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Show THE PROGRESSIVE OPINION Piano Is Learned With Clever Chart Mercury freezes at 37.96 de-grees F. You'll Be Proud of This Dinner Cloth I,, Pattern 7142 a joy when ENTERTAINING'S you've crocheted dinner cloth to set off your fine china! Make this heirloom cloth in string. It's filet crochet that has a clear chart to follow. Pattern 7142 contains instructions and chart for making cloth in various sizes: illustrations of it and stitches; materials needed. Send your order to: U - ' , :. Thrilling To Be Appreciated "CAY, you can really PLAY!" 0 Wouldn't you love to have that said of you? You can, you know, teach yourself to play with a chart. You don't have to be talented! Our piano instruction book, In-cluding keyboard chart, has the basic chords you'll need for playing the short-cu- t way. Explains elements of mu-sic, gives three airs for practice. Send your order to: , READER-HOM- SERVICE 117 Minna St. San Francisco, Calif. Send 15 cents in coins for your copy of QUICK COURSE IN PIANO PLAY-ING. LISTEN TO BAUKHAGE The Nat'l Farmer Home Hour 10:30 each morning, Monday through Friday KUTA, Salt Lake at 570 KC ' and ' other NBC Blue Network Stations Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dept. 117 Minna St. San Francisco, Calif. Enclose 15 cents in coins for Pat-tern No Name j Address ' I Address Name ' "What's cjhis? JLm Ifs 35 feet of RtS2!34 intestines, 6 or 6 times the r kj&iH length of your body, thru which YXj everything you t"VVr eat must pass. f yy"' Nature usually needs no help, but the wrong food, or too much of it, can cause temporary blockage (constipation) with aggra-vating gas, headaches, listlessness or bad breath. ADLERIKA, with its 6 carminative and 3 laxative ingre-dients, relieves gas quickly and gets bowel action surprisingly fast. Ask your druggist for ADLERIKA. mm Best for h:i California Navel . are stidltsi. They peel jiffy, divide easily int0 juicy sections! They are ideal for recipes and betttr meals or bedtime eanogl Their juice is richer It has more Titan;;: C and A, and calcium, health in every glass. Those stamped "Sn;:: are the finest from u cooperating growers. "' -- i i ) Hi.,,, Copyright, 1942, California fruit Gr. .. L. D. S. RELIEF SOCIETY PIN S2 We repair diamond rings, $tjtlVJ manuacture jewelry, make Club pins pay goo Prices wSXyA for diamonds, sell jewelry kpT3?3 K'"B at reasonable price. O. C. TANNER COMPANY OFFICE EQUIPMENT MEW AND USUD desks and chairs, files, typewriters, adding inch's, safes, Do You Like Jingle Contests? Raleigh Cigarettes are now run-ning another series of weekly con-tests for those who can supply the best last line to a jingle. Over 100 liberal prizes each week. Watch this paper for details. Adv. At the first sign of a cola, mafce 1 JSP y0"mlntl to avoll as much I sniffling, sneezing, soreness and 1 stuffy condition of your nostrils aa 1 possible. Insert Mentholatum In 1 each nostril. Also rub It vigorously 1 2??Sthre wchaeystM- eYntohuo'nlatbuemdelighted i combats I com misery and helps restore com- - I lort. Jars or tubes. 30c. I BEAUTY SCHOOL Qllkh SCHOOL OF BKAUTY CULTURE Largest In the West. 18 years sue cesBful operation. Modern, thorough, prac- tical Enroll anytime. Write for catalogue. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Beconditioned Band Instruments at bargain prices. Liberal trades BEESLEY MUSIC USED EQUIPMENT INTERMOUNTAIN MERCHANTS SUPPLY (Dealers in Bankrupt Stocks) We buy and sell all kinds of business fixtures and equipment. Cash registers, meat scales. Coal and Electric Used Ranges Largest selection in the west. $10 to $75 Fully reconditioned, guaranteed. 1 year terms. INTERMOUNTAIN UTILITIES SlSouHStMeJit USED CARS FINE USED CARS Liberal Credit Terms JESSE M. CHASE ,Buy Sel1 Trde 651 So. Main Street Salt Lake City also locations in CIVIL SERVICE BORDER PATROLMAN 'nT' men 21"35. Physically quail. s??, clv'' service positions. BMg5:. P,,atndWarteCrn "" M"d "V Vf LAD IF YOU BAKE AT nirfSL HOME, REMEMBERTHE YTr-N- ONLY YEA&T WITHAL1. I THESE VITAMINS 15 L yUJ fleischmann's vamoJ'4nn,,,,rTA20,(,0 Units B,-- 150 Units H I00 .Units ffo'J Vitamin Units (Si. mne oven. Ask for Fleischmann's Fresh Yeast with the yellow ... Bonds or Bondage It's Up to Yo Buymg U. S. Defense Bonds Will T r V'OUR VISIT can be ii I rn.de doubly cnioy- - Mjj Hold Tempi. Sq'f fcf m .i..nd shopping dis- - I FEEDS AND SEEDS Al kinds of field and garden seeds. applies Baby Chicks. Hardware. Fencing Oil. Binding twine. faun Flour All kind, of case Eocenes Honey molasses, syrup, salt and many other items Always a savin buy em-l- ' S? .I,'.d dlPDointment. Don't dehvery-- Our trucks will be by y"r SingW.reSs.1tcf0r Maxfleld Feed. Coal. Seed A Flour Co. Whse. A main office 8rd S 1st W 3 T Ask Your Grocer for... CREAM of the WESTR oTThe WeTt'Ctf "Cream W -deliciousTt h5 WrrieS vanish" Its r yu Phbeutfaf- i- minr to k r nutritious elementslvTyW mant Phosphorus, Tnd alaum 'VitaminA' VL "ate. Too it h ln eir natural eat it the 8 flavor a11 its own and the oftencr y better you will like it. PI trict yet1"""'"8 dollar, to spend H or save, I I HEW 550,000 H COFFEE SHOP HARD of HEARING Before bayins: a 'V Bearing aid f A. end for the I "if interring lto ( ftOt !Sgg3 OTARION of SALT LAKE fZf 511 Mclntyre Bldg. MfelPj-b- fi slt, Lake City, Utah. ! Please send me free PiSSSr booklet "The Story of fe- - Otarion." Name Address Not Go WITH ADVERTISE Thev6nr,'Sin9 h'9h at a"-- prices d 90 together 6Xtremely It , only 'compatible to each other. no ell Whkh is ""advertise cn CStS mr9 tha" V" afford to ! Whenever you ' vertised 9 'nt Stre and buy an "em ' ! what. you areC ndise' n doesn't make any difference , quality and serwc6!!!"9 mr9 fr yOUr money-m- ore same amount fo'C6 thanyouwuld getifyou spentthe J L Some,hi"9 which was not advertised ' BAB yS' e team locomohves ever built, have recently been added to the large fleet of other super-powere- d rail giants placed in service during the past five years. W Millions of dollars also have been invested in freight cars, new rails and property improvements. For defense as ovo well as industry's normal needs, Union Pacific the Strategic Middle Route connecting East with West Writt upplies the demand for dependable transportation. " yTicketOffice.Hotel Utah Bldg. Phone 3-- 1 544 sWION PACIFIC RAILROAD "Whale of Game On California's Monterey penin-sula, south of San Francisco, there is a golf course whose sixteenth hole is only a few feet from the ocean. The 200-yar- d water hazard between this green and the seventeenth hole is apt to thrown even the best golfer somewhat off his game; the watery stretch is a rendezvous for seals, aealions and whales. Theme song wedding might ned an Angel-par- tye ,. wedding costume is a rf; board wings covered 5r which she wears fast ; Powerful Eight pounds of uranium contains enough atomic energy to drive the liner Queen Mary across the Atlan-- I tie, if the energy could be released by neutron bombardment AUSSIES: 'Give Us Guns And Well All Fight' The eastern end of the huge Japa-nese was Be-ing pincers unquestionably aimed at Australia, and00"15." already baa ings of Port Darwin been carried out, with considerable damage and casualties, proving to the Australians that the enemy was indeed at her gates. Instant response of the 7,000,000 population, only a few generations removed from hardiest pioneers, and with a long record of providing some of the strongest fighting men in warfare's history, was "give us guns and we'll all fight." It was evident that help already had arrived from the United States in this area and that more was on the way. Australia, most strategists felt, was considered the real hop-o-point for any Allied offensive in the Far East. It also was clear that, insofar as it was within the Australian govern-ment's power, its manhood would be given the guns. Only a few felt that the Jap at-tacks on Port Darwin were of a "divertive character" designed to keep the Aussies from sending any considerable aid to Java. Most believed with newsman W. W. Chaplin that the Battle for Aus-tralia would begin even before the faU (if fall there should be) of the Maginot line of the East Indies, the strong and exceedingly populous is-land of Java. An actual invasion attempt was believed a not distant certainty, ei-ther at Port Darwin or at Cape York, the spearhead of the eastern coastal plain of the continent "down under" the only really populated WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS By Edward C. Wayne U-Bo- at Shells West Coast Oil Field In First Assault on U. S. Mainland; Japanese Consolidate New Positions As Battle for East Indies Continues a(rEeDITOR'S NOTE When opinions are expressed In these eolamns, tbey Lho- -f of the news analyst and not necessar'ly of this newspaper.) ' .Released by Western Newspaper TT'"" ' I - f a , 4 x I til t i ' ' , ' - - . The three-ma- n planning committee which acts in an advisory capacity to Donald M. Nelson, chairman of the War Production board, at a meeting in Washington, D. C. Left to right: Thomas C. Blaisdell, assistant director of the national researches planning board; Fred Searles, consultant on ordnance, ammunition division, United States army, and Robert Nathan, assistant director of progress reports, War Pfoduction board. CHURCHILL: Heeds Critics Winston Churchill, heeding the sharp criticism that followed Singa-pore and the "channel escape" of the Scharnhorst, Gneisenau and Prince Eugen to Helgoland Bight, streamlined his cabinet. Out went Lord Beaverbrook, be-cause of and his retire-ment was followed by a statement that he might come to the United States in liaison work. Chief burden on Churchill had been his frequent appearances be-fore the house of commons meet-ing his critics with bursts of ora-tory that won him one parhamenta- - section. On this plain lies Sydney, and the city of Melbourne and all towns of any. consequence. And toward this objective the main force of Japanese blitz was be-lieved heading. SPRING: Whose Offensive? Some experts in studying the pub-lic reflexes to war talk felt that the constant worry and guesswork about "Hitler's spring offensive" was chat-ter along the wrong psychological lines. Some hints of diffeent thinking than this had come out of the White House. President Roosevelt had dropped more than a few words to indicate that the spring offensive might not be Hitler's at all. Here were a couple of his state-ments: "We must search out the enemy and hit him and hit him hard." SHELLS: On West Coast - The West coast had been waiting for enemy shell fire since the day the Japs launched their sneak at-tack on Pearl Harbor but when these first shots came, they came from the sea and not from the air as most persons had believed they would. In the Pacific twilight, as the President addressed the nation over the radio on the progress and course of the war an enemy submarine appeared off Santa Barbara, Calif., and fired from 15 to 25 shells into the Elwood oil fields near that city. Oil wells in the area are located right on the beach. No casualties and only slight damage to the oil fields were first reported. Radio stations carrying the Presi-dent's speech did not go off the air until he had finished speaking and then a blackout of the entire area was ordered. ROOSEVELT: Progress Report Revealing that thousands of Unit-ed States troops already are in the southwestern Pacific, President Roosevelt, in his latest fireside chat, told the world that soon the United Nations "and not our enemies, will have, the offensive; we, not they, will win the final hnttloc or,, nnt m Pi ""' ? 1 "It is quite possible, and at no far distant time, that Alaska and New York might be bombed." These were not defensive utter-ances, since the latter was coupled with the President's thought that a "house to house" defense of our coastlines was neither possible nor the proper way to consider fighting the war. It was not "searching the enemy out" to do this. From this many gained the im-pression that the looked-fo- r (and feared) Hitler spring offensive might not be of so much consequence as the spring offensive of the Allied powers. One observer pointed out that we had sent troops to Ireland, to Bur-ma, to Australia, to Java, to Ice-land, to Aruba to countless spots of importance in the scheme of the war, and that these movements, few of them, could be regarded as de-fensive in character. They felt that it was quite in or-der, in fact of better public psychol-ogy to think in terms of a bold and d offensive of our own than to speculate and fear a Nazi ac-tion. Warrior in Bataan they, will make the final peace.," While enemy shells were landing on the California coast, the Presi-dent promised to carry the war to the Axis enemy in distant lands and g waters wherever he can be found. America, he said, will harness its unequalled production facilities to the war effort and pro-duce totals of guns, planes, tanks and ships formerly deemed impos-sible. BURMA: Defense Stiffens The addition of d Chi-nese troops to the northern flank of the British in the Burma battle had found Chiang men able to take, at least temporarily, the of-fensive. Japs holding an important river near Chiengmai were driven back, and the China troops took up offen-sive positions, some believed within the borders of Thailand. Additional E.A.F. planes were added to the Tiger Squadron of the volunteer American forces assigned to protect the Burma road, and al-though the port of Rangoon had been made useless, Chiang was thought already to have opened new sources of supply by other ports. Churchill was believed to be "see-ing the light" that empire was go-ing to have to relax its firm hand on the natives, and eventually to give over to them much of the work of freeing themselves from the at-tacking Japanese, in India. Changes in the British cabinet had seemed to indicate this, at any rate, and many observers felt that all the disastrous outcomes of the early bat-tles could only be overcome, in the last analviii hv Wtinrr lha r,f..,A Mr Stafford Lord Cripps Beaverbrook ry battle after another but at what cost to his vitality and accomplish-ments could readily be imagined. Into this breach Churchill fired the "man of the hour," Sir Stafford Cripps, fresh from his triumphs in diplomacy in Russia, a man who had the confidence of the "man in the street," and who was to take over the job of being the govern-ment's man before commons. Thre were other changes, but these were most vital. The cabinet was reduced to seven men, and some action of this type had been vigorously demanded. , JAVA: Mighty Battle From the narrow waters to the east and west of Java had come re-ports of mighty air and naval en-gagements, proving that the last stronghold of the Dutch in the East Indies was not going to be given up without a bitter struggle, also that the Japs were not going to "by-pass" Java without at least a ma-jor try to capture it. American and Dutch warships had come to grips with the invasion force attempting to take glamorous Bali from the "blind side," hoping to swarm over the island and thus overlook their quarry Java from a vantage point separated from the mainland only by a mile-wid- e strait. First reports had been highly op-timistic, reminiscent of the American-- Dutch resistance to the Japa-nese landing forces in the Straits of Macassar. Eighteen enemy war-ships and transports had been sunk ' ? - ' -- awiogcu uur pianes snot down, with a loss to the Allies of two de-stroyers and four planes. Most significant in the battle, how-ever, were the reports that the new-est types of (presuma-bly navy planes) were being used and with telling effect. For once it seemed that the Allies had a considerable air force in ac-tion, whether based on an aircraft carrier or on Sourabaya could only be guessed at. As to the word from Tokyo, the Japanese admitted that a strong naval battle was in progress, but asserted that the Allied ships "ran off" with severe losses, and denied any serious losses to themselves. Just how well Java, with its 40 millions of population, could be de-fended, still remained to be seen with the Japs pretty well ensconced on Sumatra. get into the fight in a big way, in-stead of leaving them to be made into fifth columnists by the advanc-ing Japs. These observers pointed out that Java's population of 40,000,000 per-sons would be hard to conquer. MISCELLANY: Uvalde, Texas: John Nance' Gar-ner, former vice president, in a rare Interview, said, "There is no lack of morale, no complacency among the people." Washington, D. C: Senator Gil-lette charged that huge interests had en deliberately blocking agricul-re'- s effort to provide grain alco-- 1 from which synthetic rubber uld be manufactured. nt-.- ... n j trir?Tand.nt f lhe 16lh naval Adm. wet. is the senior nava,0, R u ing w.th General MacArthur on Ba an pem.nl.. Admira, Rck men are using artillery and nth. equ.prr.ent salvaged from the naval base before .bandonm-- S! ECONOMIC: 'Fat Wonderland' . Though it was the mgton slogan that v,e "Zst our way to victory, cnnl duce our " tl pro" curves were Uvi' rpidrdUCtin on the heels of congas oa,UPWard priations upward ?i s of hn for war purposes hnS 01 safdcomlnritrtrA0"6-li- ke returning to ?fntmerica Was of food and furs a:d?,ndnd Leon Henderson wam.j along the America there was something nk. g difference between" b,Un Power of the Z of purchaseable LI Val"e were not TellT enough bonds, buying money to buy thing. J00 mu get. could-- ., -- werethiXg'do" i tion was going ahead Produ-faster- , in a wider ann and of WIder providing the weep sary for war. mater'als neces RESCUED: On the High Seas Bravery on the high seas had been recounted by survivors from the tor-pedoed tanker The tanker was in flames, yet the 20 who jumped overboard and swam about saw a following ship, instead of fleeing from the torpedo danger keep on its course and rescue them all. A few days later, 52 crewmen and gun crew members of the 5,127-to- n American freighter Delpiata torpedoed in the Caribbean, were saved by U. S. planes and ships f awaKening to 2 nearness of the war, began to alize, at long last, that they were hting to protect themselves. One ?mber from the West coast said: we don't watch out, all of Can-- a from the Rockies to the coast l"hP be Japanese." London: Trend of serious British ught was seen in Sir Stafford ipps' London Tribune, which said i the present year it is possible the Allies to be defeated. There no despondency in the nation, but :re is justifiable alarm." Cripps s named war minister. r Offer Brings Results In Memphis, Tenn., a dairy com-pany offered a pint of ice cream for every four-leave- d clover brought in. More than 5,000 were collected the first day. Oysters Grown on Trees Some oysters grown on trees there is a variety of shell-fis- h known as tree oysters which actually do attach themselves to tree roots at Montego bay, Jamaica, growing part-ly in and partly out of the water. Natural Receptacles Indians of the southwestern United States use woodpecker nests for household containers. When the birds bore holes in cacti, the wound heals itself with a. hard fibre lining which the Indians remove and use. HU0USEHOL0 Salt meat requires longer boil-ing than fresh. Put it into cold wa-ter, quickly bring it to a boil, then let it simmer. A siphon of charged water is an excellent fire extinguisher as the carbonic acid gas. in the water helps to stifle the flames. The si-phon can be tilted, and the fluid will carry to a considerable height such as the top of a blazing cur-tain. WheD using a double boiler, the food, will cook more quickly if the water in the outer vessel is salted in the proportion of a fourth of a cup of salt to one quart of water. Dampness often comes up through cracks in cement floors. To stop the cracks, chisel them to between a quartr and one-ha- lf inch wide, then fill them with hnt tar. Specially prepared commer-cial cement can also be used. I Best Occupatiun Agriculture for an hone, high-minde- d man, is the occupations or arts by v. procure the means of liv.: . -- ophon. 'Best' Man Best man at a wedding in Greece is, in one way, the lucky man. He gets the bride's first kiss! |