Show ay A released by western newspaper union WRITE WHITE COLLAR WORKER 1 g IS TRE THE FORGOTTEN NIAN MAN v ON A BIG munitions plant be being ing built with government money at af wilmington ill carpenters are paid 25 a day men t trundling V i wheelbarrows or working with pick pich or shovel are paid 16 and 17 a day in chicago 50 miles away the clerical forces working in the of flees ot of business and industry are being paid from 17 to 35 a week the carpenters and laborers in wilmington may and do dress in in 1 I 0 coveralls they change shirts pos sibly once a week they wear coarse un shined shoes they enjoy the lower rentals of the rural districts the clerical worker iri in chi chicago mg 0 if he is to hold his job must have i a a clean shirt every day he must wear a white collar there m must be a crease in his trousers his shoes must be kept cleaned and shined lie he must pay the much higher rentals of the city his income will average about one sixth of that of the carpenter at wilmington to meet the ever increasing dei mand of taxes and labor and to 1 continue to operate business and industry have been forced to economize in every possible way the white collar man has paid the bill he is the forgotten man of today 0 0 0 i WILL AID IN THE FIGHT DOOR COUNTY wisconsin that strip of land that separates lake michigan from green bay and of J which the town of sturgeon bay is j the county seat was settled j nally by scandinavian belgian and dutch farmers the well kept t farms of today made from the land i from which their ancestors cut the heavy pine timber are in the hands 1 I of the second and third generations i of the original settlers these farm vf ers many of them with kin kinfolks folks in the countries enslaved by hitler are enjoying the opportunity of building sub chasers to destroy ger iman man submarines at the shipyards 4 in sturgeon bay far removed from the rt scene of conflict is being built a fleet of the little boats that are I 1 destined to see service in the atlantic and the yards are manned by scandinavian belgian and dutch 1 I farmers TRE TAKE TO THE HILLS LS A FEW NIGHTS AGO I 1 sa sat it in an audience the meri men of which leonist consisted largely of big game hunters soldiers of fortune explorers men t who had been to the uttermost ends of the earth and whose lives have been filled with hair raising adventure the speaker of the evening was a little happy faced woman and her subject was her mountain farm home in the ozarks she talked about the charming characteristics of the i ozark hills people and their simple uneventful lives of pet lambs and puppy dogs of quiet evenings before the fireplace in a log house of wild flowers and fruits and she held that audience of he men as no lion hunter had ever held them she demonstrated that it is the sim simple Pleas pleasures uTes that have most appeal the speaker was mrs marge lyon author of take to the hills REAL HOME OF REAL CULTURE OUR GREAT CITIES have no monopoly on culture it is not a prod 1 act of the night club the cocktail lounge or the off color theatrical production production it is a product of the schools the churches of a clean living home loving people such as those found in the rural sections of america culture does not breed hillers Hit lers Musso unis or it breeds love not hate among a cultured class you do not find a subversive element seeking to destroy an established philosophy of government 1 the ithe dies committee does not find enemies of our american form of government among our rural population it is in the small town and atoa aon the farm where you find a love of country respect for its laws and its institutions it is there you find ahe intelligence that is the foundation of culture 11 r the american rural community is the real home of american culture 0 0 yi IV NATIONAL INCOME K THE department of commerce 1 te tells US us the national income in 1902 amounted to and in 1940 it was in 38 ii years we had multiplied the nation al income more than four times we had more than four times as much r to divide in 1940 than in 1902 that etwas was accomplished despite wars and depressions it was accomplished L under the american system of free if competition F amore I 1 MORE THAN JAP CAN CHEW y WITH HIS BIG TEETH the little brown man of the pacific will find I 1 he has bitten off more than he can A I 1 i chew when the end is reached J the japs will be back on their is lands they will have lost korea Manchu kuo their foothold lo in china and indochina indo china and the hundreds of small mandated islands in the pait cefic the war they so treacherous t r ly started will set them back to the days of perry and japan as a great nation as a world power will pass from the picture ikass |