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Show TIIE LOGAN, UTAH, PACE EIGHT The H c r a 1 PuhlMunl cwry vuk (ndir ii I'Lah. Stn Ci 7a W t iev NewspajM aO. Tth'phuiii all lrurtiMntH t! hv. The by rnmr f0 d'l.ts prr montb, m advance, Hum ni'nth.s, $1 7") ruxu.ontht 3'jO; nnc year, $7 0h Hv Mail ip Iarhe Yulhy, m a ham per mx months, $2 75, month, oft cunts Hint months $1 In n not.-nle Cm man ol one year 57 mi I.v allv per Month, oo outs, three months, $1 00, hik SOW nonths, S3 00, one vtur, n Ihitereh as wrennd ila.sn matter in the pod office at 1H70 th art of mneress. Match Utah, Proclaim through all the luml. Uirty Bell. (n!ir -- L HE WASNT HAVING ENOUGH TROUBLE! d-Jouvna1 'lav aftrinoon bv th HEEALD-JOURNA- THOUGHTS Val- 1 ffi , -' THINGS ". BY RAY NELSON Iyj-pa- 1 nn-h- for The lleralil Intirnal will not assume ftnain ial nspons.Mlil any errors which ina appear In aihertiscriH'iits publishi-- in its col limn. In those instance uliere the pupur is at fault, it will reprint that part of tin atlrrf ixmoiit in wlnrti tin I poyiaphieal mistake From the Mailbox . Theres a few letters here wh.e$ rave some observations you may be interested in them. iMsnrs. For I am now re dojairtun is at hand Here is nit And er to ho ..It. rod, md the time of Timothy li m Hi V - 1 jniirncvs end, here is sea-mar- niv utmost sail. d niv l.utt. Othello. Apparent ly nobodv want. ; plants. war m jiartm ally - g is high time that these two groups get together and squeeze out the relatively few middlemen, occupying strategic positions as local officers, shop stewards, etc., who are bringing unionism into disrepute. This is not a reactionary view'point. A good reactionary, who hated unionism aa such, would not seek to induce unionin the war effort. He would ism to clean house and try to provoke the unions into greater excesses. Continuation of obstructionism in war production is the surest way of swinging back the pendulum and depriving labor of much of the gain it has achieved in the past Id years. ' ' d ' Out of 53. GUO tons of scrap metal consumed in the United States last year, junked auto nobiles provided from 1,000.000 to 2,000,000 tons. 13 16 S'R'G0' Smgical tin cad. Air raid precautions (abbr ). Fxprrd. Rev eies. 20 Moist 22 Bodv of KafT.i vvai i ioi 24 Ouro-- e .aiio' 26 On user 18 Hop-- ' !r 30 Tannins V. p 32 F.lc ti il'ied 1 7 ' I PROVINCE 'XERt, J 'AfTERll RAN 2iZ.DE DjjA NEC DOTE p; BeTT NT THG P ALTjB'E Vs I 8B:F ozLjJ RUBBED IF AN- rA ;re at uTd iNET-'- EEN Z I S'I$T CF ,,nd detains. ! ,blc. 27 Gare f.xedlv. 28 Unit Co c Age Dvj C!S'Or ;0L 4'LT'rcnvtG o .ci 5 e C 1 C I 40 Mmc sli ,f lu.l t 42 ti l'i C. d 1', PIC. 41 Bell "d -- n r. t I Ne (' ( !. ,i.l MM II. kv 32 il 1 1, i i , r : t (.ebbr - It in.JHifi ti Hit ciii'i mu t V W ill ,US i e ,r ru n ur, I Mt ii n tn m L'i I hn-- 1 ituli ( nt t'ntil in II f i(,)s ,!! Ml i "l'i" o'e. t r l fer con s .'b .i- mi law. i V "w" 51 Id t n of l,.(S d.k , ju-4 v Tip; in 17 A, ci go 12, Mu 49 M, 1 . It', New (jbbi bf I. I D ho-be- BARBS c l Le iriiing what a about is evry bit dSeH.sy heie spilln g milk hovv-iii- ,U'.u 1 5FALS am, SEA LIONS Al l i Umx SC 6 NOAN US' OF that4 pi tl'pni(ONIp ?o thu AND 1c P 1H if IN 7s' afc un- -i ii - -- d vc , a in-v- c fr c land-base- -- v 'ud,. I Vaeeiardi. leadei of the famous Garibaldi Legion in the Spanish Civil War Organization of the Italian Legion from the 10 million Western Hemisphere Italian descendants will be the spot die assignment of Colonel Piuciardi To Count Sforza fal's a larger task of building up an Italian National Couni il of Free Italians all over the world to work for the liberation of Italy from fascism. This Free Italy or Italia Libie movement will not attempt to set in up a new Italian government ede. but will work for the idea that when the war is over there shall be a ionstitution.il (invention in Italy to determine what ft im of government the lountiy should have. Mandate to Count Carlo Sfoizi to heart this movement Minus ns a suit of the i on f reiiM jus' In Irt in ITuguay, to which soon I'SI dele- 1KMII1I i' or - ii the I'll ted Il gates were sent fiom Italian cti sin letU's in both North aid t i tl t hi It ill Lib South Amerii.i The stoiv h, hind mi nt ti is its loots .mil it the holding of the liuelmg m Montevideo and inaneim i mgs of I mis of bum ilco t ill over the past f w months make it one of the more mttigii'iig naiioo-ahs- t mnvennnts of the wu It is r m tnu nt u hu I, m in i lu i ml THIS CURIOUS WORLD B.nd. (at bi tou-u-.- c Kind of ud. 34 T Ik m . j Sep-tem- v 29 I.,gl biown. 30 I tv i ..pp.il is ( fo 1 Itahan-Amenea- anli-t,.su- t ,.cg from the new Italian National Council under Count Sforza will WASHINGTON probably receive its greatest stimso-- ( n DOG BIsClIT ulus, through leties already in existence 160 in ..Manpower survey Count Carlo Sforza is a recoglabor market areas shows 41 with liberal nized conservative, So with adequate supply. Behind him is the power- leanings ex81 witn with shortages, fill Mazzini Society organization pected shortages. . . . found in every large Italian center. r tire rationings quotIn New York it is headed by Dr. as will be lowered. . . . Priee Max Aseoli, now an American citi-- ! ceilings on work clothes are eii. a political scientist of note who intended to prevent repetileft Italy when Mussolini came intion of the lust war experto power. Its secretary is Alberto iences, v hen overa'ls pose Tarchiani. editor of a liberal Italfrom 8 cents to $2.08 a pair. ian daily in Paris before the fall . . . Farm income in l!H! is of France. In general, these M billion ted to reach $14 expia Society organizations are as against $8 billion in 19'ht. gr"" S rc elite intellectuals . . . Wages paid to all workThe Free Italy movement has ers may reach $7.7 billion in labor backing in the United States, 104 2 as against $!.j billion in though it has kept out the Italian l!t:i.o. communists. It is from such diverse elements bien done m the open, and since as these that this new Free Italy movement and its Italian Ligion Pearl Harbor. Leading spirit of the will git support movement m South Amerua Di a Telli. promTorqualis inent and wed'hy iiuhistri ilist of Buenos Aires The conference could Considering skirts Hnd hosiery, no! he he'd in the Argentine, for we re having a very short summer. though that county lias the largest It, h in popid ttion in South AmerIf you really want something ica. the l.ght of assembly has that s easy to find, start looking been suspended ill a state of siege for trouble In ITuguay. howevtr the lateh-strm- g was out A centuiy ago it Some husbands probably dont was Gaithaldi himself who led the need training for combat duty. revolution for Uruguay in liberaThey get it on the home front tion A fuitlur f o tin in the choice of Mont, loco ,ts tile' meeting pi u e Why does a chicken cross the w is the (i, sue t !n stnat and how does a pedestrian MOV ll! nt S arc both good riddles. that iH-Il- l 27 Vcgi partule 33 35 37 38 Sogiog.-itc- 3' l'i Movement Launched by Italians s Ka n do 3ol King pins those vertical bolts on which the front-ensteering knuckles ride need regular lubrication, not merely because of their role in steering success but because they support from 20 to 40 per cent of the cars weight. 23 : Montevideo, Uruguay, of Count arlo Sforza, for-5mer Italian for-- , eign niinixter and. Normally, brakes need not be adjusted for 13,000 miles. Just dropping sieed from 50 to 40 miles per hour is said to postpone adjustment for another 5000 miles. -- . soon, States i Z BY VETER EPSON Herald Journal Washington Correspondent Formation of an Italian Legion of antifascists in North and South America, to fight with the LTuted Nations against pr the axis, will be ; promoted with the return o the United It sreek! IcsArsgnI Hri GA ' The Washington th.se minor "leaders" grew up in an , era when workers were o:pl ited. whin employers were arbitrary and unreasonable, when the way to leadership" was to achieve some new gain for the local at least on.e a year a little more pay, a little shorter working day, some additional vacation or sick leave provision - anything that would demonstrate that the leader" was on tin job, earning his salary by forcing concessions out of the boss. Such men apparently do not realize that, for the most part, their constituents now are very well paid; that workers are more interested in war production than in such ideological considerations as the union shop; that there is Anti-Axino suier way of injuring the institution of labor unionism than to foster strikes or stoppages which will delay war Answer to Previous Tuzzle i - Most of HORIZONTAL 1 Depict'"'. Canadian prov- - U" su, From a Logan woman comes realized these views; for "Last night I attended the .there Th t smoker at the college fu ldlumse families 111 the midst of the program a life, and all tl stray kitten miserably made its get , family way toward us from a section filled with Logan people. They were in civilian clothes. ay famil nl "The kitten was too miserable for even to mew. Its ear, had just had never been cut off and a piece of furry .ay group skin stripped from its side. 1 he help ft wounds of the -Id bloody edges set ill The fresh. were bloody wr Seeing member sepia re showed red on the poor ask him things side. cutand "I had read of the Japs .jpa got "wra ting steaks from live water Td SUf buffalo with their swords and You men cant seem lo keep your eyes oil women in would bayonets Id w on their "Are vve starting uniform, but what Id like to know is win so nianv of s . when them lauqh. practices in this regard'" summer. Another question- "Is the time are plat' ripe for donating iron fences for honor. cannon? I have one to donate but can hardly afford to hire someone j visit Li to uproot it " j 3r,d the a (Note Within the next week or ,jj and MERRY-GO-ROUND so an intensive j chocolate salvage drive ;hto. Kno throughout Cache county will get dehcacie under way Trucks will be used to te By Drew Pearson (Major Robert S. Allen now In U. 8. Army) .sy have gather, all sorts of metal scrap anged witt The city and county will cooperate 15 of full understanding in' superior J.ipai-.t.cad a reserva in a thoroughgoing campaign that Lack Allied fleet cost us Java battle; lhe diffuult ji.-- t ov fad out will seek to enlist every pound of , of t heroic Dutch Admiral was un- , , iber w u i, L scrap in this man's war. Each wUJ He sure th accustomed to handling big i.,e family in Cache county should adv isable to u.g . or vcghdai t Td scour squadron; hit on British cruiser solemnly pledge to support the xseball an disorganized fleet after a brave and await a mmc tavoiable drive bv rounding up all available teamwork among I nited p0rtUmty. jipir.g rope scrap, piling it where trucks go, in or ar naval units now vastly Nations for the campaign.) ther(. preparation tt,, I coul -- O-improved. 'unity and complae urderstand:; jar (know vv hen Admir il I 'oral. in led it Tourhing upon a tourhy subject for WASHINGTON in this question, sent in by a Standing out Dutch. American .uni British mr. IT mey's. reader. against some of the discouraging into battle. three-,.c- a a, to one that let it be said of the is vvir The battle started in the First, developments race, a every parent his children are the very encouraging factor the imapproved naval style kids ra best in the world. Anyone who proved cooperation between the two columns firing broackiis ages w criticizes his children are invarl-- : navies of Great Britain and the at each other. Admiral Doneg some orman's flagship dc liujter wa. ably wrong. Ones own kids sel- United States. s a h.il dom can do wrong esecially If Naval and military cooperation the vanguard, hut being a ! A have ta the neighbors say its wrong. always is difficult between Allies. inch gun cruiser it was outrank' into my The letter asks: "What about Different customs, different trained by the enemy's gum. s help m women who will ing. sometimes different languages So with typical Dutch courjff. uiify song not allow their own little bullies make teamwork almost impossible Doorman moved in rloser, and ks to pul to play with their neighbors at the start of any war. And it signaled the rest of the nohinil looked takes real statesmanship -- military, children, yet speak disrespectfulBritish and American ships-- to An whit naval and political - to improve it. ly of the neighbors before the follow. 3. And t! bebullies? To illustrate, cooperation Doorman, it should be noted day of f tween the United States, Britain "Can vve rear our own ehil-- j was not accustomed o commarc d call the dren in isolation, or must they and the Dutch touched bottom ing a large nuniblr of nsn prof .jnse learn to live with other people the the I battles around h ver; the nti navy being during units, ce been al and help to make others good Dutch East Inches. Since then small. Ordinanh. other sc suggest tl How can adults bear to huit have tremendous improvements would not have followed Doormr we shot little children needlessly? been made; but at that time the but since he signultd them '.! have i believe. Maam, that every Unitec Nations hurriedly had follow, they obeyed take can for his own good, should thrown together what ships AdThis brought H M S Eve'e got aw y miral Tommy Hart had in the and the I to social relations how to S S. Houston, 1 our far with other children, coPhilippines; together with what gether with other British ne money the British had left after losing American units, within range operate and play. After all. ones Next wee the Prince of Wales and the the enemys h guns as trr happiness in this world depends 21 orge off upon how he gets along with Repulse Singapore; and as its guns cuons.) those around him. And that art EXETER HIT AMIDsHlP finally the very small fleet the of cooperation, of social adjustDutch could muster around Java Despite this, however, the ment must be cultivated during and Sumatra more favorably than c hildhood. Admiral Hart, then past retire- was expected. United Natieo iodmn -- O ment age. but with a good fightwas excellent O' marksmanship From San Lhigo a the whole the United Nations ing record, was placed in command of the United Fleet, and in Burns writes: USTS own sign ' It sti uc k me as being odd tint the Battle of Macassar Straits But suddenly the Exe'er, Bfc 12 men out of 2s who occupy the managed to sink a large number important of the British ur.it lower floor of our barracks do of Jap transports. was strut k in the engine-roe- i ne fnl not smoke, and from all appeur- After tins action. Halts scouts and was foiled to turn out am es, do not drink saw approaching a much iarger line. ding hi v Such an observation shoull ogical And Admiral Doorman, not e Japanese fleet, including what apcrease our faith in holesome peared to be duty Li gun cruisers, customej to commanding a brT hw esday habits of our servii enirn. No guarding a great convoy. fleet, turned out of line with ? will doubt there is rot in the armed wif Hart's own fleet was inferior. Thin wax the signal tern lil tanks; no doubt there are many So he fared one of the vital de- - other ship to turn out of line. of the .same breed in civilian visions of war: whether to xave dry is After that there was no ur. " booi lot lung Ills fleet or give battle then. To in action Dutch. British fid I U A veiling lVin-lEaly ( ladv Ieail S. warships scattered, fought give battle meant possible anniir H.s and Mh W K hilation, but also it meant the dividunlly, bee aim the Prhv Bui ndt. untos a note about ogies possibility of knocking nut most bands of Jap destroyers togetbe or even all of this Jap tie!. d unity ami jutnotLsm with plants It tn Phi She If the people of the Admiral Hart took the first al-- t. tragic defeat tnany rn:ted States would yet together rnattvc and retired Subscquent-lv- , ADMIRAL GLAxxlOKII kisur and try their bet to win this the L'utch were cutiial of After the battle Admiral itnes war instead of doiny a lot ol Hart The Japs made a landing held a post mortem Snetcht quarreling among themselves, we (Jose to Java, subsequently pushed Admirals Glassfoid and Faln jr Pam might could have fieeJom and on to Java, and the Dutch felt Toe latter announced he the v W o Allied fleet should have withdrawing all British units Te M battle. By so doing, they mediately. vmort Java might have been "But." remonstrated AJmr Helfrich. "your onltts were , (.MMM)EK ERRED1 serve under me ir Admit al Hart eired Morale "My orders" icplnd the un serve "are to inly history can tell. But beeoiw lv he had made some you until the siluahoii irois. For Hart himself, hopeless and then dispose of On I ,i lefie.siungly candid old ships according to my "n sevcial limes wrote in mont (. The Commander (refer"And what do you Prl He lie high. ring to himself) now finds Hint do. Admiral Glassiord. Ami you want to snnl. lie was mistaken" about thus anil asked. e,. n have a sigh. thus orders are to serve My I He had. for instance, sent the Vou until further combat When iiie is pressing you down a bit fleet sc urrymg off toward Sumat-is- , less," the I. admiral Rest, if you must Imt don't quit! figuring tne Japs would strike remain at your within theie, then east Hgain to Java; Then I order you to and wasted so much time on to Australian waters, Ad"these maneuvers that the Japs Helfrich refilled, teiogmzm? wcie able to reinforce then fleet. without British, support Also Gen. Waved was so busy resistance vv is hopcle-si- . reinforcing Singapore, and used That sort of experience, W so many British warships for conever, is one of the things any c voy work that Hart was handle Be may be encountered in d bv lessened Ltntish naval (specialty in ds ai lv stag,5U ,nrk support United NfC, a? team" still All cef Ihcsc things combined vastly improved though caused the Dutch to voice vigorous perfectly. within the realm of Admiral protests to Washington, anil Adper! miral Hart was transferred for Hs reasons of health". He was replacdiovvned, or captured ed by the Dutch cmiiniaii h r, vice however, wmts hopefully Admiral on rad F - Ilelfric-h- . York. THE BATTLE OF b' 1" . (Copyright. IneHelfruh took command shoitly Feature Sfuduate, before the disastrous battle of J 'v i Under )nm were Rear U I'ham A Glassford who had succeeded Hurl: Rear Admiral OLD FASHIONED f I Baric jj. Ait bur Francis Bailisir. ill complrec mand of British units; and Rear Old t,; Ad in n .v Karel U F. M. Doorman, JtM'F KANU Inc junior Dutch urtiniivl who i;j Bond' cuummide d at sea, Helfruh io-1 lining in Suiabava lit" (,( horns xffd- vacations," holidays,' and work stoppages under various hypocritical pseudom trs" Principally, we behev. because thousands of subordinate professional labor union ol.kials are too ignorant to realize that the war lias (hanged both the underlying situation and the pojmlai psychology. CANADIAN aliz reuDio j RespcuiMble union oilieiat.s have pionii.sod that the right to strike" will he waived dining thi war. The dues-ayinmember; hi), dees not want to strike; it wants to work, earn a good living and help beat Hitler. Surely employers do not want strikes. And we. the public, hate them like the poison they are. Why, then, should there be a paralyzing parade of strikes, There are more than 20.000 auto graveyards in all of the country, harlcring 1, 500.000 discarded M che O . NOBODY WANTS STRIKES 14 and n-- Mrr.tia-.Iourn.- VV AA . By William Ferguson . ap-I'- - -- J4A 1 U Thu i) uionarihy has iiiissmi tta oppni unit v to fue its. It In mi: Iral of the fas. Mis ,,ih n i,s of lilt M'inCev w (I g nuallotl i onfet one e and the F'll it llv movement hove in no i in hi ell a 1; v,.!m ii u ii y 0 tl l' I i "mm , 11 I 'Crw i V (4 .1 m c Vila cl a can IQ5 L |