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Show THE LEW SUN, LEW, UTAH GECREEMRADIO Released hy Western Newspaper Union. Br VIRGINIA VALE sTT'S really good news that X Lieut. Comdr. Robert Montgomery, recently placed m the inactive list by the ' Wy, is being starred by MGM in a picture based on J"They Were Expendable." Iyou'U remember it as the hook that gave the world the story bf the exploits of the P-T boats in one of which General MacArthur escaped es-caped to Australia. This will be Montgomery's first picture since the delightful "Here Comes Mr. Jor- I ROBERT MONTGOMERY I dan." We're told that the cast win be made up almost entirely of men who have been in the service. And Comdr. John Ford, who has been responsible re-sponsible for so many excellent pictures, pic-tures, will direct "They Were Expendable." Ex-pendable." it Martha Scott, who's forsaken movies for the stage temporarily, had a busy evening the night she did "The Soldier's Wife" on the air; ' that's the play she's now doing on the New York stage. The "Theater of Romance" broadcast was moved to a CBS Playhouse across the street from the theater, the curtain was held that night, and Martha skipped from the broadcast to the stage, to repeat her performance. J I It's taken Harold Lloyd a long time to take to radio; the immediate imme-diate success of "Comedy Theater" Sunday nights on NBC proves that he should have done it long ago. He's director and host of this unique program unique because it's the only drama show devoted entirely to comedies. The movie moguls are now after Lloyd two companies are urging him at the moment to return to the screen. i' That's a nice little assignment RKO has for George Raft In "Johnny "John-ny Angel" he'll play "a1 two-fisted guy in the middle of mutiny, a missing miss-ing cargo of gold and an affair with a mystery blonde." Signe Hasso has been borrowed from Metro to assist as-sist - i x. I Richard Himber and Ken Murray Mur-ray of the CBS "Which Is Which?" are both top-notch amateur magicians, magi-cians, so they're hatching a plot to give a series of magic shows for charity some time soon. Meanwhile their novel Wednesday night program pro-gram is going strong. ! "Steel Horizons." new Sunday night Mutual program,' on which a different girl singer from a different city sings with John Baker each jWeek, is proving a real stepping 'stone to success. Annette Burford, Who unnr nn the third broadcast. has won a permanent radio assignment assign-ment as soloist on the Friday MBS j series, "Music for Half an Hour"; i Betty Ellen Morris may be the star of a new winter series. f "TtammnA" I Arthur T.ske) of the "Blondie" program may be dumb on the air, but Lake, a co-owner f or the Plastic Engineering company, - recent.lv wn Hwarrtori nn army con- tract for an airplane part made by process his company helped ae-i ae-i velop. 1 A fat kpt a d ant rnritiv wrote Paul Whiteman, saying he'd heard wniteman had once reduced, last; the sorcoant nrantat in lrnnW flOW. I because his girl wouldn't marry him till hf vi thinner Whitoman'l ad- vice concluded " Practically, I i naa to stop living." J & I "The Yearling" has been on the ; waiting list at Metro since 1941; all sorts of problems were involved, i including complications regarding : the animal actors in the film. Now it's announced that Metro will pro- duce the picture next spring. But -the hflv MMffinall-w rfinCAfl in rtlflV J v. ....uuj " r 3 "Jody" has outgrown the role, so another 11-year-old, fair-haired, fona oi animals, must be found. 'i ODDS AND ENDS So it's Capt. - Burgess MerrAiih sunn ret the coveted i chance to play Ernie Pyle in "G. I. t Joe," based on Pyle's book, "Here Is Your War." . . . Among the loser$ ere James GUason, Walter Brennan, Fred Astaire and Humphrey BoearU . . . 500 ; Filipinos, veterans of the Philippine in-- in-- vasion and other Pacific campaigns, will 1 appear in RKO't "The Invisible Army," i since the parts require men proficient ! ith the bolo knife, for the guerrilla i Ti ah ti I f . ; mer Bros, picture, known as "Mil- rierce, apparently is really set so i lastthe till has been changed y i ' - - v f v vr m Pin urn oikw Washington, D. C. CABINET CLEAN-OUT? WASHINGTON. Thns r.m th. White House say that this time the President really means business when it comes to clpanino ,,t m. Cabinet Of course, this word has ueen passed out so often that some intimates are keeping their fingers crossed. However, it is a fact that IWp. velt is now faced with some situations situa-tions he cannot escape, other situa-tions situa-tions which have made him sore. In the former category is Cordell Hull's health. In the latter category cate-gory is Jesse Jones. As a result various names have been put in the White House Cabinet hopper and are Deing examined carefully. nere are some of the names which may feature in the new cabinet. Secretary of Commerce Marrin- er Eccles, now chairman of the Federal Fed-eral Reserve Board; or Leon Henderson; Hen-derson; or Chester Bowles, now OPA administrator; or Beardsley nunu, auuior ot the Ruml tax plan and considered a liberal big-busi ness man. Secretary of Labor Dan Tobin. head of the teamsters union; or John Winant, now Ambassador to London and former head of the In ternational Labor Office. Winant however, would prefer to be Secretary Secre-tary of State. Tobin, if appointed, is about the only AFL leader who would be acceptable to the CIO. Postmaster General Robert Han- negan. Frank Walker, now Post-master Post-master General, believes that the Democratic national chairman should also be Postmaster and, being be-ing a retiring person anyway. Walker Walk-er is ready to step out. Secretary of Agriculture Roose velt is hoping to persuade Henry Wallace to take this job again. If not, Wallace will be offered the am bassadorship to Moscow, considered vitally important or chairmanship of the international food organization. organiza-tion. Roosevelt feels that it would be difficult politically to make Wallace Wal-lace Secretary of State because of opposition from Hull and Senate reactionaries. re-actionaries. Secretary of State Ex-Justice Jimmy Byrnes or Ambassador Winant. Wi-nant. Appointment of Byrnes would smooth things down for HulL who isn't anxious to resign even though in the hospital. Hull would kick like a mule' if Sumner Welles or Wallace were to succeed him. Byrnes also gets along well with Senate Foreign Relations chairman Tom Connelly and other reactionaries. reactiona-ries. Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes. Attorney General Francis Biddle. Roosevelt will not accept either Biddle's or Ickes' resignation. They were his top campaign speakers. NOTE After FDR defeated Will- kie in 1940, Miss Perkins submitted her resignation. Her letter has been in the White House files since January 15, 1941. The President never acted on it. KAISER'S MERCHANT FLEET Demon ship-builder Henry Kaiser Kai-ser thinks he has found an answer an-swer to the burning question of how he can use some of the great fleet of merchant ships he has built, and still keep on building more after the war. Kaiser plans to enter competition competi-tion with the West Coast shipping lines, set up his own shipping business, try to emphasize smart salesmanship, cheap freight rates, mass orders. He ays his only hope is a free and open market in the Orient, thinks he can do a more efficient job of shipping both to and from the Far East than a lot of old-line companies. NAVY DEPT. RESHUFFLE Secretary of the Navy Forrestal finally has devised a plan to elevate ele-vate his old Wall Street friend. Struve Hensel, to the job of Assistant Assist-ant Secretary of the Navy He has been wanting to do it for a long time, but there were too many Wall Streeters running the Navy to add any more. Here is the new solution. Vou can write it down as definite that able John Sullivan, now Assistant Secretary Secre-tary of the Treasury, will become Undersecretary of the Navy around January 1. A New Hampshire Democrat Dem-ocrat and no banker. Sullivan will replace Republican banker Ralph Bard, who came out publicly for Dewey. With banker Bard out of the picture as Undersecretary of the Navy, Forrestal figures he can then bring in banker Hensel as Assistant As-sistant Secretary. Hensel already is chief of the Navy procurement legal division but wants a handle to his name. DIPLOMATIC CHAFF m They have worn no uniform since Benjamin Franklin appeared as Ambassador Am-bassador to France in ordinary clothes, refused to don court dress and was the sensation of the French court Franklin argued that he represented rep-resented a nation of rebellious farmers farm-ers merchants and frontiersmen who believed more in democracy than in kingly folderol. C Since then U. S. ambassadors have stuck to plain evening riches, with gray-striped pants and .-utawa-. In the afternoon. The Hornet Returns to Wreck IP-JTTr"i niiii,- wmwuiiiWiua.niiiHAini m " i i.mmiin. -pi ......-'-'"?- ' 1 W.-.'iiWw,.iw .hiim., -yyyi :tmmm ' " '"N Win IWWWmWWWWfiWIIff'WHj 1' ; :'V" N It 1 - l' - f I i II ' ? J ! V X i --,jlgSm m iwiiTaiwiiiiiiiii iiiii WiiH "flilHiir ft ' il r y v :- s -:k1.x.A .: : '. :; Sv. ."-'':. I lV .1 Left: Full-face photo of the U. S. Hornet, silhouetted planes crowning its flight deck, somewhere In the Pacific. Lower right: The Stars and Stripes flutters in Pacific breeze from carrier. Upper right: Blimp makes one-point landing aboard carrier. Cruising in from a flight, the navy blimp makes the landing somewhere at sea. Three carriers help pay back part of the debt owed the Japs for sinking their namesake carriers, the Hornet, Wasp and Lexington. Deadly blows were dealt the Japanese fleet during the second battle of the Philippines by the Hornet and They Raise Large Families in 7&-! Left: Mrs. Ethel Esterly of Allentown, Pa., Is shown in hospital with the son born to her recently. Surrounding Sur-rounding her are her husband, Earl Wallace Esterly, right, foreground, and 15 more of her 18 living children. She says the new son, Timothy, will be the last. Right: The mother of 17 children, Mrs. Stella Dorothy Welsh, 43, of Allison Park, Pa., has donated 11 pints of blood to the Red Cross. She and her husband, Robert J. Welsh, 53, are shown with 14 of their children. Two sons are In the service, another was killed In action. Signs of Victory in Holland rtr4 H Ih If "Y ti y . 4, I; i- it Victory signs put up by townspeople of the Dutch city of Breda even before it was liberated from Nazi rule by Polish troops. The signs indicate indi-cate that the Nazis' V-2 weapon will give way to the V-3 of the United Nations which will make a clean sweep of the war in Europe and complete com-plete freedom for its people. Masters Become the Servants L,l hi! ft - c'.. :47 These German civilians are being marched through Kunrade, Holland, to work on Dutch roads. They were formerly German guards over Dutch workers, who were forced to work for the Nazis. Now the Dutch do the guarding and the ex-masters do the working. This is typical of the liberated countries of Europe. other navy carriers. 4v riiititiisiiaW-iiriwP'-tii 5 I A INS. Japanese Fleet Pennsylvania t - -'i . 5 t Grounded for Age Scrgt. De Sales A. Glover, Pittsburgh, Pitts-burgh, Pa., veteran of six missloni over Europe, and holder of the Ail Medal, has been grounded on account ac-count of age. He is only 16 yeari old and will be given a discharge. Sixty Axis Downed 1. - fc ''...I ' ."V -aV . wjomwk-j,.,,.- ' :j . i r t - MaJ. Richard I. Bong, Poplar Wis. (left), with a record of 35. and Maj. Thomas B. McGulre Ridgewood, N. J.. with a. score m 25 Jap plane' lnee on 1 S "Wl 1 6 4Jt v I i i- -A JillM 'i i "T i f'-i-' al onsult the Expert By ELEANOR WALSH McClure Newsnnpcr SvndlcaU Keleated by WNU SHE still looked tired, her face a little drawn as she walked through the big outer newspaper office which sounded like a machine gun nest with its barrage of furious typewriters. typewrit-ers. But when she was ensconced in the little cubbyhole that she called her own, self-assurance' replaced fatigue. fa-tigue. She was on the job again. Linda Jordan was someone she had left outside, and the name now was Emily Kent. Emily Kent, whose column of advice to the heartsick was read, surreptitiously or openly, by half the city, and whose words of wisdom, she trusted, were followed to the letter. People could and some did laugh at her writings, but many bought the paper for her counsel alone. They liked the comfortable, plump, gray haired and smiling woman whose picture appeared daily dai-ly above the column, Just under "Emily Kent Says." It wasn't really of her not of Linda Jordan, that is. Actually, the sage adviser to the heavy laden was in her middle twen ties. She was, the editor had felt, too much the glamour girl to inspire public confidence when It came to affairs of the heart. And so he had dug up this old photo of a long dead aunt as better suited to represent the spirit of the feature. On this, as on all mornings, she faced complacently the pile of let- Such grievances Linda laid aside. ;ers on her desk, on paper ranging from good to dreadful and In handwritings hand-writings to match. For, contrary to frequent belief, she did not have to manufacture the epistles she answered an-swered so wisely. Doctor them up, yes. Usually they were very dull. But as for inventing them well, hardly ever. ( Efficiently she slit open the envelopes enve-lopes and stacked the letters for reading. Those she might use went into the wire basket and those that were hopeless she tossed away. Occasionally Oc-casionally she smiled. More often she compressed her lips. "Housework "House-work simply too much married three years husband complains I no longer look nice, but how can I? do my own work except laundry and heavy cleaning no children, but know that when there are, things will be even worse." , Every so often she wrote a composite compos-ite answer, based on a number of them, and then proceeded to give the collective authors a scorching piece of her mind. For she had no patience pa-tience with women who "let themselves them-selves go" and risked losing their husbands. She found a description of a mother-in-law situation which was being" badly handled. The writer naively supposed that only she had ever faced that situation. Linda would tell her differently, she thought. The letter would need very little editing, too. It presented a common case. She wrinkled her brow a moment-no, moment-no, she hadn't discussed mothers-in-law for quite some tima. The stupid stu-pid things -people could do about problems that were simple! With the ease of a woman who knows precisely what she is doing and is untroubled by any suspicion suspi-cion that she may be wrong, she. Jotted on the back of this envelope some notes she would use In her reply. The morning had nearly slipped by. Her watch told her that in half an hour it would be time for lunch. She glowed a little. Robert would be waiting at that Italian place, and he would already have ordered because he always knew in advance exactly what she wanted. No misunderstanding mis-understanding to mar that relationshipno relation-shipno complications, no petty little lit-tle knots of the sort she spent her life unraveling. Would she marry him? Probably, she thought, though they hadn't really discussed it. Then the phone rang. Perhaps it was Robert to say that "Oh, Mr. FarweUL Yes. Yes, I can make it this afternoon, not too early. At four in your office? What?" Her voice be came suddenly shrilL "Certainly "Certain-ly not. Under no circumstances. I'll be glad to talk over a divorce with Jim any time, the sooner the better, but I will not sit in the same room with his mother. No, I don"t care to explain. I have my reasons. If you could know half the things that woman well, call me back when you've made some other arrangement ar-rangement Goodby." The lines of Irritation didn't leave her face until she reached the elevator. I CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT WEDDING RECORDS f-iaet cpiea mads of any marriage of birtK certiflcnto, for dependency proof, ll.AO, axtraa 50c. Army dischnrK p.ipr copied both aide. S2.S0, exlraf S1.00. Original! Origi-nal! returned unhnrmed. HOIHV MOUNTAIN PHOTO-ARTS S8 East 4th 8. Spanlah Fork, VUk. Used Cars Trailers OFFICE EQUIPMENT WE BUT AND SELL Office Furniture, FUta. Typewriter. Add. In Machine. Safi, Cash Feuiatere. SALT LAKE DESK EXCHANGE It Waat Braaawaj. Salt Lake CUj. Utah. TRAPPER'S SUPPLIES Edwards' Wolf nd Coyote Ertaf mutator Capsula Kul moe ooyuua on night that bmrifht ST1 JS Free formulae and Itifttruutiona. tin HUwanls' raal Coyote Scant. GEORGE EDWARDS, LIVINGSTON, MONT. SCHOOLS Salt Lake Darber College Formerly "Moler's" Edw. F. Gillette, Mgr. Clasaen now itarting. Write for io-loimaUon. io-loimaUon. 170 Keftat St., Salt Lake. RABBITS Attention, Rabbit Breeders Steady market for your frlera. Top prices. Babbit pellets nd supplies. INTEHMTN. RABBIT 1VDBSTRIBS UU 8. HUte, Salt Lake. Hears, I te 1. Vacuum Cleaners, Repairs VACUUM CIJANERSj bought, repaired, arts, guaranteed; low prices, quic serv-i-t. Send br truck to I'ROSPKKITY SalOr, SSM btale St., Salt Lake . Blah. liumari Intake Human adults consume from fivt to seven pounds of food and liquid and breathe from 30 to 35 pounds of air every 24 hours. Relieve COLDS' miseries... At bedtime rub throat, chest and back with Vicks VapoRub to case coughing, loosen up the phlegm, help relieve congestion con-gestion in upper bronchial tubes, Invite restful sieep. Relief comes as VapoRub PENETRATES to upper bronchial tubes with its special medicinal vapors, STIMULATES chest and back surfaces sur-faces like a warming poultice. Often by morning most of the misery mis-ery of the cold is gone! Remember ONLY VAPORUB Gives You this special spe-cial double action. It's time-tested, home-proved ... the best-known home remedy for relicv- m mm ing miseries of f children's colds. V vapor u a MIL liH GOOD-TASTING TONIC Good-tasting Scott's Emulsion contains natural A & D Vitamins often needed to help build stamina and resistance to colds and minor ills. Helps build strong bones and sound teeth, too I Give good-tasting good-tasting Scott's daily, the year-round! Ksccxmeuded by Main; Doctors HOUSEWIVES: Your Waste Kitchen Fata Are Needed for Exploainet TURN 'EM IN! WNU W 4a 44 Hi For You To Feel Well 4 hoora erery day, 7 daya erery week, Berer toppinr, the kidneya filler waste saattar from toe blood. If more peopla ware aware M how the kidneya rauat eoaatantly reraore anr-plua anr-plua fluid, axcaas acids and other waste matter that cannot t ay ia the blood without injory to health, there would be better under, tending er way the whole ayitwa ia upset when kidneya JaJ to function properly. Burning, acanty or toe frequent uroia-tioa uroia-tioa aometimea wares that aomethinj ia wranf. You may suffer nafsmr backache, back-ache, heedtchea, diazioM. rheumaoe pains, eetliag p at nights, swelling. W hy not try Doea's riU? ou win be asuig a medicine recommended the country over. Doea f stimulate tbe function func-tion ot the kidneya and help tbem to flush out poiaonoua waste front the blood. They eootam nothing harmful. Get Doaa's today. Use with confidence. At all drug stores. ; nouse on the band. |