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Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA. UTAH Gay Vanity Table Is Easy to Make New Pictures of Indias National Leaders WWOIIIID YAi ha I Xml- Washington, D. C. I As the clouds of war gather ever more densely over vast India, greater attention is focused on its leaders. At the right is Mahatma Gandhi, spiritual head of the Indian national congress party, who was instruwith shows Gandhi walking mental in thwarting Sir Stafford Cripps efforts at war unity. This new picture his secretaries and aides. At the left is Pandit Nehru, active and more belligerent leader of the same tional congress party. (Picture from March of Times India in Crisis.) na- Haiwaii on Its Toes. Ready to Dish It Out to Japs AHfeS drewpearson RRs VS. SHIPS It hasnt made headlines, but a battle royal has been raging between WPB Czar Donald Nelson and Transportation Czar Joe Eastman over the freezing of steel for the construction of railroad cars. With less and less shipping moving along the coast, and more and more traffic by rail, the question is one of the most important facing the country. What happened was that the War Production board froze all construction materials already on band in railroad construction shops. The intention was to transfer these materials for use in building other types of cars. However, Joe Eastman claims that these materials, chiefly steel, already had been bought and cut out for certain cars, in certain shapes, so the order merely will make the materials go unused, with car shops closing down. Already, Eastman argues, certain plants of Pullman Standard are idle, at a time when all plants should be used to capacity. Meanwhile railroads are groaning with traffic. Sugar is now being hauled by rail as much as possible from Florida to avoid submarines. Oil is clogged up in the producing fields for lack of railroad transportation. And with the sinkings of several Chilean ore ships, more iron ore has to be hauled from interior U. S. iron mines. In view of all this, Eastman complains bitterly that Nelson wont release the steel and let the car foundries do the job. Tha tints! from 14,500 'T'HIS is what your bedroom vanneeds a Southern-bell- e ity! Between frothy ruffles of white Swiss you get tantalizing glimpses of red ribbon, run through beading and tied in bows. red-dott- e the the the for a hard days work. Mobile Optical Shops for U. S. Soldiers A Dizzy Job Buy ortnges in quantities, f SERVICE 117 Minna St. San Francisco, Calif. Enclose IS cents In coins for your copy of HAND MADE GIFT NOVELTIES. Name They're good keepers 1 READER-HOM- Address W3 v Legal Holidays LABOR U. S. soldiers are now encamped throughout the Hawaiian islands, ready to meet any onslaught of private estate. It points toward Japs. The gun at the left has been installed on what was once a huge showers at whatever part of erected have The soldiers and crew and its night. Pacific, keep guard day mud of the hills they are primping up (right) island they are encamped. Here amidst the gumbo-lik- e U btlped by tbtir vitamins! Oranges contain vitamins A, Bi and G; calcium, and other essential minerals. They're the richest practical source of vitamin G Few foods have much. It'a easily lost in cooking. Yet you need an abundance jlaily, as you do not stort it I ed Darling, with pretty curtains and bedOur booklet spread to match! tells details of making the vanity. Also tells how to make Inexpensively a book-rac- k side table, pillow tops, pot holders, many other attractive items for yourself or as gifts. Send your order to: INFLUENCING EUROPEAN Here is one inside reason why labor. Roosevelt leans toward has President the always Basically, and continues to be, been even though he has become fed up with some labor activities in the past year. But in addition, U. S. war strategists are convinced that the chief hope of revolution in Europe comes from labor. And most of the psychological warfare strategy being devised here is aimed at influencing labor in Germany, Czechoslovakia, Austria and the occupied countries. Although not generally known, the nucleus of the old Social Democratic party which tried to create a real republic in Germany is still intact. When Hitler came into power, they moved to Czechoslovakia. After the Sudetenland seizure, they moved to Paris. After the downfall of Paris, they moved to the U. S. A. Fifty Social Democrats from the old Reichstag are now in this counwith U. S. officials. try Furthermore, it is labor in the European occupied countries which is able to assemble or make radios. German labor listens to the radio far more than other classes. Some labor groups even have published newspavery small underground pers on hand presses and these are distributed by hand. German labor resents the long )urs in munitions factories, the nail pay and the lack of food, more ian any other group. Also labor about the only group which was jt taken over completely by Hitler, he Communists, his chief oppo-jntnow have long been underround, but secretly active. To European labor Roosevelt always has been one of the worlds greatest leaders. And one thought in the minds of war strategists is to show Europe that the rights of labor here will not be thrown completely overboard during war. pro-labo- cooperating groworsl lure to get trademarked Sunkist" Oranges! Youll prefer their fine flavor and Be r, According to the Constitution neither congress nor the President has the power to prescribe legal holidays except in the District of Columbia and the U. S. territorial possessions, says Colliers. Nevertheless, congress has recognized the following days as public holidays: New Years day, Washingtons birthday, Memorial day, the Fourth of July, Labor day, and Christmas. Since most of these holidays have been declared local holidays by the individual states, they can be said to be national and legal holidays. The President proclaims Thanksgiving a holiday. izr ' StmDflsG ange Coprt 1848, California Fruit O rowan Exdaugt VACATION "N SPLIT-SECON- . HE'S A THt A D SPECIALIST! tt SELF-STARTE- R JOHNNY STEGCR, famous sports photographer, leads s hectic life chasing action shots all BREAKFAST til Hakes q! w'k- - IN SO. CAUFORNIA Tour Uncle Sam saya: . . . recreational travel... one of the greatest uuuuutlning foroeaof national inurale." in spite of mmon, travel IS normal In Sout hern Call fornia.TrimsiiorUiUon to and t hroughoul t he state 18 normal, and hotel and resort lite 18 normal. Ji or data, write HOTELS of Southern California 629 S. Hill It., Ieem70l, lot Angel, CaL I yiUlMHS CORN s, FUtjS aSSssrS 1U OtifimJ MA over the country. He says, Night and day Im on the go. And I've found that one way to help stay on my toes from early morning to noon is to eat a good breakfast. I like a big bowl of Kellogg's Corn Flakes with fruit and milk. Tastes swell and what a WALLACES FAVORITES Overseas soldiers who break or lose their spectacles on the battlefield will have them repaired or replaced in the field by mobile optical shops, the first of their kind to be attached to U. S. field armies. In this unit a total of 120 single lenses can be edged and mounted daily. This with other equipment make it possible to take care of the requirements of a field army of 300,000 men. Approximately 15 per cent of the men in the armed forces wear glasses. For Latin American Expeditionary Force -- Men who work to increase our supply of electric energy are soldiers, too. Photo shows a jackhammer operator drilling a hole for a dynamite blast on an abutment of Shasta dam, near Sacramento, Calif. Love Leads Way The men who came to Washington ith Henry Wallace in the early ays of the New Deal realize now lat they picked a winning horse, lmost to a man, they have moved p to important posts in the gov-rnme- The ordinary wallpaper cleaner removes grime and soot well enough but leaves the stubborn grease stains to become more conspicuous than ever. A combination of Fullers Earth or Talc and Carbon Tetrachloride mixed to the consistency of toothpaste makes an ideal poultice to remove these difficult stains. Apply the poultice over the spot and allow to remain until the liquid has evaporated, leaving only the white powder which a clean, dry cloth or a very long bristled brush will remove. The grease will en- Claude Wickard was head of the section in Wallaces AAA. ow he is secretary of agriculture. Milo Perkins was a lowly assistant Wallace, holding down a desk in le outer office. Today, he runs the ;oard of Economic Warfare, as as a cabinet post. Paul Appleby was an assistant in under-ecretaie inner office. Now he is of agriculture at $10,000 a orn-ho- g im-orta- nt ry ear. Chester Davis was head of the Now he is director of the lAA. 'ederal Reserve bank in St. Louis. R. M. (Spike) Evans was an ide to Wallace; now head of AAA. Sam Bledsoe, Roy Hendrickson, nd Whitney Tharin were newsmen Bledsoe is overing agriculture. ow an assistant to the secretary. MERRY-G- O tirely disappear and the wallpaper is neither faded or ringed. ROUND Secretary of War Stimson Is held the warmest personal esteem by rmy commanders. he never meddles nd a military operations and backs up iis subordinates 100 per cent. Stim-o- n is always at his desk by 8 a. m., nd rarely leaves until evening, vhen he always takes home with dm a big bundle of papers that he corks over after dinner. Good explanation of Your Army md how the draft works, has been written by George H. Jiler of . the Iridoonort Post. n Hard-workin- g open-minde- Mrs. Henry Fecht of Chicago refused to believe that her son, James, sea, as she had been nugo Fernandez Atucio (left), Uruguayan professor and director of was lost atAided informed. by the USO, she with shown World is Free of branch the Movement, the in Francisco hos a San him found headJ. Alvarez del Vayo, former Spanish foreign minister, at New York from a shrapnel recovering a Atncio for pital calls of World Movement. Free the quarters wound in the back. expeditionary force to fight under United Nations command. Latin-America- n Latin-America- n (HXtEDCBEiflii vateJath RSIPo(iI33lIIDoQI3iEBQ0QM r BU 1W |