Newspapers / The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, … / Feb. 10, 1944, edition 1 / Page 2
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Who's News This Week By Delos Wheeler Lovelace Coaaallduted Feature*.—WNU Releaa*. NEW YORK. After 1940 it seemed that Rear Admiral Ross T. Mclntyre had had official instruc tions to look on only the bright side _,. _ , _ of all presi- Thia 3rd Termer dential mi- Will AUo Take 4th crobes. In If Voteru Say So 'o, after the usual pokes and taps and lab tests, he announced that his White House patient wasn't so good. In '4l, however, he said the subject was in grand health and he said the same in '42 and '43. But now, following that recent bout with the flu, he is firm in his order that the President coast for a while. Mclntyre, chief doctor to Pres ident Roosevelt for three terms and a cinch for the assignment if voters approve a fourth term, is stocky, broad - faced, full mouthed, bald and assured, as all good doctors must be. Born in Oregon, he married and prac ticed for a while before entering the navy in 1916 as medical corps lieutenant, j.g. Until he took on the top-to-toe care of Presi dent Roosevelt he specialized in eye, ear, nose and throat mat ters and was good enough to be elected a Fellow of the Ameri can College of Surgeons. He has decorations from Brazil, Sweden and Belgium. When he went to the White House he was a captain, but he was boost ed over a lot of seniors into the navy's surgeon generalcy and made a rear admiral forthwith. His order is that the President keep between 184 and 188 pounds, which cuts off second helpings but allows an un limited variety of food. He didn't order but approves the President's eight hours of sleep and breakfast in bed between eight and nine. Din ner he leaves to Mrs. Roosevelt. KIN FOLKS seem to have guided the hand of fate which brings Leighton Goldie McCarthy now to the post of first Canadian ambassa- Jlet's Give All Due Credit to Kinfolka a top-draw- OfAmb. McCarthy er states man and business man, of course; and for that may take some personal credit. *Hat consider his grandfather! A so licitor back in Dublin, he came to Canada because a partner left him short of cash and Canada seemed the best place for a fresh start. Mc- Carthy wouldn't likely be the new ambassador except for that Irish trouble. Then there is the fact that his family has long held a seat in the Canadian house of commons. Young Leighton, who was born in Ontario, near bine Lake Hu ron, helped his uncle win the seat in 1891 and that, no doubt, inspired him to run for the seat himself in 1898. He held it until 1908. He has been Canadian Minister to Washington since 1941. Early in life he studied law in an uncle's office in Barrie, Ont. Relatives, again! He has represent ed aluminum interests and is-chair man of Canadian Life, the oldest Canadian life insurance company. A humanitarian, he is a trustee of our National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis and visits the President yearly at Warm Springs. They are old friends. Mr. McCarthy is a spare, polished man, six feet tall. Although he is 75 years old now, it is easy to be lieve that he once excelled at rough tough lacrosse. Fishing, golfing and riding are his present interests. —• — THE Russians can't be reading King Carol's recent clippings. When his expensive press agent was hired the idea was to fill even Mos »j e ti » cow's new Reds Say There re papers with Still Kings a Cat stories of e Wouldn't Look At wrttodraw a halo around the head of Rumania's run away ruler. A Jot of pieces landed in a tot of paper*;, good ones, too. But here is Moscow' calling Carol a comic opera fellow and warning that he will never, never get his tbrone back. Such stubbornness will dismay Carol down in Mexico City's sub urban Coyoacan where he lives a simple life Intended to con vince his worst enemies that he Is changed for the better. A Hohenzollern on his father's side, kinsman of British royalty on his mother's, he keeps to a practically peasant routine. He and Madame Lupescu live hi a small house with only one serv ant, six dogs and in the master's bedroom only seven salts of clothes. Now and then they play bridge with neighbors, no stakes; but usual ly Carol is abed with the birds, which should surprise his old Paris pals, if any still live. His typical day begins about seven in the morning. He breakfasts on coffee, toast, fruit, reads his mail and works in the garden, while Madame Lupescu suggests he might better have planted that there, or thero. Then lunch and all the news papers, then a motor ride to delivei Madame Lupescu at the Red Cross workshop, then home to receive ot flcial ci tiers. Marines in South Pacific Battle Time, Mud and Japs Left: Sandy mnd pins daily rainstorms created this type of road for marines during their early days of operation on Bougainville. Jeeps and trucks were unable to get through to front lines until engineers and Seabees surfaced the roads with sea coral. Top right: Pfc. Juan Gonsalez starts across a lagoon In the South Pacific with an inflated poncho or rain cape. Bottom right: Marines work frantically against the setting son, A whole day's work depended upon their success in getting a tractor raised before dark. Rolling Toward Rome; Chiefs of Surprise Landing |jw„' f■ w.-j. -• ■ — »*•" *wWl''• ~. • -'■■■ » ■vflwwv •••••• i ■■ f , ' ' - • - \' > • PP«jg E&T.C >' ' * * f >« IlllftiiiiS^ & ** ' | A . V. . ..V ~ 2 Left: British troops of the Allied Fifth army are shown in their carriers rolling toward Rome after sud denly flanking German forces by landing on Italy's west coast near the Eternal City. Right: Lient. Gen. Mark W. Clark, commander of the Fifth army, shakes hands with Admiral F. J. Lowry, chief of the naval forces which participated in the landing. Only slight defensive action by the enemy was encountered and 100,000 Ger mans faced the possibility of being trapped between Allied armies in the south and the new landing forces. Nazi Soldier, Civilian After Allied Raids HI r ~ Left: Ruins and fires can be seen behind this German soldier who was pictured in the Kiev area of the Russian front where the Nazis have been retreating. Right: Nazi newspaper vendor in Berlin distributes pa pers containing stories about the previous night's Allied raid. These pictures were received from a neutral source. Nazi Sailors Supply U-Boat I '' " t . _-vV^^BF \ J^'^SKj: ,-■• , V«JB This photograph received in the United States through a neutral country, shows crewmen of a German submarine transferring supplies via a rubber boat. The supplies are going from a submarine supply craft to a raiding submarine at sea. Early in the war there were reports of huge supply submarines wblch could provide fuel and provisions for Mveral subs and erewi. THE DANBURY REPORTER, DANBURY, N. C„ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1944 J £' Ready to Fight Graceful curves of a modern bat tleship are emphasized In this pic ture of the USS Missouri taken just before she was launched at the New York Navy yard. Murder Victim's Kin . : i ■ I' |yipS Frank Starr Williams, husband of Mrs. Adele Born Williams, who waa fatally shot by a mysterious gnu woman in one of Chicago's most fashionable hotels. life Cairo Conference By Frank Gervasi (WNU Feature—Through soecial arrangement with Collier*a Weekly) Long before the great Cairo con ferences opened, knowledge of the forthcoming meetings was general. The conferees met behind barbed wire barricades, minefields, antiair craft batteries, cordons of troops and secret police. Even more formida ble was the protective barrier o 1 censorship. Madame Chiang, fragile and love ly as a lotus blossom, shopped for silk stockings, visited mosques and Saladin's Citadel and had her hair done. Roosevelt and Churchill went to the Pyramids and listened to a half hour condensation of their aeonic history by the No. 1 Dragoman, Haji Ali el Robeishi, who declined a large Rooseveltian tip and made a fortune selling "exclusive" inter views to 70 war correspondents, and will have all the "Freedom from Want" a man could wish for. The Generalissimo wasn't im pressed by the Pyramids, which he saw with Madame. The Great Wall of China, he said, gets less publicity but is a better job. The Sphinx, however, got him. "He emanates majesty," said Chiang. Churchill, described by Roosevelt as the writer of the group, wrote the communique. It was edited by the President, who changed the phrase "territories Japan has taken from China" to "territories Japan has stolen." Madame Chiang, who witnessed the signatures, clapped hands and blurted happily, "That's great!" Then everybody posed for pictures. The original of what became known as the "China Communique" was presented to Chiang as a souvenir, Stalin and Inonu. The subsequent meetings with Pre mier Joseph Stalin in Teheran and with Turkish President Ismet Inonu, were covered for the correspondents by proxy—by two British civil serv ants and two American ex-newspa permen employed by the Office of War Information. They did as well as could have been expected. The plans—as made long before they started remodeling Mena House from a comfortable hotel into an of fice building and wiring it with 400 miles of cable connections with 47 villas where the bigger shots were housed with their 6talfs in the vi cinity—didn't include Stalin's pres ence in Cairo. Arrangements were being made for the Mahomets of Anglo-American democracy to come to the mountains of Sovietism in Teheran. When, after five days of political and military talking, planning, lunching, wining and dining in Mena House, the scene shifted to Teheran for Act Two, the China Conference in Cairo had lost Its interest for re porters and perhaps for the world. Stalin had propagandistically dom inated the Cairo Conference in ab sentia. In Teheran, he dominated it in person. But all we learned directly in Cairo was that the Rus sian uniforms are of excellent ma terial, that the Soviet Secret Police is efficient and omnipresent, and that all carried gats, ipcluding serv ants. We coveied Act One with per iscopes, and Act Two by remote con trol. Stalin returned to Moscow, and Roosevelt and Churchill to Cairo to meet the Turkish delegation head ed by Inonu for Act Three. Turkey Leans Toward War. AH three conferences were of acute importance, but in some ways, the most significant was the one in volving Turkey. The very fact that Inonu, cleverest knife-edge walker in the diplomacy of neutrality, came to see Roosevelt and Churchill was a slap in the teeth for Hitler, who, poor fellow, simply hasn't anyone with whom to hold conferences now. Inonu's presence in Cairo strongly indicated that Turkey's balancing act was about over, and that the country would enter the war at 11:59' Ap. m. before the fateful mid night hour of victory, to secure a reservation at the peace conference. It was apparent that Turkey had at last decided that continued neutrali ty might be unprofitable, and Inonu's arrival gave point to the statement of the Teheran Communique warning Germany of great offensive* "from east, west and south." 'GrMt Revolution.' Final chapter in the series of con ferences, was a speech by Premier Jan Christiaan Smuts. "We iri passing," lie said, "through one of the great revolu tions of history. The significance ef this war Is that It is the first step to that greater world which Is urn ing. The war of arms will pass, and the greater battle of the homan spirit remains before ns. A higher level of homan destiny lies before us, for the elements are gathering for something much bigger than ever we conceived. FIRST CHOICE OF MILLIONS No» inter. Nona surer. Nona eaier- Bt Joseph Aspirin—world's largest asiljr atlO*. B«vsmostlnbrwrsisss^ B6 tab lets, SO*; 100 tablets, only Why rmr pay moreT Demand St Joseph Old Testament in Hebrew The Old Testament is now being published in Hebrew in Palestine, the first time in history that a com plete edition of this book has been produced in its original language in its native country. Don't fool with • cold! Neftltcted, II may easily develop Into i more seri ous condition. Rest—avoid exposure. And for usual cold miseries, gat Grore'a Cold Tablets. They're Uke • doctor's prescription—that Is. a mul tiple medicine. Work on all these symptoms of a cold . • • headache body aches—fever—nssal stuffiness. Why Just suffer along? Take Grove a Cold Tablets exactly as directed. Ask your druggist for Grove's Cold Tableta —for fifty years known to millions aa "Bromo Quinine" Cold Tablets! Save Money-*- Get Large Economy St ze Seat of Rnss Government Moscow's Kremlin, seat of the government, is a tract of 100 acres, surrounded by a wall with 19 tow ers and pierced by five main gates. DON'T LET CONSTIPATION SLOW YOU UP • When bowels are sluggish and yao feel irritable, headachy, do at millions do chew FEEN-A-MINT, the modern chewing-gum laxative. Simply chew FEEN-A-MINT before you go to bad, taking only in accordance with package directions sleep without being dis turbed. Next morning gentle, thorough relief, helping you feel swell again. Try FEEN-A-MINT. Tastes good, is bandy and economical. A generous family supply FEEN-A-MINTIo Spider Lives High The attid spider is the highest Jiving inhabitant in the world— found at 22,000 feet on Mount Everest, in India. AT FIRST SIGN OF A Ul C 5566 666 TABLETS. SALVE. NOSE DROPS —Buy War Savinjs Bonds— -HELD COMFORTABLY SNUG THIS WAY It's so easy to wear your plates regu larly—all day—when held firmly in Slaca by this "comfort-cushion—a entist'a formula. I.Dr.Wamet'aPow- plats powder, der lets you enjoy *. Economical; solid foods—avoid small amount laslß embarrassment of longer, loose plates. Helps 4.Dr.Weraet'spaw prevent sore gums, der is pure, harmles X Largest sellfog —pleasant tasting. AH4ruoohfc-3*. M—ybacklt KIMgM SNAPPY FACTS ABOUT fe/ RUBBER #f ' Tl ra ||(« on rw|h graval roads I* about 40 par cant lax than •n imooth cancreta pava mants. This woi proved by taiti conductad by tha lawn ftata Collaga. Soap,11 davalopi, it to ba a grow* Ing factor Inmaintaining motor trans portation. It ha* baan attlmatad that J 00 million pounds of Map wIH ba raqulrad for ona y aaf*i produc tion of lynthatlc rubbar. Cantalback, which gaft Ha MM bacausa It ariglanlJy had • hump In tha caiHw, W ■ growingly Imp art ant prod wet af tha rubbar Indoitty. Ovar SO Million paunds a 4 camalbock ara now halwg M«la noathly to racap Km.
The Danbury Reporter (Danbury, N.C.)
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Feb. 10, 1944, edition 1
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