Show i i 4 I Tuesday Brorning zbc A i 1—Zbe eq144t i1 i ala I iit1 ettF"'-''- k ' 1 - 44 I I Tribune Publishing ComPlibl 0- - all - Salt Lake City Utah Tuesday Morning September 2t 1941 i 1 A i1 --I3y warning against "Yankee imperialism" he then accused those who doubted authenticity 'of his covert threat with venality Goebbels could do no greater harm Hitler could ask for no more effective sup--I Safeguarding the Canal From Spies and Saboteurs 1 1 I I 1 i One of the most vulnerable points of rational defense is the almost indispensible Panama canal The narrow strip of land copnecting North and South America was an impediment to early navigators who followed Columbus in seeking a westward passage to the orient In vain 1 I 1 I I 1 I port they explored the region for se strait connecting the Atlantic they had crossed with the Pacific which Balboa had discovered in emerging from a tropical jungle in i I NNOtvliTilAalcE AM ANSWER! I - Wo011 1 I i I Slang the most' colorful and vital part of language has long paid its tribute in the American tongue" to the peach "A peach of an idea" is the highest compliment paid a business executive by his competitors while pretty girls have long been designated as "peaches" in this country This stone fruit which repre- - 1513 In 1550 a Portuguese navigator by the name of Antonio Galva° published a book to induce his government to cut a ditch through the narrow neck of land During the next 300 years plans were made and proposals considered for the construction of a canal but France was the first to act Under the direction of Ferdinand de Lesseps who had completed Suez canal connecting the the Red and 'Mediterranean seas work was started on the Panama isthmus in 1883 but was abandoned six years later because of tropical diseases that lined the survey with cadavers and of technical dif- ficulties he could not overcome However the French organized a new company and renewed operations in 1894 By 'this time the United States government had awakened to a the importance of such & seaway in the development of comitnerce and the strengthening of national security Theodore RooseVelt dynamic dictai torial and determined and control of a canal zone and paid the French $40000000 for their rights and possessions in Panama After a row with the Colombian government and a subsidized insurrection begun by the zonites a regiment of United States marines were landed to repulse Colombian troops sent to quell the uprising On the 7th of November 1903 this government recognized the new republic of Panama and secured permission to build the canal One of the reasons assigned for Hitler's persistent attempts to secure a foothold in South America is to locate an airfield within bombing distance- of the Panama canal By destroying this naval necessity he might be able to keep American warships in the Pacific which would give the nazis full control of the Atlantic should Great Britain be defeated In a recent press dispatch from Panama the comforting assurance was read that experts pronounce the canal defenses to be as nearly perfect as possible while "work is rapidly progressing to rnake this watentay impregnable" It is also gratilythg to recall that Japanese vessels were recently refused admission to the canal at the risk of increasing the tension between the governments Many spies have been arsested with maps and photographs intended for hostile military authorities and every precaution Is being taken to safeguard the gateway between our two boundary oceans i 4 1 1 i i amsendtsththe eulatimcmaeteoifnpcuolmchprlietuxdioenincatimaevotor i Nolli J sea-leiv- el 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 realitif 3 1 i 1 qing 1 z I ' - Insults and Injuries Hurled at Latin Americans Senator D Worth Clark of Idaho seems determined to undermine the Pan American union and meet the fuehrer's desire for confusion in the western hemisphere By adding insult to injury he is laboring to alienate every supporter of the "'good neighbor" policy Having advocated the invasion and annexation of n all republics the irresponsible isolationist from the Gem state now claims that all South and Central' American peoples who adhere to the hemisphere pact are bought and bribed Hitler's minister of mendacity Joseph Coebbels could go no farther in preparing the way for invasion of either occidental continent Nazi propagandists have been telling South Americans to beware of "Yankee imperialism" as the United States government contemplates their subjugation and the acquisition of their - national territories When this falsehood was exposed and the fears of the people were allayed along came D Worth with his senatorial indorsement of Goebbels' propaganda Few South Americans of education and intelligence were misled by the collaborated tale of terror told by two eminent opponents of the president's foreign Resentful of his failure to impolicies n press certain govern rnents Senator Clark now accuses their leaders of being bribed by trade concessions and loans intended to aid in fort' fying their coasts against invasion In a published communication addressed to the president of the National Livestock association Senator Clark said: "Friendships with nations of the western hemisphere arrived at by a system of poorly disguised bribery are mighty poor Hitler's Main Dependence Is Fomenting Internal Discord Lindbergh's warning that the chief e United States in its efperil lacing-thforts to prevent invasion by foreign foes is internal collapse comes with bad grace from a man whose efforts have been directed whether consciousli or not towards bringing about this very disintegration As one of a group of obstructionists Lindbergh has sought to sow seeds of distrust in the duly elected leaders of this nation in a time of crisis and has worked to bring about disunity and discord throughout the land This former hero who again warns this country not to irritate the invincible Hitler is the man whose appeal for an -immediate change In the leadership of the st country has been interpreted in circles and among fifth columnists as a call for an active overthrow of the existing government of the United States This is the man whose attacks on our foreign policies have stirred questioning among members of our armed forces as to the country's right to keep them in uniform This is the man who echoes Senator Wheeler's every criticism of the administration and who preaches fear of Hitler from lecture platforms in every section of the Union Lindbergh supporters can still make claims for his sincerity but his recent outbreak seems to settle -the question of his consistency nazi-fasci- New York Highlights By Charles B Driscoll Latin-America- friendships" 1 1 i I - i 1 1 i 11 1 1 NEW 1011K--Boyde-n Sparkes noted magazine writer was amazed the other clay though he doesn't amaze easily after all his years in the business of hunting for the amazing He was driving his car out of the grounds of the Forest Hills Surf club at Long Beach He heard a voice hail just beyond the city too short or too long— ing him for turning some minor matter Looking up he thought he recognized the voice and face Both drivers stopped and stared Not to keep the reader anxious too long the other driver was( Torn Smuck attorney for an oil company who was a schoolmate and neighbor of Spark's in Cincinnati They hadn't scen each other since they were 12 years old and I venture to estimate that that s is quite a while ago Both have been living In New York for many years They vow they're going to get together for lunch some day You might think coincidence entered into this too Anyway I think it is odd sort of behavior for a columnist so I'll relate it I was walking along 42d street near Lexington avenue a few nights ago talking to Friend Harold Hayden It was near midnight Two tall men passed going in the opposite direction I noticed that they didn't seem to be going anywhere and were looking about as if viewing the scenery So I took a chance "Those two are strangers In town" I said And feeling very rash added "The one on the outside is from Texas" I had caught just a scrap of a sentence In passing and It sounded like Texas language We decided to verify the guess on a nominal bet I caught up with the couple now standing at the Lexington avenue curb and asked directions to Times Square "Well sir we've just been there but I tell you the way" said the outside man "Are you from Texas?" I asked feeling sure of it now Yes he was from Dallas His friend was from Kansas City Released by McNaught Syndicate Inc s' South Americans may have their borderline battles their revolutionary campaigns their discordant factions and their medieval methods of deposing political leaders but they are head and shoulders above this disgruntled politician now misrepresenting the people of Idaho in many essentials of character and citizenship They are loyal to their governments and summarily fascism who preach trea'chery and repeat the falsehoods that have demoralized and betrayed a dozen nations in Europe After advocating the conquest of Latin America and thus trying to justify Hitler's 1 : ' ctrr!' r-:- - 0-1-' -1- ''' : - ± - - - t 4' : ! '' '! 'V N - 2- - ? ti I- - 4 - i) I " ')Fliii-''41'rv-i'f- - ii-- ''''' v ±' :1 - - A t - ' f kii-- ze - -- ' A :-1- - '1 1 :: fo 1- i "3 ao 1 - 1 5 1 - 5 'q'4'!' 11 1 '- 1 4( 4 - 1 ''--4 1 I - A - -'' ' - : - li - to - - - ' --' ' ' P - 1 "" - ts--:- - -' ' :1 1- t k ' - ''31- - - ' ' 4 a ?2-'''- 1' ti '1 -- ---- E - k "-- - f - 1 - - - -- ::-:-- W 1 r - t ''7 - - 1 ! 2' '- I- A'‘ " '' 2'' 1 Byrd Attack At the moment this failure is being - 1 - b The Public Formit "The accession of Norway and Holland to the allied cause raised the tanker tonnage at Britain's disposal from approximately 3000000 to 6000- 000 gross tons—a tonnage which it is argued should be sufficient for all Britain's requirements even if ample allowance is made for sinking and delays due to the conVey system "The request for more tankCr must therefore be expected to arouse vigorous protests across the Atlantic If as has been suggested the vessels are to be used to carry oil from the ports of the Dutch West Indies or the Gull of Mexico as far east as Iceland the question immediately arises why British and Norwegian bottoms cannot be used for the purpose "The handing over of another 100 tankers would certainly cause the most acute crisis on the eastern seaboard for It would mean that the tonnage engaged in supplying these states had been reduced by 60 per cent since the beginning of Questions Authority Editor Tribune: The power of Utah county commissioners over tax bound land results wholly from operation of law and is in nit sense based upon a legal or factual purchase of the land 'Me treasurer's certificate of "male" merely has the legal effect of transferring to the county the tax liens of the Mate the city and the school districts The legislature has complete authority to do this without public advertisement theoretical "sales" or auditor's deeds The county has the lien by operation of the statutes Every parcel of lien land Is In exactly the same legal status If the county has a lien in any case the county has a lien in every case If the county has a lien in every case the county does not have the freehold In any case The validity of a tax lien which results primarily from the enrollment of the land for taxes Is one thing the legal process for the enforcement of the lien 11 an entirely different thing the war" That is a manner of laying facts out on the table which will eventually on both aides of the Atlantic produce firm common ground for action through the political fog that Mr Ickes has made out of the oil tanker policy By Our Readers This legal process prescribed by the legislature in 1927 is being persistently Ignored by both the counties and the courts It is wholly Improper to speak redemption from a "theoret- 'cal" sale The resulting situa- lion is that the county has to enforce the lien and not that t h e freeholder haa failed to redeem from a sale because in fact and law there has been no male of the land but only a sale of the lien A tax deed is a deed to a tax lien gamuel fluisell Approves Caution Zditor Tribune: Under the heading "Balt Lake Looks Askance at the Offer of Extra Airport Funds" In your issue of August 27 it seems that the city commissioners are doubtful as to the economic maintenance of thin blacktop surfacing on gravel as against a more standard type of construction recommended by army federal and well qualified city engineers for construction of runways at BY' Senator From Sandpit Achilles- - was the boy whose mothert dipped him in the River Stink until he was intoller' able—Pocket Book of Boners Strict Policy As for British cribbing on the story common In official administration quarters is that the president's lender-leasHarry Hopkins has been required to adopt a strict attitude on occasions He allowed them to lend-leatypewriters for instance but not adding machines to be sent to London on the theory that the typewriters were going to the near east war zone while the adding machines were for government work at home It may turn out that Mr Hopkins was too harsh in this one instance What the British need to keep better account than last time are adding machines and plenty of them Impression has rooted here that the Iranians hated war worse than they hated the inor the nestvading British-red- s No general ing nazis there mobilization order for their army was announced when the British-Russia- n pincers came in upon them All they did was to call in soldiers on leave according to their official announcements There was really little they could do beyond putting up such a show of resistance that the nazis would not be angry In case the nazis happen to win the war Military men here gave them only two weeks' possibility of resistance if they tried Distributed by King Features Syndicate Inc Reproduction In whole or in part strictly prohibited) se Trivia : I've been chuckling all morning over a copy of The Pocket Book of Boners Sancho gave me Here are a few excerpts: "Rhubarb is a kind of celery gone bloodshot" (Q) "Tell all you know about se -- Keats" (A) "I don't know anything I don't even knew what they are" (Q) "Since pro is the opposite of con give an example" (A) "Progress and Congress" "In the middle of the nineteenth century 411 the morons moved to Utah" what's In a Name Les Bennett Dave Coursey "Smat" Smith and several others were bending the elbow at Fred Rose and Ralph liarmon's place when a stranger entered The stranger gave his order then tendered a bill in payment Fred took one look at the piece of currency "Great Scott!" he cried "I can't change a MO bill!" "Then why do you call your place 'The Mint'?" inquired the stranger Here and There The Typographical Error The typographical error is a slippery thing and sly You can hunt till you get dizzy but it somehow will get by Till the forms are off the presses it is strange how still it keeps It shrinks down into a corner and it never stirs or peeps That typographical error too small for human eyes Till the ink is on the paper when it grows to mountain Free speech Is among the freedoms still vouchsafed us and full advantage is being taken of same Not in years have there been sso many orators to walk out on Ilow strange that In this time of nervousness no one has brought out an edible enamel to go with the fingernails The boss be stares with horror then he grabs his hair and groans The copy reader drops his head upon his band and moans— The remainder of the issue may be clean as clean can be But that typographical error is the only thing you see —From Eighth Avenue Temple News size - - 4 Ham Park Notes on the Cuff Department Note to Ross Bowen and Lee Hoist Brigham City: I'll be there for t h e parade Friday morning Dust off that seat on the reviewing stand Gail Martin tells an amusing story about a tuba player in a symphony orchestra He says it's an old story but it was new to me and maybe it will be new to you It's the kind of a story that is easier told than written but I'll do my best It seems that the tuba player had a night off and the director had given him a couple of tickets to the concert He was asked to come back stage after the concert and tell them how the The conorchestra sounded cluding number was "Carmen" The last note had hardly died down when t h e tuba player rushed back stage and said to t h e director excitedly: "Do you know I always thought that 'Toreador Song' went' 'oompah oornpah oompah' but Instead It goes 'Turn-ti-ta-turn-tu- rn " Your aluminum pots and )(et-tiare valuable to Uncle Sam same as used razor blades and tinfoil But so far no one has mentioned any turn-i- n value for your old spectacles when you have to get m or e powerful lenses I wonder why? Stylists report that men 1t:11 wear red white and blue ties this year for patriotic reasons can't think of any better way 'for a man to sacrifice for his country than to wear a red white and blue tie es Suppose you buy something and pay one-thidown with 18 months to pay the balance and you don't keep up your payments what'll the government do to you? Unless I can find out I'll have to make my old hat and overcoat last another year I'm not going to take any chances with Uncle Sam Of course if he just writes insult- rd i! tors it won't be bad But suppose you get sent to a concentration camp or shot at sunrise or something My goodness! I wish Mr Eccles would mind his own business Salt Lakes municipal airport 2 Considering that the city has to maintain this project when completed and it is evident to every one that the day has arrived when heavy freight and larger transport planes are under actual construction On of rapidly Increasing air traffic needm it is wall that those responsible for the judicious expenditure Of public funds are trying carefully not to do that for which in the future they might be sorry Maintenance in the long run often costar more than the original structure Durability care and COTIOTTlie maintenance should be considered prime factors in all structural activities and where public moneys are involved there No at-cou- nt should be no experimenting That only should be done which le In strict accordance with good practice The well established plans of capable advisers should be abided by Irrespective of the promotional efforts of private interests This policy 'seems not to have prevailed in the matter of the runways for municipal airport No 2 WIM Wilson Provo lilts Metal Program Editor Tribune: We are all willing glad to give our old aluminum pots and pans to help relieve Uncle Sam's shortage in his defense program but Uncle Sam and all of us should learn the lesson taught by this scarcity Private ownership of necessities simply does not and will not supply social needs If irrefutable proof of this were needed the aluminum shortage furnishes that proof Private ownership especially monopoly ownership conducted for private profit has no regard for social national needs Profits are all the concern such a system of production has or can have Only so much production forces are developed as can produce what can be sold for profits The greater the scarcity the higher the price and the greater the profit The whole system of private ownership and profit is based upon a n d exists from social exploitation: It cannot therefore serve social needs What of aluminum is true of all essential metals It is also true of all the necessities of life The aluminum shortage therefore is but a striking example of :the inefficiency of the capitalistic system of production While we all are anxious to help out in this emergency still the aluminum trust stands convicted of the social crime and must pay the E A Mitchell penalty Provo Utah lrue Off the Record Another way to have droves of followers Is the Churchill manner of throwing aside the end of a cigar The lanced cranberry crop since 137 is ripening on the Cape Cod bogs It Is not yet affirmed though that It would pull us through another doublefeaturs Thanksgiving ' Out of the ashes of Europe we suppose survivors will crawl to come over and lecture us for $750 an hour on our lack of background end true culture - 60-ce- nt : - - - - : -- I ! i i i I I i I - i I - f i t ' 1 r - I 1 ' 4 E i 1 I i t II ex- - ' I k by the Roosevelt I - 1 1 1 t 1 i I - Pretty Explanation Ono refuses to believe that a president of the United States with so great a responsi- - bility resting upon him could be motivated by such petty and ignoble thoughts and feelings His friends should be ashamed to put it forward as an explanation or excuse for inaction To say that he will not act becausa Senator Byrd and other critics say he should act is to make him out almost incredibly unworthy Even those least sympathetic with the Roosevelt family the Roosevelt aids and the Roosevelt domestic ideas will hesitate to accept it On the contrary 0447 will reject the suggestion as altogether too to be true Whatever their personal Idea of his merits few want to think that sort of thing about the head of a great nation upon which war IfeMS to be rapidly converging There must be another reason even though this most Incredible one comes not from his foes but from his friends It would be a healthful thing if Mr Roosevelt could dispel such Ideas and give the lie to such explanations Nothing could be more helpful to the national situation—or for that matter the world situation—than to have him now publicly recognize the result of his mistakes and correct them not through some new deal plan devised by ingenious young White sycophants but in the light of experienc and In accord with the dictates of common sense even though this is the course recommended by those whom he regards as personally unfriendly Copyright 1941 by The Baltimore Sun : 1 do-ba- sed 1 1 I I Christopher BM:4p Says I Advice They come to you apologizing profusely for breaking in on your time which they You assure them that know is valuable though you are rather busy you always have time to see them They say they would never have taken th liberty had it not been that they are faced with a serious problem You remark laugh ingly that you are afraid they have come to the wrong person since you donl seem to have much success with your own problems They reply that it is your characteristic modesty that makes you speak so they are confident your statement would not be borne out by the facts They themselves have great faith in your judgment So you tell them to state their case They put their problem before you in considerable detail while you sit with your brow wrinkled ancl a Mild at your temple the conventional way of displaying deep concentration You weigh carefully the molts of the alternatives consider the problem from the standpoint of the immediate present and of the future making a careful distinction beAween what seems at the moment to be advantageous but which may prove injurious in the long run They express themselves as greatly Impressed by the manner in which you have handled their case It was just the way they were confident you would handle it They now seetclearly that the only way to proceed Is the way you suggest They hardly know how to express their gratitude to you You assure them there is no need for that and dismiss them wits the satisfactoryfeeling of having been of some small use to your And then the next thing you know you learn indirectly that they have gone and dons just the opposite of what you told them to do fellow-creatur- I t 1 1 1 I i 1 I 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 rt 'I es ' ! i I i Christuher Billopp I 1 - a - - 1 partisans on the ground that the "attack" by Senator Byrd has had the effect of delaying reorganizai is a severe indictment of tion Actually this the president the nature of which singularly enciugh those who present it seem not to perceive Clearly it means—if it means anything—that regardless of the VEtreme urgency of the situation Mr Rocsevelt will not act because he has been publicly prodded by a Democratic senator who consistently has opposed his domestic policies denounced his administration for extravagance and toward whom he cherishes considerable personal bitterness Ills friends say he will not appear to be driven into accepting as well based the criticlam of Senator Byrd and others who In the past have fought the new deals every scheme no matter how strongly they now support his foreign policy If this correctly reflects the president's attitude it puts hirn in a very bad light indeed It makes him out not a big man but a very vindictive little man—so little that in a period of national danger he would permit personal vanity and small resentments to prevent him from taking steps upon- - which the outcome of the war may hinge 'and the fate of this nation as well as that of our ally depend l plained - tankers Tanker Tonnage i Deftract ' '"-- - -- 't turee lend-lea- - :'' - i i : ' " '-'-- --- M - v Si '1- - i - fair-mind- ed 4 - la ' 21(-- 4" - - 1S:l '3' - - - F ' - - - t t-- i :- 4' er Latin-America- - ' ot l'' a literal statement of fact that except for one man there Is not in Washington or anywhere else an informed person who does not know that our defense effort is a botched and feeble business all bound up in snarling confusion wastefully conceived and ineffectually administered There is every reason to believe that the one exception noted above—Mr Roosevelt—knows alll this too! but will not admit it However well the president functions is the grand field of foreign strategy (9nd mostmen will concede that in the main there he has functioned well) it is quite clear that he has made an administrative mess of the internal affairs of the coun- try If he were three times the man he is still he could not do well all he is attempting to do and his mistake of refusing to delegate power would be a very great one As things are the unfortunate results of this refusal ' are hard to exaggerate For many weeks now the swamp in which the defense work is mired has been admitted by his own spokesmen Administration journalistic supporters have reported that the i theyerge off a "thorough r ect ganizationn It is authoritatively said that a plan has been prepared for him and is on This is accompanied by the inhis desk evitable mention of Justice William Ch Douglas as likely to be given the key position in or the reorganized set-u- p war and navy departments and the country generally await the advertised action But nothing happens WASHINGTON—It - ypn r 4 ' f By Frank R Kent o'-- - America from its native land China through Persia and Europe It has flourished in many parts of the United States and throughout Utah but has approached perfection in comparettvely few localities One of the places is Box Elder county for which reason citizens of this state look on Brigham Calf as the peach center From the bounteous orchards of that section the fruit has been shipped and sold all over the country threatening in many instances to rival the famed Georgia product Friday and 8aturday of this week Brigham City and the surrounding territory will hold another annual celebration tribute to the luscious fruit so important to the economic life of the community and marking another step toward spreadin g its fame Residents of Utah and surrounding states will gather in Box Elder county to watch a colorful parade view the exhibits and munch a delicious fruit 9 ' By Paull Mallon ' YGOTTA TAKE IT WASHINGTON—Mr Roose‘ 1 I velt was angry 'about the lies PAYS RA NAO he thought columnists had told '' -i 4 WE 3 iamtS: 1iBsy0ETD:I concerning the British lend- k lease money for food chamwhat-nHe happagne and I N 5HoULD1 A 019 2 ) pened to be inaccurate again in i sf -OD -' k 'I i ) a to p columnist or" had written saying 4't '1'' It 41 v 2- r that particular story about ' IA ? 'It :b i'' ' ' li which he was asked in his press :'N''':t N4v?4 'ir 4!:s'tt(1(A $' I ilit t ' w i1) conference It was solely the y : ' tr G 1 '! ?1'' 7 ' A ' : ktt t t r don f ' ? product of a noncolumnar re)1 I :' r 4 p( c : 1 s4 4 A 1 porter for an antiadministra( t 0 0361' 4 ''''' l'''' 'rf1? '''''f t '- k C'' ' c tion midwestern Journal c : t !!tst ?: e: 7 r But now along comes the cur ff: 1 :j ‘ 0 ' ' t Itt ) ft I s I k'l tit" 1 rent issue of the London Econi ' i t c t' r omist than whom even Buck-t V ' ' 10i'' 4 I' ' ' ''''''''':'''''''''''''':: '''' :r ' - 1'11:071 w '1 '''t l il1114 14 0 1 ingham palace is not more Brit' ! 11 :: '1 c: ish This is a trade Journal 4i i : 464-- eli jy:: g'1:1)4 00"'cirit ':— n 0 or!Al ( 'i t 1n 1 ''° 46 4 fattemptng to promote nothing ' ' '1-'st&1r--- t JILt : ' 4 ' s s but the truth and economics 4' ' t il 7to ' ' ''' te 1 t:: 1 ' 4 r1 ' from the British government : a ' - - t 4 ' VIP i ft'‘---and war standpoint In its issue : t I 'f ' ' ' ::'i4c- - 'I 4 26 of May t it minimizes talk ' 4 At -P'1 tit4'''!' 11: --A 1kt ' that the British are reselling 7 ) t'k'' $ It ' 'T-:- ' Y7!til our vitamin powders and then q 1 d 4 'v 1 ctill' 4 1 717 t of g ' 1 -it voluntarily goes on to ask ' "- - '3ttt IN V1 ( ' i' 1 tv''AV!?:'' IA: : ' ) r Ir' 1 it' why the British want 100 more ji " '' ' ' ' ' '' : 4 6 ' '11 k"i'C'4! Ott i A V 1 tankers when it woulet seem— f -1t : 41" il-'' Jr s'4Ns1 4'114'4'11 r i' Mr Ickes to the contrary not: 1 rr t ' 4 't ' I V )I: iip 1 a 4 ''ts 41-1 withstanding — they already ' I I' 1 t A i a'0' ' - AI 4 A ‘ N ''"° Ir'i't 4' ' '' I t :: have enough r N tf N ' 4 144' t 1 i ' -' : About the vitamin powders ' Fr Ill' i TZ A t I 1 i- -: 14 '4:44:- ' 5 ::r''t '111 :'0' '0' le' V4 ' ir it says the point has been re11‘' : ''" e leI it:: ' o 4' ' 4 of but ° i s rmfet:ported and complained 4 ! ' 4' ' '"-$' ' it must be untrue or true to !f0 41 5 ftr' ' ' ' - 'l ' ' IT "' such a small extent as to be ' ' ' ii 4r 034' I Then it adds:: : ':N-:4--- ' inconsequential 1' t I Nt ' 41 t q "Consternation has also &en e rzz ' v -0s I : 4V '''' !' 'i ' Ma ' caused in American oil circles ' '- ' t by the request that an addi)'''' :17 tional 100 American oil tankers 11' L' ' ' at should be placed the disposal "72 0 9'4'0 - cp 1 t dr1 a of Britain Fifty have already r t '' ibeen transferred t (and the 4 ker -L situation) has seriously dis- erilr ' —-industrialINA highly or: ized eastern states not un- 1'oi 4101" 1 Vtcrttilkktivitmc 30tm111111611c fr!tfikaattiltsvolottato naturally therefore some of the interests affected have been asking why Britain needs these 4- ' q --"-"s - to Peaches and Peach Days Furnish Fun ' Food and Flavor '1 4 4 194t Roosevelt Defense Policy Draws Criticism of Kent Manning ft A7-‘ti-4---- - II r AVI 444 The Tribune Is s member of the Associated Prole The Asaociated Prete Is triustrsis entitled to 'Ito Pee for isproduction et all pees dispatehope eroditAid to it or pot otherwise altdited Lu thia paper and helve published bereiss 1 r t 0 leeued every morning by gen IA k 50 i ' VWi EstablIshed'April 15 1871 I - -- SepteraVer 2 0 Well—If You Insist Behind the Scenes of Current News el"? gake irribunt— It i ' 1 - ' |