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Show M ( THE LEHI SUN. LEHI. UTAH Germany Prepares for British Air Attack wrvru . - - - - - - suv w 5 greaj hat lj l. riend J, 1 1Kb. Painful es and u2e jrrower.r , ht theft' !twed to melt , 54 to i closed Hout Town: P"" . Jhrnrrft i a Jf'8. Hnne stanzas tue pu- "77 a ilhiisb divorce m seui color jc Hs. Thti upper wrpartj spacious i into the i ! The ti and the t enameled vas one o Paper k were fas the fuii font of ft stool with side tack other set or makiiii are Ulustn Tiei whlcl lor our r frilled j r tre la t escripdoj istratet S ijr be onto by MEib with loe t 'd. Send on H 8PEAS1 Nwl looks 1 Mt MMtntM 'oles i ith pok temper,' life, but rsofdaj ry year, sun is i and tet ig the ' than ith pole, t" being day." n TIC lent lllltmj Bell-iti Ti ani tw as i C0!-3 romptg i seat! and l aidK '.10OO bracelet Chaplin Powers moaei Ua.- ...fitness in "1C r. wuiht "new evidence" S snatch to Dewey's J President Wilson's once active in N. Y. lit-. fnunnery in Pondicherry J Quentin Reynolds' (0rder of posies iu '.velt every day. He rj "the ideal woman. HIN a month it costs to Tijormandie and its crew jNY. Tne com iui French tunas nerc . . . ..n.Mnn's Dian 10 ereti uio 'independent radio station axmontns . . . " '.jnimation of the merger of ' . ffi'Hvn and Man- wthat they've applied to .-for a $2,000,000 touch. L Gwynne's escape from a I l UA A ma-pi. i jation camp w n ""-sulate ""-sulate at Lisbon . . . Al-;tsoii Al-;tsoii Terhune's appearance iter a two-year illness which kOed him ... The first a ever issued by the Dies tn George Sylvester 4 Nazi propagandist. How was never forced to ap- iefore that group the sub- still valid isn't it? . . . ;iiver Hardys. .n Nishbu of Nepal, India, sits to return there but can't visa for Stephanie Markin, for-iof for-iof gal in "American Ju ne's his Girl Friday at the Uaitisnn . . . The Buick aj which will build 125 miliars mil-iars worth of Pratt-Whitney ;i this year . . . The 200 a a month that iisner will make at their new Kan- riant ... . The Frigidaire rfuch is making so many 50- i machine guns "that we know where to store them!" Cuban political exiles, some m were responsible for re-: re-: entry of that shipload of ref-m ref-m the liner "St. Louis." Now 's in the same fix . . . The consul's denial that he i the bills of those ousted of- ... The way intimates will :4atAnn Sheridan is keeping image to George Brent a se- te the sake of his career" The $25,000 Renoir naintinff Jose bought for Eleanor Holm. and when he asked her if ranted it hung in her room warned: "You're not gonna T nails in my wallf " iiway Alien (No. 3) Mint bring along a press (to see that the naners got tee) when he registered for at. He considered it a chance to his country not to adver- patriotism ... He doesn't aimself on his ahilitv tn kilo 3t To him 9 Uto i. Used to flv in his haolr from the roof ... He at- :your success to ability and to gooa breaks . . . The E Which he square guys . . . He doesn't ught club m. c. to Dut him every night He needs the T5 badly to be caught any in his ntm ho1 Wt work ... To him a is 1aii ttosfi. ith W thei oryi ;io Bronq en t ri akes e of- a't know what it means to win on." To him a bun -ethmg you eat in the morning W breakfast ... He has -toe to a psychiatrist for any trouble-such as a com-' com-' oroken heart or the d. Va he has a broken heart, 36ai it but the Pal ,t 5 ' it . . W .9 1 - - . uucsu t even ""at schizophrenia is! ' had trouble getting a ''Ul hi oirl , , o ween r ran-Tne ran-Tne cot intn r wen Invitod . . X. the latest picture. ', 4. at popular prices ta r31 tOWn WfoVe h It v:- " wtiUiB 11 111 IS uupuse "0 TQU Vtifh K..-J wtion whpn vm,'.. u tot. " 7 "lva troubles . . Mn in j i "'viauai nas a jm- ueea 001 be an ouunaing boarrt ft,- ,31e empty and tiresome ide right i ever his as. is rather the WnrH . .. taints "'"acier- fWU Or Ituira CI . . aa - uuer rai 4b, 8 mea weren't ... "b rara tn mg.v .l 5ha,v.; U1V room He Sked h mght club beca .r1 bemir with S O. v - ""UWgiTlS - "ause It wan rU, "i the .nu. . ' 'xtifa-.J T. aencit-th sda v: Johnny and tie has no or- col- !'I ise so ier an all- enemies 4 Tan . can't TQS ttat te New him set w,i0 profile series on By VIRGINIA VALE (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) TN "BILLY THE KID," J- Robert Taylor's new starring star-ring vehicle for Metro, there is one scene in which all of the characters have to check their six shooters with the sheriff before attending a mass meeting. Each morning morn-ing on the set, the assistant director takes up a collection from all the extras and bit players. He "frisks" them not of their guns, but of their wrist watches. Here's the reason. The other day Robert Taylor was playing a scene tn the back room of a saloon. Also in the scene were Gene Lockhart, as the bad man, Lon Chaney Jr., Norman Willis, Grant Withers and several western type extras. With hand on the door about to exit, Taylor Tay-lor spoke his line "What time is it?" Lockhart was about to make the reply called for by the script when Director David Miller called "Cut!" One of the bearded extras had forgotten for-gotten where he was and automatically automati-cally pulled back bis cuff to look at his very modern wrist watch. "Gone With the Wind" started Ona Munson on a career of what she's afraid will de-. velop into type casting, cast-ing, the bugaboo of actors. She did "Belle Watling" in "Gone etc." and then played another "shady lady"-in the picture "Wagons Westward." Now' she's set for the same sort of part in "Lady From New Orleans," a story laid in the period of the Louisiana Purchase. It's a relief re-lief to her to do those "Big Town" broadcasts with Edward G.Robinson. Ona Munson Naturally, everything possible is going to be done to put Shirley Tem ple back at the top ol the star list wnen she goes to work for f jf.4'ss Metro. The wealthy little miss (she has more than a million in the bank) will appear ap-pear in the screen version of "Panama Hattie," a success ful musical now running run-ning on the New York stage, with Ann Sothern, Elea-Shiriey Temple nor Powell, Connie Russell and Red Skelton. Shirley starts her "comeback" at a salary of $2,500 a week. s.i . "The Lady Eve" gives Henry Fonda an opportunity for which he's grateful the chance to wear his own clothes on the screen for the first time in three years, and to have his hair cut. The only Other time it's been trimmed during those three years was when he got that prison hair-cut for "The Grapes of Wrath." His roles have called for straight drama with a minimum of comedy, and the only time he kissed a heroine on the screen was in "Chad Hanna." In "The Lady Eve" he wears 14 different outfits everything from full dress to silk pajamas and indulges in-dulges in some bits pf torrid love-making. love-making. As for Barbara Stanwyck, she wears the longest bob ever worn by a star 18 inches; she's been growing it for the last five years, ever since "Stella Dallas." She wears 25 stunning costumes, and indulges in-dulges in slapstick comedy, in her role of a woman card-shark. Horace Heidt has finally escaped his reputation as "the man with the trained dog." Before his orchestra hit the national networks and Heidt's name became a synonym for scintillating scintil-lating syncopation, Horace had a vaudeville "act featuring Lobo, an amazing dog. Booking agents always al-ways thought of Lobo when Heidt's name was mentioned. But that's all in the past now, since the smashing success of his "Pot O'Gold" program. pro-gram. Overcoming unfortunate breaks was nothing new to the band-leader. At the University of California he was well on bis way to football fame as a tackle when he found himself on the bottom of a scrimmage scrim-mage pile-up, and was carried off the field with a broken back. Lying in the hospital, he decided to organize or-ganize an undergraduate orchestra to help pay bis way through college. The orchestra gave him conducting experience which helped him on his way to the top ranks of radio band-leading. ODDS A1SD ENDS-Warner Bros, releases "Christmas Under Fire," another an-other Quentin Reynolds commentary short; the first was "London Can Taht It? ... The proceeds go to British war relief; "London" raised S26,400 for the fund . . . "The Trial of Mary Duean" has become "The Trial of Mary Andrews" but it probably tcill be the tame old trial . . . Rudy Fallee's sponsor spon-sor bought the rinhts to Rudy's new theme song, Til Cite You m Smile for a Smile" and presented them to Vallee as gift . . . Gene Autry, of the movies and radio'l "Melody Ranch." uill appear ap-pear in m rodeo act at the Fort W ortk stock show in March. ' & ti I Wfv I ; Iff V t7&&x?x$? J . X"f' ;'; feyjn v .mil ; : There have been many pictures of British preparations to ward oft Nail Invasion attempts, but very few showing Nazi preparations against British effort. These pictures show the preparations being made by the Germans Ger-mans on the coast of occupied France, to withstand the daily batterings of the RAF. At left, an anti-aircraft gun Is placed in position. Center: The observer mans his Instrument as the "trigger man" sits ready to blast the invading British. Right: Gun loaders Insert clips of 37 mm. shells. Gas Mask Drill and 'Dipsy Doodle Dip' ("J :'( Z ' -iMf aW4 4J Ji )l Soldiers of the Forty-fourth division (left) racing through a smoke screen, to which a little tear gas has been added, during a gas mask drill at Fort Dix, N. J. The gi was sprung on the boys by surprise to test their powers of detection. Right: Members of Company "E," 101st Infantry, try out a new march relief step called the "Dipsy Doodle Dip" at Camp Edwards, Falmouth, Mass. The boys take a dip on every tenth step. Mighty Mites to Haul Giant Planes i-: : :-: V '-I j , r x t. , 1 j II Ml. -i-w.'j-x ....w.v i-.w-yv . i. x -"i wiimuBwim wn ' www,mi . '"''"' '.. 1 ' " rVJI 3 tva24l2 , 02415 V ! - t -1 .-".-.VX-,VV,.'AVW'V--fl V S It Tugs are usually associated with harbors and shipping, but their modern counterparts are found at Randolph field, Texasi where tiny plane tugs are used to tow the sky giants to and from their hangars. Picture shows Sergt. R. R. Arnold checking in a shipment of the "mighty mites" at the "West Point of the Air." Another Launching for U. S. Defense 4 J '.V Football Czar i 'it;:;,-"i Elmer Layden, football coach at Notre Dame and one of the "Four Horsemen," who has accepted the post of commissioner of professional football a post comparable to that of Judge Landis, czar of baseball. Layden will draw $20,000 a year. Pair of Queens i 1 r 01 i7 fsi1-A-.'ft;'' ' The 158-foot anti-submarine net tender Locust Is launched Great Lakes fashion (sldewise) at Cleveland, Ohio. It is the first of 12 under construction by the American Shipbuilding company. As in building build-ing Ameri"3n submarines, special attention Is given to constructional strength net tenders against depth charge attack. Winter and summer queens oi Twin Cities at opening of St. Paul's winter carnival. Betty McDonald, (right) queen of St. Paul's winter carnival, and Joyce Moyen, Minneapolis' Minne-apolis' summer queen. lUeleascol by Western Newspaper Union.) SENATOR ALDRICII AND IIIE NATIONAL WEALTH SOME YEARS AGO the then Senator Sen-ator Aldrich of Rhode Island said to me In his office in Washington: "People would be best served if all the wealth of the nation might be controlled by, say, a dozen men. These men would realize their responsibility re-sponsibility and see to it that no one might go hungry or cold." "Yes, Senator," I replied, "that possibly might prove true if you picked the right 12 men. I presume you believe you should be one of them? I believe I should be, and the man who is sweeping Pennsylvania avenue will agree with your premise if he, too, is to be one of the 12." With a smile spreading over his usually dignified countenance, he said: "My statement was a foolish one, let's forget it". That it was foolish is evidenced by the constantly Increasing amount of national wealth and its ever-increasing equalization among people of the nation. When that statement was made, only a limited few could own an automobile. au-tomobile. Today there is a car for every four people in America. THE SO-CALLED RICH MAN is merely the custodian of wealth. He cannot take his accumulation with him either to heaven or to helL He must leave it to be divided among posterity. The old adage of three generations from shirt sleeves to shirt sleeves still works. ONE OF TnE ROLES OF A KING DAVID LLOYD GEORGE told me an interesting story in London in the fall of 1918. I had offered congratulations con-gratulations on his having settled the Welsh miners' strike and getting the men to go back to work, with their grievances to be settled when the war ended. "But I did not do that Job," said Lloyd George. "I thought I could, for those miners are my people, but I tried and failed. It was His Majesty who accomplished what I could not. He went alone to Wales. He went to the miners' meetings, called on many of them in their homes, pled with them as one Englishman Eng-lishman to another to forget their grievances until the war was won. They went back to the mines for the king, not for me." It gave me a new idea as to what King George meant to the English Eng-lish people, and his influence with them. VON LUCKNER IT IS REPORTED that Count Felix von Luckner is in command of a German sea raider operating in the Pacific. In the first World war. Count Von Luckner commanded the Seeadler. I knew him in this coun try after the war. He was proud of what he had accomplished for his native country, but especially proud of not having caused the death of a single individual during all of his operations. He said he did not be lieve the killing of non-combatants helped In any way in winning a war, If I had to be captured by a German raider, I should hope it might be commanded by Count Felix von Luckner. WHEN PROSPECTORS MADE FORTUNES AND CAREERS IN THE EARLY YEARS of this century Jack Hamill and Percy Robblns were partners prospecting in the Canadian northland for gold. Later Robbins, a trained mining engineer, en-gineer, became the managing director direc-tor of one of the big gold mines at TImmins, Ontario. When we entered en-tered the first World war he, as an American citizen, returned to Chicago Chi-cago and Joined the army. After the war he went to South Africa as the managing director of the De Beers diamond mines. At the time of his death some two years ago, Robbins was operating big dredges on a placer gold field at Candle, Alaska, on the shores of the Arctic ocean. Jack Hamill has been in the millionaire mil-lionaire class a dozen times, and has been broke equally as many times. Today he controls big copper cop-per mines in the northwest Canadian Cana-dian territories, and is mining pitch blend and extracting radium at Great Bear lake, beyond the Arctic circle in Canada. This represents a couple of intensely in-tensely interesting careers of men who have done things in the wide-open wide-open spaces, men who have added to the wealth of the world. They are, and were, of a type that is worth knowing. FRIENDLY AMERICA STRANGER. There is no such individual in-dividual in any small city or town of rural America. In these places all are friends. On my first day in a town I had never visited before, each person I passed gave me a cheerful, friendly greeting. The little children told me their names and their parents' names. I was not a stranger in a strange place. I was surrounded by friends in a place strange to me. It was the friendliness of rural America. V 71 M iut.-JLmitmmik k-Si ih m tdM Pattern No. 2588 PVERYONE'S favorite, these modern, easy-to-do designs.' Embroider them on towel or pillow pil-low case and let your needlework score a hit. Pattern 2588 contains a transfer pattern of 12 motifs averaging 4i by 6',4 Inches; color schemes; materials required; illustrations illus-trations of stitches. Send order to: Bewlnc Circle Needlecraft Dept. 82 Elghtb Ave. New York Enclose IS cents in coins for Pattern Pat-tern No Name Address Do Your Meals Talk Back? This is often a symptom of acid indigestion. in-digestion. Sour stomach and heartburn heart-burn frequently follow unwise eating and drinking. AD LA Tablets relieve quickly. Get ADLA from your druggist. drug-gist. ...... .v,-.. ... Stuffing Oneself A man may as well expect to glow stronger by always eating as wiser by always reading. Too much overcharges nature, and turns more into disease than nourishment. nour-ishment. Jeremy Collier. , ii MIDDLE-AGE WOMEN S HEED THIS ADVICEII Thousands of women era helped to go smiling smil-ing thru distress peculiar pecul-iar to women caused by this period In life with Lydla E. Fink- Vom'a l..,afaM. rnm kSa pound famous Xor OV3r 60 years. Plnkham's Compound made especially for women has helped thousands to relieve such weak, nervous feelings due to this functional disturbance. Try ltl Man Is Affected Histories make men wise; poets, witty; the mathematics, subtile; natural philosophy, deep; morals, grave; logic and rhetoric, able to contend. Bacon. JUST A DASH IN FTATHERS ADVERTISING ADVERTISING represents the leadership of a nation. It points the way. We merely follow follow to new heights of comfort, of convenience, of happiness. As time goes on advertising advertis-ing is used more and more, and as it i3 used more we all profit more. It's the way advertising has of bringing a profit to everybody concerned, the consumer included |