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Show f TIIE LEIII SUN. LEIIL UTAn ""l p- V "---T 1 r r i If 5 , He 1 AjlINED MARINE CORPS . . .Streamlining ts forc f J warfare, the marine corps Is placing greater emphasis on units nu u"-- " 'up or second I -. mst toque! , 4 Ik,' year. i.u marchlns back to camn after in Sen on the beach at naval amphibious base, Little Creek, Va. AF ACHIEVEMENT Line Anniversary Recalls ud Heritage of Service j WNU Features. Jionths after establishment of the corps, United States made their first landing on someone else's beach in i action which has been repeated successfully more j times in the illustrious and colorful history of the fighting organza uuu. i of the marine corps on t 10, 1775, by act of the fc Congress and the proud leritage of tradition and nt are ucms tv- the traditional birthday lS re held throughout r, for the first time, the jfks are being Joined in S,s noting the 172nd anni-if anni-if founding of the mail ma-il by the new, postwar citi-artoe citi-artoe corps, the leatherneck ,e force which is being built cughout the country, i ram the Shores of Tripoli In I nd the Halls of Monte- E'S I fronn: ?, Beat i stain imau,s f i H 1847, marines have car- tne Ameriuau ub world. Their battle record I conflict, beginning with folutionary war and con-f con-f through Guadalcanal. d and Iwo Jima, still inly in-ly carved In memory as 1 lar D battle shrines, t lamed for marines the ;ea of being trne to their i ( "Semper Fidelia Al-i Al-i faithful." i i a "ready force," the ma-s ma-s lived up to that reputa- In such varied postwar fti as guarding historical aboard the Freedom jllnjtnew speed, record Impelled planes, training in marines, demonstrating amphibious tactics to mid-r mid-r cadets and serving as - She occupation forces in idents, ud to it the T and l- keep attuned with modern c warfare, the marine corps erteking a complete stream- 5L1XC igtoa I tialii: ruca, Ti ofj its forces. Smaller but r - hjtting units are being -d which will have the flexibil-ri flexibil-ri fcobility needed for rapid -el 1 ict of these revamped first-defense first-defense forces will be the '&en marine corps. These V marines, who live at f nd hold their civilian ' till be trained at local "es and airfields in the tradition for service if l,"in the air, on land and rmzed system of up-to-the- instruction in new develop- technical training wiU be gtanis. theP ad d la r jntrj ioa M - -Y. I " ' m l -f t J ' -1 i ;? MARINES . . . Mem-" Mem-" the citizen marine corps V '"k1 "le in the re-.armes.Xhree re-.armes.Xhree members . unie marine corps re-- re-- shown here setting op munications during sum-leavers. offered to citizen marines who ml. unteer for sparetlme instruction. A nationwide enrollment drive for the citizen marine corps opens this week in connection with the anni-versary anni-versary festivities. The campaign will reach Its peak In January. Programs Attuned To Locale Planned For Luxury Trains CHICAGO. - Packaged entertain-ment, entertain-ment, fitted to the locale and produced pro-duced by showmen in studios before the train ever leaves the station, is the latest promise in luxury travel by the railroads. Everything from physical comforts com-forts to psychological color and sound effects are being utilized by train designers to please the passenger pas-senger and make him fully con-scious con-scious of the ease and relaxation of train travel. Latest in the long list of postwar improvements is the plan of the Santa Fe railroad to use wife recordings re-cordings for reproduction over the public address systems in new passenger pas-senger equipment now under construction con-struction at shops of Pullman-Standard Pullman-Standard Car Manufacturing company, com-pany, in Chicago. In designing programs for these new trains, it is planned to have a producer study their specific routes and then select music and entertainment to fit the locale. Rivers, creeks and waterfalls will call for sparkling, spar-kling, tinkling music. Indian country may call for music with the chanting undertone so characteristic char-acteristic of the early American Indian folk and war songs. Because nothing short of a major catastrophe interferes with the railroad rail-road schedule of a fast, cross-country streamliner, the producer in the studio will know in advance the exact time a train will pass through certain country. He will select his entertainment accordingly. His timing tim-ing may call for the techniques of the radio producer; his choice of music an intimate knowledge of human hu-man emotions and history of the country. Both- Santa Fe and Pullman-Standard Pullman-Standard engineers point out that the use of wire recordings has several sev-eral advantages in this type of custom-built entertainment. The units are small and compact and several hours of entertainment can be recorded re-corded on a spool of wire no larger than the average fishing reel. Once set in motion, the unit requires re-quires no attention, as announcements announce-ments and dialogue will be worked into the program at the studio. However, How-ever, should special announcements be required, a flip of a switch will change the circuit to a microphone in the steward's office and another flip will bring back the wire recorder re-corder with practically no loss of time to upset the predetermined schedule. Comics Lend Cue For Pulling Teeth WESTFIELD, MASS.-Taking a cue from the comic strips, John Dvorchak, 65, a tailor, decided to save a dentist's bill by pulling out teeth with pliers. The method proved successful for the first tooth, Dvorchak reported. Two more, he feels, have to come out but he will await a steak roast, for which he'll probably need the teeth, before pulling them in the same way. ?ove Adept d Fooling Fish $ A -.uiS VW v.j . pui is neias. ciV- have mad big T? "ctur. nerer.:- have more rr'e than Mr'Tt""" irtTJP i - sales trout with fcaow anything v ;v,- Qcfinc or tying flies" seemed to be the typical sportsman's sports-man's reaction to their line ol coachmen and golden demons when the girls first launched their business. busi-ness. , . .. . Soon, however, the Portland sisters sis-ters were giving established bcotcB fly tiers stiff competition. Zane Gray, the novelist and one of Amer ica'i most notable fishermen, was one of their first customers. DREW PF.AnsnN Must We Fight Russia? lf OST significant talk newspaper editors have had in Wash- mgton recently was an off-the-record conference with ueorge Kennan, General Marshall's chief Russian policy maker. Here are the highlights. Kussia i tough talk is nothing new. It has been going on for 160 iow' Under both C2ar and 0,6 Soviets. It was soft-pedalled in the tv, 19308 l,ecause toe Bolsheviks were too weak to talk tough. The main problem in Europe is the vacuum in France and Italy. IMS vacuum has to be filled. Big question is whether Russia or the United States will move in. The vacuum was recognized by Russia even during the war, and Stalin prepared then to fill it. The U. S. doesn't want to fill it, but does want to see it filled by democratic Frenchmen and Italians themselves. Whoever first fills this hole in Europe will be successful in dominating all Europe. People of Europe are afraid of Russia but not of the United States. Because they are scared stiff, they would appease Russia before they helped the United States. Inside Russia, the people are cynical, don't take Moscow's propaganda too seriously. Vishlnsky's barbed thunderbolts at U. N. are nothing new. He S Onlv eflirin a n,V.t 1 ..u . . ikl. 4!r. I. uc uas iaia tor two years, oiuj u it louder. There is no real worry over war with Russia. Its people haven't recovered. Furthermore, the Russians figure they can get what they want by political means. Most significant key to the fact that Russia doesn't want war is that the Soviets always try to ride out war. They made a deal with Hitler in the last war in order to stay on the sidelines, and the last thing they want is war now with the United States. We are very far from war," concluded Kennan. WALTER WJNCnh.J Doodling on the Typewriter Wisest thing the Thomas investi gating group has done yet is shove Rankin (allegedly electioneering at home) to the background. He is congress' con-gress' worst ad. . . . Capitol newsmen news-men are wondering when Secretary of Agriculture Anderson and the President will get their signals straight. ... One of the President's closest aides will be front paged before the 1948 campaign starts. For "connections" with the sale of lucrative (seized) German firms. GOPeople hope to have the matter well documented in six months. Ob, thost terrible capitalistic nations. na-tions. The V. S. is spending more coin to aid foreign nations than to rebuild its armed forces. If this world isn't WESTBROOK PEGLER careful, there'll be nothing left to be careful about. ...On Madison avenue there's a Society for the Prevention of World War 111. Must be working overtime. over-time. . . . The Metopera may not do Prokofiev's "War and Peace" this season, sea-son, not only because of "technical reasons" rea-sons" (as announced) but also because they see possibilities of an early war. Such airs: Oscar Levant has three governesses, one for each of his heiresses. ... If you never want to catch pneumonia, stay clear when Talu Bankhead and Lillian Hellman meet Brrrl ... All you have to do to have a Broadway hit show is to use a title starting with "A." Currently there are five that start with it Special Rules Prevail in Sports -OME of my colleagues on the sport side have been arguing that it isn't right to punish a man by some special law of baseball or pugilism for an act which is not illicit in the view of the cops, or to punish him for some offense already expiated in the public clink. That would be double jeopardy, wouldn't it? Yes, it would and it is supposed to be repugnant to our delicate sense of justice, but that is Just what we say. It really is not repugnant at alL The miscreants or martyrs here concerned are Leo Dorocher and Rocky Graziano. Both are good but both were bad. . Happy Chandler, commissioner of the baseball industry, gave no reason why he suspended Durocher for the season of 1947. In my opinion, which is never humble or erroneous although it often stands alone, this was a whimsical, personal judgment of a man who had been touched off balance by a confusion of events. An equal effect might have been wrought by a briefer suspension or just some loud, public wigging. Graziano is a guttersnipe. But anyone who tries to argue that his environment was responsible for his police record and his misconduct in the army must explain away Al Smith and the late Cardinal Hayes, who came from the same neighborhood, and explain the overprivileged sons of the Park avenue branch of the Jeeter Lester family. H. L PHILLIPS Undernourished? See Your Doctor A fellow in New York got meat on meatless Tuesday by doctor's prescription. pre-scription. We now look for the man who will insist that his physician has found him in such shape he has to take two eggs in hot water daily. U. N. STUDY Little Insults bitter, Little cracks quite hot Make a League of Nations Quite a hectic spot. "The Duke of Windsor's private secretary said that neither the duke nor his wife had received invitations to the royal nuptials, and that it was doubtful if they would attend." News item. WALTER SHE AD The secretarial understatement of 1947. The Chiseler of the Week has just been discovered: He takes a couple of eggs to the lunchroom Wednesday night and leaves an order to have them scrambled for bim Thursday morning. We hear nothing keeps that great actor Vishinsky from a Hollywood offer except a conviction that he wouldn't look right in a cowboy hat and at some point in the screening screen-ing would shoot the horse. It's just possible that when J. Caesar Petrillo shuffles off and reaches the Golden Gate he will be barred on the ground that be is merely a duplicate of the original. G.I.s Lose Business Battle TTT'ORLD WAR II veterans chalked up better records on the battle-W battle-W front than they have on the business front, it is indicated in reports from the Veterans' administration loan guarantee office. Figures compiled by the VA loan division for the Washington area disclose that about 1 out of every 10 business enterprises begun here with GI loans has gone in the red. The situation has reached the print where some banks want nothing to do with G.L business loans. Charging that many bankera flatly state "no G.I. business loans," Morgan Callahan, loan guarantee officer for the local office' has appealed to lending Institutions to reach a happy medium. "Lots of veterans are still good propositions for loans," he insists. There's a bright side to the story, however. Hundreds of successful heiresses have originated from G.L business loans. Success stories aS?ar from every field, from physicians who have outfitted office, to gift between' are valuable restaurants, cigar stores, frozen food marts, .nie stores frozen custard emporiums, bakeries, tailor shops, furrier shops and niulUple other business, all started from G.L loans. WRWMT PATTERSON Education Needed on Labor Act T WAS staying at a San Francisco 1 hotel filled with delegates to me recent American Federation of Labor convention. It afforded me an opportunity to talk to a consider-T consider-T .1 - vins nrpspnt. in- able numoti r : . . i eluding both leaders and delegates. i t was very eviucu, . It was ' . . . the rank ana me formed by labor leader propaganda, and that the rank and file were not informed as to provisions of the art The leaders very definitely had sold it to the union members as a "slave" law, without offering any Information as to its provisions. Union members need some education educa-tion as to what that law contains. .7;. "fS .J': . J A- 0" ' i V. Permanent Hair-Do an Invention of Ancients The permanent wave was invented invent-ed thousands of years ago. The first permanent waves were achieved by women who placed clay on their hair, arranged it in waves and then sat in the sun until the clay baked dry. CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT LIVESTOCK HELP TOI'R honci and mulei keep intnp condition. Stimulate Ingxing appetites T itti Dr. LeGear's Stock Powder In their feed. The beat atock tonic money can buy. Satisfaction Sat-isfaction guaranteed. FOR BALK 70 head of HOUSES, mostly Palomino Quarter horse, breeding, 35 brood mares all bred to registered i'alomino Quarter horse stallion, 40 hettd of young stock and stallion. BEN MATKIN'g, Ttrretoa. Idataa. MISCELLANEOUS - . v t , ' :--. , v'". nuNTEnsi rrantler leather Co., bbrrwood. Oregoa, WiU tun your deer and elk hides. Write for Information. Frontier Leather Co., Sherwood. Orefea. FOB SALE m sal. Frosted Mult Machine. Barpiiln. P.O. BOX 14 . Manli. Utah CUrat, Fralt Is Law. Merchandise high. Save. Send Fruit Christmas. Free prices. Davidson Graves, Bos llllt, Edlnbarg , Tex. POULTRY, CHICKS & EQUIP. Baked Stuffed Tomatoes Save Meat (See Recipe below) Meat Savers Every now and then when we are called upon to save meat, it helps to have dishes with meat-like texture tex-ture and flavor so appetites are satisfied. sat-isfied. Fortunate ly there are certain cer-tain combinations combina-tions of vegetables vegeta-bles which, when served with some cheese, are excellent excel-lent just for such a purpose. Tomatoes with a bit of bacon art satisfying for hearty appetites; so are squash and lima beans, with a bit of sausage. Au gratin combinations combina-tions are interesting, too, from the point of view of satisfying appetites as well as the budget Use the recipes given today when you want to save on meat; these dishes are not meant to be used as a vegetable side-dish for the average aver-age family as they are Just a bit too much on the hearty side for such a purpose. Baked Stuffed Tomatoes. (Serves S) 6 tomatoes 5 slices of bacon 2 eups bread crumbs t tablespoons chopped onion M teaspoon salt H teaspoon pepper H cup grated cheese Sprigs of parsley Cut tops off tomatoes and remove pulp. Cook bacon until crisp. Break into small pieces. Make a stuffing by mixing tomato pulp, bacon, bread crumbs, onion, salt and pepper. Fill cavities of tomatoes with the stuffing. stuff-ing. Sprinkle tops with grated cheese. Place tomatoes in a heat-resistant heat-resistant glass dish. Bake in a moderately mod-erately hot (400 degree) oven for 30 minutes. Serve garnished with parsley. Squash, Sausage and Lima Bean PUtter. . (Serves 4) 2H cups cooked, mashed squash 1H cups cooked lima beans 1 tablespoon butter S aausages Arrange squash in four nests on a heat resistant glass utility platter. plat-ter. Place lima beans in center of each squash nest. Dot lima beans with butter. Place sausages around squash nests. Bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees) for 30 minutes or until sausages are done. Sausage Stuffed Eggplant. (Serves 4) 1 medium eggplant 94 pound pork sausage cup chopped onion 1 clove garlic, minced 1 green pepper, chopped I tablespoons chopped parsley t cups cooked brown rice H teaspoon poultry seasoning Salt and pepper M cup grated cheese Cut eggplant in half lengthwise. Cook in boiling salted water for 10 minutes, or until it is almost tender. ten-der. Cook sausage meat slowly in large skillet until lightly browned, stirring occasion ally. Add onion, garlic, green pepper pep-per and parsley, and cook until vegetables are almost tender. Pour off some sausage fat, leaving about Vt cup in pan. Add rice. Scoop egg- LYNN SAYS: Save Time Keeping Clean With These Tips Warm soapsuds and water are the best treatment for cleaning leather furniture. When you place a clean cover on your ironing board, have it wet and pull it tightly. Tack it on and it will dry wrinkle-free. When your china dishes become slightly discolored, use a little whiting whit-ing to clean them. Rinse well in lukewarm water. LYNN CHAMBERS' MENU Celery and Potato Soup Baked Stuffed Tomatoes Hot Biscuits Baked String Beans with Mushrooms Molded Pear Salad Relishes Chocolate Cake Beverage Recipes given. HELP VOI R MENS be profitable layers. Stimulate poor appetites with Dr. LeGear'a Poultry Prescription In all their feed. Used by successful poultrymen everywhere. Tho best poultry tonic money ran buy. WANTED TO BUY WE BUT AND SELL Office Furniture, Files, Typewriters. Adding Add-ing Machines. Sates, Cash Hrglsler. SALT LAKE DESK EXCHANGE tZt Seuta Stats St., Salt Laks City, Utah plant pulp out of partly cooked halves, leaving a half-inch shelL Chop pulp and add to sausage mix ture; add poultry seasoning and salt and pepper to taste. Fill eggplant egg-plant shells with the mixture. Sprinkle with cheese. Bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees) until well browned. Baked String Beans with Mush- rooms. (Serves ) 1 pound string beans, slivered 1 pound mushrooms 2 tablespoons butter t tablespoon Boor 2 caps milk cup battered bread crumbs Cook green beans In boiling salt ed water until tender. Drain well. Peel, slice and saute mushrooms in butter. Dredge mushrooms in flour and add the milk. Cook until thickened. Combine with beans and pour into a buttered baking dish. Over the top sprinkle the bread crumbs. Bake Just long enough to heat through and brown the crumbs. Onions with Potatoes. 8 bermuda onions 3 cups diced cooked potatoes Salt and pepper H cup milk 2 tablespoons batter M cup cheese, grated Paprika Peel the onions and cut a slice from the top of each. Parboil in boiling salted wa ter for 15 minutes. min-utes. Drain and scoop out, leaving leav-ing just a shell. Season potatoes with salt and pepper. pep-per. Place In an iron skillet over a low flame, cov er with milk and dot with butter. When all the milk is absorbed, fill the onion shells with the potato mixture mix-ture and cover with grated cheese. Dust with paprika and run under the broiler flame to melt the cheese and heat thoroughly. Cora and Bean Pudding. (Serve 6) K cop butter 2 eggs, separated 2 tablespoons flour H teaspoon sugar K teaspoon salt ii teaspoon white pepper Paprika 1 cup soup stock 1 cup cream 1 quart cooked and shredded green beans 2 cups corn 1 chopped green pepper 1 chopped plmiento 1 teaspoon chopped parsley Melt butter; add yolks, then flour, sugar, salt, pepper and paprika. Add soup stock and cream. Fold in egg whites and vegetables. Pour into a greased baking dish and bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees) for 30 minutes. Released by WNU Features. Buy U. S. Savings Bonds! fltH WMF n a -Spoils Sleep Tonight ! A f w drops of Vkks Va-tro-nol in each noe trll works right where trouble is to open nose, relieve stuffy, transient tran-sient congestion. Brings quick relief from snlffly, sneesy rteaa com autre. au-tre. Try itl Follow directions in package. lICiA-TIl-fl , CO THIS I to maka I brtathlng I aslsr-1 lnvlt I , restful I OL fa uiyffitf on Set four Paint or Building Sspply Dealer 1 DittrlbuUd bf I HANSON LIME I STUCCO CO. j 1374 SauM, Wal T.mni. Sl,mmt Salt lake CHy 4, Utah f awj saa sta r saw am was It's magical! With Kite's QUICK SET Leak Stopper you can tightly plug up cracks and holes in walls and floor... in f to S minutes.' QUICK-SET, easily applied, seals leaks even against active water pressure. For all masonry, above and under ground. Specially recommended rec-ommended for leaks where wall joins the floor. Protect your home. Get QUICK-SET today! GIRLS! WOMIN! try this if you're F3 wmm On 'CERTAIN DAYS 01 Month-Do Month-Do female functional monthly disturbances disturb-ances make you feel nervous. Irritable so weak and tired out at such times' Then cto try Lydls E. Plnkham's Vegetable Vege-table Compound to relieve such symptoms. symp-toms. It's lamout for this I Taken regularly regu-larly Plnkham's Compound helps buUd up resistance against such distress. dis-tress. Also a great stomachic tonic I .VNU W 45-47 Patent leather is best cleaned with clean, lint-free cloth dipped in vinegar. To keep seldom-used kettles from acquiring a musty odor, store without with-out covers. An easy way to scour pots and pans is to use a cork dipped in scouring powder. Iodine stains from a rug are best removed by sponging with denatured alcohol, followed by a wash with mild soapsuds made In lukewarm water. And Your Strength and Energy Is Below Par It may be earned by disorder of kidney kid-ney (unction that permits poisonous waste to secumulate. For truly many people (eel tired, weak and miserable wbea the kidneys tail to remove exceaa acids and other wsata matter from the blood. Yoa may saffsr nsgglnt bsckache, rheumatic pains, headaches, dizziness, renin, up nights, let pains, swelltnt-Sometimes swelltnt-Sometimes frequent and scanty urination urina-tion with martini and burning is another an-other site that something. Is wrong with the kidneys or bladder. There should be ao doubt that prompt treatment Is wiser thsa neglect. Lae Doan't PilU. It is better to rely on a medicine thst has won countrywide approval ap-proval thaa on something less (svorably kaown. Doan'i have been tried and tested test-ed many years. Ars st all drat stores. Get Dtan't today |