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Show LEH1 FREE PRESS. LEHU UTAH Teeth of British lion Bared lor Act ion it it The Bored Are Boring STAR DUST People of Outstanding Personality Are Interested, and Never Blase Alovie Radio By VIRGINIA VALE 'TMlE . ' - U r . - V- f m j.i, r.jiinrUr WOK Tz- - -' - -- - " - .. ( i " - "45, TI.p Hi i1 t li guns of H. M. S. Rodney pride of t:.e V... !. navy make an impressive picture, symbolical at the Uritish lion's teeth all bared for action. The p!;'ilu was i; ade o!I Scotland, where the M. S. Encounter is in ;:(! Sect is cr!?agtd in gunnery practice, gruur.d, siiliouetted by the setting sun. i 1 Dare Devil Driver Takes Tropin f PAR life of a motion picture star leaves a good deal to be deMred, no matter how much money or fame or fun he has. There's the little matter of the effect of the studio lights on the players' eyes, for example. You don't hear so much alout "Klieg eyes" now as you used to, but the danger is there just the same. j j j ' William Powell has had really serious trouble with his eyes of late, and Erie Blore is so careful of his that he will work only a certain number of hours a day about four or five. Can't afiord to take risks, you know. Blore is a delightful person. Has an English accent off the screen as well as on. Goes visiting on other sets in his favorite costume, a resplendent lounging robe and dark glasses. When motion picture actresses come to New York for the first time having-done-all-seen-- usually state for publication that they just couldn't wait to see the the places sights like Central park and the aquarium, that all tourists want to see. But in Anne Shirley's case that was what she did really want to do 300-mil- isiruuj 1; . T!T5f!? J 3 J HMrs. Ernest ii "Wally" Simpson, friend of tfnpland's achelor King Edward VIII who-:mea suit for divorce against her fusband in London. Mr. Simpson announced he would not contest the etion which was said to be a riendly one." The American girl ,as married to Simpson, a British merican-bor- ubject in 1923. - J J TJf 1 AND r " -- z kj-x- THE BIN HOTEL Ogden's Finest ScujA: CM5 LOMOND . . One of 350 Rooms Utah's Best 3S0 Bathi $2.00 to $4.00 Air Cooled Corridort Rooms Grill Room Coffee Shop Spacious Lounge and Lobby Courteous Service Every Comfort and Convenience will be found at Delightful A Man in Trouble No matter how uncouth a man may be, if his character is firm 's THE HOTEL BEN LOMOND OGDEN, UTAH "COME AS YOU ARE" CHAUNCEY W. WEST, Gkn'L. Mail. SALT LAKE'S NEWEST HOSTELRY Our lobby ts delightfully air cooled during the summer months Radio for Every Room 200 Rooms 200 Bathi Introduced sur-piis- at A new type of aquatic race is introduced as part of water sports pictured fashionable Arrowhead Springs, Calif. Pretty contestantsandare riders with on the edge of a pool, propelling forward inflated horses to a kick of the foot This is the championship team. In action, (left Brad-shaGilhooly, Phyllis Mary Barnes, Dorothy right) Vera Scarmaclla, Their Gene Coney, Lucy Ellis, Jean Hint, Frances Bussey. rider is Adalyn Skecn. - - . i tit '"N"- -- Jeanette MacESonald seems to like Ions engagements. She was engaged to Bob Ritchie for years and years, but nothing came of it perhaps be- cause Gene Raymond came along. Now he and she are engaged, but say that they won't be married until June. John Boles has a new movie which he wouldn't sign unless it stipulated that he wouldn't have to sing! He has been rushing about the country making personal appearances and doing so well that he had to play return engagements almost everywhere. His delightful wife, njournMarcellite, eyed to New Yark, planning to see him John Boles there between hops. Meanwhile his latest picture, "Craig's Wife," has been released. Rosalind Russell is the wife, a role which permits her to be as disagreeable as she possibly can. eon-trac- Where Stars Will Shine at New York's 1939 Fair - '"",9 "J IN UTAH - ball-carrie- n - I " nn04& I li ffj 'ill''' d - i run. and he faces trouble like a man, your heart warms to him. Innocence, like an icicle, once is gone forever. melted "Dodsworth" is a grand picture, Give a newly met man a one of those perfectly finished pictures that. Goldwyn so often gives chance to show his good qualities us. In the making they seem to before rejecting him as a friend. Great fault of daydreaming have done something to Mary Marty Glickman, sprinter of the it is a velvety contralto. about the great achievements one voice; United States Olympic team that Walter Huston gives a superb per- contemplates is that one is likely went to Berlin this summer, is one formance, of in spite of the to go to sleep. course, on the fact that he of the fastest the role so often played Gain Syracuse university football squad, on the stage that he might be ex- Society's Solitude is not to be considered Syracuse, N. Y. Marty is a half- cused for being awfully tired of it. back. solely from a selfish standpoint. On the RKO sets they call Helen Society may profit much through Broderick and Ann Sothern "The the frequent individual adoption of it. Is Rocking Chair Twins," because the Cultured people are those who girls insist on having rocking chairs to rest in between shots, instead of are informed on intellectual val those canvas-seatearm chairs with ues; highbrows are those who are ostentatious of their information. their names on the backs. And there the girls sit and rock Nice people are people who are and rock, for all the world like old polite and pleasant to you; and ladies on country hotel porches. it is next to impossible to make you believe otherwise. Life is something much bigger Lily Pons will try anything. She is working hard on "Street Girl" than human consciousness. at present; remember when it was You made as a silent picture with Betty Enjoying How restful to feel that you have Compson? (Incidentally, the title is to sit and look pleasant to going to be changed.) But she is al- only so getting ready for appearances make your friend enjoy your with the Metropolitan Opera com- presence. Oft a man doesn't wish to be pany in New York, so she is learnasked, "What do you want for ing to dance. He likes to be She will sing in "Coq d'Or," and dinner?" agreeably, of course. will also dance. Heretofore when this opera was given, the singers sat on the sides of the stage and merely sang, and the action was taken care of by trained dancers. Lily's Tole was danced by the premiere ballerina, the last time the opera was performed. New Aquatic Sport "WALLY" SIMPSON MRS. f 'w ITS first. Born in New York, she was taken west when she was five, and when she took her first eastern trip not long ago she made a bee line for Central park. She drove around it in the morning, dashed off for lunch, and returned to walk around it in the afternoon. After looking forward for years to doing just that, she couldn't get enough of it. Georue Vanderbilt, the donor (left), is shown presenting the new 'arderbilt cup to Tazio Nuvolari, Italian driver, who won it recently, on the new corkscrew Roosevelt raceway, in competition with 44 of the e world's most noted daredevils of the jalopi sport. In the race, and all led the Nuvoreli got all lap 0n the way twisting track, one. prizes except W.VU Service. Bell Syndicate. fc,flMiri?ff,Yaty,l Anne Shirley As-tor- ing personality, people whom everybody finds interesting. Without exception they will be people who are vitally interested. They are never bored, never blase. They are able to give out what interests others, because through their interest in things and people about them they are constantly taking in. Their main charm is a certain aliveness, a vitality which has absolutely no relationship with being bored. super-sophisticat- e, they BALL CARR1KR "XrCOJNG people of today," a1 mother writes, "seem to regard it as a sign of immaturity or weakness to be thrilled with Their idea of soanything. phistication is to appear bored with everything, the attitude that finds it very difficult to be impressed with anything. It is most annoying to find that anything you can offer them for a good time seems to be inadequate, that the thrills of your own youth cannot be repeated for them. It seems to me they miss a great deal." I would point out to this mother, says a woman writer of international note, that naturally we cannot expect that the thrills of our youth will equally impress the So young people of this day. much that came to us gradually as colorful experiences are a part But of their daily background. there is something definitely true in what she says of a pose, of a deliberate care never to seem impressed, of a pretense at being bored. It may interest such young people to know that that G. K. Chesterton, said "there are no bores, only people whe are bored." In other words there can be nothing interesting about a person who is bored! That takes us right down to a bedrock fact that can be observed if we will note people of outstand .a.' r,,r'V( .. I' r , '1 HOTEL Temple Square Rates $1.50 to $3.00 u.. Hotel Trniplo Square lta a highly ieiiirnMf, frirnilly atmosphere. You will itlwaysfiiuli! immita' Had ulutr, iiiiremely. romforlablo. 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