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Show n3 of Trail Symbolizes Passing of the Red Man The statue of an Indian with ,pear under his arm, sitting on horse, in an attitude of utter abandon, is intended to symbolize the passing of a great race the Indian, once the unchallenged master of this continent, but who pow, as the sculptor, James Earle vraser. conceives it, stands hope- less and despairing at "the end of the trail." 1O0K .jr mi $mw, Attentioa Hunters! DEER HIDES WANTED Hfonesi Prices Paid far HIDES, SHEEP PELTS, FURS AND WOOL Call or See Nearest Branch UTAH BYPRODUCTS CO. Ogden Garland Logan SA1T IAK! CITT . UTAH Relief At Last nwimnts!mi TeUflTOSTjromDtlT be cause it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laaen pniegm, ana sua miun to soothe and heal raw, tender, In flamed bronchial mucous mem-branes.Tell mem-branes.Tell your druggist to tell yon a bottle of Creomulsion with the understanding un-derstanding you must lite the way It quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. . CREOMULSION for Coushs,Qest Colds, Bronchitis ECONOMICAL! EV, termite proof, perma- js Mot. Meal far k,mH. tj. coops, dairy hsueas, mtm, . Si, a - wmawMwuiannifi ' -- NOW ffiONING IS A JOY, NOT A JOB IUKA. MTSSTSSTPPT Mm Florence Solomon Vine r1ie.rnvrerl a wonderful relief for "ironing day .blues." Here is what she said about it to Faultless Starch re cently: "I used to dread ironing day o much, but after I began using Faultless Starch, ironing a pleasure instead of a dread." n a j . , .... J" mean, ironing aay, roof If you have to iron with a "sticky" iron, no wonder! Your arms get ijtired, your back aches, your neck aches, your legs ache. It's mighty pard work to iron when the iron sflcks at the end of each stroke, f But you don't HAVE to iron with a sticky" iron. Just change to faultless Starch and iron with a smooth, slick iron that Just flies along! I AMAZING EASY IRONING , ie.re' a 8"nple reason why faultless Starch makes ironing ,f?sy. You see, it is made a spe-1 spe-1 way. One of the special things pout Faultless Starch is that it pontains ironing-aids, already d in, that make It easy to do th, beautiful ironing. No we "sticky" iron! MSI TO MAKE THIS STARCH ! But that isn't all. You know how Pwy you are on washday. Then r have to stop and take out ten fifteen minutes to make hot arcij. But not when you use EJK8" Starch! You make I niMcss starch in barely a min-?te-NO COOKING! Just cream little cool water, add bofl- i - t - nuue DUlIUlg cuiu r?i ,ou're ugh! Start to You deacrv tha ttrAfiitafliil rJ , nviiuvi nu- Faultless Starch. NO -uraxsu, NO "STICKY" IRON! 0 I kit . m . ... vui erncpr inr n aiiiTir3 Ck? ,Giv aJI yow wash that Xbsolutely faultless look!-Adv. wn i n if i fOI THIS lfcl L-J'l, H For Your Cough SliGECREllirJIO Released by Western Newspaper Union. . By VIRGINIA VALE THERE'S a line of dialogue in the script for International's Interna-tional's "The Stranger," where Loretta Young confides to Orson Welles that she's a victim of acrophobia. That word threw everyone in the cast but Welles. "It's a fear of high places," said he. "I know because I used to have it myself. I cured mvtt.it h. mountain climbing in the Alps; iiicKea out we sheerest drops I could find and stared over tha - Rut for "The Stranger" they built the wgnesi set ever erected in Hollywood, Holly-wood, a 13-stor? church antra ! EM. ward G. Robinson, Loretta and weues ao s dramatic scene part way up it And who was it who hart an attack ot acrophobia? Why Or son went si Robert Benchley appears in Hollywood Holly-wood Victory Caravan, the all-star featurette sponsored by the war activities committee, Hollywood div- ROBERT BENCHLEY ision, acting for the U. S. treasury department, for the Victory Loan drive. Benchley appears with "a stellar stel-lar cast of 20 other notables. In the screen world. Pennv Singleton was sort of wor ried about her role in "Young Wid- owr; after seven years ol playing the comic-striri "Blondie" on the screen her contract with Columbia Pictures calls for her to do three "Blondie" nleturea a vear she was afraid she'd suddenly go cavorting around the way she does as Dag-mood's" Dag-mood's" crjnuse. There's a screwball comedienne in "Young Widow." but Marie Wilson plays her. Penny had wanted to nlav a different role, and Hunt Stromberg, who brought her to the screen eight years ago in "After the Thin Man." eave her what she wanted; she plays a perfectly nor mal person, the wise, understanding friend of the heroine, Jane Russell. Boris Karloff has been estab lishing a broadcasting record since he left Hollywood following completion comple-tion of his role In RKO's "Bedlam." Nine programs In sixteen days, including in-cluding three appearances on "In ner Sanctum" have Rept mm nosy. Sitting through a Jap-made movie the last word in aaony. ac cording to Tom Neal, who play the title role in "First Yank into Tokyo." Neal cast as an American serviceman who undergoes facial surgery, so that he can pretend tp he a .lao sergeant, for intelligence pur poses, had to sit through "Kimona' 21 times, studying the performance of the Japanese star of the picture Constance Moore. "Gloria Dean"- on "Hollywood Mystery Time." has a four-year-old daughter, uina who'a orettv smart Connie was tell ing a friend she was "sans cook and ana nurse." Gina looked up ana in quired "Are they related to Sans Claus?" There's lot of kidding in the script of the Burns and Allen show bent George's singing voice. What very few people know Is that Grade's long-suffering spouse actual- began his theatrical career as one 'The Pee Wee Qnartet," at the age of 12. Howard Barlow has no piano in bis "Harvest of Stars" orchestra; instead, beautiful Elaine Vito plays ha km Motion Dicture companies have tried to tempt her to try her luck on the screen, but sne preiers Mot Vork where she plays in Tos- fcanini's orchestra. She is also play- tag to Alex Stordahl's. wnue rrans einr la hroailcastine from New York. So why bother with Hollywood? j I ODDS AND ENDS-Danny Koye,j T7 uMBa- itiir ft IIf flTSl rtrrcii star to perform for V. S. force, occupy .t. ntir tamed JJHKi tenictmen in Ike Neiji Shrine udim. . . . Seems hard to umigme r.inr, rymore m the mother in "Utile II rs tM lopiaj mm r... . Teehnirolm vttwm o Me --..:. C.n.m makes hit first film ap pearanct in W'rof rear, in otnn out"; 10 yean ego, in "Romance, ft' was Crete Carbo't leading mm. . . Barry Fitzgerald and his stand m field m two-man ehes$ tourney h-tween scenes ol Paramount "The Stork CUth -they ultra cheered on by Betty Hutton, '""' " ' .warn. Kathleen Norris Says: When the 'Dead9 Man Comes Home Bell Syndicate. "It break my heart to leave lovely home and circle ol loved friends hart in Connecticut, and take up lift again with a man whose nervous tern peri I . know only loo welL" By KATHLEEN NORRIS sjr "M Y HUSBAND was re ported dead," writes Elaine Foster, from Bridgeport, Conn. "He was a marine at Bataan, officially declared killed in that terrible ter-rible first rush. Instead, he had been sent on a scouting expedition, in which two men were killed, and he was taken prisoner. "One year afterward I married mar-ried again, this time far more happily than the first time. My first marriage had been at 18; it lasted seven years, during all of which time I knew we had made a mistake. We were both young and hot-tempered, hot-tempered, and hard times and the illnesses of our little boy kept our nerves on the rack. "This second marriage to a man I will call David, is a much more stable affair. He is 40, I am 27; I look up to him as a guide, philosopher philoso-pher and friend, as well as love him with all my heart My small boy is devoted to him. Broken Mind and Body. "' "Harry, to call my first husband that has come home injured in soul and body. He Is lame, and although capable of doing any clerical work, his one idea is to go out to a horse ranch his cousin and uncle run in Montana, and live there. He wants me to go with him, and whether I go or not he will claim Roy. I intend in-tend to fight for at least part time custody of my child, and it would break my heart to leave a lovely home and a circle of loved .friends here in Connecticut, and take up life again with a man whose nervous tempers I know only too welt Have you any advice to give tn these troubled circumstances? The shock of Harry's return cost me my expected ex-pected baby, and I am in for some weeks of rest. During that time I want to think out the right thing to do, and your advice will help me." My dear Elaine, I cannot help you, because these circumstances really come under a theological head; you are married to Harry, and for you there can be no other marriage. Your choice therefore is either to take your son and go off Somewhere to make a life for yourself, not seeing see-ing David again, or to accompany Harry to Montana, and build a new life there, and if you are really as spiritually strong as you indicate in the more intimate part of your letter, let-ter, you wtyl find happiness somewhere some-where along the road, if you follow that course. This tragedy of the returning dead man is freduent in this war because of the enormity of the operations on a dozen fronts, and the fearful destructive de-structive power of modern munitions. muni-tions. In one case in my own family a young naval officer was imprisoned impris-oned in a camp for two years with no opportunity to communicate with his family, then reported lost on the prison ship our own men bombed, and finally lost to sight for (months. He is on his way home safe and sound now. Another case is that of a friend's child who supposedly went down with a lost destroyer. This boy swam and floated five miles, scrambled up a beach, met friendly natives, lived with them doing underground work for more than a year, and is also on "She tall find happiness fat herself . ." I WNU Feature. AGONIZING DILEMMA F ortunately, etc women have to face the agonizing dilemma that confront the $oldieri wife whose tetter appear in this issue. Elaine heard from official sources that her hut' band, Barry, had been killed at Bataan. A year later she married again, this time more happily. The first marriage, in fact, was heading for the rocks when the war came, and the separation temporarily solved the problem. But Barry was not killed. He is back now after years in a Jap prison camp, lame, tr ritable and unable to readjust himself. He wants to go West and live on his cousin's horse ranch, taking his wife Elaine, and their little boy. This move is most distasteful distaste-ful to Elaine. She is happy with her second "husband," who is in many ways superior to Harry, in her eyes. She likes' the new circle of friends she has acquired. All this she would have to give up if she goes with Harry. Nevertheless as Miss Norris points but, Harry Har-ry is still her husband her otdy husband. This second man, David, is a victim of tragic circumstances. Elaine's duly is to stand by Harry the rest of her life, says Miss Norris. Nor-ris. his way home. His wife, a pretty girl of 21, was within two weeks of a second marriage when his message came. Shattered and Puzzled. To adjust all these broken ends of life into a perfect whole and begin living normally again is more than some of these young persons can manage. They are shattered and puzzled by different claims and obligations, obli-gations, and don't know where to start in straightening things out. Infinite In-finite patience with the returning men, and a quiet sane study of each problem, is the only way through the terrible aftermath of war. But in the first case I quote, it seems to me Elaine has one very real compensation in sight To get out into the mountains of Montana will be the best possible thing for her little boy. He won't have to be anguished, an-guished, as so many thousand children chil-dren are, by being torn between the claims of father and mother. Perhaps Per-haps In his improvement and his happiness she will find happiness for herself. "Another great eompensaUon will be In t j feeling she will have, that while it is not a conspicuous service serv-ice to her country. It Is a very real one, to try to make up to at least one wounded veteran the youth and health that the war has drained away. If every man coming back had a wife, a son, and a prospect of roughing It on a Montana horse ranch for a year or two, the greatest great-est problem that America has to meet would be solved. If Elaine faces this hard change courageously, courageous-ly, the' prayers that she is praying for her light will be answered full measure, pressed down and running over. HOME-MADE SOAP POWDER Must of us have been able to get bars of laundry soap even when we have not been able to find soap flakes, chips or powders on the market mar-ket And, as every home laundress knows a bar of soap dissolves more quickly if It's shaved or grated or pulverized before it's used. It s no trirk at all to make soap powder. Just be sure the soap is well dried. Cut it into pieces and run it through the meat grinder. Let It dry well, then pulverize. Or you may use a grater or cutter to make chips. A SPORTS enthusiast asks this I one: "What man in football, player or coach, would you pick as the top of the long list in the way of influence upon his team and the i game itself?" Oddly enough this is easy to answer. His brilliant career came to an end on March SI, 1931, I over M years ago, when they picked his broken body out of a wrecked plane In the midwest The nama Is Knute Rockne. I know the lasting Influence that such men as Yost, Zuppke, Haughton, Grange, Bierman, Little and many others have had. I know what these i. GranUandRIce men, and others, have meant to football foot-ball But I still say Rockne. Starting as head eoach back in 1917 when Notre Dame was well down the football list Rockne in the next 14 years made Notre Dame the synonym for football greatness, from Los Angeles to New York and Baltimorefrom Balti-morefrom Chicago to Atlanta. Facing Fac-ing a killing schedule of 10 games year after year, his winning record was a phenomenal thing. But Rockne's winning record was only a small part of the Job he did. Almost from the start he gave his squads tha finest spirit year after year, that I have seen. It wasn't so much a matter of gameness, which most football players have. It was a matter of keenest, alertness, smartness, smart-ness, condition and love of the game. He gave bis men a brand of sports, manship that hat never been questioned. ques-tioned. An Inspiration I have never seen a Notre Dame player under Rockne's reign who was not in superb physical condition, barring only those injured In play or practice. Be had fine material as a rule, but a good part of this was due to the fact that many budding bud-ding stars wanted to come to Notre Dame and play under the baldheadea Norwegian. Strictly as a football eoach on the technical side, it would be difficult to rank Rockne above such men at Pop Warner. Hurry-up Yost, Percy , Haughton, Bernie Bierman and others oth-ers who had exceptional coaching , careers In their various primes. I Rockne was a fine eoach, but hardly hard-ly the greatest It was the Inspirational Inspira-tional side, hit complete control of the squad en and off the field, that look him to the front The bark ef bit voice had a lift to it that cangbt and held attention. I recall the night before an Army- .Notre Dame game in New York. i Army's scout for Notre Dame games filed this report to the head coach. "Whatever you do, take the kickoff 'starting the third period, if you can Don't let Notre Dame get the ball right after they have listened to Rockne between halves. I've found out what that means." The advice was overlooked. Army ticked off to start the second half and a Notre Dame back on the first play thereafter ran 75 yards for a touchdown with practically every ev-ery Army defender flat on the back of his neck from the blocking that followed. Knew Human Nature I also recall this when a big game was being played by Notre Dame in either New York or Chicago, Chi-cago, visiting coaches sometimes numbering 10 or 12, immediately headed for Rockne's room. They all wanted to visit with Rock, who also had a keen sense of humor, a gift for repartee and what it takes to supply cheerful, friendly entertainment entertain-ment Rock's personality was always an outstanding feature. He knew human nature, bow to handle men, including his famous top sergeant the redoubtable Hunk Anderson, who on occasions was about as easy to handle as a Bengal tiger or a Numid-ian Numid-ian lion. Something like 80 of his players left Notre Dame to coach at other colleges. But It wasn't so much the Notre Dame shift or any other part ef the Rockne system that such coaches as Frank Thomas, Harry Mebre, Elmer Layden, Bock Shaw, Jimmy Crowley, Crow-ley, Harry Stuhldreher, Rip Miller, and many, many ethers carried te their teams. It was mere the Rockne contribution la the way of condition. spirit and smartness. I have seen many slightly dumb football teams. I never saw a dumb Notre Dame team that I can now recall. It Is for these and other reasons that I rank Rockne on top when it comes to hit influence upon the gamer-not only when he was alive, but 14 years after his death. a Best Football Section The football query most ofter ssked by servicemen is this: "Which section of the country turns out the strongest football teams, taking a general average year after year?" The only answer. we could offer was that It Is the Midwest. When rno.bave section year after year that caa turn out such trams aa i Notre Dame. Michigan, Minnesota. Ohio State, Illinois, Wisconsin. Iowa, yon have a mass ef gridiron talent that U hard te beat ? t ? ANOTHER A 'General Quiz 1. Has the definition "light" or "heavy" cruiser anything to do with its size or tonnage? 2. A person at the North pole is how many miles nearer the center of the earth than if he were at the equator. 3. How many men were involved in-volved in the six years of war in Europe? 4. What island is called the Pearl of the AntillesT 5. Is it cole slaw or cold slaw? 6. For how long are federal judges appointed? 7. Anahuac is an ancient name for what country? 8. How many men are required to keep one B-29 in combat? The Antwen 1. No. It refers to the size of Its main guns. 2. Thirteen miles nearer. 3. Twenty-seven million of which 16 million were Allies, 4. Cuba. IM& 5. Colt slaw. Jf-1 6. For life. s ' 7. Mexico. 8. A total of 85, which Includes 14 air crewmen. f ASK ME 1 W Ji , mm 0 YO if LI 6.00-16 ?T OfnerSieiPronortonofaflov Only Firestone Recapping gives yonr tires the famous DeLuxe Champion Gear-Gdp Tread, the tread with extra depth for extra safety, extra traction and longer mileage. 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