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Show jw ju vi urn wssc Aw VitW w " w r H II KLY AMJ.s Nazi-Rus- .1Y.1-W.- Ill JO'l IIY S ciihonh s, v II. ImIIIM Beieli Threatens Low Countries DIIOU host irr 'I NOll. art t ht n opinion V K: HI! ni sr lllitzhrit - I li. In i, h t t n'i ' mm, nt t'me t pi nl i unit 'nun tint nitinll hill In hr unit i! ,v ) r i (' i lii In Ills i t tinp p r until li intiritlt I ritltlmue uniihi 111 Irit.i re. f l ut n s I si II ttun nl the kinul'iin I he ,,t V, runt hit the ilinilttnn V, it h i urn t mint nt M Cult I'1 '1 that h- tt jjm st d m 15 columns Uu the nivii anil)st and not nntssttrily ut this newspiper lk,i.in J by Wtt trn Newspaper Lnion S of hrnhlll hi n r hi, J 1 ( ' in Luzi trade lints through Norway x tt rrl mail Osin fli p turi.il wakes More rf Solute, Germany I rnt sled took artion So fust, so si eri tly that it was over hi fore the world knew. N i ?l troop ships seized Copenhagen while the government ordered Dunes to offir no resistance Up north along the Norwegian coast the Reich stagid a modernized version of the old Trojan horse trirk At Bergen, Narvik, Trondheim and other ports peaceful looking merchant vessels suddenly bristled with guns. Crewmen turned Into marines While warships steamed up the Oslo fjord, heavy trl motored bomb ers landed troops at Oslo airport and suit them marching against the city The government fled inward to ilumar, hurling a declaration of After seven war at the invader had hostilities finally months, started 30 Reaction What happened at sea the next two days was at best a gut ss. for no observer knew how many Nazi, allied and Norwigian ships were locked in the biggest Noith sia bat tie since Jutland In 48 hours an estimated 27 naval vessels reached Duvey Jones' locker. 20 of them German Farly reports told that British ships had pushed their wuy into Bir gen and other Norwegian Atlantic s , . ' In d nil ni cf nine att it r i''it la d a I rli ii i n t flown elunpfd roiinlriis both in t Hitlers invasion Revnaud flew to London fur conferences at No 10 Downing street. A ft w hours later he left smiling, returning to till an enthusiastic Baris will I am sure the allied navies live up to their glorious traditions " Meanwhile Britain's Neville Cham bitlain told commons This flesh and rash act of aggression will to Germany s disadvantage . . Though mm if both Britain d ECHOES and the Jf'ar IIWDI IMi B. S. d'pPmutic prob h ms in Norwav is Mrs J Borden to lb it countrv Rumman, mmi-dtthi past time years and the second It woman envoy In U S history. w is sie who tm he through the bar i ir if s 'once with the fust o'tli nil n w s th it w ar had come to ,i rw n A Bi tub nrn v i theirs diughttr sir m,nr ul a vu.il'la I' S banker r d i i i in 1 " m U 4 b ii pi i i i ilut I ! t sll11 ltds ft 1 i d sue other ncr'ruitaral of Der ark s an AM) K Ul K.LK hut e a program CIUr.UETUKE: Whiat With I roze' all balani es b ink mill foreign exchange e on s MOItt.I Ns 11 KM focM Irozin Norwav ami Denmark thus preventing the Hen h fiom seizu g those country s assets m t! e U S f. Authorized foreign sale of several new type warplanes 1 transa n v o v I i n g CONCHIES: Idle Week the 1' a ipe m I NN, avo'd l'o t n v so go,, v t i t t i tuns i in tho in r'h Bin gt s O'l wis th B the like ssvereigi 'v over whnh land is hmlt. suggest 'hoi ed met t spec. he i go worried s do', Ms ri ivi "v i ut , m s he n I ( veil t os R In m s Al ml ir, nit, if r B ', S, - - w f h S os' b b, th it the d to B' s me in ri m w i re on invtr Con t nt eves M w Ui p f Color id I "e a tltesesous I 4. noils roneri .s mm Bob Rev to spent acid s, Kt ison hi" te I r; and i Forcca-t- if!y k J annivci vtri-- s birth. started in Furnpes vnr nppirentlv t v xi -- - t , ii "-r tt f. Tv-gil- l should x V. j - t - i ' van is Iv to secure a cf 1 A I.e-- , u1 i o uv( ' out Was n t 1 ri ct a statue Bo-t- o Vmhassador Castillo Ni tin wasthe an unusually sharp note whuh s'ate department mule One ri hi ke puhl c a w oi k later ' Dur.ng the past 25 years, one Amireu'i inti rest in Mexico af'tr am ther bis su'Tcrcd at the hands of the Me can govirt imt " it was Mon arnoutci'd in t' e news; am t s. Then it was d t' it they hai rtusspiUed the name of the wirnir! His right name w ,s Cyius E. Dali n, a young fuhi w of 2,1, w! o had Leon botn m Utah and lad aimed m Boston f ,r years bef, re, pepm-lot-s. Ere and bewiidi'r city Li! II. s i id never Ltvi ,n a ' i g ikL 7V. AV'lo iWL J ABCs , from But when the committee tried to raise the money for the statue by popular subscription, it found that the controversy, which Dallms rival artist had stirred up, had made many people hostile to the proj- Lithih Encose tern Xu Name .. Indians wealthy Needlecnfi Ave. 15 cents in corj !c Address whom he had known in the West, Dallin designed the figure of an Indian, standing on the skeleton of a buffalo and shooting an arrow into the air. He exhibited it in New York in 1888 and it won the gold medal of the American Art Exhibit. This new triumph had an unA cor ( Sewins Circle ect. Within a short time it became evident that the public had lost interest in the project. Subscriptions to the fund came in so slowly that it was doubtful if the sum required for the statue could ever be raised. Swallowing his disappointment as best he could, the young sculptor started on another project. expected result. 2435 der to: was signed the Pattern . h to transfer pattern of m wreaths, three Hi N inch alphabets; iBustra. stitches; color schemes I- Remembering when handkerchiefs linens. of the CYKlS E. D ALLIN, famed sculptor, and the plaster model White which the George Robert Revere of Paul statue equestrian und trustees, headed by Mayor Tobin of Boston, have commissioned will be him to execute m bronze at a cost of $27,500. The statue to the of close end north Boston, in the Mall Paul Revere erected in home of the Revolutionary patriot. Chester Freni h had in him No wonder that he could comprehend and interpri t the great and generous Lincoln as understandirgly as he did in that Washington Memorial marble of the Great are fun lhct wth lazy and embroidered on i IN DIGEST! eiuation&l Relief lrom Va etn Noblest Work Princes and lords are b breath of kings, An hone; the noblest work of God- .WHY SUFFER Functios FEMALE Bos- ton woman who sympathized with the young sculptor over his difficulties in the Paul Revere competition offered to provide the money for him to study in Paris. Thus, out of what had seemed to be a major tragedy to an ambitious young sculptor, came his Ue and One Owe Prom It ii tnft first tioee ot Uili pjeuiL-blank tablet dnan t bring job (mc relief yxi hare complete a bai k to oi a; d get DOUBLE MuNKI h IMI-atablet belpt u itaid tj make the et itumach (Soldi hyie you eat the nourishing foods jroa bm&J bum, tick headache and upsets ghe ' exce9g atomach fluids oak m tick all orr JTST ONE D aywiy relief, ioc eveiyw ben, COMPLAIN! Lydia E. Plnkhams Vegetable Cm Has Helped ThousuMl Few women today do not hirers functional trouble. Mavbeyoon. OURbELF getting resUta ooodr j depressed latdy yourworkioomr Then try Lydia E. PmUami' Compound to help quiet ucstnaf reliee monthly pain (cnop, and weak diziy ii due to functional disoraf. years P nkham's Comooucdhu-' dred cf thousands of feu, voua uomcn. Try tff great opportunity and he eagerly accepted it. Soon after he arrived in Paris Buffalo Bills Wild West Show arrived there and Rosa Bonheur, the famous woman painter, took adRelieving Distress vantage of the opportunity to but To the American horses and paint pity distress is GodLke. their Indian riders. One of her to relieve it is favorite models was old Chief Rocky Bear. lie Meets Rosa Bonheur. One day Dallin saw her at work of us' Correct Constipate Jubilant over bs success, Dul-l- on a painting of Rocky Bear. It Before Not After returned to his ome in Utah, inspired him to become a sculptor of Indians and and horses as he there, says, "to celebrate my victory and to bask in the fiom that inspiration came the An ounce of rex of the approval of my idea of the Indian equestrian pound of emergency which tluM to are " found be groups cU in ami But he soon fnc parents ycmrsilt saffer davsbicauxeofcon'U?-- -1 lear-t- d that Bn cecbraLon was several American cities. The first 0 on the Keedforr if these was the familiar The a .t prt matin a. nee. c 'uv ,h!?S,eis'4 of Peace. Signal next was The He returned to B is'on in the Mr ut al vvwj The Medicine Man in PhilaKFLP iopular by W si rrg if 13, ,j m complete the lie of thetroube a statue He wax ee ed to the may- delphia and the next The Appeal If it s commonest., or s oll.ce and again a contract to the Great Spirit which stands to lack of in front of the Boston museum. pleisint nutr.uous ; Since that time Dallin has procause stra zht to the duced many other famous statUie ' i)u it" ues Paul Rides Again to The Scout in Penn Valley Massa-sopark in Kansas City; dou Summon Legionnaires in Plymouth, Mass.; and xc d vou Anne BOSTON. Hutchinson which stands in front Paul Revere Rb0tS,'KdogagsmB3''' rules ag nn nn the liiath anniof the state house in Boston; and his famous tribute to the Ameriversary mrn ul the "nine' m teenth of pi ii 'TV' but this can soldiers taken prisoners by 'ear the galloping tradition of the enemy during the World war Paul Rev ere will not halt at e statue which he called I evingtons battle green or But Not Conquered. Captured ( on i nrd s bridge. He aUo did the Pioneer monuIbis year he'll go i ment in Salt Lake City and the on across ireemng the continent to rally another Sold er and Sailors monument armv of patriots lrom a in Sy i at jxe, N. Y. wider nation that stretches to Rio 7 or Cvrus Dallin is now one Grinde vallev and Oregon Oi Arm ca's sculp-- t 'inns, ibis year the annual rs But it is probable for that, national convention all t e honors that have come of the Wneriran I egion meets for the L le will take more pride second time in historic Boston. m his masterpiece, which is to Die dates are Mand m Paul Revere Mall in September 2 to .'ll. IE ton It is the spirited statue Paul Rev ere's js the of that famous figure midnight rider, th it adorns the bronze n rung in h s equally famous of the legion's tvvrntv second ' e boise !&& pauses to shout his medal. He is the rousv arT "T..e British are com- ing spirit of the Bav state ler gionnaire organization at naA fi weeks ago it was tion il convention that the trustees of the ters 8 Beacon street,headquarnovv Lvloit White fund, headed by full tilt on its Mu r Tibin of mission to Boston, had com-nnke this return-visi- t of their ss.oncd him to execute m sea. and airforce com- tro"ze, at a cost of S27.500, the sta,e and : gn vvlvch was selected e'ery Ia,:Vrm Hotel states possession, the rack in t"e eighties. So, away after greatest patriotic ha f a century, pilgrimage TEMPLE Cyrus Dallin, the "the Cr idle of I.bertv" unknown young sculptor who had th.s land has ever seen. The come f. woik was st m, a tern ci fa ut ry and, wh !e w ik ng Ihe; o. lo ad made an et "ament for Mi, mos hall It w Mass.K'.use'.m C' i T a f a'vNOL. '. g i n t e st e t f ' a d t e ' g t t d a; 'w n i l,n k ex e x t1 ere , m Me-- c' like to go nil ri at it row at d t i i," ii old sculptor if tod tv you with a so 'o 'I lugt'iiieer t Mm of two - do ng t' at seal T"at rs Hiked ko $2 Nij 1 at t me .ml it e esnt small, even i.w, a; ill. x w.l It' i age. mi is st.l! x 7 all ut d of an upra an n you: g li i! n aj iter the upiai-i- d m Indian, one i f a e.t le i nute to axl .nti n t ) Gloat White Fa'ltr," ad met on the tea n a' i i ! e had tnlke i m t c v su-il- ; 1 -- - A'-- 0 ccual-KUiog- gs it . I tm : I 1 1 b- ucuiisa-tapb.- V , t best-know- n -- con-'entio- s' n v an-rr'- "u ft-- 4 1 I ovrs labor go-m- wiices ng in tbe tattle b'l'ol strike ot BH7 the Republic Steel corpora! was naimed a labi r bmrd ordir l.ixl voir .1 rictiijz rini'x ltement ol O s'r kers wall about 5 000 C back pnv cf more thin $5 tkki IKK) Re pi blie protested bul ihe third eir cuil court of appeals upheld NLRB x this mouth Rt pubbr s decision case reached the L' S Supreme court Verd ct NLRB "''"upheld .f il n, b sit'le - Ei a ond competit. on Dallin Wins Again. French entered it again, as did Thomas Ball, sculptor of a statue of Lmeoln in "The Emancipation Gtoup, the ongmal of which is in Washington and a copy in Boston But again Dallin was the w mrer and again the generous Fierch sent him a note: "Dal-l.you've beat us again. Youre far and awav ahead cf t e test Vfwcin I)OK h A, Emancipator. "From that day until his death, a few years ago, French and I I have alwere close friends. ways noted in life that the bigger a man is, the more generous he is toward others. There is no feeling of jealousy in a great man. He is too sure of himself to fear others in his own When a man is jealprofession. tee. ous of another man in his own A Young Westerner. profession it is an open confesAfter long deliberation the comthat he is not sure of himself mittee unanimously decided to sion own powers. and his accept for the statue the design Soon after Dallin was anby this "Charles E Ddlon and nounced as the winner of the Paul Revere competition, the city of Boston gave him a contract to make the bronze statue. Then unexpected difficulties arose, due to the jealousy of an artist whose son had been unsuccessful in the competit on He started a controversy m the Boston papers by charging that Dallins model was historically inaccurate. Although other artists rallied to the defense of the young Westerner, the dispute grew so hot that the committee decided to hold a sec- S mt mean owned oil land-- , Thoi gh which Mexico expropriated iuhiters have been near the goil posts stveral t mos, neg R ittor s In hive tnvariablv broken down earlv A Secetarv of 's'a'e U, r dill Hill got angry Forwarded t For "ut ' K his wit1 mint on i - l UIHKS U I I ! For aim 'st three vears the fte public line sug S MEXIUO: f'ehuhe cSi Cn 4i'vv',j ), THE MINUTE MAN Statue by Daniel Chester 1 rcnch on the site of the Battle of Concord. t spri.idmg. the U S took stock of its ruphi urd Released was a periodic agrirultuie departni"'t f 'recast on winter wheat production hcavv with bad news Statisticians figured about 29 per ci nt of the 45 014 000 acres seed'd las' fall had been ab unioned for lack cf moisture n"d o'tu r un f iv arable conditions Total muter wheat prediction, therefore will be 420 215 000 lowest since 19D But this added to a normal spring nop ot 200 000 000 and a carryover of about 300 000 000, will lenp I'm le bam s granary in good shape I. tq.,1 dwiv between os i f ('I s Senator I i" 1' , ,ed ' 100 r ci nt regm i 'a' o's era pt c s of the Wagm r lea mil v s.i re B "g to Investment truss t President Koisevct v t ' red the b' ii es al eh d, p. rt i' on bill Rea sir,- I'S realties for al en sp es and salo'eirs were super'' is mk in luf ITcth u; . ti-- e Dav befue Gen-lininvaded Si ledin ivn North Carolina s Sen Bob Rev uolds mute a speech Said Norn iv Sweden anti Denmark he dii net git into the last World war ithev) are today within a stone's 'li rmv of n repelitn n of the s ime thug nn I Un v ate nt t going to ret into it " lust ot the week n I'ute of r.h binr ; . Franklin D Ronsevi It s supporters won delegates to the national con vention Biggest upset Nebraska s difiat of Sen Fdsvard R Butke Finland l ;' v L Russia and n w is rk I rfi f it i ast since lee it Br turn's s ,pj 'y s ue in Dei m ilk h is Pei n i d M ut Iv, however, dipirtmmt i '! t , a on ',,re olti .ds j r I eted tl e ot i ipv on vviuld hue Irt.o n farm i ii 'i ul ,i't spi ' ts 1111' STVII. dt pirt" t rt wtmed 0 A" t r t ms r In. t i I 3 t - Iht i all of nil's wire s, ,, jni it) i 'e J s.ife a I it the $ .v IIMI S t (10 IK'O 'II I txtrdtd to Dt n Ilk. N I I and buidtri p t k ti I pi r; ' j e In i n otd at i i ! g t A ran lio I' er s u r e N r t't t I Iht t i k ' ,ni ! lai i i d to b n n i s y ad. cotton threal f r flip 4 Ill's! (r0 campaign Other political news' In Illinois. Lieut Gov John Stelle, who rebelled against the Kelly Nash Horner machine, watched painfully many months while Gov Henry Hor ner, nilmg badlv. let a "regency" run the state Finally feeling his oats a few days before the primary election. Stelle took an unpreeedent He declared himself gov ed step ernor, summoned the legislature in special session and "fired Samuel L Nudelman, state finance direc tor and right hand Horner man On election div Stelle lost the Democratic guhi material nomination to it irrv Hershey. machine candidate In both Illinois and Nebraska pri maries G O P Hopeful Tom Dewey rolled up impressive primary votes More noteutiopnosed in the first worthy in both states was the wiv Rack from a Hvde Bark holiday It was sped Franklin Roosevelt time to take more neutrality pre cautions Oil to the state depart merit in search of II S aid went Norway's Munster Wilhelm Morgen stierne and Denmark's Henrik De Soon ttie whorls began KaulTmann turning sw iftly Fust presidential job was to ex tend the ban on U S shipping against Norwav. Sweden and aietic ports of both C. . ' C. WHITE HOUSE: Scandinavian Rebound rts held by the Nazis They were reported steaming up Oslo fjord, threatening to bombard the citv unless the Germans evacuated But such news was premature Pi spite tierce fighting, every Nor wigian port remained in Nazi hands Though several troop transput ts wire sunk In the Skagerrak battle, it was substantiated wilhm a few hours that 20 000 Nazis had landed In Oslo alone In I omlon. French Brenner Faul s .ii i the Kcvolu patriot at cost cf $25,000 'I no i ty c ouncil indorsed the plan and appropriated $5,000 as its si are of the cost, the reman dt r f which was to be raised i j ! .bl.c subscription. Further1" t e, tie city fathers passed nn t rdi r, autl oriz-ln- g the use cf Copn'v square as the site for t i jk posed memorial. Next a con. the was formed to have charge of tl e project and this con n t'ce issued circulars inviting st u i tors to submit models for the statue. It made no suggestion as to the character of the design but olti red to pay $.100 each for tl e tl ice best studies. Eight of ten n odds were submitted by sculphus liom all paits of the country , ail of them, of course, anonymously From these models the committee selected three those sent in by Daniel Chester French, who .had made the famous "Minute Man erected on the site of the battle of Concord; by Thomas Ball, who was the sculptor of the statue of Washington which stands in the Public Garden in Boston; and by a certain "Charles E. Dillon of Utah, who was unknown to the commit- ( 1 even r and Thomas raised. Candidates Krui ger promised to stump the country from May until October on a two point program (D complete isolation from the war, and 2 socialization of major U S industries In Sweden Thoroughly alarmed certain she was next nn Adolf Hit ler's list. Sweden ordered a constant watch, full army mobilization and To every pound nightly blackouts of Sweden's 500 00(1 ton merchant marine went the radio message' Seek a neutral haven and stay there v, $1(1(1 7 hey breath. pi , Backed by a fund yet to be Krugir) IIIOVlAb arid Sweden might be pari for eventual Nazi Soviet dismemberment of Scandinavia Sweden, on the hot spot, held her V. S. iiounied of Norway .ft. r d nirg mate a Jtyiarold economies profi ssor from the University of Chi ea go, M lynard C Krui gi r (pro varied In Russia. Silent as a sphvnx about these goings un was Mosrnw, the Reirhs No 1 ally But observ MUIIHtN IKOJW hoiw: A: I turn hiintmiin ut Her gen ' i i of a plot L t'" guod s,v Hu e hi to Noi man llmmas has run for the In pri sidt noy fin the Soei ihst ti ket early Aiiil, whin his party inaugurate Ihe lhto n itional eonve.ntion season Socialist i horn is came back ag un the convention At tt ashing'f n. named as his vice presidential run h w eastern I urope Bn eipitouslv tie next 24 hours found Russian troops massing on Rumania s Hussar iht m frontier while Hungary Jiii'm ivi and Hul garn received simult menus ultimata from Germany Give us control ul all Dantihian shipping Dinger here was that the allies might Consider this iinneultal bringing w ir into the Balkans A fi w hours later It was learned without eonfii matmn that the allies h id placed mines in rvi ry British Freni oil well in Hu mania, threatening to blow them up If the Germans or Russians in If I ir ul Rc iik FOI.I I ICS: Rom th Try f while Britain's War Cz ir W ri s t ' n Churchill hinted in a sper eh to the hfiuse nf eommons that the alius experti d this to be the ni xt site of Nazi aggression In Ihe Balkans. Sigmflrnntly si nt was Germany's nxis partner Italy but a fast deveh ping rrisis In the nearby Balkans held great potenti.il Same day ns Girman d.mgi r troops real hed Oslo Propaganda Minister Josi ph Gochtx Is charged Ihe British with suhul igmg Gerrna ny's Danube rivir outlit to south ers wondered I Vi that imrr li tide that m ml more th but didnt. i r d v i Strict ri nsnrsh'p wis K j ti i; r 'i r i . Ij'V' Its the st to both eonrdt u inf in if f II t in Pi it any fith rri t tt tine ''it rnsi Kes un It r British I ri r t h p r turn would S( rv e as lie sigti d for an irniiiednte light i r story (if the I the t , WAITIN' I t Listen, sf I U Yi by i 111 v v isri t ,J , S( Ol IJ.MO v Long-Delaye- - r itw I mils m V , ,j(; it '.I d ft r to In, ts It vis Ii h' t i V Ihe I I ' v ,ni N r iii i,g tl th' ri hv to M In e Uu-s- e ri s', if n d I Newest d Story of the Atari nf a New Ride by Paul Revere Hear- Feared Next Move in Europe: 1 Eiril,roideredInili nnd You jhnll My Children, 'listen Thrust Into Balkans s W)V nAH 1 1 r 1 t ; lt ? m ((-- jP!!: '?r le SK111() cry KeeP Out and Keadv, u,n be they say, "the shout heard round the world. cut of the West, is vindicated, and an undeserved stigma . as been removed fiom his fame as an art.st And, after a long de.ay, Paul Revere will soon start cn another ride! SSSgsffi ICl.Sfe .$r |