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Show rear rivpt? vAirry f fpt? Set Up This Table Where You Want It Parrot Thought if... w w m a SGLT7E3G DC2GiG!l . " V ; ' b Jt r n (ajfljngw". rtern o r.JiiuWn Bureau New- - A rend. it nhln to hrina : and his t ffterun and serviceman may be addressed to the fluej'Mand Ji'ovt Bureau they uill be answered aim ui appear in this ' M fixe' news-pap- a regularly. Qj.s Attending Church services in veterans hos are not being neglected. uoii Pious pitals paministrauon reports March, attendance at e an these services reached luz.vzi, an increase oi j)jgh with 000 over the previous month. Veterans ,t during all-tim- rMniain Crawford W. Brown, di- - chaplaincy service, said 4 the 83 hospital chaplains, represent-18 relieious denominations, also nsade 10,465 ward visits and 103,400 personal contacts during tne montn. WORLD BANK AIDE . . . Harold D. Smith, Michigan, former director of the budget bureau, who recently accepted appointment as vice president of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development. ;::. :..: jectorof VA A' CORN FOR ITALY . . . Shipment of corn being loaded for Italy under auspices of American relief for Italy and Church of the Brethren, Elgin, 111. This is part of more than 400 long tons contributed by American farmers. Italian working people are now rationed with 200 calories of bread per day, the lowest of any of the other countries. In addition to the corn, large shipments of powdered milk has been sent. services such as Sunday religious rhool classes, weekday devotions and instructions, s auenaance. ine also during the month conducted 223 funerals, filled 561 out- iide speaking engagements in surrounding the hospitals, officlandled 197 welfare cases, iated at 27 baptisms and 22 mar chaplains adriages, and Catholic ministered extreme unction to 215 patients, heard 2,160 confessions and prayer meetings fith 30.0UU in -- Wis,. cnap-lain- i com-muniti- es is assigning VA full-tim- chap e every hospital at the rate approximately 1 chaplain to ev- ery 500 patients. to lains of I Questions and Answers My son was a the army air second lieutenant corps for two years. In parachuting from his crippled plane over China, he received i fractured leg and was carried back 400 miles to the nearest hos- without benefit of anesthetic. Q. In i Since J . 111 i 'l "ifl T .. ffiVrtfiiiif ft WINNIE'S (900. DOUBLE . . . Little V Sandra Garland, Ottawa, Canada, 15 months old, reveals her striking resemblance to Winston Churchill, England's wartime prime minister, as she turns her smile on photographer. i I A f r honorably discharged, married and the first child born the latter part of this With our help he mannsave up $2,000 after paying his expenses in the service. This le has used to make a down pay ment on a farm. Eventually he will receive government aid, but in the Maritime his only income is from m cows. We are glad to help them establish their home, but my point s that he has been told he owes iOt income tax. Can this be pos- ble? lie was just a school boy when if was taken for training, a fresh en in college, and didn't even fin-o- ut the year. He has never had trade or business and never 'orked a day away from home. fo. E. R Spooner, Wis. WlaWiftafti.M(KKiirtl FISH WORTil $6,351.40 . . . Minnesota Conservation department tagged 1000 fish and turned them loose in Minnesota's lakes. Those who catch the tagged fish are given prizes. Total prizes amount to $567,000. In photo is shown Chester S. Wilson with walleyed pike which brought more than $1,000 a pound in prizes and prize money. It was caught by Elmer C. Hauge, Pequot Lakes, Minn., who is shown in center. simmer. ed to A. 1 being has tin be ie taxes Income on salaries of Tritrr nVi in rt'iifcfiflM CHETNIK LEADER OX TRIAL . . . Gen. Draja Mihailovitch, former Chetnik leader, is pictured as he listened to testimony of witnesses during his trial for life on charges of treason and collaboration. 'A & I i- ; s I M $ V .A J 5 OPA PLATFORM . . . Mrs. Mar-cel- la F. Killen, progressive liberal Republican candidate for congress from the 5th congressional district in Minneapolis. Tlatform calls for continued OPA without crippling amendments. MONARCH IS DEAD! LONG LIVE THE REPUBLIC! . . . Italians greeted the death of the Monarchy and the birth of the new republic in various ways. This republican crowd in Milan, Italy, showed its sentiments by making a bonfire of pamphlets bearing the monarchial flag. There were several clashes between monarchists and republicans following election and exile of King Humbert to Portugal. , 1 ' if Ii cnt disabled. th- .- . .. or the ' j'scharglnj cnanceover 37 ovifii wun oniy eigni '"tin r littl e more of service? Red Wing, Minn. 016 to "y ,,, PPly for discharge. Success, N. Y. The United Nations organization will occupy approximately 647.824 square feet of space in the two buildings, with the United States government to get approximately $202,831 net on annual rental. Coincidentally with the lease to U. N. the Sperry company was given a similar three year lease, with renewal option, for the remainder of the plants at Lake Success. Sperry will have the right to buy the property, subject to the U. N. lease, for $9,500,000. g - RETAINS CROWN ... The world's heavyweight title was retained by Joe Louis, when he defeated Billy Coan by a knockout In the eighth round of title bout held at New York. Loo Is outfought throughout. Conn ftl"ri wiTM TRAY The folding stand Is the right height to use with comfortable chairs and the plywood tray with a gallery around thre sides and hand-holopenings, fits securely over this base. The construction of both pieces Is so simple that you will want to make number of them. d An actual-sizpattern for sides of tray, with illustrated directions for cutting ana assembling tray and stand, is available to readers for 15c postpaid. Ask for pattern e No. 2C8, and address: MRS. RUTH WVETH SPEARS Bedford Hills, N. Y. Drawer 10 Enclose IS cents for Pattern No. 268. CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT AUTOS, TRUCKS & ACCESS. NEARLY wooms BOUGHT SOLD PAST YEAR BUSINESS & INVEST. OPPOU. AGENT OK DISTRIBUTOR to represent Exclusive territory "LIGHTMASTEiK." available. Box W, Xanana. Calif. INSTRUCTION ENROLL IN A PROUD PROFESSION St. Mark's Hospital School of Naming Nursing course for High School Graduates. University affiliation. Class enters Sept. 23. WRITE TO 8UPT. OP NURSES St. Mark's Bospilal Salt Lako. MISCELLANEOUS WE BUY AND SELL Furniture. Files, Typewriters, Adding Machines. Safes, Cash Registers. SALT LAKE DESK EXCIIANUE (a West Broadway, Salt Lake City. Utah. Office Invest in Your Country Buy U. S. Savings Bonds! of energetic well- g Scott heingl Take Emulsion right away, If you feel vjff tired, rundown, unable to throwoff worrisome summer cokis neraus your diet lacks natural A&D Vita-minatural and oils I Scott's helps build energy, ttamina, retiilanc. Buy today ifk Enjoy the feeling rw: good-tastin- ni energy-buildin- 1 lipp G soma 'H2', N kttpt motquitwt chbjqvn Two student ELWOOD, IND. fliers were injured fatally in the crash of their light monoplane on the George Tears farm six miles southwest of here. Harold Pace, 37, of Elwood, died in Mercy hospital here an hour and a half after the accident, and William Barber, 20, Frankfort, died a half hour later. dual-contr- FIFTY l'EARS AT SAME KEYBOARD . . . Half century playing the' organ at St. Hedwlg's Catholic church is the record established by Emll Wiedemann, 84, shown above. His long service will be honorrd at a banquet in Farish hall, Chicago. The veteran organist came to America from Poland In 1882 when only six years old. He became at St. Hedwlg's when 31 and has remained since that time. lst and away. CO, KANSAS S, MO. CITY TOMORROW A It I C H I Vpndabk Entomologist Warns of Danger From Hessian Fly Two Student Fliers Are Killed in Crash of Plane -j . pet. The first thing Flags did, under the new management, was to tumble overboard and nearly drown. "We had to fish him out of the bay with a pole," said Frank. "Flags always had the idea he was half duck. He would go into the water every chance he had he forgot he couldn't swim. Either that, or he was trying to end it all." Behaved in Plane. behaved Flags fairly well on the airplane flight to the Guadalcanal press camp, and there the boys labored mightily to build a sleeping perch. It evidently gave him insomnia, because during the night he left It and crawled into a bunk with Al ("Red Dog") Dopking, an other Associated Press war correspondent. There he slept, but that wasn't all he'd done, Dopking dis covered when he wrote. Flags was taken to Australia by air and hidden in a plane hangar there to avoid complications with health authorities. He lived there for ten days on coconuts, bananas and McMurtry finally took him back to Honolulu. After Flags spent four weeks in quarantine there, he was put in to a special cage that Mac had built in the pantry of his apart of Springfield to Macon county. ri h0t as limo J is wheat-producin- taking a Job result in gct-doon my pension? ."Detroit, Mich. , red-tippe- d - LAXATIVI . - w WIU SHANGHAI. Flags, the psychopathic parrot, was more stubborn than a cave full of Japanese, says the New York Times. And he stayed that way to the bitter end cynical, unreconciled, silent and embittered the kind of bird that just grunts when you ask him to talk for his dinner. Flags flew 10,000 miles during his short military life, without once He was too flapping his wings. lazy. He always took the air in a plane. He wouldn't sing, he wouldn't bite your finger, he wouldn't learn to say "Okay, Joe," like other parrots. "He wouldn't do anything but lap up food," says Franky Filan, Associated Press war photographer and Flags' bitterest enemy. "He was the stupidest bird that ever lived." Sedate Existence. Flags was a small, green bird with a red chest, wings and yellow beak. He led a sedate existence aboard a seaplane tender of Treasurer island until the skipper ordered him disposed of on the grounds that he might spread psitti-cosor parrot fever among the crew. Medics always suspected every parrot and it was a constant problem to keep them from destroying Flags. To save the bird, Charlie McMur-trAssociated Press war correspondent, agreed to take him as a A state entoURBANA, ILL. mologist reports that an unusually heavy and unexpected infestation by the Hessian fly may cause considerable losses in this year's central and southern Illinois wheat crop. Dr. George C. Decker, entomologist of the Illinois natural history survey and the Illinois agricultural experiment station, said that a survey of fields in the stale's central areas showed infestation great enough to damage the crop materially. The fields surveyed were in Greene and Macoudn counties and across the state south wounded and am draw-dsability pension of $115 uave a cnance 10 Jb and sq t I.. TERRACE The war WASHINGTON, D. C. assets administration announced recently it had granted the United Nations a three year lease, with two year renewal privilege, on two government - erected buildings of the Sperry Gyroscope company, Lake " 'M CARRY TRAY NO STAND TO PORCH OR U.N. Is Granted 3 Years Lease on N. Y. Buildings hn,n. 1 , looking for. "And when Mac came home from work," said Frank, "there was stupid old Flags, his head at half- mast. Dead. He had hanged him self in his own wire cage. And after all the trouble we took to get him into Honolulu! That's gratitude for youl" ifte 'V fold-awa- ment. men armed services have not been aived except for the duration, icre men serve overseas, a waiv- 5 is usually issued, but the due date 6 income taxes is the 15th day of le third month after official 'ruination of the war. Exemptions J4nie $1,500 of service pay and catering out pay. Would suggest :5t you consult the nearest office j to Internal Revenue bureau and y can tell you the exact status Mr son's income tax. I My brother died in the serv-- : November 8, 1945, and I thought insurance was made to me be- he told me it was. But when fod, I wrote to the Veterans adoration and found that he had his insurance to a lady he worked for, not a relative at all. Bs a father living, also five ""wrs and myself, the only sis- e stayed with me and worked this woman and he had given 9 ud her husband a. fnstpr nar. A although he was in my cus-fid I had to look after him 4 he went into the navy at the ' f 18. This woman got around i and had him t miit hia nce to her. She is about 38 and Is there anything I can do mis Insurance to get it for a myself. fathi National Service Life r nt to $10,000. Pleaseinsurance tell me 1 can do.A. T., Seaford, Del. H 1 Were vnil. T unnM mnenlt yer. From your lettei.( u could ""' your brother may have -presented his beneficiary since umits beneficiaries to a cer-- :; f range of next of kin, except sl persor,s have been acting as e aP!rents' or ln Parentis- ;j her husband were not act- Lai parents. you may have ,saj ease. But consult an attor- - y TF YOU need a serving table or if you like to load a tray and carry meals to some cool spot, here is the combination with the special features you have been y, If to Holy Communion administered 1 ; 297 The chaplains conducted pretestant services and 483 Catho lic masses, in addition to 1,85 other Self Half Duck Just for While Flags, Saved From Watery Grave and From Medics, Finally Ends It All. Thta noiri ruinr irrin oement with thm I i 1 IV'ITF IDUUno i . hemnde umn i Ull 0M At ttf 2743 WNU W m May Warn of Disordered Kidney Action Modern llfs with It burry and worry. Irregular habits, improper eating sod it risk o( exposure and Infedrinking ctionthrow heavy strain on th work of th kidneys. They are apt to become orer-tsie- d and fail to filter eeea aeid snd other impurities Iron th blood. Yoo nay suffer nagging backsrke, headsche, dltuncH, getting up nighta, leg welimg feel eonantly pains, tired, nervous, all worn out. Otber sign of kidney or bladder disorder ar sometimes bursing, scanty or too (request Brinatioa. Try Dsns' Pf!l. Pons' help th kidney to pas off harmful eieeas body hav had mors thsa hslf s wst. They santury of public spproral. Are reeosa-s- n ended by grateful users vsrywhare. 4is soar stif-afce- r HH , |