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Show I I f. I t i I THE BULLETIN. BINGHAM, UTAH i r-- National Guard Tests N Y. Anti-Aircra- ft Defense ' Jf A& 1x14 SB t; i . M 'i National Guardsmen of Battery D, 212th coast artillery unit, only National Guard anti-aircra- ft unit In New York state, load a three-inc- super-powere- d gun, one of 325 ordered by the government. The new weap-ons, which would defend New York city In case of air attack, have a three-inc- h bore, fire a projec-tile containing 253 lead pellets, and can fire 30 shells a minute. Guns were tested at Fort Til-de- n, Rockaway beach, New York city. It was the first time since 1917 that a N. Y. National Guard regiment held winter maneuvers. Sport Shorts A RT SCHILLIG. smashing New York university end, likes boa constrictors as pets. He keeps two of the 20-fo- snakes in his home in the Bronx . . . Gordon former Pettinger. Red Wing, and Jack Craw-for- d were the only men to play In all 64 Boston Bruin games during their drive to the Stanley cun last year . . , Lefty O'Doul, manager of the San Francisco Seals, is operating a tavern in the coast city . , , When Pitt beat Duke 14 to 13 this season it was the first one-poi-defeat for a team coached by Wallace Wade In his 21 years as a foothnll conch w&vies in Line Conn After llnevich Win Cr0BERT McSIIANE I 11 SEVER hurt me. But I e deling I never hurt vx bfer- - b Conn talking, the shanty fe Jrto had just finished pum- - 4Jt a decision over KThetJevich. New Jersey light-f00jj-challenger. The bout W ta1' seeotld successful de-ed Mais title. a clt few words Conn present-er, pjsi ring history and fore-- f "icominff pugilistic career. i OVfty and clever to get hurt f W, in his own class, he lacks e 4,p of a punishing fighter. ltenon the crown from Melio ptyn a close Madison Square f ght. A month later the tt, likeable Pittsburgh hope- - :ed the heavyweight ranks . Ous Dorazio at Philadelphia. Plc3ore than two months ago PP:e his first title defense co'3ettina in Pittsburgh. Billy Sfights' k exceptionally clever and id is as game as any fight-rin- g today, but he is con-i- 7 little chance of stepping Lefty O'Doul - Seabiscuit started 17 times as a before he won a race . . . Fritz Crisler never has been the winning coach in a Minnesota-Michiga- n game. His Minnesota teams were defeated in 1930 and 1931, 7' to 0 and 6 to 0. His Michi-gan teams have lost 7 to 6 and 20 to 7 in the past two seasons ... In six games, five Big Ten and one against Southern California, three University of Illinois players played more than 300 minutes. They were Fullback George Rettinger, Tackle Jim Reeder and Quarterback Ralph Ehni . . . Cornell basketball squads, including varsity, junior varsity and frosh, will play 46 games this sea- - yii.iui,.jlRIMMJWW't.''JII'WJIl son . . . Ten seniors in the Notre Dame lineup played their final game in the Irish-Southe- California tilt . . . Tom Henrich of the Yankees keeps in condition during the winter by playing hockey with an amateur team in MassiUon, Ohio, his home town . . . Paul Martinovich of the Detroit Lions missed only one point after touchdown in three years at College of the Pacific. A. L. Statistics INTERESTING sidelights on the 1939 American league campaign were released recently by the league's service bureau. Statistics show that not one of the Chicago White Sox pitchers succeed-ed in chalking up a win over each of the seven rival clubs. In sharp contrast was the work of Cleve-land's Bob Feller, who won a ma-jority of his games against every rival club while chalking up his 24 victories. Feller, in fashioning the league's best record, won six straight from Detroit, two from St Louis, three out of five from Boston, New York and Washington, five out of seven from Chicago, and two out of three from Philadelphia. Ted Lyons finished with the best Sox percentage, winning 14 and los-ing six. He beat Washington four times In five games, losing the other one on his own error. Feller and Dutch Leonard of the Senators were oustanding for effec-tiveness against n teams. Each won 11 games and 'lost six. Kindest to opponents were Wash-ington pitchers. Ken Chase and Joe Krakauskas. Chase lost five to Cleveland and Krakauskas the same number to Detroit IlIPION BILLY CONN 4e ranks ting the heavyweight title e Louis the ultimate goal I both Conn and his man-Mlnn- y Ray, are aiming, lire two very good reasons 4a isn't expected to set the :ght world on its ear. To Jte, Billy Isn't heavy enough epobably never will be to diis. And he never will be 1" hit hard enough to stop rS Did It jjjrje that Gene Tunney ou-tright heavyweight ranks to surk Dempsey, but the cases t Parallel. Tunney was a big we-bone- His was a chas-"J- i could carry 200 pounds je. Conn isn't built that jpjf is small-bone- and it is sdJliiat his best fighting weight stbe more than 175 pounds, rti no question but that he Jte big, slow-movi- heavy-ymor- e than they could han-y.m- y Loughran proved what could do Zmore weighty opponents, mgh he was far from a Titer. But Joe Louis is just ',11st as clever, just as game and is the puncher in the ring today. fcely that Billy will win his fbattles in the heavyweight Boxing history is studded "aames of light-heavi- who 1 1 did whip big, slow-movin- g ti no trouble at all. It is Iral. He is fast enough to .nbersome opponent to rib-7j- e fact that he can't deliver llblow won't keep him from r's ;p decisions here and there. 3a) Mopped Up own weight class, against aK who was the New York &letic commission's No. 1 "j". Conn didn't take the his darting left jab until rl round. From then on he hjM. In the eleventh and rounds he had Lesnevicb hanging, clinching and lean-2- k he couldn't finish him. He j' knockout punch. "ing the decision from Les--.Con- n just about mopped up "Taitable talent in his weight pat's why both he and Man-- J want to crack the heavy ad eventually meet Joe that he would be attack-n- t killer with a :'m his supporters the re l "you can't have every- - Uway 20 pounds to a heavy'- s fast and dangerous as tantamount to handing an ' small ax after the open-- , tounds. It's still reasona-- ' to remark that a good big t whip a govd little man. jhat Conn is a good little ! , well be that all the con-!n- t Conn's proposed fight Louis is futile. He hasn't ie right to fight the champ vie heavyweight Bob may change the of things before the !' Conn and Johnny Ray are i1 j WHO'S NEWS THIS WEEK By LEMUEL F. PARTON YORK. When we went ln NEW World war, Sen. Smith W. Brookhart of Iowa said our crack riflemen would win for us if h wer allowed to re-Rif- Virtuoso erultandtraln Made Gun Our them. Amerl. cans, he said, Army Mainstay wtr borB marksmen, and the rlfla would be suited to our native genius. He was soundly patrlotie and moving, as he worked in Daniel Boone and individ-ual Initiative, but his plea went un-heededin fact, the senator's sug-gestion seemed amusing to most commentators. Bat, at that time, there was a young frilew popping off the con-veyer belt docks at Ceney is-land with aueh accuracy that he became a virtuose of rifle fire, and. In between war years, m&dA Mi rifle the mainstay of ear army firing power, hist as Senator Brookhart said It ought to be. The Garand seml-automat- io rifle, tested by National Guardsmen at Camp Smith, Feekskin, has for several years been put down by mili-tary men as the world's most sensational achievement in light rma. The army took It over la 1937. It la the creation of John C. Garand, the yonng toolmaker whose earlier laboratory was a Coney Island shooting gallery. It weighs only nine pounds, and fires SO shots to the minute one shot with one trigger-pul- l. Young Garand made several mod-els, embodying his basie Idea, and sent one to the navy department at Washington. They planted him .with the bureau of standards to continue his experiments. Later, they sent him to the United States armory at Spring-Hol- d, where In 1923 he brought through the deadliest small weapon ever made. It has been steadily Improved' since then, and, according; to the most as- -' thorltatlve military judgment, has more than trebled our army's firing power. Automatic in all but the trigger-pul-l, mua-tl- e gas Is used to power It. John C Garand was born in a French-Canadia- village, 20 miles from Montreal, and was brought to Putnam, Conn., by his father, when he was seven, after the death of his mother. He was the seventh of 14 children. He was a textile mill ma-chinist at 18. In 1930, he married a Canadian girt. They have a boy and a girl. He Is 52 years old, still a gunsmith at the Springfield ar-mory. THERE was once a hillbilly girl to a neighbor's cabin to borrow a hammer. She said, "Pappy's flxin' to build a house next fall." Over In Europe Borrows Europe, they Our 'World of "flxin'" - to build a Tomorrow Idea federated Eu. rope, forehanded about it, as above, with the building apparently depend-ent on a preliminary wrecking job. Within the last few days, plans for the grand remodeling have gone forward, with two sets of blueprints on each side of the west wall. Frans von Fapen fhlaks the new oemmonwealth of Earese will be devised by Ger-many, while Pan! Eeynaud, French minister of finance, and his confreres la Londoa, are making other arrangements. The wide range of planners swings from Intelleotsals, sseh as JnTian Huxley, the British solentlst, to the man of action, General Wladislas SIkorsU, pre-mier of the Folisn government which is Just now camping out la France. General SikorskL the latest ma-triculate in the peace seminar, vi-sions a "consolidated Europe," but one in which s reconstituted Poland will somehow bs happily encysted. Be Is a soldier who became a writing, as well as a fighting man, also, with his gift of ready speech, an orator and politician. He was an effective leader of the war of 1920, when the French geaeraJ, Maximo Weygand, helped the Poles sUp the Bol-sheviks, and he became premier in 1922 when he was replaced by Marshal Ptlsudski as chlef-of-sta- ff . He was forced out la 1923, and in 1924 became minister of war. One of his first official acts was to forbid women workers in the department to wear silk stockings. He decreed dark, hlgh-oollar- ed dresses, high shoes and cotton stockings. He is a strict disciplinarian. A handsome and romantic Igure of the old feudal Polish aristocracy, he took full account of modern con-ditions as he tried desperately to tool his country into modern state-hoe- d. Now, it appears, a weuld just skip it and take a chance on the world of tomorrow. (Consolidated Features WNO Service.) IIIIIIIWI. Cap, Scarf, IIittcns To Keep Tot Warm Pattern G501. Any little girl will be overjoyed to find this woolly set in her Christ-mas stocking. It's done in simple crochet. Pattern 6504 contains di-rections for making cap, scarf and mittens in a 4, 6 and 8 year size; materials needed; illustrations of them and stitches; color schemes. To obtain this pattern send 15 cents in coins to The Sewing Circle, Household Arts Dept., 25!) W. 14th St., New York, N. Y. DON'T GIVE YOUR CHILD A"Bargain"RemedyYou Don't Know All About rV v A child's HI It Deyond ins pncf of panmss Ask your Doctor before fclvlni your child doubtful "bargain'1 remedies. No family need take this chance today. Wait. Think first. Are you absolutely sure you should give a single dose of that drug to your child? Internally! It was sold, you recall, as "some-thing just as good", for a few pennies less. A very dear purchase it could be! For your own peace of mind alone, give no home remedy you're not quite certain about without getting your own doctor's opinion. Ana never go against it. Even in the case of the common children's remedy, milk of magne-sia, ask your doctor what he ap-proves. And when he says "Phillips' Milk of Magnesia" see that you get exactly that by asking expressly for "Phillips'" when you buy...ncver ask for just "milk of magnesia". If your child prefers Phillips' in the newer form tiny peppermint-flavore- d tablets, give it this way. But whetheryou get liquid Phillips' or Phillips' Tablets get the penuine PhiIlips'.Lookforthename"Phillips' Milk of Magnesia" on bottle or box. PHILLlPS'XihA JfiPlrisA' ill .1 4,, makes Windsor theTrince of Good Bourbons'' Even whiskey experts are surprised at the remarkable quality of Windsor, now 3 years old. Discover for yourself ,,,,1, that this whiskey, already nationally F55SB famous as a good bourbon, now steps FSpl Vahead as the " Prince of Good Bourbons." jrffi ' Cods SO Quart-Co- ds 49 I V- - VaPt-Co- deSl whisk j, V Gal.-Co- do 58 V. 3 years old Copyright 1939,National Distiller Jj Product: Corporation Ne. York - . Hirrj Bwkctt.Mfr.lannefl) Mr,B lomond,Ojd CHOPPING TnB best Place ping tour is in m f t t f your favorite easy-J- J W I chair.withanopen mmtm newspaper. Mace a habit ol reading the advertise-ments in this paper every week. They can save you time, energy and money. . ( They'll Teach Countrymen After U. S. Education ;r: y$-Z- 3S r KfijMW- -" '' "" ... jMiit jiri.i ..i - Miss Hop Hee Dunne of Johannesburg, South Africa, pic tured at the controls of her training plane In Phila-delphia, Pa. The Chinese girl will learn flying in a Quaker City school, then expects to return home to Africa. From there she will proceed tov China to instruct the youth of that country in aeronautics. Right: Peter Eoyang, eldest son of Admiral Eoyang of the Chinese navy, shown at his studies in the University of Michigan, where he Is receiving an occidental education. Jlsk Me Jlnother Q A General Quiz r Tie Questions 1. Wliat part of the world's popu-lation does the Southern hemi-sphere contain? 2. Is there a federal or state law for the punishment of a stowaway discovered on an ocean vessel? 3. Which is the longest verse of the Bible? The shortest? 4. What is the name of the geo-logical period in which we live? 5. Will all kinds of oil float on water? The Answers 1. The Southern Hemisphere con-tains but 5 per cent of the world's population. 2. No. 3. Longest Esther 8:9; shor-testSt. John 11:35. 4. The Ilolocene. It extends from about 20000 B. C. to the present time. 5. Several kinds will not, among them are sassafras and winter-gree- n. Ersatz in England il BUNLOP nk J i :WJJJII III MRf ifT'"fj ; "TVs: A special "gas producer" converts low grade coal into gas to drive Lon-don's trucks and busses. Mounted on a trailer in front of the vehicle, this "producer" supplies fuel for a huge double-dec- k bus. This "ersatz" campaign of using substitutes con-serves the empire's resources. War Near America The first World war came close to the U. S. Atlantic coast. Three ships were sunk near Cape Hatteras by submarines. Most famous of ships to be destroyed was old Diamond Lightship. Other boats were the Happanage, a wooden freighter, built in Wilmington, N. C, which went down off Cape Hatteras, and the Milo, a tanker sunk off Nags Head, N. C. The crew of the light-ship rowed an open boat nearly to shore before being rescued. j Chinese Food Customs Fish eating is a luxury in which only the few may indulge in the d Chinese province of Szechuen. Yet "fish" appears in its traditional place of honor in menus of the low-liest Szechuenese. A wooden replica of the highly prized "Mandarin" or "Yellow" fish is set with a flourish on the table. Guests protest they are unworthy of such a delicacy, whereupon the wooden fish is re-moved, and the feast proceeds. iBOWLINGl Made Easy - By NED DAY National Match Caine Champion (Tbi$ if the fourth el t stries el bowl-io- n lessons by Ned Dsy ol Uilwtukee, Wis.. nation match gsme champion and recof nited ss an outstanding bowling authority.) stance in bowling should YOUR you from 12 to 15 feet back of the foul line, depending on the length of your stride and whether the four or five step delivery has been selected. Body position when addressing the pins should be fairly erect with shoulders square at pins. Weight of the body should be distributed even-ly on the feet, which can be close together, slightly apart, or with the left foot slightly forward. The weight ut the bad should rest squarely in the left hand and should be held somewhere between the belt line and the shoulders. The "V" between the thumb and Index finger should point at the head pin. To put the ball in motion when be-ginning the approach, be careful not to lower it jerkily. Use a straight pushaway from the body, followed by a natural, easy back swing. (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) Supports Allies ' " - .... -- - ' ' . J iff' Pk J ' mi Xi f h -T- il ' ' lff t'i li A I Franco-Britis- h prestige in the Bal-kans was strengthened when Bu-- i mania's King Carol named George j Tatarescu to the premiership, suc-- ! cceding Constantine Argctoianu, ' whose cabinet resigned after refus--! ing Germany concessions on oil and foodstuffs. Tatarescu, former Ru- -' manian ambassador to France, is strongly pro-all- y. |