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Show I THE BULLETIN. BINGHAM. UTAH ' Scenes and Persons in the Current News Li V:vfi.fvf ft , T , w WW"""" h i m ' ; L:e ' Vii .I,,,, . .nii. f 1-.- - ! Cl .J..ltV's..?.... .i Flood relief committee appointed by President Roosevelt Photograph shows, left to right, (seated) Gen. Malm Craig, Robert Fechner. Harry L. Hopkins; and standing Admiral William D. Leahy, Rear Ad-miral Russel P. Weasche and Admiral Cary T. Grayson. 2 Lieut Commander William M. McDade of the U. S. Navy who commanded the recent mass flight of 12 navy planes from San Diego, Calif., to Honolulu. 3 Chancellor Adolf Hitler of Germany, who recently repudiated Germany's admission of war guilt which fol-lowed the armistice. ! STAR ! I DUST j J Movie Radio I By VIRGINIA VALE INFLUENCED to a great A extent by thousands of letters from fans, Norma Shearer has definitely decid-ed to make more pictures. From New York, where she went to visit Helen Hayes, she telephoned the studio that she would come back soon ready to begin prepara-tory work on "Marie An-toinette." She chose this story in preference to any other because she had discussed every detail of its production with her husband before his death. Actual date of pro-duction depends on Charles Laughton, because she Is de-termined to have him in the cast and he is under contract to make several pictures in England. It is good to know that we will be seeing Nor-ma on the screen again. The most encouraging and sym-pathetic audience any girl ever had while making a film test was Alice Mar-ble's when she tried out recently. Carole Lombard was right there on the side-lines making sug-gestions and cheer-ing. Some people might think thai Alice Marble won enough glory In ten-nis tournaments for one young girl, but Carole Carole thinks H Lombard would be nicer for her to get In the big earnings that come with glory In pictures. Radio favorites are moving en masse te Bollywood. Harriet HU-lia- rd Is back at K. K. O. Milton Berle will be there soon, and very costly it will be for him too because he wiU have to pay all the expenses of bringing his radio troupe west. And soon Fred Allen will move his broadcasting activities to Holly-woo- d, so that he can make another picture for Twentieth Century-Fo- x. He will be In "Sally, Irene and Mary," a new version of an old pic-ture which launched Constance Ben-nett and Joan Crawford on their screen careers. Those august personages at Na-tional Broadcasting company's ar-tists' service have put a new artist under contract and they are fairly swamped with mail asking about her. She is Minnie, the singing mouse, who appeared on the National Barn Dance pro-gram, and who will probably be star of a program of her own soon. Minnie was trained by W. W. Lichty, t veterinary of Woodstock, 111., who noticed that when he was playing the piano, one of the mice he raises for experimental purposes tried to follow the tune. . .... Paramount Is going to defy the fates and attempt to make a pic-ture that has long been a jinx In their stndie. Tbey started it last year with Marlene Dietrich, and when it was about half-finishe- d, she walked out and declared that she would have none of It. So, Para-mount engaged Margaret Sullavan to replace her, and thea little Sul-lavan tripped over a cable and frac-tured her arm. Paramount stiil likes the story, once ealled 'Hotel Imperial" and then "I Loved a Sol-die- r" and also they like very much a young Viennese actress named Franciszka Gaal, so they are go-ing to attempt to make it with her. George Cukor, who will direct "Gone With the Wind," Is deter-mine- d to cast some edtwfl Li girl who is not very well known in pic-tures in the lead. One faction at the studio wants Tallu-la- h Bankhead, whose tests have shown her to be a brilliant actress, but too old for the early part of the story. Others want Margaret buiiavan. "ullavaa But by far the most promising candidate is a very young and vivid actress on the New York stage named Louise Piatt. ODDS AND ENDS Thi $ludio is busily pairing off thir stars, but just professionally, trying to achieve m combination as sure at the box-offic- e as Cary Cooper and Jean Arthur have proved to be. They are going to try Jean Harlow wvith Rob-- , ert Taylor, Joan Crawford tvith Wil-liam Powell . . . Both Warner Broth-ers and Paramount are trying to gr.t Noel Coward and Gertrude Lawrence to do their nine short plays, that are Broadway's 6iggc.a hits, as screen shorts. But a radio sponsor is top-ping their every bid , . . Portland Hoffa always maneuvers an invitation to spend Sunday away from home, be-cause that is the day her husband, Fred Allen, writes his radio script and he doesn't like to be disturbed. Q Western Newspaper Uaion. Striking Wild Roso . Design in Cutwork , Simplicity of designsimplicity of needlework combine to make these wild rose3 effective in cut-wor- k. Do the flowers in applique, too it's very easy to combine with cutwork. Use these designs on sheet3 and pillow cases on scarfs and towels on a chair back. Dress up your own home or make them as gifts. Pattern 1337 contains a transfer pattern of a motif 6& by 20 inches, two motifs 5 by 14 incnes and pattern pieces for the applique patches; illustrations of all stitches used; material requirements ; color sug-gestions. Send 15 cents in stamps or coins (coins preferred) for this pattern to The Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dept., 82 Eighth Ave, New York, N. Y. Write plainly pattern number, your name and address. Bon't Sleep When Gas Presses Heart If you want to really GET RIO OP OAS and terrible bloating, don't expect to do It by Juet doctoring your itomach with harsh, irritating alkalies and "gaa tablets." Most OAS ia lodged In the . stomach and upper Intestine and Is due to old poisonous matter In the oonstlpated bowele that are leaded with bacteria. If your constipation Is of long stand-ing, enormous quantities of dangerous bacteria accumulate. Then your rtl- - , gestion Is upset. OAS often presses heart and lungs, making life miserable. You can't eat or eleep. Your head aches. Your back aohes. Your com-plexion Is sallow and pimply. Your breath Is foul. You are a sick, grouchy, wretched, unhappy person. YOUR SYSTEM IS POISONED. Thousands of sufferere have found In Adlerika the quick, scientific) way te rid their systems of harmful bacteria. Adlerika rids you of gas and oleans foul poisons out of BOTH upper and lower bowels. Give your bowels a REAL, cleansing with Adlerika. Get rid of GAS. Adlerika does not gripe is not habit forming. At all Leading Druggists. Now That Colds Are Here Again Do wliat you caa to preTent cougba. congestion and bronchial irriutioa by using Denver Mud. A remedy that doctors hare been prescribing lor years. lust spread it en. cover and ate bow promptly relief. will come. Excellent or burns, bruises, and skin irritation. Keep a package of Denver Mud in your medicine chest. AT AIi DRUG STORES Family aize, 50a Practical size. 2S Help Them Ocaruse the Blood of Harmful Body Waste Tour kidneys are constantly filtering waste matter from the blood stream. But kidneys sometimes lag In their work not act as Nature intended fail to re-move impurities thst, it retained, may poison the system and unset the whole body machinery. Symptoms may be nagging backache, persistent headache, attacks o( dizziness, getting up nights, swelling, puSmeae under the eyes a feeling ol nervous ,.: anxiety and loss of pep and strength. Other signs ol kidney or bladder dis. oder may be burning, scanty or too ' frequent urination. There should be no doubt that prompt treatment is wiser than neglect. Use Doan't Pills. Doatt'S have been winning iiew Iriends for more than forty years. . They have nation-wid- e reputation. Are recommended by grateful people the country over. As our nnfMorl Community Swim Draws California Beauties Participants in the annual community swim at Long Beach, Calif., when residents and visitors take part in beach and aquatic sports climaxed by a dip en masse in the surf. These aquatic events are held within sight of snow-covere- d mountains. - NOT IN THE BOX SCORE: AL LANG, trainer of Freddy Steele, refers ,o the world's middleweight champion as "Fish-cake." . . Finn Carlstadt, goalie tor the Norwegian Tuners, Is one of the few soccer stars who wear spec-tacles while playing. And he al-ways has somebody stand by with at spare pair just In case. University of Oklahoma wrestlers have a lingo all their own. A "Mus-cle ' head" Js a wrestler and a "pinky" is a wrestler out of con-dition. . . High-clas- s trainers such as Hirsch Jacobs and Bert Mitchell give their riders few instructions. It's usually the phony trainer-tout- s who whisper sweet nothings in the jockeys' ears while paddock yokels gape. . . Johnny Kilbane, the for-- ! mer featherweight champion who now manages Jimmy Vaughn, is a versatile gent Recently he sec-- j onded Vaughn in a bout with Freddy Miller at Louisville and then jumped In and refereed the semi-final between Freddie Eiler and Henry Firpo. The Yankees have an eye on L. b. Meyer, the T. C. U. end who scored all his team's points against Marquette on New Year's Day. Tex-an- s say the youngster Is even bet-ter at baseball than football. . . Like- -' wise the Senators are anticipating the rush by a year or two while gazing longingly at Alex Campanas, N. Y. C. freshman. . , Joe McMan-a- s, who plays such a tidy inside left for the New York (soccer) Americans also manages the Brook-lyn (basketball) Visitations. . Burly Ty Anderson Is the Ching Johnson of the Atlantlo City Sea Gulls. Like the Ranger veteran he plays left defense and also like the Rang-er veteran he brings down the house every time he goes down the Ice. ; Ed Wade, whose two points aft-er touchdown won Utah State the Rocky Mountain conference football title, also is center on the basket-ball team which met Manhattan at Madison Square Garden recent-ly. He runs a turkey farm on the side. . . Kent Ryan, captain and for-ward of the same team, is reported the greatest athlete ever produced In the conference, while the only extra bid for fame that can be thought up for the other forward, Shelby West Is that he is mar-ried. . . Blessed Event, an E. R. Bradley horse that once held a Hia-lea- h Park track record, was left at the post and beaten 100 lengths in a $1,500 claiming race the other day. . . The Atlantic City Audito-rium, home of the Sea Gulls, is so large that 1,500 customers can be accommodated for wrestling matches in a separate arena built on the stage. Because some friends read too hastily Bill Barfield, the once great Tiger lineman, wants to go on rec-ord as saying "I think the Prince-ton freshman football team of 1940 contained the best material that I have seen on a freshmen team at Princeton In many years." , . Bobby Kerr, former president of the Metropolitan (soccer) league, now i3 doing notable work as head of the Empire State junior league. Bing Crosby has an Argentine horse called Subvedo, who is sup- - 'm, J Lrley Takes ' n a Journey Memory Lane sports promoter, SSw columnist to 'to th old day co-- ! ndh in this column hi ,m0ry lane, too. JACK CCELEY Burns, who died Farmer iu in Dan McLeod 1 ;rname, inst Frank . mere lad at Humboldt m wrestled on a cinder round house for k of the hoars. The best the lter McLeod got out of It several It took Gotch jet rid of the ashen cln--x bis skin. remember when: Eddie )nthe world featherweight ship? He knocked out Ben England in sixteen rounds ? O'Bourke's club in New 4 . . And when Terry ' I knocked out Santry at in five r, in Chicago rf the world's greatest mmy Barry versus Caaper ramy Rya rus Tommy t folcolt versus Lid La--M Attel versus wen Mo-a- k Slavin versus Peter peter Maher versus Joe Pedlar Palmer versus Tcr-- ) ivern. Jack Dempsey ver- - Fulton. Gene Tunney ver-- J Dempsey. Jim Flynn ver-- ; Morris. All these fights : osslp for years, j r McAvoy, one of New ) iest ring referees, rode as a Jockey in Maspeth, L. I., years before he refereed at al- - ,1 most the same spot j J Stanford White never missed a box- - ing or wrestling j ringside at the old ,f: Garden dowi in Ma-- 1 i j dison Square Harry j Thaw came to all I"'; the wrestling shows . ikJI in the new Garden url up to the time he r ' settled in Virginia. I old timer missed at all the j s is Jim Villepeague. He ht two seats and occu--j He weighed 335 pounds. I ie first time in many years ling show was staged re--n the Olympia Stadium In Several wrestlers familiar icao mat audiences partici-- i the bill. Carl Pojcllo, one tea's persistent challengers . dom gets on a card, jour--I ' Ii the way to Liverpool, inly imed away and not allowed J Some previous income tax i the cause. J ie Neil, one timo bantam-- Aampion, came from South Slot in San Francisco, His f o managed him, wur some-- I a soapbox orator. He was I rack bookmaker and when J "as slow on the ponies, he'd f across the betting ring: . 'ants to take $1,000 against I Frankie?" I ook Frankie to England for i Wound fight with Jem Bow-- ; course the slugging Ameri-- i 'ter lost the decision. Dad, I ,s one f the early "We wuzz , barkers, yelled all the way ; wiago heard his voice when P as in the middle of the Wu toe referee?" Dad iP asked. "I don't know his ii, e was some bum bar-- II Wiped back Mr. Neil Se- - Kmrbtrtender haPDcncd :fneCori, millionaire stock lI"ember and f nc of Ene-- f feates aibite in i all bo- - lory, fcedCpSeB0k0r a" th 'Cpa "anl en Stklh0the -f- "-e. . shoot at a ;,rS8him. at counts for if Z AUe11 f ged 'as then the d r f81 ,,nd cleverest t At el,Amcrica- - the t il-2Sce- ' wilh Bowker fresti,VS0Oeo,'ef aek-'- t TU,.dercatcd Ah-l-i ntfCr,rib,e Tu,k' k hL.0ondh0n' 1600 f e6rsPuU f arcna- - i posed to be able to run a mile n 1:35. Even Bing doesn't believe that, though. . . . Harry Lenny, manager of Ray is an ac-complished pianist, preferring the clas-sical to the more popular swing mu-sic. . . Dan Parker, the sports evangel- - 1st, also is a piano BjnK Crosby player of note (more than one note, in fact). Jack Bales, the former Prince-ton footballer, brings word from Co-lumbus that Charlie Beetham, the unlucky Ohio Stater who should have been an Olympic half-mil- e ace, is going better than ever. Beetham, who should be an important figure Li the big meets later this winter, now assists himself in getting into shape by running up the Ohio State stadium steps. Al Lattin, the promotorial genius behind the world's bowling cham-pionships, totes 323 pounds on his six foot two-inc-h frame and is the heaviest man on the alleys. He throws a ball for a 190 average but averaged 205 while win-ning the Elks individual title. . . Dave Shiman, one of the maple-crashin- g stars of thirty years ago, now is a successful business man. Joe Humphrey's favorite song, which he used to sing in his high falsetto voice, was "The Rose of Kildare." The night when the late and greatest of all sports an-nouncers arrived in Detroit to an-nounce the Johnny Risko-To- Heeney affair his baggage consisted of one clean collar and two packs of cigarettes. Incidentally when Joe Al Smith always called him "Jo-sephu-was achieving fame, a great quartet of announcers were still in their heydey. Fred Burns and Johnny Dunn passed away years ago. Only Charley Harvey and. Pete Prunty remain. Most friends of Gene Sarasen rate his final round of 66 In the 1932 na-tional open his greatest golfing feat, but Gent himself has a softer spot for the four birdies he got on the last four holes of the Agua Cal-ien- te open. . . The 66 brought him 51,000 In cash, but those four birdies earned him the largest golf prize ever won $10,090. Skat! " "Oh, dear, who's broken my lovely china vase?" "The cat, ma'am," replied the new maid. ' "Whose cat?" "Oh, lor', haven't you got one?" So That's Who Passenger (to cook on ship) Tell me, sir, are you the mate? Cook Oi'm not. Oi'm the man that cooks the mate. Ribbon and All "My dog took first prize at the cat show." "How did he manage that?" - ' "Well, he took the prize cat." . Farslghted Gamekeeper (to friend who has missed a rabbit) Why didn't you shoot that rabbit? "I didn't see it till it was out of 1 1 sight." - - TO WED HOOVER'S SON Miss Margaret Coberly, Los Ange-les debutante, will become the bride of Allan Henry Hoover, thirty-year-ol- d son of former President and Mrs. Hoover, some time in June, it has been announced by Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Coborly, of Los Angeles, parents of the bride. Champ Braddock's Kids Take Care of Dad I ' ' t A couple of sparring partners got themselves tough cases of the chills when they saw the opposite corner chock full of Braddocks. Jim Braddock, the champ, made his workout a family affair and had his two husky sons in his corner as seconds. Howard, five, mops up the sweat of Pop's honest toil while Jay, six, follows through with the water bottle. Character and Intellect : Character is higher than intel-lect. A great soul will be strong to live, as well as to think. R. U.S. EMPLOYMENT HEAD I vr' : v ' 1 f V. ' ' ..-- ,; - ; j; ' director of the O Frank Persons, has service, who S employment of inspection agen-cies been on , tour He throughout the country tidj of better pointed out the rising said, ..ura must aid the times and their unemployed in capitalizing now experience in some New U. S. Envoy Takes Post in Moscow r ' ' . , f ' ' ' i i U I : v j " ? f !' V " , I ' 1 eW OiV. .we. .wvvwi The Hon. Joseph Davies. newly appointed ambassador from the United States to Soviet Russia, is shown with his bride (left), the for-mer Mrs. Edward F. Hutton, and his daughter, as thay arrived in the Russian capital recently. |