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Show THE BULLETIN. BINGHAM, UTAH Sourdough Operates Skagway's Lone 'Street Car' .wi.ssiisiiisjsjsajM Liiflh ft nrfm nrfrV JK lJSSmuiuattj iaiaMMSaaifcaMMSiaaaSiaMntJ"r- " rtnhrtttVfatoAifrVM! flr- - IriViY Arv-v-- " " .yyiv.M One of the most famous tourist sights In the northland Is the solitary "street car" of Skagway. Alaska, owned and operated by ol sourdough. Martin Itjcn. With other gold-seeke- of 1898, Itjen left the United States to seek his fortune in Alaska. He remained to build a street car, the only one in Skagway. but there its resemblance to an auto or street car ends. A The car is built on an automobile chassis, dummy is pictured on the platform of the vehicle. Itjen Is now visiting the United States for the i.rst time since 18J8. The sourdough conductor is familiar to thousands of tourists. 1 J cmriAND 1 ylf V ACE Jj..h-- 1 CHICAGO. The circle narrows about Joe Louis and the con-tenders come into clearer view. Young fighters who wouldn't have been even remotely considered as op-ponents for him are ranging themselves against him. John-ny Paycheck al-ready has been matched with him. Lee Savold is being readied for a shot at him. Only a week or so ago Louis faltered 17 I'M Grantland mrougn n rounds Rice w'tn e rough and clownish Arturo Godoy, the South American threat This doesn't mean that Louis Is ready to be taken and that the time Is at hand for some strong young fellow to rush in, belt him out from under his crown and rush off to gather in a million dollars or so. He still can hold these young fel-lows off he should be able to, since he still is a young fellow himself. But it means that he has entered on a new phase of his career. He is just the heavyweight cham-pion now and not a bogey man. The lightning still crackles in his fists and he still ranks as one of the greatest fighters the ring ever has known. But he no longer fright-ens his opponents out of their wits. There are no more Paulinos dying In the training camp or Levinskys dying In the dressing room. A Terrifying Appearance Once nobody save Max Schmel-ln- g thought of getting Louis off 6 JOE LOUIS that single track on which he trav-els so fearsomely. That was In the time when to be matched with him meant certain destruction. Men took matches with him for the money alone and then almost immediately began to regret their greed. There was something mys-terious and inscrutable and terrible about his very appearance. He was, It seemed, greater than any of the fighters who had gone before him. He was invincible and the ut-ter lack of emotion that he showed made him terrifying. Most of his fights were won before he laid a glove on his opponent. The psycho-logical advantage was tremendous. Schmeling, in their first fight, demonstrated that Louis had no de-fense against a cunningly launched right hand and knocked him out. Louis came back from that knock-out a better fighter because it fired him with a new determination and taught him a valuable lesson. He was a magnificent fighter the night he knocked out Jim Braddock to win the title and again the night he took his revenge on Schmeling. The Scene Changes But the scene in which he moves has been changed. None of those pressing closer about him now is capable of beating him but they know that he can be beaten. They know that in his last two fights he was hit often enough to have been knocked out but actually didn't come even close to a knockout be-cause neither Bob Pastor nor Godoy can punch. Naturally, this is stimulating to the young heavyweights around the country. Two years or so ago there was no real inducement to any young heavyweight, beginning to throw his punches in some remote corner, to hit the trail for a title match because there was a bogey man at the end of the trail. Now every young heavyweight is rushing to join the circle that has been formed about the champion. Rugged and Willing The boys are coming out of the bushes out of the shops and off the docks and down off the trucks and out of the jungles. The old lure is there again the chance not only to grab some money to stay the limit, perhaps but to beat Louis and win the title. This should bring about some ex-citing action. Louis, at 26, is rugged and full of health and not yet bored by his title or given to the usual soft way of living. Strange Facts I Continuous Growth I I Versatile Products ' I Mail Mutt Go On! I 1 j Although most creatures have aj definite growth limit, others conl tinue to increase in size as long; as they live, among them being' trees, fish, oysters, clams,1 shrimps, crabs and lobsters. SSb Products of tlie farm have more than 400 nonfood uses in industry. For example, corn is used in mak-ing adhesives, potatoes in laundry starch, soybeans in plastics, cattle grease in antifreeze mixtures, grape-see- d oil in soaps, buttermilk in paints, and eggs in leather-dressin- g processes. STAGE SCREEN: RADIO By VIRGINIA VALE (Released by Western Newspaper Union. DON WILSON, the plump genial radio an-nouncer, has turned actor with a vengeance. He led up to it gently by using his voice, but not his poundage (he tips the scales at 300) in "Buck Benny Rides Again." You'll see him in person in "The Round-Up,- " in the role of "Slim," made famous by the late Macklyn Arbuckle. And who knows, he may like acting so well that he'll never want to return to announc-ing. The chief difficulty so far has been finding a horse that would hold him, but he's promised to take care of that by producing one that he rides frequently seems that, though hefty, he's an expert horseman. Right off the griddle Is the report that Professor Quis Is all set to sign a deal with one of the major movie companies for a series of shorts centering around the Professor's ra-dio specialty of questions and an-swers. Perhaps he's been inspired to do it by the success of those "Information Please" shorts. Gone are the days when a hero had to be perfect every minute that he was on the rcreen. In Para-mount- 's "Road to Singapore" Bing Crosby is a shift-less sort of guy, aided and abetted in a career of Idle-ness by Dorothy Lamour and Bob Hope. Three other matinee idols have forgotten the max-ims of their copy-books, so far as I at '. - r I 4 'i'jT new pictures are B, Crofjb concerned. Robert Montgomery gets himself hanged In "The Earl of Chicago"; George Brent portrays a fugitive from Jus-tice in "Till We Meet Again"; and Tyrone Power, believe it or not, is a gangster in his latest. Judy Garland is on her way up, and rapidly. This year It was quite a distinction for anyone who wasn't In the cast of "Gone With the Wind" to win one of the annual awards of the Motion Picture Academy of Arts and Sciences. Little Judy got a spe-cial one for work as "an outstand-ing Juvenile." Janice Logan looked so attractive In the brief costume that she wore when working in "Dr. Cyclops," the forthcoming Paramount technicolor picture, that the Art Students league voted her "The Best Undressed Woman of the Year." (That's the llliglplj JANICE LOGAN trick picture in which the members of the cast are reduced to one-fift- h their natural size.) So now Miss Logan must be all-rou- champion so far as clothes are concerned. When she was a senior at swanky Sarah Lawrence college she was voted the School's Best Dressed Student. According to Joan Bennett, one of the greatest predicaments well-dresse- d women fear is putting on a new outfit and then finding someone else wearing one just like it. That's what happened to her not long ago when she appeared to take part in a Bing Crosby broadcast. She was wearing a nifty new hat. She glanced around, and saw one exact-ly like it on the head of Sabu, the young Indian movie actor he'd just put on his native turban. ODDS AMD ENDS . . Douglass Montgomery will make a Star Theater appearance March 27lh with Florence Reed and Helen Claire in "Double Door" . . . Basil Ralhbone had to pet i a black cat for a cene in "Destiny" the mangled thumb that resulted has just healed . . . Have you listened to the new Westinghuuse program, "Mu-sical Americana", recently? It's even belter than it was in the beginning . . . Joel McCrea had a perfect vacation not long ago according to his ideas; he stayed on a ranch where he worked as a cowhand, branding cattle and living in tents with the cowbovs. trig of Sports . i Old Plot, seabiscuit jrnizes It ;ERT McSIIANE faltera Newspaper Union.) of pulp magazine flc-- : recognize the plot , of a racehorse and a j of them were said to all washed up. They the top of the heap but en its toll and both were the past tense. ; the last desperate ef-i-g race. The one the st by a nose the two irs. This time fortune he valiant pair was vie--s borse and jockey are chers In the struggle for ild 'and glory, ibtlessly recognized the :ters by now. They're nd Ws jockey, Johnny s latest chapter in their areeri was written at Santa Anita racetrack n the Biscuit won the idicap and established le world's all-tim- e lead-rinne- r. a very long ago that the flory road seemed Just th the Biscuit and John-- Their comebacks are ed. Two years ago Pol-ed one of the top riders ry. Be rode Seabiscuit lis early triumphs. "rouble ;s started to go wrong, ered a broken leg in id. He spent several hospital and then went ornla ranch of Seabis-- , C. S. Howard. He was by bis old pal, Seabis-ta- d broken down In a testing himself for the Inita handicap, i on the horse was Pol-i- l charge. As horse and perated. Pollard helped a Smith bring the Bis- - it f n ilssaT Hi Vt Tlr'si'.Win'n m' ST MONEY WINNER vith owner C. S. Howard ito shape. He exercised id saw to it that he had care, fall. Pollard was ready to the racing wars and ras taken to Tanforan to lining. They worked heir first two races at were disappointing. So g, la fact, that onlook-e- d that the horse be re-l- e pasture and that Fol-abo- at riding, it San Antonio handicap i complexion of things, st race" for the Santa cap Pollard made a per-e- d ride on the Biscuit, ld horse gal-:tor- y in record time. inishes Strong is history. It's doubtful vill ever produce a race iatch, for sheer drama, rtiich old Seabiscuit went under the wire at Santa crowd of 75,000 fans lr overwhelming favor-- 1 his stable-mat- e, Kayak the Jlnish line, i has been made repeat-s- e who saw the race that r4"i for Seabiscuit that Jthef entry, Kayak II, nosed out the winner if een held back, of eourse. that the How-ha- d publicly "declared lh Seabiscuit if the luck gave him a chance. By fa win" with any specific entry, a stable records ns fif using the other wset, as a sort of police-ther- e to rescue the vic- - something happens to one.? i It Is equally true that :ore cf years has a thor-pe- d over the mile and a "by route as fast as the to win. to date, has won whining his latest race Sua Beau (with a $376,-- e greatest all-ti- Other great money the turf include Equi- ps; Phar Lap, $332,250; '. 28.165; Zey, $313,639; S Twenty Grand, $261,-rkspu- r, $272,070, and -- .425. t i BABY CHICKS, TURKEY POULTS ' BABY CHICKS HATCHING DAILY White, brown and buff Ihomt, Reds, llHmimhirn. White end Herrrd Rucki, Huff Orphingtuiu nd all leading va-rieties. TURKEY POULTS Poultry equipment, brooders (cs, ell, olivine and coal), fiders, watvrers, ete. Call and see a real modern chick ternity hospital. Visitors always weieome. RAMSHAW'S UTAH PIONEER HATCHERY St1 So. State Salt Lake Cltf Ruptured Persons Read This The Method of Rapture Control per-fected by the Clinic Is guaranteed te hold your Huptora eafely and with perfect Comfort. Thouaands of Batlafled aatlents hae been benefited bf this Many report being relieved entirely. Write for Meaiorement Blank or eall In peraon at the Offices of the Clinic. Consultation Free. National Hernia Clinic TTERDKRT DEANE, M. D.. Specialist 310 Meae Hldf. Salt Lake City, Utah WOMEN! Relieve "Tryinpr Days" by taking Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre-scription over a period of time. Helps build physical resistance by improving nutritional assimulation. Adv. WHY SUFFER Functional FEMALE COMPLAINTS Lydia E. Plnkham'i Vegetable CimcHjund Has Helped Thousands I Few women today do not have some slifn of functional trouble. Maybe you've noticed YOURSELF Retting reeUwis, moody, nervous, depressed la Urty yourwnrktoomuchforyou- - Then try Lydia K. rinkham'a Vegetable Compound to help quiet unstrung nerves, relieve monthly pain (cramps, backache, headache) and weak diwy fuinting spells due to functional diaorders. For over 60 years Pink ham's Compound has helped hun-dreds of thousands of weak, rundowa ner-vous women. Try HI CONSTIPATED! Gas Crowds Heart. "For years I had occasional constipation, fcesdacbes and pains In the back. Awful gas bloating soemea to crowd my heart. Adleruut always helped right sway. Mow I eat sansare, bananas, pie, anything I want and never fell better." Mrs. Mabel Bchott. Two thinini happen when you are eonatipoierl. FIRST: Aocuniulated wastes swell up bowels and prnM on nerves in tht digestive tract. SEC-OND J'artly digmtcd food starts to decay forming OAS, often bringing on sour stomach, indigeatioa, and heartburn, bloating you up until you sometimes gnup for breath. Xdlcrika gives double relief with DOUBLE ACTION. BALANCED adlerika containing three laxa-tives and five carminatives relieves STOMACH GAH almost at once. It often clears bowels in leas than two hours. Ho griping, ho sits fleets, just quick results. Sold at all drug mora gXjjLjJIl Xsp'Bruf h" Applicator fl I JU' 'liiii A In ' 0'J GO MUCH FAATHiR Ci DASH IN rtATHERS.-- A3 Salt"liTlCTiEifl i mi Hotel TEMPLE SQUARE Opposite Mormon Temple HIGHLY RECOMMENDED Rates $1.50 to $3.00 It's a mark of distinction to Stop t this beautiful hostelry 1 ERNEST C. KOSSITEB. Mgr. Press Club Gets Preview of Next (Maybe) President mvs,.s . m ,v e. ' . ' ' i, ' ,; 'ry'?im-m- r'i s c 7e$PirT H rx pS) r --Lf v ;v . a H'j ;Jk . vague possibilities and one perennial candidate for the presidency are firpolUical rally ,n Washington. D. C. Seated, left to rig it: Pa I cNutt, Michigan; Jesse Jones, federal loan adm nistra-o- r federal security administrator; Sen. Arthur Vandcnberg. and District Attorney Thomas E. Dewey. New York. Standing, left to right: Robert Jackson attorney general; Ref Bruce Barton, New York; Sen. Burton K. Wheeler. Montana; Norman Thomas, percnn.al candi-date of the Socialist party, and Sen. Bennett Champ Clark, Missouri. That Which Reigns At 20 years of age the will reigns; at 30, the wit; and at 40, the judgment. Gratian. Truth and a Sunbeam Truth is as impossible to be soiled by any outward touch as the sunbeam. Milton. As Red Machine Wages Finnish War Two of the first pictures released by the Soviet censorship bureau of the Red army in Finland. Left: The Russian caption states "all units or the communications service of the Red army bring mail to the front every loaded." Right: A machine-gu- n team moves day. An airplane is being its weapon in search of a new position. Blesses Followers ULIJUULM M I'lll'IJ IIH'IIH II M V ' 'y l HS iff 1 Pa i v X The Most Reverend Samuel Slritch, newly Installed archbishop of Chicago, bestows a first blessing upon his followers. Archbishop Stritch succeeds the late George Cardinal Mundelein. Many thousands of people witnessed en-thronement services. Wisdom Is Sought Wealth may seek us; but wis-dom must be sought. Young. Sharpens Our Skill Our antagonist is our helper. Burke. Wants Long Rest .fawri-vw- w www;, i k mw . After 35 years of public life, Sen. Vic Donahey of Ohio has announced his decision to retire at the end of his present term. In Washington stated that he is retiring ' secure a much-neede- d rest. Mikado's Warriors Harass Snow 'Enemy' ' Art , y-y- .MA at Hankow, China, bu.ld snow Japanese soldiers of the garrison which they named "Chiang Kai-she- and "Sung Mei-ling- ." Ch.na s Lhting marshal and his American-educate- d wife. Says the Japanese caption-"T- hey will be melted away soon by the bright sun of spring ... an unspoken hope that Chinese resistance will melt. |