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Show 'leasts- .tktrxL bb m m m v 31 --.--Ill. JZ j 7 I " i.iajl.l j, Hxxwx-xxxwxy.xaj-i.HW ...xxx.-. v- : . i-'V:- : 'I V v "v f v sWi f 4 I If 111 If 1 1 . ; - s s w- v - i o f fiwK I -fi xck I t n VI VIM IJ ify Vr-rii i a uacc i v - -v I t 1 v m ? I , 1194 i. o packed or .tudded - . J jf $ yVj. J ll "M1-- 1 - 1 with important datei that millions , x - ) L f J J 11 ? X jf . ' of footbaU toUower. are left to 1 f j 1'" 11 If " t somewhat bewildered .Ute. Many N ; ; - I . 0 J J , " ' V " ' ' requests have come to this also be- PV I W s ' ' , 0 fj ";fC- wildered department, asking us to A 1 t V ' r ; ? ' ' pick the major games from dUzy 1 A : K,-' nn,' - V. M : schedule that has more class than W 1 : " . I & . ' J7 -J known. 1 I 2"i v i - XS"&tJtl v i"! We hestitate to pick up this M- 1 4 ' -. V t W v 1 ' t signment since it means denunci- , , M K . V? ; ' 1? ,S A ' ,t .Uon from tew ymr- 1 X r, VvJ -1 , J '' -C - chambers of com- If y , tf f .. wr dw.r' i merce. who insist it s S " " Z ? I VT ir home, town f SECRETAEr OF COMMERCE S , W -SV. , - ;V -,J raTkVnTcomK A J --C-iT-rr K' .;f.;4l Plamts from the --l - ' )4,, . jn. y,,r - 1 Mr lift iliiiilrf'-li"ifi'-ii'iirr1iiirriifli'ir--f r ii "n ill uiirt urilh n "Jk li C4L COW PUNCHERS ... It took man-made machinery te conquer this 1,410 pounds ef aieer 1 r fter tne animal sruKe u 01 uuguici pcu uu .x- j - - HW ? nnv Tail-twisting, in effort to coax steer into truck, was to no avail. Desperate engineering I'M M ";:. klm . it)i riant crane after the stockyard cowboys gave us in defeat ilj 8MUJ iuucu x 1 r x t wwj i . V' v'Mmw'HniKraM twMsJBsjoiIOflWOBBBceesM liS AGAIN AFTER AID FROM SISTER KENNY . . A month age JSZiXSiS C. with the dread polio. Placed aboard a special plane, shownj at Jeft .she was L . ... it. - .AnMAn Tmiav shA is shown on the steps ox ner own numc. JllQtt 10 llUllCJDHa IW Miatu'vuii rvwftfiWwiTiViiy ftjw.ywiiw igwxanfxi " it n nn . : . 1 BaEia n-pil. drilled by biuuuw or r IK AMI LIS . . . au ' - . - rt Oil company, is shown with the famed pyramids of eu 1 . r . . .xr 1. . wildcat one, r"i a DacKgrouna. Tnls weu, oegun in """-'" - . P to determine If the desert can contribute share of ou w V nechinivui ...m Mo.t weUs are planned by the com- f. When photo had'been taken the drill bit had chewed down 5,100 F at the land of the Pharaohs. wnMHN ADDRESSES PEACE PARLEY . . . The first address by a woman to the Paris peace conference was delivered by Dr. Gertruda Sekaninova, Czechoslo vakia, the only woman at we conference. iT0( . Ml - III I . x-v -nh.. i w 11 mi aasswassb THE college football campaign 01 ( 194R j. . nacked or studded; with important dates tnai muui of football followers are left to a somewhat bewildered state. Many requests have come to this also bewildered be-wildered department, asking us to nirk the maior flames from a dizzy schedule that has more class than any football program we nave known. vjm hpstitate to nick ud this as signment since it means denunci ation from a few colleges and many chambers of commerce, com-merce, who insist their home - town games deserve high ranking. Complaints Com-plaints from the colleges are rare. The chambers of commerce are the more embittered . u 1. GrantlandRice ' An wav here Is our ranking of the, more, important contests. There are so many vi ramea that one can only hit a few of the high spots. On October 12 we have Army meeting Micnigan as .. i.i. to rvx.. nf that date. com tut; a - olete sell-out back in June. , vi nno t Ann Arbor. Indiana vs uiixoiB U rinse behind. For old times sake, Princeton and Harvard must be considered, then Navy ana nuke. And amone the better games of this day we find Columbia and Yale, two of the best teams in me Ivy league also the country Two Southern Headliners Th. Ma onmp on October 19 will be Georgia vs. Oklahoma A. and M., (at Athens, Ga., not ureecej. This will be one of the season's high spots. A game of almost equal inv r.ni-tanrn will be Alabama and Tea Bob Neyland vs. Frank Thomas. On this date Army faces Columbia in a toss-up. A possiwe thriller. Tha schedule now carries us to October 26 when Army meets Duke onH nhin state meets Minnesota. Just a moment Michigan meets Illinois in a game that might easily Hpplde the Biff Nine championship. And Pennsylvania meets Navy in a troriitinnnl rivalrv. The big game of November 2 is ftpm-ma and Alabama. This game is fragrant with a Rose Bowl odor, a Sugar or an Orange uowi taste . . . TriDDi vs. Gilmer. Here is one of the most vital or important games of the year, if you have the foiintr that football flames are vital or important Probably they are not Anyway this is tne game 01 that particular date, closely fol lowed by Notre Dame ana wavy, Army-Notre Dame Clash The outstanding melee of Novem ber 9 Is Army and Notre Dame. This is the eame that could easily draw 500,000 fans. Biff Jones says 1,000,000 tickets could be sow u there were only room enough. This will be the feature game of the year, considering the Army s wrecking assault on Notre Dame in 1944 and 1945, plus Frank Leahy's trek of veneeance. . . S TX li&ier on we uavc rum mu krmv. Harvard and Yale. Ohio ---j 1 State and Michigan. Also Southern California and UCLA, Army and Naw. The schedule makers this season have given the country the top menu In footbaU history, wiin fpur exceptions thev have all picked the strongest opponents they could find. You might add a few sprigs 01 laurel blossoms to Tuiane and Southern California who have done the widest ranging in the tiger jungle, battling everyone in sight until December 21. Both play Notre Dame and bow piay eacn other, as well as such teams as Ala bama, Ohio State, L. S. U. and a few more. This fall campaign of 1946 will be the high spot of campus play since Princeton met Rutgers over 75 years ago. The schedule we have outlined is only a small part of the big show a mere fragment But there isn't space enough to cover all the turmoil. SECRETARY OF COMMERCE . , . W. Averell Harrlman, former ambassador to the Soviet and until un-til his appointment, ambassador to England, has been named by President Truman to replace Henry Hen-ry Wallace as secretary of commerce. QTAffcsCREEN RaleaMd by WeiUra Newspaper Union. By VIRGINIA VALE PAT O'BRIEN says he's all washed up as a movie producer. pro-ducer. "I've just finished co-Troducine co-Troducine 'Crack -Up' " (he also co-stars in the RKO picture, pic-ture, with Claire Trevor and Herbert Marshall), "ana ae-pAeA ae-pAeA it would be mv last be cause, for one thing, you lose a lot of good friends. I had parts lor six actors, and about 200 of my actor friends asked for those six parts." Besides teaching him what producing produc-ing a picture means, "Crack-Up" gave him a new kind of role; b plays a lecturer and highbrow art x 11 mw-'iyi muni m 1 I 1 I xxOx I 5 0 JAILED FOR CALLING STRIKE . . . Preceded by P' sh.'" . , a iot earnrta Georae L. Mueller, third coa Mueller, president of the Independent union of Dqesne USH company employees, Pittsburgh, refused to call off the . rtrlke or to .pologlae for calling court Injunction, "scrap of paper." Mueller later was released. r" w f -2: l x. ? 4 f 1 j . ijijwuiii inmilli 1 ml II V ' ' x---n' . -0 ' E,-... A :, .., I..,-,,J DIPLOMATIC MANNING . . . Capt. Harry Manning, who argued 11 Nazi U-boat commander not to sink the S3 Washington, carrying 1,000 passengers in 1940, bat just been aooolnted commander of the largest United States owned pas senger liner, SS America. lie new with Amelia Earhart x -4, 1 : h g y 0 ag.- M Vt ' : f im-'fj (4lA ill 4 xr- . r,-rrtn-c anvNim '" :" Three of the British war Ja" tog Uate in hats. Left f right are Mrs. William WlUlams, Sharon, ' 1.. ur va anil Mra. Russell Helton. TUST 11 iTvI hit' one thing to e.mm oaU.re ... ..vin,,a Ann American-made clothes smart, nut war unuc - . 2s soon as they arrive while their American Bisters adopt their former styles. PAT O'BRIEN authority attached to a big mu-; geum. To develop the plot "" conspirators try to drive him in-aana in-aana if that co-Droducing as-. sienment weren't enough to drivr O'Brien nutsl v "White House," latest of RKO's "This Is America" series, bringsl us the history of the White House, fx-vtm ita erection to the present The executive offices are shown a! well as the rooms wnico vim u visitor sees. -v. jartnv atimt allot who land-! ed a giant transport plane on a spotj between towering trees, to rescue Gary Cooper from a tigm nx m, "Cloak and Dagger," was Panl Mantx, who won the Bendlx trophy', race from Van Nuys to ueveianov st few days later. NOW CAN SEE . . . Totally blind two years ago, Jack Wlsnovskl, 15. of Verona, Pa., is making up for lost time by sightseeing. It is believed that he Is the first nerann nn record of corneal crafts performed on both eyes success fully. VOWED TO KILL FIFTY . . . Stanislaw (the Sniper) Ballon, Polish Po-lish outlaw, shown after capture by American troops. Ballon vowed to kill 50 Nasi followers In vengeance ven-geance for killing of his parents and three brothers In Poland by the Nasis. j . oxrxT. nATmrv . Three apt a of twins are on the Belolt college, Belolt, Wis.. footbaU squad this year. Two pairs are Identical. Here they are: top, ie ana . "1"' . ... , .j.. r.1-1. --a run alien. Wanconda. 111., and bottom. F 1 Erin. 111. 1 miaojc, ajiva, aw x... .- - ... Bob and BuTwiUlams, Arlington Heights. W. With the footbaU se- on under way, Belolt Is mining exceuem u . w N PAI BENCH . . . Within an hour Pw demanded and received the resignation of Henry A" ar.i . . . x... nMi the former secretary t 'x .7 01 commarre, inoiogTapucr " merce sitting c a park bench reading J-Z C' d not find enoo.h humor In conditions ,"" Kt U satiaf, hta Wallace has announced that he would con- ratht far AdopUon of the policies 01 1 i. ' , 1 X THINK TOU GOT TROUBLE? . . . What happened te Dolly shouldn't happen to a dog. Dolly fell from a second-story porch, result re-sult two broken legs. Metal crutches made all well, except aba won't be chasing the cat I Batting Crowns The National leaeue pennant fight between the Cardinals and the Dodgers has been baseball's leading lead-ing feature this season and will re main the year's high spot The Red Sox runaway victory and the Yankee collapse have been the American league's contribution to the comment of many busy tongues. But the Individual side has more than Its share of public interest which has overwhelmed aU past records in the way of attendance. One of the main entries in this field Is Ted Williams, star of the Red Sox. :Ted, a great natural hitter, started out to lead both leagues at bat in home runs and runs batted in the triple batting crown. For a while It looked aa if the rail-Dins: Williams would run away with aU three marks. He began blasting home runs at an early date a hla battinr ' average hovered around .280. But toward the close of the season he found himself tied into ' number of knots. Serious competition was coming from Muclat, the N. L. batting star. 1 - imiiiihm mpilllilii 1 munir, II ij-iiiauaaja-aaw-wiaai a--aa-e-aaaa-a ff r ' Ul -ZD1 'v I aajaaaMlli-riiilliiMfiflrifitfi.rifiaMaiai h a"" " Thev'ra demolishing Tara hall,: .nd all the other "Gone With thai Wind" sets that have been more or less a permanent part of rauieaj 40 acres since 1938. On the founds- .... .... T. P-nl.tult Hon will be ereciea a "aw &B"-i village, representing Concord, Mass. for Selznick's "Little Women." Right on top of the success ofi Columbia's "The "' Jolaon ' Story"! comes another announcement on "flfh Centurv . Fox's Plans IOP t Wonder Who's Kissing Hen Mnf hased on the life and songs xx..., ----- . , . 1 of Joe Howard, jvu be m iecnu-j color, and If U runs true 10 lonaj will bear slight resemblance to, reality. June Haver, Martha Stew-, art Keglnald Gardner, Mar swi vens,1 Richard Haydn, Vanessa Brown and Charles Brown are tai the cast . v ,4 X tin far Martha Vlckers has been seen on the screen only in "The; Big Sleep," In which she steals cer! tain scenes; she's had featured' roles In "The Man I Love." "That! Way with Women" and "The Time., the Place and the Girl," none of which have been generally released. re-leased. Now ahe's co-starring In "Love and Learn." Around War ner Bros, they say she's likely t be a star before the pubUo gets to know her. : Sainh Edwards can't be sur what will happen on "Truth or Con sequences" In the ruture. a iew years ago, by remote broadcast he had a, young man carry out his consequences con-sequences from a street corner just a few blocks rrom me na siu-din siu-din hut last winter he did a two- way overseas broadcast to Tokyo; the contestants were u.lm siauonea there cm a 1942 show a man looked frr a needle In a haystack the 19'a version sent a contestant to the Arctic Circle, by plane and dog-sltd, to search for a nugget of LEADS DUKE ELEVEN . . . Charles Edgar (B1U) Mllner, 24, 200-pound senior from Waynes-vllle, Waynes-vllle, N. C, one of greatest guards ever te perform, who Is leading the Duke university football eleven elev-en as captain. BROTHERS BT BIRTH AND BLACKSTONE . . . Associate Justice Frank Murphy of the Supreme court 01 mo viureu --. --. .. ... x unr-.h. in rennrders court at Detroit. They rigul, Wlvn juugn ucmii . - - are sitting In the same court room where Justice Frank presided a few years ago, before be went on to we naviuu brothers were photographed as they discussed a case now before Judge George, while Justice rrana was on ,".. '.old. Hiidv Vallee SDent half his work ing day recently lying on the floor, during the shooting of "The Bachelor Bache-lor and the Bobby Soxer." He had to be knocked out by Cary Grant and then Just lie there during tne rest of the scene. Everyone else muffed his lines, the scene was shot over and over, while vallee rested. with Grant Shirley Temple and Myrna Loy as an audience. '. stnne iwn r,ns Ijtuaan Terbe. who's been specializing in viuauu. Hepped into wt rote oj vongmu Butch Brent in "Road of ti" twin mrpritint ease. . . . Nan Merriman knew tne moras ana w when 18 months old... Janet Leign toot thrilled at making her screen debut as Von Johnson's heart biteres in "The Romance msj amgm but it meant milking com. feeding pigs, end laUing in tne muu. . . . . -Srnnim From Cojlik" c-Jl looked forward to going to Mexwo on loco. hon, liU they found they'd have to be Uiocculated against typhoid, tetanus ' ind smallpox first: X |