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Show ?" fjijMiston " Ti IV 7a tilUjngton Stirs With War Talk JentKusc .... virf nil IjJlrM,:: vicrv ... hit "mion Dollar foTtt lteen br?kmf . n oorrrKART blared forth Dttw f Press v. v. ffisbington, - Wing fe, National I chall irv. in dur-,ar..0p- national capital It is a situ- lidition that, in generaj. very i;tlo ie be faced, for in this have haDDened Ullllgs ..v.- 1 best be described as the J itw to Heat ni . , gna f.oel an. w UHLElta i UtudT ' netimes refr jjiDg course, piay-ya- aiiu cops . U official nf Phil. iv.-- . the screams were onH women in responsibility and aim OUtDUrsis 'Milton' ,e 0 "If IN m midst of ... ( and his office are rege drove to the Capitol and there, before a joint 0f senate and house, he .sident 1 ?&3a 'Worn I J o voice, heard . ul ",c others hppause - at Roosevelt's WeSStf yingjw puuut aim this period which tempting to aescnue tame L I 'OUR leaders in iwihC'l national Ifnr new trtwast.l I aeiense he asked for $1,196,- - - B; ne of thews. fatnre ble cloud the sd n CUGCUtf, is i F' 9 pulcher HIRAM Yen in the arid war JOUNSOy Senate since the and is "still go- - M )isordertJ in appropriations to pay for ction landed army, navy, marine harry ul i' plants, munition shipbuilding oper est:;.posnreuo raia on & re tpt to H biter gun production, etc. foresaw desperate these things and he told :s to speed up these appro-s- . to the Presi-toAccording :ttU( Bp: of the conditions that ieel eo out Oik 'ion faces, fast enemy air-ca- n Border in reach Kansas City or St. or too k 'ie heart of America before I do anything about it. More- af ul eiem nore ttua J parachutists from enemy ivil. A might drop in, most any day eri everp: d start taking over our cities m and countrysides. The iat Mr. Roosevelt made Eu-a- r appear so close to Wash-ia- t we really may expect to ombs exploding almost any Roosevelt tis I r w i of all of tit thought ew 7 it er Ernest l Aent't educa: today,' Request Added hgular c Appropriations t sum for which the Presided is in addition to about WOOO in appropriations that requested for the military or They i ph?s these things, Mr. we ought to have Nately 50,000 airplanes, and iem tonight or tomorrow. sity'i lay s in the regular annual 1 ap-;,J- bills for WJ on July the fiscal year Hent:: 1940. He l, woniB there was no over-- ? s and i of items. ttror 'represented This was all new the best thought ought to be done to meet Ueige of Hitlpr'a Ipeinns. filer's lemons ovprran Hoi- Is I'd Belgium, the war fever of steady S'on hit a new high. It had r 8l? "P when the German dic- zei. )t into Norway. Naturally, from mure increased when the ger torccs of Uie Hitler machine tresso rned loose in the Low Coun-1;- r. t toft Roosevelt's speech to nut well advertised in ad- B 4 nat'on ig. of people that was that A 'rM decisions from Washmg-- f ngel on all of the valves of "'f as a street cleaner floods e nyaranu uniy I 1 rant gives a co1 wa- iL. linninl f "filch children like to nlav. tan 'ore the President's speech, iloyed J'e uch sour songs as that 5"ator Austin of Vermont, ' nail Publican leader in the . Auslin rose gravely in weDi at i the senate and there " -- in1 DW1 he war talk al R,u.i nT "ri ihc f 4 m lsnl vtr' way Jn wh.ch y omcials in Washington ome so excited about . .""gcr of ti q war. He see. no Panic. This Is a. time ,1 iard 1, lea Alt1' od'J it' niJc. campus r l horn 6 THIS WEEK tones the "bwii'ii lmnt. shouted to the world that the 9- - f ' Duchess Charlotte of Luxembourg there was confusion and embarrassment in the d Now, it may be Senator "Hi" Johnson of CalifonJa fought and fought until he was able to convince congress that none the foreign nations who had not of their debts should be allowed to paid bor-roany more money in the United States. The California senator is one of seven men now in the senate who were there during the first World war, and he is still goins Caesar Received Bare Dues From Tiny Luxembourg strong. No Payment on War Debts The law that he forced through congress, almost single handed, was a good law when it was passed. It is a better law today, considering that those nations which we helped men and billions by of dollars are involved again in a war to save democracy. And, incidentally. they have paid the last 10 This pretty coed at the University of Rochester goes in for collecting good numbers on miniature license tags of her boy friends, ihe tags are secured through tire dealers and campus queens are judged by the numbers they icear. .wp.ii 'gw nothing on their debts in or 12 years, so that they is around. y Ie' , nccd ''ling. t or a . il-.H- i Jin? thinking and not ntrnips within our "' lain column Ive sPpc'al attention, . I r, Boston college was one of the At Southern Methodist it's the g first to go in for goldfish fad to collect autographs on on a large scale. your sport shirt. swal-loivin- of bad news from Europe-b- ad news for all of us who want to see the allies (or anybody else who can do it) knock Hitler and his gang The United into smithereens. that there is Of is States into no doubt. The Hitler drives Holland and Belgium have made it of HiUer certain that few supporters this coundare assert themselves in that allied hunch try But I have a somecensorship has been opened m the what in order that we, here full imUnited States, can get the rape and arthe of slaughter, pact the Gerson being committed by is it I just a say man legions. be posit might see, You hunch. allies would sible after all that the in the war on their us have to like our side to pay their bills and have soldiers killed, ogam. whole thing gripe Anyway, this It s As expression me beyond activities that were in the midst o is more disgusting It World war. to t, Ik that represents th.nk.ng. in lack of balanced all that our at There Is no doubt far below are navy our army and nation has That is to say, this stream Some of our rising young freshmen even go in for munching phonograph records of their favorite orchestra leaders. Most uere content munchers with "swing" melodies; others demanded a "diet" of classical records. M mjwiiitiiiiuinimpj.i' And this pretty miss displays something new in coed hats, using her license plates for a hat band. mi iii't""""! mm nui.i u v i 1 AwslW L if IV 111 It looks like Fido tvill have his collar o hard time keeping the Um- At ;n nlace. Above: i"-- 8 S'fj0 the w S3 col- - l f-- , -- i ' pd 1 , 9 j ifffi" JT- - f-- j i d ' . t he slates that rnm(,nt. I Dies with-wa- s l. iliO-a-"- "' ,4 San Jo'C Sfafc, Jocfe He they toss out h male director and substitute a woman for the direction of "Dance, Girls, Dance." Miss Dorothy Arzner replaces Roy Del Ruth. n It is the story of one step at a time stenographer, script girl, film editor, scenarist, director. When she was a student at the University of Southern California, her father asked her to show some friends through Cecil De Mille'i movie lot. She liked the place so well that she returned to get a stenographer's Job. well-wor- same Democratic p nat.ons. guns of other u -- ft of "SkewisfthatMr. ha VJS li cZ turn from W0Uld IN THE CORNERS could explain Stiff Technocrat war but his critics said he wasn't much help in fighting it. Replacing him is the e grocer's boy, Herbert Morrison, who quit school when he was 12. Mr. Morrison, who for the last nine years has been lambasting the tory government for fumbling and faltering, is the only dash of new blood in the cabinet. A conservative Labor leader, who in 1934 rushed the last of the out of the movement, he has been variously appraised. One British friend tells me that "he is another Ramsay MacDonald, hamstrung )rv colitical ambition." Another, equally credible, tells me he is a vigorous and intelligent public leader who will greatly strengthen the cabinet The son of a laborer, he was grocer's boy, elevator operator, traveling salesman, telephone operator, and secretary of the London Labor party at $5 a week. When he was a small boy, a phrenologist, taking his for a fee, told last him he would one day rule England. He had heard about Dick Whittington and laughingly tells the story when someone suggests that he may be prime minister. It is almost certain that he will if England has another Labor government. Significantly, he has contended that England must be more hospitable to conveyor-bel- t production, in both war and peace, if it expected to The Germans meet competition. of long have been in planes, while the British have clung and quality traditionto hand-craally. Judging from Mr. Morrison's dossier of the last few years, he may help put more technological kick into their war operations. That has been one of his big ideas. TN HOLLYWOOD Die DUKCU no- - six-pen- 1 6 started a jaa vj 6rf.s. or coflrJ Prince- At the 'right is pictured written in Chairman that before special house BOARDS WITH HOLES, ST the other, "that she won't say, My dear. " They proteeded towards the first man's home. He knocked at the door and a head appeared at the window above. "My dear" began the man. wife interrupt His ed with: " 'My dear be hanged. Wait till you come inside." long-sufferin- g one-tim- n Th'ave USe g, Cabinet a says. Siequaled "fifth FOR A TABLE 26" HIGH b e- - who EDWARD LESLIE BURGIN, minretired as British ister of supply, knows Sanskrit and six or eight other languages, and writes philo-NeMember of sophical pro-all- dangerous 1 side-saddl- e. 'He Kept Us Out of War' Is Now Being Revived And dear Mr. Secretary Wallace of the department of agriculture. He couldn't get in on the excitement any other way, apparently. So. in his keynote speech to the Iowa Democratic state convention, he announced that Mr. Roosevelt had kept this nation out of war. That was his tribute, but immediately there were a good many persons able to recall a similar slogan from back about 1916 when it was used with great effectiveness. All through these days that I have a steady sought to describe was r--r f . where in the realm wag USE 52 SMALL SPOOLS there a gun with which to salute ANO 24 LARGE the royal newcomer. That was one instance in which the League of NaHJSE4BRA55 tions had fulfilled its obligation for CURTAIN RODS RUN Euof the progressive disarmament THROUGH rope. Never would Luxembourg SPOOLS NO BOARDS, menace the peace of the continent. S6 GLUE BETWEEN The French gallantly rushed in a 75, with a crew, and the baby was given a thunderous welcome. ter take along a spool to try when t Today the Grand Duchess you shop for the rods; and-geCharlotte, her husband, Trlnee one has the type that piece fitting and Felix of Bourbon-Parm- a inside the other. If the spools are their six children are safe in a little loose on the rod, it won't France, fleeing guns which end make any difference for they lives rather than acclaim new must be glued between each spool, life. The terror came in the and also between the spools and night, after 21 years of peacethe table shelves. I have shown ful In which the in the sketch everything else you grand duchess had reared her need to know to make this table. children, played the piano and, Good luck to you! being a fluent linguist, had kept abreast of French, German and NOTE: If you have an iron bed English literature. She has alor a rocking chair, you would like ways said that talk of war and be sure to send for to modernize politics was distasteful to her. my Book No. 3. It contains 32 As the ruler of her tiny princifascinating ideas of things to make pality she discharged her dufor your home. Send 10 cents coin ties of state with care and dilito cover cost of book and mailing. gence. Send order to: At the end of the World war, Charlotte expressed extreme disMRS. RUTH WYETH SPEARS taste for the Germans. Her elder Drawer 10 New York sister, Marie Adelaide, was comBedford HUls pelled to retire as ruler, on account Enclose 10 cents for Book No. 3. of her sympathies and Name Charlotte was elected in plebiscite Address which continued the last grand duchy in Europe, as against a republic. He Put the Words Right She is tall and handsome, 44 years old, of the House of NasIn Her Mouth to Win Bet sau, also the Ilouse of Queen WUhelmina of Holland, the richest house in Europe. LuxemTpWO fellows who had been din- landof ing rather well were in the Millet land is a bourg mood for a ridiculous wager. scapes and haunted castles. The "I'll bet you," said one solemngrand duchess has traversed it mainly on horseback, riding ly, "that the first words my wife Here the new savsays, when I get home tonight are agery finds a shining mark of My dear.' " age-ol- d decency and simplicity. "And I'll bet you a fiver," said home-keepin- One can get bets the politicians. Yes, they the thing, also. The and the third term advocates are smiling with that appearance that goes with a knowledge that they have gained ground. Privately, many of them will say that the nearness of the war makes certain that Mr. Roosevelt will be elected for a third term. They are sure the country will not dare to change horses in the middle of the stream, not even if France and England did change their prinMr. Roosevelt will cipal leaders. have to remain on the job because his two terms give him a great advantage in dealing with these foreign problems, they are saying. !f AmcS palace cause l I Has Been Made Recently are busy about "inner circle" Tomb do, for instanc- e- "hih And "1 y 1 rEAR MRS. NEWS in the capital city that we will be mixed up in Europe's war, and the dates that are offered range anywhere from a few weeks to next winter. afifiliirs.ii t loud year 0Ut' most States of America must do ever?, thing it can to help the allies. Yes LTUVUPply money! And so! argued for repeal of that Johnson Act spirit . FLIE to rise in in still owe around $13,500,000,000. Lights have been burning late in the war and navy offices. Mr. Roosevelt worked one night until two o'clock in the morning. That was while he was preparing his defense speech. Even the gambling will do By RUTH WYETII SPEARS SPEARS: I have made a pair of spool shelves like those you give directions for in your Sewing Book No. 3. They are painted watermelon pink to match the flowers in my bedroom curtains, and they are very pretty hung at each side of the windows. I would like to make some end tables of spools for the living room, but I can't think of a way to make them rigid. Have you By LEMUEL F. PARTON any suggestions as to how this (Consolidated Features WNU Service.) may be done? B. P." 1922, when a In Curtain rods are used through NEW YORK.--was born to the Grand the spools to make the legs. Bet- - 7 rteputa,tlons de and lost by ability to swaU thriT all sorts T teStJnunbpr f goldfish. This bary Appropriation in Addition to Regular ribbon fj Annual brants lor Army and Navy. Handy End Table Made From Spools WHO'S bKl$' Ju$t drawinS to a cUe which low h': 12, Got Any Good Numbers? L Defense Plan Takes Shape attnv 2es nnrm RPiVPD Digest Ml f1 - "- BoJttin sfarfed a ftissing cferfcy. Kills Many Insects ON 'LOWERS VE GIT AS 4051 IIS fRUITS A SHRUBS Demand original sealed bottles, from yourdealer Present as Past The present contains nothing more than the past, and what is found in the effect was already in the cause. Henri Bergson. OLD FOLKS Hera Is Amazing Relief of Conditions Due to Sluggish Bowels lialUUMUWCQll ,rt elite, jut try this aTtrYTrrrrr m? n ,abie Uutrn. bo mild. tiioroiiKii, refreahinf, invigorating. Dependable rdlef from elck beulacbea, bilioua epells, tired lectins when eaeoriatcd ritl coutlpeiioa. . - sTta25cbco(NR!rooiiroar manI, drutcirt. Make the t liiuiuui return the box to na. We Witt not iir-,- 1 tf r- delighted, refund the purchase TKtt'i fair. price. Ot Nft TuMeta tortr Mis) HI, III WATCH TOU can depend on th special solos th merchants of our town announce in th columns o this paper. They mean money saving to out readers. It always pays to patronize th merchants who advertise. They or not afraid of their merchandise or their prices. THE SPECIALS |