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Show THE SAUNA SUN. SAUNA. UTAH CLASSIFIED JAPANESE: WEEKLY Scrambled Eggs: Ilarlem is planning a monument up there in honor of Pvt. Joe Louis . . . The Rockefellers have hired two cops to guard the tomatoes in their Victory Garden , . , The Dry Dock Savings Bank permits depositors to sign or indorse checks with thumbprints. For those who cant write . . . Sounds like a Hitchcock movie, but the lad3 on a local newspaper claim it happened. A reporter covering a trial three weeks ago walked out of the courtroom and hasnt been seen or heard of since . . . You get an idea of how taut the war has made everybodys nerves when Lucius Beebe finds fault with Elsa Maxwells grammar. Years ago Clark Gable angered the r makers when he stripped to show he wore no undershirt. The movies made it up to the knitters in "The Male Animal. Henry Fonda peels down to a gym shirt . . . mentioned that Lefty Somebody had ODoul, tiie old taught Gary Cooper how to be a expert in "The Pride of the Yankees flicker, where he plays the role of Lou Gehrig. Which led one Giant fan to cackle that "outside of Joe Gordon Gary is the only . . . UnconYank that's hitting! scious quip on King Peter at the ball game. The king, said a caption writer, "soon got into the spirit of the game. He left after four innings . . . Bill Saroyan, who hasnt had a play on Broadway this year, has received more publicity than those who have presented hit attractions. NEWS ANALYSIS Mixed Tidings International Court and Police Force For Postwar World Envisioned by Hull; Nazi Drive Increases Russias Peril; Rommel Stymied by Allied Air Power (EDITOR'S NOTE: Whea pinions art upreiaH In these columns, they art those of Western Newspaper Colon's nows analysis and not necessarily of this newspaper.) - Released by Western Newspaper Union. knit-wea- major-league- r, left-hand- Things to waste paper about: First movietown was criticized for making films about the war warmongers, etc. Now they are being scolded because they dont make enough war pictures . . . Perhaps another' reason you never heard any more twaddle about stopping B pictures is that Bs make almost as much as As , . . Add little ironies: The cast of soldiers in "This Is the Army (who get $50 per month) find it swell pay for acting. Most of them appeared in turkeys which rarely allowed them to average that much . . . Vaudeville probably will never really bloom again. Because new talent aims for the networks where salaries are huskier and where there are no stands irritable one-nig- ht (or s. Those debating radio shows (not you, Town Hall Meeting) will never be as popular as silk hosiery on shapely legs. Depend too much on tedious statistics for their arguments . , . We can remember all the way back when Broadwayites were groaning that the dimout would hurt show business, which has never been healthier in summertime . . . Dont get the idea that all soap operas on the radio are corny. A few are well written. "Against the Storm, frixample . . . The short about the American soldier, directed by Garson Kanin, with Spencer Tracy doing the commentary, makes thrills waltz along your spine . . , Tin Pan Alley is in a slump. Not one of the has thefted a Tschaikowsky melody in six months. song-smit- Midtown Vignette: A girl ankled into the office of a magazine editor and sobbed a hard luck tale of no coin, no job, no friends . . . It I had only one good looking dress, she said, "Id have a chance of getting a job. Why is it everybody will bet on horses, but nobody will bet on a human being?" . . , Touched by her plight, he asked her what he could do , . . "Just give me a chance, she told him, buy me a wardrobe and youll never regret it . That was three months ago . and he paid the bills for a complete layout of apparel for her . . . Tod day, she is one of the models smiling from newsstands and shop windows at you. The other night she looked at him in the Stork Club and turned away without even a hello . . . He sent her a note which read: Im back to betting on horses. The other day I bet $50 on Whirlaway. He lost but after the race he waved and said high-price- Hello 1 Reader's Digest pats Sir Oop: Wilmott Lewis for saying: Dorothy Thompson has discovered the secret of perpetual emotion. Well, most of us have said that about Kath Hepburn and Tallulah Bankhead but wotta short memory the Digest editors have. They ran a piece in May, 1940, by Katharine Best titled: "Perpetual Emotion. DEPARTMENT Taking their first offensive action in the southwest Pacific since their disastrous defeat in the Battle of the Coral Sea last May, the Japanese landed an invasion force at Buna, RAZOR BLADES KENT BLADES 1 hJBladVVJuU miles directly across the eastern arm of New Guinea from Port Union. Keieased by Moresby, last Allied outpost of Australia. CHANGING CLASSES A Melbourne communique reportON U. S. SCENE ed that United Nations planes had WE TO Americas lowei attacked the invasion fleet and sank classes REFER to our middle or upper or a large transport and barge, but classes. Possibly there are such did not prevent the landing. but if so, the personnel ol classes, On the Chinese front the Japs did is constantly changing. The each Chopped ripe olives with the not have such happy tidings to reof today is the merest dash of garlic make a puncart peddler push port to Tokyo. First item of bad merchant prince of tomorrow, or the gent filling for small white bread news was the recapture by Chinese merchant prince of today is a men- sandwiches to be toasted and armies of Kienteh, a key point southtomorrow. There is opportu- served with cocktails. dicant west of Hangchow. Second item for all and the place of each is nity was a report that United States determined by his ability and his Strained honey, heated and bombers had sunk two Japanese Those who win must car- mixed with soft butter and a dash energy. on the Fu river in Kiangsi ry others upwards with them. Those of cinnamon and cloves, gives a province. who fail after having won what they delicious flavor to toasted mufMeanwhile, along the Hangchow-Nanchanlose has not been destroyed but is railway the Nipponese in- passed along to others. All any real fins, hot waffles e or pancakes. vaders were being constantly harreally asks is a fair field A stiff wire brush is a great aid assed by Chinese guerillas. The American a and fair umpire his government in keeping the burners of a gas or official Central News agency disto see there are no blows below closed that Chinese farmers had been electric stove free from crumbs. belt. He wants a chance to batarmed with 30,000 rifles in each the tle his way upward. county of western and southern CheA little candied ginger, finely kiang province. They are organized A LETTER FROM A READER chopped, gives zest to a fruit cockinto units strong enough to destroy or sherbet. It also is says he is tired reading about the tail, salad small enemy detachments. If suwar and wants to forget it. If all good added to whipped cream and perior Japanese forces approach, the used to top puddings. Be carepeople of America felt that way they withdraw, leaving their villages it would ensure a peace treaty dic- ful to use just a little of it, howstripped. tated by the Huns, the Wops and ever. the Japs and we would soon grow tired of the conditions imposed. Copper flashing around pipes,, OP A Gets $ 120,000,000 dormer windows and the edges of roofs never needs painting. But Price Administrator Leon Hender- OBLIGATION OF WRITING copper is now on the priority list. son was given $120,000,000 with A LASTING PEACE THE AMERICAN PEOPLE are If you have or are installing galwhich to fight inflation, when the house of representatives agreed to hoping the peace following the close vanized flashing, remember that it adopt a conference committee's rec- of this world conflict will be a last- should be examined frequently and ommendations to compromise its ing peace. They hope as they did kept covered with paint. in 1918, that this may be the last differences with the senate. Medical officers have long recThe outspoken Henderson thus got world conflict. Granted the Allied Nations win, as ognized tobacco as an aid to mo$75,000,000 less for financing his operations than he had originally asked they will, America can come nearer rale among our armed forces. for, but actually $45,000,000 more dictating the terms of peace than Surveys among the men themthan the house had first voted. Po- any other one nation. America is selves have shown that tobacco is litical wiseacres observed that the probably the only nation that would their favorite gift. If you have a result was simply an illustration of not write a hate peace. To ful- friend or relative in the Army, the old game of give and take. Hen- fill the obligation that will be ours, Navy, Marines, or Coast Guard derson had first asked for more than America must do some serious think- who smokes a pipe or he expected, the house first voted ing between now and the end of the nothing would be more apless than he actually needed. The conflict. preciated than a pound of his faA book, The Problems of Lasting vorite tobacco. Prince Albert, the finale was a compromise satisfacsmoking toPeace, by Herbert Hoover and worlds largest-sellintory to all. is reccan in the pound bacco, Gibson a us foundation Hugh gives WAR PROFITEERING: on which to think. They do not ommended by local dealers as an ideal gift for men in the service. attempt to say what the peace shall Adv. Halted by House be, but they do give us an analysis Drastic steps to curb wartime of the historic peace treaties of the profiteering were taken when the past, and their results, and do make house of representatives passed a some general suggestions. Cive Up Makeshift''1 bill outlawing commission fees on is one seems these that Among government contracts, after ChairConstipation Remedies! especially worth while. It is that man Carl Vinson declared that be the divided peace making agents, obtaining war contracts for Why fool with constipation? Why into three distinct stages. The manufacturers were "fleecing Amertry to combat the trouble after would first settle It has already made you misertemporarily ican taxpayers. able? on which there could problems Testimony presented previously to It may well be that your conbe no delay. It would include the Is caused by too little the house naval committee had disstipation of immediate bulk food in your diet, formed-lcclosed that three Washington firms science warns that lack of national sovereignties as they of "sales engineers had bulk Is one of the commonest invadexisted before Germany causes of constipation. earned close to $2,000,000 in comed Austria, and the establishIf yours is this kind of conmission fees on government conon the part of the Allied ment stipation, those purges and catracts in the past six months. thartics can give you, at best, Nations of an international poonly temporary relief. Eating comwould lice force that insure LEAHY: KELLOGGS regupliance and the temporary mainlarly, on the other hand, corrects tenance of peace. the cause by supplying the bulk Eyes and Legs food you lack and must have! The second would provide for Called from retirement to the Enjoy this crisp, crunchy cereal a of for the "period rebuilding newly created position of chief of dally, drink plenty of water, and like so many others, you'll Join political life and economies restaff to the Commander in Chief, la the Regulars! covery. was Adm. William Daniel Leahy, made by Kellogg's in Battle The third would settle those former chief of naval operations and Creek. If your condition is not "long-vice- s problems which remore recently ambassador to Vichy helped by this simple treatment, see a doctor. quire a cooling off of emotions, France. deliberation and carefnl develWith all the world discussing the opment. prospects of the United States and Britain opening a second front in That it is not possible to write a lasting peace is amply demonstrated by the treaty of Versailles. Then hate, and the desire for revenge and imperidence dominated the For You To Feel Well peace conference. The same will 24 hours every day. 7 daye every be there again if the final peace is week, never stopping, the kidneys filter written by this generation at least waste matter (rom the blood. If more people were aware of how the before those who fought the war kidneys must constantly remove surand suffered from its destruction plus fluid, excess acids and other waste matter that cannot stay in the blood have had years in which to forget. without injury to health, there would be better understanding of trhjf the The new peace, if it is to be perwhole system ia upset when kidneys fail manent, must provide for the estabto function properly. Burning, scanty or too frequent urinalishment and maintenance of repretion sometimes warns that something sentation government and personal Is wrong. You may suffer nagging backache, headaches, dizziness, rheumatic liberty for people of the Axis napains, getting up at nights, swelling. will canand their tions satellites. It Why not try Boons Pills'! You be using a medicine recommended the not be on a basis of punishment funccountry over. Boon's stimulate the for the vanquished no matter how tion ol the kidneys and help them to flush out poisonous waste from the great their lives may have been. blood. They contain nothing harmful. cannot Get Doan's today. Use with confidence. a have Hate, revenge (?) At all drug storea. place at that final peace table and will final the have if they peace terms are prepared immediately after the end of this world conflict. Former President Hoover and amEurope this year, the appointment bassador Gibson have laid for us a of Admiral Leahy to the new posi- foundation on which to base our tion was hailed as significant of su- thinking which should lead to a unipreme efforts ahead. Regarded as fied American demand for that kind an able strategist, Admiral Leahy, of peace structure that will mean in the words of President Roosevelt, the end of wars. We have very will serve as his eyes and legs and seriously needed a place to start and relieve him of many detail duties. "The Problem of Lasting Peace, The Chief Executive, however, provides that in a protected way. made it clear that Leahy would not be supreme commander of the UnitTO EACH OF US SHE WAS more ed Nations forces, or even of Amer- than steel, and guns and planes. ican forces. Although Mr. Roose- She was an American, and she died velt did not use the term, it ap- as other Americans have died and peared that the admiral would be- will die for the nation she so proudly come an assistant commandtr in represented. The aircraft carrier chief, ranking all naval and mili- Lexington lies buried in the Coral tary officers but the President. sea, but her death was not in vain. 100 Western-Newspape- r ANTI-INFLATIO- Maj. Gen. Carl Spaatz, chief of the American air forces in the European theater of action (left), pins the Distinguished Service Cross on Maj. Charles C. Kegelman. Taking part in a recent bombing raid on enemy airfields in Holland, Kegelman brought his ship back safely after one motor was wrecked and a wing damaged in fighting with German air forces. RUSSIAN FRONT: Terrible Days POSTWAR WOULD: Hull Envisions When silvery-haireCordell Hull broadcast an appeal for a safe and saner postwar world, it was clear that a majority of Americans agreed with his thesis that the peace as well as the war must be won by the United Nations if future chaos is to be avoided. In an address heard around the world, the secretary of state made these points: 1. The United Nations immediate problem is to win the war decisively. 2. After the war surveillance must be exercised over Germany, Japan, Italy and their satellites by the United Nations until the aggressors prove their willingness and ability to live at peace with other nations. 3. Disputes must be settled by peaceful means. An international court of justice would provide respect for law and obligations. 4. Freedom is to be assured by removal of economic and political shackles. Errors of extreme nationalism that caused the present war must be avoided. The gravity of the Russian situation could not be underestimated and no attempt was made to belittle its seriousness. Germanys report of the fall of Rostov emphasized the EGYPT: soldiers in regaining ground far to e the north in their around Voronezh. By turning the Nazis back here, Marshal Timoshenko might be able to take some of the pressure off Red forces in the deep South who had fought with their backs to the wall in defense of Rostov. d crisis. As the sorely pressed Russians guarding the approaches to the Caucasus and the Volga river had fallen back before the million-maGerman army smashing its way southeast down the Don river valley, the Soviet army organ, Red Star, said frankly: "Terrible days face the country. It called upon the fighting men of Russia to emulate the example of 28 Red soldiers, who in the defense of Moscow last winter, died fighting a tank charge with little more than their bare hands. The speed of the new Nazi drive against the Reds celebrated technique was believed to be due to the Germans' use of a crushing, mass maneuver which employed monster tanks, armored trains, heavy mortars and an unprecedented concentration of air n defen- se-in-depth power. Only comforting note in the bleak picture was the success of Russian counter-offensiv- Air Potver Tells It had become increasingly clear that air power was assuming a decisive role in the fight for Egypt. Steady reinforcements of the British air arm had enabled the Imperials to launch an offensive along the front from El Alamein on the Mediterranean to the Quattera marshes, paced by an RAF onslaught that drove Nazi planes from the sky. The British drive dislodged the Nazis from Tel el Eisa (Hill of Jesus) in the north and succeeded in making considerable headway along the center. Activity by the Allies had followed a week-lonassault by American and British planes and British warships on the North African coastal highway on which German Marshal Rommel had rushed reinforcements to offset the capture of 6,000 Italians on the Egyptian front in In raids previous engagements. covering 275 miles of Rommels exposed supply route, British planes virtually wiped out the El Daba airport near the Egyptian lines. 35-mi- le U. S. CASUALTIES: Sliotv J Ears Trend Casualty figures released by the Office of War Information revealed that the navys losses since Pearl Harbor were 15 times greater than for the entire span of World War I. The OWIs statistics disclosed naval casualties thus far totaling 3 compared with 871 in the first World war. The current casualties included 3,420 killed; 1,051 wounded and 7,051 missing. Those of World War I included 356 killed in action; 58 died of wounds and 456 lost at sea. The armys losses in the present war, were placed at 19,767. These included 902 killed; 1,413 wounded and 17,452 missing. That the Philippine Scouts trained under General MacArthur had given a heroic account of themselves was indicated REQUIEM: by casualties listing 479 killed; 754 wounded and 11,000 missing. Crete For Casualties for all services were Burial with military honors is the at 44,413. placed hope of friend or foe alike, if death bulk of the army casualties The in battle is the fighting mans lot. fall into the category of missing, Thus a tradition sanctioned by the the OWI said. ages was followed when the bodies of 29 German submarine crew memFEMININE ARMY: bers were buried in Hampton, Va. The victims were the first enemy WAAC Trains Hard dead to be landed on American Every morning at 5:45 a. m. from shores since the beginning of the now until next November 9, 800 members of the newly organized war. The bodies and a few empty life Womens Auxiliary Army corps will jackets were all that remained afloat leap from their army cots to begin after a destroyer on Atlantic patrol a crowded day of drills, lectures The same honors and training at their camp at Fort sank the were accorded the enemy as Ameri- Dos Moines, Iowa. cans might wish for their own dead, By November 9, Americas first if the circumstances were reversed. feminine army of occupation will Navy chaplains read the requiem. begin to spread out to 19 forts A navy firing squad fired a salute of throughout the country to relieve men in the armed forces for active three volleys. A navy bugler soundcombat duty. ed taps. 12,-14- g U-Bo- at New York Hear beat: Faces About Town: Fannie Hurst H I G II L I G II T S at 7:15 ayem in the park airing her pups . . . William Holden, of the LONDON: The British informamoompitchcrs, in his soldier uniform . . . The Ray Bolgers showing some tion service said that British women of the troops from Fort Broadway are now nearly 100 per cent mobilTheater the Stork cub . . . The ized. Of 15,800,000 women between woman with the deer on leash . . . the ages of 18 and 64, tire agency Jan Struther, author of "Mrs. Mini- said, 7,500.000 are doing full time in the Biltmore Fountain ver, jobs in war production. About Room . . Harry Hopkins, with others are disabled and 5.500,-00two fiewspaper men, talking only ore taking care of families. about his betrothed . . . Greta Gar- Many others are serving in (he auxbo on a bike in Central Park. iliaries of the army and navy. 670,-00- 0 0 in the week's neus WASHINGTON: The importance of the $100,000,000 fish industry to the nation's wartime food supply was stressed by President Roosevelt as he appointed Secretary of Interior Harold L. Ickes to be fisheries Acting under his war- time powers, the President created the office for the purpose of developing and assuring sustained production. rolls-his-ow- n, g al ALL-BRA- N ALL-BRA- N AIR LEVIATHANS: Aid Wtr Effort CHINA SAYS 1,000 PLANES would save her and defeat the Japs. According to what WPB tells us that Giant airplanes shuttling across is less than one weeks production the seven seas carrying men and of our plane plants. materials for the world's fighting AT THE NEXT PEACE CONfronts will become an increasingly important arm of Uncle Sams serv- FERENCE there will not again sit ice of supply, it was disclosed by a French Clemenceau to block a Brig. Gen. Harold L. George, com- Magnainnsous settlement of world manding the air transport forces, affairs and through a demand for who announced that the army would average lay the foundation for anrely on commercial airlines to op- other war. Without a Clemenceau erate greatly increased numbers of the Atlantic charter will have a chance. transport planes |