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Show l 5 , THE BULLETIN. BINGHAM. UTAH Who's Afraid of the Big, Bad Pups? Not Susie! r... l 'IV v v , ; ; a - j: I ,i fv T: M . , t i Jack fell down and lost his crown (as best pet), aiid Jill came tumbling after. Both pups were decidedly glum after Susie, coy maiden in the center, was named blue ribbon winner in the New York Hoys' club sixth annual pet show. And look at the kittenish twinkle in her queenly eye as she lords it over the droopy-eare- d pups. Jack, incidentally, is pictured on the left. NURSERIES CQ HARDY PERENNIALS CI vi,0roui (laid troxn unit that cor f rl.d I te I In topi lait Oil. a sue. DouMt Sunbunt Carropill, Una Spurrad Cnlumblna, Canterbury Brll, Maltate Croat. Marurlte, Shatla Dally. Sploe Plnkl. Monnida, Pvrathruat, Sweat William, ato. Tha anllra 60 bmutltul plants I'oitpaid lor 11.00, II yuu ordar at enca. Wa will Includa chamlrall to mnka 10 anl. Miracle Grow Nutrlant Solutloa with Vitamin Bl. Iniurea talaty In traniplantlna and Incraaiea troth, U af lloinra, ato, Satlifactlos Uuarantead. Clarfc Oarnr Nuraaftoa, R. , B 1 T , Ouia,la. Venetian Blinds to Simulate Windows By RUTH WYETII SPEARS HAVE you ever tried placing your davenport on the side of the room where there was a single window? You probably found that it did not look well, because the back was just high enough to give the draperies an awkward cut-o- ff appearance, as shown in the upper sketch. The lower sketch shows how a friend of mine solved this problem. There are no windows under those lowered blinds. A painted I SINGLE WINDOW WITH i i CORNICE BOARD, Ln VENETIAN BLINDS AHO 171 DRAPERIES OVER WALL li li.L AT SIDES" A NARROW 4 I -- ir PLANT SHELF ( USED DAVENPORT Iff i ; .. i :M ' 1 IN FRONT I :X i ,.- - JJ : j SINGH i'X'i'E1 L It DRAPERIES K I 7 winnnrwinprnTnnrTO box-lik- e cornice board was made about 2 feet longer than the dav-enport ari was fastened to the top of the frame of the one win-dow. The Venetian blinds and the rods for the draperies were fas-tened inside this. A narrow shelf for plants just the length of the davenport back was fastened se-curely to the window sill. NOTE: Sewing Book No. 1 tells how to make this cornice board. Also how to make curtains and draperies for every room in the house from child's room to kitch-en. All about slip covers. Dress-ing tables from boxes, tables and old mirrors. You will be delight-ed with it. Send order to: MRS. RUTH WVETH SPEARS Drawer 10 Bedford Hull New York Enclose 10 cents for Book No. L Nam Address BILIOUS? Hera Is Amazing Relief of Condition Duo to Sluggish Bowels tUMUV-fUWU- 9 .ct alike, juat try tfaia 0'MmtiaSW oabla laiatlv. ho mild, thorough, refreahlag, invigorating. relief from aick headache, billoua apella, tired feeling when aaaoclated with conatipatkm. UniRUtIlOiAUitT KDIiSrtK get a 25c box of NR from your druggiat. Make the teat then If not delighted, return the box to oa. We will refund the purchaafl axaaajaafBBjgaaxaaw Tahlrta today' f ADVISES XS! YOUNG girls sszmf ENTERING WOMANHOOD Thousands of young girls entering wom-anhood hava found a "real friend" in Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Com-pound to belp them go "smiling thru' restleaa, moody, nervous spells, and relieve cramps, headache, backache and embarrassing fainting spells due to female functional irregularities. Famous for over 60 years. WORTH TRYING! WNU W 1940 c'"lvy PROOUCt I THEDISTILIERV Filers corpo'h p fit No. 61 (I 11? BOURBON I fMaaaifw Today'g popularity rNk of Doan's Pills, after ' IJjM many yean of world-M-ii jjlftaji g' wide use, surely must fHIlkfl'Bbe accepted as evidence 1 ? SjL?L!al' fl XM satisfactory use. I" ,"22X" ., "J And favorable public 'iw.mS P'n'on supports that fSinn f of the able physicians who test the value of 'H"" Doan's under exacting laboratory conditions. These physicians, too, approve every word of advertising-- you read, the objective of which is only to recommend Doan't Pills as a good diuretic treatment for disorder of the kidney function and for relief oi the pain and worry it causes. tIf more people were aware of how the Kidneys must constantly remove waste that cannot stay in the blood without in-jury to health, there would be better un-derstanding of why the whole body suffers when kidneys lag, and diuretic medica-tion would be more often employed. Burning, scanty or too frequent urina-tion sometimes warn of disturbed kidney function. You may suffer nagging back-ache, persistent headache, attacks of diz-ziness, getting up nights, swelling, purfi-nes- s under tha eyes feel weak, nervous, all played out. Use Doan't Pills. It is better to rely on S medicine that has won world wide ac-claim than oa something less favorably known. Ash your suigkbort TWO phenomenal kids, two prodigies ol the sporting world got Uieir starts along practi-cally the same type ol road. They might be called the Twins of Dawn. Their names are Dobby Feller and Bobby Jones. They were almost exactly alike in this vital respect Bobby Jones started swinging ""Hii golf club at the age Jf M of seven Bobby if 1 Feller started throwing a baseball KISSk ! at 01,5 age of six The main point ia N 4im that each started t M--aB building up and de- -' l veloping the mus- - cles needcd or e 'rhtZ- Sf big act Jones as a K'lirVU olfer-Fe- ller as a pitcher. Grantland Bobby Jones was Rice phenomenon at the age of 14 good enough then to travel to the final eight in the National Amateur where only Inexperience stopped him. At that age he was the best golfer In the big field. From seven years on Bobby Jones only developed the muscles needed for a golf swing. There were no contradictory or outside muscles that might have come from base-ball, football or some other sport. His working muscles all belonged exclusively to golf. He never even played checkers or dominoes. Fviler the Some Bob Feller followed the same route. Starting at the age of six, Feller's sporting ac-tivity consisted of throwing a base-ball. Every muscu-lar development in his right arm and back was concen-trated on this act Against this we might take up the case of Schoolboy Rowe, the Tiger en-try. Rowe was a fits? young ball player. But he was also a Bob Feller football star, a shot-putte- r, a golfer, a tennis player and a basketball luminary extremely good at each of these games. He had but conflict-ing muscles to handle, and these in time left him muscle-boun- There can be too much muscle for any smooth, flowing action. If Rowe had concentrated on baseball alone in his younger days he might have been one of the greats of all time. As It was me iiger giani was a. brilliant performer for a year or two until too many of his muscular habitats In the back and shoulders began to tie him up. Bob Feller, spoiled, fresh or swell-heade- d, might have been almost as great a pitcher as he is. But he would have missed by many meters the height he holds today in public favor. Especially in the favor of his mates and his opponents. If the kids of this country care to pick out someone to follow in every respect, they could make no mis-take in following the methods and manners of this Iowa farm boy, who, I am quite sure, will remain unspoiled to the last ball he throws. Lasting Qualities Bobby Jones was a star competi-tor and player from the age of 13 to 28. He had known 15 years of tournament action when he retired at his peak, or just as he was com-ing to his peak. Bobby Jones could have remained one of the great golfers today at the age of 38 if he had WW, Willi I 1 continued to train for tournament play. Before the attack of bursitis laid him low this spring he was still shooting hard courses from 63 to 67 on various occasions, which Is not ragged golf. Bobby could have known golf great-Bobb- y Jones ness for at least 25 years. The same Is true of Bob Feller. The Van Meter sensa-tion is only getting under way. With only a fair share of luck Feller has at least 15 big years left years dur-ing which he might easily turn out to be the same thing to baseball that Bobby Jones was to golf. In many other ways the two are alike both were and are highly popular with their fellow players and their opponents. Both have always belonged to the upper branches of sportsmanship. A Close-U- p on Feller I had breakfast with Bobby Feller In Tampa the morning of the all-st-game for the Finnish fund. He was as unspoiled as any prominent athlete I have ever known. I noticed another leading point. For example, as Joe Cronin, boss of the Boston Red Sox, came into the dining room he came well out of his way to slap Feller on the back and say, "Hello, slug." As other vet-erans came by they'd all stop by Feller's table with "Hello, butch" "Uowya, kid" "Hello, Bob." Speaking of Sports Fiction Pales Before Career Of Kid McCoy By ROBERT McSIIANE (Released by Western Newspaper Union I XJORMAN SELBY was the "real McCoy." And Norman Selby took his own life recently in a De-troit (Mich.) hotel. It was under the name of "Kid McCoy" that Selby became one of the best and most glamorous box-ing champions of half a century ago. The "real McCoy" was originated when the Kid billed himself that way in opposition to a rival who also called himself McCoy. There were no tears shed at the Kid's funeral. He had caused too much trouble during his lifetime, had pulled too many mean tricks and was never too particular about how he fought as long as he was victorious. But Kid McCoy was a great figh-ter. Boxing old timers remember him as a paralyzing puncher one of the hardest hitters the fight game has ever known. His skill was so great be could pit successfully his 160 pounds against the best heavy-weights of his day. His cunning was almost diabolical, and it was his cunning which made so many ene-mies for him. Lesson in Cunning McCoy reveled in victimizing his opponents. 1 lie old shoe lace gag was one of his best. In the midst of combat he would pause, point down, and tell his opponent to "hur-ry up, tie your shoe laces." When the victim looked, McCoy struck. Sailor Tom Sharkey, now living in San Francisco, recalls the Kid with no fond memories. He tells about their fight in New York back in 1899. The Kid came into the ring that tt.:,. - .;..;.;v;.;.::..:.:.. Sk. Wlil' lUftl lit KID (THE REAL) McCOY night with his gloves on. Sharkey's manager, Tommy Rourke, ordered the gloves removed. They were full of plaster. One good puncn couia have brought a permanent close to Sharkey's career. That's a fight Sharkey will never forget. Odds were 10 to 6 McCoy would beat him. When the Kid knocked him down in the first round the ringside odds went to 10 to 3. But the Sailor weathered the storm. He started working on his opponent's stomach; and the referee counted 10 over the Kid in the tenth round. Sharkey couldn't forget the matter of the loaded gloves. The most lurid fiction is tame when compared to McCoy's life story. At various stages in his ca-reer he was a millionaire and a hobo. He was a world's boxing champion and a jailbird. He mar-ried nine times three times to the same woman. He served eight of a ar sentence for murder. Once he was proprietor of a jewelry store, and once he swamped out saloons. It's almost impossible not to be melodramatic when writing of Mc- Coy. He was a melodramatic per-son.' His life was a series of fan-tastic adventures. Unpleasant Memory Tom Sharkey recalls another un-pleasant incident in the Kid's life. "I remember," Tom says, "how he met Tommy Ryan, in 1896, after working as Ryan's sparring partner and learning all his tricks, still hid-ing his own skill. He wrote Ryan he was dead broke and sick and wouldn't Ryan give him a chance to make some money? It would be just a workout for Ryan, but it meant a change for the Kid. He told Ryan he wouldn't even have to train. Ryan took him at his word and gave him the fight McCoy beat him unmercifully-a- nd laughed The tables were once turned on McCoy, however. He was the vw. tim of an upset that ranks with he game's most inexplicable. Meeting Jack McCormick in 1899 in Chicago 100 to 1 sho the Kid was rated a to win. One second after the bell the Kid was stretched on the floor senseless. McCormick had knocked him out with the first punch. Ruo-o-e- Individualist beside MeCoy's A note was found that he no body. His message was of longer could stand the "madness UpcTh0aps-"th-e Kid was discour there was no longer aged because a spotlight shining upon him. a rugged-a- nd ruthless-m- d. was meant any vidual. Only extremes him. He scorned the thing to trodden path, always seek Jtory and excitement. When wj no longer be his he 4fUmeL first time, to throw 'Lrn Newspaper Union.) ( Ic a superstition f wood that an ac-- i a newspaper re-- t 1 rifiht on into big-- s ler roles. Robert n X.es in it firmly, ? t worked for him. I Jbrought into pic- - J radio because of f" las a singer-a- nd J L given one part ' Erin which he had losing. He seemed I in melodramatic Ae was cast as a neWS" l; in "Golden Gloves," played a reporter in , Mistake." And now for the leading male fount's "Dancing on a Xical comedy, in which losite Grace MacDon- - sing and dance, at i i 2 Robson has no idea 'giles she has played on '' jtfeen, but she's ready to njwest one, that of Ellen fidmother, in "Texas Again." It's one of f If VMfe: I tin 4 I ' Jietmgj from Gary Cooper fnuous parts of her long id a salty old lady who jjr.odern Texas peace of-o-successors to the ones her youth, able to see Pat O'Mal-io'- s Ji "Alec Templeton he screen before long. will be "Captaia I which he will play a 3 lor who is captured dur- - of 1812 and in which ) e "Apple Song," which 4 lady performed on the Irogram. see "A Night at Earl (u'll also see what was, ! ago, the community's ive night club. Remem-opene-with a special novie stars? Nowadays e emporium in s, but during the days .rned to its former glory ait Ken Murray and t play the leads in the Jia and Brenda, radio's n, and some of the Earl Carroll beau-- ) them, and Earl IJized acting as producer, Swedish Defense Units Practice Maneuvers rWmA KwW I- - ,iuW Am" 7 s. '1 r J ilr?fe t. 1 1$ vM?'" ,Vl'' 3 Jt JK hk X v$' All - ' , v ' l y,iaSiiS 'aaatjii&auaftijaaa fcaaaattaa With the rumble of cannon in their ears, Sweden's army and navy prepare for any eventuality. Left- - Gunners of the Swedish submarine Malmo shown manning the rapid-fir- e anti-aircra- ft (pom-Do-gun on the deck of their craft. This gun, made in Sweden, is one of the most effective anti-aircraft guns manufactured. It is particularly useful against diving bombers. Right: A huge, new Swedish army tank demonstrates its ability to climb a sandbag barricade. Mormon Leader 'in 4 f I ' 1 ' MMMAmim mm Heber J. Grant, old president of the Mormon church, who was released recently from a Los Angeles hospital alter treatment for a stroke. Ordained an apostle in October, 1882, and made president in November, 191S, he has spent 68 years in the service of his church. Next White House Occupant? ' J : ' ,ir?1" ''Br.aatJ auartet of distinguished guests pictured during inner circle A New York city. rer)orters and political writers m they are, left to right: Sen. lt Martin of Massachusetts, Postmaster of Oh o Rep. Joe alT am s A Farley, and Wendell Wil.kie. Taft, Martin and SZ are Republicans; Farley a Democrat. Tower in Forgiveness To forgive much makes the pow-erful more powerful. Publilius Syrus. In the Care Care, and not fine stables, Ka-Choo!-!- makes the good horse. -! ?. f i iVniftiifiiiiaasiff- - ii tfiiit iniiiriiiiiirn f riirrtifw.T Here's how a high-spee- d cam-- . era pictures a sneeze. Photo--, graphed at the Massachusetts In-- : stitute of Technology, the drop-- i lets forced from the mouth travel nearly two miles a minute. 'American Mother of 1910' 1,111 ... vv iQiir the title bestowed upon Mrs, Mother of wjs M Rochester, Edith Graham Mayo, widow Awafd d( Minn., rgeon, at her Tu son, a , p , f dall0B by thC ArkCcity ! ! . is the mother of eight children, of New |