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Show THK SAUNA SUN. SALINA, UTAH Sweden Walks Tightrope, but Is Ready Keieaned by Western Newspaper Union. A TYPICAL MARINE IMIO WANTED A FIGHT THE TWO THINGS from which Lieut. Col. Kink Beecher, United States marines, derived greatest pleasure was to fish and to fight. He could spend long days on a favorite Wisconsin lake, and while he preferred a black bass, he did not despise the lowly perch. But even better than fishing, to Kink, was a good scrap. Fighting with him is an avocation, as well as a vocation. He is a from the ranks officer and has fought with the marines in France, in Nicaragua, China, Haiti, and other places. The last time I saw him was at Quantico, the marine barracks near Washington, where he was unhappy because there was no prospect of a fight. I last heard from him at Shanghai. He left there for Manila some two weeks before Pearl Harbor. I trust he still lives even though he may be a prisoner of the Japs, but to be out of the fight would be the greatest hardship that could befall him. To me Lieut. Col. Kink Beecher typifies the United States marine corps. Safe Passage to Indias Coral Strand 0 0 0 GOVERNMENT BONDS IN WAR TIME WE HAVE IN AMERICA today considerably more than twice as much currency in circulation as we had during World War I, and we then had some slight inflation, but not enough to be ruinous. During World War I the public purchased the greater portion of the Liberty bonds issued by the government, as a result of special sales drives, with a house to house canvass. Within the past ten years most of the government bonds issued have been sold to the banks, with a smaller percentage to the insurance companies and the public. When the banks buy, they, in turn, use them as a basis for additional bank note currency, and that accounts for our money in circulation. Every increase in the amount of our HAT a practical idea there is in this cunning small outfit for little girls! OH with the jacket and you have a cunning play dress without sleeves so that it permits rollicking freedom and plenty of healthy sun tan. It is a dress which your daughter can wear in comfort for hours of back-yar- d play, beach games and farm life! un-nam- Kings Gift With Atlantic Fleet Off Iceland which The dramatically jacket 33 and 37. Size 13 (31) with shoulder transforms the princess frock into 33. materuffles, requires 3i yards a smart street outfit is just waist rial. With short sleeves, 3 yards. Send your order to: length has tiny short sleeves and a simple square neck. Youll like the effect if you apply to the skirt two bands of the material you use in the jacket. Band the panties, too, to complete the cheerful ensemble. Pattern No. 1607-gives instructions for you complete three pieces. making each rf ever-increasi- According to the censor, the picture at bottom shows part of the largest convoy to leave Britain for Indian port. The ships brought soldiers, planes, guns and tanks for the deIndia as it neared an Indian port, shows hundreds of tanks lined fense of India. Above: This picture, made at some up ready to go into action against the Japs. 1606 (I. circulating currency increases the danger of inflation. The banks cannot take up the government issues without turning them into increased bank note currency. That is one of the reasons for the effort to sell the bonds to the public instead of to the banks. The other reason is to take out of the hands of the public money people would otherwise use in the purchase of commodities. We cannot produce a sufficient amount of consumer commodities to meet such a demand. When the public has money to buy more commodities than can be produced it pushes the prices up to inflationary levels. The only other remedy is fixed prices, and fixed prices will leave money in the hands of the people. B t'-'- e CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 149 New Montgomery Street San Francisco Calll. Enclose 20 cents In coins (or each pattern desired. SEWING Pattern No Size Name Address Is de. Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1607-signed or sizes Z, 3, 4, S and 6 years. Size 3 years dress requires Is yards o( 35- - or material, bolero plus bands (or dress and panties, yard and panUes, i yard. h New Dirndl. A SLICK new long torso frock with a swish skirt and just shoulder ruffles for sleeves is ideal for summer wear. You can have sleeves, if you want them, and a bright row of braid to bring attention to the flattering low.-cneckline as you can see in our smaller view. Just the frock junior girls from coast to coast are asking for this season! ut AMERICAN DEMOCRACY AND THE COMING PEACE MRS. ROOSEVELT, in the American Magazine, tells us we are fighting for the privilege of revolutionizing the world on the lines of de- Is Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1606-(or sizes 11, 13, 13, 17, and 19. Corresponding bust measurements 29, 31, HOUSEWIVES: Your Waste Kitchen Fate Are Needed for Exploeivei TURN EM INI mocracy, rather than permitting Hitler to revolutionize it on the lines of German totalitarianism. She says the war is but the first step in that revolution. She does not say what the final step is to be. Governor Stassen of Minnesota, in a recent interview, proposes several plans for the purpose, he says, of Atmaking the Roosevelt-Churchilantic program a reality at the peace conference. Both give America something to think about, and we should be a unit as to what we want by the time that peace conference meets a few months or a few years from now. To help us in the thinking it would be well if Sumner Blossom, editor of the American Magazine, would find someone to interpret the type of world Mrs. Roosevelt is expecting the revolution to produce. ll Seven-year-ol- d King Feisal II of Iraq, being helped down from the roof of the royal palace at Bagdad, after he had found a scale model The Atlantic fleet is facing constant danger in keeping the supply of a Hurricane fighter plane in a lanes open between the U. S. and Europe on the high seas. Here Rear storks nest. The model was plantAdm. Robert C. Giffen looks at the rocky coast of Iceland from one of ed there as a surprise birthday the ships of the Atlantic fleet. gift. They Save Gas and Rubber IN 1941 THERE WERE on the roads of America 27,300,000 of what the government considers cars. That is, cars the government would not permit being replaced during the war. Government experts figure that should the war last until 1945 three more years cars then the number of in operation would be down to 3,900,-00What a dead place America would be under such conditions. Let us hope the Huns, the Japs, and the Wops are licked long before we reach such a point. non-priori- ty non-priori- ty Tank Driver 0. THERE IS ONE WAY of insuring retreads for your automobile tires. Get a job as an official of a labor union. They are considered essential to the war effort, but farmers, salesmen, merchants, and others of the common people, including workers, may walk. CLASS CONSCIOUSNESS OUT OF THE WAR we will achieve a freedom for which we are not fighting the Huns or the Japs. Out of the war we will achieve a freedom from that growing While Miss Condida Boccuzzi rides the handlebars and Rudolph pumps the bicycle, Jo Ann Napolctano and Mario Boccuzzi hitch a ride on behind to combine in saving plenty of rubber and gasoline a good object lesson for you adults. Ruth Gibson pops her smiling face out of a tank at you. Her job is driving tanks around the Aberdeen (Md.) proving grounds. A thousand women take mens places here. There were those with selfish purposes encouraging a recognition of class and class distinctions. Any effort along such lines is subversive to our ideals. It has been only in recent years that we have recognized, even in a small way, any class distinctions. 'Elsie Woman's oft ID)ireams Suppose you knew that one aisle of one floor in one store had everything you needed to purchase! Suppose that on that aisle you could buy household necessities, smart clothing, thrilling gifts for bride, graduate, voyager! How much walking that would save! How much time, trouble and fretful shopping you would be spared! That, in effect, is what advertisements in this paper can do for you. They bring all the needs of your daily life into review with in one convenient place. Shop from your the advertisements. Keep abreast of bargains, instead of chasing them. Spend time in your newspaper to save time and in the stores. money ... easy-chai- vm r, , |