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Show THE BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH , -- "5 ' .-.. fSJS ,PUBLIC That rin? is grttin? so crow-de- with hats not be that it would tial surprising if some poten- nominees started throwing their chapeaux out of it. This is one man's conception of how puzzled the public is. f ? ' r vtt?Xll4's f a ANOTHER WAY TO SKIN A CAT . . . There innst be easier ways of getting a leopard to where you want him to go than by carry-ing him on your shoulders, but it looks like this Hindu animal trainer with a big circus is doing it this way just for laughs. Anyway whenever a circus animal trainer starts wearing leopards (or neck-piece- s it's a good indication that spring is on the way4 0 IF you will pardon us for pointing, big league baseball today hat an extremely higb average of leader ship in ita managers now after the golden fleece. The 1948 crop can match anything we have known in baseball. As they will figure largely in the headlines of the new year they should be worth just a bit more space than they have received "Who are they?" Even if you don't remember, they include Joe McCarthy of the Red Sox, Bucky Harris of the Yankees and Lou Bou-jrea- u of the Indians. It micht be Steve O'Neil of the Tigers also be-longs. We are not so well acquaint-ed with his work. It might be that Connie Mack can be included in this list we mean 1948 the only year that matters now. You can throw out all the others. The American league battle will be hand-to-han- throat-ruttin- g duel between McCarthy and Har-ris. It ought to be. They have most of the good ballplayers. McCarthy is a brilliant manager. But don't underrate Harris, the most human leader of the lot Harris can handle his squad, and, when you ask him a question point-blan- he an-swers point-blan- protecting no-body, telling you the truth as he tees it. Harris is a rarity I haven't aeen since the days of John J. McGraw. McGraw, as I knew him, was a help-ful friend when you needed a story. 5o is Harris. Managers Need Players Boudreau, a great ballplayer, has never had the material to prove his place. Boudreau might have churn-ed up a mess of trouble this season, if the Yankees and Reds hadn't reached out and lassoed most of the good floating material. A fellow can be honest, have an honest opinion, and still be wrong. In the opinion of this restless roamer, the best manager In the National league to Billy South-wor- th of the Braves possibly the best manager in baseball today. Next to Southworth, we put Eddie Dyer and Leo Durocher on level terms. Both are something better than good managers. We like Dyer'i system of handling his men and working with umpires better but we can be quite wrong here. Burt Shotton is one of the great managers of baseball. Rickey should have given him 50 per cent of every dollar he took in through 1947. For all of that Durocher is an abla leader. He isn't a McCarthy, a Har-ris or a Southworth, but he Is good enough. Mel Ott has another chance to prove his place. Ott is one of the most likeable persons in the game today. Charley Grimm, Johnny Neun, BUI Meyer and Ben Chapman are are good managers. With better material, they might be much bet-ter manager!. But they will chuck In a number of grenades when the Cardinals, Dodgers, Bravea and Giants come along. Florida, the Beautiful Florida may have many things that other states lack and that in-cludes California. In the Ever-glades, for instance, the state that Ponce de Leon helped make famous has the last frontier of sport, the most famous 10 thousand square miles in the United States. Here, within a brief whirl of the social softness and glamour of Palm Beach and Miami Beach, you can come upon both beauty and savage wildness, fang and claw, the rattle-snake and moccasin, the copperhead and the coral snake, the puma or what is known here as the panther, bear up to 400 pounds or more; deer, alligator, egret, pelican, heron and crane, almost every known variety of bird life and fish beyond all Ima-gination. In one day's haul in a small boat we returned with 12 varieties of fish. The boat was half full of fish by 2 o'clock. There were wild duck and geese flying overhead and there was quail in the dryer spots. The Jungles of India and Africa have nothing to match the variety or beauty of the Everglades or its look of wildness in certain sectors. There are no tigers, lions, ele-phants or leopards around. But the puma or panther, ranging nine feet from tip to tip. weighing close to 200 pounds, Is a replica of the West's mountain lion. The puma Isn't a tieer or a leopard, It Isn't even a Jaifuar, but it Is still noth-ing; to meet on a narrow trail. The mangrove swamps and ghost islands here can get you lost in 10 minutes, lost beyond recall, without a guide. I was lost in less than 10 minutes. "Would I ever find my way back?" I,asked, after clearing a tew man-grove spots. "Not in a hundred years," my guide said, "unless you can beat a 1.000-to-- l shot." Florida has something that toe many of its people never have ap-preciated. It Is about time thej understood. For what they have is invaluable In the long run a mor important part of the nation that Washington, D. C Mary Had a Little lamb on Her Apron EVERYWHERE that Mary goes, goes in her dress-herse- lf frock! Gamboling lamb is in outline with loops in lazy-dais- y Etitch. P Ik ' ' J Make her a sunfrock and panties. Pat-tern 74G1; embroidery transfer, pattern In gbei I. 2, 3. 4. S. 6. Our Improved pattern visual with easy-to-se- e charts and photos, and complete directions makes needlework easy. Due to an unusually large demond and current conriltloni, illRhtly more time la required In filllnK orders for a few of the I most popular patterns. Send your order to: Srwlnir Circle Needlerraft Ipt. S4 W. Randolph St. Chlraeo SO, 111. Enclose 20 cents for pattern. No SEASON IT OUT AND YOU'LL PREFER THIS In NR (Nature's Remedy) Tablet there are no chemicals, no minerals no phenol derivatives. NR Tablets are difTerent-!- Cf different Partly vtgf lablt combination of 10 vegetable ingredients formulated over 50 years ago. Uncoated or candy coated, their action is dependable, thorough, yet gentle, as millions of NR's have proved. Get a 25 box. Uje as directed. VI fm to-nig- ht sssrr A"vi?V QUICK RELIEF ySlSKDi(STiOl BiH 1 L .y-'t-n Are you going through the func-tional 'middle age' period peculiar to women (38 to 52 yr.) ? Does thia make you suffer from hot flashes, feel $o nervoui, hlghstrung, tired? Then do try Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms. Pinkham's Compound also haa what Doctors call a sto- - machlo tonlo effect LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S May Warn of Disordered Kidney Action Uodra life with Ita hurry and worry, irregular babita, Improper eating and drinkins ita risk of expoaura and infec-tion throwa heavy atraio on the work f the kidneya. They are apt to become 4 and (ail to filter exeeee acid and other impuritiea from the blood. Yoa may softer aa?jrlns backache, headache, diazineae, setting up nighta, leg paina, awelling feel eonatanlly , tired, nervous, all worn out. Other aij(na of kidney or bladder disorder are aome-tim-bur- la-g, acanty or too frequent urination. Try Pt'IIa. Doon'a help the kidneya te paaa off harmful exevaa body waate. They have bad more than half a century of publie approval. Are recom-mended by grateful uaera everywhere. Atk yeur neifkborl i I sA l.rllnl ia fTAiri:N3 The NAVY has a Real Business Proposition for Young Men Who Want to "Go Place." Ask tor Information. Sar Recrniting Station i Wonder Man With One Leg Is Star College Athlete 2 Law Student Sets Amazing Record in Sports OXFORD, MISS.- -A one-arme-d law student at Univer-sity of Mississippi continues to amaze everybody with his unusual athletic prowess. Don Ryback lost his left arm and his left leg in a railway accident when he was 11 years old. At the age of 26, he has behind him an amazing record despite his handicap. Now a sophomore law student in the upper third of his class at Un-iversity of Mississippi, Ryback al-ready holds one degree from Temple university in Philadelphia, A star athlete, he is a nimble participant in handball, tennis, soft-bal- l, football and swimming. Ryback is a realist. When he suf-fered his childhood injuries, he made up his mind not to let the loss of his limbs get a psychological grip on him. He worked hard and adapted himself to conditions. Developed Arm. Not particularly sensitive about his missing members, Ryback has developed the remaining arm and leg to a remarkable degree. And probably most Important he has developed his mind to keenness. When he was graduated from Temple In 1945, Ryback enrolled at the law school of University of Pennsylvania. Forced by illness to withdraw, he turned to the South and University of Mississippi. There he won respect and has earned the good-nature- d kidding of his mates, a fact he grinningly in-terprets as a sign he's accepted as one of the boys and not as a freak. He gets around with aid of a crutch, a support which he wields with amazing dexterity. He can boot a football, for distance, straight through the uprights while balanced solely on the single crutch. Excels in Swimming. In swimming he's at his best. Using a lunging stroke, Ryback cuts through the water with a speed and endurance that made many a two-arme- d and two-legge- d swimmer give up. Just to add frosting to the cake, he can do a complete back somersault off the high diving board. Ryback Is no slouch on the wrest-ling mat either. Weighing around 150 pounds, he figures he'd tip the scales at about 200 with his other arm and leg. But, despite his dif-ficulty, a lot of the campus boys who consider themselves strong give him a wide berth in the grap-pling ring. A member of Phi Delta Phi, na-tional honorary legal fraternity, Ry-back even has overcome that final bugaboo of most law students-h- e's learned to type with one hand, bang-ing along at a respectable rate of 30 words a minute. Sponsored, according to the re-quirements of Pennsylvania law. by Justin D Girolanio, a Bethlehem at-torney. Ryback plans to return to Pennsylvania next year to take his bar examinations and start his final apprenticeship as a law clerk. ATOM OF ADVICE . . . David E. Lilienthal, chairman of the atomic energy commission, told congress he favors outlawing strikes in atomic plants if that step should be necessary to in-sure continuous production. l . ,x f i u - ' - ,' ' ", L RECALL. Franl ftht district attorney f on a gas tfS ST the do' f 111 dinner of h &the fight rackel a" old KSS'"w heavy' as 7s a'iney in New L and sasscd a temper fHe said that if Hogan L evil .bout the prize-L-thing fr h.m o do ! Superficially tha was Land some of the lead-- on this seamy run t;,ch from Eagan and (another going-over- . with Individual ex-- I boxing rit,,r9 hve la Hogan for about a L turned up some cor-- L they shou'd have Ij nd started the ex-Lrr- y army career and ii of Bo ky Gradano. i middleweight cham-- i U now a king wh-- for after be won the irtp writs of banlsb-liitne- d in many Juris-- anse be was a bad sol-- t expose fully broke, ,j with sweet and genu-iia- t society could be big uivt his past and let tier the rewards of his opportunity. GOOD POY SCOUT ;D WOULD BE A GOOD FICER BUT HE IS NO THE CHAIRMANSHIP XING COMMISSION IN BECAUSE IT WOULD TO IMAGINE A FEU UVE AND IGNORANT AT GOES ON AROUND iGAN. When he snapped back that Hogan ought to prosecute in-stead of just talking ' about crookedness he with his chin because chairman of the com-de- s the duty of know-- i bat and keeping crooks scan do by the arbitrary n him by the legislature, instinctive and perhaps ction to Hogan's charges i maneuver him onto the rofues and put him in law, order and the good :h he is sworn to uphold, rulese reaction pro- - n aroused a smtment in the D. A. suspicions of some of s' motives, judged by nal association with the the racket. To be sure, taxing should know the s if the business and e phone numbers for i Bu he needn't have k with them and if be n't complain when others Main opinion of him. e after this episode, Irv-on-e of a triumvirate s.es Graziano as a prop-- ered that his name nad to a check for $320, ap-- ; someone familiar with Cohen said "Oh well, the philosophical way of j is insured against such r by fiduciaries, and the Pany made him whole its routine Inquiry. In ;;, Cohen was asked to !'S of the handwriting oi n his professional, as it ".old for comparison with "i the check. r the New V'ork wrlt-- priiefight run are on this k with those little fig- - ""se individuals have "i to hear the news, In- - " ould be presumptu-l- r into Hogan's mind and ke enjoying the situa-i,J(,- e when has presump- - felonious? . , Donald Day, who "ved in Eurnpe many "ars after W jrld H War 1, has been de , kined by the Ameri-rman-where he was s the collapse in 1945. have been suspected y on the gn,und thal T h"ne when he could in a similar fix, d MJ been brought back treason, which turns arK more easily made ;;sBt.' Jury that I be- - ri C,?rresPonnts in il !? 8 disso,ui ,helieht of It probably wasm-- ,ute,:fr-Th- e other a Gerl i"erncd h .8ny ,Jntil e k Sbon t0 "hirn may hve 1 ,om, evl. n "I 1 - 1J ! LI ..t ty lev . A n v1 lL it IPW1 J . rjkqi jjU MRS. JONES WAS TIS ROUNDER'S NAME . . . This Is Mrs. Casey Jones, wife of the engineer who rode to fame on a six-eig- ht wheeler. She was seated at the throttle of the General Motors "Train of Tomorrow" on its run from New Albany, Miss., to Mem phis, where she took part in ceremonies honoring the arrival of the train there. Her husband's ride to his death on "Old 638" 42 years ago has been immortalized in song and story. ''MW't'tyVMH NINTH ANNIVERSARY . . . This is a recent pictorial study of Pope Pius XII, made as he cele-brated the ninth anniversary of his pontification in March amid a world threatened once more by the clouds of war. U,A iJjmlll.''llWMIWIIilllIMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiH iin m tVSi t ii v i , " J f "fti ' f, , - V ; f ' ' - I t i f, ? f til SOUL-SAVE- R AT SEVEN . . . Renee Martz Is seven years old and an established evangelist who divides her time between the Bible and her dolls. Renee has been preaching since she was four, has traveled 30,000 miles and led 6,000 souls to the altar "to con-fess their sins," she says. Once you're saved all you have to do is '"just keep on the Lord's side," is her lesson. WMVe66MQM0O4OOmre6H5 ;vlilillllll Jkii Milled NOSEGAY . . . Tom narmon, former Michigan football great, unveiled his new nose after completion of plastic surgery that transformed his scrimmage-wear- y schnoz into a thing ol beauty. Aussie Police Mount Bicycles To Chase Golf Ball Thieves SYDNEY. AUSTRALIA. - When one of the youthful bicycle riding golf ball bandits here told the lord mayor j "go ride a bicycle' he took their advice literally and put wheels under his police force. Woe to any s, he prom-ise-now that his patrol squad has been equipped with bicycles, too. Up to now the bicycle-mounte- d kids have had no trouble outma-neuverin- g the police patrolling the course on horseback. Now that the squad is on an equa, basis with the gangs, his honor-a- nd the golfers-- are hoping this light-fingere- d activity will cease. lUfUwwaitWi 'aiia Mi imwwi inifniiiiameaiiaaMwi - M(nHifcffii(rf8 FLYING TIGER AND WIFE . . . Claire L. Chennault. wartim. commander of the famous "Flying Tigers" who made life miser, able for the Japs In China, Is back In the United States tempor-arily accompanied by his pretty Chinese wife. Chennault was called home to testifiy in connection with proposed U. S. aid t China. I? I I ! Y Bochow, Jr., oi i t s SMS? 'A Driver Discovers Two 'Mole Riders Are Attroctive G;rls SALINAS, CALIF.-Af- ter driving 7.000 miles in a stolen auto with his two "male" accomplices. George H. Einsla, 39. was flabbergasted to learn the "young men were shapely, attractive girls. didn't they tell "Why the dickens me?" Einsla asked police, looking through his cell bars toward the women's detention ward where his but female com pants-wearin- g panlons were lodged. Einsla and the g.r Anne Lucile Stelzniede. Phoen.x Ariz., and Shirley Mae Wills. booked on a fed caster. Pa., were a eral complaint of transporting stolen car across a state line. ft Einsla said he had dnven w the girls for 11 days dj. ever since, FBI -- they first the auto In a picked up Tucson. Ariz., parking lot. Idea I w". But I sure had no of gir. dragging along a couple Einsla said. "Whew." Officers said the girls apparency had been posing as men truck time. One had a job as a that all three driver. Einsla added with women dur-ta-had gone on dates their Jaunt |