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Show THE LEIII SUN, LEIII, UTAH 1 d; ut sen :er r Re DRi r .; if i i . 'U.H Ii :f nil in A ! ARS I Tori late a good requii igh PI than farms rdenel irops ons al id fni y dwff lover e hon insq the ii imparif sugat per srymi cent r cent 1 is Pi 1 of of plants per :ed by fiillspi mber. our oi ;er. )le, usit e aroui measul tract id lengf nd pH m aHo and q materii i ed i changes evedby genuine '1 Mn 'and W Western Newspaper Union. nv VIRGINIA VALE k-YEAR-OLD Beverly 5U6 oil111111-''""3 .iv,- ...f nnnlHn't be more surprise to anybody than st0 her. She was getting on i in first grade in public ,,01 when her mother saw 3d in a Los Angeles pa-I pa-I universal wanted a child ac- V" . mr O lt to play ivoiuw u iaiius ... XL. I- .1.. in uieir LCLiiuiuuiui KIHCl " Ltier GaL" Beverly Sue looks it like Yvonne, isut ner mower ..vino so she sent the voune FfUJIUi'O" - . - to the studio with her own sis- WWWJ(W.W.V'.-li! pue; , -r" ad, " of g : cai i maj ; , ictaal i llustr i - te & VV, f n ant , , !To I, . i name i eadiaa& if ;1 BEVERLY SUE SIMMONS and Miss Simmons won out over :ontestants, though she'd never i in her life. She used a foun- pen for the first time when wrote her name on her contract all of a sudden she was In the taradays the 'teen age girl es in for so much comment p from people who are qualified comment and those who Just coze tnat everyDoay ougni to the March of Time's latest, fen-Age Girls." It shows what re doing, wearing, reading; they talk, how they behave, :st they rave over and what they It also shows their serious (, portraying them as the wom- oi tomorrow. lit last! All of ns who've com- Vned for years because movie Vi look too much like movie stars p they're shown In getting-up-in- Viorning scenes are going to get we've asked for. In "Janle Married" Joan Leslie wakes abed, without make-up. response to a request from the idian army. Lassie, the collie . made a personal appearance during his recent location trip Vancouver for Metro's "Son of sie." Many sequences were in the beautiful Banff region ie Canadian Rockies. scent Sherman temporarily re lished direction of "Janie Gets "-ied" to 11-year-old Clare Foley "t to aDDear in a scene with -Id Meek. The sequence re ed Meek to play with a yo-yo; man had forgotten how to do it, Ueek never had known. nme Doctor" begins its sixth on the air August 12, but after mS the first four scripts Max ftin decided he was written out, wanted to emit. His sponsor '?& him to try once more, and he " fact, he's written 256 more, 31 have, by the 12th of August e eating salted peanuts, the p times he sets up a crime ,for H Jameson to solve, the more "inks up. :aH to MerriU Mueller, NBC "spondent In the Philippines, lets there have a new slang e rslon"NBC leave." It means i -oay pass to Manila and beean P Mueller arranged for soldiers WTIP from f.,ni i?- t: i: capital city for broadcasts to This "NBC leave" usually r - .uree aays, and built up "e uunne, vacationing In the visited the' James Meltons in Nticut-facing the prospect of melton carrv out his Dromise -We her around the countryside most ancient automobUe in section. Incidentally, the Con- legislature has annroved a "oviding $150,000 for a museum ;)Use historical exhibits and the JB coUection of old cars. r Benny reports that after his i . tour of army camps "US summer, his entire Will be intact for the return ;c air in the falL So Mary Liv- v uas all summer to cet R- w me broadcasting ordeal. :,r,c li J Fxnc vn.u r h... vc...u.7- r ?el 'acfc London i 'Call Z d co-starring Clark Gable ( Young, will be re-issued . . . "avers and his Bronco Busters, Hi f " i troupe, nave been hjj ''""w to do specialty acts niter, co-starring Charles " and n ... V., esse' has completed his first IJ Producer, "The Dolly Sis- Vi contract extended . . . T! Borge Show" now replaces t "tvee and tnll - Tkm ,r M broadcast by CBS, is re- iToJ . U Uay Through Victory un published by CBS, Allied Hero Returns to a Grateful Country NEW WHITE HOUSE TEMPO Harry Truman has now been President of the United States for a little over two months two of the most historic months in the nation's history. These two months are sufficient suf-ficient to get a fairly accurate gauge of how the new President will function func-tion for the rest of his term. On the surface there is a new at mosphere in the White House when you walk into it these days. If, for Instance, you drop in on White House Secretary Charlie Ross, he is cordial, courteous, but brief. There is no invitation or inclination to sit down and gossip. This business-like atmosphere prevails throughout the entire White House staff. If you go on in to see Ross's boss, you get in on time. There are few waits. And the little man on the other side of the big, broad, shiny desk listens intently. He wants to hear what his visitors have to say. These are two definite innovations. Truman gives the impression of having a firm grasp on all domestic problems. He knows them thorough lyundoubtedly better than Frank lin Roosevelt during his latter years. when he was devoting all his time to the war. One of Truman's frequent replies to callers when they urge sanction on some special idea is: , I realize that. But it takes time to do all these things, and seldom have so many important things confronted us all at one time. I'll get around to that just as soon as can." One thing that worries him most is our foreign affairs. The new President Pres-ident frankly realizes It is his main weakness. He does not have Roosevelt's Roose-velt's international background, therefore has to rely almost wholly on his diplomats. Truman's method of running the government Is that of picking pick-ing good men and giving them free rein. This is a good system, sys-tem, and we could have had more of it in the past. But it breaks down when the President is not sure he can rely on the men picked to perform the most important job we now face building up the peace after the war. Truman told Stettinius, for instance, that he was to be his own boss at San Francisco. But he found that Stettinius called him on the phone once or twice a day to get his approval of almost al-most every decision. Unlike Roosevelt, Truman does not hesitate to fire a man wno doesn't produce. He let Leonard Reinsch go back to his radio job in Atlanta the day after he handled himself badly in a press conference. He transferred Edward D. McKim, his administrative assistant, after it became known that the genial and likeable McKim seemed too en grossed in Mrs. "Hope Diamond" McLean's dinner parties and the social so-cial whirl of Washington. MacARTHUR ONCE FIRED EISENHOWER Sometimes it is from quirks of fate or personal jealousies that heroes are born. " - Old army friends of General F.ispnhnwer couldn't help but re member this as they gathered to pay him tribute. Fnr. if it had not been for a per sonal row with General MacArthur in the Philippines, Eisenhower prob-nhlv prob-nhlv would be in a Jap prison camp today instead of receiving the plaud its of millions. When MacArthur retired as chief of staff and began the reorganiza tion of the new Philippine army, he tnnk with him to Manila one of the bright, up-and-coming men of the army, Col. Dwight Eisennower. am, after some time in the Philippines, things didn't go well, and Mac-Arthur Mac-Arthur fired him. Eisenhower went back to the U.S.A. to climb to fame and the top command of the American Ameri-can army. If he had remained with Mac Arthur, he probably would now be with Gen. "Skinny" Wainwright and the 16 other American generals taken prisoner by the Japs. BASEBALL AND UNITED NATIONS In San Francisco, a delegation of Philadelphians called on Australia's External Affairs Minister Herbert Evatt to ask that the city of broth-ly broth-ly love founded by William Perm become the seat of the United Nations Na-tions in the future. Dr. Evatt listened carefully. Then he replied: "I can't vote for Philadelphia until un-til the Phillies get out of the cellar. cel-lar. I'm afraid it would give the United Nations a defeatist attitude if both Philadelphia baseball teams were at the bottom of their leagues." 1 ; ft. H S 7 x ' ' yl : k "I I V' ! - IsS ' (S rj - k"'-'t -F.l;- v V 6 -Vj News Behind mi ByPAULWALLONj General of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower is shown In upper circle as he was welcomed home by his wife. To his right is his father, David, and his mother is to his left. Lower left shows the hero and his bride in 1915, shortly after he married Mamie Doud of Denver. Lower center shows him as he finished his training at West Point. Lower right shows the Eisenhower family taken In 1902 at their home In Abilene. Blind Vets Learn to Play and Work Again , -' - rtr ty r r, zJ' ' - lz' V y ' A p Kvr 51 J if xr ; t fit 1 M I ilil f '1 HNI CAM, At the New York Institute for the Education of the Blind, navy men and marines who lost their sight In the service of their country are engaged In a baseball game, as shown In the upper photo. They follow the movement of the oversize ball by sound. Lower, from left to right, archery, radio repairing and bowling. Market Lamb Show Pen Winner fey - -feM , 4 tl " - ? Iff I A ' Twin Brothers Meet F- 4' Award for best pen of three at the Chicago Junior Market Lamb show went to Sherwood Stouffer's beauties of Mount Morris, 111. Entries were received from every state In the Midwest. Young Stouffer, who is 17, was awarded second prize for his pen of five Iambs at last year's show. The prixes are a trophy and cash award. G.Ls Drive Strike-Bound Trucks ! i t" - " i t rt- -r rn innuM r Sgt. Granville J. P. (left) and CpL Martial Harris, twin brothers, are shown when they met for the first time since babyhood days. They were separated by death of both parents and did not learn of each other until the army located them and. brought them together. Youngest U. S. Ci ti zen CAPITAL CHAFF fl. New Hampshire's one-time isolationist isola-tionist Senator Tobey has got religion. reli-gion. He is so anxious to avoid another an-other war that he has become one oi the most ardent advocates of international inter-national co-operation. Tobey even blasted (indirectly) his old friend and colleague, ex-Senator Danaher of Connecticut, who, while an executive execu-tive of the Republican national committee, com-mittee, used his position as ex-sena tor to go on the senate floor and lobby against the reciprocal trad agreements act. jiwuwnnjm.wj.' '.".wwjmjm ' yaw ... i.yww v.'v.KvpnwrwtHlv)? i u.i uyu:y r j - f i y j Soldiers took over the job of driving trucks In Chicago as members of the truck drivers' union walked out. Thousands of soldiers were shipped to Chicago to keep essential trucks moving, carrying food and war supplies. Photo shows the M.P.s assisting an army driver into the cabin of on- of tbe trucks loaded ready for delivery. Charles Franklin Cohen become the youngest person to be sworn in as a citizen in the United States. His father, Sgt. Mai Cohen, is in tLr Canadian army. Released by Western Newspaper Union. POLITICAL UNREST GROWS IN EUROPE WASHINGTON. Those senators back from Europe bad far more to say than they offered in interviews. Their private reports on their quick-study quick-study of the western end of the continent con-tinent would make your ears curl Here are some of the things they did not make public. De Gaulle is staving off an election elec-tion in France because he fears the communists will sweep him and all democrats into the discard. The impending im-pending election In the British Isles may do much to determine how she will stand against the sweeping surge, as defeat of Churchill would mean appeasement of communist expansion. He, himself, Is afraid of it. Yet Churchill and De Gaulle are fighting each other. De Gaulle ordered the Syrian shooting by his French forces because he saw Britain going back Into the Middle Eact in the old way and thought he could do the same thing. Church) Chur-ch) !1 dislikes him and is suspicious suspi-cious of him, although the French general Is probably the only remaining road-block to communism in France. De Gaulle Is existing in control only by adroit double-handed juggling of French political factions. fac-tions. The French people are not as fully filled with admiration of us as the cheering movie newsreels sometimes some-times suggest. They see American soldiers not always as their libera tors but as highly paid strangers (etrangers) who travel In jeeps while others walk, and are well-fed, while they are not. The French powers likewise resent re-sent the presence of American forces in North Africa because we tend to give the Arabs ideas of liberty which the French do not con sider healthful for their colonists. Their ruined industries, short ages of materials and unbelievably extreme decay in morals are com bining to break the stamina of the nation and make it an easy prey for any opposition to existing rule and the sole, present, powerful op position is the political absurdity known as communism. Their heritage runs back into great love of liberty as deep as our own, but they are to a considerable extent a peasant people, and therefore there-fore easily subject to harsh, disciplined disci-plined leadership of dictators. So far they have not come to that yet, but there is resignation apparent among millions of them who do not have enough to eat and not enough work. They are in the mood for subjection by any overrunning political power, In Italy, communism is much stronger than dispatches have led us to suspect The revolutionary movement is kept down mainly by the American military force of occupation. oc-cupation. It seems to have all the political spending money there Is. in hand-to-hand circulation there. All the symptoms of dejected resigna- Ition apparent in France are also present in Italy, Including the decline de-cline in morals. The Belgians and Dutch seem to have much more character, more stamina, are more insistent upon liberty and christian principles. They are trying harder to revive. Their people show less moral decay. Whether the people in Anglo-French-American Germany can be made democratic is yet unclear. They are not only dejected but sullen and all believe they face years of dire existence as their penalty pen-alty for making war. The anti-fraternization anti-fraternization policy of General Eisenhower is likely to be changed to permit our soldiers to mingle more with them. But these areas, all of them, are in our sphere of democratic influence, influ-ence, and therefore the most favorable fa-vorable sections of the continent The Russians have everything else in their lap (except possibly Greece, which is held on one knee, so-to-speak) and everything the Russians have is completely blacked out from the rest of the wide world. TMnthinff valid or cenetratine is li-nnum hv us nf Yugoslavia. Ro- WNU W mania, Bulgaria, Austria, or Czechoslovakia, Czech-oslovakia, except that Stalin is there setting up the kind of governments he wants, and one other confirmed fact all anti-communist opposition opposi-tion is being liquidated. The Polish issue, which we discuss dis-cuss so extensively, is a minor matter mat-ter as compared with this whole of middle and southeastern Europe operating on a Russian axis. If conditions are as bad as they ; are known to be in our end of Europe, Eu-rope, it would be unreasonable not to suppose that they are twice as bad in Uie unsnown ywrvr emi. Many courses of probable action are being discussed. Anglo - French relations certainly need to De nxea at once. Rapprochement between De Gaulle and Churchill is called for. More Intelligent and earnest American leadership to back the people in Europe who like our way of life (which was their historic wav) is needed. 5 ASK t.E ? ANOTHER l A General Quiz l . The Question 1. Eased on standard time, when it'a 12 noon in Chicago, in Tokyo it's what time? 2. What is meant by a woman's coterie? 3. What country ranks next to the United States in population in the western hemisphere? 4. With what type of cases does the ftppellata court deal? 5. From what source is sac charin derived? 6. What was the White House first known as? 7. How many Islands are there In the Philippines? 8. From what does the word camera come? The Answer 1. Three a. m. the next day. 2. Her set, or circle of friends. 3. Brazil. 4. With appeals. 5. Coal tar. 6. The President's Palace. 7. About 7,000. 8. From the Italian word cam era which means chamber. CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT Persons now tngsgei In isstatitl Industry will not sppr without sft-rntnt sft-rntnt of trtUtbility from thttr Iocs! Vaittd Sutcs Employment Smc. nELP WANTED MEN, WOMEN ALASKA. Thousands jobs-biiatness oppor. lnio. accurate, authentic, ou ways i.arn Livelihood in Alaska" $1. Alaska Re-search Re-search Bursas, Bos 905, Juneau, Alaska. AUTOS, TRUCKS & ACCESS. P0SHioouVn0i JAw. ' An FARMS AND RANCIIES WANTED Farms & StockRanches We bava a largo group of clients able to pay all cash, or substantial down payments. pay-ments. It you wish to sell, send us details. 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To Feel Well 11 boors erery day, Tdys JT week, never stopping, th kidneys filter waste matter from the blood. If more people were aware of how toe kidneys must constantly remove surplus sur-plus fluid, excess acids and other waste matter that eannot sty In. the blood without Injury to beslth, tnere would be better sndenrtandmi o( rr tbe whole system la upeet when kidneys laJj to function properly. Burning, scanty or too frequent urination urina-tion sometimes warns that something Is wrong. You may suffer nagging backache, back-ache, headaches, diiiinms, rheumaoe pains, getting up at nights, sweumg. Why not try IW P.inT You be using a medicine reeomnienaea toe country over. ' stimulate the fune-tion fune-tion of the kidneys and help tnem t flush out poisonous wssfi from th9 blood. They contain nothing harmful. Get Doom's today. Use with confidence. At aU drug stores. |