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Show ' THE BULLETIN. BINKIIAM CANYON. UTAH TcilJS 1 ( tin m, if iiti. .au MaLj BOSS SnE-NAZ- I . . . Although pre-sumed dead long ago, Frau Ger-trude Scholtz-Klin- k, head of the women's branch of the Nazi party in Germany, turned out to be very much alive. She was seized by U. S. agents in French sone of Germany. Releaa.d by WNU Faaturea. By INEZ GERHARD MacLAUGHLlN, "Qr. DON Brent" of "Road of Life," is an ex-rolli- stone who has gathered plenty of moss. At the age of ten he had cone to nine schools, m almost is many states; by the time he finished college he had attended four universities. His radio roles range from cowboy to district attorney to famous doctor - but his trade ca-reer includes working In a goldfish- - DON MacLAUGnLIN ery, acting as farm hand, factory time keeper, hotel clerk, deckhand on a freighter, English teacher and writer. Clifton Webb, famous as dancer In Broadway shows before anyone knew he could act, has made his name in pictures as an actor. But he returns briefly to dancing in "Sit-ting Pretty," to do a rhumba with Maureen O'Hara. From eight to nine, EST. Sunday nights on ABC that's the time to sit by the phone and listen to "Stop the Music," the big new show whose prizes are all for home audience par-ticipants. Name the tune Just played by Harry Salter's orchestra and you win something worth at least $250. Then name the more difficult "mys-tery tune" and fabulous gifts will pour in. Switchboard operators pick names at random from all over the country. The historic 1936 Olympic games are presented in "Kings of the Olym- - pics," recently released by United Artists. Originally comprising 24,-0- 00 feet of film, it was acquired from the alien property custodian by Lonid Klpnis of Westport Interna-tional, then edited, from the work of 600 cameramen. Hitler presided over the games, the last before the war. Many an actress Constance Bennett, Claire Trevor and Kay Francis, for example can't scream satisfactorily. Lauren Bacall can, not only for herself, but for others. She was on the "Key Largo" set when Miss Trevor had to do a screaming scene, and let go with a sample that startled Humphrey Bo-ga- rt and John Huston. So you'll hear her screams, not Claire's. You probably have heard Arthur Godfrey singing "The Thousand Islands Song." Well. Mayor Mitchell of Alexandria, N. Y., feels that Ar-thur has done so much for the Thou-sand Islands that he's given him one! Three of the country's leading disc jockeys, Dave Garroway, Jack Eigen and Peter Potter, will be fea-tured in Columbia's "I 'Surren-der, Dear," with Gloria Jean and David Street. Don McGuire has the comedy lead. Norman Brokenshire did the first radio interview with movie stars-Dou- glas Fairbanks and Mary Pick-for- d; still recalls how she fainted away, from mike fright. He is cred-ited with a lot of radio firsts orig-inating the daily serial style of pro-gram, doing the first philosophical show, etc. He now is climbing to the top again, with "Theatre Guild on the Air" and two NBC morning pro-grams. The first Hollywood producer to add a helicopter to his standard studio equipment is Samuel Gold-wy- It will be fitted with a special gyro camera mount, to which a regular camera will be affixed. Goldwyn predicts that it may open entirely new techniques in film pro-duction, largely replacing the over-head crane and making advances in various shots possible. Warner Bros, will send a camera crew special to New York, Chicago and Rio de Janiero for special back-grounds for "The Fountainhead " Gary Cooper will star in the film version of the popular novel; King Vidor will direct. ' ODDS AND ENDS Ronald Col-ma- n served notice that he will do no guest appearances other than on the lack Benny show. . . . Frank Sinatra uuhdrew h ICC application for a permit to build a radio station at Palm Springs. The nwM Enlish-soun- d ,,ig Englishmen on "The Whistler" an Usually played by Tom Collins, whj I never been within 1,000 miles r. .l:,gl.nd. . . Victor Moore is now L Regular on the ),mmy Durante show. Lantors If ou Knew Susie." made her .creen how as . . Peasant U y TTwt the f)INE out on thai ' 'rated, ' ' y easy-HJ- : fn Table. Ideally 8uilJ porch, lawn or jA beg' size pattern simpW nOT decorating. I User " specified , .an"l ? fcv where pattern lndlcateTv or skill required. mVv I able (or use on l,"' I made from Pattern N,'' ' I- - Send 25c (or Peasant I 17 to EasMUId ment W. I'leasantvule, C Bran Muffins! 3 Marmalcde l( Easy Try 'emjorSial n i 3 tablespoons lcrl shortening j cup sugar Jtcir ' rtir 1 egg 15 jrn 1 cup Kellogg's HteJ All-Br- fcctl !s' cup milk tj so i Cream shortening uii oughly. Add egg and vl hr c in All-Br- and millil .(jj most of moisture U J r , flour with baking poief ' Is Add to first mlxtun c until combined. Filip; fcal pans one-ha- lf full Pits. , ful of marmalade intok f' . muffin. Bake In modensl f fvel (400P.) about 30 mlnil fus muffins, 2 '4 inches b muffins. LrjEai I Amarica's mott . f""7fT 'd I famous natural I f$ . p I luathra carta! I'K j -t- ry a bowlful fill J j tomorrow. leninl Hie juice of a lemon iif Wy water, when taken first 1 ing, is all that most p j Pr insure prompt, normal t 1 No mora horri laxolivti'4 in the digestive tract andirt s, tion ! Lemon in water is? OtnrationolAmari(i 1( o lemons for health andff T if doctors have recommrl f They are rich in vitaminj 4'" valuable amounts of Bii'f. Ji0 alkalinize; aid digestion. Jr. Not loo ihorp or our,leiw .1 has a refreshing tang- -f I mouth, wakes you up. X T purgative - simply nelf.r f terri7 regulate itself. TrjlMa. Hit CAUfOKNIA WtfJ f'.F 4af TRAP WITH SHjjW IHU FUR IS A IAIT ! JI ' GUARANTEED RESUUS IN tW J We ANIMAL W' fc tj RAIN OR SNOW. K ' L,, OJTAOS FREf AID. F 0 shur rutjJJL ox ton I " wwmwwti')rl' igxm $ i4 ill 1 o 1 I CAMPAIGNING FOR HENRY . . . Henry "'Sm L next U. S. president, but you can't convince his in the newly opened New 1 ork head getting together for a conference Quarters of the Wallace-for-Preside- nt movement are (left to right) campaigners Jo Davidson, famed sculptor; Rexford G. IoieJ. wn. Glen II. Taylor (Dem., Ida.), prospective runmng mate and C. B. Baldwin, campaign manager. WALTER SHEAD Drop Seen in Farm Prices mail today from rural areas and small CONGRESSIONAL points to the drop in farm prices aa the only break in the inflationary spiral. Generally these let-ters say that while the farmers are willing to take a cut from the abnormally high farm prices, something should be done to relieve them of the brunt of the entire price cut that is, the things thi farmer must buy should be cut proportionately. Insofar as this reporter can find out, however, economists here do nol look for much of a letdown In prices for several months. As for farm prices thcmsclvei the consensus Is that they will go down gradually until they reach the parity floor, when the gov-ernment will have to step Into the picture and begin buying to maintain the 90 per cent of parity program. Secretary of Agriculture Anderson has temporarily withdrawn from flie grain buying picture but he still has about 100 million bushels of wheat to buy to meet the government's export commitments. When he does step buck into the grain market, probably about April 1, he will be buying to support farm prices as well as to meet overseas commitments. As it now looks, the farm Income for 1948 likely will be some 18 per cent under the 1947 total or about equal to the 1946 income, which was a record hit;h until topped by 1947. In the meantime, not many farmers were hurt by the spectacular grain drop,' most of them having sold before the crash. WALTER WINCHELL Notes of a New Yorker The Argentine ambassador in Washington has quite a Job to do. He has been ordered to see that Mr. Truman invites the Perons "or else." Evita's big ambish is to im-press Washington aassiety. (That will be the dayl). We suspect the White House can see nothing amusing In the fact, that Henry A. Wallace's initials spell HAW! Many stlckups in some of the fashionable sections of Brooklyn have not been reported because the victims were picked carefully. Peo-ple who made oodles in the black market and kept their 'wealth in their homes. Can,'t squawk now. . . . Communist chief William Z. Foster hides in the phone directory (Bronx) under the listing of William E. Foster. Timet Squart Vignetl! Songwriter Hugh Martin probably will never get any medals from Texas because bis new song hit, "Tired o Texas," joshes the Lone Star State. . . . But it was ordered written by Texans, who asked Martin to knock out a "Texas-flavored- " tune to be sung at a luncheon honoring some Texas-bor- n army big shots. . . . The lyrics got a lotta "yox" (more than the composer expected) so be worked on the ditty to whip it into commer-cial use. , . . Several producers with musical comedy scripts turned it down. , . . Another producer (almost on the verge of taking it) changed bis mind when the headlines shrieked about Texas City's disaster. . . sToday ift the click song in the show, "Look, Ma, I'm Dancin'l" AMBITIOUS . . . Because Dennis Corbett, three, of Evansville, Ind., wants to be a lawyer, despite the fact that he was born without arms and legs, friends have formed the "Underprivileged Service, Inc." to see that he gets an education, as well as physical aids. Wr ii i " t. th - . I I lL lkllA!14.i.&'L3 i CAPACITY TO BOUNCE BACK . . . This is a scene, of courage. A visiting basketball team of paralyzed veterans from the 'West coast beat another team from the Bronx Kingsbridge hospital by a 29-2- 2 score. All the players competed from wheel-chair- s and put out a brand of good, hard basketball throughout the game. X x DREW PEARSON Aviation Program Mapped Sen. Owen Brewster. Maine Republican, is taking no , PUBLICITY-WIS-E being left out of the headlines when his congressional aviation advisory committee presents its formal recommendations. Instead of leaving the report to his staff to write, he called in the three major press services and invited their help. United Press could not spare a man, but Brewster was able to borrow Jim Strebig from Associated Press and Leon Shloss from International News service. They are expected to give him a big publicity break. Brewster's committee will recommend: huge Dve-yc- ar aviation program, building U. S. alrpower to 1A a peak it should obviate the necessity for universal mili-tary training. Old planes will be brought out of anothballs until a new building program produces new planes. 2 Coordination between military and commercial air systems; untangling and coordinating the country's air routes; establish-ing an independent agency to control air safety; unification of armed services aviation. The congressional committee will blast both the army and navy for failure to achieve air unification. In fact, unification, it will find, is not even halfway round the corner. BOMB nEAD . . . Col. Kenneth D. Nichols has been appointed to succeed Maj. Gen. Leslie R. Groves as chief of the armed forces special weapons project which developed the atomic bomb. H. I. PHILLIPS College Js 'Mediocracy' Educators are sounding warnings against the administration's ex-pressed hopes that there will be an enrollment of nearly five million in American colleges by 1960. They say it will mean "educational in-flation" aVd a "tide of classroom medio'cracy." They hint that the time might come when the boy v.ho didn't get a college education would be the lad of distinction in any com-munity. Already our colleges are so overcrowded that there is no more chance of the students getting acquainted than there Is in a subway rush. The whole moid of college life Is changing. Where a boy used to get a kick out of making the glee club, he aw now won't sing unless it's for a radio audition. . . . The fresh-man rush Is fading out because the modern student won't wres-tle without pay. . . . The old rah-ra- h spirit is being replaced by something resembling the mood in a wartime brass mill. Altogether, boys, three rousing cheers for dear old Willow Run uni-versity! Even if you are processed like a Ford fender instead of edu-cated like a potential scholar, it is all made easier than yesterday. Nancy Walker says, "Don't bother reading a contract; the big type gives and the small type takes away. ' H ;".l-.lM'.!''f- I im ajj ).iiaaaiuiw ... i .' r ' J n-;-. J3' f A F f yi 'fl - , i 1 r BOTTOM RUNG REVISITED . . . Fifty-fou- r years ago a youngster with nothing but a little hope and the ability to play a lot of baseball boarded a train caboose at Pittsburgh and bummed a ride to Steuben-pill- e, Ohio, to seek his fortune on the diamond. He was Honus Wagner, now 74 years old, who became one of the all-tim- e baseball greats. Here, on his 74th birthday, he ts the caboose incident. PINIIEAD . . . Marshall T. New-man, associate curator of physical anthropology at Smithsonian insti-tute, measures skull of an original "pinhead," a prehistoric Indian in-fant whose head was deliberately deformed. ' VTBROOK PEGLER Just a Cut and Dried Plot OHILIP MURRAY, the CIO, and lawyers for the Hollywood-Wal- l Street moving picture trust may rest serene amid the sound effects, discoursed with wind-machin- thunder-shee- t and such mechanical gear by the department of justice. It is Just another productioai schedule whooping along in election ear. Each show will be a mint of money for the party. In the long run, on ceremonial appeal to the Supreme court, Murray and the CIO will be acquitted of violating the Taft-Hartle- y law in using the columns of the CIO News, a private publication of the union mobsters, to boost their candidate in an election. Although the plot 'is cut and dried, does anybody suppose that any other theatrical play is impromptu? That moving picture anti-trus- t case has been going on, starting and stopping, for 10 years now. But this is a good year for it. The Hollywood trash are in the grease because of the Communist business, and since FDR died they haven't been so conscientious about getting up the money. This will remind them, in election year. Everything is going to be all right, though. It just takes time and the right kind of pressure and the right frame of mind in the department of justice. That's all it takes. 1 1 i forvrHz - OWL IIE DECIDE? . . . Reports that Ray Morrison may leave the Temple university Owls to become head ty)tball coach at Yale are un-confirmed by Morrison. Said he: "The only fair tiling for me to say is no comment." v " ac I 4 art ONE OF THE LONG BOYS . . . Following returns assuring him ol the Democratic nomination for governor of Louisiana, which is equiva icnt to election, Earl Long, brother of the late Sen. Huey P. Long scans messages of congratulation with Mrs. Rose M. Long, widow ol his brother (left), and his wife. Long's victory in the Democratic primary returns the Long dynasty to power after eight years. K n K WRIGHT PATTERSON 'Porkers1 Spend Millions FEDERAL "pork" expenditures projects which have only partisan political patronage value. They represent the ability of the senator or representative to bring home the bacon for his state or his district. They buy votes. Such expense items are found in every budget and appropriation bill passed by congress. No single Item calls for the expenditure of billions of dollars but many of them call for millions. Summed up, the total rep-resents a considerable sum of money gleaned from the taxpayers' pockets. |