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Show THE LEHI SUN, LEIII, UTAn mf,r"T Z-Vi ' 1 ' TT , , , , . I'- ' y ' f' n? ' . . .' '7ft L V I III - I mil iii i .jimfiMiftnniiiiMir iii-'mmwmmm&mmmw-i&i& '-'-'lirtm rm marumr-rr- l IOUNGEST DESIGNER . . . Anna Belle Graham, 12, Is head of a designing firm with an annual income in the e.afinirA bracket. A native of Los Anpeles. ch nnn :u i n. ... . . . . ... .. . . iuuts m miami tseacn. uonme. Anna Belle's younger sister, is her favorite model. TEN IOUXG MEN WHO MADE GOOD . . . These men were selected by the U. S. junior chamber of commerce com-merce as the nation's ten outstanding young men of the year. Top row, left to right: Joseph A. Beirne, Washington, D. C, anion leader; Charles G. Bolte, New York City, veteran leader; John A. Patton, Chicago, Chi-cago, management-labor interest with human needs; Arthur Schlesinger Jr., Harvard university, history; Harry M. Wismer, Ypsilanti, Mich., radio sports for young people. Bottom, row, left to right: Dan Duke, Fairbnrn, Ga., fight against Klan; Bill Mauldin, Phoenix, Ariz., cartoonist; John F. Kennedy, Boston con-fressman, con-fressman, veterans' housing; Dr. Philip Morrison, Cornell, atomic work; Joe Louis, Detroit, clean athletics. . ; - Mr S ; - ; : x-:i: & f .' f , A , J j ' f ' A' 1 " fVv 4 - A r M$st fml- - if JiiiMfiwjA-:iS1tfrTfn.ini j- mini i " Aft rj Al ste KOMAN LADY TAKES A BATH . . . Shortage of electric power at Pumping stations often causes a shortage of water in Eome. So if happen to be there when there is such a shortage just do what the wnans do. MarineUa Scarnati, 3, is doing it here. 1 f i a ill A J H ? ' P A f, 4 " 1- A ! s if I 'A lAi I4' i " i I alWffirrwiiii ii nilllllliiniiwnTT anwiw -EEs rN xhj, YOUNGER HORSE SET . . . Four little girls In m D Winers at the Pinhurst, N. C, gymkhana. The young .. .? are ,eft 'is": Audrey Walsh, 4, Great Neck, L. I., C ' , ih'c EUis- 5. Weslaco, Tex.; Sandra Fitzgibbon, 4, Pinehurst, hnm Day CoUins, 5, Southern Pines, N. C. All won rib-eat rib-eat fei, exPer horseback riding. The gymkhana is an annual '"red by odd type of sporting events. REPORTED DEAD MAY BE ALIVE . . . Pfc. Carl Tomasello, West Allis, Wis., who was reported report-ed killed in action in 1914. Investigation Investi-gation by his mother, Mrs. Mary Tomasello, showed wrong serial number on his grave. She since received a card from him. I A ' jw'AsA I vA 'if , 4AlT s&J a 4 i p-w , A 1 GREENBERG SOLD . . . Hank Greenberg, whose sale by the Detroit De-troit Tigers to the Pittsburgh Pirates, has proved a sports sensation. sen-sation. Until the stork arrives with the new Greenberg heir. Hank refuses re-fuses to discuss the new deal. STkECREENlMlO Released by Western Newspaper Union, By VIRGINIA VALE BETTER put "Bedelia" on the list of new pictures that you mustn't miss; it has everything. It stars beautiful Margaret Lockwood, Ian Hunter, Anne Crawford and Barry K. Barnes, and the supporting sup-porting cast, from Jill Esmond straight through, couldn't be better. Vera Caspary, who wrote the book, helped with the screen " play but "Bedelia" Is better than "Laura." i: ( f 'W'-W m ;: MARGARET LOCKWOOD And if you don't like pictures that make you shudder, don't let that worry you the suspense is beautifully beauti-fully handled, and it's distinctly not a horror picture. When a reviewer review-er wants to see a picture a second time, it's good! "Bedelia" is an Arthur Rank production, released by Eagle-Lioa RKO has another beauty contest winner on its hands; this one is Mar-na Mar-na Kennealy, winner of the annual an-nual Irish beauty contest which eight years ago started Maureen O'Hara on the road to fame. Pat O'Brien discovered Miss Kennealy when in Ireland. Regan Callais is the first television televi-sion actress to be drafted to the screen. RKO signed her after she was discovered in a recent beauty contest in Chicago. She danced in night clubs in New York, Montreal and Atlantic City before going to Chicago to appear as an actress and dancer in the Patricia Stevens "Cover "Cov-er Girl" television show so she seems like a natural for the movies. In the movies it's an unwritten law that a screen hero mustn't either stoop or stretch to kiss a girl. If he's a bit on the" short side he stands on a plank. If he's too tall for the girl she's built up. So, for her romantic scenes with tall Kent Smith in "Nora Prentiss," Rosemary Rose-mary DeCamp had to wear three-Inch three-Inch platform soles. But it's Ann Sheridan who really sets a record-she record-she kisses him 22 times. This is the picture in which James Wong Howe, one of Hollywood's most famous fa-mous cameramen, makes his debut. As a result of Ed Gardner's appearance ap-pearance at the National Press Club dinner he got President Truman's autograph on his apron. Gardner tried three years ago, at the Birthday Birth-day Ball, but a bunch of Secret Service men interferred. Lucille Wall, who plays an attorney attor-ney in "Portia Faces Life," frequently fre-quently gets letters asking her for legal advice. The other day one asked what to do about . a parking park-ing ticket "Pay the fine," wrote Lucille. "That's what I had to do." After major studios had been bidding bid-ding for them for seven years, James Cagney landed the screen rights to William Saroyan's "The Time of Your Life" it's the only play ever to win the Pulitzer and Drama Critics prizes simultaneously. simultaneous-ly. Too bad that Jack Parr, the comic, couldn't see eye to eye about his material for the Vaughn Monroe show; he and the advertising agency agen-cy that had signed him on a six-year six-year contract ran Into difficulties, and now the deal's oft. Ozzie Nelson has to be very careful care-ful of the dialogue he writes for the radio counterparts of his young sons. They listen to the show, and if they don't like the lines they remark later lat-er "Say, pop, we didn't sound much like ourselves today I " While on tour for the "March of Dimes" Ezra Stone and Jackie Kelk of "The Aldrich Family" had no trouble with bobby-soxers, but in every ev-ery community they were mobbed by mothers. "And we loved it!" declared the air's Henry and Homer. ODDS AND ENDS William Fraiv-ley Fraiv-ley doesn't bavt to worry about bit wardrobe for "My Wild Irish Rose"; Most of bis scene! take place in s Turkish bath cabinet, and he wears a sheet. . . . Robert Stevens was called back from bis honeymoon to play one of the chief supporting roles in "The Crime Doctor's Vacation,'' at Columbia. Colum-bia. . . . Vincent Sherman has been directing di-recting "The Unfaithful at Warner with a very sore bead; his garage door slid down on it. . . . William Boyd is an old-time screen star at heart, apparently; ap-parently; bis new town and country car is named "HoPalong Cmssidy"; be bat the name on the door. Kathleen Norris Says: The 'Dear Woman Friend9 Bell Syndicate). WNU Features. 1 'hl'l fife. i mi ill HiW$ i,i When It is necessary to carry pair of scissors in vour Durse. tick the ends into a cork. This will hold the blades together and protect your purse from the points. When buying new hosiery, mark each pair at the top with a few-tiny few-tiny stitches ot thread. Use different dif-ferent colors for each pair. When washing several pairs at a time, there' no trouble matching them. Bake crust for pumpkin pie a few minutes before adding the fill ing, to prevent unpleasant soggi- ness. In making yeast bread, it is most important to avoid letting dough get too light or rise too long. Let it rise until doubled, but not more than doubled. While slipcovers are still damp. iron just the flounces, then work the damp slipcover over the chair. Saves ironing and produces a better bet-ter fit. "Edie discovered to her consternation that Russ and Nancy were falling In love." By KATHLEEN NORRIS E DIE'S marriage took place in the first months of the war, and has gone on the rocks. It isn't her fault, unless indeed it was a fault to marry a man she had known only a few weeks. However, she was not the only girl to do that in 1942, and she and Russ had some happy months together, to-gether, before he was ordered away to the South Seas. Edie settled down in her old home with her mother to wait for the baby; she did not see Russ again for almost four years. In the second of those years, her old chum Nancy came to board with her, and all three women adored and spoiled little Sonia. Edie and Nancy had good Jobs; everyone was happy. Then Russ came home, to find that, first, he'd earn less money than Edie, for a while at least; second, sec-ond, that his lovely little daughter didn't like him, and third, that he was more lonely at home than he had ever been abroad. Adjustments were difficult, and by the time they began to smooth out, Edie discovered discov-ered to her consternation that Russ and Nancy were falling in love. "I had never suspected it, I had never dreamed it," says Edie's heartbroken letter. "Russ and I had been talking of finding a little place for ourselves, but there was so little lit-tle choice of places, his prospects were so uncertain, and my job still so absorbing that there seemed to be no hurry about it To mother and little Sonia and me this time of reunion seemed heavenly. Then suddenly it all broke, and Nancy confessed that she and my husband were not only deeply in love, but that the baby she was expecting was his child. She was covered with shame and remorse but that was the situation, and what were we all to do? Nancy Manages Household. "A complication is that my mother moth-er has not been well, and Nancy, who is very capable, has been managing man-aging things at home and taking care of her, too. Mother has always been devoted to Nancy, and is shattered shat-tered by this terrible revelation. Russ is sullen 8nd silent. Nancy goes on about household duties with her face like a mask, and I feel frantic with despair. What on earth is the way out? If they have fallen In love, seeing each other every day as they have, living under un-der the same roof, are they to blame? Am I to blame for going on with my $75 a week job, which with my mother's thousand a year Is all we have? Surely it was not wrong to offer my friend a haven In my home, when she was widowed and heartbroken? I am an ordinarily nice-looking woman of 28, always neat and smartly-dressed, but sot glamorous. Nancy is 24, tiny, very pretty, appealing. Please send advice ad-vice for us all; they know I am writing you." My dear Edie, I wrote her In reply, re-ply, this is no one's fault; it is one more result of the supreme folly of war. That Nancy should be widowed wid-owed so young was a direct result of war. That you and Russ should have been separated in the first important im-portant married years is another. That Sonia should not have known her father In her babyhood, that you should now be the curiously- Nancy's unfortunate baby ... EVERYONE HURT A letter to Miss Norris reveals re-veals one of (be unhappy after-maths after-maths of war. Edie married a man whom she had known only on-ly for a few months. He was away in service for four years. During his absence, a baby was born. Edie lived with her mother, who cared for the little lit-tle girl while Edie worked at a well-paying war job. Then Edie's old chum Nancy came to board with her. When Edie's husband was discharged, be bad to come into the bouse with the women and the baby. He turned to Nancy for companionship, com-panionship, rather than bis wife. Before they realized it, they were in love. Finally Nancy had to confess to Edie that she was going to have a baby and that its father was Russ. Edie does not know what to do under these painful circumstances. assorted family's chief bread-win ner, and that the war hero should be humbly hunting a job all this is wrong. The doubled-up family works an injustice on you alL Things have become pretty hopelessly com plicated, and only Infinite patience and time can work them out. And over and above all these un natural difficulties, surely the rights of Nancy's child deserve first con sideration; whatever happens, this unfortunate baby enters life heavily handicapped. To divorce Russ, to have him rush into marriage with Nancy, would only be to mix things up further. She Knew the Risk. So my advice is, first, that Nancy get out. She was no ignorant innocent inno-cent child when she surrendered to the delights of a flirtation with Russ. She knew that Russ was, and is still, the husband of her best friend, the husband of the woman ; who stretched out a hand to her in her loneliness and need. Exactly how she betrayed that generosity is something that the months to come are going to bring home to this unscrupulous un-scrupulous little woman. If Russ goes away with her, as he well may, Edie is no worse off than before. It will give her time to breathe and to think everything over. But Russ may not go with her. Russ is comfortable now in the old home, with his wife and child. Nancy is the outlaw, and Nancy will have to go to some city hospital, get a job in the kitchen or linen room, as women in her distressed circum stances often do, and give her baby out for adoption; any conscientious foster-parent will give It a better break than she can, and may she come back a wiser woman. And an honester one. Love does Indeed take a man and woman unawares sometimes. But not in this case. Ii Russ, still war-bewildered, uncertain, embarrassed embar-rassed by bis joblessness and im-pecunio3ity, im-pecunio3ity, was weak in being flattered flat-tered and companioned by this pretty little housemate, Nancy wasn't She had no such excuse. She considered neither the rights of Russ, Edie, Sonia or the unborn baby. She thought of exactly one person herself. That is always an expensive proceeding In these questions ques-tions of a triangle. INVISIBLE FLAME Campers next summer will be able to cook hamburgers and coffee over an "invisible flameless" flame. At least, that is how Du Pont describes de-scribes its new tablet fuel made from trioxane, a form of formaldehyde. formalde-hyde. The fuel, produced for the first time on a commercial scale, ignites instantly with a nonluminous flame not easily blown out by wind. It was used during the war experimentally experi-mentally in the search for a fuel to heat field rations without disclosing disclos-ing positions of troops to the enemy. jaum '' IS DO THIS TO RELIEVI DISTRESS Rub throat, chest and back thoroughly with comforting Vicks VapoRub at bedtime. It starts to work instantly . . . and it keeps up its fine soothing sooth-ing action for hours to relieve distress even itflfQ while you sleep. V!; t s SORETONE LINIMENT for quick relief on contact 1 Reex nerve pain often signals the misery of lumbago, muscle end back ache due to fatigue, exposure. To re lieve these symptoms quickly, gently nse the liniment made for this special purpose. 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