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Show ' I t i i THE BULLETIN. BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH QUESTIONED . . . Charles of revenue bu-reau, admits he gave Henry Grune-wal- d data on Teitelbaum tax case, but denies be was member of al-leged clique of officials who tried to shake Teitelbaum for 5500,000 In rrooked money. Right Clothing A light jacket is essential when fishing in the mountains, both in spring and summer. Early morning or late evening breezes are often very cool and the light leather Jacket or poplin windbreaker is good the year 'round in high country. A slicker or plastic raincoat will come in handy for sudden rain squalls. Your list of accessories besides rod, reel, line, and hip boots should include a creel, landing net, bait box spinner-and-lur- e box, leader box. split shot, snelled hooks, jack-knif- e or small hunting knife, a fishing license and directions on how to get to your fishing spot. 1 Waders of the waist-hig- h variety are not essential for stream fishing in spring. Most bait fishing is done from shore. Lake fishing may call (or waist-hig- h waders. In all cases," cultivate a healthy respect for the water. Losing your footing is no fun and the water Is uncomfortably cold ana oiien aangerousiy swin. A pair or two of heavy wool socks in rubber boots when fishing in the spring will cushion the foot against uneven rocks. Wool socks also keep your feet warm despite the low tem-perature of the water in which you may be wading. As a word of precaution, in the springtime it is a good idea to put a couple of blankets in the back of your car when starting out In the Rocky Mountains. These blankets, plus a couple of chocolate bars may prove to be life-save- if you get stuck in mud or snow. A coffee pot and a can of coffee under the back seat might be useful on such an occasion, too. Wear loose, comfortable trousers, a woolen shirt, a short fishing jack-et with plenty of pockets and a felt hat when you start fishing. Remem-ber a belt too . . t for holding up your boots. The bulge at the waist-line may sustain your trousers but the extra tug of boots may cause you embarrassment in the endl AAA Tbt hippopotamus differt from the rhinoceros in having four instead of three toes. AAA Surprise! It was a very unhappy landing for a large flock of Canada geese which stopped for a rest in Raleigh county one night a few days before the goose season opened. The in-cident was reported to the con-servation commission by Conser-vation Officer Progresso Tocado. Instead of a placid pond, the honkers came down about 11 o'clock on the sheet metal roof of the ma-chine shop of the Winding Gulf Collieries at Riffe's Branch. Flood-lights shining on the roof was be-lieved to have attracted the geese. Hearing a commotion of thump-ing, honking and hissing on the roof, Nightwatchman E. E. Rine-hea- rt at first was startled. Then, realizing what was happening, he rushed outside amidst floundering geese and flapping wings," and turned off the lights. Soon the thumps on the roof stopped and Rlneheart turned the lights back on. All but six of the geese prompt-ly took off. The six appeared dazed and some were bloody but all but one soon staggered up and made takeoffs. The remaining one, still stunned, was captured. By morn-ing he had recovered his equilib-rium and Rineheart carried him home and placed him in a chick-en coop. Tocado was notified, came and examined the goose and found both wings apparently in working condition. Carrying the honker to the 600-acr- e lake at Flat Top, the officer placed him in the water to recuperate. Returning to the lake two days later to check on his patient, Tocado found the latter apparently had resumed his south-ward flight. AAA, Tbt bold eagle was adoped as our national emblem by the Congress on June 20, 1782. AAA Hard to Beat A good split bamboo fly rod Is a thing of beauty and personality. When you hold it in your hand it seems to say to you. "Let's go fishing!" It asks for a place on your team, and promises an eager participation that helps you cap-ture all the fun there is in fishing. The best rods are made from selected hard Tonkin cane, split with the grain, heat-treate- d and straightened, milled to a mathe-matically correct taper accurate to 11000 inch, and glued into the six-stri- p sections that make up the complete rod. These rods are sensitive as a bear's sore nose, powerful as an archer's bow. AAA Good Dry Flies Dry flies, as their name indicates are tied so they will float. They mus be tied on light hooks and have hackle that is stiff and glossy. One must pay a good price for really good dry flies, for they rre expen-sive. If one wants the best and nothing else should do one must pay more, but results will more than compensate for the outlay. Poorly-tie- d dry flies won't float properly and, consequently, won't catch as many fish as those properly tied. SPlRirSCD!P MAHONEY I !!! PL iiiffiffm TURNING PRO'1 yat PEN. HE jj ? OF" PUT-T- ff( I OF THC CLEVELANO wnVF l BOWN9,HOlOS THE T VfcJf J ! rJV RECORD TOR THC &L fjf VJ HCWST PERCENTAGE F Of COMPtETEO PASSES FAMOUS GREYHOUND RACER, HOLDS --J W ONE SEASON , fOOR OUT OF THE SEVEN jSELmfiS" " , AMERICAN DOS P.ACIM3 RECORDS.' ALMOST 2000 VARDS VS., p U.N. ADMITS BED CHARGES ... At Panmunjom, Korea, Colonel Andrew J. Kinney squints in the sun as be and a Chinese Communist officer bold a part of a napalm bomb casing found by the Reds at Kae-so- n. The United Nations admitted a charge made by the Communists that an allied aircraft atrafed and bombed Kaesong. The city is the headquarters for the Communist delegation to the armistice talks. j Daffodifs 'M'O embroidery needed I The yel-- A low of the daffodils and the green of the stems are ready to be Ironed directly onto your fabric; they're dye-fa- st designs, they're launderablel Use the 9 by 7 sprays on pale green or yellow tea cloths, place mats, buffet or dresser runners; on pretty organ-dy hostess aprons, on the pockets of pastel house dresses. i Send SBc for th MULTI-COLO- DAF-FODIL DESIGNS (Pattern No. 3841 oom- - transfer and laundering Instruc-ting YOUR NAME. ADDRESS, PAT-TERN NUMBER to CAROL CURTIS. Box 229, Madison Square Statioo. Naw York 10, N. Y. HrCArtYlOTOTMe -- v I MEWTHOIATUM HgUtVEO HIS HEAD- - 3 """l , ' coLOMiseRy.ACHev HesT imj v!usst tws JmszL HE SAYS ORA fe) DENTURE CLEANSER "Since using ORA my denture is al-ways clean and sparkling," says Max ; N. Serlick, Portland, Ma. DENTISTS PRAISE ORA , In a survey, an overwhelming major-ity of dentists praised this marvelous new cleanser. No harmful brushing that can ruin dentures. Just place in ORA solution for 15 minutes or over- - j night. Removes tobacco stains. ORA Is guaranteed not to harm dentures. ; Get ORA today. All druggist. A Product of McKesson & Robbins, Inc. ' "Hot Flashes" Stopped J or strikingly relieved In 63-80- of cotes In doctors' tests j If you're miserable from the "hot flashes," and accompanying irritable, restless feelings of ''change of life" " ' you may be suffering unnecessarily! j For ... in tests by doctors . . . Lydia f Pinkham's Compound and Tablets brought relief from such functionally- - s caused suffering to 63 and 80 (re-spectively) of the women tested! Complete or striking relief t Teal Research baa proved these med- - lclnea thoroughly modern in action ... has shown you where to look for relief , ' from those distressing, nervous, "out ot sons" feelings of mld-U- e "change I ! Bo. ..get Lydla B. Pinkham's Vegetable 5 Compound or new. Improved Tablets, I with added Iron I Wonderful, too, lor the functional paint of menttrual period.) j H a throats a wwnaa'a ' lit;, armvUlMUc aarraoa ayMm f W.Ut'WW.i! awful "beat waves"! ' SPORTLIGHT : --i j Shoeless Joe Always Good Copy I By GRANTLAND RICE - NEW YORK No other game has turned out as many odd or different characters as baseball has fur-nished. The list of distinct personalities is a long one. I mean such players as Dizzy Dean, Germany Schaefer, Rube Waddell, Ossie Schrcck, Larry McLean, Babe Herman and many others. One of these waa Shoeless Joe Jackson, who died recently.. Shoeless Joe ("Oh, the brave song bis black bat sung") v.as on the quieter side. But the Carolina Crashsmith was always a good story. There was the time Joe, lifetime average .356, reported , to some small team in East Tennessee. Some time ago, Hyder Barr related the following yarn about Jacksob'i first game there. "The ball park was terrible," Barr said. "It was full of rocks. the time he played for less. This Isn't as much as a big league rookie gets today. It wasn't toe hot for a .410 hitter. Charlie Dryden, one of the great baseball writers of all time, cer-tainly the most humorous one, found Jackson an endless source of copy. "Joe didn't read too smoothly," Dryden said one day. "So when be got a letter from his wife Joe used to chuckle as he pretended to read. Then he'd slip me the letter and say, "Want to read something funny?" I'd read It back but fre-quently It wasn't anything to laugh at, like asking for dough." Ty Cobb one day told me a tragic story about Jackson. They had been good friends in the major leagues. Long after Ty was through with baseball he dropped by Greenville where Jackson lived. Cobb talked a few minutes about various unimportant things. Finally he said: "Don't yon know me, Joe? I'm Ty Cobb." "Yes, I know you, Ty," Jack son said. "But I didn't think anyone I used to know would want to recognize me again." Joe Jackson took a small amount of gambling money, largely because Crantland Rica broken glass and old cans. Finally after the fourth in-ning Jackson came back to the bench and said he was through. He was playing barefoot. 'What's the mat-ter?' the manager asked. 'Rocks and glass hurting your feet?' he knew he had been far underpaid. I don't believe he ever threw a game in that series and I saw them all. To me he was a great hitter and a good guy. The Training Stat Citrus fruit and sunshine, bowl games and flowers, are not Flori-da's only contribution to the human race. I have discovered again In roam-ing its highways that Florida is also keen about Its record as a condi-tioner of men especially ballplar-er-s. Who trained at St. Petersburg last spring? Well, the Giants, the Dodgers and Cardinals, for exam-ple, and they ran one, two, three in the National League pennant race last season. What team got its basic training In Florida for several years and had enough left to survive the "vest? The Yankees. "You don't suppose," a Florida ' resident said, "that the Yankees could have surlved Arizona to come along and win another pennant if they hadn't been in Flor'da for ten or fifteen years before?" All we know is that the Giants had trained all around the map without winning any pennants. They never seemed to be physically fit But last year, after training in Florida, they surviv t! an losing streak and a deficit of 13 games in middle August, and yet won the pennant. . " 'Naw,' Shoeless Joe said. 'But they're fuzzln' up the ball so much I can't throw it.' " Cobb, Ruth and Speaker each told mo on radio interviews that Jackson was by all odds the greatest natural hitter that ever lived. Joe batted 1 "I decided to copy Jackson," Ruth told me one day, "because he looked more like a good hit-ter than anyone else. I couldn't copy Ty Cobb's hand action be-cause Ty was looking more for basehits than for power. "Jackson stood with his feet fair-ly wide apart, his right foot shoved forward and the left foot back of the right. This gave him a good turn to start with. I changed this a little. I kept my feet closer together. 1 could get more leverage that way. But I was also more easily caught off balance by a r. I had more trouble with than Joe ever had. He never had much trouble with anybody." Jackson and Money Shoeless Joe was never a big spender, but no man was more underpaid. He used to sew a ten or a twenty dollar bill in-th- e lining of his coat, to be sure he had some cash when needed. The years where he hit over .400 brought him small increases. I doubt that Jackson ever got over $4,500 a year, and most of TREED . . . Vance Erin Hardy was freed In Detroit court after spending 27 years for crime he did not commit murder. He was freed through the efforts of his sister, Gladys Barrett, Detroit, after In-vestigation by a national magazine of his case. JET HELICOPTER . . . Former navy pilot William Murray, Wilton, Conn., flies the experimental helicopter K-2- during Its first successful flight, just announced by the navy. Instead of using velocity of exhaust gases for forward thrust, the craft uses this power to turn shaft of rotor blades. Engine can operate on low grade fuels or on high octane gasoline. Unlike piston engine, the turbine requires neither a cooling fan or a centrifugal clutch. Engine is 175 b.p. iKMMiHaaHBWHamaBaaBmaaiHHaaaaHaBsaiaimHiM i lb Gas That's An The stork had visited the home of Rastus Brown for the eighth t time, leaving quadruplets. A few '' days later Rastus met an old ? friend on the street "Whut yo'all gonna call yo to new babies?" asked the friend. "Eenie, Meenie, Minie and Gus!" "Whaffer you put In dat GusT" " 'Cause we don't want no mo'." BLIND GI HOME . . . P.F.C. Charles Hunzlger, New York, al-most totally blinded by a grenade explosion in battle of Heartbreak Ridge, was flown home by the mili-tary air transport service. He spent the recent holiday with bis mother. a til CROSSING ACCIDENT KILLS DRIVER . . . This panel truck, in which its driver died, rests atop a railroad trestle in Pittsburgh near the train with which It collided. The freight train struck at the crossing, and the force of the collision carried the truck several hundred feet on to the trestle. The driver, Jacob Ambroilc, who was an operator of a cleaning shop, was delivering clothing to his customers when his truck was hit by tbe train and shoved on the trestle. if T1 - It k if? " jfc A BLEAK FUTURE . . . Korea vet John Paima, Brooklyn, smiles with fiancee Terry Marchiano. Wounded In Korea, taken prisoner and re-leased, he still has 12 pieces of shrapnel in his head and G. I. bin of rights offers him no aid in sup-porting himself. iillyl'WW ' V " t r " V" Tt-- wnwff, WAfy ill Till1 - fl II i' sailliiiY WATER TANK FALLS UPON TOWN ... An entire city block in the town of Tucumcarl, New Mexico, was devastated recently when a huge water tank suddenly collapsed and crushed and flooded tbe whole area. Four persons in the vicinity of the tank were killed. No explanation for the sudden fall of the large tank, which cost one million dollars, was given, but authorities were investigating to determine if there was deliberate destruction of the tank by persons unknown. SNUG ... A white-glove- d North Korean Communist corporal-of-the-gua- rd buttons up the rain pon-cho of a Communist sentry who Is standing guard at the site of the Panmunjom, Korea, armistice talks now in progress. HOW tOL7Qggg tf 1 I' I 11 I j P BOOTS, IP HUNG UP Oi A WIRE COAT . HANGER, AS SHOWN, WILL NOT CRACK WHILE DRYING OUT. THEY SHOULD BE HUNG IN A COOL. DRY PLACE. |