A Vigilant Voice Facts—Opinions for D e m o c r a c y News—Editorials

VOL IV; No. 44 FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 1M2 TWO CENTS Kingston Fire Co. Ready PICTURE OF A BLACK CAT IN A BUCK-OUT Blackout Successful For Mortgage Burning In South Brunswick Kingston.—Meirbers and sup- of directing the interesting program The Blackout on Wednesday than inane compliance just fot porters of the Kingston Volunteei arranged is L. J. Luck, who will evening throughoul South Bruns- the sake of peace at any price. Fire Company will mark the or- be master of ceremonies. wick Township was a credit to the If any one missed or was over- ganization's liquidation of indebt- Mrs. Frank loveless will lead iii Defense Council and its partici- looked in the distribution of print- edness against its property with a the singing of the National Anthem pants in all branches connected ed directions which were delivered mortgage-burning ceremony and while Joseph Catelli Jr., president This it how your street looked from the air Wed nite. Due to prior- with it. One might say it was 90 by Boy Scouts about a month ago, accompanying program this Satur- of the Fire Company, will relate ities, we didn't have a plane. Because of our own conservation pro- per cent efficient and that for a they may be obtained at the Day- day evening, April 18. the organization's history. gram, we didn't use either film or metal needed in war {plants for giving tryout is about all one has a right ton School and E. C, Pierson's you this picture. But it tells the story and we wager you can find to expect. store. There may be several rea- Firemen's Hall is expected to After the formal program has your house in the left-hand comer if yon look sharp. be filled to capacity on the occa- been completed, professional en- sons for anyone being missed. The There was one light burning in March wind might have whirled it sion, during which Walter H. tertainment will be provided, fol- house in Monmouth Junction but Mathews, former president with the away when left at your home in lowed by dancing. this in all probability was not in- longest record of service behind Committees which will con- Sugar Rationing Registration Plans your absence. him, will perform the ceremony tcntial. Another instance was that duct various functions at the e- of a farmer running a tractor who Movie, April 28 symbolizing the burning of the re- vent include: Sugar rationing registration will gin with S to Z — Register on There will be a moving picture, cently paid mortgage. had not heard of the Blackout. Reception — Paul Hotalen and be carried out on two series of fourth da/. Another family, living near entitled "The Warning," in the In addition to the speakers an- Mrs. James McDonald. Hours Fixed Dayton, which takes a Philadelphia Dayton School Auditorium on the nounced last week — Judge Klem- Refreshment — Mrs. Clarke Tul- dates. Hours '{or registration 'will be paper, but no local paper, had not evening of Tuesday, April 28th. mer Kalteissen, Father Hamilton ler, chairman; Mrs. Herman Krieg, First, on Tuesday and Wednes- There will be no speakei a» and Dr. E. W. Smillie — two more vice chairman; Mrs. Walter Mat- day, April 28 and 29, registration from 2 p. m. to 8 p. m, heard of th« Blackout, Also a per- On registration days, school pu- son living in the Sand Hills had people who are in Defens* are distinguished guests will speak. hews, Mrs. Frederick Bubeck. Mrs. of commercial users and dealers pretty well posted. Accepting invitations this week to Nelson Anderson, Mrs. James O'- mil take place in high schools. pils will be dismissed for the day not heard of it, but when told, be present were William Flemer, Donnell, Miss Viola Okeson, Da- South Brunswick business users of at 12:30. complied promptly. First Aid first president of the Fire Company vid Taglioli, John Green and Char- sugar may visit Jamesburg, Prince- There may have been other iso- Don't think for a moment that and Freeholder Bertrand L. Gulick les Shangle. ton, New Brunswick or any high LOCAL HEALTH HEADS lated instances where people living all persons taking First Aid can of Mercer County, son of the late Servers — Miss Jessie Anderson, school convenient to them. in remote places far from alarms rest on their laurels, because con- Bertrand L. Gulick, who was for Mrs. Chester Potts Jr., Miss Doro- Then on Monday, Tuesday, Wed- FAVOR IMMUNIZATION and do not take a paper, old people stant practice is required to keep many years president of ththee a Pott and Mrs. Rudolph Rey. nesday and Thursday, May 4, 5, 6 living alone, etc., which might hap- fit. Immunization of every infant over pen in any Blackout, trial or real. Kingston Town Improvement As- Ushers — Vincent Petrillo, chair- and 7, registration of consumers Cooperation Required sociation. The Improvement As- will be conducted. Elementary nine months, and pre-school child When one considers South man; Herman Krieg, Frederick 1 Those who have not taken any in this township against smallpox Brunswick ! far flung Territory, sociation fostered the Five Com- Catelli and Theodore Catelli. schools will be used. South Bruns- interest in Defense matters so far pany. wick home consumers of sugar may and diphtheria is the objective of this was no mean achievement. might gather up Scrap, and Music will be furnished by register at the Township elementary Child Health Day, May I, Mrs. Democratic Process Luck Muter of Ceremonies George Jusko's orchestra of Tren- prepare tin cans. Even though it school closest to them, or any out- Rosamond] Collins, South Bruns- There has been considerable ar- Charged with the responsibility ton. does take time, it is mighty im- side elementary school if more con- wick school nurse, has announced. gument and some misunderstanding portant work and those who are in- venient. The last week in April has been about certain matters in the Defense different will, in all probability, DRIVE FOR BLIND CHAIRMAN SMITH TO BE To Stagger Registration designated as Child Health Week Council, but that is the way things find themselves forced to do things to bring the campaign to a climax. are worked out in Democracies. when the new Defense set-up is New Brunswick — Residents of In order to avoid top-heavy re- Cooperating with South Bruns- Constructive criticism should be ac- 'MARRYIN' PARSON'? gistration on any particular day, completed at Trenton. Middlesex County will this year a- wick health officers are the State cepted in all such bodies rather Chairman Public Relations. gain be asked to "Have a Heart a modified plan of assigning cer- 'Health Department, the State Med- Can't you just hear Chairman and see to it That Others See" by tain persons whose names begin ical Society, the State Health. Of- with particular letters of the al- ACCIDENTS, ILLNESS 0. H. Smith saying, "I now pro- contributing to the fifth annual ficers' Association, and the New UTILITY BOARD STUDIES phabet has been provided. nounce you man and wife"? drive for funds of the Middlesex Jersey Congress of Parents and Marriage ceremonies solemnized County Association of the Blind. 1. Persons whose names begin Marie Thainey nad the misfor- leathers. tune to fall while performing an BUS PROBLEM ,by Township Committee chairmen The drive will culminate on Sat- with A to D — Register on first acrobatic dance and fractured her would be validated by a bill before urday, April 25, when blind mem- day. plan of campaign is to urge wrist. Her brother, Alfred fell South Brunswick residents the New Jersey Legislature. The bers of the association, assisted by 2. Persons whose names begin to have their children im- from his bicycle while delivering fcill is one of 500 placed bwre the Boy Scouts, conduct their annual with E to L — Register on second r private jpliysi- who seek a Route 26 bus line have newspapers and injured his wrist. Legislature^ date. i icg day. . (•»" dayv . J ble to Qay.jf*r tri*. had -,'ieir problem recognized, in Each yeaf many curious bills also 3. Persons whose ire ui-gea to con- Mary Nobile is still confined to principle if not specifically, by ore introduced among the great gin with M to R •— Register on I'jt *l mraltn" ofticers. her home with scarlet fever, as the Ne» Jersey Public Utility Com- CHURCH CONGREGATION is Margaret Eichert. aymond Wolfe mass of legislation prepared by third day. \ \ Death Rate Drops mission. senators and assemblymen to feed has chicken jox and Robert Fen- HOLDS ELECTION 4. Persons whose names be- Tentative figures for New Jer- The Commission, in a survey re- the lawmaking mill. Although chel has just recovered from meas- sey' for 1941 show 297 cases and port, has recommended mobiliza- the legislators promised to curtail les. • eight deaths from diptheria. The tion of school and special buses introduction of bills earlier this year At a special congregational SUPPER AT DAYTON death rate from diptheria for 1888 for assignment to regular bus routes £ecause of the war there has been meeting held in the Miller Memor- NEXT THURSDAY was 148 per 100,000 population. to provide adequate service for de- jio noticeable let-up in the number ial Presbyterian Church immediate- P.T.A. SETS APRIL 28 ly following the service Sunday During the decade beginning with fense plant workers. of bills of the crackpot variety in Dayton.—The Ladies' Aid So- 1900 the rate declined from 48 to the Legislature. morning, the resignation of Henry The report to Governor Edison Pennell, who has served the local ciety will hold its Annual Spring 25. The following ten-year period FOR SUPPER and the Legislature pointed out the Conflicting Bank Holiday Bilk Church as elder for thepast Supper in the chapel on Thursday, showed a decline to 18. great majority of plant workers Another house measure would twelve years, was accepted. April 23, at 6 o'clock. There will Kingston. — Due to First Aid were using their own automobiles. also be a Fancy Work Table of In his recent May-Day Child classes which are held on a Mon- make all Saturdays bank holidays Walter Hutchinson, who had re- Health Proclamation, the President Tire and gasoline restrictions, in (Continued on Page Eight) signed as a trustee, was elected an hand-made aprons, pillow cases day night, the Kingston Middlesex time, would make such car use im- and other articles. of the United States stressed the Parent-Teacher Association held its elder and ordained by the Rev. vital importance of the health of possible and the commission offer- The menu consists of chicken regular monthly meeting in the ed a solution in the form of sup- Paul Martin of Princeton, who is children to the strength of the DEFENSE ACT salad, esca]loped potatoes, peas, school on Monday afternoon with plementing present bus service by Moderator over this session. nation. He urged that every com- Rev. A. Raymond Eckels preach- cottage cheese, mustard eggs, veg- ten members being present. the other available vehicles held BEING REVISED etable salad, rolls, coffee and lem- munity in the country anticipate; for special uses. ed last Sunday. He and Mrs. the formal celebration of May I Plans were completed for the Eckels expect to leave their home on meringue pie. Price, adults Cafeteria Supper which will be 2200 Buses Available 75 cents; children, 50 cents. and the succeeding weeks by exert- Trenton. — A measure to revise nere or) Monday to spend the Sum- ing every effort at this time to held on Tuesday, April 28. Mrs. The board listed as available for the act creating the State Defense mer and early Fall in Iowa. Christensen was appointed general part-time use, to supplement exist- Council is ready to be submitted conserve child health through the Robert De Wolfe of the Prince- FREE POSTAGE application of positive health mea- chairman. The menu is as follows: ing regular bus service, 302 chart- to the defense committees of the ton Seminary, who has been cho- Meat Loaf, Bake Macaroni and er buses; 1601 school buses and Senate and Assembly next week, FOR SERVICEMEN sures as well as by the reduction sen to fill the pulpit here for a of the two devastating childhood Cheese, Spaghetti, Bake Beans, 298 vehicles operated without according to Assemblyman Thomas year, will begin his duties on Sun- Deviled Eggs, Potato Salad, Cabb- charge for promotional objectives. S. Dignan of Princeton, chief of By Congressman Sutphin diseases for which the surest means day. age Salad, Cottage Cheese, Ginger- Recommendations of the board staff of the State Defense Council. of prevention exist, namely, small The Second War Powers Bill bread with Whipped Cream, Rolls to meet the situation were: Legis- The need for revision follows pox and diptheria. provides free mailing privileges for and coffee. lation to allow il to present tempor- Governor Charles Edison's plan for DAYLIGHT TIME By emphasizing the fact that first class mail sent by members Mrs. Frederick Bubeck and Mrs. ary licenses to charter, school and simplified control of defense activi- science has had at hand for years FACES OPPOSITION of the armed services. I introduced Garrett Eisenman will be delegates other special buses to be placed in ties. It has been developed in a the means to reduce almost to the such a measure some time ago pro- to the Middlesex County Meeting service on regular routes; to sus- series of conferences held by the viding for this privilege, and I also vanishing point the incidence of Trenton.—An additional hour to be held in Piscataway on May pend special licenses now existing law advisory committee of the favor the same privilege for recog these diseases, he again drove home of daylight saving has met oppo- 6. for particula. purposes and to re- State Defense Council, headed by nized civilian defense agencies. As the fact that the control is largely The Association also planned a ._,.. . _ 1 A I 3IIIUIsitioI IIIn IIICin k/EUQlCthe i Senatel_.t.CtlHli>. W*-Leaders de- arrange facilities without necessity the law now stands a member of in the hands of parents. card party to be held on May 22. foi hearings or other delaying for- Dav.d T. Wilentz of Perth Amboy. ciared ,oday passage of |egi8la,ion the armed services should write Attorney General. to push the clock forward another No Case in 11 Yean malities. The need for revision was decid- FREE in the upper right hand cor- In New Jersey there has been hour is doubtful. ner. This will permit the letter to Critical Stage ed on now because the present The Senate passed a resolution no case of smallpox in eleven WAR STAMP SALES RISE State Defense Council act expires be transmitted through the mails years, due to the general accep- "In making the above recom- Monday authorizing Governor Edi- without postage, mendations." the board said, "the (Continued on Page Eight) son to negotiate with authorities in tance of vaccination. Therefore, in IN TOWNSHIP SCHOOLS Mail sent to men in service must New Jersey the immediate prob- board respectfully suggests that New York and Pennsylvania re- there is no aspect of the war more lative to a uniform policy but op- continue to bear the usual post- lem largely is limited to diptheria Sales of War Savings Stamps DATES age. prevention. critical than the prompt and rea- position was evident as the measure in South Brunswick's four element- sonably comfortable transporta- came to a vote. In difference, lack of knowledge ary schools have been as follows: tion of workers to and from our Wednesday, April 22 - PLANS PROGRESSING or misguided notions appear to be Dayton — $49.80 for the week war industeries. That the situa- Card party, auspices of S. D. L., SEWING CLUB MEETS FOR FIRE EVENT the reasons for the failure of many ending April 17; Mrs. Leffcl's tion has already reached a critical Mechanics Hall, Monmouth Junc- he sewing Club members held parents to protect their young chil- oom high. Total to date $356.80. stage must be apparent to all. tion. their meeting on Wednesday eve- dren against diptheria by toxoid im- Deans.—$86.55 for week end- '"The suggestions herein made, Thursday, April 23— nTing at the home of Mrs, Alfred Plans are progressing very nice munization. ing April 17; Miss Pitner's room; Spring supper, sponsored by the ly for the huge novelty party to be if enacted into legislation, cannot Van Duyn. Children ishould receive toxoid high. Total to date, $412.55. be initiated and administered with- Dayton Ladies' Aid Society, The members attending were given by the Monmouth Junction treatment between the ages of nine Kingston. — $72.65 for week Tuesday, April 28 — Volunteer Fire Company in the out preparation and study. We feel Mrs. Maynard Voorhees, Mrs. and twelve months. Teh necessity ending April 15; Miss Wooley's that they are presented none too P. T. A. supper, Kingston Mid- Fred Fenchell, Mrs. Harvey H. fire house Saturday evening. May for immunization at this early age room high. Total to date, $145.- 16, with Ef.rl Carlisle and Jack dlesex School, Mershon, Mrs. T. Clifford Emens, is based upon the fact that near- 35. Ritter in charge. Defense Council motion picture, Mrs. Joseph Mqore, Mrs. Elbert C. ly two-thirds o fthe diptheria Monmouth Junction. — $4.70 "The Warning," Dayton School Pierson, Mrs. David Griggs, Mrs. deaths occur in children under six for week ending April 12, Miss SEE OPENER Auditorium. Elizabeth Brooks, Mrs. Frank 450,000 N. J. MEN years of age. Richter's room high. Total to Saturday, May 2 — Morrisey, Mrs. William Voorhees of IN NEXT DRAFT CALL It cannot be emphasized too date, $182.10. T. Clifford Emens, Gypsey Wat- Card party, benefit of First Aid the Junction and Mrs. A. Raymond strongly that to deprive children of lington, Rowland S. Mershon, An- Eckles and Mrs. Walter Jacobson thonio Santowasso, George Brab- Squad, Monmouth Junction Fire Trenton. — New Jersey's 202 the protection that science has SON FOR GOTTIAUXS House. of Plainsboro, local draft boards were advised made available amounts almost, if son and Edward Griggs were a- Friday, May 15- yesterday by Lientenant Colonel not altogether, to criminal negli- mong those from Monmouth Junc- Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Got- tion who attended the opening Card party, given by Ladies' CARD PARTY WEDNESDAY Edgar N. Bloomer, acting slate di- gence. The family physician and tiaux are receiving congratulations game of the Giants and Dodgers Auxiliary, Kingston Firemen's Hall. Loyalty Council No. 144, Sons rector pf Selective Service to ar- public health official can point the over the arrival of a baby boy Saturday, May 16— and Daughters of Liberty, will hold range for the registration of an es- at the Polo Grounds in New York way an durge action, nevertheless, born April 13. City on Tuesday. Annual bingo party, auspices of a public card party in Mechanics timated 450,000 men in the 45 the essential factor still lacking in The baby has been named Alex- M. J. Vol. Fire Co., at Monmouth Hall here next Wednesday, April through 65 age bracket on Apri most diptheria illnesses and deaths ander Edwin. This is their only Junction Fire House. 22, and another on May 20. 25, 26 and 27. is parental cooperation. boy. FOR VICTORY: BUY BONDS- PAGE TWO FORUM

Lovely Perennial Border Farm Ynlrais Guard 'Home Front' A Joy for Many Summers Nation's Pressure Groups

(Released by Western Newspaper Union.) Threat to War Production '"pHERE'S a touch of silver in the * dark cloud hovering over the tribal home of the Cleveland In- Organized Minorities, Anxious to Maintain dians—they haven't been picked to Hard-Won Advantages, Overlook win the American league pennant. importance of 'All-American Front.' And for good reason. No one knowi for 6ure just how much the absence of Rapid Robert Feller will By BAUKHAGE influence the Indians' destiny in Neus Analyst and Commentator. 1942, If the slack created by his enlistment In the navy is taken op WNU Service, 1343 H Street, N-W The C class was the problem. The by other , the team will owners or the tenants working them Washington, D. C. cause plenty of trouble. The United States is having a time had either to show full co-operation within a limited time or get out and Most sports fans want the Indians of it trying to do its share in • war to come through this year. Lou where the guardians of every one of let an efficient farmer take over. Requires Only Ordinary Care. 1 Sometimes the new proprietor called JBoudreau, putting in his first year the United Nations many fronts as manager, seems to have won the A WELL-PLANNED border, think theirs is the most important on the 4-H members to help him. According to L. K. Elmhirst, writ- complete confidence of his men.** bursting with beauty! You'll one. That, in itself, is a major achieve- never tire of looking at it when One reason why Australia pressed ing in the magazine Free World, 'the system worked well." It was a ment. The 24-year-old Boudreau is summer comes. If you have a •o hard for a Pacific Council, on little more than a youngster in space along your house or before which representatives of the Anzac highly arbitrary method, but the British farmer, who is an independ- the baseball world, yet he has thea clump of shrubbery, the ar- nations could raise their voices calm confidence of a veteran pilot. rangement is perfect. along with Great Britain, was be-ent person with a century of stub- born tradition of non-interference And the Indians aren't known as a • • • cause they wanted to keep the im- group of Pollyannas. And your lawn? Your Bhrubbery? Will portance of their part of the world from government, yielded to the bit- ter necessity. fcw. they, too, be a joy to see? Our 32-page before the President. Any Chinese Good Judgment booklet describes planting and care of can demonstrate to you that unless * * * Above photo shows one way thousands of rural youths from coast lawns and trees. Tells how to raise shrub- to coast are learning new trades thil year under a $15,000,000 "out- Baseball men appreciate Bou- bery, vines, perennials, annuals, roses, China is kept supplied the war will Thirst Versus bulbs, hedges, herbs. Explains fertilizers, be lost and even Mr. Churchill in- of-schooV training program being supervised by the U. S. office of dreau'* smartness in selecting a •oils, how to prevent plant disease!. Send sists that his front—which right now Sweet Tooth education. One pur- pair of veterans like Burt Shotten your order to: is Russia's, is the number one hot- America's alcoholic thirst is about and Oscar Mellllo to be his coaches. to suffer in order to satisfy Amer- pose of the project is They are capable subordinates and spot. to train young men READER-HOME SERVICE ica's sweet tooth. can provide plenty of assistance. SIS Sunn Avenue New York City These conflicting demands, how- And 50,000,000 bushels of grain- who can take the Feller's absence isn't the only In- Enclose 15 cents in coins for your ever, are not impossible to answer. wheat and corn—are going to find place in civilian jobs copy of HOW TO PLANT AND We simply divide up what we have a market most of which will go up of skilled workmen dian problem. That is proved by the CARE FOR YOUR GARDEN. fact that the Tribe was lucky to and pass it around. Because there in smoke. Rapidly the whiskey dis-; being called for serv- Name are not enough ships to carry it tilleries of America are being turned ice in America's fast- Address all away (and because of the watch- into distillers of industrial alcohol expanding war indus- ful eyes of our army and navy) our to be turned into explosives. Most own forces are at last getting pretty of this war demand for alcohol it try program. Second- well equipped. now being satisfied with sugar be- ary aims are to pre- As a matter of fact this competi- cause the industrial alcohol plants pare farm and small tion really helps speed production. are equipped for the distillation of town youths to work But there is another kind of com- sugar (molasses) and not grain. But in agriculture as it petition which doesn't help produc- 25 whiskey plants, already equipped becomes increasingly tion. It is the competition of the for the distillation of grains, have more mechanized, various pressure groups inside the stopped turning out a beverage and are working for the government. and to fit them for country. mechanical ivork in sense Each one wants to maintain the The President recently signed an the army should they ALL-VEGETABLE advantages it has won and in most order to take over the plants which be called for service. cases justly won in the past with make high wines, which means they LAXATIVE long and hard work. The great pres- distill 40-proof alcohol. They will Almost every state in sure groups which exert a powerful have to be equipped to make the the Union is now of- • In NR (Nature's Remedy) Tablets, influence on congress in peacetime 190 proof required for industrial use. fering instruction LOU BOUDREAU there are no chemicals, no minerals, no are: the Legion, which seldom fails phenol derivatives. NR Tablets are dif- Then all whiskey making stops. under direction of a ferent—act different Purely teittablt—a to get what it asks for; labor, which In fact the whiskey making busi- state vocational of- finish in a fourth place tie with De- combination of 10 vegetable ingredients has had a long, uphill job but which ness already has a crimp in it and fice. troit in 1941—when Bob won 25. formulated over 50 years ago. Uncoated now can call the turns; the farm the gin business has virtually evap- It Isn't logical to talk about pos- or candy coated, their action is depend- bloc, which during the hard years in able, thorough, yet gentle, as m Uions.of orated—or will as soon as the dis- Left: A youth at sible improvement In the Tribe until NR's have proved. Get a 25* bo* today spite of its efforts was unable to do tillers use up such alcohol as they a power hack saw. It's proved that other pitchers have ... or larger economy size. much for the farmer's lot until re- have in storage. * good chance of winning most of HR T0-M0HT; TOMORROW ALRIOHT cently. There is still four years' supply of lie 25 games which would have been Even Big Business, which nobody whiskey in storage. Soon no more Frller'a. Boudreau Is fairly opti- could call the spoiled child of the will be distilled. The blended whis- mistic about his hurlers—both vet- New Deal, probably has qyite as key making and gin making end ^•BV" ''"d newcomer^ Among the much Influence as Citizen .l,hn Q. when the 140-pr^ol neutral spirits to, tun are Al Mllnar, Al Smith, Jim Nobody-in-particular. J are exhausted. Bagby, Harry Elsenstat and Mel Many of these groups aie now One bushel of wheat or corn will Harder. The latter group Includes fighting for what they consider their make 2% gallons of alcohol, so you j such artists as Bay Foat, Red Em- just rights. But what they overlook can see that it will take a lot of bree, Pete Center and Tom Ferrick. is this: a large part of the popula- grain to make the 200,000,000 gal- Poat played ball with Boudreau tion has no lobby at all. In fact, the lons a year of alcohol which the majority of the white collar folK, at the University of Illinois. A right- Every Home government expects to be turning hander, he was a star in the Three- partly due to their indifference to out for war by 1943. politics, just don't count when the Eye league last season, winning 17 / Needs a'Grandma* It takes time to convert the small- • while losing 6 games. He stands m Home itn't complete without herl If,. roll is called up yonder on Capitol er distilleries because a man ho is I she's with you help keep ber In |ood Hill. high with the Indians—not because * health. Should her appetite "•lip," set able to make very good whiskey of his past record but because he IVINOL. Thil modem tonic contain! This middle class, the unorganized cannot necessarily make alcohol. It looked consistently good in spring • Vitamin Bl and Iron, combined with salary earners who are sometimes takes installation of equipment in f other valuable Ingredients. Yourdrossirt training camp. He has a fast ball, / has VINOL. politely referred to as the backbone some plants not fully equipped. In sharp curve and at least average other words there is a "change of the nation, don't even rate de- control, perhaps better than that ferments. They pay their taxes and over" necessary just as there is Prepare for Fainting in wartime they aren't important when the automaker changes over Ferrick won 8 and lost 10 for To soften paint brushes place enough to do anything more than go his factory to make planes or tanks. Philadelphia last year, but the In- them in vinegar, heat it to the to war. They don't make much That is the reason why in the dians look to him for his share of boiling point and allow brushes to trouble, but they do holler when they meantime sugar has to be used, and wins, either in a starting or relief stand in it for a while. think they aren't getting an even why we have to ration it for other role. Embree, bought from Wilkes- break. uses. Barre, boasts a sensational minor The organized folks, on the other Many people have written in say- league record. He won 21 and lost Slmfite - Sctentffle -Terriflc! : 9 in 1941. Flay btg league games at home hand, who are just as good patriots ing that sugar rationing was foolish- with the naw lenMtlon— and many of whose sons are in the ness when there was plenty of grain. Job for Veterans J/g Tim* Baseball army, nevertheless, are the ones It is just as foolish as saying that V Innlngl In 20 rntnuiai. Cat who because of their political power because you have a nation of a hun- Center, recalled from Wilkes- voun before leaion epam April cause a lot of pulling and hauling, dred million people you have all the Barre, won 14 and lost 8 last sea- l«t». Send 15c coin or Defame son. For some reason he hasn't Damp. and that makes more trouble for the soldiers you need. It takes time to TIP VIINON government than the conflicting de- change a civilian into a soldier. It Metalworking, forging, woodworking, operation and repair of been ranked as high as Embree, t. O. los It Ubbeck, Teui tires of our Allies. They each think takes time to convert a sugar dis- motors are cmong the courses being offered. Above, students learn Ferrick or Poat, but on the basis of their front—the farm front, or the tillery to a grain distillery. bis early teason showing he'll have how to cut metal at the Schenley company's machine shop at Frank- a good chance to prove himself. business or the labor front—is the • • • fort, Ky., where these pictures were taken. Plant technicians donate most important. It isn't. There It Sentinels their services as instructors. While the newcomers will have a only one that is important: it is the Peanut Oil big Job on their hands, a good share all-American front. Peanuts to you! of Boudreau's pitching this season of Health • • • What do they mean to you? Some- will come from Harder, Bagby, Don't Neglect Them! thing for the monkey in the zoo, the Nator* designed the kidneys to do a British Farmers Smith, Elsenstat, Milnar and Joe marvelous job. Their taak Is to keep tht elephant in the circus? Or perhaps Bevlng. Others on the roster who flowing blood stream free of an etceM of toilc impurities. The act of Hving—It/» Increase Yield your daily bread, or merely your may give additional aid are Dewey itself— ii constantly producing wutt When the war broke in earnest peanut butter. Adklns, Mlllard Howell, Vernon matter the kidneys must remove from In Washington, peanuts have still the blood if good heath la to endure. about the British Isles a terrific Kennedy, Joe Krakauskas, Chubby When the kidney• fail to function a* challenge faced the British farmer. another meaning today. Thanks to Dean and Clint Brown. Nature Intended, there ia retention of watte that may cause body-wide dis- He was told that 3,000,000 tons of the war, we need more peanuts, not tress. One may sufler nagging backache, Imported feed for cows and poultry to feed to Japanese prisoners, but Another performer who will bear persistent headache, attacka of dimness, getting up nights, swelling, pufflnesn would be cut off. He had to cut to squeeze. Peanut oil is needed to watching is Steve Gromek, who under the eyes—(eel tired, nervous, all down on his livestock and grow fill the demand for essential oils cut came up from Flint, Mich., with a worn out. 1941 record of 14 wins and 2 losses. Frequent, scanty or burning passages more potatoes and grain. off when the enemy took over the are aometimea further evidence of kid- Meadows went under the plow and Netherlands Indies. In the opinion of Gordon Cobbledick, ney or bladder disturbance. Cleveland sports writer, "If there's ThB recognised and proper treatment 4,000,000 additional acres of arable The department of agriculture has 1B a diuretic medicine to help the kidneys asked that 2Vz times as many pea- 'another Feller' in sight it would be geret rid of excess poisonous body^wsstebody mate. land were put under cultivation. The Gromek." Use Daan't Pills. They have had more nuts be planted to replace other oil- number of farm horses dropped in than forty^ yearyen • s••-» o_f |^-«**publiH»v_g'c approvala- - - • -t- . Are producers stopped by the war (and It's entirely possible that Cleve- endorsed the country over. Insist on two years by 300,000 head. In one Doan't. Sold st all drug stores. typical county alone the acreage in to feed squirrels). As of March there land may finish out of the first divi- potatoes was increased by 22,000. were indications that we would have sion. On paper, Lou doesn't have In order to bring about this situa only a two-thirds plus crop. That the team that Oscar Vitt had in tion aid to obtain co-operation for isn't enough. And so we must have 1940, or Roger Peckinpaugh had in DOANS PILLS a "Food for Victory" program the more soy beans which yield oils and 1941. But Lou won't be downed with- minister of agriculture divided the many other things from vitamins to out a bitter struggle. He has theWNU- 15—43 country up into districts, appointed plastic ashtrays. The soy crop has spirit and intelligence necessary for directors of each district and named already increased almost as rapidly a manager. What's just as impor- a committee to work under each as the price of the beans. But since At left, youths learn how to use a power drill, while student at tant, at least in Cleveland, is his director. These committees classi- we won't get all the peanuts we right is getting his first lesson in forging. Officials estimate that 75 ability to get along with fellow ball BEACONS of fied all farms as A, B, C, according need this year, the cry is still— per cent of courses are being given in rural areas, because big city players. to the efficiency of management. "More soys!" youths tan usually secure similar training at regular trade schools. The Indians' catching leaves something to be desired. At the I—SAFETY— present writing Gene Desantels ' •like a beacon light on BRIEFS . . .. by Baukhage looks like the No. 1 boy behind the the height—the advertise- plate. Bowever, he can't take any- ments in newspapers direct thing for granted. Otto Denning, you to newer, better and Farmers who have a cash market More than $800,000,000 worth of bought from Minneapolis, is crowd- easier ways of providing for skim milk can contribute to the farm commodities were bought be- ing Desautels through his ability to Food-for-Freedom dairy products by tween March 15, 1941, and March 15, bit. Neither of them will lead the things needed or selling some of the skim milk they 1942, largely as supplies available i American league hitters. Desautels desired. It shines, this have been feeding to the calves. for shipment to the United Nations hit .201 last season with the Indians beacon of newspaper Calves will make satisfactory under provisions of the lend-lease while Denning hit .260 far Minneapo- advertising—and it will be growth if the skim milk is discontin- act. lis. Jim Began, another possibility, to your advantage to fol- ued at three months of age, provided Long after the snow of Washing- also came UP from the minors, hit low it whenever you the calves are given a well-balanced ton's record spring blizzard had fad- .242 in 1941. Much will depend on make a purchase. grain mixture and plenty of other ed a shrinking snow-man still stood the eventual catching strength. feed. in tie White House grounds. Youth is being trained today for a mechanized tomorrow. THE FORUM PAGE THREE

TO TOUR AID CLASSIFIED GOOD HEALTH AILINCPHOUSE DEPARTMENT By Dr. Jm. W. Barton by Rogef B.ijlThitman CALENDARS Advertising Calendar samples for 1B43 (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) Boger B. Whitman—WNU Service. now ready. Sell a real line. Write for sam- ples and particulars. White Ear la Printing: INJECTION TREATMENTS BUST SPOTS ON CEILINGS Ce., Dept. ASB, Adams, Maisaeaesatts^ During the last war, the only way FRIEND of mine has been ELMER TWITCHEU. OFF TO RUBBER ON FARM a recruit with hernia or rupture was A troubled because of rusty spots CO-ORDINATE Built for Go-operation accepted for any form of service on an upstairs ceiling, correspond- "I'm off to Washington," declared MUST HAVE CARE The Migrating Hordes was to be willing to undergo surgi- ing to the heads of nails that se- Elmer Twitchell In an unusually cured the plasterboard to the attic high state cf ex- Yesterday, perhaps, you were We are made for co-operation, cal operation. working in your garden, laying your What about the floor beams. Painting did not con- citement. Like feet, like hands, like eyelids, ceal them, and in time they showed "What for?" we Rural Food Production plans for your spring gardening, rak like the rows of upper and lower injection treatment ing up old vines and stalks, burning for hernia, and why through ceiling paper. This is not asked. Increased Uae of Rubber. teeth. To act against one another an unusual condition, and can oc- "I wanna be a the rubbish—in short, making ready is then contrary to Nature, and it was it not used In for the spring season that follows suitable cases? casionally be found in side walls co-ordinator," be By M. E. BENTLEY is acting against one another to made of plasterboard and wall- replied eagerly. (Agricultural Engineer, Tern A * U so swiftly upon the heels of winter. be vexed and turn away.—Marcus At that time sur- Ktlenilom Service.) The day was so still you could hear geons would not use board. My friend's ceiling is under "What do you Aurelius. an unheated attic. The points of wish to co-ordi- Motorists—aid aren't we all?— the drumming of a woodpecker in this method because the nails are exposed to a low tem- distant woodlot or the mellow sound the solutions that nate?" we hopefully asked him. have been so-lousy worrying about perature, which chills the nails for the tires on tieir cars that rubber of the schoolbell, a mile away, call' were injected were "I ain't particular," said Elmer. STEARNS" ELECTRIC PASTE their entire length. The rusting of "Squat tag or leap frog would be on the farm hat not received much ing the children in from recess. The not always stable or the heads is due to condensation sun was warm on your back. Still, reliable and the re- up my alley. I was national open attention. firth* Bert Weapon to Us* for I of moisture in the air of the room. squat tag champion in 1928, and I Rubber has played an increasing- it was a lovely day and you looked Dr. Barton sults were disap- Insulation in the attic would cure with delight upon the somewhat rATTACKon the ENEMIES: pointing. have written several books on leap ly important part in food produc- the whole trouble and be a great tion in recent years. Rubber tires draggled-looking robin which tagged | Rati. Mice and Cockroaches! frog which are standard works ev- B a Today with proper solutions to advantage in raising the room tem- you around the garden, picking up *CsjB^^rifpsjf IIPSHJ *0ftV*t)f #r1^ ^B stv I Inject and the injections done by erywhere." for tractors and farm implements; KM TKM By ulna *a «U I perature during the cold season. rubber tubing in milking machines; dropped seeds; your eyes rejoiced > rallaeb A..rH«. iiaasbr I surgeons, it has been found that Without this, the spotting can be • • • in the flashing color of the bluebird, ^ SUII Df AIM aiNrailaeMr I "But I am no slouch at lariat rubber rings for canning in glass about one in every three cases of prevented by removing the rust of jars—the list is almost endless. darting from fencepost to fencepost; [STEARNS ELECTRIC hernia is suitable for the injection the nail heads by sandpapering, and throwing or sack racing, either," be once a chimney swift flashed, in HdldndRodth PASTt treatment which means little or no then giving each bead a touch of resumed after a moment "Nor at Here are suggestions for care of rubber on the farm: speedy flight, across your field of • 3S< and >l.00 at AD MUOCKIS loss of time from work, no anesthet- aluminum paint to protect the metal Indian club swinging, apple bobbing vision. These were some of your ic, and no hospital fees. from the moisture of condensation. and blind man's buff." Block up the wheels to keep weight off the tires when machines summer birds. They were coming Another advance during the past If aluminum paint cannot be had, "Are they co-ordinatinc such ac- back after the long winter months. spar varnish can be substituted. Of tivities?" we asked. and implements are out of the fields few years is in the treatment of tor any considerable period. You missed them then and wondered MEY0H severe pain by the use of Injections course, either one will be concealed "Oh, yes," snapped Elmer. "Tea If rubber-tired implements are where and how they had gone. into the nerves and roots of nerves by the ceiling decoration. Indeed. They are co-ordinating ev- WHERE AND HOW-WHY AND supplying the painful part. Former- Leaking Stucco. erything. Haven't you been read- stored on cinder floors, block up the tires or place planks under WHEN DO THE BIRDS GO? ly the solutions injected were unsuit- ing about the testimony before Sen- Of such value to all gardeners, able or not effective. Thus in the Question: My stucco home, two ator Byrd'a eommitteef And this la them. The sulphur in the cinders breaks down the rubber. orchardists and farmers are the T siinnsi Flnt of all torn eaal pain of tic doloreux (trifacial neu- years old, is cracked, so that rain no minor co-ordination, It's an all- I Itaat M an aaleas re* |tn ikaea > water soaks through to the interior Tractor Tire Slippage. lervices of the birds that all may ralgia) while there are cases still out co-ordination. We are the Ar- well be concerned with their migra- SSSSHSJ. MOM eeeple nakt sue «e ft t requiring surgery, most cases can plaster, especially above and below senal of Co-ordination, from what I Excessive slippage of tractor tires Baals a day. Bw Star aarer tktak at (Ms* now be relieved by these injections. the windows and doors. Could this causes heavy wear, Just as skids and tions. Ssak kernel • reftlar Dme (daft) let read." LONG-DISTANCE MIGRATIONS be corrected with waterproof • • • quick stops do on automobile tires. Alcohol Injections Successful. cement? Over-loading the tractor is one cause While it is generally known that • rear* aetiaalaa TOOm hereto oatU "Do you think you'll land a Job?" tsar Baallr kwasae Makkon aid aavtHtaf Drs. E. A. Rovenstine and H. M. Answers: At paint stores and from of slippage, and pulling in snow or many—perhaps the majority—of the Wertheim, New York, in the Journal we asked. •a tat, aak raw dnnlat lot ADLUIata. dealers in mason materials you "Why not? Ev- mud without chains is another. birds which frequent our farms and gau aCtettr* Head al S aarmtaastnt of the American Medical Associa- can get cement paint combined with erybody else has. Keep rubber-tired implements out woodlands in the North during the aad t bxatrrea |Mai OOUBU aaHaa. tion report their success at the New a waterproofer, with which all the A friend of mine of the sun when not in use. summer months, merely travel Oes Is assailed aad boval aedaa loBovi York university college ot medicine southward in the autumn far enough •vatUaflrlaa*. Aftertax, make •»rear cracks can be closed and the wall it- who has been Under-inflation damages both rub- saM la gin four boa-all I at 10 ouastef in the treatment of intractable or self made waterproof. But in say- good at card ber and fabric in the tires. to find their accustomed foods, yet, tone at recalai keer, sal*. TeaTfnaM unbearable pain by injections of ing that you notice leaks above and tricks has been A solution of calcium chloride to some birds are known to make in- procaine and alcohol. Among the below the windows and doors, I am named National prevent freezing is recommended credibly long migratory flights. various neuralgias these physicians inclined to think that much of the Co - ordinator of for northern areas If water is used Some of our common summer resi- mention tic doloreux, intractable trouble is in open joints between the Parlor Games un- in tractor tires to add weight. dents spend their winters in locali- pain of tuberculosis, severe pain in window and door frames and theder the OCD and Wilbur Jones, an Rubber tubing in milking ma- ties well south of the equator—per- CORNS 60 FAST shoulder, severe pain in back of outside walls. This may be because chines will last longer if it is kept haps on Argentinian pampas, or P&ln KOM quick, corn* f alligator wrestler by profession, has •peedflr removed when I neck, pain between ribs, severe pain of the failure of the flashings. The landed as National Co-ordinator of clean. After each cleaning and ster- even In Patagonia. The arctic tern you UM thin, loothlna In lower back and leg (sciatica). joints should be closed with caulk- cushioning Dr. Scholri Alligator Wrestling." ilization, the tubes should be hung is said to be the champion "globe j. Try them! Another distressing pain is that ing compound, forced in with a tool "Really?" up to drain and dry. trotter." A government bulletin caused by cancer which has made called a caulking gun. Carpenters "Not only that but an appropria- says of this remarkable bird: D-Scholls Zinopads It necessary for physicians to pre- and painters have {he equipment tion is being asked for $150,000 for "Its name, 'arctic,' is well earned, scribe opium and other pain killing and will do the job at so much p?r alligator pools and $75,000 for alli- as its breeding range is circum- window and door. AGRICULTURE drugs. This means that the patient gators." polar and it nests as far north as More Raleigh Jingles is in a stupor most of the time. Cracking Cement. "Can you get alligators for that IN INDUSTRY it can find a suitable place. The first nest to be found in this region Raleigh Cigarettes are again Even in cancer, where the nerve Question: White sand and white money, the kind that will really do offering liberal prizes in a big supplying part can be readily cement are mixed together to make any work?" we asked. By FLORENCE C. WEED was only 714 degrees from the North pole and it contained a downy chick jingle contest to be in thii reached "the results are gratifying porch steps, and the mixture usually "Yes, alligator! are as a ctau willing paper. One hundred and thirty- to many patients. Thus the pain checks and cracks. What causes to sacrifice a little for the cause" ex- surrounded by a wall of newly fallen Goat Herd Value snow that had been scooped out by three prizes will be awarded each from cancer about the face, neck this? How can it be prevented? plained Elmer. # week.—Adv. and lungs can usually be Juntrolled, The poor man's cow" has al-the parent. In North America it Answer: For steps, concrete What does Mrs. TwitcheU think „_,._„ whereat pain due to can'ejr of the should be made not only of cement a variety of uses. In Tex- breeds south in the interior to Great abdominal organs may require pain and sand, but also with crushed of your working as ajederalv url|M*, J^s*-,,,n, Vyii^y. Arizona end- Ore- Slave lake, and on the Atlantic coast ' killing drugs or surgery to give re- stone or pebbles. One good mix- nstor of rope tricks, squat tag play- Son, goats^run in sizeable herds. to Massachusetts. After the young lief. ture is 1 part cement, 2U parts ing and so forth?" we asked. Often 300 to a farm. They grow are grown, the arctic terns disap- Conditions other than pain, such sand, and 5 parts stone or pebbles. "Oh, she's too fat I on coarse vegetation on which pear from their North American as excessive perspiration, phlebitis Use only enough water to make the busy to care," he other animals would starve. In breeding grounds, and a few months (inflammation of veins) were also mixture workable. Another reason replied. these western states, the clip later they may be found in the Ant- "What's she do- amounts to about 16,000,000 pounds reported successfully treated by for the cracking may be that the arctic region, 11,000 miles away." mixture dried out quickly. If it is ing these days?" of goat hair each year. This does NIGHT TRAVEL OF BIRDS these nerve blocking injections. "She's a co-or- not nearly supply the raw material • • • applied over a foundation of con- Although most birds appear to be crete, this should be soaking wet. dinator," he said. for plush fabrics for upholstering rather helpless in the dark, going and the new concrete should be kept "Of what?" furniture and automobiles. Texas to roost at dusk and arousing only For Eye Strain "Either magic has more than 3,000,000 goats wet for four or five days so that the when early daylight calls, neverthe- cement will cure to its greatest lantern shows or eggplant culture, clipped annually while New Mexico See Your Doctor is next with 201,000. less thousands and thousands of density. am not sure which," said Mr. them migrate in night flights. All Twitchell. "She's doing well. Great Goat and kid skins make fine lovers of field and woodland have Some months ago I attended a WaU Finish. for morale, she says." Question: An apartment has been '.eather for shoes, book bindings, noted that on some given day in symposium (a number of short • • • speeches) on headache. newly plastered. It has a smooth leather purses and cases. Our goat early spring it may be that not a finish, and is apparently dry. I "The whole Twitchell family is in herds do not yield enough to supply [ bird will be visible, yet on the fol- As eye strain has always been on it," we observed. the need and 68,000,000 pounds of considered a very frequent cause of want to use a flat paint that can lowing morning flocks of them will MOTHERS . .. be washed once or twice, to save "Yes indeed, Uncle Chidsey has skins are imported annually. appear everywhere, proof that they For over 40 year* liave bwi orios headache, I was surprised when the been in from the start. He's U. S. this mild laxative and curminative four speakers and the eye specialists redecorating costs. What should I A milk goat herd, maintained by have come back in the night. to relieve Headache and Stom- use? Co-ordinator of Kite Flying at a the U. S. bureau of animal industry HEIGHT AND SPEED ach Dlicomforta... to Irsacn the in the assembly said little or nothing pretty good salary. He is opening distren of these oymptoins when Answer: A top quality casein at Beltsville, Md., has proved that OF MIGRATORY FLIGHT they accompany a coir). Equally about headache due to eye-strain. kite flying centers everywhere and good for ndulU. At all HrugKlita. paint is washable when dry, and can the Toggenberg and Saanen breeds r Free Sample and Walkinn IJoll Fortunately eye strain as a cause thinks he may get a million dollars It was assumed at one time that ,teMotherGrayl'o..l*eKoy.N.Y. be finished later with an oil paint, supply milk similar to the Holstein birds flew at great altitudes, but, MOTHER GRAY'S of headache came up amid the ques- for kites. He says that nothing cow. Goat milk has the advantage SWEET POWDERS tions and answers and the chairman if necessary. Directions on the can since man's conquest of the air, it should be carefully followed. This bolsters up a people's morale like of more vitamin B, a softer curd and others admitted that while there running around with a kite on a and smaller sized fat globules and has been realized that flight is in- type of paint can be had in colors, creasingly difficult as air becomes seemed to be a headache due to eye as well as in white, and is in string. And Grandpa Lem is co-or- is highly recommended for invalids strain about an inch above the eyes, dinating, too. He's the one who nev- rarefied with altitude, partly be- Do You Like Jingle Contests?, wide use for just such purposes as and people with delicate digestions. Raleigh Cigarettes are now run- and at the back of the head, never- yours. er did amount to much at anything." The milk is widely used for mak-cause of the reduction of oxygen sup- theless it was not a constant symp- "What's he co-ordinating?" ing Swiss cheese. The meat is nu- ply and partly because of a lack of ning another series of weekly con- Cracking Plate Glass. buoyancy in the rarefied air. There- tests for those who can supply the tom and could be due to other con- Question: A five by six foot plate "Top - spinning, I understand," tritious but is little used in America ditions besides eye strain or other mapped Elmer, grabbing a train. except when the flesh of the angora fore, although some of the birds best last line to a jingle. Over 100 glass window has begun to crack. with excessive wing spread, such as liberal prizes each week. Watch disturbances of the eye. It cracks a little more each day. • a • is sold for mutton. This means, then, that in looking cranes and storks, have been seen this paper for details.—Adv. Replacement would be expensive. CIVILIAN CASUALTY Domesticated goats are thought to for the cause of headache, disturb- Can the cracking be stopped? Helena Hollingsworth Honeybun (with binoculars) flying at 20,000 ances of the eye or eye strain is not be descended from the wild goats feet above sea level, the fact re- Answer: The cracking can be To air raid meeting goes on Mon. of Persia. Wild goats are found only as common a cause as was thought. stopped by drilling a small hole one- Her bunions burst right through her mains that migration in general is in Europe, northern Africa and theeflectefl below 3,000 feet. TRY THIS What, then, are the signs and eighth inch or so in size at the ex- shoes Himalaya mountains. symptoms of eye strain or eye de- treme tip of the crack. The job can At flre-warden work on Tues. The speed of flight varies greatly: IF YOU'RE fects? be done by any dealer in plate glass Flycatchers loiter along at 10 to 17 miles per hour; the fast-flying on "certain days" of month Persistent pain in the eyes them- at very little cost. When Red Cross work arrives on If functional monthly disturbances selves, persistent flow of tears, dim- Fainting Basement Walls. Wed. Agriculture News mourning dove rarely exceeds 35 make you nervous, restless, high- ness or blurring of vision, inflam- Question: I finished my concrete Her limbs feel like a ton of lead; miles; herons and hawks, timed strung, cranky, blue, at such times with an automobile speedometer, -try Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable mation of the eyes and lids, itching basement walls with aluminum Helena's mind seems full of burrs Repair Compound — famous for over 60 or swelling of the lids, are the usual paint, but it peeled. Cement paint From salvaging all day on Thurs.— have been found to fly at 22 to 28 years — to help relieve such pain With so many automobiles at rest miles; aviators claim that at 65 symptoms. "Persistent scowl or a does not hold, or casein paint, ei- much of the time, many garages and nervous feelings of women's tendency to hold a book too close ther. What can I do about it? Fearless femme, she bats no eye miles an hour they can overtake the "difficult days." will find their usual work curtailed. fastest ducks. The greatest bird Taken regularly-Pinkham's or too far from the eyes are com- Answer: Cement paint should Practicing home defense on Fri.— However, according to the U. S. de- Compound helps build up resist- mon signs of eye disturbance." hold, provided the concrete was pre- Won't someone send on Sat. and speeds reliably recorded are of the ance against such annoying symp- partment of agriculture, garages, swifts and the duck hawk—from 10P In most cases where eye symp- pared for it by cleaning off all traces Sun. particularly those in the country, toms. Follow label directions. Well toms are present, there is a tenden- of old paint and of oil. First aid for our Miss Honeybun? to 180 miles per hour. worth trying I are likely to pick up much general NEED FOR PROTECTION cy to first visit an oculist or optom- Musty Odor. —Sam Michael Gevins. repair work for farmers and others. etrist. In a great many cases tht Question: My one-room apart- • • • DURING MIGRATION Garage mechanics may be called on The hazards of migration are oculis' or optometrist will refer the ment, made over in an old house, An Insurance company has re- to exercise ingenuity in making NEXT TIME IN BALTIMORE was new when I moved in and many, and have been greatly in- patient to the family physician as ceived a claim from Corregidor for parts normally supplied through oth- MAKE IT the symptoms are not due to any everything was clean. In spite of losses of watches and other items creased by changes brought about this, it always carries a musty er channels. by man's occupation of one-time eye condition or eye strain but to a at the post exchange. And we can • • a odor. How can I get rid of :t? HOTEL MT. ROYAL disturbance elsewhere In the body. imagine the insurance company ad- feeding and resting grounds. There Average Acreage Is need for bird refuges, and for a It would be wise, therefore, when Answer: Exposing chloride of juster looking it over and demand- According to census figures, the eye symptoms occur to visit your lime will usually dispose of an ing severely, "Just what happened general legal protection of the mi- average acreage per farm in the grating hordes. family physician, who in turn may odor. However, the odor may come there?" And, perhaps, after being United States in 1940 was 174, com- advise you to see your dentist be- from a dead rat or mouse in the told of the Jap attack, adding, "You pared with 154.8 in 1935 and 156.° For further information, send (en cents fore consulting an eye specialist or walls, in which case, the odor will will have to send us more proof." in 1930. to Superintendent of Documents. Washing- eventually pass. ton. D, C. asking for Circular Ho. 363. optometrist. • • • • • a "Tht Migration of North American Birds." • • • Cracked Firepot. a a a Una Dodo found her typewriter so Save Baling Wire THE GRAND FIR QUESTION BOX Question: My old-fashioned fur- hard to operate that she Just threw Farmers use between 90,000 and nace has an iron flrepot in which I This conifer is well named, since the corer over It with the exclama- 100,000 tons of baling wire a year- it grows usually from 150 to 200 Q.—What causes my fingers to ap- burn soft coaL About every other tion, "I guess the War Board frose equal in weight to three large pear shriveled and to perspire ex- year the pot cracks halfway around, feet high, and frequently to a height it." warships—for baling hay, straw and of 250 to 275 feet. It is usually cessively? and I have to buy a new one. What And it Is Miss Dodo who has been other forage crops, the U. S. depart- A.—Condition may be due to foods can I do to get longer wear from it? ment of agriculture reported in urg- called "white fir" because its using one typewriter ribbon so long smooth bark is splashed with gray- PERFECT HOTEL SERVICE eaten or substances handled. Answer: A firepot should certain- that she could be accused of hoard- ing farmers, dairymen, stockyard Q.—A crust forms on my scalp ly give longer service than that. operators and livestock producers ish-white blotches. • Homelike Atmosphere Ing. FEED FOR GOSLINGS about two days after I shampoo my The reason may be in your method • • • to conserve baling wire. hair. What causes this? of stoking or of handling the drafts. a a a Goslings need no feed until thej Rates begin at $2.00 per day Sign spotted by Tompkins Harris Yon Can Almo Enjoy A.—Condition of scalp you outline Your coal dealer should be able to In Joe Brocato's restaurant: Watermelons Are Africans are 36 to 48 hours old. They should may be due to a simple ailment— advise you on this, or you can get It's Tough to Pay 55 Cents for a Watermelons, summer-time deli- then be fed stale bread soaked in MUSIC—DANCING eciema or Impetigo—or to < serious information from the Committee of Steak, but cacy, are believ-d to be natives of milk or water; or, they may be FAMOUS ALGERIAN BOOM Ten of the Heating Industries, 307 given a mash made of four parts ailments such as tuberculosis or It's Tougher When You Pay 35. Africa. NEAR RAILROAD STATIONS •ven syphilis. See a skin specialist. North Michigan Avenue, Chicago. corn meal and 1 part middlings. MT. ROYAL AVENUE AT CALVERT ST. PAGE FOUR THE FORUM

INDIA: Learning the Three R's in China Works for Ford WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS By Edward C. Wayne Hindus Debate Homeland Defense Anti-Nazi Unity in Norway, Denmark Several occurrences had contrib- uted to the continuance of conver- Brings New War Threat to Sweden; sations among Indian leaders with Sir Stafford Cripps, General Wavell | Advent of Spring Weather Heralded and American representatives as to j the question of the Hindus' part in j the defense of their homeland. j By Increased Battlefront Activity Among these events had been the perhaps fortunate mistake of a Chi- < EH ITCH'S N'OTE—When opinions are expressed In thesr columns, they nese spokesman, who had given out are those of the news analyst and not necessarily of this newspaper.) incorrect information about the ; —' .— . •• - iRek-ased by Western Newspaper Union.) ^^—_____^_*- Japanese occupation of the port of Akyab. This port, so close to Cal- TOLL: HARMONY: cutta, had actually not been taken, 0/ V. S.-Jap War And Discord but the mere thought of it for sev- News, some good, some bad, con- AH had not been too harmonious eral days had made the Indians realize the war was at their door. tinued from the various baltlefronts in this country, though in general on which American troops and sail- the nation was moving swiftly This alone gave Cripps a big ad- ors were meeting the might of Nip- enough along the path of production vantage. Also the tipiely interven- pon. for the war to meet the goals and tion of Chiang Kai-^helt. and the The navy had admitted the loss schedules set by President Roose- arrival in India and 'on the Burma of three warships, the aircraft tend- velt. . front of a sizable force of American er and former carrier Lungley, the But there were manifold bicker- planes and fighting pilots were tell- navy tanker Pecos and the destroy- ings along the pathway. News sto- ing circumstances, and played a big er Peary, with the loss of some 700 ries said that there was to be a part in the keeping open of negotia- lives. sugar rationing beginning in May. tions. This had been a bitter tragedy of Then other dispatches cited that the Indians, with the exception of the the waters off Java, adding to the Mahatma Gandhi and some others awful toll of the Battle of Java Sea. among his immediate followers and Charles A. Lindbergh has donned First the Langley, spotted by Jap disciples, were beginning to realize a worfcingman's badge and has gone planes, had been "smothered in that they were faced with bullets to work for the Ford Motor company bombs." and bayonets, and that if they were Guerrilla fighters, farmers and their wives and children assemble at its Willow Run bomber plant, at Her crew, all but about a dozen going to get ready to fight, they for a weekly open air class in reading and writing in a northwestern Detroit, Mich. Lindbergh and Ford had better be getting on with it. men, got safely off, swam about, city in China. With the aid of United China Relief funds, China is mak- bave been fast friends since 1927, clinging to debris, until picked up by The Mahatma was counseling "no ing great strides In eliminating illiteracy among its millions as part of when Lindbergh took Ford aloft for destroyers, later transferred to the violence" and was continuing his its wartime reconstruction program. Since the war began some 90,000,000 his first airplane flight. Photo shows Pecos. The latter, trying to escape life-long policy of a passive resist- Chinese have been taught to read and write, and today they are intelli- Lindbergh and Henry Ford as they to Australia, was caught by flights ance to the invader. The Moslems, gent citizens of a democracy that is an important ally of the United States. met on Lindy's arrival at the Wil- of Jap dive bombers, evaded the 70,000,000 of them out of a 390,000,000 low Run bomber plant. first run but was smashed in the sec- total population, were perfectly will- ond. With two crews aboard one ing to fight, but were demanding boat, the loss of life was heavy. their right to a separate government Relaxing After Battle with Japs The Peary was done to death In of their own. Rubber Co-ordinator - the Aussies' port ol Darwin, but Nehru, past president of the In- went to the bottom with all guns dian congress, had seemed to be blazing, her commander dying at the toughest nut to crack. He had his post. seemed to be holding out for the Not all was to be defeat, how- SEN. WALTER F. GEORGE right of the Indians to do their own ever, for our naval forces. Ameri- "Victory Z)«y" Jor labor. drafting of manpower, their own can submarines had taken a heavy War Production board and the Of- training, while conceding the right toll of Japanese shipping in the of Britain to do the leading. neighborhood of Bali and south of fice of Price Administration were at Java, and in the Christmas island odds on the sugar situation, and the region. whole thing might be called off— DE GAULLE: that there really was plenty of Following these disclosures, the sugar. Important Recognition navy reported that since the* start The formal recognition by the of the war 47 Japanese ships of war This was hotly and instantly de- United States of the DeGaullist gov- had certainly been sent to the bot- nied by Donald Nelson, who said not ernment control over French' Equa- tom against 24 for the American only was there no friction, but that torial West Africa, and the French navy. the sugar rationing was necessary Cameroons, strategic territory alorg and would be carried out. More than 200 ships of all types the supply route to the Middle East had been sunk, many of them by There also was a terrific argument had been considered highly impor- plane action, many by submarines, in progress over the time and a half tant. many by army planes and shore overtime paid war workers for the It brought, for one thing, closer guns. 48-hour week, under the law that ties between the United States and the work week at straight time the Free French and put Petain, de- This rate of loss was deemed cer- should not exceed 40 hours. tain to be more than the Japs could spite his refusal to allow Laval a stand, while America was increasing The President had maintained his Arthur B. New hall, dollar-a-year her production average of more than position as squarely behind the 40- man, former vice president of Good- hour week, and while some sena- Officers of the warships of a task force or the U. S. Pacific fleet are rich, wBo has been appointed rub- , two ships of war daily going into shown as they relaxed in the ward room after a hot engagement with the water, and more than this num- tors and congressmen fought against ber co-o}dinator by Donald Nelson, I ber of merchant vessels. excess profits by employers, others forces; Note officer (extreme left) with bandaged neck, and per- with brnad powers to dircot its use. were busy going after labor's over- M«a-.^tike4 tthirt of another offlcer'at right. With the attack on Australia def- time. initely turned back, at least for the Senator George of Georgia was a time being, military leaders were leader in the battle, suggesting that 'Call the Marines' taking a more optimistic tone as to the 48-hour week be adopted and the Welcome Word from Home for A.E.F. the chances for a 1942 offensive in sixth day of work be called a "vic- the South Pacific. tory day," the workers passing up their overtime, but to be paid it if the UNREST: seventh day were worked. In Norway, Denmark Observers, still writing frankly THAW: and against the Nazis in the Stock- Russian for Slush holm press, saw the spring season Just what the great Russian thaw bringing even more anti-German had meant was vividly described in unity to the Danes and the Nor- wegians. dispatches from Kuibyshev. They called it "more formidable than a Both nations were finally realiz- moated citadel." GEN. CHARLES DE GAULLE ing that all German promises of Second ufjicial approval to him. post-war freedom were obviously One writer said: "Imagine all the false, and that occupation and pup- swamps you ever saw. Imagine all place in the government of Vichy pet government meant simply con- the muddy ditches your automobile France, very much on the spot re- quest. had whizzed past. Imagine millions garding his future conduct. The Danes were united behind two and millions of mudbaths. Into It was the second official approval national heroes, the king and the all this dump billions of tons of of DeGaulle and his followers. Rec- minister to tlic United States. Hen- grayish snow and stir thoroughly." ognition of his control over New That's a thaw in Russia. The Rus- Caledonia had come first. But sian mud clings to feet and to tanks. French West Africa was a terrific One correspondent said he saw a territory with a population of mil- trackwalker on the railroad jump off lions and close to a million square the track to let a train pass. The miles. man was buried to his waist in mud- Oddly, on the same day, the Vichy dy slush. His comrades had to pull government reported that Germany him out with a rope. had given it "permission" to rebuild its air force, and to this was add- CRITICAL YEAR: ed the information that Vichy now War Tempo Speeded had more than 1,000 warplanes, or actually more than all France had The World could feel, with the at the outset of the war. quickening of life in springtime Photo shows Franklin D. Roose- fields and trees, the speeding of the CORREGIDOR: velt as assistant secretary of the tempo of the war on half a dozen navy during World War I, practic- fronts, and the vigorous battering of Nipping Off Japs ing with a .30 caliber Springfield nation against nation that was to Despite the widely increased pres- rifle on the marine corps rifle range make 1942 the critical year of the sure on the Bataan lines of General Mail time in any camp is a big time to the soldiers in Uncle Sam's at Winthrop, Md., in 1917. "We can World war. Wainwright and the almost constant army because it brings word from the loved ones back home, and lifts use marines," the President said the In the "land down under" the attacks by Jap planes on Corregidor, one out of army life for a brief few minutes. These U. S. soldiers, who other day, in answer to a claim that seasons were reversed, with Aus- American fighters continued to take are settling down to camp life in their new environment, are pictured there were not enough troops in HENRIK DE KAUFFMANN tralia moving into the fall season, their toll of Jap planes. receiving their mail somewhere in Northern Ireland. Washington to make a good parade. Number one Danish hero. but as the threat was to the tropical Just as the British on Malta had rlk de Kauflman, the latter, one Ger- north of the continent, weather made held out through the entire war man had been angrily quoted, was little difference. against hundreds of attacks from the Australia Looks Aloft These Days Greetings the No. 1 Danish Hero in the eyes But in Russia, in occupied Eu- air, the anti-aircraft gunners on Cor- of the people. rope, and on the embattled oceans regidor were getting from two to As to the Norwegians, their re- the changing weather was bringing four enemy planes a day with sistance to the Quisling government faster reports of action afloat and machine-like precision. had solidified until no risk was too in the air. They were only counting those great for the people to impede the Across the English channel had they dropped. Many more were re- puppet leaders. Evidence was that been moving huge flights of bomb- ported badly damaged and probably Germany plans on giving Quisling ing planes, of late more often than disabled. enough rope to hang himself. not accompanied by high and low A sharp land counterattack had Sweden was not inclined to view squadrons of fighter planes, giving turned a Jap thrust into a trap on these developments with joy, but the "big berthas" protection from the land. rather with fear, seeing the day not the defending Nazi ships, and they General Wainwright was continu- far distant when she, too, would be were dropping death and destruction ing the tradition set up by Mac- drawn into the war. over a widening area. Arthur. The Japs were ripping at full PROFITS: speed into India's flanks, the Nazis Agreement by a senate committee on the eastern front were redoubling MISCELLANY: on the principle of limitation of war their pressure against the Soviet, profits by industry had brought to and were said to be rushing 4,000,000 light reported profits running as high new troops into action. The Russ Washington: The government took as 4.000 per cent on invested capital. were countering, so it was reported, over control of the entire national While, with the government pour- with upward of 7,000,000 men, many stock of quinine. Huge amounts are ing capital into essential industry, of them fresh troops. needed for soldiers in the tropics. such profits always would be great, Temperatures had gone above San Francisco: Survivors of the the senators felt that a sliding scale freezing on much of the Russian Langley told odd stories of what With the Japanese ensconced in bases on New Guinea, only a scant Nelson Rockefeller (left), co-ordl- of maximum permissible profits front, and the torrential rains of they saved. One officer said he nator of inter-American affairs, might be the answer. 400 miles from the Australian mainland, the continent "down under" is springtime had been falling. The shoved two oranges in his pockets. making feverish preparations for the struggle that is to come. Particular greets Gen. Arturo Mujica of Chile Some companies had returned ex- battle of the central and southern He said he saw a Filipino messboy attention is now being given to anti-aircraft defenses, and hundreds of at inter-American defense meet of cess profits, one check to the gov- fronts in Russia were expected to swimming along with a ouija board posts like this one outside Melbourne are springing up everywhere. Pan-American Union in Washington. ernment amounting to $40,000,000. be the most bitter of the war. on his head. 11.

THE FORUM PAGE FIVE

Translated From Kathleen Norris Says: The French Most Divorces Are Failures By MARY CAREY (Bell Syndicate—WNU Service.) tnfJ!tf*ut GUatnlteM. (McClure Syndicate—WNU Service.I nv VIRGIN! 1 VALE (Beleased by Western Newspaper Union.) IT WAS a scorching June morning * on Greenwood campus, and hot OLAND YOUNG made up and cross behind a great rolltop R a novel "ten best" list the desk, Dr. Mary James struggled other day, between scenes of with a pile of French examination Columbia's •"He Kissed the papers. Ridiculously young and small she looked; only shell-rimmed Bride"—a list of Hollywood's spectacles suggested the Ph.D., and best scene-stealers. Being a these she hastily pulled from her gentleman, he spared the fair nose as a gay whistle and a shout of sex. Here are the performers "How's for a swim, Mary!" brought he considers most dangerous her to the window. to have in camera range while play- "Oh, I'd love to," she cried to ing a big scene; Cary Grant, Lewis the girl and man in the courtyard Stone, Wallace Beery, Charles Chap- below, "but I have to finish these lin, James Gleason, Robert Bench- fiendish F3 books by noon." ley, Bob Hope, Allyn Joslyn, Edgar To all of their temptings she shook Kennedy and Daisy, the canine a reluctant head, and the youngest star. For your information, the best gym teacher and the assistant pro- scene-stealers do the trick with their fessor of economics had finally wan- eyes and their hands, and are death dered off. to newcomers; put two together, and "Imbecile!" she scolded herselt you have a battle royal. "Why not admit what the whole col- lege has seen for months? Well, why not, She's younger and prettier." Mickey Rooney, it seems, is con- Cool and Decorative—Salad-Muffin Luncheon About half an hour later, an un- sidered adept at scene stealing, but (See Recipes Below) usual amount of calling and rushing according to Roland Young, his face about for so quiet a corner of the lights up too much when he gets Spring Luncheons campus, brought Mary James again Teady for a piece of business. "In This Week's Menu to her window. "What's happen- the Hardy pictures, Lewis Stone As spring spreads its fragrance ing?" she called to a group of chat- stops Mickey cold every time by »nd gayety once more across the Guest Luncheon tering freshmen. dead-panning." 11 f _ days, do your Assorted Salad Plate: "Oh, Dr. James, such excite- Jl yS moods turn to •Chicken Salad ment!" They all answered at the At last Richard Denning's actually -"**^_^?3C thoughts of ex- •Fruit Salad same time. "Dr. Hunter hit his going to appear in scenes with Doro- quisite, gracious •Egg Salad in Tomato Cups head diving in Ramsey Pond and thy Lamour; it's taken him three luncheons? Yes, •Molasses-Nut Muffins or Miss Simpson dived in and rescued years. When she played in "Her to be sure, they •Cheese Rings him." Jungle Mate" he was an aviator do. You get love- Coffee or Tea All that day and through the long flying over the jungle, searching for ly visions of pic- •Recipes Given. summer evening. Greenwood had I was glad to come home from Mexico, but I laced great unpleasantness be- ture-plate lunch- just one topic of conversation. It tween my parents. Mother minted to place me in a school that cost almost twice eons, crispy green salads, tiny, seemed to be renewed as each new- moist sandwiches, the tinkle of •Egg Salad in Tomato Cups. the one hundred dollars a month that my lather was paying lor me. (Serves 4) comer arrived who didn't know china on cool, crisply laundered about it. cloths, centerpieces of delicate 4 medium sized tomatoes By KATHLEEN NORRIS 1 package cream cheese To escape the maddening chorus* IT ISN'T FAIR flowers. Mary James shut herself into her "\\ THAT can I say to my 1 tablespoon finely chopped Divorce is bad enough when But this year's luncheons are dif- room and with clenched teeth pen- \A/ mother that will there are no children to he green onion ciled her way through a great pile ferent from last year's. The plates 2 tablespoons finely chopped * * make her stop knock- considered. But it simply isn't ore pictures to behold, true, but of French translations. But one part ing my dad?" asks Susan, green pepper of her mind was thinking: "Why fair, says Kathleen Norris, to the menus are kind to purse strings '.<• medium sized cucumber, who lives in St. Paul. "Moth- deprive a child of the normal and food shortages. wasn't I born an athlete? If Allen chopped were drowning I'd stani and recite er and Dad were divorced six home life he needs just be- A bowl of colorful greens, curly 3 hard cooked eggs, chopped cause things may not be run- French." years ago, when I was 10. endive, crisp lettuce, tossed togeth- '/i cup mayonnaise • * * When she first told me that ning as smoothly at the mo- er with grapefruit and orange sec- ment as you want them to. tions with red slivers of strawber- Wash tomatoes, peel. Slice oft Ten days later, at the end of the she was leaving my father ries are perfect with these muffins top, and scoop out the center. Toss hottest commencement day in Green- and going to marry a man I Successful marriage has al- the other ingredients lightly to- wood's history, two of the gowned ways been based on Killing and all you would want for lunch- will call Sam, Mother said eon: gether and fill the tomato cups. Chill and hooded faculty members paused compromise and -adjustment, RICHARD DENNING well and serve on lettuce. in the rotunda of College Hall. that she still loved Dad, that •Molasses Nut Muffins. and parents must think of Ray Milland. In "Disputed Pas- "Mary!" cried a very Hushed (Makes 24 small or 18 large) All three of the salads given can we were often going to see their children as well as them- sage" he had two scenes and two be served on one individual platter. young man. "Where have you been him; it was only that she selves when they consider di- speeches, but not with her. Now, in 3 tablespoons butter Arrange them attractively, a scoop keeping yourself?" loved Sam more. "Beyond the Blue Horizon," tall, Vt cup sugar of the chicken salad, a fan of fruit "Why, hello, Allen." She managed vorce. A child's happiness is 1 egg "However, complications arose. too big a price to pay for a blond Denning steps out as Doro- salad, and then the tomato cups. to make it very casual. "Are you thy's love interest. 1',i cups flour Your platter is complete tor a lunch- quite all right again?" For a Jew months I was left with little self-indulgence. 1 teaspoon cinnamon jny father and his sister, ml Aunt eon and a very pretty sight to be- "Of course I am," he sounded Billie Burke is one of those people I teaspoon ginger hold! A hot muffin to accompany savage. "Never was anything the nnn. Aunt Ann has two c.»ldren coin, Susan is protecting her. I teasnjton cult about my age and I was very happy who never throw away mmjrik^f «f and a fragrant cup of tea or coffee matter with me but a bump on the there. Then Mother and Sam came krow that if I suggested to Susan sentimental interest. But the other .. Waskoon sods completes the luncheon. head. Of all the tuss. I say, let's home, and great was my excitement that by quietly moving to her fa- day she told Joan Crawford, whose II teaspoon baking powder duck Senior Reception and go for a ther's home and bidding her mother l' 'up chopped Brazil nuts On the other hand, if you prefer because they were going to take mother she plays in "He Kissed the salad bowls which the guests will swim." me to Mexico with them. We stayed an affectionate farewell she would Bride/' that she was going to de- % cup milk serve themselves, here are ideas: After they had splashed about on be doing the fairest thing possible, '.i cup pure, dark molasses a year, and during that time my stroy most or the things she'd been Greens: chunks of lettuce, water- the shallow edges of the pond for a mother became so angry when I she wouldn't pay the slightest at- saving. So she went home and Cream butter, stir in sugar gradu- cress, slivered green onions, rad- while, Allen struck out with a mighty spoke of Aunt Ann, or of my cousins, tention. pitched in—and the first old letter ally and cream together. Stir in ishes. thrashing and swam once, twice and that I stopped mentioning them. Her mother has hurt her in every- she opened was one from Enrico well-beaten egg and blend. Mix and a third time around the little lake. way; robbed her of her father and Caruso, written to her after she re- Oranges: Use sections on a bed As Allen rose from the board in a \ "About that time it seems Aunt sift flour with spices, salt, soda and of curly endive or curly garden let- Ann and my father sold some furni- her home; put a strange young man fused his proposal of marriage. baking powder, then mix in Brazil graceful swan-dive, Mary struck out in that father's place, refused to let tuce, with raspberries or strawber- ture and some books that Mother (That was in the days when she nuts. Add alternately with milk ana manfully for the deepest spot in the Susan's own father offer any solution didn't want her career cluttered up ries for color. pool. A score of strokes so tired her thought were rightfully hers, and molasses to the first mixture. Bake that began it. After that she enter- to the school problem, and neglected with matrimony.) The house clean- Vegetables: Cooked green beans weak muscles, that it was easy tained all her friends with long ac- Susan for- days at a time. ing stopped right where it had com- in well-greased mullin pans in mod- in lengthwise slices, carrots, raw enough to sink beneath the surface; counts of my father's and my aunt's What I do suggest, therefore, is a menced. erate (350-degree) oven 25 minutes. or cooked, in slivers, cooked limas, but it required courage not to call peculiarities. 'No Smith was ever compromise. I suggest that Susan You can have a veritable smor- chopped ham. out until she had gone down and honest. That's the Smith temper com- gasbord on your main luncheon risen a second time. She managed have a talk with her father and ask Recalling the damaging effects of Fruits: Beds of lettuce, length- ing out in her. Nobody knows how him to pay her expenses as a board- plate if you carry out the general wise slices of bananas, berries in one choking, sputtering scream of cruel John Smith can be. Nobody a terrific beating George Raft took idea by serving several different "Allen!" then the green waters er at the extravagant school for in the original version of "The Glass season, cheese balls dipped in knows what I went through. My doc- the next half-term. From school let kinds of salads in frilly lettuce cups. chopped nuts. closed in around her and she tor told me it was divorce or in- Key," six years ago. Paramount ex- Pick out some combinations you thrashed about madly in sheer ter- her spend as many holidays as she ecutives have applied for $50,000 sanity. I think John wasn't quite like best from these ideas here: Dressing makes an important ad- ror. Down, down, down—utter dark- can with her father, and after the worth of insurance to cover possible dition to salad, and many times this right in his head.' half-term quietly move to his house. •Chicken Salad. ness, and a queer throbbing in her damage to the handsome counte- is left to your head . . . A Common Tragedy. nance of Alan Ladd, playing Raft's (Serves 8) Faced Unpleasantness. ( own preference. But how can mothers so complete- role in a re-make of the mystery j 2 cups diced, cooked chicken For, if you like, "Mary, Mary. Open your eyes." "I was lonesome in Mexico and thriller. Raft still bears the scars ' She lifted wet lashes to find Allen's glad to come home, but when we ly overlook the welfare of their chil- 1 cup finely chopped celery have the choice dren, and sacrifice their lives so of the slugging administered by 1 cup halved, seeded grapes of two permitted anxious face bent over her. "Dar- did get home it was to face great Guinn Williams. ling—are you all right?" unpleasantness between my father cheerfully? It is going on all the Vt cup toasted pecans for your guests. time, everywhere, this disruption of Vi cup mayonnaise Save sugar in the "It was frightfully silly of me, Al- and mother. Father was paying len," she murmured. And, shame- $100 a month for me, but the school homes and demoralization of girls William Holden's been grounded Combine all ingredients lightly. little ways, is our and boys. If marriages are child- for the duration of "Meet the Stew- Chill, add mayonnaise and toss motto, so here is lessly, she shut her eyes again just in which Mother wanted to place me to feel the quick tightening of his cost almost twice that, excluding less, that is one thing, and divorce, arts." Director Al Green nearly col- lightly together. one way to do it. This dressing however regrettable, is not quite lapsed when lie found that Holdcn uses molasses for sweetness. arms about her. extras, and she tried to get a court •Fruit Salad. "Mary—if anything had happened order for a larger allowance. the same sort of tragedy. But when was spending his Sundays racing I'iquant French Dressing. there are children to love and build high-speed motorcycles at Muroc (Serves 8) H cup salad to you! I've known for months that "My father's home is ten miles out for and establish in normal attitudes Dry Lake, and got studio permission 4 thick slices grapefruit H cup vinegar I loved you, but never before, how of town and' quite near the school, toward the serious business of living, to stop it. 4 thick slices oranges % cup chili sauce much. I haven't dared to speak, be- so I could live with him, but Mother then it is simply extraordinary that 4 slices pineapple '4 cup pure, dark molasses cause you seemed scarcely to no- won't hear of it. She told my dear- so many good women can con- 8 whole apricots 1 teaspoon salt tice me. Do you think you could est friend that my father was so Betty Winkler, of the air's "Abie's learn to care for me—a little?" vince themselves that it is "really Irish Rose," and Vice President 1 small package cream cheese close with money that nobody could better for all concerned" to break % teaspoon Worcestershire sance "Perhaps, just a little," shesiniled get along with him, and that cost Wallace agree on one thing—that Pare oranges and grapefruit. Cut 1 tablespoon onion, grated up at him. "After all, you saved up the right and natural relation- she can't speak Spanish. She au- into slices. Cut pineapple, oranges me a scene with my mother and a ship. Mix all ingredients together and my life, and it would be most un- crying spell. ditioned for NBC's new "Down Mex- and grapefruit slices into halves. grateful ..." Some years ago I was passing the ico Way," and without warning was Arrange in a fan shape on curly beat thoroughly. "Don't you think that when a man "That's out." Allen pulled him- doorway of a hospital room when an asked to learn a Spanish song from endive or lettuce. Stuff apricots When you invite your friends over and a woman decide on a divorce extremely pretty woman, married self abruptly upright. "It's not grat- the least they can do is to spare a record and sing it. When she with cream cheese and place at low- for salad and rolls for these lunch- exactly 17 months, called to me to heard the result she criticized it er edge of the fan. itude I want. Please forget all about their children from taking sides? eons, this may seem like so little, it now—or you'll be hating me in- come in and see her. While con- vehemently. Wallace was kinder but it's guaranteed to make a hit Incidentally my mother and her hus- gratulating her upon the arrival of a when he heard the recorded show; side a week. Don't I know? I've band now quarrel a great deal; he if you do the little details up right. never felt such a fool in my life as fine baby boy I spoke of the father's just said "That girl cannot speak Have the salads crisp and cool and is 34 and che is 37; they go out al- pride in the new arrival. Spanish." Lynn Says: I have these last few days. I wasn't well blended. If having rolls, these really knocked out at all; just most every evening and often for should be piping hot for contrast. It week-ends, and leave me to home- "Oh, George," she said, smiling stunned for a minute. Jean's been and flushing, "I don't believe be'll The Score Card: Latest reports you don't feel inspired to make rolls, work and the radio. That is why "Johnny Presents" Talullah Bank- reaching me assure us that: we a life-saving instructor all winter, come to see him. You see, we're get- then do other things like getting and by the time she'd tried all the Mother wants me to go away to head in evening gowns, only because have enough black pepper and ready-made rolls and pretty them school. I know I will never be di- ting a divorce, and he said he was her sponsor asked her to wear different holds on me and knelt on afraid he'd grow fond of him. He most spices for at least two up: vorced, for no matter what my hus- them instead of slacks when broad- years. Coffee and cocoa supplies my chest for good measure 1 was band did I would forgive him, but loves children." casting. So now she changes in a are adequate from South Ameri- Toasted Long Rolls: Split, butter ready for the infirmary!" if ever I did you may be sure that And seeing my consternation she special dressing room at the studio, ca, and tea stocks are still good. and sprinkle with grated cheese. added pleasantly, "No one could He caught the twinkle in Mary's my children will never hear me say- and as soon as she's finished her Domestic fats and oils will Pop into the oven until cheese eyes and acknowledged it with a ing anything of their father that is live with George, of course! He's stint, bowed and thrown kisses to melts. Serve hot. shame-faced grin. "Most unsport- actually out of his head most of have to replace imported palm , not kind and generous." the lads in the audience who are in Cheese Rings: Use day-old bread ing of me, I know," he admitted. the time." and coconut oils used for frying uniform, she gets back into her own fats, soaps and oleomargarines, and cut rings with a doughnut cut- "Of course I've kept quiet around Susan Protects Mother. She married again in a few favorite uniform—slacks. The injustice of a case like and homemakers must conserve ter. Brush with butter or salad the campus and played the grateful months; the new husband, it seems, all soaps and frying fats care- oil, dip in cheese, and bake in a victim to my best ability, but I had Susan's is this: she is reluctant to is so rigid a disciplinarian that be- hurt her mother, to leave her moth- ODDS AND ENDS-Sammy Kaye, fully. moderate (350-degree) oven until to let it out to someone. You won't fore the first child of this second the bandleader, is learning to skate I golden brown. tell?" er's house and perhaps expose her marriage was born, the 'wife was Tin will be available for can- since he accepted a leading rolv in "If," said Dr. James demurely, to criticism or blame among her obliged to see her small son dis- ning foods that cannot be pre- Orange Biscuits: Add grated rind friends. Susan doesn't want to give Sonja Hcnie's next picture, "Iceland* served in other ways, but you "if you'll get on with that proposal graced and punished in a way . . . At last Lionel liarrymore hus a of orange to a baking powder bis- any one a chance to say that she will be wise homemakers if you cuit recipe. Roll and cut. Dip a of marriage you seemed about to that would have done credit to Mr. role he iongs to play, that of Thuddeus make a while back, I can promise was unhappy with her mother. Oth- Stevens, arch enemy of Andrew Jack- learn to use dried fruits properly, cube of sugar in orange juice and Murdstone himself. Her new mate and can from your own defense as your future wife to keep your erwise she could go to her father, at- was angry when his own child son, whom he's been studying for yean press into top of each biscuit. Bake tend the desirable school, build a . . . In "The Gentlemen Misbehave" gardens this summer. Be kind in a hot oven 12 to 15 minutes, secrets forever." turned out to be a daughter, and to your kitchen equipment and new life for herself as his closest presently the little stepson was sent Cary Grant gels chased by six blood- gadgets made out of tin, for there Lynn Chambers will be happy to give Butadiene, Combustible Gas companion and housekeeper. to boarding school, was taken ill, hounds, one of which captured convicts who escaped from the Arizona stale will be no more after that is used. you advice on your luncheon or salad Since butadiene, a combustible Susan, in other words, is treating went to his adoring grandmother penitentiary; -at rehearsals that one al- problems. Write to her 'at Western gas, is used in one process for man- with generosity and kindness the and so got back into his father's Pineapple is still being planted ways caught him . . . Vat O'Bricri* Newspaper Union, 210 South Desplaines ufacturing synthetic rubber, the bu- mother who has never shown her bands. And the much - criticized and shipped to the mainland, and Street, Chicago, Illinois. Please enclose formed an "All Irish" glee club on th* reau of mines has published results the slightest consideration. Instead George has proved to be an excel- no serious shortage is yet notice- a stamped, selj^iddrcssed envelope lor set of "He's My Old Man"—Pal't thi of tests to show industry the need of repaying that mother in her own lent father. only Irishman in it. able. your reply. * Released by Western Newspaper Union.) for care in its use. PAGE SIX THE FORUM

U.S. Requests Scrappy Party Ends With Row 'uJZ? ISUNDAY Citizens' Aid International II SCHOOL •:- LESSON> By HAROLD L. LUNDQUIST, D. D. Of The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. SEWDNG CBPCLE In Scrap Hunt (Released by Western Newspaper Union.)

Pattern No. 8120 la for children of 1, 3, Nation Searches Junk Piles 4, 3 and 8 years. Size 3 smock, 1H Lesson for April 19 yards 32-lnch material; over all l'/« yards, romper la yard. Appliques 4x12 Inch For Vital War Leason mbjects and Scripture texts H- lected and copyrighted by International piece plus 4x10 contrast. 2',a yards rlc* Council of Relleioui Eduoatlon; used by rae for rompers. Send your order to: Needs. permission. SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. By ROBERT W. McSHANE GROWING TENSION WITH 106 Seventh Ave. New York (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) FALSE LEADERS Enclose 20 cents in coins for each Help win the war by getting pattern desired. LESSON TEXT—Luke 11:37-48. 52-54. in the scrap! GOLDEN TEXT—He that is not with Pattern No Size me is against me; and he that gathereth Name With this plea, Uncle Sam not with me scattereth.—Luke 11:23. Is enlisting the aid of every Address man, woman and child in the Opposition to Christ and to Chris- nation's war effort. tian teaching has come down through the centuries practically un- This new battle cry isn't a changed. Hence, we find in Christ's call to arms. Rather, it's an dealings with the enemies of His urgent plea to salvage every day helpful indication of what may available scrap of metal, pa- be done in our time. per, old rags and rubber. Patriotic duty was mixed with pleasure recently when Mr. and Mrs. It is sad to note that the chief William Coburn gave a party at their home In Boston, Mass. Party Invi- opposition came from those who That old stove in your base- tations requested each person to bring at least 25 pounds of scrap. Mr. professed to be religious leaders. It ment, the rusty, ancient bind- Coburn views the potential runs contributed by the guests while Mrs. is expected that the world, the flesh, FREE er near the machine shed, the Coburn tries out a rowing machine donated by Gov. Leverett SaltonstaU and the devil should fight God's bundle of papers in the attic— of Massachusetts. truth, but one might expect better BIG CANNON of those who profess His name. The all can be used to defeat the Government figures disclose that terial at current prices. Persons difficulty is that there is only pro- Axis. In fact, almost every there is an enormous pile of scrap who have been in the habit of giving fession, with no real life. DISH TOWEL unused item or piece of equip- iron and steel on the six million wastepaper, rags and scrap metals when you buy a box of to charitable organizations, such as I. Hypocrisy Unmasked (w. 37- farms throughout the nation. Th. 44). ment around the home or estimates run from 1% million tons the Red Cross, art urged to con- farm can be used with telling tinue that practice, since these or- The Pharisees professed great in- to 3Vx million tons—more than terest in the observance of religious SILVER DUSI effect in the war against total- enough, when combined with other ganizations sell their collections promptly. laws, but their concern was for the 8120 itarian powers. materials, to build twice as many outward appearance, while God ITS THE WHITC SOAP... Small towns are becoming an in- With the launching of the sal- battleships as there are hi all the Judges the heart. First we note a THE RIGHT SOAP...FOR A navies of the world today. creasingly important source of sup- \\7ITH this one pattern you can vage program, officials of the ply. Residents have been asked to false profession of cleanliness. * " outfit your youngster with as SNOW WHITI WASH, War Production board and The British ministry of supply es- Christ came to the Pharisees' table timates that one ton of waste paper collect such material as brass or fine a set of play clothes as the SPARKLING DISHES. BIO representatives of industry iron beds, electrical equipment, with clean hands, but He had not most pampered child in the world &A 17X30 DISH TOWEL i pointed out that a critical shortage will produce any one of the follow- observed all their ceremonial wash- ing; 1,900 shell containers, 47,000 kitchen utensils, picture frames, old could own! The pattern includes a WORTH 10$ OR MORE of scrap metal now exists in the metal ornaments, toys, coat hang- ings. When rebuked He struck home smock—full cut, fitted through the PACKED INSIDEi United States. Unless more scrap boxes for .30 caliber ammunition, with terrific force at the heart of 71,000 dust covers for airplane en- ers, old carpeting, blankets, fire- shoulders, topped with a round col- 1» forthcoming at once, war produc place equipment, old furnace parts, the whole matter (v. 39); namely, lar and appliqued with two bright Hon will slow down immeasurably. gines or 36,000 practice targets. Only that inward filthiness of heart which 28 per cent of the nation's paper is plumbing fixtures, radiators, auto- red apples which turn out to be Because of this shortage, the war mobile chains, license plates, gar- often makes folk meticulous about pockets—overalls of sturdy pro- A Sugar Saver Hkeljr will be prolonged by months, now recovered. outward cleansing. This leads to a Leon Henderson, price administra- den tools, burlap bags, old rubber portions and very brief rompers— Actually cold food requires more •ven years. and all types of hardware, includ- substitution of technical observance these again to be appliqued with sugar to sweeten it than warm food tor, has estimated that defense of the letter of the law that ignores needs will require SO per cent more ing door knobs, hinges, hooks, locks, the cunning pockets. Decidedly does. Psychologists tell us that Salvage for Victory. springs, etc. love and judgment (v. 42), which an invitation to start sewing at the food is just as sweet but does "Under normal conditions," waste paper hi 1942 than was need- The lists furnished by local sal- are so precious to God. There can once, isn't it? not taste so sweet when cold. WPB representative pointed out, ed in 1941. A large share of this be a dead, dry, and technical ortho- "the steel industry, for instance, de must come from family units. vage committees are ample proof that almost everything found in a doxy which entirely misses the pends upon scrap for approximate- Sixteen per cent of the 882,000 point. ly one-third of its supply of raw tons of rubber which the U. S. will cellar, attic or back yard has a defi- use in 1942 must come from rubber nite salvage value. But worst of all is the covering material. With the vast expansion up of spiritual death (v. 44). Some- AND, YOUNG LADY, REMEM6ER.IFY0U of our armament program, includ- reclaimed from old tires and other The War Production board looks used rubber goods. To get this 141,- upon every scrap metal pile as an times we speak of those who are BAKE AT HOME, THE ONLY YEAST WITH ing the aid that we must continue "dead and don't know it," and that to lend to Britain, Russia and China, 120 tons of reclaimed rubber, whole- unworked mine. Probably no other salers will ncled aU the old Urea metal is In demand in such vast may actually be true spiritually. ALL THE5E*WTAMIN5 IS FLEISCHMANN'S It if obvious that the salvaging of There may be death within and yet metals heretofore wasted or de- and tubes, boots, shoes and garden quantities as steel. It is needed not hose the public can contribute. only for tanks, guns and planes, but a brave and sometimes self-delud- stroyed must be augmented to a ing outward show of life. tremendous degree. In frequent in< Immediate Action Needed. also goes into the hulls of new mer- chant ships, into freight cars and U. Theological Deadness Con- •tances recently, steel mills have Even the lowly rag plays an im- been threatened with shut down for new housing units and Industrial demned (w. 45-52). portant role in wartime. Every plants. Already the WPB has acted The lawyers of that day were tack of scrap." housewife knows how necessary As this is being written, one of cleaning rags are to her domestic e-learned In the Mosaic law, hence were really the teachers of the nation's largest steel mills re- duties. Uncle Sam's problem Is the Don't forget to take that empty ported only enough scrap metal on same—only it is magnified a few toothpaste or shaving cream tune theology and ethics. They came un- hand for two days' production. This million times. Those are essential with you to the store when you der the rebuke of Christ as He pro- Is less than one-tenth of the compa to war production plants, where they want a new supply. Customers nounced three "woes" upon them. ny's normal supply. are used to keep machinery clean are required to turn in some kind First, they were guilty of heap- The importance of general salvage and in working order. of collapsible tube for each new ing upon others burdensome require- If emphasized by the bureau of in- What can you do to help in the one purchased. The retailer who ments which they did not them- selves keep, and which they did dustrial conservation, officials of nation's salvage for victory pro- sells one without the proper ex- •••OMOW which point out that the success of gram? change is liable to a maximum not help the people to keep. There the "Salvage for Victory" program The answer lies in direct, immedi- fine of $10,000 fine or a year's are such teachers today who set up standards they do not themselves will have a profound bearing on the ate action. The scrap material ly- imprisonment. I1 Pet Cike: Vitamin A-2000 Units (/»/.) Vitamin S.-150 Unit! f/«/.J •utcome of the war. ing idle around your home, around observe, a sort of signpost pointing 1 Vitamin D-350 Units (Int.) Vitamin O-40-J0 Units (St. Btur.) According to bureau figures, your farm and around your busi- the right way, while they are not All of these vitmmlM go right into TOUT bread; the* are not sppredably waste materials have supplied SO ness place must be uncovered and to conserve the nation's supply of themselves going that way. Then lost la the oven. Ask for FleUchaunn's Fresh Yesst—with the yellow label. par cent of the raw materials for turned over to war production. It steel by ordering curtailment in the there are those who present hlgb the steel industry, from 20 to 25 must be done immediately. Short- use of this essential metal In such ethical standards without the spir- par cent for the manufacturers of ages in critical material exist now. civilian goods as refrigerators, itual dynamic needed to live up tc aluminum and a large proportion They must be met at once if Amer- washing machines and automobiles. them. To tell a man to be good for many other essential materials. ica is to meet the war production However, the methods of saving without telling him of the Saviour SAVE WASTE PAPER * Guns Versus Automobiles. schedule established by President steel at the source are not suffi- who can make him good is mockery. For every automobile that isn't Roosevelt. Industry can answer the cient. Salvaging scrap iron and Then, those of Christ's day were Uncle Sam Needs Your Waste Paper manufactured in 1942, we will have present challenge to democracy— steel, known to be available in huge condemned for hating God's wit- saved enough zinc and copper to but only if every person co-operates quantities everywhere, offers a rich nesses. They were willing to build Save It for the Local Collector make brass for 2,400 cartridge cases to the fullest possible extent. vein of raw material, of which only sepukhers for the dead prophets for .30 caliber ammunition; enough Every effort is being directed to- the surface has been tapped. (killed by their fathers), but were nickel to make 100 pounds of nickel ward developing in the minds of the Lead Is Vital Metal. not willing to hear the living proph- steel for armor plate, projectiles, general public an understanding No metal is more directly asso- ets. How true to life that isl The and armor piercing bullets; enough that the need for metals, paper, rub- ciated with the production of weap- very ones who hate and hinder those tin to coat 1,000 cans in which we ber and rags now cluttering up ons than is lead. It furnishes bul- who are preaching God's Word, put food for our soldiers and sailors. homes, shops and factories is a con- lets for rifles and machine guns and speak and sing smoothly of the faith This is only a small part of the tinuing need, and a demand that Is used in shrapnel and shells. Me- of our fathers, and claim as their critical material which has been will increase rather than lessen. chanical lead is indispensable for own the witnesses of a past day. made available to war industry Local salvage committees are the construction of explosive plants Christ also pointed out that while through the stoppage of automobile functioning in every community while tetra-ethyl lead is essential professing to interpret the law they production. throughout the nation. These com- for the high octane aviation gaso- obscured its meaning. They threw mittees will furnish complete lists line which feeds our present-day 400- away the key to knowledge so that of needed scrap materials to every mile-an-hour fighting planes. neither they nor their people could Interested person. While emphasis has been placed learn—and yet they continued tc teach. Have not the false teachers Farms Are Best Source. on the salvage of steel, the disrup- tion of supplies from abroad has of our day done likewise? They deny Farms, the greatest single source the integrity and authority of the of scrap material in the general made it imperative that the nation conserve every available pound of only infallible Word—the Bible; they salvage program, are expected to reject the deity of our Saviour, furnish thousands of tons of scrap lead. The use of this vital metal has increased in direct proportion Christ, and yet they talk about be- metal in the form of obsolete ma- ing Christians and preachers of the chinery and tools, junked automo- to the war effort. Lead, lying idle in shops, homes and automobile truth. Woe be unto them in the day biles, old logging chains, wire fenc- of God's judgment and wrath! ing, old tires and tubes, obsolete "graveyards," should be reclaimed motors and motor parts, wheelbar- and directed back into war produc- What happens when such men are rows, rusted gears and the thousand tion. condemned or unmasked? We find- and one things which find their way Zinc, too, is essential metal. Old Ill. Enmity Intensified (w. S3, 54). to the scrap heaps on almost every wash pails and buckets, galvanized The scribes and Pharisees had twe Test Driver Don Kenower farm in the nation. wire and tin roofings which are no approaches: they sought vehement!} puts 'em through the jumps Farmers who are unable to haul longer in use can go directly into to provoke Him to overspeak, and for Uncle Sam—shares the their own scrap to the nearest sal- the production of propellers for bat- they craftily laid in wait for Him. Army man's preference fox vage depot have merely to call the tleships or into essential parts for The writer of these notes has seen Camel cigarette!.* closest salvage committee (or the tanks, trucks and a variety of other both methods at work in our day. local county agent) and arrange- war machines. Liberals, or modernists as they are ments will be made to dispose of One of the scarcest and most criti- called, profess for the most part tc Disposal of old papers, In a man the material. cally needed metals is copper. With a suave courtesy which makes their ner both patriotic and profitable, Is State salvage committees have an estimated shortage of thousands speak smoothly and gently about th« made easy through use or this recommended that any person who of tons of copper predicted for the conservative and orthodox believe! housewife's paper baler. The baler, has an accumulation of scrap ma- coming year, government orders or teacher; but if one only has eyei which holds 25 pounds, is equipped terial, In whatever form it may be, have restricted the use of this es- to see, there is often the strong and with a spool for cord and a raior call a nearby waste material or sential material almost exclusively cruel hand of iron hidden under the blade holder. junk dealer, who will buy such ma- to defense production. velvet glove. Approximately 600,000 tons of the Whatever may be the approach, estimated supply which will be be assured of this—every effort tc available next year will be Import- reveal false teaching in its true Winning the War With Waste ed, most of it from South America, light, or to deal with hypocrisy In and any disruption of this outside spiritual things will bring intensified •Ar With men in the Army, the Navy, the source would be a deadly blow to opposition. Christ took it—we too Marines, the Coast Guard the favorite fl. Enough steel and rubber go into ft A passenger car yields about rearmament. can take it in His name and for a single 27-ton medium tank to 1,500 pounds of scrap iron and steel. His sake. cigarette is CameL (Based on actual sales make 24 automobiles, ft A half-ton truck (blitz buggy) In 1941, approximately 34 per cent records in Post Exchanges and Canteens.) ft The steel in the hull of a heavy takes 3,970 pounds of steel, a four- of the copper supply came from Praise the Lord cruiser totals 6,635 tons. In a 35,000- ton truck 18,000 pounds, a 27-ton scrap. In 1942, it is plain that even I will greatly praise the Lord with ton battleship, 18,000 tons are need- tank uses 72,000 pounds and a light this must be substantially augment- my mouth; yea, I will praise him ed. tank 32,000 pounds, ed by an increase in the return of among the multitude. For he shall ft The shells turned out by army ft A carload of blueprint paper is stand at the right hand of the poor, CAMEL potential copper now lying unused in ordnance plants are packed in 30,000 used in drawing the plans for one of cellars, attics, and back yards, on to save him Irom those who con- THE CIGARETTE OF COSTLIER TOBACCOS tons of paper board each month. our 35,000-ton battleships. farms and in shops and factories. demn his soul.—Psalm 109:30-31. i THE FORUM PAGE SEVEN FAMOUS ALL-BRAN MUFFINS. EASY TO OUR COMIC SECTION MAKE. DELICIOUS! They really are the most delicious muf- fins that ever melted a pat of butterl Pattern No. 220 contains a transfer pat- Made with crisp, toasted Bhreds of tern of a 6%xl7% and two 5%xl5 Inch KELLOGG S ALL-BRAN, they have a motifs; materials required: Illustrations of texture and flavor that have made them •titches: directions for edging. Send your famous all over America. order to: KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN MUf FINS ' 2 tablespoons % cup mtlk Sewing circle Needlecraft Dept. shortening 1 cup flour y cup BUgar y teaspoon salt 12 Eighth Ave. New Vork 4 2 legg 2'/a teaspoons Enclose li cents {plus one cent to 1 cup All-Bran baking powder cover cost of mailing) for Pattern Cream shortening and eugar; add egg No and beat well. Stir in All-Bran and milk; let soak until most of moisture Name Is taken up. Sift flour with salt and baking powder; add to first mixture Address and stir only until flour disappears. Pill greased muffin pans two-thirds full and bake In moderately hot oven (400°F.) about 30 minutes. Yield: 6 large muf- At the Parting Goldwyn fins, 3 Inches In diameter, or 12 small muffins, 214 inches in diameter. Sadly Disillusioned Author This story is told by a man who READ THE ADS is writing a new movie for Sam Goldwyn. One day the author met Goldwyn for the first time. He listened patiently while Goldwyn DON'T LET discussed the story, without ac- cent or malaprop . . . "All those CONSTIPATION stories about Goldwynisms have SLOW YOU UP been incorrect," he mused—while • When boweli are sluggish and you feel Goldwyn continued, still without irritable, headachy and everything yov Pattern No. 2*0. do U an effort, do aa millions do — chew accent, still using the correct FEEN-A-MINT, the modern chewing YOU'LL love to show these words . . . "I'll write an article gum laxative. Simply chew FEEN-A- about Goldwyn and disprove those MINT before you go to bed—tleep with- * linens off! And they're such stories," the author vowed. out being disturbed—next morning gentle, fun to embroider in lovely colors thorough relief, helping you feel swell Then as the conference ended, again, full of your normal i'ep. Try and edge with crochet) Although Goldwyn led him to the door and FEEN-A-MINT. Taites good, is handy simple to do, you'll be proud of said: "Now remember, you've an and economical. A generous family supply sheet, pillow case or scari deco- important job. In this enterprise rated this way. you're the main clog." FEEN-A-MINT io< SWITCH LEND /V\F TEN DOLLAR'S, -THEN I'LL OWE SERGE-ANT, AND you A FIN ONLY GIVE ME AMD you'LI P FIV& — OWE AAE A PIN - O RALEIGHS P PLEASURE...FOR PREMIUMS • Youfour 0ow1 n eyes tell you[tha 1 t • On the back of every pack of Raleigha 1 nanlgtw are top quality. The there's a valuable coupon, good in the tobacco is more golden colored U.S.A. for dozens of handsome, practical gifts you'll want to own. Write for the •AND WE'LL CALL than in other popular-priced IT SQUARE / brands—and golden-colored catalog that describes them. A few are leaves bring the highest prices shown here: at the great tobacco sales. Try Raleighs today. You'll discover a milder, better-tasting smoke that is definitely easier on your throat. You'll enjoy that By mellow blend of 31 selected J. Millar grades of choice Turkish and »1« U. S. Sivlngt Stamp* Watt Domestic tobaccos. And you'l! may now be obtained through Brown & Williamson. Send 133 pay yourself a dividend of pre- •port Jacket Natural tan Raleigh conpone for each dollar miums with every pack! poplin. Wind- and ahower- atamp. Savings Stamp Album, proof. 3 files. Light weight, ahown above, free on request.

WHOO-EE-EE- HM-M-K. EE-1-I-l-M-I- AIR V/HOO-EE-EE RAID I-J-I-I-1 Dtteic BrMc* TaM* with TM-topTaU*. Matched But- I genuine inlaid wood top. terfly Walnut center. Maj- A Autonutio leg look*. Quetry inlay. T T

E QIK<«dged Congress Quality Free Catalog. Write Brown Playing Cards. Smart new AWUliamson Tobacco Corp., R fancy backs (our choioe). Box £99, Louisville, Ey. B & W coupons ire also packed with UNION MADE PLAIN OR CORK TIPS Kool Clgarettas t> TUNK IN R*d SkslUm and Quit Nelton every Tuaday Night, NBC Red Network O *500 THIS WRITE A LAST LINE * TO THIS JINGLE By HERE'S WHAT YOU DO HERE'S WHAT YOU WIN C. M. Payne It'ssimple.It'ifun.Justthinkupa "Heard the one of Pat and Mike You have 133 chances to win. If lastlineto this jingle. Makesureit you send in more than one entry, rhymes with the word "winner." Arguing which smoke they like? f your chances of winning will be Write your last line of the that much bettor. Don't delay. Raleigh was the final winner Start thinking right now. DOESN'T GET IT Help! TAKES PRACTICE jingle on the reverse side of a Raleigh package wrapper (or a "MummyI" called the small son facsimile thereof), sign it with First prize . . . $100.00 calk of the house as he came in from your full name and address, and the front garden. "A man wants to mail it to Brown & Williamson originality and aptness of the line you write. Second prize . . . 50.00 cask Tobacco Corp., P. O. Box 1799, Judges' decisions must be accepted as final. Third prize. . . . 25.00 cash see you." Louisville, Kentucky, post- In case of ties, duplicate prizes will ba "Ask who he is," his mother r«- marked not later than midnight, awarded. Winners will be notified by mail. 5 prizes of $10.00 . 50.00 cash April 25,1042. .plied from inside the house. Anyone may enter (except employees of 25 prizes of $5.00 .125.00 cash You may enter as many last Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., their A few seconds later the little boy lines aa you wish, if they are all advertising agents, or their families). All 100 prizes of a carton "He speaks seven different Ian- dashed inside, his eyes wide open written on separate Raleigh pack- entries and ideas therein become tho prop- of Raleighs . . . 150.0150.00 • guage: with fright. "Joe seems to get along fine with age wrappers (or facsimiles). erty of Brown & Williamson Tobacco Frizes will be awarded on the Corporation. 133 PRIZES $500.00 ••Ye; , but nobody takes much in- "Mummy," he whispered in tones his new wife." tercst to what he sayi in any of of awe, "he looks like a man, but he "He did the same with his old one them.' says he's an insanitary specter." when she was new." PAGE EIGHT THE FORUM ^:MX^-:-X-:-X-<"O-X«W^X*<~M~>«^^^ ; $ht Jfarum "A VIGILANT VOICE FOB DEMOCRACY" Published Every Friday Thurs. - Fri. - Sat. April 16-17-18 Mon. - Tues. - Wed. Apr. 20-21-22 Thurs, - Fri. - Sal. Apr. 23-24-25 ;; MONMOUTH JUNCTION, KEW JERSEY RUDYARD KIPLING'S REX BEACHER'S CHARLES LAUGHTON EDWARD R REY . Editor in Single Copies Two Cents JUNGLE BOOK "THE SPOILER'S" One Year (By Mail) .... One Dollar "THE TUTTLES OF with Entered as second-class matter at the post office at Monmouth Junction, in Technicolor New Jersey, under the Act of March 3, 1879 MARLENE DIETRICH OF TAHITI" with with RANDOLPH SCOTT JON HALL FRIDAY. APRIL 17, 1942 SABU JOHN WAYNE FLORENCE BATES fense: Civilian, state police and continued for the duration of the military. The post of State Civil- war. by a bill in the lower house. <^X"K"W-<^^X"X"X'<^K^<"»»«»»»fr<^-<^X^^ ian Director, now held by Leon- There's no end to the ideas of Evenings at ard Dreyfuss, would be created by the lawmakers. The sale of pop- statute as an equivalent in rank to pies would be restricted to 15 days PRINCETON 7 and About 8:45 Colonel Charles H. Schoeffel, head immediately preceding Decoration of the state police, and Adjutant Day to prevent fly-by-night vet- General James I. Bowers, as head erans from conducting tag days and Thurs. - Fri. - Sat. April 16-17-18 MONDAY TO SATURDAY 6 DAYS APR. 20 to 25 of the military. fleeing with the proceeds. The Governor would have pow- School buses would have the IT'S SO BIG WE MUST PLAY IT A WEEK er to name one or more deputies to same right of way as police and act in his name between the Gover- fire department vehicles and am- TWO YANKS IN TRINIDAD CHARLIE CHAPLIN nor's office and the civilian, mili- bulances in order to get children tary and police heads. The Gover- to their classrooms on time by a ID nor would also have authority to proposed law. A senator sponsored with set up a war cabinet of such state another bill to require school buses "THE GOLD RUSH" officials or other persons as heto pay only one-half of regular re- might deem necessary to act in angistration fees. PAT O'BRIEN BRIAN DONLEVY WITH WORDS AND MUSIC advisory capacity. Members would 1925'i Great Comedy Made Even Greater. serve without pay. Among Other Measures JANET BLAIR Chaplain'i Music Enriches It. — Chaplin's Talk Makes it Even More Compulsory Observation Convicted defendants would be The measure would provide po- able to serve out unpaid fines at Hilarious. lice powers for the enforcement the rate of one day's imprisonment for each dollar owed. Mercury and Action — Fight — Romance of blackout, air-raid tests, fire THE WORLD'S GREAT LAUGH PICTURE drills and other means of protect- its compounds could not be used ing civilians. There is no penalty wih nitric acid or other material in at present for failure to comply hat making by another bill. Legis- with blackouts or air-raid alarms, lators would be prevented from MONMOUTH JUNCTION Mrs. Belle Snedeker of Winsor, Club met on Thursday evening at DAYTON except in a few municipalities. practicing before State Boards by Mrs. Williard Petersen and Mrs. the home of Mrs. David Mac Phcr- a measure introduced. By the Jennie Applegate of Hightstown son in Princeton. Those winning terms of another bill the warden of Miss Ruth Voorhees spent her Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Luttmann and Mrs. Harry Duncan of Allen- favors were, Mrs. Edward Hughes, PROPOSED LAWS the State Prison would be ordered Easter vacation with her grand- spent Sunday evening with Mr. to bar relatives of condemned mur- town. Mrs. Walter McKee and Mrs. John Continued from Page 1 parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Metz Greene Jr. and Mrs. Fred Luttmann and son derers from witnessing their execu- Sr. at Three Mile Run. Word has been received here by Ricky of Metuchen. Miss Doris Cramer of Princeton tion. relatives of the death of Giles H. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Gibson at while in the Senate a bill ready for Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Mershon spent Wednesday at the home of Hullfish at St. Petersburg, Florida. tended Parent's Day visitations at consideration would prevent bank3 entertained at dinner five cousins Mr. and Mrs. Earl Merti. Possession of milk bot- of Mrs. Mershon's, all sisters: Mrs. Mr. Hullfish made his home with Trenton. fiom closing on Saturdays. Whis- tles in large quantities by unauth- Mr. and Mrs. jamc» Cttonnell Mable Faga of Bethlehem, Pa.,his son-in-law and daughter, Mr. Dorothy Errickson and Leroy key glasses in taverns would be orized persons would be prohibited spent Wednesday in Newark. and Mrs. Foy Dodd and family Skillman spent the weekend with required to have their capacity while another bill outlines in min- in that City. He was a native of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Douglas Sara Keighler of Philadelphia. marked on them by another mea- ute detail how municipalities may New Brunswick and well known sure. The mailing of sample bai- WANT ADS entertained over the weekend for An all-day meeting of the Lad- pay bills resulting from the destruc- in this community. Later the body lor at election time would be dis- three British sailors. ies' Aid and Missionary Societies ion of sheep by stray dogs. will be brought to New Brunswick Chester Van Note is confined to was held on Thursday at the home HELP WANTED — Full time pos- for interment. his home by illness. ition for a person interested in of Mrs. Harry Wilson. Alex Kish, who is stationed at Mrs. Herman Krieg visited her Elders W. F. Knowles and Henry flower growing and marketing. mother in Trenton on Sunday. Contact me in the evening or week- [•'ort Beaurgard in Louisiania, is Binde attended the meeting of New Mr. and Mrs. Chester Potts Jr. end. C. C. Van Voorhis, Phone spending two weeks with his moth- Brunswick Presbytery on Tues- wtre Sunday evening guests of Princeton I975-J-I. el and brothers here. day in First Presbyterian Church Charles D. Dooney has passed Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Davison in Princeton. FOR SALE — Two 5:50-17 inch the preliminary enlistment exam- Princeton. tire8 with good original tread. Al- inations for entrance into the Unit- Mrs. Wilbur Potts spent several fred Kady, Sand Hill Road. Frank- ed States Army Air Corps. days this week at the nomeaaw her . DEFENSE ACT daughter, Mrs. Russeli"' 1^\ end lin Park. Mrs. David H. Griggs entertain- (Continued from Page I) ed the 500 Club at her home on in Newark. FOR SALE — 1936 DeSoto with Tuesday evening. Her guests were Mr. and Mrs. James McDon- radio and heater; good tires. Apply Mrs. Harvey H. Mershon, Mrs. T. ald spent Tuesday with the for- June 30. to Alfred Kady, Sand Hill Road, Clifford Emens, Mrs. Elbert Pier- mer's mother, Mrs. Harry DeVois The 30-member council would Franklin Park. son, Mrs. Alfred Van Duyn, Mrs. in Bordentown. be abolished under the bill, as Eligabeth Brooks and Mrs. Frank Miss Frieda Krieg has secured would the office of Secretary for FOR SALE — 8-room house, all Morrisey. a position in the home of Dr. B. Defense, vacant since the resig- improvements, oil heat, beautiful B. Scasscerra. nation of Brigadier General Rich- grounds, Main St. location, Day- Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Moore have ard P. Williams on April I. As ton. Schoenly, telephone Mon- KINGSTON before, the Governor would have mouth Junction 4702. entertained 'his week for Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Kintervatter and Mrs. entire responsibility for defense ad- Kingston.—Mrs. James McDon- Jacob Martin of Belmar, Mr. and ministration, but with wider powers. BUSINESS DIRECTORY ald and Mrs. Herman Krieg attend- Mrs. Mathew Robinson of Sea Three Defense Branches ed the initiation of the C. D. A. in Bright and Mrs. Ambrose H. Al- Directly under the Governor WE HAVE A Delicatessen Princeton on Tuesday evening. len of Trenton. would be three branches of de- Mr. and Mrs. Newhouse of Rocky Hill were Sunday guests of Mrs. Complete Line of COX'S Helen Krieg. Delicatessen — Bos Station Mrs. C. C. Van Voorhis is con- CHIPMAN 180 Nassau St. Princeton, N. J. fined to her bed by illness. Mr. and Mrs. John Barlow have PAINTS Insurance returned home after spending some Keep Your Telephone lime at the home of their son in -INSURANCE— Kannapolis, N. C. Always Ready for Use Mrs. ose Feldman is convales Vincent Young L. I. LUCK cing after being confined to her Kingston New Jersey home by illness. Georges Road Mon. J'ct Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Catelli Sr. Tonsorial Servioe F D Telephone Mon. Jet 5701 spent Wednesday in Asbury Park. HiVERY WEEK over 2,000 telephones in New Patrick McDonald of Trenton .•...vVtV: :•;**• RALPH'S BARBER SHOP was the Wednesday evening guest Jersey are temporarily out of service—not because RALPH PICASOIA, Prop. at the home of his brother James there is anything mechanically wrong with them— All Bartering Service* McDonald. but because the receiver has been left off the hook Main St. Kingston, N. J. The Kingston Women's Card (or is held up by a book or other object that pre- ventB the switch hook from going all the way down). • * • When this happens, these telephones register "temporarily out-of-order" at the central office. No one can reach them until the trouble is corrected, Princeton Fuel Oil Co. which may be a few minutes o?eveu hours. • * * Today, keeping every telephone alwaya ready for service is highly important, for the tele- phone is being used to a record-breaking extent to Phone 1100 help speed our nation's war effort. PERRINES

Kerosene -.~: Fuel Oil NEW JERSEY BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY Princeton N. J. KEEP 'EM FIRING ARE ANNOUNCING TO THE PUBLIC

THE OPENING OF THEIR NEW

HORACE SASSMAN MODERNISTIC SODA LOUNGE

CREAM RICH MILK Buy Defetue Bonds and Slamps. Invert in Victory JAMESBURG, N. j. KINGSTON NEW JERSEY "THE TELEPHONE HOUR" Now at 9 P. M. Every Monday WEAF • KYW