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Show THE I.EHI SUN, I.EM1. UTAH Making America's Speediest Plane T-n: l-. V By VIRGINIA VALE MWd by Western Newspaper Union.) !f ARCH OF TIME camera- 1. men went on a long and ilous voyage to film some he material used in "Crisis 3the; Atlantic" they went m Canada to England ard a tanker in convoy. film also includes the first jures to arrive here from enland since that strategic nd has become so impor- l 1 '' Msis In the Atlantic" vividly rays the many aspects of the zgle to keep the sea lanes open iat war materials and food can I bat to Britain, and depicts as the Joint U. S.-Canadian defense . Jta involving bases from the Arc- the South Atlantic. Iff a film p; don't miss itl n? : i Jjan Donlevy has been spending btf cat time learning to do some thing that will be quite useless in pri vate life. In "The Jreat Man's Lady.' a Paramount - pro duction, he plays the part of a professional pro-fessional gambler, a master hand at cheating. And what makes it all the more painful is the fact that Donlevy r uas ail nuuuiicuk.c H " of aU card games. at the game of Authors .tte Davis Is at It again, play. M ef the most unpleasant worn- rer teen on the screen. It's for Little Foxes," RKO's screen HTmi f the tremendously suc-li'ol suc-li'ol elay. It was RKO, yon may J 1. tfcat set Miss Davis sauarelv at feet, dramatically, by casting the heroine of "Of Human TSSmst?' a role few actresses -ct td have had the courage to take. ck It, and made movie history. Oil Xfr Shoj,: ' lna Neagle does an entire dance ier while submerged in a glass filled with wa- ttnn her new pic- Back ll S- n fed lM.irVj. k -A .n-.-,.imWMl 1 Bp I 5-1 -lth ; TriLiJ .KPT Workmen are shown swarmine over Lockheed P-38 Interceptors on the production line (left) In the Lock heed plant at Burbank, Calif. After a P-38 was clocked at 458 miles an hour in its first public performance, army officials acclaimed it "America's fastest plane." Right: One or tne am jt-js 10 come on mo prouuuwuu line. It the background are several Lockheed-Hudson bombers waiting to be flown to Britain. . " . . , 4... .... . - .. Defenders of Africa Carry On I. . i:-;v:vx-ww:i w twm ff :xn AvvH js mil n' "Sunny." vagland she won ENfils for swim- and diving, so im,ot: into a 'mSt $W cos J2. and combined 8 "talents as a '"aner and a REDer. The story's uch (0 New Orleans IbodC the Mardl and Ray Bol- md John Carroll head the sun- tP ng cast The under-water dance M ..stunt new to pictures new, as etc to Miss JN eagle, we migm auu. f 4 ' Ivn Ik S 1 .&Wi:&4$$MiM$$L wen Gen. Jan Smuts (second from right), prime minister of South Africa, poring over maps of Africa with Lieut. Gen. Allan Cunningham (second from left), governor of Kenya Colony. They are shown with their aids planning the defense of Africa. Inset: South African troops who are fighting In behalf of the British empire In East Africa, with captured Italian guns and material in front of the Fort of Mega. Anna Neagle ISO,! ED the g! of 9? Bob Hope's grand- r is helping to extinguish incen- ARnflris in the English village ;tSe he lives. "My health at pres-Sait pres-Sait li m:h better than my disposi- hf ' wrote his grandson. "I GELE mind staying up at night to Jf our pictures, but I hate to have Vepdss , ny sleep just to put out anwsile Bob is slated to do an- German Blitz Warfare on Two Fronts ege; of ' those hilarious comedies rARTE pipette Goddard; it's called j fi'fj K-jrder Farm," and sounds as vice, miit even top "The Cat and short 'angry" and "The Ghost Break- C.ir previous collaborations. ,,a iei Moorehead, who plays the LL Her In Orson Welles remarka- rTAG sCiazen Kane," first encoun- , city, ;eiies when he was five and ,as ot much older. He strolled MENJa ,tel lobby with his father, md cubing a concert which he had ,d",Vrd, and dohig it so dramati- that she never forgot him. She r LAlta her film debut in "Citizen V' nd gives a beautiful, sin- t CAKWerformance. In fact, the whole JLAR.krHj that you tor get that the Sand" . . aey seem so real. . ..jra Stanwyck and Robert 1 1 Ml 'didn't teU even their best is that they were going oft on st Indies cruise; waited un- jf before the boat sailed to telegrams announcing their I It's their first vacation to- In 18 months, an,d their sec 1p together smce they were 4 three years ago. They I as Mr. and Mrs. A S. Brugh, 1 to avoid advance plans for na at their various ports of AND ENDS ranter Broth- ed college students to man the ""Dive Bomber" and "The Plight ?the army draft left a shortage tanks of extras . . "Robin il lining lobe a Renuhlie serial. . t , o-"-o ----- . - 2 " Te Rogers in the hue role eraonaa - (umm(-ng, wm fce Deanna Dur- ni Iimg man in "Almost an An-J An-J T 4 . Edgar Bergen and Charlie Kitcadf f er beginning their fifth year .i"2Hl coffee program and when - n4 kited Bergen toasn't at all sure . j tould turn out a script week LOnlVkl Pause That Refreshes on the TAB (i been renewed for another 26 a mrt "TO Hit 7 l . .- - ' 80k. ' v Tot A .vTjV 4 . th ii i i 'i 11 'fc J These pictures show German blitzkrieg machines at rest after vic tories In Greece and North Africa. At top, Stuka dive-bombing pianes being serviced at a Greek airport with gas, oil and bombs. Below: Some of the huge German tanks are shown in tne XNorin Airican aesert El Brega, after rushing the British back Into Egypt. Secretary of Navy at Army Review Last Time Out Sorrptarv of Naw Frank Knox shown on reviewing stand at Fort Dix, v. J.. dnrin the first all-out review of the Forty-fourth division. The review, staged In the navy secretary's honor, was part of a Seventy- eighth division reunion. (L. to a.) secretary mox, lkw. utu. nu5a Drum, Rear Admiral Adolphus Andrews and Major Gen. Clifford Powell. Big Hank Greenberg, (right) the most valuable man in the American league, looks wistfully out towards the diamond before starting his last game prior to his induction in the army. Several hundred friends came to say good-by. First Venezuelan jwLjwiy ,w l . A ) 1 :l - Washington, D. C. SHIP PREMIUMS TO JAPAN It is hard to believe, but the government gov-ernment of the United States actual ly is paying war risk insurance to the Japanese for helping to insure the S.S. America, pride of the U. S. merchant marine. This Is Just part of the revelations over re-insurance which are break-1 ing this week at the justice department. depart-ment. These probes also show that when a vessel is injured. Axis in surance companies get all the data regarding its cargo, time of departure, depar-ture, destination, and the interior plan of the ship. Thus, despite all the censorship, of Secretary of the Navy Knox, Ger many has had an easy means of knowing all about every ship that leaves the United States. This is accomplished when Amer ican insurance companies, because of the heavy risk involved in insur ing a cargo in wartime, reinsure with various foreign companies. In other words, they sell part of the policy abroad, thus distribute the risk. That is how Japan makes a lush profit on insuring American vessels, even vessels owned by the U.S. A Last year congress passed a law providing war risk insurance for U. S. shipping, but the maritime commission, for reasons best known to itself, has declined to take ad vantage of the law. ; Commission members state quite frankly that they wanted to throw the business to ! private insurance concerns as long as private insurance was available. DEBATE FREEZING AXIS FUNDS One of the most vigorous inner cabinet debates in a long time concerned con-cerned the question of freezing German-Italian funds on deposit in the United States. In a heated discussion. dis-cussion. Secretary of State Hull and Secretary of Commerce Jesse Jones were the only cabinet members who stood out for letting the two Axis powers continue to spend money as they wished in this country. Many people may not realize It, but whereas the government has frozen the funds of all the conquered nations France, Norway, Denmark, Den-mark, Belgium, Holland, Greece, etc. it continues to permit the conquering con-quering nations to use their money in the U. S. A. in any manner they wish. For Instance, Germany gets more than a million dollars monthly from the lease of patents to American companies.: This is paid in -American dollars and can be spent for anti-American propaganda or anything any-thing else, or shipped back to Germany. Ger-many. Italian diplomatic attaches, for instance, were found carrying $2,000,000 in U. S. currency in a suitcase from New Orleans to Mexico Mex-ico for propaganda purposes. Another An-other $2,000,000 of U. S. currency was shipped to Buenos Aires by the Italian embassy. Meanwhile, France, for example, no longer sells perfume, etc., to the United States, but sells to Germany, Ger-many, which in turn ships the perfume per-fume through Vladivostok to the United States. Reason is that French funds are frozen, so the French can get no money from the U. S. A. But German funds are not frozen, so French trade to the United States now Increases Nazi profits and helps build up trade channels for the future. STREAMLINED FOODS Because of the acute shipping shortage, food items for shipment to Britain are being selected for high vitamin and calorie content, also for minimum bulk and weight In general, preference will be given giv-en to concentrated and dried foods, rather than bulky canned goods such as fruits, which contain a considerable con-siderable amount of water. Tomatoes Toma-toes are an exception because the juice they are packed in is high in vitamins. One item urgently desired by the British is dehydrated vegetable soup, 12 tons of which will make 700.000 bowls. A plan is under consideration to transport some of this concentrated food in the big bombers being ferried fer-ried across the Atlantic, which can easily carry a 12-ton load. The $400,000,000 that has been allocated al-located for the food-aid program will be used to buy 15,000,000 cases of canned tomatoes, 20,000,000 cases of evaporated milk, 50,000,000 pounds of lard, 250,000,000 pounds of cheese, several million pounds of Wilshire cured ham, mulions of powdered eggs, and thousands of tons of dehydrated de-hydrated vegetable soup, dried raisins rai-sins and prunes. While gigantic to itself, the program pro-gram is only about 3 per cent of the U. S. food bill, which in 1940 was $12,000,000,000. MERRY-GO-ROUND The Nelson Rockefeller committee for cultural relations with South America wasn't at all keen about i the Douglas Fairbanks good-will pilgrimage. pil-grimage. They resented Franklin 'Roosevelt Jr., close friend of Fair-! Fair-! banks, putting this one over with 'his father while they weren't look ing. Mayor LaGuardia declined with IllllUrW lkji71K!C& Exposed Defect Let a defect, which is possibly but small, appear undisguised. A fault concealed is presumed to be great. Martial. Good Axe Few The good, alas! are few: they are scarcely as many as the gates cf the Thebes or the mouths of the Nile. Juvenal, WANTED DRY BONES In Truck Loads or Carloads HIGHEST PRICES PAID . Writ w Wire COLORADO ANIMAL BY-PRODUCTS COMPANY 463 SOUTH 3RD WEST SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH . or their aurest knadMS locsttd at OGDEN - SPANISH FORK - LOGAN HEBEt CITY Also buyers of Hides, Pelts, Furs and Wool HIGHE3T MARKET PRICES PAID ALWAYS Various Wishes I had only one heart; grief, twe Anger wishes that all mankind tear-glands; and pride, two benl had only one neck; love, that it I knees. Richter. torn 3 r ""r-SM There's a wealth of rich Juice in individually-inspected Sunkist Oranges t And it's a natural source of vitamins. Eight ounces gives you all the vitamin C you need each day to feel your best Help you with vitamins A, Bi and G; calcium cal-cium and other minerals! V t " V" ' 4 K 4 J - V'Jj! Mm Euy to peal, slice and sec-don, sec-don, Sunkist Oranges are ideal for fresh summer sal tds and desserts. The trademarkonthe skin identifies the finest fruit of 14,000 cooperating California Califor-nia growers. Btst farjuict- OOUorala mut tnm fwhnt V "V BiUm n?frS Bollywood CBS, 6:15 P.f, E.D.3.T.-Mon WoJ,, Frl J Gen. I. M. Angarita, elected pres ident of Venezuela, succeeding Gen-t FDR.g request he head eral Contreras. General Angarita new Ciyil Defense Commis-said Commis-said he was In full accord with west-, . indicating to the Boss that he em hemisphere defense. - wants a cabinet Job or nothing. THE ADVERTISER INVITES YOUR iOTUID & UTQOM Tha aJvertiser assures us that his goods Vrf JSfLir AnliJ Wli are god. Ha invites us to compare them with others. We do. Should he relax tor a minute and let his standards drop, we discern IL We tell others. We cease buying his product Therefore he keepe up the high standard of his wares, and the prices as low as possible. . h |