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Show - - I T1IE BULLETIN. BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH By INEZ GERHARD pLORENCE FREEMAN has been playing prominent parts in radio dramas since her debut in 1335. Cur-rently she is helping to celebrate the first anniversary of "Wendy Warren and the News," in which of course, she is "Wendy," "A Woman of America," "Valiant Lady," "Aunt Jenny," "Young Widder Brown" that's a partial list of her assign-ment- s. She is a college graduate taught for a year before deciding to be an actress. In real life she is a clergyman's wife, has two daugh-ters, 7 and 9, and lives in New Jersey In a lovely old house which has just been remodelled with the active participation of the entire family. In the film based on the radio sketch, "Sorry, Wrong Number," Barbara Stanwyck is heiress to a drug fortune, so Edith Head tried BARBARA STANWYCK to imagine what the richest girl in the world would wear for a wedding dress, and Barbara wears it Since Rudd Weatherwax, owner-train- er of Lassie, announced during rehearsal of the "Lassie" show that she had had seven pups, he has been snowed under by reque'sts for a puppy. One already has been given to Claude Jarman, the youngster who is with Lassie in the film, "Sun in the Morn-ing." Nobody can say that Ray Mil-lan- d won't put his shoulder to the wheel when he's asked to. During a week's visit hi New York he ap-peared on five radio shows to help advertise and exploit his new picture, "So Evil My Love." One of the best of "The Big Story" broadcasts was the recent one based on material supplied by Bill Pinney of Pensacola, Fla., Journal. It drama-tized the police reporter's trapping of the perpetrator of a crime that endangered the lives of 250 inno-cent persons. Pinney received a $500 award from the program's sponsor. Carmen Cavalerro has hit on something new for his Tuesday NBC broadcasts. A psychiatrist has been engaged to make sure the musical programs are relaxing, as the spon-sor ordered. A week beforehand, each program is tried out on three different groups at a veterans' hos-pital. Sounds like a bid for pub-licity, but Carmen and the doctor say It's true. Four members of Hollywood's most exclusive club, the John Ford Honorary Stock company, appear in Ford's "Fort Apache." To be eligible, aetors must have been In pictures at least 20 years. The roster Includes Maurice Cos-te- ll o, noot Gibson, Frank Mayo and J. Farrell MacDonald, who were stars when Clark Gable was felling trees and Dot Lamour was an elevator girl. Peggy Ann Garner, made famous by "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn," is now 17 and gets her first grown-up role in Eagle Lion's "The Big Cat." Columbia will film the highlights In the career of columnist-commentat- Drew Pearson in a flm tentatively titled "The Washington Story." He will narrate and appear in important sequences. Odds and Ends . . . Warner Baxter kisses his 100th leading lady in Co-lumbia's "Gentleman from Nowhere and his leading lady. Fay Baker, gets kissed by her first film leading man . . . Hollywood reports that Blng Crosby has been advised to lay off television for at least one more year . . . "Leonard SHIman New Faces," on NBC Thursday eve-nings, is a good show-a- nd, as an added attraction, has no master or ceremonies. Mary Rolfe, Henry's sister on The Aldrich .Family." ii very Lyle Bettge . happy. Her husband. months in Chi is home after four and a cago in "John Loves Mary for Cape Cod vacation Is scheduled the summer. Elliott Lewis has been deluged he did the with "gag gifts" since of narration of the voire feature "The Winner ..Circle the horse in One wag even sent him a bag of oat collect. ( . I ) A WI B'. - "s, wr, dkj4UffcfaUiM . . . resident hss named James Grover McDonald of Bronxvllle, N. Y the first special represent t've of the U. S. to head the American mission to Israel. ld recently has been a mem-D- er of the Anglo-Americ- com-mission of inquiry on Palestine. Poultry or Play House h fir v I. j Tfs ! s r TN RESPONSE to many who i- have- - requested information that would simplify building a small, general purpose backyard house, I designed the unit illus-trated herewith. It can be built 4 feet by 8 teet. 8 feet by 8 feet, 8 feet by 13 feet, or any num-ber of additional length units. To conserve lumber, Us outside sheathing consists ol asbestos and ce- -' ment board, available at your local lum-ber yard. Patterns are supplied for cutting the anKlei of each piece of lumber. User merely cuts lumber according to lenKth' each "pattern piece indicates, saws and assembles. The platform, back, front and aules are first built as Individual sections, then nailed together. Complete list of ma-terials, step by step instructions, num-bered assembly Illustrations included. Send Ml renin fur .1'nttern No. 51 to Kasl Built Pattern Co., Dept. W, Pleasant. ville. N. V. 1 UnJf ra H m rm l ' .Nightdress thing for hot summer "lovely, well fitting nlght- - '.row lace or ruffle trim-- J 'inipplique of pansles to ff , m your favorite color. pastel In rayon satin or ' 'dotted swiss. j . II j complete cutting pattern, "sand 18 Included, tracing , chart for the embroidery 'J Tell Nightgown (Pattern 51 (cents In coin, TOUR ' iDDBESS and PATTERN . I A rntaS NEEDTEWORK itui sl chiciKo ;, ill. it cents for Pattern. 'I "It truly is a Laxative Food" "Anyone troubled with constipation as I was, should try en ting kei.logg's aix-dra-n regularly. It bus done m no much good!" Mrs. Henry Wit-kows- Kennywood, Pa. It your diet lacks the bulk k.- - v.v you need for reg- - 4j";3W- - ular elimination, if' eat an ounce of S , x,1 kellogg's ALL- - ffilfj bran every day - r 1 In milk and , sS drink plenty of f11- - r water. If not a LS aatisfied after Vr ten days trial, ' send empty carton to Kellogg Co., Battle Creek, Mich., and get Doublb TfouR money back. Order keixogq'sj all-bra- n today. Yodora fj checks Nft) perspiration l odor ssmM Made with a jao cream bat. Yodora is actually toothing to normal skins. I No harsh chemicals or irritating salts. Won't harm akin or clothing. Stay$ soft and creamy, never gets grainy. Try gentl Yodora -s- o" the wonderful difference! lemon in a glass of 'ffllaken first thing on aris- ta most people need to "Jipt, normal elimination. toiMMativti that irritate e tract and impair nutri-:- b in water is good for you! "of Americans have taken ''Nth-a- mi generations we recommended them. ri in vitamin C; supply wountsof Biand P. They 'W digestion. Sor iour, lemon in water jeshmg tang -- dears the "you up. It's not a helps your sys-Tr- y it 10 day "NI4 SUNKSI UMONS Invest in Your Country Buy U. S. Savings Bonds! Relieves Distress ol MONTHLY mm k tBtiNiSSIl Also Helps Build Up Red Blood! Do female functional periodic dis-turbances make you suffer pain, feel to nerwoui, irritable at such times? Then try Lydla E. Plnkham'a TABLETS to relieve such symptoms. Plnkham'a Tablets are also very effective to help build up red blood In simple anemia. Lydia E. Pinkham's TAEtCTS COMFORT 'oro-cae- d "SUFFERERS you switch 'Tfiey-lalJli- r I'ills. They "Foin (fl! Umul' kidney action. itHi ?ew,k"lny-bUddr- ) SS2JIW1,V 1 "le""J fin t cu,r5r. IOUULE YOUB And Your Strength and , Energy Is Below Par It mtj b eauad by disorder ol kid-ti- ej fuoctloo that permits poisonous nitt to accumulate. For truly many people (eel tired, weak and miserable wtaeo the kidneys fall to remore eicees acids and otbar waste matter from the blood Yoo may suffer nagglnt backache, rbeumatle pains, headaches, dizxineea, jtettlnt up nights, leg pains, swelling. Sometimes (requent sod scanty urina-tion with smarting and burning Is an-other eign that something is wrooi with the kidneys or bladder. There should be no doobt that prompt treatment is wiser than oegleet. te Dean' PilU. It tt better to rely on s medicine that has won countrywide ap- - Eroval than on eomethlng leea favorably Doan's have been tried sad test-ed many years Are st all drug stores. Get Doon today V make peopIe (fcSl.0n,y m can 1 i ' ;f r- -r u v , f vr ' ' -it 11j? nil i) CONVENTION CLEAN-U- OLD STYLE ... The man who made the cleanest sweep of them all at the Republican national convention In Philadelphia comes up the aisle behind a broom. By this time the last weary delegate bad left the ball, the emotional sprees marking the naming of seven aspirants to the Republican nomination had ended and the dead trappings of the hectic nominating and voting demon-strations littered the aisles and corridors. Serrrtarira Have "Good Chance" It Is reasoned that well trained and well groomed secretaries have excellent marriage prospects be-cause they work so closely with men. Secretaries need not dress ex-pensively, like show girls, to Im-press an employer but they should ' be crisp looking at all times. To be avoided are. glaring nail polish, short sleeves, chewing Rum, skimpy skirts, seductive necklines, high heels and Jewelry that jangles, says the director of a secretarial school. a i! OBJECTOR . . . James D. Peck of New York City chained him-self to a railing in the White House near the East room in dramatic protest against the re-cently passed draft law. y ' 3 MINE WORKERS WIN PAY BOOST . . . John L. Lewis was In again-Aft- er a series of rocky conferences he and the soft coal mine operators announced a new 1948 wage contract providing a dollar-a-da- y pay in-crease for 400,000 miners. The agreement, which became effective July 1, also hikes the Industry's contribution to the UMW wel-fare fund to 20 cents a ton. With Lewis here are James Owens (left), UMW secretary-treasure- r, and Thomas Kennedy, UMW vice president. ' V A " ' x J 1 ' fiA 'J f " ' L r ffwrnatti NOT NOMINATED ... One of the several men who didn't get the GOP presidential nomination they wanted was Carl C. Coun- - tryman, poet and lecturer. Countryman cam-paigned assiduously for months under the slogan "Countryman for his countrymen, his country-men for Countryman." ifiVood J fv U. S. a woodworking Industries ;to a wood from the vast tie Belgian Congo known i" because they are unable timber at 4e countries largest tlm-ilrea- dy has begun large-crtatio- ns of the wood that with American oak. The )ii Importing about 6,500,-- if Korlna a month. illy to obtain hlgh-ib- er In the United States on two things lack of a serration scheme and rap-- i of the woodworking In- - IS only fitting that the heavy-weight championship of the world was decided between two Negroes, since most of the better fighters In the last few years have belonged to the Negro race. I might mention Joe Louis, Joe Walcott, Ray Robin-son, Ike Williams, Ezzard Charles, Beau Jack and a few others. The only two white entries I can think of now who belong around the top are Tony Zale and Gus Lesnevich. "Why is this?" I asked a well-know- n trainer. "Here's the trouble," he said. "Most of the white fighters are lazy or yellow. They won't train and they can't take it." This is a minor detail that the white section might consider. Re-member this: "They won't train and they can't take it." Good white fighters have become about as scarce as the extinct dodo. Zale and Lesnevich are exceptions. So is Willie Pep. Outside of Zale, Pep and Lesne-vich, most of the white fighters that I know are crude, lazy and in-competent Thry dislike the train-ing routine or, like Rocky Grail-an- o, they won't learn their trade how to box. "A right hand will do It." was Rocky's answer. Only It didn't Zale is a professional. Graziano isn't He never will be, except on the financial side. Graziano wUl never be the pro that Zale Is. "Strictly a pro," Francis AlbertantI says of Zale. "Graziano? Maybe a scmipro. But never a pro." Citation's Coals Unless something of a harsh phy-sical nature happens to Calumet's Citation, he is almost certain to reach two coveted goals 1. To finish the high-mone- y win-ner of all time above one million dollars in total purses. 2. To be ranked as the top horse of all time rated definitely above Man o' War. There is little doubt of his pass-ing the one million dollar mark un-less he breaks a leg or is badly in-jured. The Calumet star already has slipped by the $544,000 mark, and he is just warming up with such stakes as the Arlington Classic in Chicago and the $100,000 Interna-tional Gold Cup race, at Belmont on his list There is more than $500,000 In big stake purses left on the '43 schedule and Citation is still a young three-year-ol- d. There will be much baying and braying among many members of the old gnard In placing any horse above Man o' War. But don't for-get two things that Man o' War ceased firing as a three-year-o- ld and that Man o' War never won a handicap race. He never ran against older horses except Sir Barton who, at the time, was bad-ly crippled. Man o' War was a great race horse. But the big test comes in the handi-cap division where you might give away weight where you must carry from 130 to 140 pounds to prove your place. There is no reason to believe Man o War couldn't have carried this weight Citation already has run against older horses and beaten them. Two of these were Armed and Buzfuz in the Seminole handicap. Citation can finish his three-year-ol- d career on even terms with Man o War, getting none the best of things. But If he goes on from there into the handicap division to meet older horses, he is almost sure to finish as the greatest race horse this country ever has known. It Is always just as well to wait until a competitor has at least reached the stretch of his career be-fore he is finally judged and placed. Twenty-Gam-e Pitchers How many pitchers, on the winning side, will there be this season? The crop will be extremely thin. When the 1948 season opened, the leading probabilities included Black-wel- l, Newhauser, Feller, Lemon, Reynolds, Dobson, Munger, Marchll-do- h, Trout Sain, Spahn, Jansen and Branca. I could mention one or two others. How many of these will make it? Blackwell and Feller, two of the favored sons, certainly two of the best are out of it unless they fin-ish like a brace of Citations. Blackwell with a bad arm, has three victories out of eight starts. At this time last year Ewell, the lone pine, was on his way to 16 straight. Feller has been battling to break even. It might also be noted that Feller has been driven from the field of glory seven times, at least In less than two months. Hal Newhouser drew the roughest start of the bunch, losing four of his first five games. But the scrappy and skillful Tiger put on a hot ral-ly and proceeded to win seven In a row. He still has an outside chance to reach the olive crowned circle. Red Munger of the Cadinals has been one of the season's major dis-appointments. Picked as a winner, big, strong and fast the ex-ar-officer has been below par most of the year. "Yv r " f 1 I ' -- J Vtji - - : '111 : & ?ft: - Y C3 . fn Pwc: te&&A jp 1 1 Y4 - JM pwt JJr A t ' ( "j a "yt jj I rY lfr WiM VA --Y- 14 vi IUJ i fYV , . Yfi S i :i COMING IN OUT OF THE DRAFT . . . The race was on. Passage by congress of the peacetime draft bill brought a rush of youths within the susceptible age group to join national guard and reserve units throughout the nation. One provision of the bill exempts members of the national guard or active reserve groups from service in the armed forces. L " ill ' - - - -- ia BASLBAWL . . . Although he's not good for any paid admis-sions, the Pittsburgh Tirates have no more loyal rooter than this chimpanzee at the Highland Park xoo who sports a Pirate cap. r W r jjtf&Kz'-- " PERMANENT ... Mrs. Martha Jane Thompson of Valencia, Pa., recent turned 100, la cor, in"rd that a woman shou.d try to look her best at any age. S. wave. She she gut a permanent ,ay, she is opposed to atawlf, i CT r va. Su rWA 'n,r lAtf ilalfalaW Mlisi mfflTv firifiHiinfif aaairfiif ii TWO LITTLE OPTIMISTS FROM EUROPE . . . Janice Hermanson, 2, and Emmi Mattersich, 5, of Norway and Austria respectively sit hope-fully on a rock near Rye, N. Y., and watch their fishing lines with In-terest, confident that any day now they might get a bite. They were two of a group of immigrant children wbo enjoyed a boating party and picnio given them by the Overseas Aid-Unit- Nations Appeal tor Children re-lief organization. |