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Show Thursday, June 15. 1933 THE TIMES-NEW- PAGE Til R EH NEPIII. UTAH S, Jimmy Mattern, Round the World Solo Flyer Scenes and Persons in WIHLILcssa rvv -- ' - s o ll r: the Current News WFFj 111 I i tV ft & BEVERLY HILLS. WE. Y FF1fcFF ' F- - S ' 1 Well all I know Is Just what I rend !u the papers, or what I run into around iflg r y T liaO trying to got on thepreferredllst. Beon through the old home i " jc ' j Com- monwealth of Oklahoma two or three times lately, and got wind of a personal nature while there. In the old days of the silent pictures, every- rTf7 rnFs r7" body had a busi- I j ness whether ha was working or not. Ha was writI. ing scenarios for the movlos. Well era wrote for years till they they discovered the movies did not use them, that they had their own paid I writers to write their stories. But .. you cant stop a person if he gets it In bis bead he can write. They will pick out something. Well down In Oklahoma all the rejected scenario - writers have switched from writing 1 1 , - - niiil'M VuM and love train robberies ( rVr l itiir triangles, rift Jimmy Mattern, first aviator to attempt a solo flight around the world, sitting on a wing of bia plane, and westerns, they have switched 1 Scene during the conflagration at Long Beach, Calif., that followed the fatal oil explosion fn tha Century of Progress. from th life of the Dalton Boys to Richfield plant. 2 "Forgotten women" enrolling for the work camps for unemployed females In New York, my life. a plan that Is becoming popular all over the country. 8 Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt with Mrs. Fattle Wil Every guy that had a pencil and lis South, eighty-year-olKentucky widow who realized her dearest ambition when she was entertained Is some old tools cap paper was going at dinner In tho White House. to put my life right in between the klvers of a dime novel, (maby nickle). I guess Its the same in each state. The dissapointed writers of Kansas are perhaps after notorious characters up there. The unpublished writers of Texa3 are perhaps telling the early life struggles of some old Texas highbinder. That these gentlemen dident know you, or maby had Just met you once or m Mr . V '"r f twice In their lives never seemed to hinder their Idea that they was the one to do your life. Well, I dont want to be a crab, or I dont want to hinder hidden talent or art. But I Just want to be modest about It, and let them practice on ' it iwwir' somebody else's life. Why pick on mine? Besides, I am a young man, (get -JL that) yet, and I havent even started living. I am going to cut loose here some day and try and get some life into my life and even then it wont be fit to tell about. The first part '1 will be uninteresting and the last part will be too scandelous. One of President Roosevelt hopes to spend part of his summer vacation In this residence which he built on these the little Canadian Island of Campobello next to the one In which he spent his boyhood summers. General view- of the exercises at Keyser, W. Va., during the dedication of a monument marking the blew buddingoldyoung biographers from Lord into my birthplace of Nancy Hanks, mother of Abraham Lincoln. The memorial was erected by the members of knows where, butcountry he happened to Hanks association. the Nancy FAIR AMAZES LEO land near the old ranch where I was born on. He heard a couple of stories of my early day cavortings, NEBRASKA SENATOR so he goes so far as to get a foun tain pen, and from then on he was my Boswell. Being some sort of Northerner by trade, he even works himself up into my dialect, hits New York as the l" Vif L Voice of Rogers." By that time he -1 r- has become a brother cowpuncher born and raised right next to me, and gradualay works himself up " i isInto a cousin. Well, a progressive minded fel low like that writing your biography is liable to turn out in his story to be my father. In other words there is Just too much Imagination there to work on another fellows life. There Is a fellow ought to take his own life. With two more fountain pens he could work himself up into a Lincoln. What kinder hurts me about all this life writing epidemic, is that no one that knows me has even Leo, famous lion of the films, Is V L.&r writing one, (that kinder now one of the exhibitions of A So hurts if any of my my pride). William H. Thompson of Grand View of the new swimming pool In the White II o use, which has been Century of Progress, and to Judge Island, a former Nebraska Supreme Oklahoma friends see anybody sit- from his expression he is amazed completed and Is now enjoyed frequently by President and Mrs. Roosevelt court Judge, who was appointed ting under a persimmon bush with a by the wonderful exposition that United States senator from that pencil, pen, or carona typewriter, Chicago has built. state to fill the vacancy caused by take a nice round hickory saplin Dr. Jean Piccard, scientist, right, and Lieut. Comm. T. G. Settle, Unitthe death of Senator R. B. Howell and put him out of his misery. TO BOSS RAILROADS ed States nary, are shown with the metal gondola which is to be their of Omaha. Somebody started writing the life home and laboratory In their attempted flight to the stratosphere early of Charley Chaplin out here, and in July. The balloon, by which this 200 pound gondola is to be carried started it running in a magazine. HEAD OF KIWANIS 10 or 11 miles up, will be 100 feet in diameter. The ascent will be made Well the magafrom Chicago. zine hasent got through paying damages yet. There is lots of injustices in our laws, but we can II . at least live our j . 111 Birthplace of Nancy Hanks Marked m ! : mwd Where the President May Spend Vacation 1 f'Wh: l ill 4 7 White House Pool Is Complete Ready for Stratosphere Flight semi-souther- n v' PF fit F)At - V Li sug-este- d Here Is a New Kind fag, Log Rolling That's Not Political " ' .. of Airplane 5 j lss lives My without having lived by J them some wishing amateur man of well letters. v Most of has been my life lived alone. I never run with a pack. But the whole thing is so silly that we needent go further with it. I am just tipping the boys off to p.F-- ' 5 . "X " -- ! ' ' .' , " J ' $ ' ' t f ' f more, lived more in a year ever did or will. So Bill, I hereby pass you on a batch, (I think Its a dozen) of amateur Carl Give em a chance they are Carl E. Endlcott of Huntington, Ind., president of Kiwanis Interna' all fine boys. I got nothing against tlonal and presiding officer of tha era. But let em practice writing on seventeenth annual your life. Yours can stand it. But my organization's poor little life Bernard Shaw could convention In Los Angeles. ent make it look like anything. But here Is better still, pass a law there England's Stored Gold Were England ever Invaded, the In Oklahoma, (you can do It, you al only way in which the Invader ways have) making every blogrn could get at the gold stored far pliy writer Join the below the pavements of Thread camps. That will get their mind off needle street would be by means of of writing. fi 19S! McX aught Symdicil; Inc. key and lock combination, done S jf ' r than I Sand-bergs- of the visitors to Century of Progress exposition in Chicago Fr ever seen the loggers of the North and Northwest at work, so they A have are Interested and excited by the exhibitions of log rolling given there. Peter Hooper and Sura Ilarrla are tlift exports in the photograph. . --- F i The Arup, the Invention of Dr. Clojd L Snyder of South Bend, Ind.. which he hopes to reach unpreceifested. altitudes, was tested at South Bend airport by Glenn Doolittle at an altfrorfde of 2,200 feet. This new craft is the result of seven years of study and experItaewtotlir-i-- " Doctor Snyder on the principle of the flying wing. He believes that the Arup will revolutionize commercial aviation because of Its unusual safety factors. It Is so designed and constructed as to make a tnllspin and a flatspln impossible and lands at a speed lower by five feet per second than does a 500 square foot area parachute. with sharpen their pencils and go after somebody else. Why dont they pick on Govenor Bill MurrayT Bill has ? . Joseph B. Eastman, member of the Interstate Commerce commission, who was appointed railroad Rooseby President velt, under the provisions of the new railroad bill. Explorer a Scientist Most Journeya that seem daring and romantic to the public are exAs expeditions of exploration. Pfetasants In Barter ploration is one way of supplying In retufn for 5,000,000 pickerel the science of geography with data, ecus and a number of Ilunsrarlnn the explorer. In his way, Is a scienpartridges, the government of North tist A point loss commonly unDakota shinned to the Government derstood Is that scientists, who are or baskatchewan 1,800 not explorers in the usual sense, go pheasants, which were distributed into strange lands and undergo throughout the province for breed- hardships for other reasons than ing purposes. geographicaJ discovery. ring-necke- Beaver Stone Matont dam built almost en- tlrely of stone was discovered .reIn Yellowstone National cently park by Ranger F. Sheldon Dart. A few willow twigs were the only pieces of wood used In Its construction. Mr. Dart says that the stones the beavers have worked Into this dam vary in size from pieces as large as a man's fist to some 10 Inches In diameter and 14 A beaver Inches long. j . |