Kathleen Norris Says: Can't You Hear the Bugle Calling? ? Ball Syndicate?WNU Fcaturca. The wives of service men, when without smaU children or other inescapable responsibilities at home, go into the WAC in droves. o? v a tui trtrm Mnpp/c I r ? M/ ?*ni IIMHII 11 VIMKW IS IT just possible that you are missing an opportunity that is right at your door today? s it just possible that some day n the future you are going to ook back at these sad, terrible, [lorious war years and ask your lelf "What on earth was I think ng about that I didn't get into he WACs?" Which means get into the ac ual military service of the great :st country of them all, wear her uiiform, share her great adven ures, travel, learn, win your ?ight to glory with America vhen the hour of peace and vic ory arrives. For generations?for centuries? his opportunity has been offered ?ly to men; the excitement and istisfaction of acting?acting with taring and confidence and heroism vhen the hour of national crisis ar ives, has been monopolized by men. for them have been all the thrills, ibandonment of routine, new sights, lew duties, new friends, new terms ind responsibilities. Uniforms, )?nds, the rare companionship of he camp and barracks?the most tbsorbing club in the world have >een theirs alone. For the women, ncreased home duties, dullness, valting, praying, anxiousness. Now that's all changed. Girls are teeded and wanted and welcomed n the army now. And not girls mly: women of any age between 31 and 44 can seize this opportunity to lerve America, build a very bul wark of strength and Inspiration be hind our fighting men, and at the tame time gain enough training, guidance, education, experience, to carry them into entirely changed and widened and bettered lives aft er the war. Opportunities for Wives Without Special Ties. The wives of service men, when without small children or other in escapable responsibilities at home, go into the WACs in droves. There is no better way to fill tpe lonesome time of waiting. Busy, healthy, well-paid, allotted to the special work and die special niche for which yoU are most fitted, you can write to your beloved soldier on equal terms. You'll have you stories of camp life, the top sergeant, the drill, the companion soldiers of your company, to match his stories. And a* nothing but the service Interests him now. your gossip will be a thousand times more alive to him than were the old letters, the lone some letters, filled with news of the tomato preserving and the buying of a. fall bat. I said up there "well paid." You start at $50 a month; as a "non com" you may make that $138 very soon. The WACs haven't been in existence much more than a year, and many a woman is getting that now. But?that isn't all. You have no living expenses. You get com fortable rooms, bathrooms, recrea tion rooms. You get the finest food the richest nation in the world can afford for anyone; the very best of everything, and plenty of it You get your clothing from the well made, aoft-to-the-touch underthings to your uniforms, your cap and top coat. There is no smarter Uni term in the world than yours will be, and it is carefully and indi vidually fitted to you. You get laun dry work service, and you have ac cess to electric irons tor extra touches; pan get amusement?the vghest-patd- entertainers in the mantfy are making Incessant rounds tt the camps, the finest movies come yo? way. And the home-made camp theatricals, by the men sol ' I diers and the girl soldiers, are per haps the most fun of all. If you have any special gifts along these lines you may get, through your enlistment, a chance at an audience that won't forget you after the war. If you're ill, even to the slightest sniffle, the shining bright well equipped hospital and its staff take charge of you. WACs Permitted to Marry. What are some of the questions you want to ask? Yes, you can use make-up and curl your hair, so long as the latter clears your uniform collar. Yes, as an army wife your allotment goes on. Yes, yod can fall in love and marry, while in the service. You can go to army dances and find out what real rushing can be. You'll be invited to Service Club parties. In short, you'll live on the terms of which all girls dream?or at least did dream when I was a girl, more than 40 years ago. Terms of healthy activity, regulated work, interest, excitement, companionship, fun. And you'll have a chance to learn what ever you want to learn?which I never did. You'll .learn to swim, to drive cars, to decode messages, to project movies, to cook, to work in the pharmacy, library, hospital. Very high government officials have WACs as stenographers and secre taries now, in Washington. The men these thousands of girls replace are at the fighting fronts. Women working today in essen tial war Industries, factories and farms, are doing a magnificent job. But leave that work to the wives, mothers, older women who can't qualify as WACs. They're being better paid than you will be, cer tainly, but lots of that pay goes for things about which you won't have to worry, marketing, transportation, clothes, rent, house cleaning, do mestic help. And much of it isn't progressive; rivetting won't be so much in demand after the war. But what you get will be always like money in the bank. The right to call America truly your country, the country for which you fought in the greatest of all the wars. The right to talk to your returning men on their own terms; no, you didn't sit at home and grieve. You got into uniform, perhaps to be sent overseas, perhaps to work here in the home camps, but always beside your soldier, always sharing with him the greatest experience of your lives. This may be the last war. We pray it will be, and we are taking steps, in the new enlightened, quick ened day of air-routes and radio in formation, to make sure that it will be. Before you aettie down to the home-making and child-bearing thai are the happiest and most worth while things in life for a woman, grasp this chance. It may not come your way aga AMERICA CALLS Our nation needs women be tween the ages of 21 and 44 to increase the strength of the Wo men's Army Corps. Besides the gratification of directly serving to preserve America, the women of the WAC enjoy these benefits: Training which will prepare a young woman for a postwar job. Good pay. Many non-commis sioned officers make 1138 a month. No living expensea, yet the best food and clothing that the worlds richest nation can provide. Medical care. WACs receive army medical care which means meticulous atten tion health and physical fitness. Such organizations as the WAC are proof of women's rising role in national and world events. Natives in Jap Area Help U. S. Fliers Although they were shot down well within Japanese territory in the South Pacific, (our United States fliers were eared (or by natives until they were able to set out (or a home base in a rubber lite rait. Alter rowing (our days they were picked up by a navy plane. They are pictured with the co-pilot ot the rescue ship. Locker Room Scene After Yanks Won Series Judge Kenesaw Landis is hoisted atop the shoulders of members of the New York Yankees in their locker room after they won the 1943 World's Series. Landis is supported by Chandler, Etten and Turner. Pitcher Chandler hurled for the Yankees during two of their four win ning series games. Inspecting Bomb 'Chutes With X-Ray In addition to providing a descending medium for men and equipment, parachutes also carry bombs. They were used against the Japs in the South Paellle with deadly success. Left: An employee of a war plant in S tough ton, Mass., uses an X-ray machine to inspect bomb parachutes. Right: Another employee holds a 23-pound bomb attached to its para chute which is in the cylindrical container. Four Ways to Cross a Jungle Stream United State* troop* la Antrall* lean to cross Jan lie streams la more ways than one. Pear methods are dsn sash sled to this picture: . 1. Via a raft made at timber lend ea the spot; 2. Via amphibian Jeep; I. Via a rope ladder saspeaded across toe water; 1 Via a "dyiaf isa," I a form of breeches baoy. Back to Argentina After a series of conferences with state department officials in Wash ington, D. C., Norman Armour, U. S. ambassador to Argentina, boards a Pan American Clipper in Miami, Fla., with Mrs. Armour as he re turns to his post. Argentina is the only South American country that has not broken relations with the Axis. Losing Weight .i?gi mm Benito Mnssolinl, left, and Mar shal Hermann Goering appear to be losing weight in more ways than one judging by this picture taken recent ly in Berlin and radioed to London from neutral Switzerland. Bataan Air Hero Lieut. Col. William J. Cnmmings Jr., one of the U. S. flight heroes on Corregidor and Bataan. He now commands a fighter group in the European theater of operations. Reunion When Seaman Michael Qninn left his Job a* keeper of the rerilla hense at the Bronx Zoo, New York, "Cook ie," the chimpanzee, lined herself into the hospital. . They are ptetnred dnria* Qninn*s first lease. ' t * Released by Wfetern Newepeper Unkm. RUSSIA'S FUTURE FORM OF GOVERNMENT IN OUR PRIDE w* like to think of America as the dominant power of the world. We may be that to day, but what of the comparatively near future? The dominant powers of the to morrows may very easily be Rus sia and China. We grew to great ness because we had the resources with which to work, with a form of government and an economic sys tem that created a will to work. To day Russia has the resources, she has the man power and given the will to work, she can outdistance us within the next half century. The Russian government today is not communistic. It is purely a dic tatorship and dictatorships last only so long as the dictator lasts. The dictatorship in Russia is providing education for Russian youth. The next generation will be more capa ble of individual and mass thinking than has any generation of the past. The dictatorship of Joseph Stalin has made many things possible and these have meant advancement. To day Russia is at the threshold of, for her, a new world. She has oils, minerals, timber, an abundance of fertile soil and man power. All she lacks is that economic system out of which is created the will to achieve. Joseph Stalin will pass and with him, in all probability, will pass the dictatorship, to be followed by a form of government that will pro vide the needed economic system. Should that prove true, the Russian people and the people of the world will thank Joseph Stalin for his ac complishments. It is my belief that communism was but a passing phase in the life of the nation. It was a boogy man that lives today more in the minds of zealots in other coun tries than in Russia. ? ? ? JAPANESE POPULATION IN WESTERN STATES SOME SIX YEARS AGO, when in Honolulu, I looked for material for a newspaper article on the subject of the Japanese population of the Hawaiian ialands. I found many, a big majority, who pronounced them good citizens. They supported such statements with what seemed to be good evidence. Others, including in telligence officers of both the army and navy, were emphatic in their denunciation of the Japs and insist ed they were an ever-present source of danger to the islands and to the nation. My interest in the subject had been aroused by people I had talked to in California. The Californians had insisted the Japs up and down the coast were a menace to the safety of the nation and could not be trusted. The people of the coast states had, for years, attempted to impress upon congress and people of states farther east that the Japs were a dangerous element, many of them paid spies of the Tokyo gov ernment, and not to be trusted. After weighing the evidence gath ered at Honolulu, I decided the Japs were good citizens, loyal to the Unit ed States, and wrote my story from that viewpoint. Events have demonstrated how entirely wrong I was in my esti mate of the Jap character. The Japs were all the intelligence offi cers of the army and navy said they were. They were all the people of the Pacific coast states said they were. Today, as a resident of a Pacific coast state, I trust they may never again be permitted residence in my town and my state. If the people of the Pacific coast have the say so, they never will. * ? ? HOW INFLATION CAN AFFECT OS A LETTER from an old news paper editor friend tells me of his retirement after 52 years of news papering. In his letter he says: "I have enough to see me through if I do not live too long." But I wonder if he considers all the possibilities. We may have money. Judged from our past expenditures, it may be enough to last a definite length of time. But are past experiences a criterion for the future? The ugly h?ad of inflation is just beyond the horizon. The dollars of today will depreciate to the values of tomor row. He who must live on a fixed ; fir/1 ;? ?Ti1l :j. aicv>"c hia/ iuiu ? wuj uuv jjiuviuc the price of tomorrow's bread. It is an uncertain age and the most help less individual is he who has saved that he may have a competence for his declining years based on the conditions of the yesteryears. Infla tion is no respecter of individuals. We do not know, we can only hope. ? ? ? AS A SECOND THOUGHT, Vice President Wallace assures us that only from two to eight per cent of all corporations are bad and that mak ing legitimate profits is a system that must be preserved in America. Wonder what prompted that second thought? ? ? ? HERBERT HOOVER'S PROPOS AL that ere delay writing the final peace terms until are get over being mad would, seem to be practical horse sense. t Fight It Out jc By VIC YARDMAN \jg; AHodaMHmmm. \ \ WNU Features. \ "MO ONE envied Abe Tucker the Job of sheriff of Prayton county.' For the county, still primitive and isolated from any real "civilized" centers, was at the time of Abe's election, owned and run by Ray Moore and Martin Ladd, who, were the setting of this story laid east of the Mississippi, would be known as "political bosses." However, locale makes little dif ference in human nature. Moore and Ladd had all the characteristics usu ally associated with political bosses. They were entirely lacking in scru ples. And to climax it all they hated each other with a vehemence that had already resulted in a half dozen cold-blqoded murders. Ben Midgeley, Abe's closest friend and newly appointed deputy, made no bones about voicing his doubts. "You can never clean 'em out, Abe," Ben said. "Both Moore and Ladd have too strong a hold. They own half the land in the county and have mortgages on the rest of it. There aren't a half dozen honest men in the whole blasted county got guts enough to help you make a single arrest." Abe got up and closed the door of the little adobe office. "Listen," he said, speaking confidentially, "Fred Halliday, who is Martin Ladd's right arm and first lieutenant, is in town today." "That's right," Ben admitted'. "He's over at the Paradise now." "Fine!" Abe leaned closer. "You go over there, Ben, and tell Fred that Ray Moore is making a big drive tomorrow night through Hell gate canyon. About five hundred head. And there'll be only four riders doggin' 'em. Drop the news kinda casual like, as if you didn't suspeci rreo wouia De lmeresiea. George Ratnor arrived an hour later. He was a little man, brown and wizened, with a fiery look in his eyes. He owned a small ranch bordering on the extensive acres of Ray Moore. For months he had suspected Moore of annexing part of his small herd whenever convenient, but realized the folly of trying to prove a charge. "George," said Abe, characteris tically coming to the point at once, "I need three men besides Ben Midgeley to assist men in cleaning up Pray ton county. Can I depend upon you?" . " "You're danged right you can!" the little man exploded. "I don't know what your plan is, but I'm fojr it nevertheless." Abe smiled contentedly. "Fine. This afternoon I want you to bump into one of Ray Moore's men, casual like, and drop remarks to the effect that Martin Ladd is making a big drive tomorrow night through Hell gate canyon and there'll be only four riders along. Give the impression you overheard some of Ladd's men talking in town." At eight o'clock the following night George Ratnor, Tod Leland, Ben Midgeley and a youth named Curly Sellers gathered in Abe Tucker's of fice and listened to the sheriff unfold his plan. An hour later, headed by Abe, the party of five made an unobtrusive exit from the town, riding north. At ten o'clock they had reached the en trance to Hellgate canyon, a deep cavern-like defile separating the Moore ranch from that of Martin Ladd. But now the group had diminished to three, George Ratnor and Curly Sellers having ridden off to the south a mile or two back. ! ' AU LI- A1 1 -a. ,wc icu IUB IU1CC UUtllf C1I11UI15 Ul a narrow shelf which ran along the canyon floor for a hundred yards or more. Here, concealed by scrub growth, they dismounted, tethered their horses and walked back to the lip of the canyon to wait. Suddenly Abe stood erect. A re volver sbot had sounded far down the canyon. It was followed by an other and then more. Motioning his companions to follow, Abe led the way along the shelf, descending al most to the canyon's floor. The distant firing had increased in volume and now, mingled with it, they heard the hoarse shouts of men. Shod hooves sounded on the canyon floor; a rapidly moving shad ow materialized from the darkness. Abe raised the rifle in his hands and fired. The figure crumpled. Others, close behind, drew rein, cursing hor ribly. And in the mad confusion that followed while they turned about, the three concealed men fired rapidly. Two more were added to the casual ty list. Then the space at the mouth of the canyon was empty, and the clatter of pounding hooves grew fainter. "Those were Moore's men," Abe said. "They suspect we belong to the Ladd outfit and that we have them trapped." The drum of hooves had sounded again on the rocks. But it wasn't made by horsemen. The cattle, which George Ratnor and Curly Sell ers had borrowed from the former's range and driven into the canyon to make the trap seem real, were try ing to escape. Abe clucked content edly as they went by. There were 50 head in the bunch, and he feared they might be killed in the battle. This night's affair resulted in the killing of no less than a dozen men from both the Moore and Ladd fac tions. And Abe Tucker and his four loyal followers were happily content.