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PAGE SIX
A White House Deb
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Joan Morgenthau, 18, Is shown with her father, Secretary of the
Treasury Henry Morgenthau, Jr., after her debut at the White House.
The President and Mrs. Roosevelt entertained with a dance in honor
of their young Dutchess County, N. Y., neighbor.
Son Born to Actress At Labor Probe
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lFilm actress Andrea Ij«eds became
khe mother of an eight-pound boy
•*t St. Vincent’s Hospital in Holly
wood. Both were reported doing secretary 0 f Labor Frances
.filoward, bncely. She is the wife of Robert S. y ins ; s shown as she appeared
noted sportsman and son lore a House committee in
Uf Charles S. Howard, owner of j n g t0 n to testify in connection
Seabiseuit, famous race horse. investigation of migratory
Canadians Drill to Meet German Invasion
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British guards on the Channel coast have been doubled as reports persist that Germany plans a lightning
invasiqp attempt sometime within the next few weeks. Britain has been training constantly to meet the
threat. Pictured are Canadian reinforcements recently arrived in England, engaged in transporting a
gun tractor across a river as part of their anti-invasion training.
Trapped by His Fellow-Lions Tb Coach Army
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Shortly after a new habitat for lions was opened at New York’s Bpons
Zoo, three-year-old Brutus was shoved by one of his four buddies int*
this deep ditch, which separates lions from spectators. Trainer James R.
Haynes is trying to make Brutus go up a runway that has been low ered
JAto.UieJ>lh but the 36>—e-and cat refused and his keepers waited for
hunger to dnifcAun to freedom.
(Our Advertisers Are Assured of Results)
In The WEEK'S NEWS
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•'• BRITISH
OH S :■■■:■ PHOT AND GREEK
SR**» i : ” GROUND CREW fiaternii*
„ "somewhere
in Greece." Pilot
has Just returned from a raid
m I ° T * f th » broken Italian linos.
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monks in FIRE J '
DRILL at the ab-1 s
be lelqh. Y ot Buckiast- Enqland. j , –
They are P ,0 ‘ V m r
prevent fe. It: –
pared io oi
destruction “ A
Abbey by Nasi 1
bombers. St ;
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u>. !"BEST DRESSED
m i WOMAN"u
Mr«. Marrt.on
William*, wile
of the uttlliie*
■> -p magnate. Fifty
s sriss t r f ^ ~ ~ I *lyli*te conferred
columnist and 7 arqaret McBride, radio •be title on Mr*.
writer out William*
hi whole
on which Mi** clothe* budget i*
on* of the larq
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/— f THE Actor DURATION Laurence 1 Si
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I Olivier and hi*
Vivien Leiqh. *ail
to do their bit lor MRS. ALBERT GUZE oi Inglewood. Cal., receiving irom J. E. Field*.
i Vice President of Chryvler Corporation, the key*
\ Enqland In the J to the 1.000.000th
ftk war cri*U. vehicle produced by hi* company in 1940. This I* the third year
Chrysler Corn, ha* passed the millionth mark—the others being
■Slot ii> 1936 and 1937. -----------
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Released from a five-year contract
as Dartmouth’s head football coach,
Earl (Red) Blaik has accepted a
similar post at the United States
Military Academy, West Point.
N. Y. Blaik was an assistant coach
at West Point before going to Dart
mouth seven years ago.
Household Hint
Reach for crushed newspaper,
instead of a dish cloth, when clean
ing out a frying pan in which fish
has been cooked. Discard the pa
per. Scald out the pan with boil
ing water to remove the odor and
then wash in very hot sudsy water.
Rinse in boiling water. Wipe dry.
THE COVINGTON NEWS
Live Stock Winner
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Posing proudly with her prize
winning steer, Sargo, is Evelyn i
Asay, 18, of Mt. Carroll, Ill. Sargo
was named junior champion steer
in the 4-H junior feeding contest at,
Chicago’s International Live Stock*
Exposition.
British Commander in Greece
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Sir Archibald Wavell, commanding the British army in the Middle
East, is shown (wearing field boots) chatting with a British engineer
seiigeant about the construction of gun emplacements somewhere in
Greece. In bad,ground is one of the big anti-aircraft guns landed in
Greece by the British, one of the powerful reasons for the successful
counter-offensive by toe valiant Greeks.
(Largest Coverage Arty Weekly In the S tate)'
Donkeys in the Desert
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Fine sand that would soon stall the best of mechanized equipment
doesn’t faze these patient donkeys, used in the desert in Britain's
campaign against Libya. The Tommies who lead the animals wear
much less than regulation uniform as they bring up supplies.
FOURTH DISTRICT POLIO CHAIRMAN
MEETS WITH STATE
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The eighth annual “Fight Infantile Paralysis’’ drive got off to a big
start last Saturday when the State Committee for the Celebration of the
President's Birthday met in Atlanta to complete plans for the campaign.
Shown above (from left to right) are Wiley L. Moore. Treasurer of thr
Committee: Quimbv Melton, of Griffin. Fourth District Chairman, and
Fllis Arnall. head of the State Committee. The drive will culminate on
the President's birthday, January 30.
Named to Three Vital British Posts
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Foreign Secretary Viscount Halifax (center) is Britain’s new ambassador to the United States in a r move
that restores Anthoj^ Eden (right) to the Foreign Secretary post which he quit in 1988 in protest against
the appeasement poIWv of the late Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and Lord Halifax. Captain David
Margesson (ieft), one-time floorwalker in a Chicago department store and for ten years the government
whip in Commons, replaces Eden as War Minister.
War Comes to the Holy Land
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Huge clouds of smoke roll over a mosque and cemetery in Haifa, Pal
estine, aftijr an Italian bombing raid on Rie* sli oil reserves. Thirty
nine Moslems were resorted kiUeL. 5k wounded.
Thursday, Janua ry 16, i 5j
Stewart Is Told
Selective Service
Success Depends
On Local Boards
By C HARLES P STr.Wcj
Central Press Columnist
OUR SELECTIVE service
tem is a vast organization t*\
Ing into every and neighborly territory
every state n
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Lieut. Col
O’KeUlher
and navy j
mittee sat In his unpretention
flee at national headquarttj
Washington and explained t|
what makes the thing tick
'The heart and soul of sell
service." he said, "isn't in ng{
headquarters nor in the heaij
fers of the respective statq
territories Its heart and soii
in the more than 6.000 local
»»«■«>'•
arduous task of determining
shall be inducted and who shj
put into deferred classifies
weigh all evidence, studying)
angle, without any pay what?
except intangible pay—the j
faction of feeling that their i
is vitallv important to the i
try's welfare and perhaps its
existence ”
Colonel O'Kelliher knows hti
When our last World war's |
law was enacted he was pract
law in Oconto. Wis. “Like |
sands of others," he relates, '1
swlred the call to serve on ai
board. It was a big response
deciding the future of boys I’d,
acquainted with from birth,
whose fathers and mothers
my personal friends. Still, |
was some satisfaction in being
to do it fairly and with full eg
eration for the, best Interest
my neighbors, my community
my country."
Called to Washington I
Then the colonel was namti
efrdinator of local boards thrJ
out Wisconsin. Subsequentln
was called to Washington Sinwl au
tional draft inspector.
he's been a member of the I
committee, army and which navy has selective been perl sej
ing plans for today's setup
many years, j
“As national draft inspector
observes, referring to his en
ence in the last war era. “I vd
hundreds of boards in all para ci
the United States—in huge
in large and small towns and a
ral districts. There was a wide
ference between various bos
methods, the but just the result it is always] l|
same, as now.
sions were made in the best i
ests and of communities they had the and the tj
try, approsi
public opinion.
“Dependence was a major aboutj a
for exemption, and only
per cent of those selected fori
ice these were married. dependency In a major]
cases no
volved. band In many had supported of theVn his thej I
never
Some wive? and were relatives, being supported] and It |
approval with almost that unanimous they comm] chose]
were
“One case created in quite Washiaj a s]
government agency exempt*]
wanted its workers
replaced. the ground The that local they board couldr] re]
the request. Upon appeal to I
ice General administration, Crowder, head upheld of the] I
put board. The to Secretary issue, thereupon of War B] j
up |
At the bottom of the letter
manding ‘No exemption, Remember, the there] seer]
wrote. indisp]
such thing as absolute
bility, mitted or a die worker even’ " couldn't be]
to
Principal the Sam*
The colonel recognizes that
draft law of 1917 and our lM
lective “But service the law aren't he ident] says]
principal." sy]
the same. Success of the
depends upon the local nw
made up of the registrants frt«
and neighbors job
"That first World war
tremendous When it was o vpr
agreed t ,
American people were
selective service is the most del
cratic. efficient, economical j
fairest method of securing tnet
our military forces, 1 «*l
“Nobody's happier than
the raising thought that to today fight in we Ft] ”J
an army
or anywhere else, We're train
these boys to insure us afH
war that That selective doesn't service change is the] pNJ
just it as did practical actual and wartime efficient t] J
as In the']
"And never forget that
share boards." of the credit goes to th» ]
SALLY b SALLIES
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business i,
of raising |
ly 1 . 000.000
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military \
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8 t U. u r t J
amazinglv j
pie and
reaucratic J
by-word
centralizatJ Lieut]
Victor .1 0
liher of thj
fit's joint |