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Show THE SAUNA SUN. SAUNA. UTAH WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS By Edward C. Wayne 4In the Navy Nazis Claim Smashing of Soviet Army In Terrific Attack on Eastern Front; Pro Nazi Panama President Is Ousted By Regime Friendly to United States If the beaten eggs aie mixed -- A 'otes of an Innocent Hystander President The Front Pages: Roosevelt, who has taken many a lashing from the pi ess, saluted National Newspaper Week with a mes-ag- e to publishers to guard the press freedom. In short, he urges it to hang on to ts right to slam him . . . Royal Cortissoz, celebrating half a also said century with the worth remembering something about press freedom. Opinions, he said, are a critic's capital, and he is useless if he cannot find freedom of expression for them . . . Virginio Gayda, the typewriter that talks like Mussolini, urges the Fascist dailies to fake news to keep the people's spirit up. According to dispatches from Italy, the Italian people would prefer to have him fake up a few plates of spaghetti. Jan Masaryks The Wireless: broadcast was heartbreaking enough to wring a tear from an isolationist. He reported that the victims of the Hun slaughters in Czechoslovakia are not the revolters, but just any helpless Czechs they lay their hands on . . . The squeeze is on the Nazis in South America, however, take it from broadcaster Herbert M. Clark. It's getting so uncomfortable for them in Argentina, he said, that some of Der Fuehrers busiest dagger troops are screaming alluva sudden that theyre Swiss . . . C. Fadi-mahuand B. Hope morous insults at each other made in laughs come like bananas bunches . , . Eleanor Roosevelt's chatter docs more to keep her listeners awake than the coflee she n ping-pongin- g plugs. The Story Tellers: Runyon makes a monkey out of the fiction rules in Broadway Incident, his entertainllis ing piece in Cosmopolitan. hero is a drama critic, which is definitely a contradiction in terms . . . Garbo is news for the funniest reason. She used to collar space on being a mysterious recluse, out of the world. Now Life blows her to lots of pages because shes a simple, friendly girl like you, Toots . . . for Lou Paul Galileos word-halGehrig in the Nov. Cosmopolitan creeps into your heart like a smile from a baby . . . Writes Kyle Crichton in Colliers: When ecstatic cries of dah-lin- g greet a Hollywood actress entering Ciros, she knows that her last picture has been a Or her first marriage success has been a failure. ... The Magic Lanterns: The cinema gets a pretty good report card. Hold Back the Dawn is a large afternoon for the sighing set. Charles Boyer plays put and take s with two hearts, Olivia de and Paulette Goddards (who is a heel with a tender side). The yarn, about how he marries his way past the immigration gate, is skillfully told . . . Things are milder in It Started With Eve, but all oof'ly nice. Deanna Durbin is the same likeable lass, and Chas. Laughton s is the of the occasion . . . Tom Harmon runs and kicks a gamut full in Harmon of MichiFootball shots from the gan. newsreels are woven into the love story, W'hieh also looks like cuts from previous films. Havil-land- thuue of Ui . jprni GAMBLE: On Eastern Front Hitlers dramatic announcement that events of enormous impor- tance would take place on the eastern front was followed closely by what many observers and analysts of military tactics called the greatest gamble in the historyof warfare. Then from the Nazi high command came the word that in their opinion the last eflective Russian foices on the central front had been smashed and last army groups are being wiped out. An initial campaign which had less to been planned for a month-o- r yield Leningrad, Kiev and Moscow had been going on for more than 17 weeks, and the yield had been Kiev. Though knocking on the doors of Leningrad, entry had been denied, and there were many reports that this new plan of Hitlers to storm Moscow from a beginning distance of between 150 and 200 miles would call for the abandonment, for the present, of attempts to take the northern metropolis. The observers, at the same time that they questioned the good sense of the campaign for Moscow, admitted that if Ilitler was to throw all his available forces into a blitz on the central front, Timoshenkos men would have to fall back, but whether Hitler could count on driving all the Russians out of western Russia before winter they believed to be dubious in the extreme. There was a general feeling in Moscow that the attack was spuired on by desperation, that Hitler was feeling the effects of the unrest back of the eastern front, and believed he would have to have a big Russian victory before winter so that forces could be rehis front-linlieved to clean up the mess in occupied Europe, steadily becoming worse as winter approached. As usual whenever a German drive was announced there were those who believed it might be a cloak for something else. Some suggested that the first spearhead to be driven forward, north of the Sea of Azov, might be attack on a cloak for a the Caucasus oil fields. If this were true, however, the Reds on the fighting lines were badly fooled, for they repoited a general central German attack of greater ferocity than any so far experienced. all-o- ut TWO BITES: Or Just One? Just as many papers wire ing editorially why it was that askcon- gress was following the plan of what Aeu York Heartbeat The Big Parade: Ambassador and Mrs. Martins from Brazil at the Stork ringside cementing Good Will with United Statesmen by applauding the rhumbacrobats . . . the Joe E. Browns staying young in the sinful places up til almost half-paeleven! . . . Sonja Heme swapping a chilly howja-doo- o with her boss, Darryl Zanuck . . . The Drew Pearsons of Washington gaping at The Big Towns tallest buildings, the hix . . . Beatrice Kay and her definition of a diplomat in Washington or on Broadway: "A guy who knows how to keep his chin up without sticking out his neck. st York Newsreel Subwayltes gazing at people across the aisle as if they were a blank wall . . . The once famous actress who now performs in stores, exhibiting all kinds of kitchen utensils . . . The debutantes who have everything to make life worth living, yet few of them have learned how to live . . . The amazing dexterity of cabbies weaving through the traffic, listening to their radio, talking to passengers and smoking a cigar at the same time. AVi o Panama-- registered BED All): ICins Support Despite the fact that President Roosevelt had been conceded to have stirred up a hornets nest with his pronouncement about Soviet Myron C. Taylor, President Roosevelt's personal envoy to the Vatican, is pictured entering the White House upon his return from Rome. Before leaving the Vatican, Taylor is said to have had a lengthy interview with the pope and it was reported that this was the subject of his discussion with the President. Russia and religion, the house of even while the representatives, press battle over the subject was raging, put its OK. on a plan to give cash aid to Russia in addition material help. This had been regarded as indicative of the tenor of house thought on the subject of helping the Reds in their defense of their homeland, an attitude that had been echoed in the American Federation of Labor convention. This group, while assailing Communism as such, completely endorsed the sending of aid to Russia in increasing quantities. The house action came when, in discussion of a bill which would increase the RFC lending power to a billion and a half, Representative Smith of Ohio said he understood Russia wasn't going to get any of it but he wanted to make doubly sure, so offered a prohibitive amendment. pre-occupi- ... ernment In the blfcudleSs coup detat, Ernesto Jacn Guardia, former minister to Mexico, took over the duties of president as Anas fled to Cuba by an plane. A cabinet was then formed, Guard' resigned as president and Iticado Adolfo de La Guardia, former nnmster of government and justice, was elected president by the new cabinet. Repot ts were that the coup was precipitated by the recent action of the Arias fegime ir ruling that ships could not carry arms for protection against submarine attacks. A cabinet ruling, this regulation was ordered as the U. S. was considering arming its own cargo ships. to . ice-crea- m Three presidents within the space of a few hours was the new's from the republic of Panama as political elements favorable to the democracies ousted ArniPfo Alias, pro-Napresident and set up their new gov- e funny-man- Typewriter Ribbons: F. E. Freedman: Is the Atlantic Ocean ver- boten or fer boatin? . . . Kin Hubbard: Thcr ought tbe some way teat celery so it wouldn sound like you wuz steppin on a basket . . Youngstown Vindicator: The gen erals most likely to defeat America are general inertia and general apathy , . . Toronto Star Weekly: Ail Europe is now divided into three parts: occupied, unoccupied, and . . . Olin Miller: Its when a man first feels his age that he has the hardest time being it . . . Damon Runyon: She has an cone where her heart is supposed to be . . . M. Foster: The plaza was drowsy with history II. Klurfeld: She was a good secretary, but clockeyed. PANAMA: Coup d'etat e water-born- Sen. Tom Connally (left) ALUMINUM: Decision and Rep. Charles Eaton of New Jersey are shown before entering the White House as members of a bipartisan delegation from Capitol Ilill summoned to discuss with the President his plans for congressional changes in the nation's neutrality law. Both men are members of the foreign relations committee in their respective branches of congress. they called legislation or the program of voting for or against Bill A, when everybody concerned A In an opinion that required 84 courtroom days to dictate. Judge Francis Caffey of a New York federal court ruled that the government had failed to prove its charges of violations under the Sherman act by the Aluminum Company of America. Thus ended one of the longest trials in U. S. history with ALCOA the apparent winner on all points. Inasmuch as the government failed to prove its case, Judge CafTey said that it would be contrary to the public inknew' that Bill B and Bill C, two terest to dissolve or enjoin ALCOA. in were the ofling, the other steps, An interesting part of the courts White House brought them a new opinion was the statement that it sample to chew over. appears that there exists in this This was the question of the al- country adequate supplies of bauxteration of the neutrality act. ite (ore of aluminum) and water The press was informed that the power available to anyone. ThereHouse con- fore, he said, anyone is and has first congressional-Whitference on the bill was whether it been able to go into production of would be advisable to take two bites virgin aluminum since the last of out of the cherry or only one. ALCOA'S patents ran out in 1909. Would it, they discussed, be advisable to settle the question of BRIEFS: . arming merchantmen and extending the right to American merchant BERLIN: One large guerilla band ships to go to British ports sepaof Serbs is led by a daughter of a rately, or both at once. Were the question decided in the Serbian attorney, it was reported by first method, congressmen asked to Croatian sources battling with the vote on Question A, whether merChetniks. chantmen should be armed, would know full well that this question DETROIT: More than 100,000 men would be indissolubly linked with will be unemployed in the auto inQuestion B, of whether they should dustry next spring, and many thouallow merchant ships to sail into sands more will be transferred to British ports but this question defense industry, leaders in the would not be before them. automotive field reported. C e CITY OR COUNTRY? To remove fresh fruit stains A KANSAS CITY friend told me recently that he had bought a small from table linen, stretch the farm within an hours drive of the stained part over a bowl and pour city. My friend is, and he 3 been, boiling water over it. a city worker. He is the father ol a family of childien of from 5 to 16 If washable curtains become years of age. He has been fearful rusted on the rods during damp of the financial future of America. weather, dampen the rust spots The man from whom the farm and cover them with a thin coating was purchased become enam- of salts of lemon. Let stand until ored of what he considered the op- the stains disappear. la the. column, they Whtn opinions arc oc anal. and not aeecu.arily ( this u.a.paper.) (Rfipaupri by Western Newspaper Union (FIMTOR8 NOTE a,, Ute.eased by Western Newspaper Union.) Anti-Tru- st with milk that is slightly warm when making custards the custard will not be watery. hd portunities, the conveniences, the attractions, of the city and wished the privilege of enjoying these for himself and his family. What my Kansas City friend has purchased is an assurance of health, Mrs. Louise Daniels (above), varmth and food for his former neuspaper woman, has shelter, and for himself. Chickens, family been named "It Omans Editor" a cow, pigs, a garden, a wood lot will of the navy department. It from which to cut fuel, provide these be her duty to direet a publicity things, if nothing more, and he was wise to secure a place where he canifntign that will tell wives, mothers and sweethearts of the can keep his feet on the ground and has an insurance against hunger. navy, just nhat their men are At the end of five years, the man doing to spend their time. who sold may have realized his expectation of enjoyment of opporconvenience and attraction tunity, HUMAN: of the city, but the chances are 100 to 1 against him. The vast majority Interest Tale in any large city evidence more of There was probably no human in- failure than of success. terest story in the news which had the depth of poignancy of the abor- WHERE GLAMOUR AND tive exchange of German and Brit- ROMANCE WAS KING ish prisoners of war seriously MAJOR JERRY REED was a wounded men, women and children, on the cowboy King ranch in Texas both combatants and before he became a major. When he entered the World war, Jerry Two hopeful ships laden with an and quit unmentioned number of German to enter the aviation service, in nationals had lain at Newhaven, which he rose to the rank of major. ready to set sail for a port still to As a sideline he taught prize fighting be selected where these ships would to the fistically inclined young pick up such British citizens as bloods of the army. With the close Germany would release. of the war he entered the concrete But the ships did not sail, and contracting field. But Jerry has dreamed of the imagination painted the anxiety and heartbreak aboard those vessels, glamour and romance of that great emotions undoubtedly shared by an baronial estate of more than a milequal or greater number across the lion acres, the King ranch. To Jerry channel. the ruler of that domain was greatThere were rumors that the Nazis er than any king or potentate. After years of contention the state were demanding the inclusion of Hess. This was promptly denied of Texas has built a public highby England, who said that his name way straight through the center of those million and more acres. To was not even mentioned. Jerry the ruler of that domain is it was evident the that Suddenly whole plan had broken down. Ger- now but an ordinary individual, and romance and glamour of the many, Britain said, had broken faith the Lone Star state is gone. a was out for Germany bolding swap of even numbers, whereas the SLIM ON DIET covenant had stated, the British asSLIM WILLIAMS, an old Alasserted that the exchange would be without reference to rank or num- kan sourdough, prefers cream puffs to blubber as a steady diet. A few bers. Some day a historically minded years ago, Slim drove a dog team writer will pen the story of those from Fairbanks, Alaska, to Washington, D. C. A later exploit was days spent by seriously wounded an attempt to ride a motorcycle British and German prisoners while from Fairbanks to New York to two nations quarreled over their fate whether to die on foreign soil, prove the practicability of a highor to be sent back to their loved way from Alaska to the American line. Slim and his motorcycle ones to close their eyes in peace. did not get to New York, but he did TURKEY: get through the Alaska and British Columbia mountains to the AmerMakes a Deal ican line and so claims to have Under a deal between Turkey and proved his contention about a highGermany, which had been concluded way. he has passed Slim after months of difficult diplomatic soldiering age regrets because cream puffs maneuvering, and under terrific are now a part of army rations. pressure from the Reich, the Turks agreed to give Germany half of WORTH KNOWING their output of chrome, ore necesTEACHING ORIENTAL politics to sary to highest grade steels but American college youth is the vocaonly to start delivery in 1943. tion of Dr. William M. McGovern, Germany, under the agreement, a member of the faculty of Northstarted at once to ship war materi- western university. There are more al to Turkey, and the total deal people who know Dr. McGovern as was said to involve $75,000,000, not Bill than as Doctor. Those who so big m a world which as one know him as Bill know his avocacomedian said, was playing bingo tion, that of seeking the with billions. places of the world and seeing Germany was shipping Turkey and experiencing the unusual. Bill is a member of a headmotor vehicles without tires, but not airplanes which Turkey wanted hunting tribe of Ecuador. He has Prior to this agreement Britain visited Lhasa in Tibet. He is an and the United States have been intimate friend of the Shah of Pergetting 100 per cent of Turkish ex- sia. Yes, he has been places and done things, but on the campus he ports of chrome. However, the stubborn resistance is Dr. William M. McGovern, prothe Turks put up against signing fessor of Oriental politics. I doubt if this agreement, and the dating of the students and other professors at the first shipments in 1943 showed Northwestern actually know Bill, Britain that it wasnt any friendly but Bill is worth knowing. agreement. It was recalled that Russia and TOO MUCH OUT OF EACH of our earned dolGermany, now locked in deadly federal, state, combat with each other, had an lars, government municipal takes just about agreement which looked far more county, 30 cents for taxes. In 1900 it was friendly on the surface than the We cents. seven are paying Turkish-Germa- n only pact. too much for government, or paying JAPAN: for too much government. We, and we only, can stop that Gets Jittery tax monster. The ballot box proThe Japanese, becoming jittery vides the weapon writh which to over the world situation which was slay it. starving them of oil, and strangling them economically, while Germany ARMY IN MUNITION PLANTS continued to pour men and muniWE MIGHT put the next million tions into the campaign against Rus- men for the army to work in munisia, had issued an odd request to tion plants, making the equipment her Reich partner in the Axis. they will need. It should be as Tokyo, through the Domei News valuable in our preparedness efforts Agency, called on Berlin to end the as to have them drilling with broomwar with Russia, so as to conserve sticks and pieces of stove pipe for t asmen and material for an guns. sault on Britain. AMERICAN WEALTH THE TOTAL WEALTH of AmerThe Pacific situation continued tense, with the government-controlleica, including everything that has press of Tokyo laying down a value, is estimated at 375 billion a barrage of criticism aimed at dollars. To divide that equally the United States, and concentrat- among all the people of the nation ing on reports of a military con- would give each of us about $2,885. ference at Manila between British With such an amount no one could and American leaders. accomplish anything. We could The report said, in part: "Judg- not buy and operate a farm, we ing from the arrogant attitude of the could not build a factory or a railUnited States, Japan must be pre- road. Wealth becomes productive and of value to each and all of us pared to meet the worst. There is a limit to Japanese per- only when it is consolidated. That severance in making peace rreves. is just what we Americans have If the limit is ignored, Japan must done with our mites. rise to her feet. bronco-bustin- g cow-punchi- dollar-eatin- g When baking candied swreet potatoes turn them frequently to permit even browning. A damp cloth placed around 8 head of lettuce will keep it fresh and crisp. Leather - covered chairs that have become sticky should be cleansed with a cloth moistened in gasoline, benzine, or alcohol. Then apply olive oil, let stand 48 hours and wipe thoroughly with cheesecloth. Mildew'ed leather can be restored by application of petroleum ointment. If you have a relative or friend in the service and have any doubts about what to send him as gifts, your problems are over. The service men have solved it for you by naming tobacco as their first choice in gifts. Actual sales records show the favorite cigarette with men in the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard is Camel. Prince Albert is the popular smoking tobacco. With these preferences in mind, local tobacco dealers feature Camels by the carton and Prince Albert in the pound tin as ideal gifts to the men in the service from the folks back home. Adv. 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