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Show PaK m KhKA 2 fimm Hhnmrtth Handicapped Find Place in H'nr Work DEBUNKER SFI'ORTEK Thumluy, Xovembcr 5, 1942 by John Haney Furbay, Ph D. I'ublixlifd on Tliurmlny of each week Eureka, I'lnli. I Ill K, Klilur mill IiiMIkImt. Hi C. K. Disabled Vets to Take Up Diamond Cuttiiifi. KiitiTiTi il In (hi; poHtofflco at Ku-r- i cluss mall kii, L tali, an manor under Art of Marrli 3, 1X711. - Ky VIRGINIA VAI.K ALLEN and Portland Ifj'RED HoITu urc-n- t going to have to worry about meat ration WASHINGTON. Industrial diamond cutting and skilled office work, including sli'iuiKraphy, are a fi-of the occupations in which the War Manpower commission Is planning the placcmi'iit of the nation's disabled service men and physically kandicapied men and women who constitute e reservoir of "unused night oil program received 4,000,000 hoi-oik- ! HelbiiM'ii by Wviicrn Newapuper Union. ing if the public does as well by them this year as it did last. The star of the Sunday gifts of meat from two governors a smokt-ham from the governor of Tennessee, a tur- NOV. 5 Chief Coiih. MINIM! NUTKH-T- he paid a large dividend of $88,000. The Zunia publlHliod It ti delinquent list which wan a loiiKlhy one. Manager Hugh reported that thn Iron IHiihhoiii and Coloradn hold their unnunl would Hhortly meetlngH. A Kharp Jump in of loud brought that, metal up to G.7!iR a pound. Ixaac ItuiucHon was injured at the .until alien bo Jumped fnnii the after It had been hoiked a hurt ills tanrn above Hie rolliir of the abaft. I.ariieH Club orThn Denua-ratiganized with the following officer a; fiiivernor Johnson of key Keritui ky, iinntliiT bam from the University of Missouri, a roast pig fioni Ii.v.-- Slate college, a barrel of fnnii Johns Hopkins, and bundi i d.i of other gifts, ranging from a Inn I. i t of West Virginia coal to a bottle of laughing gas! i t Jiu-- I McCreus a life member of the Ollicers' Club of Gardner Field, Calif. Itecently, when buying cattle in that vicinity, with the thermometer at 111), he visited the camp and learned that llie men were trying to raise iinuicy Tor u swimming pool. A Ihng Crosby golf match had JeiiKt n. pres; Mrs. Ale vice 1st proa; Mra. Kleele might, Kdaurd Halley, 2nd vice pre; Mr Ilke. wry; Mrs Kll.i Sullivan, Irens: Mrs. J. K. O'Connor, parllmentarian. Mrn. B. C. - DWWw w jm' man power" estimated to contain persons. The latest step toward solution of the problem of finding work for the physically handicnpd is an agreement recently concluded by man- If a person lets his whiskers or hair grow fur a year without cutting, and then shaves them all off; and compares this with the weight of the whiskers or hair shaved off daily during the follow-inyear, he will find, as experimenters have, that Iheie is no difference in the amount of growth providing the person's health and food have not changed. All loose hairs which fall or are combed out must also be saved to make the experiment accurate. Hair and whiskers seem to grow at the same rate whether cut often or not at ail. r Syndicate Led WNU agement and labor In the small diamond cutting industry under which disabled veterans of the army and navy will receive special preference as apprentices with age limits waived. The cutting of small diamonds for industrial uses is an industry which, until the Nazis overran the low countries, employed about 25.000 people in Holland and Belgium. Now we are trying to make ourselves In this highly skilled and important craft. Most of the woik is being done now in New York city, but it is planned to set up apprenticeship programs in other sections. Increased employment and faster production rates in the munitions and heavy industries already are adding to the number of handi-capicwhose misfortunes frequently prove, after proper training, to be no handicap at all, a fact which, according to the commission, war industry and business gradually are discovering. Tiie blind are being used successfully in a number of industrial operations as well as for such skilled work as stenography. nt Fcutur.a. The shortage of leading men may precipitate a cycle of man-Ics- s films; looks as if Metro is getting ready by buying "Cry Havoc, a little theater play dealing with volunteer nurses during the siege of Bataan. d, Easy to Pack Thn following Miltonic grand lodge officeis visited Tintlr l.otlge: A. Mil :ee. S. II. K. It. (Jlbson. (oodwlii. K. It. Ilowell, '. I Sn (I A. Thatrln'r, I. er. C. II. Harrell. ?i 1 " I). Kviins. Tintlr leeeivei its first fall of snow on September 2xih. 2o years uco. d William UuerU of Kureka end of Mammoth ren ived Kugitr from grammar grade life roriffit-ufrthe stale board of education. Ally. Claude E. linker made a busi ness trip to Stilt Luke. Slain Mine Inspector Hodges was here for a week inspecting Tin'ici mining properties. David Mills, who ledd a position with the depart ment. and a former n( of was back here for a visit. i lleck and lleuey Haynes were operating a first class garage in Kureka. Twenty yearn nvo n I.incoln tour lug rar sold for $3 don. Waller Klli'li, Jr., whose home was In unuthera California, spent a week in Tlnlic looking after his business Interests. A. K. Myers and It. It, Hell spent a dnv hunting ducks at Clenr Lake Mrs. J. J. Coffey. Mrs. Charles le and Mrs. Nell O'lfare of the Service Star la'clon. reported that thn Klks lodge would assist t) the soldiers craves for mist Ire Day. Dh-vi- Survey Cites Violations Of Speed Limit s Eu-lek- a, 40-Mi- le JUKI. Mrf'RKA purl of it, a Victory Commit-li-- e li:id but they Still Mi:Crra said he lucked $2.(IH1. couMn't sing, duni'c or piny gulf to write a ruiM1 money, hut he You'll be seeing i In i k mid did. him mhiii in "Great Without Glory." ruiM-- ' Iii-ai- i 'a-bris- k doo-oratl- Ilarry Carry's been in doxens of range wars in the mnvies; now he'd like tu take part in one. Cattle thieves have been butchering beef belonging to a neighboring rancher and selling it to the black market; the neighbor, like Carey, raises cattle fur the government. So, though llarry is busy in Air Force" at Warnrr Bros., he's been oiling a Exceedingly popular with design- roup!e of six shooters and planning ers Is the drawstring theme. Thia action. xkirt of gabardine folds together into a single panel no wider than Fred M.iiMurrnys added himself one of the stitched pleats. It is a to the list id Hollywood farmers; real find" from the practical standlie's the owner of KOI) acres in northpoint. because it can be packed ern C.ihltuuin, which will be used away in a Jiffy and takes almost no for funning and entile raising. lies space. do to ''Above slated Suspicion" with Joan Crawford, for Metro, as the Relic one outside pieture Paramount lets him moke eaeh year. The story of a professor and Ins wife who act as Drrhv KIHKK.t IZHH.'K Ml. 12, . o. n. Meets Kvery WiMnemlat 7:30 I. M I. o. O. F. HALL Vlsitlag Druthers Invited to Attend KKX.VKTH SmtlUKIt. A. M. ROSS, Tintlr Lodge 'Si 0 A. 0. N. Secy. s No. 0, T. lad and 4th Tuesday of earh month at I. O. O. K. all. Vlslthlug broth era Invited to attend BURTON T. COLLINS, W. M. JOHN P ROWK. Berrelarv Origin Thanksgiving day started with the Pilgrim Fathers back In November, 1S21, but not many people know that It was a British celebration In this country for of a century from November 11, 1602, when It was proclaimed In Whitehall by officers of Good Queen Anna First officially proclaimed United States Thanksgiving celebration was la 1773, but the one to which the celebration Is usually traced In this country la the one by George Washington on October 3, 1788, setting side the last Thursday of November as Thanksgiving y day for our I. i three-quarte- vie-lor- read and blessings. III Masted live. live. You should tui.n. v U Ib.n'1 ,Ml. I icrv u,ljr (IU spare vhnulil bp used I. . War Ilnn-WI'., yoilr pereeiit every pay im Neil ODonnell Mortuary 4 IManiriill Nervier Nominal (Iwrge. PHONE 54 Call Any Time Night Dai In 1918 Leo McCarcy wrote a song cntiticd "Keep Up Your Chin," but tin' Armistice was signed the day it was accepted for publication, and war songs were out. Now along comes another war, and the song's part of the musical score' of "Once Upon a Honeymoon. It sounds almost too pat. Dick Davis, playing u Norwcg.an in Warner's "Edge of Darkness," heaved a Nazi storm trooper over his head, erni ked the heads of two others together, fought through a mob of them,. raced Si) yards and dove ulT n pu-rWhen lie sw am back to the beach Director Lewis Milestone ealled to him: "Your wife phoned that your draft board has classified you; you're 4 unfit!" i'! t VS,,'a,,Hu IUtrb,n " ..Xs '"i",U1if lL,hjm uilh Choir I) net 7 JniJl Urmia Marshall "Mum IfW.rn, ItfiiHlruon ,kkU", ?;y & ill ;iHn ii. l inn ih rrrmirnl '" in . , i ,, 4ni,, HTUnVnhn'IIUf I hIf. Wri vn D..n.. in, nr,' fi. nr h. (hr a, ms, a, II "T" Mwj h.-u- r (h,ii hr fitii.hiil I hr, ll,n,i, 1. trams Kiilnif i, huntiua bar It In hiIiii.s; ,hr ha Ihm Imtrhr', Tr tints ii Shout .4ifSil." , , 1fr hrrn mu ihini Napoleon Was Germanic, Says Hitler Collaborator SWEDEN.-- at- An The tween saying peror A lot of the Joy and heartbreak of a great turf classic went into that pile of scrap. Shoes worn by Kentucky Derby winners top the contribution of historic Churchill Downs. The last shoe on the left was 1812 winner, and worn by Shut-Out- , the third shoe from the bottom on that side was worn by Regret, the only filly ever to win the Derby. author draws a parallel beNapoleon and Herr Hitler, that although the French em"did not really know the Jews," he hated them no less. The essential difference between the two Is said by Herr Bouhler to be that while the soldier dominated In Napoleon, Herr Hitler Is much more the statesman. four Russian with two He is one of the outstanding newspaper columnists of the day. Whethrr you agree with him or not you find yourself saying each time you rend his col'ni that he can really write. He was born in Minneapolis in 1894, but received his education at Chicago, 111. lie first gained fame for himself through his sports col'nts. After serving as European correspondent for the United Press in 1916-1he was with the AEF as war correspondent. 1917 and '18. During 1918 and 1919 he served in Hu U. S. navy. He was eastern sports editor for the Chicago Tribune until 1933. For his brilliant reporting he received the Puliter prize in 1941. Today many or his syndicated s deal with organized labor. You know him as Rouqiu Newspaper Man Tells of Three Trips in Vessels Unescorted. LONDON. Although London and Wufcliinglnn report losses to convoys, they do not give many details almut the cargoes of men and material which arrive in safety, despite Axis submarines and war planes. This is particularly true regarding the siiips which make safe voyages alone. Martin Moore of the Daily Telegraph of London, who has made three unprotected voyages, writes about them to his paper from Colombo, the principal seaport In Ceylon clearing house for war supplies tj India as follows: I am not going to tell stories of d or being tnriedoed or mined or fired on by enemy raiders. 1 cannot tell these stories because no such experiences have happened to me in all the 17,000 miles I have traveled. Nor can 1 describe how naval escorts saved us from these dangers, because I have never sailed in convoy. This is a story of the ships that gi t through alone. There are many hundreds of them on the seas today, carrying Allied aircraft and tanks and guns and munitions to the theaters of war. If every cargo wailed for a convoy these supplies would be seriously delayed. Precautions Taken. There is nothing spectacular In their lonely voyages. The naval authorities who plot their courses, and within a narrow margin the naval command knows every day the whereabouts of every merchant ship voyaging in its area. The mckt careful precautions are tal.cn to ensure that nobody knows when she is sailing, where to, by what route and with what cargo. For weeks after 1 had booked my passage from the United States to Australia I received no hint when the ship would sail or from where. Only a day beforehand did I learn the date of departure, and that information had to be given me orally, not in writing or on the teledive-bombe- anti-tan- k guardsmen, armed Titles, who found themselves In Die path of 30 enemy tanks and armored ears which had broken through Russian lines at a point on the Klrtskays front. As the tanks advanced. Die four men embraced each other, look an oath to fight to the death, and then opened fire. After they had knocked out 15 tanks. Red Star, reported, the remaining 15 retired, and the four Russians emerged alive. Admits New Orleans Cop Is Good Talker NEW ORLEANS. Patrolman Gus B. Thames stopped motorist Nick Matrana to have a look at his driver's license. Then they took each oilier in. Thames. 37, was going to Join the navy, any- way. After talking to Matrana both went over and enlisted. "That cop sure Is a good talker," Matrana said. What tyouRtuf With WAR MINUS These huge n heavy tanks and America's automotive and locomotive plants are turning them out on s never-endin- g assembly line. Our army uses light tanks, weighing 14 tons, and medium tnnks of 28 tons also, but wr favor the medium tank over other two. 00-to- cost $120,000, These heavy tanks are needed for certain phases of modern warfare, and with their thick armor and heavy-gaug- e guns they are almost unstoppable. They are considered suiwrior in gun p wer, in maneuverability and in the power of their huge tractor motors to Axis tanks Americans everywhere are helping to pay for these monsters of war through their purchase of War Bonds. InveFl al least ten percent of your income in War Bunds every The waitresses in the New Center restaurant have a pool All the money goes to the gal who waits on the first soldier or sailor to come Into the red-hcad- ... d place . Maestro Freddy Martin . knows a fellow who's always in the dumps. He's looking for used tires . Linda Ware got no crown when . she was made queen of New York university's junior prom . . . Priorities were the cause. Finis for Finns? phone. Two of the cargo vessels in which I traveled carried passengers. Yet particulars of the mule we were following were kept from us as secretly as if we were all enemy agents. These unescorted vessels are an immensely important factor in the building up of Allied striking power. One ship in which I traveled carried about of a million pounds' wcrth of war material bombers, fighters, tanks, explosives. Yet she was only a medium-size- d freighter and only one among many making this particular crossing. Only One Alarm. Site was loaded os surely no vessel has ever been loaded in the history of sea transport. Not only were her holds full, but from stem to stern her decks were piled high with this cargo of war. There was barely room for the crew to clamber past the planes, the tanks and the three-quarte- crates. Throughout the voyage ol nearly three weeks we hao cnly one alarm. A faint plume of smoke was sighted on the starboard bow at dawn. This might have been the smoke of a friendly vessel, but we took no risks. Our ship swung hard to port, the crew were piped to action stations, passengers were mustered at lifeboat stations. For more than an hour we stood on deck, wearing But If the other vessel was a raider we gave her the slip. They Were So Dumb That Policemen Grabbed Them WILKES-BARRE- , PA. Two pa- trolmen crept on hands and knees to a warehouse in an attempt tu surprise a pair of boys ransacking the place. One kirked in the door and shouted: "You're under arrest!" The boys kept right on working. Themselves rtiiimril, the cop i red and grabbed, the pair. One twisted fue and wrote on a pad: "What's up"" "You're under arrest," the law repre-c- m eated-in 4 Reds, With 2 Guns Knock Out 15 Tanks MOSCOW. The army newspaper Red Star, in an editorial, told of rol-utnn- i ! STOCKHOLM, Director Richard Wallace Just doesn't like plane crashes, since he in one in 1935 was a that cost five lives. So you won't be seeing the erackup scenes in A Night to Remember," with Brian Alierne and Loretta Young, that the author put in. One of the best of our radio shows isn't heard in this country except by the studio audience. It's Mail Call," the war department's service show which is recorded and short-wave- d from CBS' Hollywood studios to srrvice men in all parts of the world. A recent program, staged before an audirnre of service menL includrd Amos V Andy, Claudette Colbert, Joel .MrCrca and Hetty Jane Khotlrs. d tempt to demonstrate that Napoleon was of German descent Is made by one of Reichsfuehrer Adolf Hitler's intimate collaborators, Chief of the German Reich Chancellory Philip Bouhler, In a book entitled "NaRise of a poleon: The Comet-lik- e Genius. The name Bonaparte, he announces, derives from the old name of Boni-per- t. He also asserts that Napoleon's ancestors in the year 823 had such Germanic names as Konrad and neur-vieti- meets M , British ngi-nton thn continent, it hud been intended for Powell and Loy. WASHINGTON. -- The public roads administration reported that more than half the motorists "in several states" still drive over 40 miles an huur despite an appeal by President Roosevelt that this maximum speed be adopted to conserve tires and gasoline. At the same time, the agency said traffic volume on rural roads during June was down 39 per cent in the gasoline-rationeEast and down 22 per cent in regions, compared with the same month last year. The reports were based on speed and tra cl volume measurements in ten states, and the data turned over lu the war department's highway traffic advisory committee, which is waging a campaign to save tires and gasoline. This survey showed that the average speeds of traffic were two to eight miles an hour slower than before Pearl Harbor on sections of highways in Nebraska. South Dakota, Virginia, Wisconsin, Arizona, Maryland, Missouri and South Carolina, with the reductions greatest in the first four states. Many SliiK S:ifl Without Convoy geant minutrs of heavy iwiicil work to book two deaf-mut- e ers on charges of burglary. broth- British D Chided For Toying Wilh Bread r.-- rs LONDON'.-(!- rt n-- SVi Friday - Saturday November at Hr, tain's food mm1: ter. Ianl V. (Hill in, denounced thi uhtlrss lln! 'ns who. covetously "toy" w ,ih bn ad or rolls solved in homes "If you saw, a I sec every day. the sinkirg of slops, and if you had the imagination to think of the men and their fannies involved in these sinkings." he deelaied, "you would not toy with bn ad." it Thanksgiving Turkeys To Be Sent to Australia MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA. -The already "lung-rangview" of this gli'linl war is r cutrd on the Thanksgiving turkey situation for Untti'.l Stiilcs troop In Australia. The tin key population of Australia has born found iradriunle and have been made to hnve a refr grraii-- ; cargo shipped here fr in the Dr vied States. r: r i:' t -- ievs will arrive on e and 6 7 Irving Berlin'! HOLIDAY INN With BING CROSBY FRED ASTAIRE MARK SANORICH and other great start November and 8 S Sunday - Monday ROSALIND RUSSELL BRIAN AHERNE JANET BLAIR in It took a ser- writing. 45 The lr. S. has notified Finland that Finnish consular offices In thia coun try must dose. Above, Finnish minister Hjalmar rrocope Is shown as he received of the action. Vernon (Iofty) Boyle of Toole, has been visiting in Eureka. Mrs. George Tinsman, 74, died at her home in Eureka on Thursday of heart attack. Funeral services will he held Saturday at the O'Donnell Mortuary. MY SISTER EILEEN" Added Attraction "ARCTIC GIANT" A Superman Cartoon. Matinee 2 p. m. Sunday Tuesday Only November 10 Big Family Show GIVE OUT SISTERS with the ANDREWS SISTERS Chapter t "GANG BUSTERS" Wednesday - Thursday November 11 and 12 RETA HAYWORTH VICTOR MATURE JOHN SUTTON CAROLE LANDIS In MY GAL SAL" IN TECHNICOLOR |