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Show UINTAH IUSIN RECORD Speaking of Sports SCREEN s RADIO A VALE Newspaper Union.) ' cok ng 'I 1 - DE MILLE r By ROBERT McSIIANE (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) r I 'HE most strident voice of box-in- g has -- Pu'nTalpand achallengble. Mix jot an invltatlon e- r Four today is suffer- a serious shortage he towel ,4 declared Mo men he nen handsome Not just ipin S wremojboys, but good looking. ns ivwood tissue Save . r ' I & ROBERT ALEN UP DYNAMITE ON. Known as Yussel the Muscle, d; the occupation of issolini; and an attack it line. Apparently the hatched at the famous ni conference at the ., and was calculated allies off their feet. I Nazi Tieup. vhen allied intelligence d of this, the first thing lid was check into the Slorway. There, thanks odding, the Norwegian which is a labor certain high-- : who were sympathet-i- n some cases ready them. started to clean house, Nor-fireen the it tipped off the he fact that the allies oir plot. So they start-i- y almost immediately. question that before i government had time of the inside plotters, ad prepared maps of y lad figured on the operations there, more forceful in the cabinet even wanted bentrop accused them oing into Norway first, lain and a majority of ere against it. )out all the truth there lbbentrop white paper. B. DE MILLE Carroll and Paul-- , doddard are the leading in getting men to play He wanted t ,te those two girls! i Preston, and that was simple dis-rji; Preston is a De Mille But it took months to get from Cooper on a loan-o; ei Goldwyn, to whom he is ji'jutract exactly ten other pro-- 1 s were after the rangy Cooper Madeleine -- worn-iMcul- ty - y. d, double-crossin- pos-ltar- ut jl'J high-pressur- e gov-'over- pro-Na- t ..at time. another leading man, sy wberf1 i. Wash tmrincing in strength and act-- 8 .ibility, to be Coopers rival for aeeded Carrolls hand. It took 4 tier three months before he Mi fill that part with Preston Fos-i Whereupon he decided that tn werent nearly enough good actors In me; young '.'leiae I oD he-m- J Roose-nofficiall- 0 young man thinking of ptmg Mr. De Mille s challenge suggest that you first prove to that you can act and also that you have money enough pport you for a long, long time. !o ELT DELEGATES g eks before p ers of Georgia had Georgias delegates erm, he made a trip to y and reported to he had the of-u- Sfwood. any nocrats e t John Carradine three years,-l- Mille pointed out, to get De TONY GALENTO and JOE JACOBS aneg.) Fred MacMurray is studying binding, and her first efforts be bindings for all the scripts has done in pictures. We could suggestions for the proper malm which to bind one or two m, but she might not like them i anyway, its not an actors if he finds himself working in J one. s ! e Vi ;s Metropolitan Opera com- that succeeded in signing up buna Durbin; her debut with that mis organization is scheduled for the -- season, but she may it her debut this fall operatic 1 the Los Angeles or San Fran-opecompanies. 2 sts, wet ra 15 ling ban m C. Hill, noted news com-ao- r, has installed in his of- 1 teletype machine carrying scripts of all European broads' Many of the broadcasts cribed are intended by Euro- and Asiatic governments for consumption, and afford an sidelight on conditions with-J- c various countries. Mr. Hill has his own staff of correspond-- J MIS, ung ES e in-Jb- le m important cities, and is leading press associa- - si by a as Andre Kostelanetz, well-f1- 1 ecehestra conductor (Tune me" is his radio program) and of Lily Pons, who Initiated for a United States ? honoring Stephen Foster. It s first stamp honoring an Amer- composer, and as it is a one-- 1 tamp probably well all be Sit. When the postmaster him that it was to be kostelanetz promptly ar-- a j special Stephen Foster ey of six of the most beloved songs, for Tune Up Time, Tony Martin singing them. CamPaign , gen-oonfi- cd -- nd, -- )rd, the last two years the Fla , home of Frances songstress, has ' tfansformed into a money-- S citrus farm; she financed it, er Mother acts as manager. top-flig- AD ENDS bones If est Highland ter-Pof uater continuing a ,ii touhon for flowers; he'll burst I J""?. ny day now. j,f'holt and Rosemary De- journey to leui York the r nf fWuy, to broadcast "Dr. n dine for three weeks. ; , I j ' ODDS n ship. In June, 1930, Jacobs reached the zenith of his career. Schmeling and Jack Sharkey were meeting to decide the championship vacated by Gene Tunney. First Above Yussel the Muscle set up a prefight cry about the nine times Shark- among t. ey had won by fouls or had claimed There ai fouls. everyone It is est The Schmeling Victory such con In the first three rounds of the reactions fight Sharkey seemed to have the 50 situation well in hand. But in the mately the fourth round Sharkey cut loose with basis, one blow, quickly followed by an tional stu uppercut The German went down, and his p the same holding his groin. Referee Jim Crowley was getting traveling ready to count when Jacobs, with freighter the inevitable cigar in his mouth, crawled through the ropes and screamed: Foul! You wuz Slay down! fouled! Schmeling obeyed his masters voice, and thus became the first heavyweight to win the title while resting on his back. Perhaps his most masterful job was done with Tony Galento, the Orange, N. J., saloonkeeper. Jacobs ''Vr4 prodded Galento, a roly-polbrawler, into the status of a national rowdy and heavyweight threat. Galento was one of Jacobs favorites. The boisterous, swaggering barkeep was a natural for Yussel the Muscles ballyhoo talents. Tony fourth was considered a washed-urater, but under Jacobs guiding hand he fought his way into a title bout with Joe Louis. Galento lost the fight but startled the boxing If' hen going through a stop sign, the driver's and passengers world with his showing. chances of death are only 20 per cent less than those of British Because of his managers death, sailors serving in the North sea tear zone. And the chance of death the blubbery Galento -- insisted on is four times as great as that of student pilots being trained by the postponing his fight with Baer from manU. S. army. The hazard to u aylaid pedestrians is equally alarming. his Without May 28 to July 2. he was lost. ager s p We Wuz Robbed! Two years after Schmeling won the championship, he was matched again with Sharkey. When Sharkey decision in was awarded a the return bout, Jacobs achieved some sort of immortality by clambering into the ring and bellowing "We wuz robbed!" The statement became a definite part of fistiana s was phraseology. Then, too, there his classic remark which he is supposed to have made when attending We a ball game on a chilly day: should have stood in bed. iTifcJ in line. wed your instructions, nt, reported Rivers, ot all the Georgia dele-fo- r your man at the But you know how cats ou get em in a bag. ratchin and now when they're going Ed, replied the just keep hold of that ne, he governor of Georgia nthusiastic as the Pres- tless, also, he was in- pinning him down on m. He said: an hold em all right, it, if Im holding them it if Im holding them else, then they want to it so they can each get -- - - - J I ibfs .h Xnt, mm .j OMINOUS WAR MOVE How can the British abandon the Mediterranean? That would be to abandon France, whose lifeline and link with her African colonies it is. It would be to abandon the great Anglo-Frenc- en HARDY PERENNIALS Cl W W Vigorou field Qroftn plants tnat ear ried 8 to 12 Inch tope last fall. 8 each Doublo Sunburst Coreopsis, Long Spurred Columbine, Meiteso BHI, Cross, Marguerite, Canterbury Shasta Daisy, SpicO Pinks, Monarda, Pyratbnun, Sweet Williams, etc. The entire 60 beautiful biants Postpaid for 81.00, If you order at once. Wo will Include ehemicaie to make 10 pal. Miracle GruW Nutrient Solution with Vitamin Bl. Insures safety git SU In transplanting and Increases growth Dowers, eto. Satisfaction Guaranteed. ClarkQardarNiireriee,ll.e, Boxl7,0ace,la Jlsk Me Another A O General Quiz The Questions 1. Who designed the Stars and Stripes? 2. Is propaganda spread among the enemy a new idea? 3. What salary did George Washington receive during his terms as President? 4. At what degree of latitude is the equator? 5. IIow many gallons of fresh water must a large liner carry in crossing the Atlantic? 6. Is a peruke worn on the head, neck or foot? . 7. Has the Nazi salute, the upraised hand, been used by other people? 8. What is the oldest institution of higher learning in the United States, Yale university, Harvard, or the College of William and Mary? The Answers 1. Francis Ilopkinson, a signer of the Declaration of Independ- ence, designed the Stars and Stripes. e 2. In wars, messages were written on paper and tied to arrows to be shot to the enemy. 3. Washington received no salary during his terms as President. 4. Zero. 5. Large liners require more than a million gallons of fresh water, for one trip across. 6. Head (its a wig). 7. It was formerly used as a sign of serfdom among slaves in Ancient Rome. 8. Harvard, founded in 1636. old-tim- Week Days Names Names of the days of the wreek are derived from Saxon idolatry. Adoring seven of their various deities more particularly than all the rest, the Saxons dedicated the days of the week to them, namely: The Sun, the Moon, Tuisco (sire of Germans as well as Saxons), Woden (father of gods and, god of war), Thor (eldest son of Woden), Friga (wife of Woden and mother of gods), and Saeter (the Roman Saturnus. Pathfinder. CONSTIPATED? Hers U Amazing Relief of Conditions Duo to Sluggish Bowel HaWilfawcdi! M7.B7rrrmar.mr a' .11 think all laxative alike. Just try this bi. i..i. bo mild, iRoioukU, refreahing, invigorating. Dependable relief from sick headaches, bilious spells, tired feeling when associated with constipation, get a 25c box of NR from your lYltHOUi KISK druggist. Make tiie test then return the box to us. We will If not delighted, uni. i refund the purchase pric e. Thsti Ot NR Tshletst near-easter- - ev-at- ic FEMALE COMPLAINTS left-win- g r. JOHNNY MOVES UP Johnny Roosevelt, youngest and only merchant son of the President, has been promoted. The Filene department store In Boston, for which he went to work several years ago as a stock boy, has made him manager of a new branch in Winchester, Mass. This Is one of the most Republican strongholds in New Eng-lanOut of a population of 10,000 there are only 400 registered d d. J. NURSERIES n Effort Counts h army, iu know when the time which is rapidly being assembled strength should fail, Although replied the President as a threat to the totalitarian left the effort will deserve praise. In , you just hold on to flank. That army couldnt be munigreat enterprises the attempt is tioned and supplied by the long enough. Propertius. above conversation is route around Africa. It might possignificant because it sibly be fed by supplies coming he attitude of almost WHY SUFFER Functional through the Red sea but not supstate boss, including and munitions equipment. ported by :ue of Jersey City and To abandon the Mediterranean to are of Chicago. They y Italy would also be to abandon Turlor a 'uTird term for Roosevelt, but key and leave the mess In souththey dont guarantee to transfer eastern Europe in Hitlers hands, their delegates to Roosevelt's fairto the extent that he could divide Lydia E. Plnkhama Vegetable Compound Has Helped Thousands I haired boy especially if he is a up the spoils by some kind of trade Few women today do not have eomc elim of New Dealer. between the supposed enemies, (unrtional trouble. Maybe youve noticed YOUItSh.LF getting reatlies, moody, nervoua, Mussolini and Stalin. Such a pairdepressed lat ly yourworktoomuchtoryou JIM FARLEY would be 7 nen try Lydia E. Imkhama Vegetable ing of strange bedfellows Jim Farley used to be one of the stronger than the coupling of supCompound to help quiet unatrung nerves, relieve monthly pain (cramps, barkache, bitter targets for New posed enemies, Hitler and Stalin, to headache) and weak dimy famtiag apella functional disorders. For over 60 to due Dealers. hunravage and divide Poland. yeara Pinkhama Compound has helped nerBut today, it is just the opposite. Such results are impossible for dreds ot thousands of weak, rundown vous women. 7'ry iff Listen, for instance, to SEC ComEngland and certainly for France missioner Leon Henderson, generalto contemplate. Therefore it seems 20-- 40 ly considered a pretty clear that England is not WNU W Over at the Mayflower the other leaving the Mediterranean with day, says Leon, the newsmen anything except her ordinary comSincere Friend were taking pictures. Jim Farley mercial traffic usually routed A friend is a person with whom and I were there, and they got a through the Suez canaL She Is just I may be sincere. Before him I picture of us together. Somebody getting her rich argosies promptly think aloud. Ii. V. may from the sidelines started kidding out of an area of danger from a me about being a candidate. So I sudden possible clash of aerial and turned to Jim and said, Lets join maritime navies in those waters. It seems to me that the critical forces, Jim. And he said, 0. K., Leon, which element In this war just now Is not end of the ticket do you want? , . . what happened in Norway, as what Jim Farley Is a darn good man." may happen in the Mediterranean. rock-ribbe- 1 European and Asian power politics, whatever consequence that may carry, is sure to be an issue this year. As in 1916, the sentiment against that, west of the Alleghenies, is overwhelming. In 1917, we were at war and, before the end of that year, with complete and even enthusiastic support of the country. Yet immediately after the declaration of war, there wfas no such sentiment except on the Eastern seaboard. I know, because I had undertaken the organization of the selective draft in every American community. Most of the gray hairs I had until recently, I got in the first anxious 30 days of that effort. Was the ambitious experiment going to flop? In most states, except the East, there was only aloof and skeptical if not sullen acceptance. By the persuasive power of the eloquence and idealism of Woodrow Wilson, by some arts we used of blatant ballyhoo and hokum national selling, that was changed in a few weeks to a war psychosis which approached hysteria. Woodrow Wilson could do that because he prepared the seed bed by g months of patient and restraint and, of far more importance, because we were actually in, and not merely flirting with, a bloody war and a sickly season. Can Franklin Roosevelt do that which to be elected, he must do, or sincerely change the whole course of his foreign policy? Can he do it when we are not engaged in war, and when no such seed bed is ready? He has another handicap which Mr. Wilson had not. This country had then never tried a mass adg war venture in the diplomacy of Europe. We tried in 1917 and 1918 and we know it to have been the most disastrous gamble this nation ever made. Apart from the handicap of our dolorous experience, is the simple military question of whether we should scatter our strength over vast areas of this globe, or whether, the obvious course is to retain our Interior lines, our concentrated strength, the advantages of our natural barriers and our unquestioned unity. It is a reversal of every American traditional (if not constitutional) political principle and of every military and naval axiom. Coupled with the reversal of the third term tradition, it will certainly be a It cannot be massive handicap. shushed or even minimized. Only the persuasive skill of Mr. Roosevelt, his literary ghosts, and the greater pulling power of four billion dollars, coupled with possible Republican campaign blundering could overcome it. Yet, so great is the power of good or ill of all these elements, that for one, am not yet ready to say it can't be done. U with lg war was to include of Norway; the inva-n- man. During the years, he turned up as guardian of such fighters as Andre Routis, featherweight champion; Frankie Genaro, flyweight champion; Johnny Dundee, featherweight king; Mike McTigue, light heavyweight titleholder, and a host of others. Though his fighters brought him both cash and glory, Jacobs chief claim to fame was his unequalled ability to think fast and play all the angles. In a racket full of conniving geniuses, Jacobs more than held his own. He was a sharper among sharpers. The most fantastic single phase of his career was in shouting Schmeling into the heavyweight champion- WNUSMa Washington, D. C. The rapidly crystalizing policy of this administration to defend America by mixing aggressively in y, right-han- CECIL When cocky Ribbentrop meeting Germany went into ise secret allied plans Scandinavia first had d. But the real truth, official sources here, rent. ly happened was that lays before the inva-French and British rvices got wind of a to launch a whirlwind Jacobs collected first by himself, d then served as Tex Rickards JP THE WAR AS ELECTION ISSUE Joachim von .ummoned diplomats to a gala presentation hite paper the other ave been that he was ned with covering up e which the allies had jaywalke danger as raid victif Yussel the Muscle JOHNSON UmudFwum well-know- n he-me- upstanding r, not one- 're only a few here " '0f the number we need such terrific e (evv are in al- that sometimes theyre to get. possible cast-j j see, hed had trouble in in of the three male leads in jWest Mounted Police," GENERAL K3QSSS& HUGH S. f JanS': drew Pearson Compar those of i be surpri ous our lit are. was stilled recently just as it was warming up to one of its greatest efforts in behalf of the Tony Galento-Ma- x Baer fight. The voice belonged to Joe Jacobs, ; 4. fight impresario who talked Max Schmeling into the worlds heavyweight championship and himself into a colorful, important position in the boxing game. . The extremely voluble little manager, a figure among Broadway sporting circles, died at the age of 44, victim of a heart attack. Jacobs inaugurated his ring career at a tender age. The son of a tailor, he came from tough Hells Kitchen on New Yorks West Side. He wanted to be a fignter, but soon learned the futility of absorbing punishment when one might just as well Accordii get paid for shouting advice. In fact, it was said he actually had ern Natior fighters on his pay roll before he company s got out of high school. en who can act. tie J tw tj. ,hem to come to HollynutEfc "though hes not promis- iem 3 thing. n: fpS rfOH Fistiana Loses Most Colorful Of Promoters If that warfare opens up, the affair in Norway will just be a sideshow and that raises my principal conjecture. Hitler has two choices In grand strategy. He can concentrate on the British empire by striking at its heuit In western Europe, or, if he has the armed assistance of Italy, he can attempt to cut it In pieces in detail and strengthen his own economic, if not military, position by operation in southeastern Europe and the Mediterranean. He can do either, but he cant do both at the same time. function badly and nagging backache, with dizziness, burning, scanty or too frequent urination and getting up at night; when you feel tired, nervous, all upset . . . use Doans Pills. Doan's are especially for poorly working kidneys. Millions of boxes are used every year. They are recommended the country over. Ask your neighborl kidneys WHEN suffer a |