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Show v- V; THE BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH j End of a Nazi Submarine " ' '""UI JW 'f ,.aiayi.i;riiMx in iirr n i f t ' - " ; X This official U. S. navy photo shows Nail sailors cringing around the conning tower (arrow points to Germans) of a. at under attack by U. S. army and navy planes. A few minutes later this sub sank under the ball of bombs from army Mitchell B-2- 5 and navy Liberators. Nasi submarines are becoming scarce articles these days. J futh of France Invaded by Allied Armies b rbor area of Marseilles, one of the most famous ports of the world, within the original terrain ' nslon of the southern part of France, will become the center of interest as the drive continuea from Toulon (Insert), another famous city on France's south coast. The first objective of military f. f wa$ the great naval base of Toulon and the r capture of St. Tropes, east of Toulon. The original md drives extended as far east as Cannes and immediately beaded toward Nice as well as inland. Mascot of Scabces 1 d-- N ) Lewis J. (Jimmy) Carrlck of Pittsburgh, Ta., is the mascot of all Uncle Sam's Seabees. He has been confined to a wheel-cha- ir for five years with spinal meningitis. Naval surgeons are to operate and hope he will be ;blo to play ball soon. By VIRGINIA VALE Released by Western Newspaper Union. HUGHIE GREEN, in from London, brought first-han-d news of American film stars overseas, You may remember Hughie from RKO's "Tom Brown's Schooldays," or one of his American stage appear-- ; ances; he's now a flying offi-cer in the RCAF air transport com-mand. You missed something if you didn't hear him on British Broad-casting company's "Atlantic Spot-light"; one Saturday he was on Lon-- 1 don's hall of the program, ribbing American radio, and the following Saturday he ribbed British radio from New York! He says Jimmle Stewart has won the admiration and respect of army men for his work. Bebe Daniels, whom the British love because she stayed on In Lon-don to entertain them despite the blitz, staggered everybody when she j BEBE DANIELS went up to within 600 yards of the Bring line in Normandy to Interview American servicemen for "Ameri-can Eagle in Britain." When Albert Dekker showed up on the set of Paramount's "Two Years Before the Mast" with a black eye he offered the oddest excuse yet "A goose bit me," said he. Seems he went into the poultry house on his San Fernando Valley ranch to ex-amine a setting goose. "She didn't like it, and took a peck at me.'' Claudia Morgan had quite a de-cision to make, when told that she must give up either her role in a hit play. "Ten Little Indians," or that of Nora Charles in radio's "Ad-venture of the Thin Man." The radio show conflicted with curtain time of the play. Time was when an actress would unhesitatingly have chosen the stage, but it was radio that won out this time. Incidentally, snother staee star aDDeared early for an Ellery Queen guest shot and demanded that the air show be put on at once, then left in a huff when it wasn't, the producer frantically phoned around till he lo-cated Miss Morgan at a friend's home, and she rushed to the studio and filled the gap. Ruth Swanson, who was named "the prettiest dress extra in Holly-wood" three years ago, recently was discharged as ft pilot in the Ferry Command, following an auto Acc-ident. She'll return to her old love, the movies, in order to play one more role, in Warner Bros. "Of Hu-man Bondage." Then she'll go to a new love ft major in the air corps, and give up her screen career for marriage. Ending a radio absence of more than seven years, Ed Wynn will re-turn to the microphone soon in a whimsical new comedy series. Be-ginning September 7, "Happy Is-land" will be heard from 7:00 to 7:30 over the Blue Network, with Wynn, Evelyn Knight and Jerry Wayne. First thing they know, Patricia Collinge and Theresa Wright are go-ing to believe that they're actually related to each other. They were cinematically related in "The Little Foxes" and "Shadow of a Doubt," and a third time in "Casanova Brown." The "experts" on "It Pays to Be Ignorant" have to be wrong when a member of the audience is asked to pull a question from the dunce cap for them to answer; just once in two years did they have to be right. The question,1 "Where is the only place in England where the King can't go" couldn't be kicked around. So Harry McNaughton, the only Briton in the gang, correctly re-plied "In the House of Commons." After World War I, when John Loder-wa- s in Berlin, and broke, a suit from palmier days won him a Job as a dress extra. ODDS AND ENDSMarjorie Maii abandons comedy rolet in "Gentle An-nie," in which ihe plays a pioneer wom-an of the old West "Pillar to Post" has been held up by Ida Lupino's injury she fell on a slippery floor, had to have a broken bone in her hand reset. . . . "Screen Guild Players" heads the Hooper list of top ten radio programs on the Pacific coast, with "Ellery Queen" second and "Can You Top This?" 'I third. . . . Dick Powelts happy ubout I. claying a tough detective in "Farewell. , j My Lovely" it's a good dramatic role. , . . . Fibber McGee and Molly have ' signed a new four-yea-r contract with the sponsor who first put them on the air. I Uusement Park Fires Greatest in History r, r ' V'V .v .V If 4 -" 5 affiSirLi zMn in swept New York City's most popular amusement beach parks doing damage of nearly one mll-- ri tnd resulting In an injury list of more than 500 people. Left, aerial view of Palisades amuse- - lire at Cliffside Park, N. J., favorite resort of New Yorkers. Photo taken from ft navy plane from Imett field. Right, billows of black smoke, spotted by spurts of live flame, shoot skyward from ft iter ride In historic Luna park on Coney Island. Thousands of men, women and children wero m the crowded park. The fire at both parks was of undetermined origin. Mourn at Camp of Annihilation mv WWM..-- A JWW.i imwijin'-liri- nrnrnrrnr Tirfrr w .fwrt"Wyw Photo showi ft few of the thousands of Poles weeping for their loved ones at the edges of the huge burial pits at the "Camp 'of Annihilation" In suburban Lublin, Poland. The Nail burnt to ashes the bodies of thousands upon thousands of victims of their tortures and threw the remains Into the pit. Special ovens were built for this purpose. - GI Has Pet Rabbit wwiniiu lTOl!ww!lppllmwllliw l 'fr 'A Carrying ft white rabbit, present f ft Frenchman, grateful for libera-tion, an American doughboy marches through Torlgny on the heels of the retreating Germans. Yanks have been presented with hundreds of different kinds of pets by the French. Latest Moves Against Nazi Heaviest opposition of the southern France Invasion was met between St. Raphael and Cannes and from there to Nice. Glider hordes were dropped aU along the Riviera, and huge landings were made in St. Tropes bay tone. It was announced that bombers had destroyed every Ismail rail bridge In Rhone valley, Indicated by large arrow. French Commander irrrhl it?is i?Mm m tut, i . ;,)!' iyt f -- 1VVJbI v " 1 . Gen. Jacques Le Clcrc Is In com-mand of the French troops, who have gone into action against the Germans In France for the first time since the 1940 armistice. The troops, many veterans of North Africa, landed on the Normandy beaches. Hay Fever Sneeze Willis m&f ill It HnJii ISM M 1 mil The sniffling season Is here again, and Ginnie Powell shows how th weed affects Americans who suffei from hayfever. The Paciflo North-west Is the only section of the coun. try free of the malady. Red Cross Men Cooperate ..XT' f Avram hes in Normandy fell to fast-movi- American forces, fRed Cross post in a cafe" was taken over by Amer.can Red I'kers, wh0 permitted some of the German medical corpsmM .to a cooperate with the Americans in taking care o the many femun soldiers who were left behind when the Nazi retreated. Chamorro Children in ssrl ; jy TV;! Maj. Gen. Roy S. Geiger, com manding general of the Thin marine amphibious corps at Agana Guam, with Chamorro children freed from Japanese oppression b; marines. Hero in Big Town iA fk r loir Jlilr'X ' '' " f' Afaz Visiting New York City, Pfc. Alton W. Knappenberger drops into a Sroadway drug store to enjoy s ?uper-dup- er ice cream soda. He wor the title of "One-Ma- n Army ol Aniio." ( Clearing the Way for Yanks Jh W Vfeft--- ;;;vCi . The engineers do their part, and It Is usually a dangerous and i hard part. The men of this American engineer unit are shown combing , the streets of Lessay, France, In the hunt for mines. Making the roads t safe for the Allied advance in France is only one of the jobs of these engineers. Hundreds of bridges must be rebuilt for the advance. Yanks Treat Wounded Native K the baUU fnt down boy, wounded by ft Jap sniper on Kr river near Aitape, New Guinea, fe'.eto h corpsmen. Other native villagers B h '""J s. A g00d per Cent of medical suppl.es bring used on the sick and injured natives. p |