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Show r t Foreign ' wC A To Extend Sea Patrol x y V vygX- V l. T Jt v Of Copperheads Of ' Qvii War . From Page One) and In the maximum quantity. So ways must be found to do this. Knox struck an identical note. We cannot allow our goods to be sunk in the Atlantic, he u we 'shall be beaten said, . . We must see the . do. they our through. . . . This is (i job fight. Wickards theme was that it the United States is to continue as a great nation, it must act He sumlike a great nation. marized the chronicle of the war as a story of too little and too late. Millions of Amei leans, declared, "ate getting sick he of type" of action might ad presaged by the thtee condi esses was 'a matter of atjecture, with considerable tention "paid -t- o-' the fact that-bot- h Hull and Knox laid heavy the necessity of emphasis oftriease-lensupplies seeing that gbt to England safely. DIFFERENT AUDIENCES w Hull delivered his message the here last night before American Society of international Law. Knox addressed the annual dinner of the American Newspaper Publishers Bureau York. of Advertising at New Wickard spoke earlier in the day to farmers from the not states at a New York conference that considered increased agricultural production to provision Britain. Hull's .speech was regarded to by several persons close the the State Department as strongest he has made as secre. tary. He called off the names of 15 European nations that have lost everything that makes life worth living, and commented: It is high time that the remaining free countries should arm to the fullest extent and in the briefest time humanly possible, and act for their pe appeas-erwhowante- d Colonel Is Corporal! - V There was no question, as to Axis intentions the United States: On the face of It, it seemed rather confusing when a re- cent order issued at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, announced the promotion of Colonel Loudin to a core I olonel, poral s rank. howeert is just the lirst name of Private Colonel W. 'Loudin of Flemington, W. Va and he really was 6 pro-mote- d when he was made a corpora. be torpedoed by submae rines or bombaided bv the These warnings should enough so that hae been wplain ill be w ithout any Gel many should unforeseen liability, events occur. Both speeches .(Hull's and Knoxs) are in sti iking contrast to declaiations made bv Col. Lindbergh who said in Ins last speech that' about one hundred million Americans opposed the war entry of the United States. Also over theie, fronts hae become clearly drawn, in case complications should occur as the Jesuit of the irresponsible a plutocratic of instigation , clique. would luft-waff- U. 8. HELD ON LIST Evidence has been piling up over several years which makes it makes a difference Yes, who wins tjie difference whether we stand with our backs to the wall with the other four continents against us and the high seas lost, alone defending on the last free territories earth or whether we keep our place in an orderly world. Knox, too, Foresaw a nation imperiled by energies on fijur continents. America, he asset already was "gradually becoming encircled by military powers which have "openly and themrepeatedly proclaimed selves our enemies. Coal- (Continued From Page One) mine at Columbia is scheduled to resume woik Monday v 'lhe other ma lots still shutdown are United States Fuel Company's Hiawatha Mine. L. E. Adams, vice president and general manager ol the Spi ing Cany on. Hoy al and Standard Coal Companies, said about 500 miners in the employ of those companies would go bade to work this afternoon. Ordinarily the companies employ about 750 men, but the summer seasonal let down will cut the number by about 250, thoe men going into their usual spang and summer employment. We were paiticulaily uneasy about the situation m respect to our mines as one of our tubs is to provide bunker coat for ships refueling on the Pacific Coast, Dunng the past set oral weeks we have refueled ships from Kus-siJapan, Greece and many other countries. Mr. Adams said. PLAN KETKO.VCTI) E - He eaki the 500 men g back to work on the retroactive agreement, receiving the same pay as before the strike until after the agreement is reached when adjustments will be made in wages as of today. Resumption of work has relieved much of the tension that has been steadily growing in the coal fields as the sti ike, originally expected to last only a day or two, sti etched through almost an entire month, it was called nationally by Lewis at midnight March 31 when the UMWA Union and operators failed to agree on a new contract. Arguments, punctuated with fistfights, have been heated and numerous. A few trucks, ignoring picket lines, have been -- Tied, and a report now dented by union officials was circulated that the Huntington Canyon road had been dynamited. The temporary agreement which is reopening the Utah .mines will make retroactive to the time of work resumption anv benefits for the miners contained in the final contract which is still being negotiated in New York and Washington, D. C. a, are-goin- EXWtSSlYFORYOUt C GROUP ANOTHEH 2 SUITS50Q 50 I BOTH TOR TWO ... PEOPLE MAY SHARE ONE ORDER -- Tailored In oar hops in two sands of yards and sununor chooso from. own Salt Lako Thoudays. of now sprint to materials Sale Spring Wallpaper Ita for the kitchen, Wallpaper bargains the tim yon need them. bath, living room and even the front room. 6 roil selection with PER LOT. border included . 506-756-90- 10 6-S1 ROLIT ELECTION WITH BORDER per lot. ON OUTSIDE WHITE SPECIAL - PAINT-$1.- . DIAL and 57 Sava- - SPECIAL PURCHASE FOR THIS ANNIVERSARY EVENT! P.flOWKS CLOTH Pleated Tops! 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Vaseline Hair Tonic ... ftlimp vour DOCTORS PRE SCRIPTIONS ms written, . is our pledge RLE DELIVERY DIAL 7Se 1 Th'S $4.98 The German high commend destruction chaotic pictured among ships waiting in Greek "escape ports to remove BEF troops. Stuka were reported to have sent six vessels to the bottom and damaged 14 others in the past 21 hours These were so severely dame aged thev w uld hardly be of the for embarkation Bynsh expeditionary corps," the German communique said. While conceding another major setback, London officials insisted batthe climax of the Setle of the Balkans was lessDunrious than the episode at Allied escape kerque, in the from the bloody fields of Flanders last spring. 25 Curtain Elods Antique And Greece. Hot or Cold PLATE LUNCH And Drink Save With Penney s Modern Weaves ! h LUNCH oV Rayon And Cotton It Drapes -- FOUNTAIN new spring wardrobe! MEAN SMART WINDOWS FOR SPRING! close-togethe- ....... a -- (Conunued From Page One) Dardanthe Turkish-controlleelles and subdued the small Greek garrison after a 4 hour ba'tle. The Germans had prev ioulv another occupied Samothtace, Greek island 30 miles northeast levelled of Lemnos, and thus twin bairels at the 'gateway between the Black Sea and the Mediterranean. British Middle East headquarters acknowledged that BEF troops made a turther withdrawal. "inflicting severe losses on the enemv" as they fell back toward Athens. Eat her dispatches from the Hellenic capital itself declared that grev green waves of Nazi infant! v storming the pass had off and that the been driven Germans had hi ought up heavv guns to shell the Allied defenders. mbulance diners aiming In Athens from the battlefront saul Uie .Germans had suffei ed terrific losses in attempts to take assaults. the pass by infantry British casualties were described as extremely light." in London, no attempt was made to conceal that withdrawal British expeditionary of the but force was in the cards, the British radio declared last night that so far not one But-isfrom soldier has 60c PER GAL 50 Felt Wallpaper Co 245 SOUTH STATE . years ol fair business dealing . . . that is the history of the Penney Company. From a little acorn of a store in Kemmerer, Wyoming, in 1902, to a great stalwart oak of almost 1,600 stores today, spreading its friendly branches to every corner of the country! American business at its best . . . built solidly on the simple virtue of the Golden Rule . . Tind, with every step of growth, striving to . . serve its vast army of customer-friend- s right here in your community! Thirty-nin- e d (Continued From Page One) he force. War- Axis- - said, one it perfectly plain .that group of powers actually does have designs both upon the new world and upon the principles, the possessions, and the way of life that are ours. All the military movements and official acts and utterances of those the powers have confirmed knowledge that wtrtoo arerm-elude- d in their plans for woild domination. Our freedom and our wealth inevitably makes us magnets for their machines of WASHINGTON. April 25. (AP) President Roosevelt placed Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh today in the category of Civil War 'Copperheads." The president was asked at a press conference why 'the army had not taken up Lindbergh's commission.. The famous aviator, who frequently has criticized the administration's foreign policy, is a reserve colonel. The president remarked that in the Civil War. both the Confederates and the Northerners took on liberty-lovin- g people from other countries, and both let certain people go. The latter, he said, were the Vallandighams.' ' (Clement L. Vallandigham Was a representative from Ohio who. was arrested by the union mill treatary authorities in 1863 for sonable utterances and was'ban-isheto the confederate states. (He was known as a leader of the Copperheads.") When reporters did not react to the name, Mr.iRoosevelt said that allandigham was an do make peace because he felt the Northerners could not w In. Still replying to the question about Lindbergh, Mr. Roosevelt .said thercals.a.w ere an' awful Jot. of appeasers at Valley Forge w ho urged George Washington to quit because he could not win against the British. He advised reporters to read what Thomas Paine had written on the advisability of quitting. Mr. Roosevelt was sharply critical of those Americans who, he said, have taken the attitude that the dictatorships will surely be v ictonous. This he said Is not good Americanism. And it is a "dumb attitude, he added. d that stoty. Just what d Pase3 Flier Placed In Gass Ships To Go As. Far As Needed, (Continued - Roosevelt Flays Lindy As Defeatist Roosevelt Says Chief. r- The Deseret News, Salt Lake City, Utah Friday, April 25, 1941 IIX 5 1 ' - |