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Show THE LEW SUN. LEIII. UTAH PIN iw America Can Be Licked: That's not a slogan thought up by this hysterical alarmist. It's quote from Adm. William M. Standley, new ambassador to Russia. It makes him an hysterica! "larmist, too, which ought to make him a use ful man to the gov't New York bad to have the war dumped on the door step before it realized the shooting had started. The burning of the Nor mandie woke the New Yorkers up, They let out the usual yell for scalps, but that was better than no yelling at all They began to won der what was going on. Well, what was? Lethargy's another of our crimes, Admiral Standley warns. Have a look at the country away from the coasts and you'll agree. The big idea there is, "The bombers can't reach us." To them, the only part of the U.S.A. at war is the part in danger of invasion. What makes those ostriches think the Nazis or Japs will hug the beaches? They love to travel Tbe fault-finders who keep hollering that we don't know enough about Pearl Harbor don't even listen when yob mention men-tion what the navy did later at the Gilbert and Marshall Islands, Is-lands, Macassar strait and Java. That isn't the kind of news they like to monger. Man About New York: The United States did not create the pioneer spirit; the pioneer spirit created the United States. That spirit has never failed our people. It was in the gun-pits at Gettysburg, Gettys-burg, it was in the trenches In France, and it is In the foxholes of the Philippines. Buy Defense Bonds The world picture is black today, but it was black in 1778, when Philadelphia Phil-adelphia and New York were In the . hands of an enemy. It was blacker still when the capital was burned In 1814. ' There were only 5,000,000 Ameri cans then. But they taught Europe that though it could invade Ameri can territory it could never invade the American Spirit; that their ar tillery could crack an American fort, but never the unity of the Republic. The American people have won ev ery war because they have continued contin-ued to fight the enemy, not to question ques-tion their own leadership. Five million mil-lion Americans stood oft the world because deep defeat could not divide di-vide . them., , , . 4 That tradition Is worth more than all the gold in Fort Knox. Onr schools can truthfully teach that there were no hoarders at Valley Forge -and the captain of the U. S. S. Constitution never had to ration Loyalty. Today the tides of Manila Bay are ebbing and flowing, but not the patriotism pa-triotism of the surrounded Ameri-cans. Ameri-cans. Tokyo hopes they .will soon run out of ammunition. Because even Tokyo admits that MacArthur's men will never run out of courage, Bay Defense Bonds xae suieiio moo aian't waste a second hopping on the R.A.F. when the Nazzy ships slid through Dover strait. Ail right, it was a blow that hurt. Hitler got his ships home. But who tied them up for months? The R.A.F. . . . Who fought oft the invasion of England, ; and changed Germany's whole plan of the war? The Huns" are on the Russian Rus-sian ' front today, ' taking a bloody beating, because the R.A.F. sent them there. But one setback is sup. posed to rub out all their glories. The toughest outfit of the war, with a record full of glory, is being crucified cruci-fied for losing one skirmish. The idea is not being promoted here, however, that everybody has to shut up. Blunders must not be excused, r inefficiency and plundering concealed. con-cealed. The chief thing is to notice no-tice who's doing the loudest yelling, and check back on his record. Lots of the mouthpieces aren't speaking ' in America's interest You don't I have to be slant-eyed to be 4 good Jap, or to have an accent to deliver message from Berlin. Sure. America Amer-ica can be licked. But fewensakes, don't let's lick ourselves. Washington, 1. C. C. S. MOUNTAIN WARFARE The army is buying pitons, kara-biners, kara-biners, ice axes, skis, sleeping bags and parkas, to be used not in an expedition to the North pole but In preparation for warfare on snow-clad snow-clad mountain sides. If you esk what mountain sides the reply is: "We are preparing for any emergency." Army chiefs have carefully noted what has been done in Europe in mountain and winter win-ter warfare, and they intend that U. S. troops be trained in the same tactics, i Today, In the Railroad Retire ment building (headquarters of the quartermaster corps) you can find a group of men known as "the Cold Climate Clothing and Equipment unit" They are ski experts and mountain climbers, who know by rigorous experience what is needed for life in the cold' latitudes and high altitudes. ' They Bre Bestor Robinson of the National Ski association; Robert H. Bates, editor of "Five Miles High"; and William House, a famed climb er and explorer. Working indoors ten hours a day, they are preparing specifications for the best military skis, the best goggles, boots, and high-pressure stoves that can be carried in a knapsack. Note: Germany's expert in moun tain warfare, Paul Bauer, carried out his last peacetime mountain climbing exploit in the Nanga Par-bat Par-bat expedition in India In 1938 with the consent and cooperation of the British government Buy Defense Bonds MRS. WOODROW WILSON Mrs. Woodrow Wilson sewed for soldiers 25 years ago, and now she's doing it again. Every Wednesday morning, she meets at the swank Sulgrave Club for Red Cross sewing with Mrs. Jesse Jones, and Mrs. D. Bu chanan Merriman, better known as the duchess of Windsor's "Aunt Bes sie." After the sewing, they lunch at the club, then adjourn to Mrs. Jesse Jones' apartment at the Shoreham hotel, or to Mrs. Wilson's home on S street for bridge. The lady who, as "the beautiful widow Galf set all the town talk-lng talk-lng during World War I, still sets the town talking wherever she appears ap-pears today. She gives her name freely to Democratic party and patriotic pa-triotic causes, but her most regular activity is providing tfionl decora-Uons decora-Uons tor the Wilson shrine at the National Cathedral She has made a study of floral arrangements, personally per-sonally supervises the decoration every ev-ery few days. Measured by the code of the cave dwellers, Mrs. Woodrow Wilson is an active woman, but she stares in amazement at the activity of the First Lady of World War II. WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS By Edward C Wayne Treasury Asks IV2 Billion Tax Boost To Carry Out U. S. 'Victory Program'; Sweeping Soviet Advances Continue As New Assaults Puncture Nazi Lines POLICY: Cliange Toward Paris Indicated by Bombing Though the British had systematl cally bombed enemy Installations it occupied Europe, particularly thoss nearest the channel coast Paris, ex-ceDt ex-ceDt for the token bombing in 194( had been virtually untouched by tht (EDITOR'S NOTE Whn opinion are expressed la thess eolnmns, thsy are those ( the aiwi analyst and cot necessarily al this newspaper.) . (Keieaaea Dy wet tarn Newspaper Union.) , I V; rV . TAX YlfXD I ' ' TAX YIELD I (PROPOSE) 4, I vazoWtmuM , A ' JMftTmriitiiir mam If"' I 1 C - J Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau as he presented a new 7 billion 610 million dollar tax program to congress. If approved by congress, the new taxes proposed by the treasury, added to the present total, would yield approximately 83 billion 487 million dollars in 1942. This would be an average of slightly more than $175 for every man, woman and child In the nation. TAXES: War Not Cheap The job of digging $23,000,000,000 In tax money out of the pockets of the people of the United States had been placed squarely before Secre tary Morgenthau of the treasury, and he had placed a plan before the congress to accomplish this. He had prefaced his announce- JAVA: Neiv Psychology The word "offensive" had become Increasingly important in the dictionary dic-tionary of the Allied Nations. In Washington Chief of Staff General Gen-eral Marshall had struck the keynote, key-note, and when the Japs came Into ova, ana uenerai wavell was shunted off to India, leaving Dutch dent of the plan with the statement Gen. Ter Poorten in charge, almost war. However, with a sudden day and nicht attack against the huge autt factories on the outskirts of Fans, Britain apparently had told thi world that her policy toward m oueen city or iTance naa dccd changed. A large squadron of heavy bomb ers, meeting considerable anti-aircraft fire, had flown over the citj and suburbs all day and far Into th night dropping deadly loads in thi neighborhood of the Renault Citro en, Hispano-Suiza, Potz and Reg nier motor works. Vichy did not reveal the amount of the damage, but said there "wen civilian casualties." London had been terse about tht affair, simply stating that the Renault Re-nault auto factory, to France what Ford is to this country, had "be come the symbol of French col laboration with Germany." The company, said London, "ii known to have been engaged In the making and repairing of transport vehicles, tanks and airplane engines for Germany." ACE: Made in a Day' From the Pacific theater had come the story of a determined attempt at-tempt by Japanese heavy bombers, evidently operating from an island base, to put one of our largest aircraft air-craft carriers out of action. The vessel, thanks to the vigor ous defense of the pursuit personnel, escaped "without a scratch" the navy had reported. Out of it emerged Lieut. Edward O'Hare of St Louis, Mo., as the war's first "ace in a day." The Japs came against the carrier car-rier with 18 bombers in two flights This little anecdote about a prime minister and a reporter tells more about the stupid, short-sighted thinking think-ing that was almost fatal to democracies democ-racies than all the intellectual essays es-says ever written . . . Stanley Baldwin Bald-win told a reporter: "I want it to be said of me that I never sent a single Englishman to die on a foreign for-eign battlefield" . . . "But Prime Minister," he was reminded, "don't you see you are piling up trouble that will kill a million Englishmen In the next war?" . . . "That" said Baldwin calmly, "is a problem for my successor." Buy Defense Bonds-Book Bonds-Book publishers are cutting one-eighth one-eighth of an inch on tomes already to conserve paper . . . The best book publishers (five) are standardizing standard-izing the Jackets on non-fiction . . . A Los Angeles lawyer has complained com-plained to authorities that Japs are using "spot" announcements on West coast high-powered stations to relay code messages to Tokyo . . The N. Y. Times is prepared for an air raid. In its annex lobby (where the paper is printed) there's a Disaster Dis-aster Wagon equipped with helmets, first aid kits, etc. SUGAR SHORTAGE ' If there is an investigation of the sugar shortage, certain agriculture department masterminds will have to do a lot of explaining. Few know that these masterminds, master-minds, over the protests of domestic beet - sugar . producers, last year forced a reduction of sugar-beet acreage of from 17 to 20 per cent: also that cane which would have yielded 300,000 tons of sugar was left to rot In Puerto Rican fields because processing was prohibited. Sugar producers on the other hand, vigorously urged that domestic domes-tic quotas be lifted to permit maxi-mum maxi-mum output. But the agriculture moguls refused to heed these warnings. warn-ings. Led by Secretary Claude Wickard, they insisted the United States had ample sugar supplies for all needsand they kept on chorusing chorus-ing this refrain right up to a few weeks ago when Wickard, as a guest speaker on Mrs. Roosevelt's Sunday night radio program, completely changed his tune and broke the news that sugar would have to be rationed. Wickard bases the shortage on two grounds: (1) heavy demands from our Allies, particularly Russia, whose sugar producing region has been devastated by the Nazis; (2) greatly reduced Imports from the Philippines and Hawaii. The Philippines are out but not Hawaii. Large munitions shipments are constantly going to these islands, and sugar is coming back. . Agriculture department tycoons are making a big ado about how essential es-sential their activities are to the war effort. One essential might be less bungling in unrestricting farm production. pro-duction. Note: Puerto Rico now has on hand, and waiting to be ground, more sugar-cane than It is allowed to process under the production quota quo-ta set by the agriculture department depart-ment NAZI KAIL SHORTAGE The United States eovernment ha difficulty getting accurate reports of conditions in Germany these days. But from a neutral listening post comes the following: Germany is suffering an acute shortage of rail equipment Civilians Civil-ians have been instructed not to travel anywhere on the railroads, except on the most urgent business." Penalties for violation of this rule are severe. About 130,000 freight cars are be-lieved be-lieved to be in use in Russia or in the Russian campaign. that it was a "victory program" and that "war was not cheap, but a mil lion times cheaper to win than to lose.' The plan had called for a general doubling of income taxes between the bottom limit and $10,000, in creases of corporate taxes, increase of excise taxes, and a raising of the social security payment rates. One innovation was the secretary's secreta-ry's suggestion that at least a por tion of the tax be raised at the lource, employers withholding weekly week-ly amounts from their workers' pay and turning it over to the treasury monthly. Secretary Morgenthau admitted this might mean paying on two years' taxes at the same time after about July 1, but pointed out that it the first order to the men was to make an offensive out of the defense of the island. The troops, which included some Americans, British and Australians, but which largely were Dutch and natives, had hurled themselves at the enemy with considerably more force than had been evidenced by the British in either Malaya or Burma, Bur-ma, and early successes were reported. re-ported. However, the estimated 85,-000 85,-000 Japanese troops were able to turn the tide of battle against approximately ap-proximately 50,000 Allied soldiers. The Japs had landed at three points, the estimate being that 140 warships and transports had been used. One landing was on the Sumatra Su-matra point of the island, another in tfie north central portion, and would reduce the burden the follow- the third just west of Sourabaya! lng March, and also would prevent taxpayers from, spending In inflationary infla-tionary avenues to purchase goods that could not be produced, in sufficient suffi-cient quantity to meet the demand. The first reactions of congressmen In general had been favorable. It was doubtful if the eventual tax bill would emerge in exactly the form as presented by Secretary Morgenthau, Morgen-thau, but that something substantially substan-tially like it would be adopted was considered certain. Samples Of the Morgenthau schedules sched-ules called for single persons makr lng a net of $2,000, now paying $117, to pay $230; for married persons making $2,200 with no dependents, now paying $61, to pay $118; for married persons with two dependents depend-ents (average family) making a net of $2,700, to pay $64 instead of the fall of France and the reasons for it naa Deen aired by outspoken Eduard Though most observers felt from the first that the battle for Java could have only one end, and though the Dutch, at the outset were bit ter against the United Nations for not having sent sufficient aid, the battle was the first test of the .new psychology, to be "on the offensive" instead of the defensive at all times. The battle for Java marked tho closing phase of the beginning of the Southwest Pacific war. Japanese Japa-nese successes in that area, won at a huge cost of man Dower, wpro largely the result of overwhelming air superiority. RIOM: 'Inside Story More of the "inside story" of the present $29. RUSSIANS: Increase Pace It had been expected that as the spring thaws began to set in the Russians would find the going more difficult, especially as Hitler made ready for his "spring offensive, Some wonder had been caused when the Germans began issuing bulletins telling of enormous num bers of Red troops being shoved up toward the front reports which were more or less confirmed, from Red sources There were two possible solutions to this either the Germans were preparing their people for the ex pected report of the loss of the Six teenth field army, which had been trapped in the Staraya Russa dis trict or they were trying to con vince the United States and Britain that Russia did not need and could tot use additional lease-lend aid. However this might be, observers sad considered it more likely that Stalin, having placed a large group jf generals in the background posts if training new armies, was putting put-ting these into the fight in order to lalt the "spring offensive" before it sould get going. To the westward she Russian army has captured large quantities of war materials. LIEUT. EDWARD O'HARE Navy's "Ace in a Day." of nine each. Only two got away. Yet the attackers came in with such ferocity that one of them attempted a "suicide crash" with his load of bombs on the deck of the ship. "So close was it" the navy had reported, re-ported, "that he was shot down by point-blank anti-aircraft fire when less than 100 yards from his objective." objec-tive." O'Hare "got six " of the enemy planes all by himself. The other pursuit fliers got the other ten. Two returned to the Jap base unscathed, apparently. Two American planes had been shot down, but the pilot of one was rescued. , It was a dramatic affair and one Which ShnWPrl tha Amofinan n:ut. Daladier, ex-premier who had been were being tried in combat and not louna wanting, also that the Jap placed on trial. At the same time ex-Generalissi mo Maurice Gamelin , had stood stiffly at attention, refusing to answer an-swer a single question hurled at him by Pierre Caius, the prosecutor. . ".um, giving sim more im- losses, if they continued at five to one or better, soon were bound to be reflected in, a loss of momentum for their drive. STRATEGY: port to the reports of dissension and Decided Upon ff- U1 co-opera- While there had hn Hon that the Atlantic Charter and possible spring offensive on the Eu. ropean front plus the keeping of supply lines open to Britain and Russia were the primary American military objectives, a significant strategy naa been decided upon in the Pacific theater. This strategy called for the use of vusu-aua as a basing-ground and a nftn-nff nnint .1 , --r iw me eveniuai win ning onensive against the Japanese. There had been numbers of "to- -w. -umuiiig rams on fort Darwin and other points of importance to Australia, and the Aussies believed that these were laying the ground- jLl f jf "T? J tion within the nation, na-tion, charged that the entire war effort ef-fort of France had been "sabotaged" by the lack of interest in-terest of several large steel industries. indus-tries. He told of two concerns which had been approached ap-proached by the government long before the war to take part In a gov ernment-private industry combine which would have set up huge arma ment works in northern Africa. Eduard Daladier wiva ill uuiuiciu nuita. t ,i. , - o-"""v. Tt,-.- r.i.J!. wj .-..J -u. work an eventual all-out dcoh government would have been able to 1.1 . .ltn tte offensive, not It recalled statements of Napoleon j TVPT CfiV . ind of the Germans themselves dur- I . have strengthened her armed forces. But the industrialists approached refused to consider the plan until France was at war with Germany, wnen it was too late, he had said. the defensive thoueht Australia was planning with the Umted States for supplies, men and munitions with which to mat th ! continent a springboard for attack rather than defense. ing the last war, that conquering the I HoiV to Spend Russians was Impossible because of iheir tremendous manpower, for countless thousands of new troops tlways appeared on all fronts, just hen one thought them well beaten. There were many who had expressed ex-pressed the belief that Germany, instead in-stead of driving the Russians back ;his spring, might if forced to a leavy battle on two fronts, even be (nocked rapidly out of the war altogether. al-together. VaUcuty of this belief will e determined in the next few weeks. Donald Nelson, WPB . head- charged with the Job of spending an apparently, unending succession of bilx-ona of dollars, had issued a document docu-ment called Directive No. 2 which outlined to the world his theories of Nw it snould be done. tne first place, he has ended competitive bidding on war work-He work-He is trying, he had announced. to get the small plant not now en- MISCELLANY: Puerto Rice: American mil fv- Atlantic side had felt the impact of German shells. The tiny island of Mona off Puerto Rico which houses a CCC camp, had been shoTioH , . submarine. New York: The Vatican radio had announced that food supplies, sent fV Iha Dam A A gaged In war work, into the war p.c arriveV Ser 1, had ture. . arrived there safely ano were be- uig uisiriDuiea. (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) AN ADVENTURER AFTER 254 YEARS TO A YOUNG MAN, Harold Nor-tham, Nor-tham, now soldiering with a bomber squadron in the West the names of cities, towns, villages and general locations from which each day's war news of Europe, Asia, Africa and the Far East comes, are familiar. Ten years ago Northam, then 18, wanted a membership in the Chi cago Adventurers' club. He was told he lacked the needed qualifications. He determined to acquire them. With a capital of $10, he left Chi cago for Boston as an attendant on a stock train. In the same capacity he sailed from Boston for Danzig, on a boat carrying steers from Chicago. Chica-go. Leaving the boat at Danzig, he worked his way through much of Russia, Including the Ukraine, Moscow, Mos-cow, Leningrad, and into Finland; south through the Baltic states and Poland, through Germany, Den mark, Holland, Belgium, France and Spain working at whatever he could find to do for a day, a week or a month. From Spain he crossed into Af rica, then back from Egypt to Italy, Greece, Turkey, Syria, Irak and Arabia. At Port Said he got a Job on a boat that brought him back to New York, and then on another boat that took him through Panama to San Francisco and on around the world, with stops in Japan,' China, Indo-China, Siam and India. After 2 years, he returned to Chicago with a new suit of clothes, a new bag, $10 and the needed qualifications qual-ifications for the Adventurers' club, of which he is now a member. Buy Defense Bonds MAIN STREET IS THE REAL AMERICA THE MAIN STREETS of America represent more of our national val ues than do the Broadways, the State streets, the boulevards of our great cities. People of Main street communities are more typical of our American culture. They are, as" a class, better educated, with a far higher standard of literacy than is found as the average in the cities. Our Main streets represent agri culture, the foundation of American production and national wealth. They represent our forests, and very largely our mines. Without these three things, our cities could not exist The Main streets of America, serving people of the towns and - farms, represent one-half of the peo ple of the nation. From districts represented only by Main streets are sent to the national house of representatives 50 per cent of its members. People represented by our Main streets can constitute a controlling force in national legislation. legisla-tion. Our Main streets are rural America Amer-ica and it is rural America that makes of us a great nation. Without With-out our Main streets, there would be no Broadways or State streets or city boulevards. Main street is the foundation. IMPERIALISM AND THE PEACE IMPERIALISM has dominated ev-ery ev-ery peace conference following ari international war. The first thought of the victors has been "what can we get what territory, what resources, re-sources, what markets that will strengthen us and weaken our defeated de-feated opponents?" ' That was true of the peace conference con-ference following World War I. The humanitarian ideas President Wilson Wil-son took to Paris, with the expectation expecta-tion of writing a peace treaty that would end wars, went glimmering when he sat across the table from Lloyd George and Clemenceau. They had been willing to listen to humanitarian ideas, as propaganda propagan-da to undermine the morale of the enemy people, but not when the enemy en-emy had been licked. - As a gesture to President Wilson, Wil-son, they consented to taking enemy territory under mandates, instead ol direct annexation, with the provision provi-sion that such territory was to be administered for the benefit of the mandated people and was not to be fortified. Japan received the mandate over some 700 Pacific islands under such conditions, but these islands turn uj now as Jap air and naval bases. - President Roosevelt and Primi Minister Churchill have proposed I basis on which to fix the terms ol peace when this war is over. Theii proposals sound good now, just as f resident Wilson's 14 points sounded good in 1917-18. But what will the proposals be when the war is ovei and the enemy is licked? It Is a fairly safe bet that Lor! Vengeance and Lord Imperialism will again dominate" the Deace con. ference. If so, both the loser an the winner will eventually pay. CURRENT CROP OF WEATHER PROPHETS IN LARGE SECTIONS of Americi snowfalls have been light during tin winter, and long-range weathei prophets are telling us we will havi a dry summer. Such weather condi tions are perfectly all right with peo pie of the cities, until they sro to hm food, when they conmlain ahnu prices. It Is fine to enjoy the sun shine, but all sunshine and no rail means poor crops and high Iivim costs. The farmer prays for an ade quate mixture of snow, rain ant sunshine. Q Guide To A rmedFc fetch Branch Haslt, inc D0JU.WallyoU, lrnrmr r,U Naw set-nn? r , r Anr.: . ... lu ieu ad' artillervmo - " battalion, a e,.!' ship? uwni Our npw $o . armed iorcrs!teIU manded. describe ' ff, - ..tea. jaa ,, Navy. Marine Corpl Z TX 'J signia-chevronsbranAi ana special marks. List. , 1 officers. Send your order oraiiciMi Enclose 15 . GUIDE M rn"J2L2eJ AHMED FORCES. Name Address IUA Ml f - M .... 1 is aa emotional upt, csmed tr! shock, accident, fcsr, sup. Tta hi f .'tfinach, and may lean yw w.w HwiKouuD w ncartourn. AD fcwuimu Diimuu ano warboo. w vuitK. relief. Ati your druezist. 1 Do You Like Jingle Coi Raleigh Cigarettes are rung another series of weels tests for those who can sup best last line to a jingle. C liberal prizes each week this paper for details.-Advf Bunions Get this quick relief. Lifts shoe oressure. soothe. ' cushions tha sensitive spot. Costs but a trifle. U Effects of Prosptrif; Prosperity can change nature ; and seldom is anyc tious enough to resist the el good fortune. Q. C. Rufus WDLE-A WOMEN ( K fl Bl re lo V, ft HEED THIS ADVICj If you're cross, restless, nerj sutler not nasnes, mm caused by this period! woman's life try Lydia a ham's. Vegetable Compel Made especially jormm.1 tn nlinio rlistress due ID functional disturbance.! sands upon thousands h renort remarKaote p low laoel curecuons. Yet Unjust He who decides a easel hearing the other side, tea decide justly, cannot k ered just. Seneca. DASH KAniERSX; WNU W Better to Wear M It is better to wear out rust out. Bishop Hon of cm'i H wide jn of uM"f Don'i These physicians, too, fi of adrertisinf you ra4 "J J u a rod diureM of the kidney BtSVt the pain and worry it cwrf that cannot stay r.5te H 1.,,. i,tth- there ' wri testandinfofwhytte' Then kidney. J ping hi lining anr PI for thi f t and see 5w effor aany yei pgton. is one oi w says animosit1 !fI? agair broke thi Nintrodui Mm. w Matthew ; which n pning jaj M resi :jJ5iy, to in Nthera perican i Was "eretake: )f indei aaed; the 'mtoreci ""aaento :i0cewasd f fated Attbitto lese devry '"to flu "xiamitt teenth, r Sexist hta ft 1 fa 7welt leado.. rDr.I ruction, ft., e nfcn. Burning-, scsmy tioa sometimes wr " i function. Y aSa7iJ acne, persisted -""- ugliness, ug-liness, getting jrS2 ness under the eyes- all played out. - . j tj tse Dotn'trOi. 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