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Show THE LEW SUN. LEIU. UTAH Fear Record Bill Conqu of Pr,U:. e ina i Portrait of a Hero: , One of the unsolved mysteries of history is how Custer hurdled the military promotion system and overnight over-night rose from a mere lieutenant to a general ... All anyone knows is that he returned to headquarters one day after being out on a mission, mis-sion, and chums greeted him as , "General" ... Custer thought they L1JJI . 1 U nlionira luuuuig, uecauso us boanted that he'd be a general before be-fore the war was over, and be was all set to start punching. One of his friends grabbed him by the arm and took him to his tent where he found an envelope containing his commission addressed to "Brigadier "Briga-dier General' George Armstrong Custer" . . j Custer, who was only 23 years old, turned pale and passed out cold. " Buy Defense Bonds -Custer Is the man who turned the tide of the Civil war by saving the Union army from defeat at Gettys burg. At the time of the game 01 Gettysburg he was about 13 miles away. His brigade had been ordered or-dered (along with the rest of the cavalry) to wait at Big Roundtop, where .Jeb Stuart and his Confederates Confed-erates were expected to attack . . . Stuart fooled the Yankees by attacking at-tacking from the opposite direction instead . . . Hearing Stuart's gunfire, gun-fire, Custer disobeyed the orders he had received, headed straight toward to-ward the sound of the guns and, charging four times, stopped the Confederate forces dead in their tracks . , . But for Custer's trigger thinking, the Union armies would The bitter Irony is that the man who was defeated (because of Custer's Cus-ter's coup) was Fitzhugh Lee, the divisional commander of the Confederate Con-federate attack. Lee was the instructor in-structor who had saved Custer from being expelled from West Point by reducing his demerits. Buy Defense Bonds-One Bonds-One of the greatest military wizards wiz-ards of all time, Custer was almost expelled from West Point "for hav ing the worst record" of any student stu-dent there . . . Any cadet who gets 100 demerits (over a period of six months) is automatically tossed out of the military academy. During Dur-ing his first half year at West Point Custer piled up 129 demerits. (He was saved by a sympathetic instruc tor who reduced them) . , . In his studies he was at the bottom of his class, and probably the only reason he was graduated was that the Civil war started and the Union' army needed officers. Buy Defense Bonds -Custer always believed in fighting an enemy when he saw one, without with-out stopping to consider the cost ;. . . When he was a kid, he once 'attended a dance and noticed one of his enemies poking fun at him outside by making faces and gestures ges-tures through the window , . ..Custer ..Cus-ter rushed up to the window and pushed his fist right through the pane into the guy's snoot. Buy Defense Bonds Custer was a showman who knew how to do things in a manner that hit people between the eyes. At the end of the Civil war, the army paraded pa-raded in review before the President Presi-dent and other dignitaries in front of the White House . . . Just as he approached the reviewing stand, his horse reared and started to run away . . With a flourish, Custer mastered it and onlookers cheered wildly as Custer galloped back into his place in line and passed the reviewing re-viewing stand a second time . . . He Insisted it was an accident, but rivals argued that his horse never acted up before or after that parade. Boy Defense Bonds-It Bonds-It took a month to make Custer's last stand for the film, "They Died With Their Boots On" . . . Historians Histori-ans believe the actual battle couldn't have lasted more than from half to three-quarters of an hour, Custer's men were so hopelessly outnumbered outnum-bered . . . Although Sitting Bull Is usually credited with having been in charge of toe massacre, actually he was as far away from the battle as his horse could get him. As soon as he heard of Custer's defeat. Sitting Sit-ting Bull returned, claiming that he had been in the hills using his power with the Indian gods to bring about victory ' . . . The Indians didn't know until after the battle that it was Custer they had been fighting. Buy Defense Bonds In the picture this repartee gets a howl ... The commandant at West Point summons Custer and (threatening to expel him for having hav-ing a fist fight with a fellow cadet) asks him if he has anything to say . . . , "I didn't know," says Custer, "that you could get fired from the army for fighting." Bay Defense Bonds Custer was nuts about onions and ate them as though they were apples. ap-ples. The last gift he received from his wife before he died was a sack of onions . . . Whenever he was away from his wife, he'd sit up until all hours of the night writing long letters to her. During one expedition, expe-dition, he wrote her a letter 80 pages long . . when Custer died it Little Big Horn, the Indiana who killed him paid him a tribute that showed the respect even his enemies had for him. Every man killed in that battla was scalped except Custer. Itti Sn Ti i aaVa'aa 'JVi n i r i it l, 1 a kit ; CHANGED CITY ' Washington has changed overnight over-night Washington was a boom town one week; next week it was a war town. The change is partly a matter of visible .things, partly things that are felt without being seen . . . Khaki-clad soldiers, with tin hats and bayonets, petroling two abreast between the White House and the state department . . . Darkness Dark-ness over the Capitol dome, where searchlights are blacked out, for the duration . . A Jam of volunteers for Civilian Defense . . . New flags delivered at Civilian Defense head quarters, two for LaGuardia's car, two for Mrs. Roosevelt's car, six for the motorcycles . . , The residence of German correspondent Kurt Sell is raided at night and Sell is taken into custody by FBI. Though the department of commerce com-merce deals with such innocuous subjects as census figures, its great steel doors are locked, and guards demand credentials at the main entrance en-trance . . . Women fliers of America Ameri-ca call a hurried meeting to speei up plans for training ... An extra detail of police strolls on the south grounds of the White House, last trampled by egg rolling Easter crowds. In his press conference, the President's Presi-dent's voice is so grave and low that a newsman calls out, "Louder, please" . . , Four plainclothesmen, in two cars, sit parked all day on Waterside drive, where the bank rises sharply on the back garden of the Japanese embassy. . Even Falla, the President's Scottie, feels the change, for the White Housa guards have less time to play with him, and he curls up disconsolate in his green dog-house, just back of tha President's office. JAPANESE SPIES Last summer Congressman Martin Dies had investigators make a thorough thor-ough survey of Japanese activities along the West coast. The results eventually were suppressed by the state department and the President himself, but a brief summary of them indicates that some parts of the United States face a dangerous problem when it comes to fifth column col-umn activity. - Hitler had many agents planted through Norway, France and the Low Countries when he attacked, but the Japanese, according to the Dies report, start out with 150,000 of their country mew to' the United States. These are all Japanese citizens, citi-zens, and do not include 50,000 second sec-ond generation Japanese born in the United States. The Dies report shows that 200 key Japanese have been decorated by the emperor during dur-ing the past two years and that many Japanese are in close co-operation with the homeland through the Central Japanese association which has been directed by consulates consu-lates in California. Dies agents have collected photographs photo-graphs of various Japanese truck gardens operated alongside oil tanks and strategic railroads. Also they report 5,000 Japanese residing on terminal islands in Los Angeles harbor, har-bor, where are located strategic oil tanks, Reeves field and a shipbuilding shipbuild-ing company. Oil storage tanks blown up in the harbors would endanger en-danger all of the Los Angeles area. The most revealing documents seized by Dies' agents are maps, showing all the U. S. strategic points and fortifications, and a naval manual man-ual showing the size of all American Ameri-can naval vessels. 1 The naval manual, published in 1941, is so up to date that it even shows latest models of U. S. mosquito mos-quito boats together with the Presidential Presi-dential yacht Potomac and the plan of U. S. airplane carriers. The location lo-cation of guns, engine room, etc.. is indicated alongside the photograph photo-graph of each vessel. It must have taken Japanese agents months or years to collect this data. KNEW FORMATIONS Another Japanese map seized by Dies' agents is revealing in the extreme. ex-treme. It shows the layout of the American fleet in a typical battle formation near Hawaii. U. S. naval officers confirm the fact that the map correctly shows past naval maneuvers. ma-neuvers. The documents show the details of Pearl Harbor, the Panama canal. San Francisco, Manila, Guam and Vladivostok. They also give the normal nor-mal crusing radius of the U. S. fleet out of Honolulu, together with the-normal the-normal location of airplane carriers, cruising battleships, scouts and auxiliary aux-iliary transports. Maps also show the whereabouts of submarine cables, ca-bles, mines, channels, wireless stations, sta-tions, Japanese consulates and air bases all along the West coast ' ' WAR CHAFF Clt was significant that Japanese struck first not at the Philippines, which is armed to the teeth with heavy bombers, but at Hawaii. Hawaii Ha-waii had sent its best war planes on to the Philippines . . . If the navy had read the newspapers it might have been better prepared. C Consiantine Brown, foreign affairs expert of the Washington Star, predicted pre-dicted war with Japan 10 dayj in advance and named Sunday, December De-cember 7, as the starting date. WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS By Edward C. Wayne U. S. Shifts Hawaiian High Command; Russian Army Claims Important Gains In Pushing Nazis Back From Moscow; President Names Censorship Director (EDITOR'S NOTE When opinions are expreosed In these column, they r tnoe of tbo news analyst and noi necessarily of tbl newspaper.) i (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) HAWAII: Changes Despite the fact that Secretary Knox had revealed that the army and navy forces on Hawaii were "not on the alert" against attack, and the fact that President Roosevelt Roose-velt had appointed an investigation board, the extent of the disaster as revealed by the naval secretary left a general sense of relief in this country and in England that it was no worse. Even before an inquiry board headed by Supreme Court Justice Owen Roberts and appointed by the President could start its work there was a shakeup in the Hawaiian army and naval commands. Admiral Ad-miral Husband KimmeL commander command-er of the Pacific fleet, was replaced by Rear Admiral Chester W. Nimitz. In the army Lieut. Gen. Delos C, Emmons was ordered to replace Lieut. Gen. Walter C. Short, commander com-mander of the Hawaiian department, depart-ment, and Maj. Gen. F. L. Martin, chief of the Hawaiian army air command, com-mand, was relieved of his post and Brig. Gen. C. L. Tinker appointed in his stead. Chief outright loss was the battleship battle-ship Arizona, 32,600 tons, a good ship in good condition, and undoubtedly undoubt-edly most of the 2,500-odd who lost their lives were centered . in her. The fact that the Pacific fleet, still Intact and still in considerable force, was ranging the great ocean in pursuit of the Japanese fleet was comforting news. -Also of considerable relief were the navy secretary's stories of heroism hero-ism on the part of army and navy men, also of civilians in the Honolulu Hono-lulu area as well as in Pearl Harbor Har-bor itself. The Americans had con ducted themselves as such in trying circumstances, and while dealt a crushing blow had bounded back, full of enthusiasm, to carry the fight to the enemy. . CENSORSHIP: Adopted by U.S. President Roosevelt's appointment of Byron Price, an Associated Press editor, as chief of the American censorship cen-sorship bureau, and the adoption of a central censorship was met by a press resigned to the fact that some thing of the kind was a necessary war measure. . The first days of the war had found so much confusion and so much printing of rumors of air raids and of speculations as to movements move-ments of troops and of ships that the public was gradually becoming a little jittery, particularly along the East and West coasts of the continent.' conti-nent.' ' The naming of a trained newspaper news-paper man as head of the censorship censor-ship and the President's announcement announce-ment that he would be permitted to create his own organization and This is Byron Price, executive news editor of Associated Press, who has been named director of censorship for the United States.. to operate it in his own way, presumably pre-sumably without interference from the army and navy heads, though of course in co-operation with them, met with general approval. Prior to this the war department had sent out orders to newspapers on what they could and could not print, one of these apparently restricting re-stricting the publication of telegrams tele-grams of casualties, because they contained the name of the place where they occurred. Newspaper editors hoped that under un-der Censor Price restrictions would be clearer and more distinct, and would permit newspapers more freedom of judgment. , NAVY: -Keeps Secrets The navy was keeping secret the work it was doing in the Pacific, but just a hint had been dropped by Admiral Thomas C. Hart, commander com-mander of the Asiatic fleet, which tended to show that the ships might be drawing close to an attack on Japan. The bulletin simply had said that he "had learned" of three attacks made by American submarines, and that two of them "bad been successful." RUSSIA: Moving Steadily . , - - Steady advances by the Russians on all fronts, despite weather conditions, con-ditions, and reports of huge , captures cap-tures of prisoners and of booty had begun to convince the world that the German effort to hold their winter win-ter lines was doomed to failure, and that the retreat might duplicate for the German armies what happened to Napoleon in the same situation. One such strategic point as Kalinin Kali-nin being captured had spoken volumes. vol-umes. This town, 90 miles northwest north-west of Moscow, had been the first point the Nazis bad grabbed in starting their encirclement of Moscow Mos-cow and Leningrad, and lying as it does on the main route between the cities, had virtually isolated them from each other. The northward drive of the Red armies had smashed, Moscow reports re-ports said, six divisions, or 90,000 Germans at that point, and the enemy was described in full retreat and in danger of annihilation. Tanks, motor vehicles and guns were being abandoned in the flight, and without mechanized equipment in large quantities the orderly evacuation evac-uation of such huge numbers of men under Russian weather conditions was seen as impossible. - London sources realized that the Reds had now a wonderful opportunity opportu-nity for a double-flanking operation against the great arc of Germans around Leningrad and Moscow, and that if pressed home with vigor a disaster without parallel in all warfare war-fare was in store for Germany. FAR EAST: Birdseye View The whole far eastern situation, though becoming more favorable to American defense of her vital positions, posi-tions, particularly the Philippines Hi.lAflu ! viiilfA i mi P" f: MIKADO, MICH. This village, christened 55 years ago in honor of the emperor of Japan, wants to change its name. Its 125 citizens are distressed." They now want to rename Mikado "Roosevelt." Above photo shows some of the objectors. and Hawaii, was not so highly optimistic op-timistic an outlook, viewed as a whole. ' Military observers said the Japs probably overestimated the fifth-column fifth-column aid they would get in the Philippines; also the disaster that their sudden attack would create in Hawaii. i They believed they reckoned without with-out the bounce-back of the navy from Hawaii, and without the firmness firm-ness and ferocity of the Filipino troops, and the military ability of General MacArthur. Guam, it is true, had fallen, but Midway and Wake had held out, and the Japs had broken the force of their attack on Luzon without getting get-ting anywhere. However, it was in Malaya hat the chief Japanese onslaught was taking place with enormous numbers num-bers of men from Indo China, moving mov-ing through Thailand with complete co-operation. ' . The British had been frankly afraid that if Singapore did not fall, then it might very well become useless as a naval base, and they pointed out that if the ships could not enter and leave the harbor, and that if planes could not take off and land from the fields then Singapore might fade from the picture. A major British defeat in Malaya was, therefore, regarded in the best quarters as a distinct possibility, and the picture of what would happen hap-pen next was not pretty for the defense de-fense of the Philippines. ;; The other dark spot was Hongkong, Hong-kong, the siege of which was being undertaken by the heaviest possible Japanese forces. This, too, it was conceded, might fall, not with so much military advantage to Japanese Jap-anese plans. The plan, therefore, for a unified command, and the suggestion that General MacArthur be placed in charge, was considered of vital importance. im-portance. Study of maps showed that a Jap victory in Malaya and at Hongkong would make reinforcements reinforce-ments to Manila a severe problem to the United States indeed 'M, ' : '''(I South Trimble, clerk in the house of representatives, signs the house appropriations bill after it was passed. The bill provides for J10,-077,077,005 J10,-077,077,005 to be spent in waging the current war. This is one of the largest appropriation bills ever passed by the house. LIBYA: British Assault The British assault in North Africa Af-rica looked extremely favorable, despite de-spite the fact that hordes of Nazi planes were challenging the American-equipped British in the air. The imperial forces were speeding speed-ing up their attack on points to the west of Tobruk, and had moved even west of Derna at some points, and were following a strategy of rapid and mobile slicing movements move-ments from the south upward toward to-ward the coast at different points, each of them cutting through German Ger-man communications ; and supply, lines and forcing them to be reestablished re-established at tremendous cost. 'In one of these onslaughts, for instance, in-stance, the British claimed to have destroyed an ammunition depot of 300 tons, and to have taken 1,100 prisoners, in addition to destroying or confiscating much fuel 1 The center of fighting by General Rommel's forces had moved to a point 15 miles west of Gazala, a plateau the fall of which would open the road to Derna, second big stopping stop-ping place of a westward movement against Cyrenaica. The British, usually conservative in claims, frankly said in their communiques, com-muniques, "it looks as though a decisive de-cisive victory is not far off." DRAFT: . To Be Broadened It had become evident that the draft law was to be broadened immediately im-mediately to include all men from 19 to 44, and that at the same time the navy was to be increased even further, a simultaneous bill provid ing for a 150,000-ton addition to the combat strength. ( This latter matter, however, was viewed as far in, the future, as the available shipyard strength of the nation was fully mobilized, and any increase in commitments would have to come well after present construction con-struction was finished. Both the house and senate were agreed on having all men between 18 and 64 to register, but limiting limit-ing the active service to those between be-tween 19 (or 21 in the house bill) and 44. ' The registration bill was an effort ef-fort on the part of the administration administra-tion to make a full survey of the available manpower of the nation. Result of the new move would be to give the United States a potential poten-tial army of some 5,000,000 men, and it was seen as a distinct possibility possi-bility that that number would be called up for training as soon as facilities could be put in service. In his formal approval of the bill, the President said: : ,'I consider this registration provides pro-vides an essential instrument for the orderly planning of our national effort" ef-fort" UNREST: Report Revived The tempo of attack from the "Ostland," or on the Russian front brought from Stockholm,' Bern and other neutral sources increasing reports re-ports of unrest inside Germany. Though returning correspondents, ousted from Berlin before and after the declaration of war on this country, coun-try, told frankly that Germany was preparing for war on a five-year basis, neutral quarters advanced the theory that Hitler was having a hard time explaining the Russian situation. It was said that the subterfuge of refusing all holiday leaves to officers of-ficers and men back from the eastern east-ern front, and other means of keeping keep-ing the people in ignorance of the disaster were being resorted to, but that the German high command was having its hands full explaining why Hitler's vaunted attack on Moscow Mos-cow had failed. The Reds were boasting that Leningrad Len-ingrad was safe; that Moscow could not be taken; that the Caucasian oil was definitely beyond the German grip; that before spring would return, re-turn, the Russian armies would burl the last German out of Russia. Hitler's simple announcement that Germans could not fight in the cold weather, and that the Russian campaign would be abandoned for the winter, Stockholm said, would never be able to satisfy the home people for what was bound to happen, hap-pen, the return of broken, smashed divisions. to (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) WHITE COLLAR WOSKER IS 'THE FORGOTTEN MAN' . ON A BIG munitions plant being built with government money at Wilmington, 111., carpenters are paid $25 a day; men trundling wheelbarrows or working with pick or shovel are paid ?18 and $17 a day. In Chicago, 50 miles away, the clerical forces working in the offices of-fices of business and industry are being paid from $17 to $35 a week. The carpenters and laborers in Wilmington may, and do, dress in coveralls; .they change shirts possibly pos-sibly once a week; they wear coarse, unshined shoes; they enjoy the lower rentals of the rural districts. dis-tricts. . ; .: . The clerical worker in Chicago, if he is to hold his job, must have a clean shirt every day; he must wear a white collar; there must be a crease in his trousers; his shoes must be kept cleaned and shined; he must pay the much higher rent-als rent-als of the. city. His income will average about one-sixth of that of trie carpenter at Wilmington. To meet the ever-increasing demand de-mand of taxes and labor, and to continue to operate, business and industry have been forced to econo mize in every possible way. ine white collar man has paid the bill. He is the "forgotten man" of today. 0 0 WILL AID IN THE FIGHT DOOR COUNTY, Wisconsin, that strip of land that separates Lake Michigan from Green Bay and of which the town of Sturgeon Bay is the county seat, was settled originally origi-nally by Scandinavian, Belgian and Dutch farmers. The well-kept farms of today, made from the land from which their ancestors cut the heavy pine timber, are in the hands of the second and third generations of the original settlers. These farmers, farm-ers, many of them with kinfolks in the countries enslaved by Hitler, are enjoying the opportunity of building sub-chasers to destroy German Ger-man submarine. At the shipyards in Sturgeon Bayr far removed from the scene of conflict, is being built a fleet of the little boats that are destined to see service in the Atlantic, Atlan-tic, and the yards are manned by Scandinavian, Belgian and Dutch farmers. 0 o TAKE TO THE HILLS A FEW NIGHTS AGO I sat in an audience, the men of which consisted consist-ed largely of big game hunters, soldiers sol-diers of fortune, explorers men who had been to the uttermost ends of the earth and whose lives have been filled with hair-raising adventure. adven-ture. The speaker of the evening was a little, happy-faced woman and her subject was her mountain farm home in the Ozarks. She talked about the charming characteristics of the Ozark hills people and their simple, uneventful lives, of pet lambs and puppy dogs, of quiet evenings before be-fore the fireplace in a log house, of wild flowers and fruits, and she held that audience of "he" men as no lion hunter had ever held them. She demonstrated that it is the sira-ple sira-ple pleasures that have most appeal. ap-peal. The speaker was Mrs. Marge Lyon, author of "Take to the Hills." 0 0 0 HOME OF REAL CULTURE OUR GREAT CITIES have no monopoly on culture. It is not a product prod-uct of the night club, the cocktail lounge or the off-color theatrical production. It is a product of the schools, the churches, of a clean-iiving, clean-iiving, home-loving people, such as those found in the rural sections of America. Culture does not breed Hitlers, Mussolinis or Stalins. It breeds love, not hate. Among a cultured class you do not find a subversive element seeking to destroy an es-tablished es-tablished philosophy of government The Dies committee does not find enemies of our American form of government among our rural population. popu-lation. It is in the small town and on the farm where you find a love of country, respect for its laws and its institutions. It is there you find the intelligence that is the foundation founda-tion of culture. The American rural community is the real home of American culture. ' o a -NATIONAL INCOME THE department of commerce tells us the national income in 1902 amounted to $17,900,000,000 and in 1940 it was $73,800,000,000. In 38 years we had multiplied the national nation-al income more than four tim- had more than four times as much to divide in 1940 than in 1902. That was accomplished despite wars and depressions. It was accomplished under the American avstm nt tr competition. 00 MORE THAN JAP CAN CHEW wiiu nis BIG TEETH, the little brown man of tha pMi. he has bitten off more than he can chew. When the and is reached, the Japs will be back on their islands. is-lands. They will have lost Korea mancnuKuo, weir foothold in China and Indo-China. umi h.m.j. small mandated islands in the Pa- cmc. ine war they so treacherous-ly treacherous-ly started wiB set thom kv - days of Perry, and Jaon. a 8icai nauon. as a world power, will oa from the picture. uet roise Aweslbm, "JVJY ISN'T shebrQ PeBuTCtaPeaker But the experience 3 speakers smile at this"L? idea. In order to bel self, they say, yo;eg J e.thSe yU Caa . Just stand up there, rtw J your hands to distrart w2 32-page booklet tU, Vow to develop an easy, ehariZ? raque. Tells how t elves lamnla r.i...v Vm h der to: "to READCR.nmn ... 117 Minna VtSarV Enclose 10 centi fai coin J) Name ............. Address CLASSIFIE DEPART ME! KNIVES Probably Your Lssi fV To secure genuine "Kutraasttf b Knife of extraordinary value, flu, servation ci steel, our nippi? u Order now and own this de ta knife. 8" blade, made from heavjl high carbon crucible steel correodrk ened and tempered to hold tawi edse. Delivered nrlro i iu n . tied, money cheerfully refunded. 3 loaay, writing aaaress plainly. BORDER DISIRlBl'TBiG 111 Station A El fw,y Perhaps Official JPasn'l Very Good at Hkorj A famous alienist met ! prominent official Aftei discussion on the rnenii sound, the official asked: '.'Doctor, how do you resS? if a person is insane?" "Oh, we merely ask a fo dmary questions which be people can answer correct "What type of questions!" "Well," replied the "this sort of thing: Captai made three voyages aroa world and died on one b Which was it?" "Oh, I say," objected fc cial, "I'm afraid I've &l which one it was. INDIGESTI Gaa mas excite thtHetftn! 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