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Show THE UTE SENTINEL ******~*********** * * a STAR a 'Way Back When *: DUS'" f :* • ** * * ! Movie • Radio ! * VIRGINIA VALE**** W ***By Scenes and Persons • Ill the Current News . FARM ToPi cs By JEANNE PULLETS FED WELL WILL LAY IN FALL l'tiOTOR EXECUTIVE WAS A DAY LABORER W HEN word went around the Metro-Goldw yn· Mayer studio the other day that Leatrice Joy Gilbert, thirteen-year-o ld daughter of Leatrice Joy and the late John Gilbert 1 was making a film t es t 1 there was m? r e craning of necks and rushmg toward the set than there is even for Garbo. If good wishes could make good actresses little Miss Gilbert will be the greatest of all. Back in the wardrobe department many a tear 'was shed as seamstresses who had d~essed her mother and her father 5ewed on her costume, and cameramen who had been devoted to her father begged for the chance to photograph her. For a long time ,the studio has owned film rights to "National Velvet," but couldn't find a girl who was both young and ap· pealing enough to play the heroine. Everyone hopes that little Leatrice ·wlll be chosen. ILLIAM S. KNUDSEN, vice president of General Motors, hardly gave promise to the casual observer of being executive material 30 years ago. Born in Den· mark in 1880, he came to the Unit· ed States at the age of twenty, with $30 in his pocket. His first job was as a reamer and riveter in a New York shipyard, and later he worked • in the railroad shops at Salamanca, N. Y., repairing locomotive boilers. Knudsen had worked in a bicycle plant in Denmark, and he finally obtained a job as a bench hand in a similar factory in Buffalo, N. Y. The result? In five years Knud· sen was manager of the bicycle factory, the Keirn mills which Hen· ry Ford bought in 1911. During the TO Careful Summer Attention Pays Good Returns. A."lv H. H. Alp, Extension Poultryman, "University of llllno!s.-WNU Service. -~ _..__ • I _..__ . ODDS AND ENDS-Officials at NBC who discovered Doris Weston and called W amer Brothers' attention to l•cr are delighted with her perform· ance in "The Singing Marine," say she is the only girl who looks intelligent while listening to other players sing •.• IJen Bernie is attending dramatic school in hopes of outsmarting Walter Winchell in their next film • • • ] oan. Crawford will star in the re-make of that grandest of all film storie.s, "Shopworn Angel,'' which Nancy Carroll once made .•• Ray Milland htu been given Claudette Colbert's former dress· ing room and hi~ friends are kidding him unmercifully about his flossy sur· roundings, walls of blue mirror glass, white dressing table, and thick, thick rugs • • • W hcnever actors insist that they ju!t can't do justice to more than two pictures a year, producer~ remind them that Gene Autry is the biggest attraction in pictures nowadays, partly because he is so good, partly because he makes so many picture.s that audi· ences have no rhancl' to forf(Pt him, @ - Western Newspaper Unioa. ' SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH A 4-Year Junior Colleee Two High School and Two College Years Betutiful40 acre campus. Modern Build· iogs and Equipment. Hish Scholarship, Strong Character and Social develop· meat. Special Music department. Physi· cal education. Low Cost Tuition, Bo11rd and Room in regulated homelike dormitories. Self help offered. WNle for Caulog11e ROBERT D. STEELE, A"""ciato Proa. IN UTAH Celebr~tes 27th Birthday in Iron Lung "Trading Post" MOSS Gully Control Varies With Local Conditions Harold Dahl, twenty-eight-year-old American flier now in a Spanish in· surgent jail, whose wife, from Champaign, III., has enlisted the help of the United States embassy in Paris to secure his freedom. Dahl, flying a pursuit plane for the Spanish government, was forced to bail out when his ship was attacked by insurgent aircraft. Frederick D. Snite, Jr., of Chicago who recently celebrated his twentyseventh birthday lying in an iron lung-the machine that does his breath· ing for him. It is his second year in the machine since he was stricken with infantile paralysis in China and he expects to spend several more in it before he is able to do his own breathing and walking. His girl friend Rosemary O'Farrell, left, and his sister Mary, right, visit him. Huge Plow Will Cut Six-Foot Furrow JOFFRE I~ Watch Your -~ -· ..:.·:·· __'Kidneys/ Farmers keep In mind economy, \ effectiveness, and permanence when Help Them CleanRe the Blood they build soil-saving check dams, • of Ilarmiul Body Waste earth fills or diversion ditches to kidneys are constantly filtering Your control gullies, says T. B. Chamwaste matter from the blood stream. But kidneys sometimes lag in their work-do bers of the Soil Conservation serv· not act as Nature intended-fail to reice. Check dams ot straw, poles move impurities that, i[ retained, may poison the system flod upset the whole and logs, woven wire, and loose body machinery, rock serve their purpose well, al- l Symptoms may be narging backache, persistent headache. attacks of dizzin•. though they do not last as well as getting up nights, swelling, puffineoo dams of well-laid rock or concrete under the eyes-a feeling of nervoua anxiety and loss of pep and strength. f and earth. Other signs of kidney or bladder disGullies waste millions of tons of order may be burning, scanty or too frc_q uent urination. valuable soil every year. SCS men 1 There should be no doubt that prompt on more than 140 demonstration treatment is wiser than neglect. Use Doan'a Pills4 Doan'a h&ve been winning areas are showing farmers how gul· new friends for more than forty years. lies can be prevented and checked. They have a nation-wide reputation. Are recommended by grateful people the Control varies because climate, country over. Ad: your neiqhborl soils, and cropping methods vary in different parts of the country, but farmers will find one or more of three me\hods effective. In practically all sections of the country gully sides may be plantIodine Checks Goiters ed to grass, shrubbery, or trees. Research in the last generation Once established, the vegetation reveals that a drop of Iodine taken slows the flow of "little waters" aft- I every other day will prevent simple er rains and holds the soil. Choice goiter or enlargement of neck of grasses, trees, or shrubs for such glands. plantings is a question which may be referred to county agents or SCS specialists on demonstration areas. I When gullies drain a fair-sized watershed, run-off can be retarded by the right crops and contour farm· ing. Terraces or diversion ditches ) ======= ======= = take care of excess run-off. Where the volume ot run-off is high, earth, masonry. or concrete dams may be necessary. These are most efiective where a 1 dams gully slope is comparatively gen· or yonr choice of 16 :prints wllbour. enlaTE"OIDf'nts 2fic coin. Reprints Sc ea.. tle and where they can be high NORTHWEST PHOTO SERVICE cutting further prevent to enough North Dakob .. .. Ferp back of the gully head. These dams also create reservoirs for live· stock water and irrigation. TO BUY-5ELL or TRADE I BRO.NZE I I _..__ When Sonja Henie decided to go to Norway for a vacation a big fare· well luncheon was ·~·-.-···~""''''. " planned for her by Tyrone Power. That seemed 1 i k e a charming idea when it was planned and the invitations sent out, but in the meantime Sonja and Ty. rone had a squabble and weren't speak· ing. They carefully selected table~ at opposite ends of the lunchroom studio and avoided speaking to each other. Hollywood has often giggled over parties where none of the guests were interested in meeting the guest of honor, but this was the first time on record when the host and the guest of honor weren't speaking. His attentions to Janet Gaynor and Loretta Young are supposed to have caused it. I I I CAPTURED BY REBELS next ten years, he worked closely with Ford in the development of mass production of automobiles. In 1921, he joined General Motors, where he steadily advanced to his present position as one of the most prominent men in the whole automobile industry, There is so much In liking the work you do that, even if o!Iered more money at ~:omething I did not loike, I think I would stick with the thing that appealed to me more. And I would be thinking of my own success in doing that. For, when we are working on things we like, we can put in more extra hours, we take more extra pains, we can do a better job. Doing the things we like, we tire less easily. We are inspired toward finding better ways, and we are able to contribute so much more than we may be actually paid for at the moment advancement cannot fail to The daffiest picture of the wee'k that rapid. be Is RKO's "Super Sleuth." You • • couldn't find better hot-weather euA Sll\IPLE WAS KING FLIVVER • Oakle Jack anywhere. tertainment MECHANIC aided expertly laughs, provides the 1 by Ann Sothern, but It Is the storJ that really deserves loud cheers. I TIME is so short, so swift in passing, we should never be at loss don't want to spoil It for you bJ how to use it. The question for won'l you but much, telling too not be "How can I kill this should j of story the Is It that mind knowing but rather "Do I need evening?" de· In ·a movie star who specializes valuable time for fun, this take to roles. tective or is there something important I _..__ Ann Sothern's career, in the dol. t can do with it?" Consider the life of Henry Ford. drums lately because of second· rate pictures, has suddenly picked He was born on a farm near Dear• up and no one is happier than her born, Mich., in 1863. The oldest of close friend, Joan Bennett. If you five children, Henry helped his fa· heard Ann spouting Shakespeare on ther with the plowing, shucked corn, that best of all summer programs, mowed hay, cut grain, dug pota· Charlie McCarthy aided and abetted toes, and milked cows. Time nev· by Edgar Bergen, you know that she er hung heavily on his hands. Me· has a sense of comedy that should chanically inclined, he rigged up a put her up in the front ranks ot small machine shop on the farm high comedy with Claudette Colbert and repaired watches at night for the village jeweler. After finishing and Carole Lombard. . Westminster College Cheapest of all ways to feed pullets this summer will be to feed them well. Egg production n e x t September and October will depend on the summer feeding. Experience 1 has demonstrated that worms and disease thrive best in poorly fed flocks, and that good pullets are never raised by making scaven· gers out of them during July and August. AND Prospects look favorable for egg prices next fall because many people will attempt to economize on feed. Such a practice will make the feed used doubly expensive. A ration which has given good results with pullets after they are eight weeks old Is the one made of a starting mash and ground grain. For each 200 pullets two range feeders are recommended; one contain· THE JrS lng starting mash and the other a coarsely ground grain mixture of HOTEL BEN LOMOND equal parts of corn, wheat and oats. Ogden's Finest •. One of Utah's Best Grinding the grain has a tendency 350 Rooms - 350 Baths to Insure greater consumption of It $2.00 to $4.00 and less of the mash. Some poultry· men are making a practice of clos· Delightful Rooms- Air Cooled Corridors Gnll Room - Coffee Shop ing, for a part of the day, the feeder Lounge and Lobby Spacious if especially mash, containing the Service Courteous early too toward there is a tendency Convenience and Comfort Every pullets. the of sexual maturity will be found at This ration In combination with a THE HOTEL BEN LOMOND good clean green range such as alOGDEN, UTAH falfa, plenty of clean drinking water "COME AS YOU ARE" and some protection from exCHAUNCEY W. WEST, GEN'I. MGRc treme heat should go a long way toward developing pullets of normal growth, free from worms and ready to lay next fall when egg prices are expected to be high. HOMES-RANC HES-FARMS Despite the fact that most laying Any Place, Size or Price flocks are laying well at this time l.ist with us-buy or trade thru us of year, the need for careful cull· INC. ~-RAY ing should be noted. Every bird not ' 30 West 1st South Salt Lake City, Utah laying and not having any value I as a future breeder will consume I about 20 cents worth of feed a month. 1=WN=u==w=== ======3=2=3= 7 1-Henry Ford who celebrated his seventy-fourth birthday by breaking ground for the new Dearborn Veterans hospital at Detroit for which he donated a 38-acre site. 2-War memorial designed by John Russell Pope and built by the United States government in memory of America's dead in the World war which was dedi· cated recently by Gen. John J. Pershing at Montfaucon, France. 3-King Carol of Rumania, who was a recent visitor in London, shown walking along Regent street. ' Hot weather in Hollywood so in· tense that the closed-in sets of sound studios are like fur. naces seems to have a calming effect on temperament a n d nerves. Ginger Rog~··n·~c:-H ers and Katherine Hepburn sit togeth· er at the edge of the "Stage Door" set at RKO studio, calmly sipping tea and dis· cussing the day's news. At Twentieth Century • Fox, Vir· Ginger ginia Bruce and Rogers Loretta Young swap theories on child-raising. At Colum· bia, the stafi is daily more amazed to find Grace Moore agreeing wholeheartedly with every suggestion the director makes. Incidentally, John Ford has an effective way of squelching actors who want to play scenes their way instead of taking his direction. If an actor grows ar· gumentative, he lets him go ahead and play the scene his way. Then he rips the film out of the camera, hands It to the stubborn thespian and says, "You can have it. Nc one else would want to see it." NEXT 'YEAR GO Huge plow constructed at a cost of $3,400 which is Jesigned to cut furrows six feet deep. It will be used in the Santa Ana river plains of California to recover rich loam soil buried under Sand deposits by the 1916 flood. The machine will be pulled by two 95-horse-power Diesel· driven caterpillar tractors. The share will be nosed into and pulled from the earth by a powerful hydraulic hoist mounted on top of the frame. An equestrian statue of the Victor of the Marne, designed by Maxime Real del Sarte, which will be placed in one of the squares of Pans as a memorial to the French World war general. -- Aerial Nurses Fly on ifhcir Errands of Mercy PHOTOGRAPHY !~~~!bl!!~!~!!!.~~~ I REAL ESTATE With the Farmers HOMES, FARMS, RANCHES, or BUSINESS PROPERTIES Consult the Large eggs do not hatch so well as small ones. • • the local public schools, the farmer boy left for the city to seek his fortune. In Detroit, he obtained a job as a mechanic's apprentice and the fortune he received was $2.50 per week. When he was twenty-tour he returned to the farm and ran a sawmill, experimenting in his spare time with a steam car. There was never a question in his mind about what to do with time. His father was not in sympathy with Henry Ford's expe~:iments, so he again went to Detroit, and worked for a power and light company as an engineer on the night shift. During the seven years that he was there he became general manager; and night after night, at home, he worked far into the morn· ing hours in developing a gasoline motor car. Success came from his experiments at last, and in order to popularize the new vehicle, Hen· ry Ford built racing cars and drove them himself in race after race. You know where Henry Ford stands today. His life is the story of time well used. It is an example worth remembering the next time you are wondering "how to kill time." ©-WNU Service. BEE HIVE REALTY I INC. • BEASON BUILDING • • SALT LAKE Nearly 900,000 tons of wheat was grown in Great Britain last season. • • • SALT LAKE'S NEWEST HOSTELRY The University of California conducts a large horse breedilig farm. e Our lobby Ia delightfully air cooled during tbe sqmmer months • • • Poultry raising In America is rightly called "a billion dollar business." • • • Non-layers of all ages should be carefully culled out of the flock until September 1. • • • The Department of Agriculture says that the cost of keeping a farm horse, including cost of depreciation, is approximately $100 per year. ••• A summer shelter provides cheap, comf?rtable quarters for housing yearlmg layers at the end of the first laying year. ••• The Rose Comb White Leghorn is identical with the Single Comb White Leghorn except in the matter of the rose comb. • • • In chic blue uniforms and overseas caps, the newly formed organization of flying trained nurses are seen holding inspection at Burbank, Calif. With specially equipped ambulance ships members of the Aerial Nurses Corps of America will be ready to fly on every type of aerial errand of mercy. Eggs are imported into the United States in the form of shell eggs; whole eggs, dried; whole eggs, fro~· en; dried and frozen yolks; and dried albumen. I I HOTEL Temple Square Rates $1.50 to $3.00 e The Hotel I Tf'mple Square ba11 a highly de:•irable, fri('ndly at mollphere.You. will alway• find it irnmac-ulate, euorc"'m("ly romfo['tu.M(", and tltorough{y a~r('~ahle.Yon (':on th~rf" fore undet-.tand why thie hold ia1 IIIGHLY RECOMME:-iDED You eo.n "l•o appredo.Lfl wby1 1 1 It's a marl< of distinction to stop at this beautiful hostelry ERNEST C. ROSSITER, l\fgr. |