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Show ff 1 THE BULLETIN. BINGHAM, UTAH XTVTIONAL Scenes and Persons in the Current News ni r irr-""" t-- . ' m M k ' 4r4'?' ) I H 'rin : , v-- w - v v wtiA i . wc. A-- 1 i- - - v )? ,V nl x rw f?1? belng drlven t0 a raU head from Plerre-- s- - D-- 'or hlpment to the eastern part of 2-- Secretary of State William Phillips who is mentioned as successor to Long, as ambassador to Breckinridge Italy. 3-- Vlce President John N. Garner (right) and Gen. Eduardo Hay, Mexico's secretary of foreign affairs, at dedication of highways at Laredo, Texas. V5K J on tr,l 1 k Leaders aver that "Charley Gehrlngcr was the IT .THc"n clrcnlt Pmer in All-St- affair with Loo Gehrlr ranking a very close .econu Edd" Stur. est of all lacrosse goalies when he operated in front of the Mount Washington and Cres- cent A. C. nets, has moved from Westchester to a better business proposition in Boston . . . Watch Southern California next falL The behind-the-scen- es dope is that How-ar- d Jones again has assembled one of the nation's best football teams . . . It's tough preparing fo an Olympic Invasion. A recent letter fron: Berlin confides that officials have been working overtime stock-to- g op sixteen different brands of chewing gum for the athletes. Unless he takes a salary cut Jim-m- y Wilson may be looking for a new Job next year. Now that the once great catcher no longer is very active on the playing field his boss seems to feel that a $17,000 annual salary is too much for a mere Phillie manager . . . Van Mungo is not surprised at die un-justified rumors that he misbe-haved before the All-St- game. When he checked In at his hotel on Monday morning he was assigned to Room 313 and when he aid for his breakfast be received a $2 bill in change. After that he was pre-pared for anything in the way of hard luck. ssit Ins Last Ovation H,! Humplireys Best Ci rjiory to Retain 3licat leaning forward g BAD been from one of the padded leath-itol- n in a corner of the Garden L Felt hat carefully bal-- 4 Bm one knee, be had been Bw erly to the brisk gos-- ; tnicmt Marge dispose of too IT1 sumptuous free-tick-et seekers S J n life to him for almost had Ire- - . ..... Pie Traynor Convinced Diz Would Make Pirates rie Traynor will tell yon that If the Pirates bad Dizsy Dean they would win the pen- - r there the crowd had drifted ing j, L. I looked at him again. It all, times change, old sees g ids drop off quickly. .Vhen a I told t ITwho has been out of close 'r tins tt w long is shoved again Into ite te? i spotlight be must wonder If it til t'K&f, ,1 nant easily ... Al-though they do not deny that the big boy may do it, the smarter and more honest boxlnf peo-ple feel that Joe Louis will need more than the ex-tra foot of bandage permitted bim by the ever - obliging I be the tame. He I tnougnt asi i l noted one gnarled hand trem-t- it lot M slightly. We felJ to talking, tart ! 1 4bout the ,1Iness that came life a h yein but about otner of ," Mer days. beet here were stories about boyhood 'Wchj ments on Oliver street when he (d to play marbles with the edh urernor," a gentleman who is ild . iwn more familiarly to most oth-iir- lj as Al Smith. Hal i bout how Murphy, who seldom i C1 it to fights, once sat beside him the 1 1 at a Dulse-strum- - Pie Traynor Kew York boxing commission before be makes a comeback . . . Rab-bit Warstler, obtained from the A's recently, shonlu be of real help to the Bees. He is one of the best defensive infielders in the busi-ness and when he is happy, hits .300 In the clutch. His Philadelphia trouble was that he did not like the way Connie Mack treated him . . . Incidentally Mr. Mack would be something less than a popnla. fa-vorite ia Boston even L' he returned all that dough be has beea taking :ai i ff 'Wj sting , A 1 the I icaii rtj hOH f , j taj M it i .i "",tii-i'- j ming bout and punched his ribs black and blue in the midst of the ex-citement. About how Sullivan named him "Joe the Beaut," title which he much pre-- I ferred to the "Bow-ery Demosthenes" which some news-- out of the town since he located the Yawkey bakery. The fans are sore because he was In a town on a Sunday for a regularly scheduled contest but would not wait over for the AU-St- ar affair two days la-ter. Another hot Boston blast is di-rected at the National league. The fans, who esteem Wally Berger so highly that the Bees were afraid to make several very promising deals for him this spring, cannot understand why he was kept on the bench during the dream game in his home park . . . Larry Benton, a great pitcher when he served the Braves and Giants, soon will be released by the Baltimore club . . . Rudd Hoyle, 185-oun- d triple-thre-at star at Hun school in Prince-- "1 Lu iBnrophreys PaPer tagged Qn hlm years later A Pa was the proud Loas4 that, L I tears, he had been able to ftie s cigarette, chew gum and bounce a fight at the same time. ow did he come to get into this fart? Well, be wa a newsboy jh he was ten years old and who used to listen to him on old Produce Exchange corner to admire the power of his I, even then. After thai there i lot of distinction to be ved as master of ceremonies and parties. lllfor "Beaut" Started fined Announcer's Career s I ton, is an unreasonable lad. In spite of tempting offers from two major colleges nearer home the youngster, who is tabbed as "surefire varsity," plans to enter Harvard this falL The best minor league buy right now is Cliff Melton, who once had a tryout with the Yankees. He is a big, young, limber and not too smart Southerner possessed of a very good fast ball and a sharp breaking curve. Baltimore is ask-ing $50,000 for him and will take 20 G's less Don Lash, who possi-bly is the best Olympic-- distance star ever developed in the U. S., did his first running as a bare-footed boy of thirteen. That was in the cow pasture back of the little red school in his noma ham-let of Auburn, Ind. Could it be that Penn, the team which may end Princeton's football winning streak early in October, already has started practice? The New York state athletic commission has dug up an old rule which decrees that all prize fight contracts must be signed at the commission's office. This, nat-urally, will not improve the very messy boxing situation but should give the matchmaking state offi-cials some swell extra chances to get their pictures in the papers ... A Boston restaurant features a Bill Terry hot plate on its "Ce-lebrity" menu. The dish is "Fresh-ly made corned beef hash with dropped egg." . . . Jimmy But-wel- l, who came back from the World war to continue his career as one of the all-tim- e great Jock-eys, now is a patrol Judge. Jersey City hopes to get the To-ronto, International league, fran-chise next year. Mayor Hague's new stadium, which wiU se 38,000 for basebaU and 65,000 for fights, being the reason for revived sports interest across the river . . . Even though the Giants are slipping of Eddie Bran-nic-k there Is no danger losing his title as the best dressed secretary in baseball. On the club's last Western trip he nicked brightly striped and dot-ted neckties . . . Aside from win-ning prUe fights lightweight cob-tend- er Leonard Del Genie like nothing better than to read Charles j Dickens. pen one night, when Chuck Con- - r p was meeting Billy Welsh at ; pen's Little Casino down on lt f 7 near Pearl, the er did not appear. A spec--m stood op and demanded that r &e Beaui' be given fhe job. f Sot it. Whether the "Mayor I Chinatown" that was Connors, f the "Little John L. that was fish, on this occasion is some-- m he could not remember. But I flld "member that :t was one f I we happiest nights if his life I""En. - A very happiest? No, those I sweU times when he and Sam fT eand Terry McGovern were e fight business. Best fighter ft ever lived, that Terry. re'of success? Wei', what C have t0 handle a crowd Is voice, personality and col-L- a ?ught t0 be a deeP. bass L,,u ,ih lots 01 vibrations. You L0ught t0 antagnize the either. What you should do ! "use good Judgment and try to eP them friendly. 5WeU yeah, maybe he was i 2 misquoted. But what of C 7e"deD that ,ast n,Shl ther Conn nd 8'IenC8 E0 h CedT, ""Post'opje" to the Cedfil.T that hed an-fj-e boxmg iaws sinCe 1899. Wluh?" " some pePle did i?kept "tisfled. Rof. that was real S SiTholr and u 8ome of t5eheadbiandfl0W0fab0xinS eve- - the ii1 toe crowd back ston iaea0fflceaain- - Jimmy pi with h Wa,lting t0 down-V- kt hand tn8 no longer ""-tim- e .U " ,way" r4 PairM ,plcture on tnose ro you"- - Wh d0, 1 ' ol 80me day e got on?. nd we could AlS.,n0re and - " 40 ,1n. JomeanHyumotphherretysI. am Not "AH in the Eye" The popular idea about the use of the "hypnotic eye" in making wild animals or any animal be-have is "all In my eye," or, in plain language, "pure, unalloyed bunk," says Clyde Beatty, well-kno-animal trainer in his book, "The Big Cage." "Trainers for years have made practice of staring straight into the eyes of the animals that they work at close range," he says. "I do it myself. It is part of the stage setting, however. It has no effect on the animal. It is just an effective trick of show-manshl- p. I'm all for showman-ship. But I want it known that when I make an animal do my bidding, it isn't because my eyes are looking into his." Ihhnhd about Aa Immortal Oration T) EVERLY HILLS.CALIF. The future has a rotten trick of mussing up the judg-ments of the present. What a pity it is that we can't wear our hind-sigh- ts in front. When I read where some ponderous performing pachyderm of the literary elephant quadrille ays. "This story will live forever." I get to thinking about a time-yellowe- d cony of a U A metropolitan news-paper that was printed on Novem-ber 20, 1803. It devoted great gobs of praise and nine solid columns very solid to the eloquence of the Hon. Edward Ever-ett of Massachu-- 1 setts, who. on the Irvhi S. Cobl day before, after months of prepa-ration had, on a battlefield down in Pennsylvania, spoken two hours and turned loose enough oratory to fill about nine gas balloons. But of the subsequent and incidental re-marks of another man, an awk-ward, shy man from Illinois, who had spoken Just two minutes, It said, "The President was also heard briefly. The applause was formal and scattering." Prejudices of Crities OFTEN, 'twould seem, the reviewer makes up his mind beforehand that he doesn't like y'ou and behaves ac-cordingly. A friend sent me a clipping from a small city it dealt with the open-ing of the picture, "Everybody's Old Man." The writer was quite severe in his analysis. He didn't like the film. Passionately, he didn't care for me. The joke was that the theater where the picture was to have been shown burned down just about the time the paper went to press, and the picture wasn't ever shown in that town. The next best Illustration of the point Fm making dates back years ago. I was discussing various nov-elists with that gentle wit, the late Oliver Herford. "Ollie." I said. Vhat do you think of books?" "My dear Cobb," he softly murmured, "something I once wrote about him in a critical way so prejudiced me against the man I could never bear to read any of his books." . Dukes. OUT here we're waiting for that baron and that French count back in New York to form the mother branch of their Noble-- men's club for the protection of holders of genuine titles In Amer-ica and, presumably, as a guar antee to our own home-grow- n heir-esses that, when they marry for-eign princelings or what not, the goods will be as described. There's been a lot of title-leggin- you know. As soon as the organization gets started we're going to open the Hol-lywood division. Since only the au-thentic nobility may qualify, it's figured that the active roster will be confined to a very limited group. e a The State of the Nation. FAR be it from me to turn right on the heels of the hot wave, but I feel it my duty to warn my fellow-America- that this frag-ile and crumbling republic is doomed. That is, it's doomed if you can believe what comes out of our sainted political leaders In the way of predictions. Hark to the quavering chorus which already has started up: A crisis exists. Every professional crisis-breede- r in the land openly admits it I can't remember when a crisis wasn't existing. But they come larger in campaign years. We are facing a dread emergency which has had no parallel since the last occasion when we faced a dread emergency. This very hour the nation totters on the brink if an abyss. It has been tottering ever since George Washington was Pres-identtottering worse at times, but always on the tot Miracles and Misdemeanors. ONCE upon an early time there a man so holy that even the wild creatures would not harm him. He drew a thorn from the paw of a tame lion and the grate-ful beast followed after him. So he became a saint Only the other day in a court ln Tanganyka, which is ln Africa, a black man a savage by our defi-nitions was on trial. It seemed the lions were raiding the stock, so the native authorities set traps for them. The accused found a lion in one of these traps and made a lad-der and went down and helped the great brute to escape. Being arrested, he explained sim-ply that the lion was his friend. So they fined him $12.50. In the olden times it was a miracle. Nowadays it's a misdemeanor. IRYIN S. COBB C WNU Service. Minister's Son Invents Invisible Ear Drum The Invisible Ear Dram Invented by A. O. Leonard, a son of the late Bar. A. B, Leonard, D.D, for many years secretary of the Board of For-eign Missions of the Methodist Epis-copal Church, for his ows relief from extreme deafness and head noises, has so greatly improved his hearing that he can join In any ordi-nary conversation, go to the theatre and hear without difficulty. Inexpen-sive and has proved a blessing to many people. Write for booklet to JL O. Leonard, Inc., Suite 200, 70 Fifth avenue, New Tork city. Adrt Quick Lunch for the Stenographer - J v VV'-- - f iTMilii,hittritfitiiiirtii flnimi wihiMillt nHTiiaiiiwafiiS frnmiMilnWBiTM,wMiMwfca,iiirtiHriftftMHTru'-,J-'M-A brand new grill with cooking surface of an amazing new aluminum alloy so sensitive to heat that a single folded newspaper provides suffi-cient fuel for cooking an egg enables hard-workin- g stenographers to eat in the office during rush hours. Photo shows Laurette O'Neill testing the device at the International Homefurnishing show in the Merchandise Mart in Chicago. High Dignity One of the sublimest things in the world is plain truth. S .jjjt WITH A 4iWNLANTERN 111 ft II T1!18 to BtU CotanM IImH B!E' . 21J1 hrllLliiuntoa.raIt lwigithht elnh,Unbtllrf . Ifc ffi nd It alww raadj for any at llehllnt job. Is ur wnUiw. tfat ll(hl m md far rnry outdoor aw,., a tha farm, for bantini, fWhini, eatdaor aparav fmmtot Frm bolm-trp- a aloKa, poroalala top, Dtrkla-plaU- d fount, built-i- n pamp. Llka Colanaa Mmpa, It makml and burnt Ita own cm frarn nrolar aaaollna. It'a a big nlaa. with fara mt dapaodablallshtlaf arrlet, for only .. sm voua local ckalkr-- ot wrtt for (iWB Voklar. THS COLEMAN LAMP AND STOVE CO. foisonfvy frJ Torment Sunburn soothed" PHOTOGRAPHY Boll Developed HI ' or mailer, I caautlful enlanremante from four roll tSo. WleeOBila l'hotoahop Wait Salem. Vila. .g0f Wf laif it -- fl m n n -lf AFTER YOU EAT? After you finish a meal can you be sore of regular, successful elimination? Get rid of waste material that causes gas, acidity, headaches. Take Milnesia Wafers for quick, pleasant elimination. Each Wafer equals 4 teatpoonfuls of milk of magnesia. 20c, 35c & 60c at drug stores. fvT""' V WNU W 31--38 SALT LAKE'S NEWEST HOSTELRY Oar lobby Is delightfully air cooled during the summer months Radio for tvry Room A 200 Roomo200 Batht J T -- ' SHI fTf$ l HOTEL Temple Square Rates $1.50 to $3.00 Thm Hotel Temple Sqnara haa a highly desirable, friendly atmos-phere. You wUi always find it Immao-ulat- e, supremely comfortable, and tharonahly aareeabIe.Yoa can there-fore anderatud why thia hotel iai BICHLY RECOMMENDED Yoa ssub also eppredate whyt Iff a mark of diitinction to atop mt thin batitul hottalry ERNEST C ROSSITER, Mgr. San Diego Girl Is Selected as War Vets' Queen Shapeliness and charm were the two principal attributes which won the title of "Miss American Le-- If i cfj A tin gion" for Betty Fulkerson of San Diego (shown above), when war veterans recently gathered at the California-Pacifi- c International ex-position. She will be an honored guest of the Legionnaires during the state convention in Hollywood in August She is shown holding the trophy she won. I REPRESENTS LEAGUE "I " I V I V I , i ft ' y rv' urn ininiiiiilV.wj afm iaaim m Removal of Scan Lester, League of Nations High Commissioner in the free city of Danzig has been demanded by Dr. Arthur Karl Grelser, president of the Nazi-controll- Danzig senate. King Carol Greets Czechoslovak President i till IP V-- ft-.- v V Xp U, ' " X--i' LiAm r- -' Ill ir II t 'If i&ouo,, iiiSi W i il vt President Eduard Benes of Czechoslovakia was warmly greeted by King Carol of Rumania when he arrived in Bucharest for a conference of the Little Entente powers. Golden Gate Bridge Approaching Completion N : - - v - VX'-- '. fit Automobiles wiU be passing over the San Francisco-Oaklan- d Bay bridge by next November, engineers pre-dict This view shows the center lane with the floor steel entirely erected on the West Bay Crossing. The bridge, largest structure of Its kind in the world, wiU cost 177,200,000 on completion, |