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Show THE BULLETIN. BINGHAM. UTAH , One Axis Leader Down Two to Go i.'WIUI .IIIMIIl7lWWWM iCljt V"--'- ?, JfYi Twli - Jt.... - - The sudden political demise of Benito Mussolini makes him the first Axis dlctalor to fall under the military and Intellectual might of the Allied nations. Left: King Victor Emmanuel of Italy who accepted Mussolini's resignation and appointed Marshal Pietro Badoglio, center, as the new premier of Italy. Al-though Badoglio announced that "the war continues," as he proclaimed martial law, he was never a member of the official high ranking Italian fascist group which surrounded Mussolini. He has been known to have dis-agreed with the former premier several times. Right: Benito Mussolini who took advantage of the unrest of World War I to create dictatorship and now finds himself overthrown by similar forces In World War II. A Reporter's Bookmarks: W. L. White's "Queens Die Proud-ly- " (Harcourt-Brace- ) contain, this beautiful wordage: "And the plane It isn't something that belongs to the Government with a number; It's Old 99, the beautiful NEW Flying Fortress that belongs to you. It's more than your home it's, well, a kind of a sweetheart. All of you picked her up off the assembly line at the Boeing plant where she was born a beautiful, smooth, shining, naked thing. Then all of you took her up over the clouds and wrapped that beautiful blue star-spangl-gown of the skies around her, which is the way every Fortress ought to be dressed, because they're the Queens of the high skies." n. Ostein's "The Rise and Fall of the House of Ullstein" (Simon-Schuste- r) is a tragic story of the slow death of Germany's greatest publishers via the swastika poison . . . The history of its downfall has an uncanny way of paralleling some of the events already taking place here . . . The author reports that he told conservative German dallies to offer stiffer resistance to the rising tide of Naziism. But they, and even chiefs of his own paper, told him not to be so pessimistic about the danger within . . . They feared that such stories would lose sub-scribersso they did nothing, and now they have nothing. From "Exchange Ship," by Max . Hill of the Associated Press : "Clean people? The Japanese bath provides what prob-ably is the dirtiest way of getting clean in the world. Scores of men, women and children bathe in the same water, which is hot but surely not enough to kill germs . . . Each wing (of my prison) had a row of five Japanese-typ- e baths, one of them usually out of order. That meant the 180 prisoners had four tubs, and the water wasn't emptied until the last man passed through the line. The native prisoners were first but there was only one place for the foreigners last." II. Allen Smith's book, "Life in a Putty Knife Factory," contains con-siderable amusement, including: "A man who becomes the writer of a column is much worse off. His brain achieves such a state that no re-spectable gumma would ever attach itself to it. He becomes a straight-forward paranoiac. He suffers first from headache, tinnitus, palpitation, digestive disturbances, and incapaci-ty for mental exertion. After that come intense egotism, selfishness, conceit, overbearing pride, violent temper, and moroseness. How do I know this? I was a columnist. My own favorite Is W. W. Around newspaper offices, where it is fash-ionable to scoff, he gets very little outspoken applause. Your omnis-scien- t, swaggering newspaper man greets his name with a sneer. I never did. I wouldn't sneer even though it made me appear to be sharp as a tack." "Time of Peace," an exciting tale by Ben Ames Williams (Houghton-Mifflin- ), contains this gem: "So now you've seen where your ancestors lived," Mark told his son as came they Into familiar surroundings. "Don't ever forget that you're more than a New Englander. Out of your eight two went from Massachusetts to Ohio, two went from Georgia to Missis-sippi, one lived in California, one in Oregon, one In Minnesota, and one -y-our mother's mother-ca-me from Germany ... Two of your ts carne from Wales. Your grandpar- - ents came from Ohio, Michigan and Minnesota. You've got all the blood strains In you, Tony. You're not a Westerner, nor a Southerner. You're an American." Secretary Harold Iekes' "The A-utography of a Curmudgeon" (Reynal & Hitchcock) offers the fol-- Evpnf-1?- ' uhapter caUed BkMed fVZ rumor, about man are almost without ex-- r - ..t.tcijr Damea that most ou loud if they should be said of a private ctuer. The private citizen '"r" t0 the law. So lifrT yKu' thery. has the put the more public he is should he prove that he y commit the crime, the pubEty iorld eWU,d ECt WOuld 'v the nrdc:-t?- t puDiic life provided that it is uf. ficiently unbelievable." Rus'a'by'wS rR?d Tflp to GraeGbrnaeerb(L1 ' RussiaXSlJf .V D? ClViUan or own 8 car "1 r "n them; con ? ealh D tor more waXbet- -n blanket, cent of aU fY ' ?lnety-fiv-e Mon there 2 C0P-civiUa- n waste rau.,8nnUal CLASSH To travel wftfc nationally a'Hati, able to meet EbufViO What have yon u west. '' RALPH UlUTrEWl'W PHOTO FINIS Jize. 163K,c EA. Ron. ej.p. 60c m " from old, w GUERNSEY Prinjer heifer, ? yV"H Hlfice equipm rUua7n?".r,t,n- W J?ALT lAK DESK ft MAGAZINE Household i yn. tl.M yrs. II 00 J. HHV T Msn. Twin Falls, Idaho. FARMS & RANCHES! Bell now. Rsnche lnj SrrithFou;,uick, LYMAN'S 8T8ou th Mahi, SiH Ubj AUTO MECHAN1 Bulck Dealer wants I food u. Good wases. plenty of ovete tine working condition!, i. par, etc. Applicants dim ij eard from U.S.E.S. ARCH i Worming Hogs . NEW VlteliU contains minerali i compound, all in one and k material will worm jour h them Salt, Iodine, Sulphur, h Phosphate and Molastes Tbta rals and tonic they nel(M!i Bold in fifty lb. bam f.o.h. Si at 13.50 per bag. Your now Mtisfled. Send check r mow Crystal Whits Salt t On 1(H So SUte, Salt iMii J. VEAR HAKSC W manufacture Hay Salt, Bheep Salt. Buy your lift Manufacturer and save HIDES WANTEI Rabbit Rais. HIGHEST MARKET! FOR Y0UB RABBIT HIDES-S- H: DUPLERS 117 SO. XAH USED CARS TRAII WJf.U. Ws iW-- 4 JUil A Veo! BASH IM WATHEPS-.- J " DON'T LEl) CONSTIPATb SLOW Y0UW When boweli aw iluff fed Irritable, headachy, "j do -c- hew FEEN-A-MINT-cbewlng- gu- laxativs. Wj FEEN-A-M1N- T hefors J" taking only in accordaDCi J direction! -a- leep wltb turbed. Next rooming sj relief, helping you ' "7 FEEN-A-M1N- Taste P and economical. A genenwii" FEEN-A-MIN- T WNU W Kidney A-d- Irregular K!tf4 tion-tfi- rows berry and other impuria"v Wood. iftl Yon may aB ,tat headache, Zid let pains. U'j o( kidney or bladdw , times burning. urination. pi Try Doaa'! "t kidneys to wartt. They "l century ol Publ t,TgBl " mended by tf 'T'HE Great Lakes and the Norfolk service ball teami have been picking up most of the publicity a the two outstanding combination! along the war front. A new challeng-er has now en-tered the field with a blast of bugles and a roll of drums. This challenger thinks it has been overlooked. We refer to the New ' Cumberland team Tom heB that meets the star-littere- Norfolk bunch In Nor-folk over this week-en- d. I can break the news to both Nor-folk und Great Lakes that Nc,w Cum- - bcrliind's team is no soft touch. It had won 22 straight games un- - ' til Washington's Senators beat them 2 to 1 a few days ago on Vernon's ' homer in the eighth. Still 22 out of 23 isn't too moth-eate- Over 4,000 tackled a rain to see this game at 1 Harrisburg's Island Park. New Cumberland's crack pitcher is Tom Hughes of the Phillies. Lynn Myers from the Cardinals and Pat Mullen from the Tigers lead the at-tack. These three are not the only high-cla- ss players on the team's roster a team that expects to take Norfolk In tow by Sunday afternoon. Perhaps it won't, as Norfolk with Rizzuto and many other stars, is on a par with any big league squad. Great Lakes will also have some-thing to say in a loud voice about any service title. Navy and Sport Our navy believes with a big part of our army that sport, handled in the proper way, Is something more than slightly important. It is now well understood that those colleges, for example, who have navy recruits can carry out at least some sort of a football pro-gram. Those colleges taken over by the army, so far as football Is con-cerned, will return to the deep-tangle- d wildwood, where the whang doodle mourneth. I have contacted athletic directors at many of these army campus grounds and they all tell me their case is hopeless unless army changes its plan. "Here's the way it works out at . Alabama," a former Rose Bowl star said. "We have now about 2,500 stu-dents enrolled at the university. But they are all, or practically all, In the army. They are under army con-trol, army training, and no longer belong to the university. Many of these want to play football. They be-lieve they can keep up with their work, and still find some spare time for a few games with near-b- y ri-vals such as Georgia and Georgia Tech. If Alabama was under navy control It would have a pretty fair team with Frank Thomas on hand. "But under army control, unless army gives its permission for foot-ball to go on, there will be no Ala-bama team this fall. Most of the army men I have talked to I'd say over 95 per cent want competitive football to go along as It has at West Point and Annapolis where they also work 16 hours a day harder than any army recruits will work at any college. "I happen to know how keenly the cadets and midshipmen from the Hudson and the Severn want foot-ball. "I'm not speaking for morale on the home front. I'm speak ing for those in active service and those headed in that same direction." 'Ride 'Em Out' Atkinson One of baseball's most important slogans has always been "run 'em out." Teddy Atkinson's racing slogan is "ride 'em out." Atkinson is one of the best jockeys riding around New , York and the best hustler on the track today. Too many jockeys stop riding when they see first-plac- e beyond their reach. They overlook the fact that many large chunks of cold and hot cash are sent along for second and third spots. Atkinson keeps on riding. If he can't make it in front he goes after second money. If he can't get that he keeps shooting for the show. This, naturally, is the way it should be. It is tough enough to beat 11 or 12 per cent in fact it's imposs-iblewithout having this hostile mar-gin increased several points by rid-ers who ease up or pull up when they see they can't get there in front. Hagen Wanted to Win During Walter Hagen's long prime as a winning golfer, the able pro would tell you he had no interest in second or third place even In a U. S. or British Open. "Who remembers who finished second or third?" he used to say. This meant that Hagen would take any kind of gamble to win or lead where others would take no such risk. Hagen often knew that If any of his gambles failed, he would drop from second to fourth or fifth the money. Perhaps lower. (KlIIIl Released by Western Newspaper Union. 'TWERE are certain golf shots that will always live in memory I both of the men who hit them and the spectators who saw them. They are the shots which, more than anything else, helped decide the out-come of many a great tournament. James S. Kearns, well-know- n Chi-cago sports writer, recently recount-ed a few of those shots to which he was an eyewitness. Kearns speaking: "There was Harry Cooper, on the 14th tee at Baltusrol In 1936, on his way to what seemed a certain vic-tory in the National Open as a prop-er reward for 10 long, stout-hearte- d years of trying. "Coop had the biggest gallery on the course that day, and not a per-sonal marshal. He had broken the all-tim- e record, and yet the United States Golf association sent him into the final round with nobody to protect him from the crowd . . . Nobody but Estelle Armour, Tom's wife, and Nellie Cruickshank, Bob-by's wife, who knew enough of golf to try to give a player the fair chance he deserved. If mux. ir s s I t ifflYTf "Well, Cooper stood on the 14th tee with the mob milling around him, and the National Open champion-ship just at his fingertips. He swung away and asked for order. He swung back again . . , And again the front row of spectators was jammed for-ward, so close he couldn't swing down at the ball. Finally, on the third try, he hit the ball into the bunker beside the par 3 green, and right there was opened the door thrnnvh uhlti Tnrtv liTan.... mA take the title. "There was a Monday morning in Philadelphia in 1939, when it was steamine hot. and jj.;. when players and watchers alike were dead weary from a week of heat and five days of golf. Byron Nelson and Craig Wood, who had come through a playoff with Denny Shute on Sunday with scores of 68 in a desperate battle Byron Nelson 'or the National Open title, were en-gaged in a second playoff. "Off the fourth tee, Wood had belt-ed the better drive, maybe 20 yards. Nelson squared off to his second shot on that long and difficult par 4. He must have been 220 yards from the flag when he drew a bead. He fired the shot the way a Garand rifle might be fired . . . Dead on line, low and whistling as it went. The ball struck, bounced twice, rolled, fell Into the hole. There the 1939 Open championship was settled. Masters Crown "There was Nelson at Augusta, playing off with Ben Hogan for the 1942 Masters crown. Three strokes behind at the short sixth, he holed a great deuce to start catching up. Then at par 5 eighth, uphill, he saw Hogan hook his second. The door was open. Byron took a spoon on the uphill lie. He walked to see where the hole was out on the green. He walked back and took aim. Then he knocked Jhe ball five feet from the hole ... A low, drawing shot over the brow of the hill, pulling in through the guarded opening to the green. The shot meant an eagle 3, and a lead that was never lost. "All those . . . But out of memory one more shines bright across sev-en years. "It was the September day when John Fischer of Cincinnati stood on the 36th green in the final match for the amateur championship of the United States in 1936. One down to Jock McLean of Scotland, he was, on Garden City's hurricane-swep- t acres . . . One down, and with the muscles of his left leg torn so he could scarcely stand up to a shot because of a fall in a bunker the pre-vious day. One down . . , And his ball 12 fpet frrim the nin nn II.. .i- - 3 last hole ... 12 feet of treacher-ous, sliding, sloping green. It was hole it or be runner-up-. "Johnny Fischer siied it up, took a long and careful aim, took a stance. He swung the putter back, and upon the clubhouse roof, eight motion-pictur- e cameras began to grind.' Johnny jumped, dropped his putter. "He smiled in half-reque- st and the cameras stopped. He picked up his putter, never both-ered to sight the putt, and knocked the ball right in the middle of the hole for a 2 that made him even and let him win on No. 37." SPORTS SHORTS C Chalky Wright. Negro feather-weight, says he doesn't know his cor-rect age. Estimates place it at from 38 to 44. C The American league this season may break the record of 86 extra innings games sei oy Doth major leagues in 1916. C Jack Moesch. Long Is land prep star, now a utility infield er for Baltimore, is the youngesi player in the International league. Get Sick on Land to Stop Sea-Sickne-ss Tr? .Ki,. , L.- ' ' ' " - ' ' , - ' MMW.HHMM' IA,II . . - I ' , . v v , ' A , , ' t iMWMwiwiiwnwiiwiuiiiuiiwwi.w ff ' a .(.(M " " '4 t - ' ' T" ' ! ' " l-t- r ' , ' ', jit W" - ' " ' t ' j ' 1 .,aaV . , M JSi In a giant land, sea and air invasion, Allied military leaders must consider and sicLTrjT.d ? fCUmU,ate1d,fta th" 8UbJcct-th-e loped aLJZu&EZ, lint 11 are Rf e1ver1 on rough water. As a result of these experiments, given to Invasion troops an hour and a half before embarkation. Left Serl '?rlK N,ch0,s fter ""ion in the sea-hors- e. Right: The contraption in action. High Scorer l ' , iMij Allen Martini, youngest major In the Eighth U. S. army air force. He led the first American raid on Paris iLPiltof the "Dry Martini," a Flying Fortress. U. S. Privates Round Up Some 'Supermen' aWVmutiutwwv,.MHv.wM.MVAw.u .. . rink YAf-- i-fC These German prisoners include parachute troopers, vaunted super- men of many campaigns. They were rounded up by a few ordinary soldiers In the Invasion of Sicily. It appeared that the total number of such prisoners taken by the Allies would run iqto several thousands. Former Football Hero iBONTPIOJ n Ml Wr4' As a former grid coach for Ford-ha- and one of Notre Dame's Horsemen, Lieut. Comdr. Jim Cro" eyiS,fCrStmed t0 Psi"!r South Africa S 1 coconut despite the sign i Cigarettes for Defenders of China dp ii. , y klZ ht.lt- - uX--t. Jt.--. . wilJ ?-- .. x'i-- s Chinese soldiers on their way to a battlefront are Chinese mother. These soldier, given cigarettes by were part of the stubborn unit thai resisted and finally routed a huge Japanese army .long the upper lU'mCbmBkin ThPSe defcnders ccoanled ,or enemy, and conducted one of the most he-ro- io victories of the war. . |