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Show THE LEIII SUN, LEIII, UTAH Revenge Is Sweet to Some Russian Civilians Radi do bstar ewy ranc tra by J f? usloti .right 3 ari leba y. it X k n via l rr. TV- k. n rr M A ni n 'eaiTd W Wesn Newspaper Union. By VIRGINIA VALE nip lead in "Salome ESJLsha Danced," Wal- 1 danger's Universal pic- bat every juuu "-SI-the big break that In send a career sjcouuug M Seu,u eu.iJ Unrl two "Kftard work and heartbreak is-" i ncupr a chance (r?ri d d0. -But i nflHL DV Te training there she says. 1. . io-nna In nrtinp uing lessons, ic0- . St sort of thing." Lessons Dew to neri wU lj,,, , , i i ! ? r I rt"'.L& ''"t ,12 1.1 YVONNE DeCARLO e ballet dancing since she ja nine, nut we uauei wum me in handy for "Salome" so did ferything else she'd learned. So b, at 20, she feels that she's really rang somewhere, after wasting an id lot of time! I In 1922, when Gary Cooper went rem Montana to Hollywood, he ri along a pair of chaps, which wore as a cowboy extra when he ike into the movies. The chaps appeared; he didn't see them :in till he spied them on an extra his new picture, "Along Came sea." A costume company had Tied them in the meantime, and doubt many a cowboy has need across the screen In Coop-i Coop-i pants. Cooper wanted to buy m back, but couldn't get delivery t the picture was finished; as pro- :er of the film, he'd rented them! np mam nf NVw Vnrlc la heinsr vniuced in Hollywood; Mono-in Mono-in has acquired more land and is j an elevated structure to its f lork set and planning to build M ' the Bowery as it was in the J "90s. Go to Hollywood and see t York. SKO'j studio school has been wed to a showboat, currently in M by the troupe filming "The sorous Ghost" Sixteen-year-old ma Lee and Alfalfa Switzer, f or- frly of "Our Gang," are in the :toe so the school came to them. B you look hard when you see W i "Pan-Americana." vou'll 'a a glimpse of Joan Crawford: F Joined the extras portraying embers of a theater audience and -;ted herself near her husband. Terry, who's featured. Just 3 as a sentimental gesture, to g nun luck. Producer-Director m Auer didn't know she was on "set till the scene was finished pat Kirkwood. the voune Enelish fresi, wiU be the first star to come Hollywood under a new plan for Aange of screen Dlavers between to in California and Metro in .'Sand. She will star in "No Leave, with either Van Johnson Robert Walker. Texan Parks Johnson and the CBS "J Pop program have hepn nom. Ned for war-effort broadcasting r resolutinn P legislature, which has also in- tf rarks and Warren Hull to F'SUate a Khnw In tholf hnnco of pesentatives. oiack eye helDed eet Dickie tj ie role of "Eddie Breen" in H BeUs of St. Mary's." When he r." ee Leo McCarey, who re--nibered him as the Nazi boy in Hmorrow. World," on Broad- h I le "Pologized for the eye. 1 Jove to fight, - said he,' -but 'sby gave me this shiner yes- l -v. "You'll have plenty of 0118 Picture," McCarey Pretty Sharon -urn to SI "Rk. TTTM,1 T. Sunday nipht lnmu oma Vet vLe 0f RUey." on the Blue ha 8 featured role in amount', "Our Hearts Were r!g Up'" seJuel to "Our Hearts t, e Yung and Gay." vXiS WDS-Joan Blondell N r to join Qprk Gable idJ:hrer.Gort in "TAu Strange ,Zre- ; Eser ITiUmt4, former cnpioB, ciU be starred as &W" buUfiter in Metro's "Ties- ft 1 c feu, ,1 '"a personal appearance If, followed her engagement in easUTe": 'hen she had influ- -wen sprained her ankle the first Mr, 01,1 f bed ,a' Mo- '''fL gan ,00', at nafion-t'Iktr!!tVSt nafion-t'Iktr!!tVSt coructtd by Lawrence inTf i "er "champagne voice j 10 "ic on Auflioi. Washington, D. C. ARMY DISCHARGE CREDITS Here is how the army will determine deter-mine what men are to be discharged after the war In Europe is over. Spe-cial Spe-cial forms have been quietly sent to commanding officers in all theatres, rhey are to be distributed to the 3.I.S who will fill them out, try to ?gure out the number of credits they lave earned to give them a quick return home. The one thing still undecided by he army Is the number of credits jecessary for Immediate release. This columnist is able to reveal, lowever, that: 1 1. All credits will be determined deter-mined as of the date the war in Europe is over. 2. Special credits will be given for overseas service, and overseas over-seas service will mean any service outside the continental limits of the U. S., including Alaska. Thousands of men who served In Alaska will receive overseas credit. Overseas service serv-ice will be determined from the day a man leaves a port of embarkation. 3. Combat credit will be given only for those receiving the medal med-al of honor, distinguished serv ice cross, legion of merit, silver star, distinguished flying cross, soldiers' medal, bronze star, air medal, purple heart or bronze service stars for battle participation. partici-pation. No other awards or ribbons rib-bons will be included. 4. Credit will be given for children who are under 18 years of age on the day the war in Europe ends, but for some mysterious mys-terious reason the army will not allow credits for more than three children. HENRY KAISER CONCILIATES Few people realize it, and ship-suilder ship-suilder Henry Kaiser is too modest admit it, but he was the guiding guid-ing genius behind the recently signed pledge for postwar industrial peace Just promulgated by Eric Johnston, president of the U. S. :hamber of commerce, CIO Pres. Phil Murray and AFL Pres. Bill 3reen. Kaiser figured out the scheme last !all after seeing the terrific bitterness bitter-ness of the election campaign. He first approached Bill Green, told him that if Green was sincere about believing be-lieving in a 60,000,000-job program, management needed assurances of labor peace. Green was agreeable. Johnston agreed to call the first meeting, invited Kaiser, Murray and Green to a hush-hush dinner in his Mayflower hotel suite, debated the entire proposal up, down and sideways. Not content with a bare statement state-ment of unity and pledge of labor-management peace, Kaiser has now quietly proposed that the U. S. chamber of commerce, the AFL and the CIO set up a new, well - financed organization organiza-tion which can actively go about the business of contacting contact-ing local labor leaders and local lo-cal business men, preaching the gospel of cooperation on that leveL PETRILLO CRACKDOWN Congress is so steamed up about the rambunctious practices of horn tooter James Caesar Pefrillo, head of the American Federation of Musicians, Musi-cians, and bushy-browed John L. Lewis, mine workers' chief, that re sponsible labor leaders are greatly worried that it may pass the Bailey bill. - This would Invalidate the agreement Petrillo won after defying de-fying the record manufacturers and the government for two years, and which provides that the manufacturers pay his union a royalty on every record made. It would also rule out the 10-cent-per-ton coal royalty Lewis asked after he saw Petrillo get his. Even though many of them have little sympathy for the Petrillo-Lewis Petrillo-Lewis methods, labor leaders see in the Bailey bill far more danger than appears on the surface. For if the bill becomes law, it will knock out not only Petrillo royalty setups, but also numerous negotiated agreements agree-ments whereby employers agree to pay a small portion of their payroll into health funds Jointly administered adminis-tered by the union and the employer. These are used to pay sickness and accident benefits, medical costs and death benefits for employes, and more and more employers are agreeing to include contributions to these funds In their contracts with the unions. There have been no complaints com-plaints about these funds, but they will be illegal if the BaUey bill becomes be-comes law. :oa ..fulfil i i Hi : sj&Ov'v- .; Li f ir'!" wf NT WITH the bluebird chirping again and the "red red robin now bob bob bobbin" around," baseball base-ball with all its future troubles is still in a far better way than it looked to be some weeks ago. Many teams have lost many good men, but they still have some inter esting talent left, Stage-Struck Girls So Bad They Won Fame, Fortune In 1893, four stage-struck sisters from an Iowa farm, ranging In age from 17 to 22, appeared in a sketch of their own composition on en amateur program in Cedar Rapids which started them on th most fantastic career in American theatrical history, says Collier's. Being so incredibly bad and ludicrous lu-dicrous that they required a wir screen to protect themselves from thrown vegetables, the girls played in the Middle West until 1896. when their "reversed fame" won them a $l,000-a-week contract The main point Is that we nave, Broadway. Seven years later, id too many gonfalonio gallops wl, cherry Sisters retired to farm The Nazis are taking a beating Inside Germany, as well as on the war front. This strip of photos shows a German civilian policeman as be plays the unhappy role of "Wermacht." Two Russians, former slave laborers, take a triumphant role as they beat the Nazi into fear and finally let him get away. The Russians met the Nazi as they were searching for American "Displaced Persons Center.'" ' Okinawa Invasion Gigantic Military Operation L . , JA ,t . ZSStlmiiBBmmitom dsnaiiiv- Tr r Mancni . um S d GrantlandRice Some of the ships which comprised the gigantic fleet that participated in the Invasion of Okinawa are loaded with thousands of tons of equipment and supplies at an advanced Pacific base. Boldest Allied operation opera-tion in this theatre, an armada of some 1,400 ships took part In the amphibious attack on this key Island in the stepping-stone chain between Formosa and Japan proper. Call by Radio for Surrender Flag Over Geruma i -it li t f i'A If vMs ; - 4 fit y i ?m 1 ; i Psychological warfare branch of the army broadcasts an offer to the Germans to surrender city. The sergeant wears a tiny microphone clipped to his upper lip. His speech is amplified by a sound truck. Bat Boy to Big -Time Baseball i . . "v -- ' Troops of the new 10th army's 77th division are shown as they raise the colors for the first time on tiny Geruma Shima, during the landing that preceded the Invasion of the isle of Okinawa. The flag was raised by the division chaplain. Murdered by Nazi CAPITOL CHAFF C.The RFC has named the New York firm of Fuller, Smith and Ross to handle advertising of surplus property to be sold through RFC. This firm is also the advertising representative for the Aluminum company of America, which has major interest in plant facilities to be sold through RFC C. Despite the wide publicity ridiculing ridicul-ing him a few months ago. Rep. William Gallagher, former Minneapolis Minne-apolis street cleaner, has won the re-sDct re-sDct of his colleagues in the hous X ? L i.y'fii ir0r -'- l..m'"Lrrii',J-. Anything can happen in the major league. A few seasons ago Richie U'hittuiffton. rieht. was selling peanuts and popcorn in the Cleveland park. Last year he was bat boy. Today he is regarded as one of the rncst likely looking prospects working out with the Indians. He will be farmed out until he secures more experience. U' ': . ' : , toff MaJ. Gen. Maurice Rose; brilliat C. S. armored commander of thi 1st army, who was murdered b Germans after his surrender. He is the son of Rabbi Rose of Denver. had the last few sea sons where either Yankees or Cardinals Cardi-nals were so far In front by August that nothing remained of the races except a cloud of Indigo dust far down on the stretch. This new season there is a strong possibility for two of the closest races in many years, where almost anything can happen. We put this point up to Larry Mac- Phail and the always astute colonel coyly confessed that such might easily be the case. "We no longer have the matter of picking one or possibly two teams from the two leagues and tagging them on top in ApriL For one example no manager knows today Just what ball players he will lose next week or next month. A Big Question Mark "What team could you pick on top In the American league at this point? Or the National league? And If you happened to have one or two favorites, how do you know how they'd look around the middle of May or the middle of June? "Take Detroit. The Tigers still have Trout and Newhouser. Two fine pitchers two big 1944 winners. But Wakefield Is gone and so Is Pinky Iligglns, and who Is left to give these two pitchers any runs to work on? You know where the Tigers were last summer until Wakefield returned. "The Browns look as good as any other baseball team, but this is April not June or July. Even Joe McCarthy doesn't know how the Yankees will stack up two months from now. "But that isn't the important point. The main idea is that each league might easily have five or six clubs well-bunched through the summer sum-mer all with a chance to win and that's what makes baseball. Naturally Natural-ly each home city likes to see its team with at least a chance somewhere some-where up with the bunch not 20 games or even more away. You saw what happened last fall when the Browns, Tigers and Yankees were all bunched up. No one ever accused them of being great ball clubs. But still you couldn't get near their parks, with thousands turned away in St. Louis." Race Counts Most We have had a few ball players who could draw out the populace, no matter how far out their clubs were. Babe Ruth was the top party in this list I recall one season when the Babe played In Boston and Philadelphia before overflow crowds, although Boston and Philadelphia, far out of the race, had been playing play-ing to fewer than a thousand morbid souls daily. In later years Bob Fel ler was a big attraction on the days he worked. So was Ted Williams. But in the main it has been the ball club that drew the crowds the ball club up in the race. I have always believed that a few seasons ago the Dodgers, playing in the Yankee stadium, would have passed the 2,000,000 mark. I still rate Detroit and Brooklyn as tne two Desi oau towns id me country, and that isn't barring New York or Chicago. There was a time when Boston belonged In this preferred pre-ferred list. But when you get right dpwn to the big check-up most of them need a team somewhere In the race. For some odd reason, although their ball players come from all over the map, from the unknown hamlets and the farms, from spots more than 2,000 miles away, hometown home-town pride is always concerned. This has always been a deep mystery mys-tery to me but there it is. For some years the National league had two or three teams neck and neck down the stretch such as the Cardinals and the Dodgers. When that was happening, the Yankees usually had their race packed away on ice by late July or early August Then, last fall, the American league suddenly switched Into a hot three-club finish as the Cardinals Cardi-nals were wrecking the National This ail speaks for the complete honesty of baseball, which I believe today is taken for granted by every known proof, but it Is of no vast help to nationwide interest. I agree with Larry MacPhail that the 1945 season may easily give us five or six clubs from each of the two big leagues which might easily be under a blanket from time to time during the coming months. It is my tip that baseball is on its way to one of the most interesting interest-ing seasons in many years unless it is so badly riddled that it isn't given j a chance. Cherry life with a fortune of $200,000. CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT Band & Musical Instruments Will BUT. SELL. TRADE musical instru ments. Expert repairing. Jenninf s-Pearo Ct.. SS E-st lt South, Salt Lk City. 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But kidneys sometimes lag In their work de not act as Nature intended .ail to re-moT re-moT Imparities that, if retained, may Kiaoa the system and opset the wool dy machinery. Symptoms may be nagging backache, persistent headache, attacks of diaxineaa. getting np nighta, swelling, puffineas under the eyes a feeling of Bervous anxiety and loss of pep and strength. Other signs of kidney or bladder disorder dis-order are sometimes burning, scanty of too frequent urination. There should be no donbt that prompt treatment is wiser than neglect. Use Coos's ftils. Deon's have been winning new friends for more than forty years. They have a nation-wide reputation. Are recommended by grateful people the country over. Aik soar neighbor! |