff ' I i , Marshal Henri Petain (right) with Admiral Jean Darlan, French navy chief, leaving memorial services to France's colonial poilus, In Marseilles. Marseil-les. The gesture was seen as a Vichy bid to prevent any more colonies from joining the "Free French." On U. S. Mission f w wwww y 'n.wwi iwpw wjjy t -v - i 5 -1 .-I A vaccine developed by two Rockefeller Foundation workers, Dr. Ed-rin Ed-rin II Lennctte and F. L. Horsfall, has proved su successful on animals that it is now being tested out on humans. The new discovery is an ifli vacdle, developed at the Unirersiiy of Chicago Photo show. Chloe Both, sophomore, receiving an Injection from nurse Martha Cooley. Com. R. Wanamaker (left) and Com. E. O. McConnell, both of tbe V. S. Naval Reserves, board the Atlantic Clipper at riushing, L. I., on a government mission, as It takes off fr Lisbon, Portugal. AS w-. I fhl.Phillipr TOE AUTO HORN SOLUTION Mayor LaGuardia of New York Is In another campaign against automobile auto-mobile horns, but hizzoner makes the same mistake others make when he thinks anything can be done about auto horns except abolishing the darned things. Campaigns to soften the notes, decrease the volume vol-ume and dilute the pitch are silly. An auto horn is an auto horn anyway any-way you take it, the human thumb being what It Is today. Caricature of Mayor LaGuardia by Jack Rosen which won first prize recently In Waldorf-Astoria employ ees exhibition In arts and crafts. The mere presence of a horn on an automobile transforms a driver into a speed maniac, a pig, and a fathead with the manners of a dictator dic-tator and the ethics of a gangster. He can own a revolver without the slightest yen to use It; he can possess a shotgun without the least Impulse to use it, but put an automobile auto-mobile horn under his control and he becomes a potential assassin with all the instincts of a hungry hyena. "It Is the horn," said Elmer Twitchell today, "that gives an auto owner the Nero complex, shucks him of all remnants of civilized Im pulses and makes him a plain damned fool, filled with the idea that all he has to do is to press the button to make the whole world jump. "I don't care whether it is a loud horn or a soft horn, a bass horn or a canary, a blaster or a boop-a-doop-er, nothing can prevent the owner from making a nuisance out of it, and Mayor LaGuardia is suffering from drooping intelligence If he thinks otherwise. "All the reckless driving, all the violations of automobile laws, all the disrespect for the rights of other highway users, and most of the auto accidents are due to the horn, and to nothing else. Take that horn off the car and the driver would be forced to depend on common sense, "Back in the horse and buggy days you didn't see teams crashing Into one another at every crossroad or wobbling all over the road at breakneck speed, did you? And why not? Because they never had horns on horses! "Yes sir, this world started going go-ing savage the day the first horn was clamped to a gasoline vehicle. It started swelling up with inconsid-erateness, inconsid-erateness, self-importance and the to-hell-wlth-everybody-else spirit the first time an auto designer put a button under a car owner's calloused thumb. It converted a nation of tolerant, tol-erant, easy-going, kindly folks into a country of bad-mannered, jittery, wild-riding, mean and homicidal dogs. It made bigger and better hospitals the never-ceasing need of America. "And there will be no change until un-til the horn is removed, made unconstitutional un-constitutional and plowed under for all time. Man won't be so reckless, so selfish and so pigheaded once he has to depend on brakes Instead of breach of the peace!" CHILBLAINS? "Don't rush the season!" says the man Who claims he likes winter sports; But yesterday I caught him with A folder on Southern resorts! Doris Irving. SHORT STORY A motor car, A little horn, A human thumb . . . And peace is "gorn." Women's hats for spring and summer sum-mer are being taken from the old family album. Instead of out of old numbers of "Puck" and "Judge." A New Jersey court holds that anybody walking on a moving escalator esca-lator does so at his or her own risk. Not only that, but it looks so darned silly. Elmer Twitchell, in our opinion, always had the right idea on escalators esca-lators and energy conservation. He always sits down on them. Jerkin, Hat Can Be Knit in Quick Time r -Mjfeli r 2695 THIS jiffy knit jerkin and match-(no match-(no hnniA snr-h nrnrtifftl as sets, are quickly made in German- town yarn. Pattern 2695 contains directions for knitted hat and Jerkin In sizes 12-14 end 18-18; U-lustrations U-lustrations of them and stitches; materials required. Snd IS tenia In coins (or this patters to Th Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dept. ea Eighth Ave., New York. N. Y. Send rder to: sewing Circle Needlecraft Dept. 11 Elcbtk Ave. New York Encloie 13 cents la coins for Pattern Pat-tern No Name Address How To Relieve Bronchitis Creomulslon relieves promptly because be-cause It goea right to the seat of tha trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid natura to soothe and heal raw, tender; Inflamed In-flamed bronchial mucous membranes. mem-branes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulslon with the understanding un-derstanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you ara to hava your money back. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis First Step in Progress Discontent is the first step in th progress of a man or a nation. Oscar Wilde. EAR EXERCISER AIDS DEAFENED Our ears in common with other parts . of our body need exercise and stimulation. stimu-lation. If we do not use our ears they become dormant and eventually useless. use-less. The Falcon Aural Exerciser is made to exercise the ears along the same principle that sound is created, through waves of rarefied and condensed con-densed air. The Falcon Aural Exerciser Exer-ciser speeds up sound vibrations and helps strengthen the ears to function as they should. The Falcon is simple to use. Electrically operated, Inex- fensive te purchase. For full particu-ars particu-ars write to Falcon Aural Exerciser, Suite 516 Twohy Bldg., San Jose, Calif. Seek to Find Nothing is so difficult but that It may be found out by seeking. Terence. "FAMILY OF ELEVEN and' all take ADLERIKA when needed." fW. NIowa) When partly digested foods decay, forming gas, bringing on sour stomach or bloating, try ADLERIKA. Get it TODAY. AT YOUR DRUG STORE Soaring Envy Envy, like fixe, ever soars upward. up-ward. Livy. Salt Lake's NEWEST HOTEL li'lOl1--' - ? 1 I. "I I V 1 J - . .'4 3 Hotel TEMPLE SQUARE Oppwite Mannta Teaple HIGHLY RECOMMENDED Rates $153 h $3.03 It's a mark cf dist'mctios to stoa t this beautiful hostelry ERNEST C BOSSIIEK. UtU |