Show TiimIhv Morning -- nYour Wartime Problems — By Richard Hart — frna loving wives get powerfully in the way of their husbands when they try to make progress in the army or navy Others exert all their wifely psychology to help their spouses over the rough spots This is the story of Lillian J He and her soldier husband ied been terriblycuss spoiled by his she spoiled family A likely him all over again and everyone was quite surprised when he enlisted in the signal corps It was no surprise however her family when Lillian told find friends that ' she was going to rent a furnished room in the town near his camp where he was to receive his basic training He passed high in the classification tests and was being recommended for the officer training school Actually the three month basic training period turned out to be a second honeymoon for them She got a part-tim- e job as a waitress and that gave them a' little spending money He could aee her during early evening and over most week ends She watched him sued his old His muscles careless habits tightened his spirits brightened and he proved a popular soldier She literally conducted a personal canteen for members of his outfit — planning inexpensive picnic excursions and staging informal parties in their room Then finally orders came through to transfer him to the Would officer training school sne follow him again? Of course But in she wanted to badly thinking it over she came to the corclusion that she would seriously hamper the intensive studies at the school She had hoard that the routine was no and required almost every picric e hours second of hta She also knew that there was a certain advantage to be a -- four-by-fi- off-tim- ve member of a small study group — something that is rarely possible if a wife waits outside the camp Lillian J went back home and her hubby now thoroughly on his own reconciled himself to her absence The course proved tough the pace swift and he needed every hour of his working day She came over every they Sunday afternoon crowded into several hours their experiences of the week Of course he got his commission The money she earned in part-tim- e jobs made it possible for him to buy without stint the best possible uniforms and And then their equipment honeymoon started all over again for they found themselves comfortably prepared for the next step in his army career Asides to Readers To M A C: A common law wife if openly declared has the same status as a legal wife as far as allotments are concerned But wiiy not go through with an actual ceremony? To A Z: With a deformed back you have little chance of even making limited service There are some physical handicaps that make army living too difficult even for the patiyotlc fellow Better get some sort of a defense job w'here you can do your bit but stay at home To Mrs L S: You might just reach California in time barely to see him off as he Is at an embarkation camp Seems like a waste of money and if you jeopardize your job why do it? To K L: Your many questions cannot be answered here especially in view of the fact that most of them have been discussed before in this spot If you have any problem on your mind write to Richard Hart care of The Salt Lake A stamped addressed Tribune envelope will bring a personal reply Youn" Film Fans Mourn Death of Buck Jones HOLLYWOOD Nov 30 (UP) — Buck Jones is dead in a Boston night club fire of all places and the small boys of this nation have lost a friend wealthy As one of Buck who went independently The few the movie cowboys never to to great lengths to set a good ex- ride a mechanical horse nor hire ample for his youthful fans at a stunt man he was one of Hollybeloved characters hors cpry ' matinees would have wood's best With only an eighth grade eduhated for them to learn that he cation he joined the army in 1910 succumbed to inhalation of smoke ld fought the Moros in the Philipand burned lungs in the Massa- pines became an Oklahoma cowchusetts hot spot the Cocoanut hand and did his first acting in Brothers’ circus’ n Jones liked to tell Ringling Grove He is survived by his widow and his young admirers didn't hang a daughter married to Noah out in night cibs Beery Jr the young character actor Be to Present Had Anyhow fellers he wasn’t there for whisky drinking and cigaret smoking The New' England theater men who played his movies were holding a dinner in his honor He had to be on hand Buck never smoked a cigaret on POSTON Ariz Nov 30 UP) — the screen He never drank a glass of whisky nor beat his horse Eight young Japanese evacuees And he always gave the Injuns disregarding the threats of proa fighting chance thereby explain- axis leaders and the pleas of their ing why there were 5000000 mem- parents enlisted in the United bers of the Buck Jones Rangers’ States army at the height of the Kan club The Indiana cowboy who hated revolt In the Poston relocation to admit he was born in Vincennes center it was disclosed Monday more than dial f a century ago alNorris James press and intelliways listened carefully to hi‘s vociferous fans He got thousands gence officer for the war relocaof letters if the villain so much as tion authority said that after inpoked him in a picture More itial the Japanese volunthousands of complaints came teers training be would assigned to army he kissed the girl Buck’s as units of none that interpreters wanted admirers lovey-dove- y business And they Their action James said meant rever received It after Buck got a complete severing of ties with into his stride their families Eight Klim a Year In a move to restore the disFor most of his 20 years in rupted civil administration of he made eight pictures a unit No 1 of the Poston center film year with a few de luxe added to evacuees loyal to the United starters reared a family bought States W Wade Head direca vacht and estate and became tor Monday declared all civil commercial positions in the CAN DO and unit vacant An election will be held to fill the YOU officesa In rebellion declared by Head In the entire field of aspirin than' St Joseph to be quelled proaxis elements on The aafec none Ajpinn None faster 18 forced the city counNovember 10c sold Also seller at world largest in economy sires — 36 ta Wets 2tc 100 cil to resign and stopped all work tablet Joe Demand St Joseph Aspirin by 6500 of the 8500 Inhabitants He-me- Jap Evacuees Join Army NOTHING MORE FOR Have You "Got Your Eye” On Home? Have you been looking at a house you’d like to buy —if you had the money? Or would you like to look over our list of good available homes with a view to buying one — and obtaining a loan to finance your purchase? Either way we can provide the funds on convenient terms on our own — First Security Low Cost Loans year) or F H A Loans ( '"WHATEVER YOUR LOAN REQUIREMENTS Ask FIRST at First Security Trust Co Postoffice Street Main Opposite Fireman Gave Night Club Official Okeh ?FIk Giant Warship IBomber Crash Kills Ten Awaits Dip Young British Actor Joins S Service Report Shows Site Was Inspected On November 20 -- (Continued From Page One) screaming and yelling as we stumbled our way across the bodies” Walsh said that he and two men in the party forced the door on the Shawmut street side “As soon as I put my feet on the sidewalk I pulled out at least 20 or 25 people There was not more than a minute or a minute and a half from the time I saw the fire till the time I got on the aide-walk "I was behind the &r when somebody puled out a light” Bradley testified "I told Stanley the (Stanley T Thomaszewski bus boy who admittedly started the fire accidentally) to go over to the corner and make the customer pot on the light" While Bradley thought the customer had merely switched off the one of the bulbs had light actually been loosened It was while Thomaszewski was trying to screw back the bulb that he lighted the match which ignited a palm and caused the disaster T w'ent back to my work” "All of a sudBradley continued den somebody screamed ‘fire!’ I Jumped out from behind the bar One of the palm trees was burning Then a flash came I tried to throw water on it but the whole ceiling was ablaze I hollered to everybody to take it easy” The palm tree Bradley said was in & corner of the lounge near the kitchen and there was an immediate panic w’ith everybody "hollering and screaming” Bradley said he wasn’t sure the fire started in the palm tree All he knew was "there was a flash and the flames ran across the cei- December 1 Bart ’ Salt £akc Tribune 30 CD — PHILADELPHIA Nov The battleship New Jersey heaviest ever built will be launched at the Philadelphia navy yard December 7 Rear Admiral M F commandant of the Draemel Fourth naval district announced Monday Although her exact tonnage Is a wartime secret the New Jersey will have a greater displacement than her sistership the Iowa launched at the Brooklyn navy August 27 yard last The two battleships— first of a HOLLYWOOD Nov 30 (P)— Freddie Bartholomew British-bor- n film actor who passed his eighteenth28 birthanday last March nounced Monday he enlisted air Saturday in the army corps and expects to enter active service In January “America gave me my opsaid In portunity” Freddie announcing his enlistment “I am glad of the chance to serve her” He came to the United States 10 years ago and has appeared in a number of films outstanding having been "David Copperfield” and “Captains Courageous” new class —originally were anbut nounced as 45000-tonnetheir design later wras changed to of lessons incorporate results World w'ar II learned in battles of Admiral DraemtJ said The New Jersey will be christened by Mrs Charles Edison wife of the former secretary of the ship’s navy who officiated at the keel laying September 16 1940 Edison now is governor of New rs Head of NAM Sees Postwar As Vital Era Jersey SAN DIEGO Cal Nov 30 ns funerl arranged with mating r MbsnSftvsTVONal aisxffl conf'dence Prced uniformly affe"f'°n toll chosen appointments CC°rdlr)3 o the Ser KespectfulL ft- - v’' :'HZ y-- r assf ’ hi- ? f 4 " O J I: r - -- - Hat 7 a fa ' ’ - ' Jje4 Bi 34: SMI v s f Tf’-- ' sat r slow-dow- Utla Dear Friend: IIS® MH — Qtlt millionth he was the twenty-fiv- e visitor to enter the building t ‘ £1 a routine flight Reason for the crash had not been established Air base officials were conducting an investigation UP) — James A Getchell marine private from Detroit Mich walked into the Army and Navy Y M C A Monday and was handed a $25 war bond and a $5 meal ticket The i NEW YORK NovJ 30 UP) — bewildered marine was informed William P Witherow president of the National Association of Manufacturers said Monday there must be a quick postwar relaxation of government controls qver business If the system of free enterprise Is to survive in the United States W'ithercw Pittsburgh steel manufacturer in a statement preceding the opening of the association convention Wednesday at which 4000 of the country’s leadindustrialists are expected to ing be present said: Hi! "Patriotism has been substituted for the profit motive as a driving force and the managers of industry are measuring up In every respect to their great responsibilities When the war is over the time 'N'y will come -- bn patriotism no ling” "Somehow I managed to get longer will be stimulated by presiP® across the room and out into the ent emotions 'and the desire of to war win the kitchen” Bradley testified "Some producing of the cooks rushed in with fire Must End Quickly extinguishers and I went back In to help but the smoke hit me in “If the present trends toward the face I stood there shouting regimentation and central authori ‘come out this door!’ but nobody ity are not checked up short f when this time arrives — If they heard me" as new order’— ‘the are acoepted Witness Breaks there will be no turning back” Witherow said he had found At this point Bradley broke down Tears streamed down his evidence on every hand that: face and his voice choked as he “(1) The management of Ameritold how he finally managed to can industry will permit nothing clamber out a kitchen window within their control to stand-iV into an alley way There he said the way of the speediest possible he beat out the flames in his hair victory v‘ ' with his bare hands “(2) The principles of free enThe bus boy Thomaszewski terprise be preserved intact extold the board substantially the cept when modification for the same story that he had related to duration of the war is essential ' r for victory police Sunday night “(3) Corrective measures be "I was stationed in the Melody lounge" he said “I was told to taken bv appropriate executive or go over and put on a light in the legislative action to end labor corner near the kitchen I got up union practices which by output on a chair to put it on I didn’t restrictions strikes or know where it was so I lit a or ‘organizing activities as usual’ cripple the war effort” match “The bulb only had been loosened Surprise In Store and I just turned it on” Referring to the output of The boy said he then stepped since Pearl down shook the match and then American industry Isaid: dropped it on the floor where he Harbor Witherow Is lifted“When ultimilitary censorship stepped on it Just then he said mately some of the production he heard someone cry' fire and he achievements of this war wiji looked up and saw the flames ”1 tried to put it out but the amaze even those who have coma of American flames came so fast I couldn’t do to take the miracles methods as a matmanufacturing anything Bradley (the bartender) ter of course” came over and threw a glass of Witherow said that so long as water at the flames the war lasted the central govern“The room was packed with ment must take the people Soon the whole ceiling for regimentation of responsibility the nation’s corner was ablaze It spread faster physical and human resources and than a gasoline fire” “individual enterprise necesthat The boy said the flames drove must take a back seat for him to the kitchen from where he sarily the duration” led some people to safety "This regimentation” he said Reilly asked the boy if the lights “must not be mistaken as the basic went out when he fixed the bulb source of efficiency in industrial “No” he answered management— even in the trouAfter escaping from the club bled times of war the boy wandered around looking “These abilities and skills to v SIOUX CITY Iowa Nov 30 (UP) — Names of 10 victims in the crash of a heavy army bomber in a snowstorm near the Sioux City Iowa army air base early Monday morning were revealed Monday night The victims were: Second Lieutenant Henry Bunn Springfield 111 the pilot Second Lieutenant Edward E Lowry San Francisco Cal the copilot Second Lieutenant Harry Kaufmann Kansas City Mo Second Lieutenant Leon R Christensen Caldwell Idaho Second Lieutenant Earl B Reynolds Colony Kan Technical Sergeant James G Kirkpatrick Grandview Texas Staff Sergeant Wayne A Simms Plant City Fla Sergeant Robert E Abies Akron Ohio Sergeant Alexander R Armstrong Jr Detroit Mich and Sergeant Arlo H Brown Stockport Iowa The plane burst into flames on striking the ground trapping the men inside The crash occurred shortly after the plane took off on 1912 fiv ok f'jf ms '(H u I hbikev Jwrkj V rv’ e J -- t s'xaxrtKi fS - v v: ifttr-ri - - 3 - mi Mfiic IBI j for a fellow busboy and went home at 4:30 a m The next day he continued the search and while seeking information at police headquarters told his story to officers A member of the fire department arson squad Louis Cohe said he questioned Thomaszewski at the scene and that the boy claimed he knew nothing about how the fire started Cohen testified that he questioned all persons he could find who had been in the club at the time of the fire but was unable to discover anyone "able to tell where or how” the fire started Tells of Refusal Henry W Bimbler a waiter In the main dining room testified that there was a lengthy delay in getting people out through the kitchen door because a dishwasher refused to give up the keys Bimbler first saw flames when going over to the desk near the main door to have the head waiter "okeh” a check "Flames were coming up the stairs from the Melody lounge” he said "I ran to the kitchen and shouted ‘fire’ There were no flames on the kitchen stairs I went up again and everything was in flames "I went down again and shoved nine girls into an icebox I told them to stay there until we got a door open I asked a dishwasher to give me the keys to the door but he told me ‘I can’t give you the keys until the boss says so’ Four or five of us then pried the door open” Leo S Glvonettl of Medford acting as captain at the main entrance on Piedmont street said the main dining room was packed to capacity and that he had been turning away customers for an hour and a half before thenearly fire produce have been jdllyk m “"T I I Landon Warns Of Oil Crisis i Nov 30 by a shortage of crude petroleum necessary for war because of "typically dumb bureaucracy” The 1936 Republican presidential nominee speaking at a dinner celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of oil discovery in midcontinent fields asserted the oil shortage at first was one of faulty distribution “Now it’s a matter of basic supply” Landon declared “The oil industry must have a top rating in material and man power as a e£5l?5lr: f “Ice-col- It’s Coca-Co- la d is more than s£l Yes sirce thirst-quenchi- ng refreshing There’s an art in its making There’s in its production The only thing like know-ho- w Coca-Co- la I speck & “I speak for Coca-Cofor Coke Both mean the same thing itself Nobody else la can duplicate it” the real thing coming from a single source and well known to the community’ iOITUD UNDII AUTHOIITY COCA-COL- A is Coca-Co- la OP BOTTLING CO T H I COCA-COL- A COMPANY SALT LAKE CITY Y ’ 1 1 Silii£'tlll'llJs them” SIM PI Jf a vital industry” He added that “all the tanks and airplanes in the world can accomplish nothing without lubricating oil and gasoline to run ASHY V MAh jr UP) — Alf M Landon warned Monday night that America is threatened HSIP Jltl U QUICK 1 A I I ii lowest possible cost” Kan ” developed through the years through generations as a result of free competition to meet the demands of customers "They are now employed In the war effort — not only to provide the things that are needed to win the W'ar — but to provide them at the fastest possible rate at the NEODESHA I? iflt(WVS I Si ”i If 5Lr it 5 7 |