Show 4 - d I - - - - r - -- 1 - 1 - 0 i 14'A e - Sunday Morning— -- gake Tfributte Trbe (Snit o - Behind the glit-541tg44-zfultiiii- at Me Lile That Look 't L 1871 EstablishedApril 4 lamed eery morning by Sea Lake Tribune Pi:Wishing Clinnyany z ertYUPD The Tribune Is a member of the Anociated Press The Associated Press brexclusively entitled to the lose for reproduction of alloews dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper sad also the Weal news published herein I 11111 NtNc 1 o f t Salt Lake City Utah Sunday Morning LE September 1940 I V Pessimism Discounted By Authoritative Statements One of the leading Correspondents of the International News Service adthits becoming dishearteird "listening to the moans and walls' of malcontents echoing theanimus of partisans or the hopes' of obstructionists claiming that the United States is unable to defend itself against - invasion In a any sort of letter distributed by the recently printed 'King Features' Syndicate" he gives fervent thanks to acknowledged authorities' - who assert that our military defenses are as far as they gut but not only are developing at a speed consistent with excellence Secretary Frank Knox of the navy department is quoted as saying—that "the United States already has' the most powerful and most efficient fleet on the high seas anywhere in the world" Wheth' er it would be effective in bgth oceans against simultaneous- attacks by two potential enemies is doubtful but the construction program under way will take care of such an emergency provided Great Britain is able to delay the total' tarians of Europe without whose cooperwill not dare ation imperialists of Asia 'make a hostile moveWilliam S Knudsen of the national defense board one of the most thorough investigators and capable—appraisers of Industry and its possibilities in this republic recently made a tour of all plants and factories in operation or in process of being rernod'eled to comply with war He reported needs of the government splendid cooperation between manufacturers and federal agencies and satisfactory progress as to both the quantity and quality of articles turned out General George C Marshall chief of staff asserts that this country is in far better shape to meet a powerful enemy on land or sea than it was in 1917 an army of a million men could not be put into camp overnight a large proportion could be taken care of wirr out discomfort to the men or overtaxing resources of the war department Now as during the first World war it is the best equipped army in the world except for machinery and chemicals of destruction which are being prepared with astonsecond-han- e - ' ishing rapidity Because of the bulldog tenacity of the stubbornly holding totalitarian ' forces at bay despite inconceivable punishment taken in doing so the United ! States will have ample time to prepare for any emergency The most alarming eventi 4 ualities of the present conflict insofar as ci - this republic is concerned will be a loss of foreign trade and the necessity for : maintaining an expensive military ma' ' chine fot many years to come: centime be a It may perhaps longturies before this republic can count on being as tree from alarms or attacks as it has been for the past 150 years Not until the lust for power and pelf is controlled or the passion for revenge and rapacity wears itself out and the barriers to trade and amicable relations are reduced or removed will any leading government be able to relax from eternal vigilance and defensive' activities While paganism survives and secures converts taught to sneer at the principles leaders deride of justice and honor--whosImpulses of mercy and compassion and hold themselves as supermen which they 1 undertake to prove by acts of brutality and barbarity there will be efforts of arI rogant and ignorant adventurers to dom inate to subjugate to annihilate all whom r they consider "inferior creatures" of the same Creat6r British - 1 Another Kidnaping After a Period of Security r 1 1 - t After a 'considerable period of relief from the dread of kidnaping which once threatened children of the rich in every section Of the country from Seattle to Saint Augustine another case has been reported from San Francisco in which Salt Lakers may be said to have more than ordinary interest The victim was a little grand soh of Mrs Louis Shattuck Cates whose husband a former resident and business leader of Utah is now president of the with Phelps-DodgCopper corporation headquarters in Boston The child was forcibly taken from his nurse on a public road in Hillsborough In central California and "carried off in automobile driven–lay–adark copplex loned man of apparent Latin nationality" The kidnaper had carefully planned the crime as he left a typewritten note demanding ransom money in bills of small denominations amounting to' $100000 While agents of the federal bureau of local policemen and state investigation 'patrolmen immediately took up the search Mr Cates of results apprehensive called off pursuit and published an an nouncement that he would coMply with the terms of the kidnaper in order to have the child returned safely to the dis- tracted 'parents Count and Countess de 1 i — i ' ' c' 1 1 4 J e 1 i ) --- t --an t 1 I ) 1 1 ' I t Tristan i I r ' It is devoutly hoped by every humline resident of this country that after the little fellow hat been restored to his home thel-vilwretch who wars on helpless children and tortures fathers and mothers may be apprehended and punished accord covers these infamous ing to the law that crimes The death penalty is too light for such avaricious An and cowardly brutes American public that went through the 4 1 1 : - ' I ' ''t I' trying ordeal following the Lindbergh the papers guarding tragedy—watching their little ones suspecting strangers and in a prayer-tospeed the capture of this culprit who may should he escape encourage a renewal of these atrocities — I Charles II Jenkinson Former Utah Railway Official Sixty-onyears ago a young man came west and took a position at Logan-ceach- e county with the Utah Northern railway Serving faithfully as a clerk a telegrapher and station agent Charles H Jenkinson was traniferred from one locality to --another wherever a trustworthy employe was needed most after the custom of corporations covering large territories and establishing new enterprises Oneassignment was Pocatello where he met and married the girl who became his helpmate in—every sense of the word From that time forwarcV his progress though gradual was assured when he treasurer of the mountain division of the Union Pacific with offices Lake City a responsible position he filled with honor and fidelity Of an unobtrusive disposition but alert and persistent in the discharge of his official duties Mr Jenkinson was an ideal railway man always putting ahead of his Can personality the company employing him and dividing interest therein withnothing else but his model family He was kind and considerate in his attitude toward both friends and strangers which made him an exceptionally popular railway official Ten years ago he retir d under rules of the cpmpany and mad his home in Los Angeles where he pa sed away the other morning at the age of fourscore and one e - — By Charles B Driscoll When I was talking with Sculptress Sally Plane Loss Figures Ryan recently she showedme a bronze head of Val Gielgud English theatrical man which Note: All officialdom from Val is a brother of John she had done Mr Roosevelt on down is still Gielgud famous Shakespearean actor getting figures on planes casualWe talked for a while of the Gielguds ties corresponding with those of and agreed that John is 'perhaps the greatthe British and far from the est living Shakespearean actor Val with a claims of the Germans This may neat Van Dyke beard is more picturesque not mean much however as brother his actor than all their figures come from Lonto Val how on me tell Miss Ryan went don always wears a cape instead of an overcoat A large rectangular plot In the Maybe this Gleigud Maybe it's swank dead center of 'the country has simply knowt what looks well on him and been picked Zr location of new wears it regardless of what people may say defense industry plants in a re- or think port which is shortly to come A story related by Miss Ryan was about out of the bureaus of census and an occasion when John Gielgud appeared agricultural economics These in a performance in which he had to wear bureaus have been working on a a cape When John one of London's bes- t- - study laeeled "decentralization of liked actors appeared in the first scene on Industry" for about a year AnVal show of the brother first the night alysis is based on census statisstalked down the center aisle to hIS front tics since 1880 concerning the was a seat in his usual costume There location of labor supply and tonrealspontaneous outburst as the audience gumption In- - the protected area ized that the Gielgud brothers really looked 7between the rockies and the Apgiving the house its Just alike and palachians money's worth Type of men being chosen by is one the the belief is that cape It my Latin American countries as repmen to is 'really becoming garment that resenthtives to the coming shipAnd on the other hand I think it is seldom ping conference here Octaber 2 is not encouraging American ofnotably becoming to 14omen From time to time—almost every season ficials to expect much from the In fact—somebody tries to get women into meeting Most of the good neigha good many years bors have named diplomats on capes again It to succeeded has effort since the any great the ground who have no specific extent knowledge of the problem While The cape is an essentially graceful garthey requested the conference ment especially on tall persons Few women for reduction of shipping rates are tall enough to wear it with distinction their activity so far has sponAnd besides women are so naturally grace sored the impression that they ful-th- at they-do-n- ot need this aid- - Rather merely expect another contribua little to a detract the cape has tendency tion from Uncle Sam from the natural grace of the feminine by Xing Features' figure - Distributed I think men should' go in for capes Syndicate Inc They 'do of course to a certain limited In brass bands marching ' clubs extent lodge uniforms and stage costumes they effect the cape whenever they can find an excuse to do so The hair on your head would 'And few men have grown up without grow to a length of 40 feet in 72 years if it did not fall out or going s through the period of wearing the overcoat or topcoat over the shoulders never was cut ' s has-bee- n Here and There cape-fashi- on The French police in Paris were (perhaps still are) professional cape men A part of their uniform when I knew them was a blue cape which they usually wore over one shoulder The cape was a weapon as well as a graceful garment Most of these men carried no big sticks for handling the frequent riots of the capital But when the police charged upon" a mob they came swinging their capes Each cape was studded with heavy brass rivets which looked innocent enough as decoration When d the garment came swinging down upon the head of a rioter the troublemaker usually rolled on into the gutter Released by McNaught Syndicate Inc brass-studde- Black and white beans were used in voting in ancient times with the black bean denoting a "nay" vote New Guinea as green black and gold varieties of butterflies with a wingspread of 11 inches F Some of Brazil's landed ge try own estates which are la I er than the British isles A plant tendril has been obserVed to make a complete coil around a supporting object in two minutes - " - - ' !!'f'::nti :--: I g ' titi:4 4 ce'sr o ' ' t-' ? !) ' - IA I 11 RA I b- - ::":::::::: :::::::::::i:":::::::::::'::::::: ' :::::111' :: :: tt '" :': i' : i h :::: - 'E'I15- ':-- 11'A ' A ::: '':'::::::::"'::'':-::::::':'-:- ' § ) ::': ritLTER '7f ' i N1:'- o k 7 441 ' :":": :iiy:::::::::::H:::::-::::::::::- ' - p - f j-- ' 1 1A1 e 1 r I 31 6'1 I c 7 :''''':''''''' :: ' ' :::' il‘A —' ": commission Ever since the commission was created its weakness has been thatt it has had no head With power to coordinate such as Woodrow Wilson gave B ME" Baruch in the old war industries board Practically every thought1 By D Asset Edito - DE - ::::-::::- :::ii v— r Of ' il1 A- -- - '''sll'' l'is' Vlotis ee 4 rs: ) '''' lifzi :k ' 1 :!!':::::::: i it:f)A 701 ' ‘14 ' ?' -- ::: - ' ::- 'rpv r ts 4i - :::i: 4 '— '' !:! ti ' 14 1111f 4' $? s:: Al' ' :::::' ' ( e fr ' "r--:- e'0" Pttl- - - il ' 'Afoc- 10 b- - -- - ::1: ! t!t ) :::::: t:i1::!!!:i:1:!::s : f71 1 tn"' :1""1"1"1"111J164rT::!::::::1iii!::::i::::::!::::: t L--: l' til "- -- t:: t op Ak I A: - - t t t :i: r: :' 41 '':'!' kvoNg c 4 h2v - :':j 41mvirz4 — 1 e ei ::::::0: rei7N:' 4 j 1: 7 :: - 1"4'—") - - ::: GAIT I r:t' t' D SYNDICATE i I u ' The Public Forum A an I throu of wa of dr! — mile-- It's drivel whero conce 4 ta t Los Angeles tonight is ablaze with lights There's some sort of fashion show on and all the department stores are open: In the windows living models parade in the latest things milady will wear this fall At practically every street corner huge spotlights send their rays into the skies above while crowds' of eager onlookecs mill about And the thought came to me—a constantly recurring one—how dif ferent this is to London There searchlights pierce the heavens trying to find bombers for the guns to shoot at Citizens scurry to bomb-proshelters for protection ihstead of looking at clothes models We're a very fortunate nation—and can remain so if we don't let a lot of misguided pacifists lull us into a false sense of security I get so out of patience with such people that I have to be restrained when I'm with them Why can't they —realize that nations are not much different from individuals We still have to have pollee don!t we Well when we can dispense with police to- - guard our own homes from crooks and thieves then we won't have to bother anti-aircra- ft under the It likely To the "i a ma i lama It ' That at once I IIril Cr tablist west ( on th has cc famou ca A re provin machii 0 for ricane any at falai ruP7115ah°1' I has was started yesterday—I've only been able to write in spurts and starts—so you'll have to overlook the mic-in'it 11p of hours But rm okay now I hope I hope si: gelloni the di speed Cars under with v the wl roll an q caused analyz Weatis the eql ear pi sleet c Mizzen be sim terestit pit at mud Is and 30 sulfide mixtur The cz speeds taken The structic of the i pools o Inspect througl Inter ress in sic is t the tra the car line of at spee miles a Supp and tes a "rid( the ridi rmx ': A 1111 Off the Record Traffic is thick on the state department's carpet as one homing diplomat after another Is called in to be asked if he meant what he meant A The great icebox mystery: During a Shawnee Okla heat wave a cat was placid d in a refrigerator with a steak Only the cat came out spend - if best Applecart Upset By Olin Miller statistician says Americans more money on fishing than on any other sport We should have thought more money was spent on the aggravating activity known as golf than on any other spört The statistician turther estimates that the everage cost of fish caught by sportsmen is $425 per pound about $300 of which is spent for fancy and expensive tackle It would seem therefore that the biggest sucker in the game is the fisherman himself The sporting goods and hardware stores lay out attractive show window displays of fishing tackle and supplies and he comet along and falls for the line and sinker to bait—hook say nothing of rods and reels artificial minnows flies and various other trappings add trivia Squire Perkins says: "God help th' rich—th' pore kin vote th' Democratic ticket" isn' p Mete tion our-dese- This column t given ining-tamps-served The State of The Nation ethi tg8hend By Our Readers The weather's been wonderful for over a week and just when it ought to continue to be nice it starts to act up Clayton Smith had a tooth pulled yesterday and hd's in bed today That's the sad part of life—just when a guy reaches the time of life when he can enjoy things he begins to fall apart Abe Shore manager of Max Factor's just phoned and Is coming over to see me Said he'd just read my story about my visit to his establishment My goodness The Tribune must have quite a circulation down here— I haven't seen that issue myself yet Either Sammy or Jerry —my two favorite bellhops—get me a copy of The Tribune as soon as It reaches the newsstand but I haven't seen a paper for a couple of days—I've been feeling too lousy to even be curious to see what the editor has done to my stuff But so far he's been pretty decent—although I know I'm a pain in the neck to him what with writing about my health and' suck 1 side tiasiness m 4 "tort' high Ing r Senator From Sandpit LOS ANGELES—I've stopped picking at the counterpane and it appears that I'm going to live after all Had a bit of nourishment—the first hi two days— I've been subsisting on orange Juice and ' aspirin—and I feel better About the time you're reading this I'll be starting for home I've had a grand timebut it'll be nice to be back in familiar haunts again Sorry I was not able to be at Russel L Tracy's'partk-I'v- e long been an admirer of his Beatrice Peak phoned the other night and we had a long talk She wanted to know bow Lillian and Lance Bowen were and all about things at home I haven't met up with Bob Nibley yet but Ray Taylor told me he had a swell job with the Locktreed company Bright boy Bob and he'll go places of "Ii turne ' Fórum Rules Editor Tribune: Some writers are so inconsistent that they believe if this country were strictly neutral an armistice would be signed in a day Even if Roosevelt and Hull were dead and the U S sunk in the sea there would be no armistice and there will be no armistice worthy the name until Christ himself comes and commands it I am tired of hearia that this war is one of the troubles of Europe It is a contest against every nation on the globe it is against the U S is much as it was against France The whole struggle its beginning its duration its chief figures the combinations involved and the outcome were blueprinted nearly la000 years ego and Wit come-10 us as holy writ Read every detail of it in the Prophets It is "the battle of the great day of God Almighty" rushing over the earth "until I make a full end of all nations" It is destiny sweeping away and putting down It what is known as Babylon Is the great and mighty cleansing to precede the coming of the'Son of Man It is the day of burning the baptism' Iv fire for the remission of the sins of the nations Ten thousand presidential 1 hanici I upset the applecart Mr Roosevelt I brushed aside the Wilikie recommendation with the remark that his Republican opponent knew nothing about politics Nothing more has been heard of it except adminthat two friendly and S istration columnists a few days ago quoted Says Profits Bill "a competent spokesman" of the commission Perils Mining as saying: "It's too bad Willkie popped the ' Editor Tribune: The proposed —idea We've been discussing a reorganizaLetters appearing in this enitlYnn do not express the views of The tion for some time and everything apppeared excess profits bill now before 'Tribune They are the opinions of set Now probably nothing will be done until contributor' with which The Tribune congress has a far more impor the election" may or may not agree The followafter ing rules govern contributions: tent bearing upon the mining No more severe indictment of Mr Roose1 Letters limited to 250 words and preference given to short comvelt has been made than is gained' in industry and upon employment munications that quotation It comes from one of his Write legibly and clearly on 2 in the west than is generally one side of the paper only own appointees and friends and it is printed 3 realized Its importance lies in Religious and racial disClisalone of a derogatory or sectarian by new dealish correspondents who certain- 4 in its effect upon development nature are barred Partisan or perhostility and aply are without third-tersonal political comment cannot be activities Mines as we all know parently did not realize the implications of printed 4 Personal aspersions probitp their article What in effect it says is that The plentiful are exhaustible Red 5 Poetical contributions not the president of the United States is so petty striktowns" of "ghost supply' wanted an individual that he can be diverted from an 8 Letters may be barred for ingly Illustrates this fact Towns 'obvious misstatements of fact or act concededly in the national interests for acfor statements winch are not in which formerly provided emno other reason than that it has been pubcord with fair play and good taste I The Forum is not an adverlicly suggested by his opponent ployment for thousands now lie Using medium and cannot be used The facts speak for themselves Here they for advertising purposes wasted desolate At the and S names true Writers must sign t name a are: First the president refuses to and addresses in ink Letters will of these their height activity chairman for the commission' be carried over assumed name if !on nddfrih endis In all cases writer so requests not only as e urged to do so by many detached however true name and address a means of e'mployment to men must be attached to communication third he becomes convinced that persons The Forum cannot conelder 9 a chairman should be named- fourth his in the mining industry but also more than one letter from the same — Writer at one time comrilissibn infornially agrees that without a as a ready market for produce of clo The Tribune cannot accept chairman the best results cannot be cohbatiar letters for publication which bear western farms libeloini or actionable remarks enn fifth everything is set to name a tailing joint legal responsibility Just to maintain the level of Doubly True Today employment in the mining inflow a constant need we candidates could no more stop It Then Mr Winkle urges it andI "nothing dustry will now be done until after election" If of new mines to offset those than King Canute could sweep that was true as asserted by his friends last back the ocean with a broom It properties that are closing down week it is doubly true today because Mr Now to develop a npw mine Is no Is simply God marching on Willkie in his Coffeyville speech on Monday easy task The odds against the Man's hope as Edwin Markham reiterated his statement that the defense successful discovery and exploitasaid ta in the aftermath is being bungled because the presprogram exare new of tion a deposit C N Lund Went will not appoint a chairman and delebalIn to order tremely high 217 David Keith building gate to him the necessary authority to do ance the many risks the rate of the job "Nothing will be done until after — return on a succesful miEe must election" By necessarily be large is is as it the That story presented by the The Imposition of a tax runHam Park sources If any opponent of the most friendly 45 cent on to up per ning profits has pictured him in a more infaabout armies navies and air of a company after payment of it cannot now be recalled If vorable light buran added taxes normal puts fleets But not until then the president refrained from action in some den on those developmental corIn the coffee shop when I ordinary matter at some normal time for porations which are so urgently such a cauie as is here attributed to him it went to inhale a bowl of soup needed would seem a very small thing to do But I was introduced to a guest of JIntli enough new enterprises under existing circurfistaticesto be thus the hotel—Miss Marla Lindforth are developed to take up the from a course whicifIwould promote from Stockholm She speaks slack in the labor market we are and efficiency in thevital job of nabetter than speed unembe English—much good plagued with going to tional defense appears worse than small—not mine—but with the most fascinployment This solution is unfar from ignoble It seems not to be in Mr I ating accent Sshh! She takes my likely to evolve if the odds Roosevelt to admit a mistake—or correct title — "Senator" — seriously I against new enterprises are in- one Particularly is this true if the misthink she even started to curtsey creased Certainly we must all take is pointed out by a political opponent t when I was presented Made me taxes to meet increased the pay Under those circumstances it seems the feel kind of silly She'd heard of cost of the national defense pronational interests are subordinated to perUtah—who' hasn't in the ScanHowever the means of gram sonal vanity Apparently the way to induce dinavian countries? I told her taxation should be so drawn as Mr Roosevelt to give the commission a head how so many of her countrymen to equitably raise the required-revenuIs to have Mr Willkie declare it should not rt and women had come over to without unduly penalizhave one paradise — chamber of ing those new companies so neccommerce please note — and essary to our economic growth Copyright 3940 by the Baltimore Sun Robert H Strange what splendid citizens they'd become y7i14911011x e' I Sees Divine Hand In Present War A!:$::V4 f "Ak ' ilx'0“Nssx : etit") 4 1777175F-"6qS"7"1"It 404t '" C7:' 1: I I 1 fiNVINL 67"q41f!: l :' '"Nr:)L-'tIttUDLIC - " :1 - i ' - - ::::::-::: 411Arir: ' !'4:tf : - :W:' :'i1:i:iiii'irj:::i:i-- moto ful person whether for Mr Roosevelt or against t him is in accord about that Mr Roosevelt started out with the idea that no head was needed and that he ': himself could do all the co- ordinating necessary with- out delegating power to anyone else Recently it has '40 been borne in upon him S4:4i46 that the coordinating job A required vastly more time than he possibly could give defense the that protoil gram was bogging because 6 of the lack of a chairman Frank R Kent cornof weeks members Some ago ' mission talked the situation over eae t themselves and agreed that if their were not to be minimized the time had come when authority had to be lodged in a chairman Various friends of the presiI dent had pressed this view on him and— so it was reported—he was Just about to act là when Mr Wilikie his Republican opponent made a statement urging that chairman with real power the preparing this country to defend itself could — not be effectively done 4 — t'? e' :' - At - '0 '' '1' - :Wi:N:':i::':::i:':-::'n:::-:- L4e 17 'q':e t I 4' ::"::::' A - '' 01::12: 1 ::: r ::: '- 1! i'u:::-:::::- I v-- ' p Niif :::!':::::::: 4i10:!1: 0 -- -r $kt Itlier' ::'''''''''' r- :i:-- 11111111111 s iii:g:::: :!:itii:i::i'e '1 1ff "'6 otlk - '-- O k !is1"141'r:- e''i::i: ( ' ::':i':::':::- I i : ::-':::- ::::::::i::::::::: 1T'ISII' :1'::::::::0::::j::ii i l' '! - 1- k:::::: ': t- w I ' - 1 ' 4:': ' - Ir' 'A1- - t ':1 f"-- -i i 17- ‘ two-poun- ' Something new in the handy reference field is a Blue Book of cafe society or the night edition of "Who's Who" Refugee nglish children atNew Haven are being initiated into baseball's mysteries They must be told about not wandering off for tea during the seventh inning stretch In Kansas a city fireman resigns front the rescue squad to become an evangelist There's probably a distinction there somewhere :4 t -- 7 Almost daily we'are told anew that our old debtor Britain is fighting our battles for us We it seems are resting on our t owers Happily the Willkie campaign Is not to tee off on a golf course It will be remem bered Landon's did and was never out of the ' rough Seeing what Whoosis does with Europe will give us a line on what the other king-fis- h Huey 'Long might have made of theUnited States Distributed by Esquire Features Inc Reproduction strictly prohibited vii 1 - ' now and then WASHINGTON—Every some of the enthusiastic friends of Mr Roosevelt inadvertently make a more devastat- ing criticism of him than any presented by those who frankly are in the oppo$)tictn camp The most recent example bf this has been caused by the president's faildie to name a chairman for his national defense -- - "4 ''' :" 5 1 i - '' '' 7::' - ! I v By Prank R Kent - 7" more plausible account has seeped through to office sources here The French are desperateThe scarcity ly in need of of oil Is so serious that practically all forms of mechanized transportation have been stopped In the unoccupied area The six ships were so low that they were unable to keep In commission much longer Their officers dickered secretly with the British for safe passage through Gibraltar to Dakar to pick up large French stores of oil there on the promise of returning to their base at Toulon from their mission as soon as possible: The grapevine has hinted there was a further understanding with the British about perpetuating the neutral status- - of the ships for the duration of the war Herman Goering's night ride over London was described by Berlin oracles as an inspection trip to let the reichsmarshal see the damage effected by his air corps The oracles did liot explain how Goering could inspect damage from thousands of feet in the air at night the impression was left that he musthave carried a pocket”flashlight mark of Significant tell-tal- e the trip was that it came the night after his airmen received their worst trouncing of the war British claimed nearly 200 planes shot down that day Goering apparently is having morale trouble with flyers The United States navy has established a permanent patrol of the South Atlantic coast from the Panama canal zone to Buenos Aires This significant movement serves notice on intermeddlers that the pledges of both major parties in this republic were made deliberately and for actual enforcement of the Monroe Doctrine Fifth columnists who have been slyly slipping into South American republics with nazi instructions and promises of protection will hesitate before trying to foment rebellions finance insurrections and against authorities of governments banded together for mutual protection as a union Bold and confident conduct will keep the war away- - from this hethisptiere w'hile the timid and evasive' attitude of pacifists and ostriches will invite invasion New York Highlights - WASHINGTON -- A buoyant effect on the consumers goods lines such as daily advertised in the papers— will be wrought by the draft Mr Rooseveit's economists have informed him The million men who are to be taken out of unskilled phases of business for a year in the army can be replaced from the great army of unemployed they figure Net re-seconomically would be to give a million men between $20 and $30 a month more purchas1 ing power (the pay of draftee This 'm oney unquestionably would flow mainly into the con- Burners line of daily living needs: TO tremendous—cost (Mr Roesevelt has asked for nearly $2000000000 the be financed by—treasury borrow- ing which giles 06 draft a fur thér inflationary character Strange as any episode in this unorthodox war was the escape of six French warships into the Atlantic under the silent gung of the British at ‘Gibraltar not in the blackness of night but on a sunny afternoon The deal on this one was so obviously deep that explanations have been scarce Suggestions have been made the French wanted to avoid seizure of the vessels by Hitler or intended to join the British fleet This sounded a little too unorthodox for credence in view of the estab- lithed attitude of the Vichy gov- ernment and the facthat Hit- ler's gun is stillimitt itirer head A American Naval Vessels Patrolling the Atlantic Coast 44 - - - - fry More Plausible i - i —44:-- en- — praitepooll 6 JLre-Lq- 4141' tirst-yeltrwi- iri-S- —- - By Paul Mallon ' SI -- 7")d'7 4 1-t- Kent Hits Failure T6 Name H eadof Defense Group —By Manning lildoll--L:Don- Scenes of Current News 14 September Is at k 4:'44 11 - |