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Show L-- . - THK BULLETIN. BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH 1,01 1 Rent Violations Send Couple to Prison NKv vduk Pleading fuiUy to charges citing i.ou Imtancei of rtnt ceilingi violations last March and October, two Harlem real estate men were sentenced to serve six months in prison Federal Judge John W. Clancy also lined James Smith. 70, $j.()m and ins son, Raymond Smith, 29, $1,0(10 Federal Atty. Silvio Mollo as-serted tiiat they crowded as many as live persons into rooming house rooms for which they chai ned $5 to $11. SO a week. 3" i J :' W!liRA''I';K elements, at work since the beginning have cii ved this gigantic trough in the Grand Cain on of sjMrlvl.r. our of nature's most spectacular sights, the inyon Mb.. In length, a mile deep and at sonic places 18 miles wide. MASTERPIECES lion Carves Stupendous Ictacles in Three Canyons WtW Features. the beginning of time, wind and water have com-icarv- e the earth's surface in a small section of north-on- a and southern Utah into three of the most stupen-sctacle- s Ij in the world, the Grand canyon of Colorado ion canyon of Virgin river and the great horseshoe-jmphitheat- er known as Bryce canyon, area in this scenic triumvirate is now a national park tich belongs to the people of the United States. These ing, the Weeping Rock and finally the Temple of Sinawa. This mystical amphitheater Is completely surrounded by stone rock walls. The level floor is greer with trees and in early summei bright with blossoms. In the center of the circle stand two large stone pillars. The larger one is called the altar and the smaller one is known as the pulpit. The visitor instinctively listens for the sermon and waits for the sacrifice. The ear-ly pioneers, deeply religious Mor-mons, were so impressed by the solemnity of the scene that they named the canyon "Little Zion." THESE THREE national parks are readily accessible by paved highways, but the roads on the north side of Grand canyon are closed by snow from October 15 to May 15. Accommodations of all types, in-cluding hotels, lodges, cabin camps and cafeterias, are found on the south rim of Grand canyon. Lodges and cabin camps also are available at the north rim and in both Zion and Bryce. Free campsites for motorists bringing their own equip-ment are maintained in all of the parks by National Park service. Mv be counted among the H jewels in the national ifl-t- be enjoyed by us today iflbeld in trust for the benefit of Americans yet to liHud Canyon National park 1Mb Arizona is the largest of H thethree I parks, con- - H Parks taining 645,- - 000 acres. H Zion National Series Park in utah H is second in B size with 94,- - Hmd Bryce Canyon Nation-alise in Utah, is the smallest Rjc.-es-. In 1946 more than Hple visited these parks, canyon is 297 miles in Hr.ile deep and in some Hsiles wide. Mighty moun-H-.- : thousands of feet from Mel the gorge, are dwarfed "urinous proportions of this Hough. From the rim of Hn the visitor may look Hie summits of these moun-HV- e on wave they reach fcor., garnet, purple, topaz, Inny sea on fire. And a feet down real storm sy lash these mountains, may sparkle and thunder rserate from wall to wall, W the sun shines in a sky. CANYON presents a "rast to Grand canyon, visitor enters a fairyland wite, red and lemon yel- - of minarets and towers, & castles and cathedral ireamland of goblins and shapes. There are 30 W cliffs carved and sculp-- N amphitheater, Jiree 'i and about two miles rammed with fantastic color. Trails such places ?s Sunrise Castle. Queens Garden, "Canyon, and Silent City. K SHARP contrast, Zion vast cathedral. The 'leaven teems to rest on stone wills. Considered by the most satisfying of cal Parks, Zion, by the c' its scone, invariably 'ilence from all who en- - toachtog by Mount Car-T- . the tils; view is from ''fie canyon through win-- highwn tunnel. From e visitor enters along J of Virgin river passing huge rock masses called "Hi the West Temple. "K'te these gates, the 'toads in ,, level valley bS alrno i prndicu--" 'hlch rise more than above him. Side l0t these walls into tre-- blocks which rise red base, changing Pwn and, two thirds Naming white, tinted "Pays ;. rcds ?f Proceeds along this i I?Uey l e Pass the Mountain of the Sun, bsTh" Patriarchs. """one, Angels Land- - Excellent paved highways within the parks make it possible for all travelers, without physical exertion, to see many of the principal won-ders of each park. For hardier per-sons, there are miles of foot trails, and the adventurously inclined may axplore more distantly on horse-back. It is possible to cross of, foot, by mule or horse from the south rim to the north rim of Grand canyon, but this trip and all trips down into the canyon should be tak-en only by persons in excellent phys-ical condition. In each park, ranger-naturalist- s give frequent talks, and in the eve-nings they conduct entertaining pro-grams around the campflres. VERITABLE FAIRYLAND . . Fantastic figures and kaleidoscop-l- o color prevail in Bryce Canyon National park in Utah. Tk HfltaW fjBKKHnHBBBBaBBaBBBHrak 0 HjHjH s "j. "I BHssHBIHaska. nesAn m liJHHjL sW TARGET, NEW YORK CITY . . . Brooklyn bridge was In the bomb-sigh- ts of this flight of 9 Superfortresses when, as part of an armada of 100 such planes, they flew over New York City in a simulated bomb-ing raid. The 100 giant airships, nearly ail the strategic air com-mand could muster, according to Gen. George C. Kenney, converged on metropolitan New York from six different fields in various parts of the country CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT APTQ8, TRUCKS & ACCESS. HELP WANTEDWOMEN SALESLADIES wanted if not already in your community. Direct sell-ing Rig earnings Lingerie, rp.uh nylon. Tojfrurn llnnlrrv Co., Vtilmrtlt-- . III. MISCELLANEOUS ASTHMA, HAY FEVER TRY SELRODO RELIEF OK NO 'OST TO VOU See Your Druggist or Write P. O. Box HIS - Salt Lake 017, VUh. WANTED TO buy HI' 111 V AMI SI I Offlre Furniture, Kites, Typewriters, Add-ing Marhlnes. Safes. Cash registers SALT I.AKK DESK RXCHANOB tS South .i. St.. Sail Lake City. Utah : Buy and Hold Your U. S. Savings Bonds SAVE THIS AD! IT'S WORTH $3 TO YOU! Send this with S3 In rash, money order or check to I ISM A PKKFI MKS INC.. ilH W. Ohio. Chimin. m and receive tax and postage prepaid a large 1 oz. bottle of love-- I" Llnneu Perfume u Breath of Old Swe-den, natlonatlv advertised at SS plus taxi Ideal for summer use or a precious gift OPERATORS j ATTENTION Increase Your Earnings in RESORTS DRUG STORES TAVERNS CLUBS CIGAR STORES BILLIARD HALLS GAS STATIONS WITH THE WORLD'S BEST COIN OPERATED MACHINES Send for Catalogue . BAKER NOVELTY COMPANY 1700 Wellington Boulevard CHICAGO 12. ILLINOIS cap long rootts intl H imetr body hut of fowli I MJrW nicotine luiors I Ma.'A'Z'U which kill chicktn and Mr Applicator laves nicotine KSSl Insist on original factory- FlW J snli-- packages to miurr ,' HBul lull strength. twIF, .gH 06ACCQ Br PtODUCIS I fflJM CHEMICAL CONPORAf ION kPJH iNCGfiPomno t touisviitr ?. kfniijck' bavHaLaaJ Women In your "40'g"! Does till functional 'middle-ag- e' period 5 wome cause you to suffer hot flashes, nervous, hlghstrutiB, weak, tired feelings? Then do try Lvdla E Plnkham's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms It s tamous for this purpose! Taken regularly Plnkham's Com-pound helps build up resistance BRatnst such distress. Thousands have reported benefit! Also a very effective stomachlo tonic. Worth trying! VNU W 2347 May Warn of Disordered Kidney Action Modern life with Its hurry and worry. Irregular habits, improper eating and drinking iu riak of exposure and infec-tion throws heavy strain on the work of the kidneys. They are apt to become over-taxe- d and fait to filter excess acid and othtr Impurities from the blood. You may suffer sagging backache, headache, dizziness, getting up nighta, leg pains, swelling feel constantly tired, nervous, all worn out. Other sign of kidney or bladder disorder are some-times burning, scanty or too frequent urination. Try Doan'$ Pills. Doon't help the kidney to pass off harmful excess body waste. They have bad more than baif s century of public approval. Ara recom-mended by grateful users everywhere' Ask your neighbor! Child Kidnaped Two Years Ago I Is Found Alive Amazing Story Told of How Girl Was Being Trained For Skating Act. CHICAGO. A girl. kidnaped two years ago. was found alive and well in New Orleans with her abductors and returned to her Chicago home. The child was being trained to become a member of a fancy roller skating act with those who abducted her. The girl is Mary Ann Kubon, who was only three when taken from a boarding house in June, 1945. She had been placed there by her mother. Myrtle. According to the New Orleans office of the Federal Bureau of In-- j vestigation, the child was found in company of William Graham Ful--i ler, 44, a former convict, his wife, Mane; a foster daughter, Mrs. Selma Taylor, and her husband, Rima. Abductors Caught. The five, according to the FBI, were seized as they attempted to hitchhike a ride on a highway eight miles outside New Orleans. Fuller and the other adults were turned over to Sheriff John J. Grosch of Orleans parish and Mary Ann was placed in St. Vincent de Paul orphanage. Mary Ann is the daughter of Walter Kubon and his wife, Myrtle. In 1945 the parents separated, and Mrs. Kubon came with the child to Chicago from her home in Harvey. She made the acquaintance of Ful-ler, who was a professional roller skater, giving exhibitions at various rinks. On June 17, 1945, a man repre-senting himself as Walter Kubon took the child from the boarding house. The man actually was Fuller, police suspected. Knowing the man svas a skater, Walter Storms, chief of detectives, had cir-culars printed, directing the search toward roller rinks throughout the nation. Subsequently the FBI en-tered the search. Traced by Skates Order. Fuller was traced after he had placed an order with a New York firm for a special pair of skates, de-signed for a girl. Fuller, his wife, and the other couple are roller skaters and were training Mary Ann as a feature of their act, according to the report from New Orleans. Mrs. Kubon, whose husband is a steelworker, has returned to her previous home at Harvey. The mother wept with happiness at the return of her daughter. She said she had prayed every night for her safe return. She and her hus-band have three other children, all boys. In New Orleans Fuller was charged by the FBI with unlawfully fleeing Illinois to avoid prosecution for kidnaping. Clerk Pleads Guilty To $780,000 Theft Lived Luxuriously and Kept Two Private Yachts. NEW YORK. - William Arthur Nickel, clerk who lived luxuriously and kept two yachts while he embezzled $780,000 from his employer, pleaded guilty as he went on trial with two of his three Nickel, who apparently will be chief state's witness in the huge Mergenthaler Linotype company swindle, entered his plea to a indictment charging grand larceny and forgery. TIip former Mergen- - thaler employee, whose extrava-gance failed to arouse suspicion un-til a fellow employee discovered fraudulent entries in his books, was arrested last October in a Florida hotel. Nickel, who had fled to Detroit, Chicago and Florida when he roc-- I Ognlzed that his accounts wi re under scrutiny, talked freely after his arrest and implicated three' others in the complicated plot. Julius Lobe!, alias Jimmy Collins, a Broadway figure who has been at liberty under $85,000 bail, and Irv-ing Cohen, 45, known as "Izzy the Eel," are in the swin-dle trial. A fourth co - defendant, Isidore Rappaport, 55, president of the Ultima Optical Instrument com-- ' pany, was granted a separate trial because he and his firm were named in only 41 out of nearly 500 counts in the indictment. Rappaport, a war for the linotype firm, was said by Nickel to have master-minde- d the plot in which fraudulent checks made out supposedly in payment of Mergenthaler bills escaped com-pany detection. Rappaport, how-ever, was said to have been ousted in favor of Collins later in the plot. NC BALLPLAYING FOR GLENNT . . . G.enwood (Glenny) Brann II, whose legs were amputated after he was branded by playmates during a game of cowboys and Indians, shows his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Glenwood Brann, Maiden, Mass., the autographed baseball and bat presented to him by Joe Dobson and Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox, who visited him in the hospital. Commonplace Pump Termed Most Widely Used Machine PHILADELPHIA. --With only 29 per cent of the nation's farms equipped with the most universally used machine in the country the commonplace pumf the remaining 71 per cent are rapidly becoming an important market for this mech-anism which outnumbers the auto-mobile, telephone and refrigerator combined. Terming the pump the "unsung Cinderella of the machine family," Richard H. DeMott, vice president of SKF Industries, Inc., in an in-dustrial report, said that of the coun-try's 5,800,000 farms, only 1,679,000 are equipped with pumps for run-ning water. He estimated that the national "pump population" now tops 100 mil-lion, constituting one of the most im-portant uses for ball and roller bearings. He compared the pump total with 34,000,000 automobiles, refrigerators and 27,800,000 telephones reported in use at the end of 1946, pointing out that each motor vehicle uses at least one form of pump. nSMmMMBSSMMM S'Ssii. mUur 'yiafeMMrJsr JMm MM 3fi tfoWafei iGSmUMMMMMHi " .jbmMMMMMm BEfe'' JH &f&Vnl&3ft fv E IT ssgK vJBBB MMMMMK-'6- J& MMMMmr ' HHt, MMMMMMMmBsSSSBSSSL mMttwSvsR MONSIEUR . . . American football doesn't have a monopoly on roughness if this picture of a typical squeeze play in a game of rugby at Paris is any indieation. Player in white, who doesn't know whether to hold the ball or throw it away, is showing little joy over the feverish embraces being bestowed upon him by two opposition men. Action occurred in a semi-fin- al game of the French rugby cup competition. Neighbor Watches as Slayer Kills Woman on Doorstep PHILADELPHIA. A mother was slain, apparently with a screw driver, at the front doorstep of her North Philadelphia home. Edward G. Gundaker was look-ing out a window of his apartment across the street and said he saw a man hack Mrs. Clara Matthews about the face and head and drag her into an alley. While he telephoned police, the assailant stripped a stocking off the right leg of Mrs. Matthews, drew it deep into the flesh of her throat and knotted it tight. The assailant was gone when police arrived. A blood stained six-inc- h screw driver was found at the entrance of the alleyway. The victim's husband, Howard, orchestra play- - er, said his wife carried it in her purse to open their front door when they forgot their key. Body of Harvard Athlete Is Found Floating in Lagoon BOSTON. The body of Sylvester Gardiner, Harvard uni-versity athlete and World War II! veteran, was found floating in the Charles river basin lagoon. Positive identification was made by his father, former Gov. William T. Gardiner of Maine. Medical Examiner William J. Brickley said a brown overcoat and shoe skates found on the body indi-- 1 cated that the young athlete had been accidentally drowned while skating at night. Girl, 3, Rescues Drowning Cousin in Kansas Lake SHAWNEE, KANS. Three-year-ol- d Vivian Ramsey was acclaimed a heroine after saving her cousin from drowning in nearby Lake Quivira. Vivian and her cousin, Elsie Louise Mayor, also 3, had wandered to the lake from their home, several hundred yards away. They were not missed until the mothers, Mrs. Wi-lliam Ramsey and Mrs. W. J. B. Mayor, heard screams coming from the lake. Running to the lake, the mothers found the Mayor girl in the water and Vivian lying on a plank leading to a dock, holding her cousin out of the water by her hair. Caesarian Operation Saves Baby After Mother Dies PORTLAND, ORE. A healthy girl was delivered by Caesarian opera-tion three minutes after death of the mother, Mrs. Mildred Wickstrand, 31, from pneumonia in a hospital here. The infant, born a month prema-ture and weighing 6 pounds, 11 ounces, was placed in an incubator and was thriving, the hospital said. MOTHER OF 12 AT 31 . . . When the Schnitzlcr family of Genesee. Wis., sits down to the table, it's a fairly sure thing that a lot of food is going to disappear. Mrs. Ervin Schnitzler, just 31 years old, is the mother of these 12 children whose ages range from one month to 14 years. Incl-Jde- in the family group is a set of twins. of Lost Colonists' Unearthed " Recent archeo-S-t the fort of Sir Walter st colonists" within national historic site toast Land ofl tne Nortn ckc wealed posi- - k I be one s KaleiKh's colonists, 'NiJ0Il Park service. Three exploratory trenches have been excavated at the fort site. Visi-ble in each trench was the profile oi the ditch or moat of the fort, ap-proximately 10 feet broad and 54 feet deep. The depth and charac-ter of the fill indicate that the fort is indubitably of great age. in con trast to the remains of Civil war forts of earthen construction dis-covered elsewhere on Roanoke is- - land. Shoulder, Sleeve Patches Being Banished by Army WASHINGTON. - The army is banishing all but a few of the unit shoulder patches of World War II. The changes, it said, "are the re-sult of an eflort to decrease individ-ual arm or service consciousness and foster an increased ground forces esprit de corps." The announcement added that sleeve insignia of small units-inclu- ding airborne, ar-mored, amphibian and similar org-anizations- would disappear, leav- - fng only patches for divisions corps, armies or army ground forces. Youth Stabs to Death Girl Friend of Granddad NEW YORK. James Quinn, 21, was held for fatally stabbing his grandfather's pajama-cla- d girl friend. The victim was Margaret Dowling, 42, a telephone worker. Quinn's wife said her husband stabbed Miss Dowl-ing after he accused her of stealing his money from a bureau drawer. |