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Show j j THE BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT USED CARS NOBODY BUYS MORE ... OR PAYS MORE! BUSINESS & INVEST. OPPOK. CAFF FOR 8AI.K One of best spots in Kapid City, So. Dak. Inquire tHH Main or rhone 1254. HELP WANTED MEN WANTF.I): Electrical Engineers with coU li'go tor Held work in laboratory truck. SinKle men preferred. Apply I'.U, BOX 1'jlU - Caliper, Wyomlnf . LIVESTOCK FATTFN 11008 FASTER by itlmilatinf their nppetite with Ur. LeGenr' Hog i. Also n ideal tonic for brood idwi and puis. Haa helped increase profit for million of hot raiser. Sail, guar. MISCELLANEOUS ti PAN Middlehy Mnrshnll Rns fired oven almost new, can be converted to Propane nr Butane gas, three compartment Federal Dough Hetarder. 80 quart tlobart Mixer like new, New Star Popcorn machine, 13 foot back bar for bakery, 2 six foot show cases, National Bread slicing machine, barrel capacity, slow speed mixer, dough moulder. Call or write Bush Super Market, 1)115 Slith St., Ogden, Utah, l'hone 6AV7. POULTRY, CHICKS & EQUIP. HFI.P YOUR HENS be Stimulate profitable layers. poor appetites with Dr. LeGear's Poultry Prescription in all their feed. Used by successful poulvrymen everywhere. The best poultry tonic money can buy. SEEDS. PLANTS. ETC. S00,IK0 FHIHT NUT TREES Western grown Peaches, Apples, Pears, Prunes, Plums, Apricots, Cherries, Walnut tree grow best In your climate. Vlnlng and Cone Berries, Strawberries. 700 Varieties, send for 48 page catalog. Agents Wanted. Tualatin Valley Nurseries, Saerweod. Ore. WANTEpTOBUY WE BUT AND SELL Office Furniture. Files, Typewriters, Add-ing Machines. Safes. Cash Registers. SALT LAKE DBSK EXCHANGE 2S Soul Stat St.. Salt Lake City. CUk &l yoWLjidwisL (Buy. 1A. 5-- SavinqA. (Bondiu JhsL flsAL SnvMtnwtL AZk Get Well ffJ QUICKER &ilL from Your Couth XjJa" Ou a Cold FOLEY'S Cough Compound I REAL Rupture Relief Soft, washable material five true comfort, provide strong support. No springs or leather. Has brought comfortable relief to thou-sands. Satisfaction guaran-teed. Send for free folder. Write today: WEB TRUSS CO. Dept II I Hajerstowru Md. n Diaper Rash - To cleanse tender parts, s ease red, smarting skin, . and hasten return of fi comfort, use dependable RE5IMDL""?"" 1 Lsl ApplirolOf I .1 SLACK IEAF Ujl WW "ATHx"uc"7rj!ii WNU--W 0848 fl-M.i.,- 1 TRAINING TRAVEL PAY The NAVY has a Real Business Proposition for Young Men Who Want to "Go Places." Ask for Information. Navy Recruiting Station , IN WHAT line of professional sport can the athlete or competitor make the most money? Baseball, football, boxing, racing, wrestling, basketball or what have you? The range In salaries from Joe DiMaggio to Bob Feller, according to recent report. was something like $65,000 to $85,000. At the same time, Johnny Lujack was signed up for an amount approxi-mating $20,000 a year. Charley Trip-p- i drew down just about the same chunk of cash for 1947. ffiifr Football with its 20 games a season, including exhibitions, can't match baseball with its 190 games, also in-cluding exhibitions. There are not many ballplayers paid the same as Bob Feller, Ted Williams and Joe Dl Magglo. But also there are not so many football players paid on a level with Lujack, Trippi and a few more. Even as it Is, pro football can make very little money with Its brief season thrown against modern expenses even the winning teams. The others can drop enough dou-bloons to founder a Spanish galleon. On a general average, baseball and football pay close to the same amounts, with baseball In front. The kickback is that any number of ball-players get $7,500 or less a season Stars Lure Crowds What about the pro golfers? A Hogan, Nelson, Demaret or Locke can make from $25,000 to $30,000 a year, but there are not many of these. Only a few stars. Most of the others are underpaid, but it happens to be the stars who draw the crowds. Golf compares favorably, with football for the few who must work over 200 days a year to top $20,-00- 0. The average pro golfer on tour doesn't make $5,000. Club golfers who are also instructors can do much better. Ballplayers also last longer than football players, although such vet-erans as Sammy Baugh, Sid Luck-ma- n, Bulldog Turner and Mel Hein can hang around for better than 10 or 12 years. They are the unbreak-able- s. Joe Louis can pick up more money in one fight than any base-ball or football player can earn in a big part of his career. The Louis-Walco- tt outdoor Jamboree should play to at least a million-dolla- r gate. It will be an interesting fight along physical and psychological lines. Louis gets 40 per cent of the take. This means around $400,000, from which his manager takes his cut. whatever it is. In any event, at least $250,000 comes to Louis. The only kink here is that your Uncle Sam, losing no time at all, lops off around 75 or 80 per cent. The morbid facts are that the same collector doesn't leave Feller, Williams and other high-price- d play-ers enough to start a bragging de--' bate. Wrestling Is Steady What about the wrestlers? Some active fact-finde- r says that Camera will collect around $250,000 for a year's activity. This may be too high. But wrestlers do better than many people know about. It might be remembered that wrestler can operate five nights a week in a rush period. Boxing champions must settle for two or three performances, a year. Jimmy Londos told me once that he made as much as $20,000 a week. Londos was then an incredible oper-ator, also a very highly intelligent human being. The only true answer to this sal-ary matter in sport must take in the highest number who average the best pay over the years. My answer here would be base-ball, where so many thousands are involved In so many leagues. There may not be so many Ruths, Fellers, Greenbergs, DiMagglos or Wil-liams, but there are more than 400 big leaguers who can knock off from $7,500 to $15,000 a higher average for a greater number. Pro football can almost match this payroll with the two leagues reaching for a rival windpipe. The football players get all the money, and it will be this way until two strong leagues can play at peace. Which reminds us, we almost for-got the jockeys. How about Eddie Arcaro, Johnny Longden and a few more? All they have is around a million dollars each. You know" $100,000 a year is no big overlay. . , Lining Up the Stars It will be interesting to see which teams and which leagues sign up football's leading college stars of 1947. Including all bowl and post-seas- on games played, the seven leading backs of the year were Johnny Lu-jack of Notre Dame, Bob Chappuis of Michigan, Bobby Layne of Texas, Ray Evans of Kansas, Charley Con-tr-ly of Mississippi, Doak Walker of 5.M.U. and Harry GilmeT of Ala-bama. I , V i tjr ; i 1 ; GOLD STAR WIFE . . . Mrs. Roth Dutcher of Arlington, Va., is new national president of the Gold Star Wives of America. Recently in oftlce, she is determined to get action on house and senate bills which would relieve the dis-re- ss of many a gold star wife. - mi n 'I . J n i imiii r Si-- ' , sN , rrrfO --- - Chpil J W1- A. jrffV? ! li 5 cap-- h RUBBISH PILE . . . Boys' club members check a working Tnel Kt a speedboat model, limited in cost to $1, for the Skipper's is not! jest. Explaining construction details are Guy Lombardo, left, ""J Al VV. Armstrong, executive director of Boys' Clubs of America. jgfWl SCRAPS fy 5 Comb Rubbish Heaps 3 v Boat Contest Materials firjr treasure hunt in the rubbish heap for boys all over the M tates. They are seeking old tin cans, mother's castoff r i scraps of wood, paper clips, rubber bands and even HI paint, all of which will be used for building entries 11 st nationwide Skipper's Cup model speedboat contest. "l a swift and sturdy craft 'T0 ian $1 is the immediate Hiv. of many of the quarter Von ' wngsters who are mem- - ?K It affiliated with Boys' Jff America. This organiza-- JEveready Battery of the natio-nal :;st itlffil , "skipper" qualifies lo-- )per 1 s next aim is to survive Kite! eliminations so he can dbitif speedboat in the Reflect- - "ItttJ i at Washington April 10 for final honors. v k lional contest Is dated to fr-- i lith annual observance of mmJ lb Week. Itest is limited to boys un-- )L U of whom are supplied 1$ J v tking drawings of model rVAlt 'le model boat was designed las Rolfe, who also will fL fone of the judges of the JJ inals. Instructions cover-ll- j t, weight and detail gov-t- Jt tries. Hulls must be com-In- il id water speed tests certi-i- . itional headquarters on or Kirch 13. ;i ( ' ts of the best boats locally titf- - five awards of tiny, two-ly- e f 'ictric motors and a supply M Ignt batteries. Winners in y i Boys' Club regions of the i--5 receive regional Skipper's D national finals in Wash-- 4 he seven boys who score e trials, regardless of re-- d ill compete before U. S. np ireign celebrities under idow of the Lincoln Me-- iffwill include Guy Lombar-- H i leader and speedboat i; Bill Stern and other well- - lorts figures. Former Pres-- . I ver is serving as honorary i i of the national commit- - "JrI draftsmanship contests will Ullf I speed trials. Judging, Ad ill be on a basis of point Ujft a on, will cover basic de-- i originality, workmanship, appearance. , s - nih v i .sx i flinifcitiaaimii ff'niti' hWiTnifilfiMi iihi n - -- '"- .t...i PLANTING FORESTS BY AIR . . . Forests are being planted by helicopter now. First Job of this kind was undertaken recently by a west coast paper manufacturing company when 2,640 acres of the company's tree farms in Washington and Oregon were seeded from the air with five species of native forest trees. ' V '.l..h1:..., nnftftilMiiwnii iiwiiBimwiimiiif HARD-HEADE- D . . . Earl O. Shreve, president of the U. S. chamber of commerce,' put him-self on record as endorsing the Marshall plan, but stipulated that it be backed up with "hard-heade- d business experience" and econ-omy in government at home. War Vets Respond To Call for Blood ATLANTA, qA.-- For 24 veter-ans of battlefields extending from Luzon to St. Lo, the call for blood was enough. Many of them gratefully re-membered that their own lives had been saved by blood plasma during the war, and here was Lawson veterans' hospital ap-pealing for blood donors. All 24, with Purple Hearts shin-ing on their Jackets, lined up at the hospital to give blood. lS J , ,,, .w. A .w.v. CANAL ZONE GETS JETS . . . U. S. air force's; 3Gth fighter group, one of the defense units for the Panama Canal zone, has completed its conversion from the wartime P-4- 7 aircraft to P-8- 0 Shooting Stars. These P-8- are shown en route to their home station, Howard air force base in the canal zone, where they will become an integral part of the canal's defense system. Ira "it AGE OF INNOCENCE . . . Even if four-year-o- ld Carol Ann Coulon of Miami had never seen a Flor-ida orange she still would be plenty cute. Her own state thought so, too, because she won the "Little Miss Florida" contest. Proud Son Sees Widowed Mother In Cap and Gown ITHACA, N. Y. When the library tower chimes at Cornell university peeled forth their congratulations to mid-yea- r graduates, Jonathan Hartwell Harwood III, aged 4, near burst with pride. Among the young women in aca-demic robes was his mother, Vir-ginia Oake Harwood. Few fellows have the privilege of seeing their mothers graduate from college. Jonny doesn't know it, but he was the chief reason why his mother finished her course in the college of home economics. Jonny's father fought In the invasion of Normandy, June 6, 1944; and he never came back. Jonny's dad graduated from Cor-nell, too in 1942. And his mother, whose parents live in Lockport, N. Y., left school in her sophomore year to marry him. They didn't have much time together just a couple of summers while dad was training at Fort Bragg. Then he was sent to England to train as a Ranger and was made a captain. Then came . . . "People thought I was crazy when I decided to take my year-old son to Ithaca with me in the fall of 1945 and continue col-lege," Mrs. Harwood admits. "May-be I was a little crazy. But I had to have something to do something to occupy my time and my mind. I could be a better mother to Jon-ny, I felt, if I graduated from col-lege and was prepared to earn my living." The pension and insurance money made it possible for them to rent a small Ithaca apartment and live in modest comfort. And Jonny went to Cornell, too. Jonny attend-ed the college's nursery school. He also will be graduated this year from nursery school to kindergar-ten. VV" " ., in. iprn... "" in n B I j ' . ' BIG JIM MEETS HIS MATCH . . . James E. "Big Jim" Folsom, governor of Alabama with aspirations toward the presidency, found a man his size when he entered the conference room for the closed session of the southern governors' conference. He was surpassed in physique by Capt. Reid Clifton of the Florida highway patrol, whose 305 pounds and 6 feet 6 inches overshadowed the Alabama governor's 250 pounds and 6 feet 8 inches. NEW BILLS FOR OLD . . . Rep. Frank L. Sundstrom (Rep., N. J.) h?? submitted a bill calling for issuance of a new series of U. S. paper currency and cancellation and destruction of all existing pa-per bills. a .nn Lighthouse flier Quits Post Ma Are 'Tired' RKEY POINT, MD. Because tjare tired and she wants to ft," Mrs. Fannie Salter, the in lighthouse keeper on f bay' 8'Ven UP her ' d to be the only qualified 'jf for of her sex in the na-ff SaUer retired from a !,r ;t,as held for 23 years. She w; c"rge of the Turkey. Point f February 11, 1925, under p" rfTent fay Calvin Coolidge. ja ,r Jceeded her husband, who '4' - the keeper for three years . f Jps death. f 4k leave since last Septem- - jf woman light tender ex-- P f at "climbing the tower has Je fallen arches." k she has no definite plans I Puture, Mrs. Salter, who is li fs, insists that she will the water. Her immedi-j- r are to "just rest and catch png-delaye- visits with rela- - Sale of Loafing Space To Restore Old Plaza ALBUQUERQUE, N. M Appeal-ing to the weaker side of man, A-lbuquerque Historical society offered loafing privileges in the plaza in return for donations in a drive for funds to restore the old town plaza. Results were good, officials of the society report. The scale ran: For $8.55, one square foot of loafing space; for $10, plain and fancy loafing anywhere; for $17.10, loafing privileges with frills; for $25. your child's footprint in concrete, and for $50. your own footprint. tsms. v H 'f 'UP TO MARGARET' . . . Frank G. Handy, son of G. C. Handy, publisher of the Ypsilantl, Mich., Fress, was reported to be object of the' affections of Margaret Tru-man, daughter of the President. Said Handy: "If there Is any an-nouncement it will have to come from Marg.tret." - - HURDLES HIS OWN nAXDICAP . . . Maimed war veterans at Vaughan hospital in Chicago watch with new hope as Walter Bas-kovic- h, who lost a leg when he was a child, gives amazing demon-stration of high jumping. "If I can do it, so can you," Baskovich told the disabled vets. Show was presented by University of Chicago acro-theat-cr to illustrate how determination can overcome handicaps. i 1 if jets Stung Daily-D- ut It's His living When he finds a hungry commu-nity of mosquitoes, he covers his arm with insecticide and thrusts it in again, giving the insects another opportunity for a vicious bite on he must la-boriously his arm. Once again count the number of bites. Franklin is a laboratory, techni-cian for a local chemical company. The process is a test of the power of mosquito repellants. PJMORE.-Haro- ld J. Frank-- stung several times a da-y-jnakes his living by doing it, O'Vnto a cageenftiallielsd wthitrhusting 3,000 IT; After a minute he mu fS.u arm and counts f tL 7 total about 60. well " not, he repeats the J another cage until he I ""equired number of " 4 |