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Show THE BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH vfhl.Phillipr p 2f m " NEW CAR FOR THE PRESIDENT PRESIDENT TRUMAN is getting limousine with gold-plate- d gadgets, a writing desk, special upholstery and room for a high hat. If Harry is smart he will have a quick convertible railroad train platform at-tached and carry a spare soft hat. He was studying the budget when asked what color and be snapped without hesitation, "Anything but RED." The new presidential auto has everything including a horn which won't work when approaching Re-publicans. The bumpers wDl be inside the car. Where Harry needs 'em most especially if listening to advisers on Formosa policy. There will be extra leg room. (The President hasn't any more legs than when he took office. But anything can hap-pen these days.) (Ed, note.) Announcements say the fittings will "include vacuum bottle ar-rangements." This is to keep any-thing ice cold except a Fair Deal program and anything hot except a Hoover report. "There will be a gold-plate- d van-ity case," the description adds. Nonsense! Harry can't have soft-ened up that much. Another feature Is "pan-oramic visibility." Harry can see ahead with no more than the usual trouble he encoun-ters, and if Taft. Dewey or Hank Wallace are following be-hind be can watch them. Automatic transmission is in-cluded. The President will have no more trouble changing his speed traveling by automobile than when traveling by microphone. Then there is central point steer-ing, making it easier to turn in any direction, a great advantage in Washington today. The President hasn't been having any trouble in that respect, however. . There will be the latest non-ski- d tires, especially nseful when journeying through the slippery streets of a cold war and not at all bad when the car sinks up to the hubs some-where between Chiang Kai-she- k an.d G.en.era.l Mao. The automobile desk will be nifty and helpful, but in a luxur-ious car like that Harry is going to feel awfully queer writing a plank about a balanc.ed..budget. Other features include wide seats, giving ample room for the Pres-ident, his military aid and all the medals; hydraulic brakes to bring the car to a full stop between the point of a decision to act in a coal strike and the point where he gets a frown from John L. Lewis; and special shock absorbers to take up the recoil if he hits a depression in the road or in,.the..business outlook. The extra headroom for a high hat may be a mistake. The Repub-licans can make great campaign stuff out of that. Change the order to a car with regulation headroom, Harry! When a man steps out of a car wearing a silk hat today, the more battered.it.i.s the better. Send my case straight to the jury. Spare me not a hostile twist; Call in anyone to help me ... But, please, N. O PSYCHIATRIST In Reno a young woman let her horse drop silver dollars on a wheel and played as directed. She won. Up to the time the horse con-cluded it wasn.'t..hay. Three-fourth- s of the national budget now goes for interest on past wars and defenses in future ones. Civilization is rapidly reach-ing a point where it can just say "Shoot the roll on more trouble, win, place and show." The Maharajah of Baroda is selling his 7 de luxe airplane because he can't afford the luxury any more. He has been cut to $570,000 a year. It's a terrible strug-gle to make both safety deposil vaults meet. YE GOTHAM BUGLE & BANNER Seeing those big cruisers being moved from the motorboat show reminded ye ed of the time he bought a at the show and. nervously following its removal across town in a blizzard, saw it wedged between the elevated rail-road and a taxi . . That's how nervous breakdowns are born: Love;i Thomas is still on crutches bui retains the spirit of youth. 3 Garden 3 Sequence fSa By Richard H1U Wilkinson DREAMED a dream. BRYANT in a garden. A beau-tiful girl sat on a white marble bench, and smiled at him across a pond filled with goldfish and pond lilies. Brieht sunshine filtered down through shade trees and re-flected the gold I I in the girl's hair. 3 Minute Bryant knew Fir-tin- that- - according to I al good dreamSi he was supposed to do something possibly to walk around the pool and bow gallantly before the girl. He began to wonder if he didn't look somewhat like an idiot stand-ing there. It was then that he heard foot-steps on the flagstone path that connected the garden with the wide, screened-i- n porch of the house. He looked up to find Laura, his sister, coming into the garden. He was glad that Laura had come, f'nr Laura knew all about dreams nd could tell him what to do. "Bryai.i!" Laura exclaimed, stopping on the pool's edge, and looking from him to the girl, "whatever in the world are you standing here for? Why, you're positively rude. Doris must think my brother Is stupid!" Oh, yes, that was it. It was all working out fine now. Laura had asked her college roommate, Doris LaPlante, down for the week-end- . Of course, that was she. How stu-pid of him. So Bryant walked around the pool and was introduced. He looked deep into the twin black pools that were Doris' eyes, and apologized. His voice sounded odd, but that, of course, was because he was think-ing that here was the girl he had been waiting for. Then he almost groaned aloud. Doris had looked up and said it was quite all right and she really should have introduced herself, but he added so much to the scene, standing over there so straight and silent. It was the sound of her voice that made Bryant groan; for he remembered that it was all a dream and that Doris would soon be gone. Then suddenly it was night, and they were once more in the garden. There was a full moon and a gentle breeze and music drifting down on the still air from somewhere back of the marble bench. A week, two weeks, had gone by Bryant wasn't sure which since the first meeting in the garden. He had a dim recollec-tion that they were glorious weeks of riding and golfing and swimming and dancing all with Doris. TT WAS ONLY OCCASIONALLY now that Bryant remembered it was all a dream. The dread of waking up didn't affect him quite so poignantly. That is to say, it didn't affect him until this night when they were alone in the gar-den. Then he was seized with a sudden panicky sensation. And so quite abruptly Bryant turned and said without prelimin- - ::. : XVV.X......v."V.AV.'.v..... v J i Bryant slowly put his arm about her slim shoulders. aries: "Doris, darling, I love you. I know this is all a dream, there-fore I'm telling you now before I wake up. I've waited all my life for such a girl as you. It seems cruel that you'd come to me only in a dream." And Doris turned up her face to his, with the moon making shad-ows of her eyes, and said: "I love you, too, Bryant, and I'm glad you waited for me. I hardly know what I would have done had I dis-covered you belonged to some one else." Bryant thought this over and de-cided that the dream had turned out just the way he would have ordered. He'd better wake himself up, he thought, before he did something to spoil it. But before he could pinch himself, which was the conventional way of waking oneself from a dream, Doris laid her head on his shoulder. Bryant looked down at the gold- en head. "Doris," he said brokenly, "this is all a dream, and in a min-ute you'll be gone and I'll find my-self alone. You're not real." But Doris laughed softly, and snuggled closer. Bryant slowly put his arm about her slim shoul-ders. She was there, close against him. Her lips were upturned, and as Bryant bent to kiss them he knew that when again he opened his eyes, she'd still be there-a- nc would always be there. CLASSIF DEPART BUSINESS & invej, KKOWINO 7 Good location. New h,i.' quarters. : Main BtreM.Ji Roll DevMopeiTrOvTJrH 8 Hltlh Gloss Pri" FOX STUDIO". ' Sfj Buy U.S. Savings I , - . uuun ; j iahing too! Try deli. ( I ciout oven-poppe- d Rice I Krispiea. America's fa- - .1 vorite ready-to-e- rica '1 ! cereal. Cornea in Regu. s J lar and Large nzt I packages. j lWr For Little Fel With Big Col f xw- - fi ; i " L Mother . . . the best-ta- d remedy you can use to rt. tress of his cold is wanrj forting Vicks VapoRub. 1 1 It on at bedtime, it fK while the child sleeps! t' by morning the worst m his cold are gone. Try III one and only Vicks &m One application: MAKES FALSE TEEI for the life of your II roof platei are loose and slip them for instant, permanent coml brtmma Flasti-Line- r strips. Lar sir or lower plate ... bite c :d it mol. HardtHS for laiting fit and ctmfort i rubber plates, Brimms HUsti-Lin-results from six months to a rev Endi forever mesa snd bother ol applications that last a few hourson slipping, rocking plates and sort anything. Talk freely. Enjoy the cm sands of people all over the cow with Brimaa Plasi-Line- ' Easy to kVflt or Tighten Foist letHiffi Tasteless, odorless, harmless to rt , plates. Can be removed as per aiterol say: "Note can tut anything, K. guaranltt.tl.2i for liner for onte" for both plates At your drua Holt, RELIEF AT If ForYour COl Creomulsion relieves prompt it goes right to the seatoltl( to help loosen and expel phlegm and aid nature toflj heal raw, tender, inflamed mucous membranes. Tell youn.1 to sell you a bottle of Crf with the understanding yoojV the way it quickly ll'' or you are to have your 010 CREOMULS for Coughs.ChestColds WNU W LUMDAC TORMB! SORETONE Liniffl Heating Pad Ac Gives Quick R To set quick, gentle relief f'Oijfe lumbago, muscle nd back fnli nd exposure, use Soreione l"""; this special purpose. j Contain special rubefacient Wr ng like glowing warmth from Fresh blood it attracted to iupert Soretone standi out for not delighted, money back. 50. '. . ,J Try Soretone .for Athlete 1 type of common fungi on 'nJ-- Omt ti Ik, US momctt mmtt bt By INEZ GERHARD WHEN RONNIE ALCORN was 13 was sent to reform school; he says it was the first time he slept in a cleiin bed or had enough to eat. That was in 1932. It was his ambition to produce motion pic-tures "Johnny Holiday", made at that same reform school, is his first ff JL RONNIE ALCORN one, and he plans eight more, for United Artists release. His story is fantastic, that of an under-privileged boy born to be a success (he had made his first million by the time he was 30) who took plenty of hard knocks on the way to achieving it. He has a second am-bitionto help as many under-privileged boys as possible; he has already done a terrific job at it. We're always hearing about movie stars who dash from one set to another on a bicycle, when work-ing in two pictures. And about radio performers who leap from studio to studio in taxis. But Kent Smith has out-don- e them all. For a week he commuted daily by plane between Hollywood and San Francisco, to do a stage role and finish a picture. His latest is "My Foolish Heart." Vera Vague may sound dumb as a man-chasin- g comedienne on the air at present on Jim-my Durante's program on NBC but away from the radio Vera, otherwise Barbara Jo Al-len, can talk for hours about orchids, her two hothouses, and the third one she's building During the Christmas holidays her white orchids retailed In New York for $215 apiece. Not bad! Those occasional off-ke- y solos by "Dexter" represent real artis-tic hardship for Sam Edwards, who , plays the role. He started his ca-reer as i singer, and has to battle his professional training when he makes those tuneless squeaks. Teresa Wright Invited her hus-band, Niven Busch, to visit her on the set when she did some torrid love scenes with Marlon Brando for "The Men". He stalked out. blushing. But Robert Cummings' wife was present when he made love scenes with Lizabeth Scott and Diana Lynn for "Paid in Full," time after time, and nobody was the least bit embarrassed by the routine. Judy Holliday was so good in the play "Born Yesterday" that it was hard to imagine anyone else In the screen version, but during the three years of disagreement over terms it looked as if any one of eight other actresses would get the role. And how they all wanted it! But after Harry Conn, of Co-lumbia, saw her In "Adam's Rib" he gave her the contract she want-ed. Jan Sterling was one of the dis-appointed eight. However, she has signed a new Paramount contract, and in her first picture, "Union Station", plays a gangster's girl, a role said to be like the one she'd have had in "Born Yesterday". Mercedes McCambrldge is an-other actress who can have just about anything she wants in Hollywood. Radio and stage ex-perience prepared her for her screen debut in "AH the King's Men", in which she gives a sensational performance. If Gertrude Berg ever decides to turn talent scout, she can point out that the following stars all played roles on "The Goldbergs" before they became names John Gar-field, Paul Stewart, Joseph Cotten, Marjorie Main, Richard Widmark, Van Heflin, Shirley Booth, Martin Gabel and Sam Wanamaker. And a lot of others, too numerous to mention. ODDS AND ENDS ... It looks as if Steve Cochran would be the screen's next bad man with the ladies; in "Storm Signal" he beats up Ginger Rogers and Doris Day . The United States supreme court will be asked to strike down motion picture censorship as a violation of the Constitution . . . Julia Faye, Hedy Lamarr's slave in "Samson and Delilah", has had plenty of experience in slave roles; she'd played 10 different ones, the first in 1917. RgBy JIM RHODYFH Fish Ponds It is a cheering note to anglers that reports from most states of the nation Indicate that farm fish ponds are growing rapidly in num-- I ber. This is encouraging news be- - cause of the g areas of good fishing as heavily-fishe- d waters become unable to replenish stocks rapidly enough to meet ang-ler demands, and state conserva-vatio- n agencies also meet Increas-ing difficulties in that respect. Whether the farmer Is a con-firmed angler or not, a fish pond should have an Important place in his farming plans. First, such ponds are nfttlmes necessary for stock watering purposes, or to con-serve water for other uses. Sec-ondly, the farmer ran make quite a little revenue for himself by in-telligent handling of a farm fish pond program, as anglers are re-quired to pay from 25 cents to $1 a day for fishing privileges, de-pending on the degree of sport or pounds of creel the angler may ex-pect for his money. In some sections of the na-tion, oommerrlal fish ponds, built either through rommer-ela- l vision of their owners, or because of a personal love for the sport of angling, are yield-ing Important financial returns on the investment ventured. Getting back to an earlier point. In spite of the importance of honk and line fishing, the amount of waters suitable for fishing has de-creased as the pressure of civiliza-tion constantly destroys fish habi-tat. With the gradual Introduction of artificial Impoundments to pro-vide adequate water for cattle and other stock, new habitat was cre-ated for fish. Now farm fish ponds have become of great Importance from the point of view of anglers. Farm fish ponds can be of al-most anv size for storking pur-poses. But the average will be found to he frnm one to five and one-hn- !f nrres Ponds as small as one-ounrt-nrrp can be made to pro-diir- e fkh in worthwhile nuantities If nronrrly managed and treated with eornmerelal fertilizers to keep tin the level of plant and small ani-m- i life that the fish must have for food Ponds should he stocked with anerle 0f fsh that will ma In-fill a natural bailee between prey and pred.i'ir snerles. Blueirllls, whh. iit'lize the In-sert and smntl animal life of ponds, are the prey species, and largemouth bass are the predator species. If the proper balance in weight and number of these two species can be maintained, maximum pro-duction of fish may be expected. In fact, this means that the ponds must be heavily fished by anglers to prevent overpopulation and stunted growth. "Fish farmers" can expect re-turns of 50 to 100 pounds of fish per acre in a natural pond, and up to 300 pounds in a fertilized pond. This Is a greater production of food per acre than could be realized from beef on ad-jacent land, which would come to about 150 pounds per acre. The production of one pound of fish in a fertilized pond might cost six to eight cents, but in terms of food and recreation this Is con-sidered as an insignificantly small cost. Not every pond can be turned into a fish pond. It takes special planning or construction. Silt from erosion can make a small pond untenable for fish. And. while ponds may be as shallow as three feet in the south, they must be from six to 15 feet deep in the north to prevent winter killing of fish. AAA Whooping Cranes According to reports, four young whooping cranes returned with 29 adults to their wintering ground in Texas, this giving the big white birds a little headway in their fight against extinction. The continental population of these birds now stands at 36, in-cluding two captive birds at the Arkansas wildlife refuge on the east coast of Texas, and one in Louisiana. In 1942. the whooping cranes were down to 22 birds. The glow rise in numbers is attributed by the National Audubon Society to increased protection on their win-tering grounds and less shooting. This is believed to have resulted from the widespread publicity of the need for the birds' protection along their migration routes. AAA New DtcJc Stamp A pair of trumpeter swans fly-ing over the Red Rock Lakes area of Montana will be depicted on the 1950-5- 1 duck stamp A sketch of the birds by artist Walter A. Weber of Vienna. Va . was picked by a group of waterfowl experts as the winner of the 17th annual duck stamp competition. It will appear on the stamps, the first of which is to be issued July 1, this year. Stamps are required of all hunters of waterfowl. j WAHONEY ", jf. HAS SPENT NINE BEND-SJ- L v r CVE" A PiGSKlN FOR THET ...VlrWX. V CHICAGO BEARS, MOST OF THEM ' 'lU 4 f W LOOKING INTO Q8 SID UXKMANS I."5 jT Jr J '.. W FACE UPSIDE DCWN. HE HAS MADE f ' r ' 4 7 TIMES AND ONCE K4 f l- -"" XaX BECAME A BROKEN FIELD fiUtfCR J I WHEN. IN I04O, HE SNAGGED A f- -r 1 V Jl WASHINGTON FWSS AND SCOOTED KW Wi Z 24 YAR0S FOR A TOUCHDOWN J '''IP WHAT THRreHET jlWf uZJZS I BOXING CHAMPIONS' NAMES BE- - 7 egST GIN WITH 'JAMES J?' saa jJ3r 'xpooovag Ixaaaco SPORT LIGHT : j i Luke Easter Eyes Babe's Record By GRANTLAND RICE THOSE INTERESTED in the slug-gin- g side of baseball should now turn to the West coast Ted Wi-lliams came up from San Diego but they have two younger men in-habiting the Paci-fic's slope who may pick most of the laurel this new sea-son. One is Ralph Kiner of the Pitts-burgh Pirates and the other is Luke TTnstpr uiih 1 h gives the Pacific a big edge in long-distance wallopers. They will have most of the crop. Give DLMag 130 games and he may outslug them all. Big Coast Game Red Blaik'a Army team is headed for the West coast next fall to start an entanglement with Stanford. They are already rating this one of the big games of the 1950 season. There's pretty fair reason for this rating. With Pollard, a Los Angeles pro-duct, playing in Army's backfield, the West coast experts figure Army will have one of the star backs of the season. At least he made a big name in a hurry at Loyola, where he played only a year before head-ing for the far-awa- y banks of the Hudson. I've heard nothing but boosts for the la halfback. Add Follard to Bob Blaik, Stephen-son and Cain and you get one of the best backflclds Army ever sent into a football melee. You can always bank on Red Blaik and his staff for a g, hard-hittin- g defensive pla-toon. So if the expected takes place, Army will again have one of the strong teams of the country possibly the strongest with so many veterans leaving Notre Dame. "But don't figure the 1950 Stan-- Grantland Rice Cleveland Indians. It so happens that Kiner has passed the mark twice. "Reaching the 60 mark Is a different story," Ralph tells you. "Hank Greenberg and Jimmy Foxx found that out, and both could hit the ball a long way. Once you get into the SO xonc, I guess you begin to overtry as the days begin to run out. The Babe never bothered. He just kept swinging." Kiner is still a young ballplayer. He should have his best hitting years on ahead. He takes good care of his physical fitness and he hag a workshop where he keeps the equip-ment needed to strengthen his grip and wrists. His ball club fell apart last year and this didn't help him a lot. Actually no one thinks about beat-ing the Babe's old mark of 60. It may happen some day as 58 has been tied twice and 56 has been reached on two occasions. Green-berg, Foxx, Hack Wilson and Kiner have been the four main challen-gers so far. Now Hank Greenberg enters Luke Easter, the San Diego giant, as another likely challenger. Easter is around six feet four, and weighs some 240 pounds. "Beyond that," Hank says, "he has what you might call a home run swing. I mean by that a full, free swing the type that Babe had, I believe Easter can hit the ball as bard as Ruth did and drive it just as far. He may not be able to do this as often, however. Easter will be a Cleve-land rookie and you can't ex-pect too much of him the first year. I believe his power will still win many a game for us and either bring Cleveland In as a pennant winner or at least one of the leading challengers. You can't afford to crawl too far out on the end of a limb for a rookie, but I'll go quite a dis-tance for Easter." As Ted Williams and Joe DiMag-gi-o are West coast entries, this ford squad will be easy for any-one," a Stanford grad said when the discussion came up. "Marchy Schwartz had a fine sophomore crop this last fall. All they needed was experience. They got plenty of that. Also I could say that Stan-ford's freshman team this last fall was the best in many years. Palo Alto will be packed with high-clas- s football players. This should be the best Stanford team since Clark Shaughnessy turned out the bunch that had Frankie Albert & Co. It will be big, fast and three-dee- And by the time of the Army game it will be well seasoned." Joe Louis and 1950 Just what plans Joe Louis has for the rest of 1950 is anybody's guess including Joe's. But you can en-ter one sure answer if Joe fights again, it will be a morbid spectacle that only the morbid in heart would care to see. In recent months Louis has been working beyond exhibition purposes to get back in shape. He has been doing road work of fair proportions and a certain amount of gymnasi-um boxine. H :50IX-- T - B Harold Arnett .QfejSIGN TRICK Vtf nk BENT NAILS DRIVEN tf ALHr ' lP CJS" INTO REVERSE SIDE - lWOFSIGN MAKE PRO- - --UOvrfi T DUCE SIGNS TO BE QM"",?-s- n HOOKED ON FENCE K&-- - EASILY CHANGEABLE. NAIL 3EN T TO TSL'1'5'" POPkM HOOK I CAN REFILLER pTl SMALL CONTAINERS WITH feS SPOUTS CAN BE REFILLED i FROM BOTTLES BY USING Xiff' CORK BORED FOR SPOUT. rtRsr!'' PRESS SPOUT TIGHTLY INTO . ,4rnBl7Si CORK , AND INVERT BOTTLE AND CONTAINER. PRESS MHrspaX SIDES OF CONTAINER TO FORCE iVrZ. AIR OUT AND DRAW FLUID IN. Ir ' |