on the americans sweep into jap...
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IPP <•*
&B&1T, 1944
ON THE
RUTH WYETH" SPEARS
I T I S not necessary to make our * economies s@ dull tha t they de-p r e s s every one. Let'.&make them tjay and at t ract ive to give us a lift aad, a b i t of a challenge too.-Th i s out rocker is an example.
A s aw and a -wood chisel were used for removing projections a n d rockers . An old quilt was
found for padding and the feathers f rom an old bolster were packed into a thick seat cushion to raise the seat which has been lowered by removing the rockers. This required a ya rd and a quarter of ticking. Four and one-half yards at inexpensive chintz in a bold, modern pat tern did the rest. Total cost for an up-to-date chair less .than two dollars, one that will serve well for the duration.
NOTE—This remodeled chair is Irora BOOK 5 which also contains directions for modernizing an old fashioned couch .and making other home furnishings from things on hand. To get copy of BOOK 5 send 15 cents direct to:
MRS. RUTH WYETH SPEAKS Bedford Hills New York
Drawer 10 Enclose 13 cents for Book No. 5.
Name
Address
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No Diplomatic Relations No diplomatic relations exist to
day between Russia and at least 25 of the other United Nations, nations associated with them and neutra l countries, among which a re Brazil, I raq, Peru, Portugal and Switzerland.
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TURN 'EM INI • • •
SNAPPY FACTS ABOUT
RUBBER
With synthetic tires about to be in general use, experts emphasize aga in that - (peed is important in deteMniaing t i rcra i teage. tho legal Jnpit o f 35 m.p.h. has been found to be tfce best?mileage eon-server wi th synthetics, |ust as is was wi th tires c* crude rubber*
tire cords lose elasticity as Siey grow older, which accountsfw many blowouts when a well-worn fire strikes a rough spot In the road.
Wart ime regulations are saving near ly , 200 million bus rnifes a year for the country's highway transportation system. Converted into t ires, this-conserved mileage means e tot to the robber program.
'I P'U" V •y 4 f ^jg/, y ? s - 1 ^ fajge Three
Americans Sweep Into Jap Territory
KWAJALEIN For the first time daring World War II, American forces swarmed into territory which was held by Japan
before December 7,1941. Marine units landed on Roi and Namur islands in the Marshall group. Left: Eniwetok and Kwajalein atolls of the strategic Marshall group. Center: Nauru and Ocean atolls of the Gilbert group where the enemy lost 4,500 men in an American occupation last November. Right: Jaluit and Wotje of the Marshalls. These atolls are circular strips of land with water forming each center.
Sweden Keeps Its Peace in Midst of War
In contrast to most European cities, Stockholm, Sweden, has no blackouts, no air raids, and is unmolested by the ravages of war. Top left: Sweden's democratic King Gustav autographs books for youthful subjects. Bottom left: Prime Minister Per Albin Hannson. Top right: Swedish women impartially dish out food and coffee to German and Allied soldiers. Bottom right: No invasion barges disturb these Swedish bathers.
Fair Sex Lobby for Soldier Vote New Stance?
New York Showgirls Shelia Herman, Anna Karen, and Joanna Jaap are pictured in Washington, D. C , where they called on Senator Scott W. Lucas, co-author of the Green-Lucas bill to enable soldiers to vote. The girls are a committee from the entertainment industry and are lobbying in favor of the measure.
Indian Belle 'Cuts a Rug'-With Yank
Killiy MuDniiiki «.f tin K'ngois coasts into Ernile .Bouchard of the Canadiens daring a hockey skirmish at Madison Square Garden. Members of the two teams engaged in a free-for-all, but after penalties were levied the Montreal team won 5 to 3.
He Led Invaders
Frank Leahy
;T was the greatest Notre Dame team? The Four Horse
men? Kocfaie's iriasterplerje>of#93"0? Or Frank Leahy's? l94J-sqna'd with Bertelli on ihe^Sfer
Here's the opening argument— "Dear Grant: They are saying the
1843 N. Darners were a better aggregation than the
<* i-'idefeated fight-i>.g Irish of 1930. '1 'lose who do overlook the fact that the latter oi-tfit had the i 'aching benefit of the ,daddy-stir-i' r-upper of .'em i l l — t h e b e s t
u a m n e d c o a c h that ever lived, Rock, himself! In
battle, Grant, between these two teams, how much of a factor would having Rock on your bench figure in the final outcome? I should say plenty, the fact that Frank..Leahy's an inspirational leader and a brilliant strategist, himself, notwithstanding. But Rock was Rock, that's all. And that means the best.
"I think another proof of the 1930 team's greatness is the fact that I can remember names from it. And I'm not a Notre Dame man, nor rooter. I generally root for the N. D.'s to get H in the neck. The little guy, the underdog, always finds favor with me. But I can remember the many nominees for All-America mention from that team; the guards, Bert Metzger and Cannon, Tommy Yarr, the center, the great tackles, Joe Kurth and Harris, and Philadelphia's Tom Conley, the captain and end/ The other end has bowed to memory, but I know he was a dandy.
"But the backs! Frank Carideo, a Mills' pupil, and one of the greats of all time, certainly would give his team a vast edge in this department. Marty Brill, with Earl Brit-tain of Illinois, will go down in history among the great blocking backs. Joe Savoldi was a human battering ram, while Marchy Schwarz was the breakaway guy who could do more than his share of breaking away. Chuck Jackwich, Bucky O'Connor, and Moon Mulllns were other fine backs and important cogs in Rock's mighty machine.
"This present team would have it over Rock's outfit in the passing department with the Accurate Angelo heaving the leather. Schwarz and Carideo were no more "than fair Singers for Rock, but they seldom had to be, what with the overland game so profitable. Rock's line could invent the holes! And there is recent proof that a line of such caliber might completely nullify Angelo's fine passing game.
"I'll take Rock's boys, Grant, of the two. And you?
"Very truly yours, "George E. Heiser."
By VIRGINIA VALE Released by Western Newspaper Union.
T\ H E t a l e n t e d folk r e s p o n s i b l e for t h e I n n e r S a n c t u m
t h r i l l e r s ( S a t u r d a y e v e n i n g s , CBS) a r e h o p i n g t h e p o l i c e w o n ' t t h i n k t h e y ' r e p r o p h e t s . A w h i l e a g o t h e i r w e e k l y s k e t c h w a s c a l l e d " T h e C a n dlestick Murders"—a few days later one of New York's most shocking murders took place, when a young woman was killed with a candlestick. Soon afterward the city was horrified when many of the pigeons that fly about S t Patrick's cathedral (near the CBS studio) were poisoned —that week the Inner Sanctum mysT tery was "The Bird of Doom," and had Laird Cregar, of the movies, poisoning pigeons. It begins to look as if somebody around there had a crystal ball.
A large amount of money, time and labor was spent on the dream sequences of "Lady in the Dark," but they couldn't possibly be lovelier or more dream-like than those in the Claudette Colbert-Fred Mac-
• 'toll:'», summit, in., maiiea lius snapshot ui himself to his parents; t ro rnf^ f ly , - fie was reported to be the first Ameri-
Wherever the United States army goes, jltterbuggirig Is sure to follow. Corn. Norman Diamond of Brooklyn; N ; Y., starjonea in India; is pictured
y"cj^Uig.^.^g, '4.#ttk.^^Rt^6r Indiangtr l a s his bUdiJies standing in tbe '. <Jan &>ldier**on the Anzio beaches m
A Feiv Words in Rebuttal I'm sorry, George, but I'll have
to string with Frank Leahy's 1943 squad with Bertelli in action.
To me the Four Horsemen outfit, with a backfield averaging 159 pounds, plus a rather light line were the all-top and all-time artists. Pound for pound. But they lacked the needed poundage. Here's the j answer. Red Blaik and other Army ' coaches will tell you and prove they could handle the older Notre Dame attack. Army outplayed Notre Dame | badly the day Jack Elder ran 95 yards, for the winning touchdown— and Savoldi was there. In 1930, Notre Dame beat a fair Army team 7 to 6.
The 1943 Army team was far better than the 1930 Army team. Yet it is my belief that with Bertelli faking and passing and running his squad, Notre Dame could have beaten Army 40 to 8, or worse.
Don't forget this 1943 Notre Dame team ran up over 80 points on fine Navy and Georgia Tech teams, which Bill Alexander and BUlek Whelchel will tell you could have been 60 to 0 in each game, going all the way out.
"Army teams could hold the Rocfcne attack to small scores," Red Blaik told me. "We couldn't hold this 1943 team to any small score, even with Bertelli missing. They hit us with too much speed and power at too many spots."
The 1943 N. D. team had a bigger, faster line.. It had, much bigger, faster ends. It had a much better backfield with BertelUt Greighton Milter, Bykovieh, Mello, Kelly, and several others. -.
And it had that smoothly clicking, devastating T-formation, hitting the opposition like a bazooka shell.
Bertelli Most Dangerous Above all—in Bertelli 1943 Notre
Dame had a quarterback far more dangerous on the scoring side than Carideo ever came close to being.
It,is my belief that Notre Dame's 1943 team, ysrith Berteia in action, could have beaten the 1936 team by two, or three touchdowns and wrecked the 'Four Horsepaetj thrqugh a -surplus;;M po$e§r, -deqegfion janrjC passing, j .doubt- iselore iie'rtelfl'IW that auy-4S43 pro team could have beaten^ it^-ajiid, Jhe pros B»t general, are v»efi "ahead*of -the egBeg^uiss
FRED MacMURRAY
Murray "No Time for Love." That hilarious comedy bears a striking resemblance to the story of the Ginger Rogers picture, and deserves to be rated among the year's top productions.
At the suggestion of Bette Davis, star of the picture,-Warner Bros. have changed the name of Douglas Drake to Johnny Mitchell, the name of the character he plays in "Mr. Skeffington." Gig Young also was named from a film character, his role in "The Gay Sisters."
On Broadway service men stand In line to get into "Destination Tokyo," along with the rest of the public. The picture was just as popular during its recent one-week run at the Mare Island naval hospital, San Francisco. Because many patients could not be moved to the hospital theater, a 16-mm. print was screened in wards and sick rooms.
"The Song of Bernadette" is an impressive picture; it was done beautifully, reverently, with dignity. Jennifer Jones, new to the screen, seems to have been perfectly cast as the heroine; many of the best actors and actresses in the theater and the motion pictures are in the cast, and all have given their best.
Paramount had a problem in "The Uninvited." The star-spangled cast includes Ray Milland, Ruth Hussey, Donald Crisp and Gail Russell. Bnt there had to be an unseen actress who moans and weeps heartbroken-ly in the night, filling the hearts of yon and me and the rest of the audience with cold terror. She's tbe ghost of a Spanish gypsy girl. Betty Farrington got the role.
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Aerial Funeral Service
A Fort Worth undertaking firm has applied for a permit to fly funeral parties in helicopters as a regular service; and a Los Angeles cemetery has nearly completed its own helicopter field for funeral processions that are soon expected to arrive and depart by air .
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FAMILY MEDICINES SINCE 1 8 5 4 .
Quite a deal, the one by which RKO will release the star-studded product of the new International Pictures, Inc., representing one of the strongest independent organizations of producers, writers, directors and stars in Hollywood. Lined up are Gary Cooper, Sonja Henie, Edward G. Robinson, Teresa Wright, Dinah Shore, Frank Morgan, and other headliners. The first picture will be "Casanova Brown," costarring Gary Cooper and Teresa Wright.
"Your America,-" the first coast-to-coast program sponsored by a railroad (NBC Saturdays), is that rare thing, something new in radio, programs, taking us behind the. scenes of railroad operation. - Music ji is provided by an. orchestra and a chorus, both composed of workers; for the railroad, and there are dramatic stories by Nelson Olmsted.
When you hear a Marine called a "Leatherneck," it has nothing T» do with the epidermis of his-neefc. Years ago the Marine uniform wag equipped with a high stiff leather collar. F rom that time on, "Leatherneck" has been the word far a Marine. The word for his favorite cigarette is "Camel"—the favorite cigarette also of men in the Army, Navy, and Coast Guard. (Based on actual sales records from service men 's stores.) And though there are Post Office restrictions on packages to overseas-* Army men, you can. still send Camels to soldiers in the U. S., and to men-in the Navy, Marines, and Coast Guard wherever they are.—Adv.. 1
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- * -ODliS AND ENDS^-F. Rugft Her
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