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Show THE Thursday. December 18, 1941 TIMES-NEWS- NEPIII. UTAH . Page Three Latest Additions to America's Sea Power j 1 jwy STkESCREEfOAbiO By VIRGINIA VALE (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) to know what IT ISsaydifficult about the National LrOXvCTm Legion of Decency's banning of Great Garbo's new "; - . .1. C . goes back a matter of 50 years, is one of the few who believes that Buddy Baer can peddle out a large package of poison to Joe Louis, if trained and handled properly. Mr. Brady, who directed the earlier destinies of Jim Corbett and Jim picture,-"Two-Face- Woman," with Archbishop Spellman also condemning it, and various cities banning it as well. The plot, that of the woman who poses as her twin sister to in Start of British African Drive ?' CHARLES BOYER Joan Fontaine who can have practically anything she wants these days in the principal roles. A p hasn't towels. e In NR (Nature's Remedy) Tablets, there are no chemicals, no minerals, no phenol derivatives. NR Tablets are different act, different. Purely vegetable a. combination of 10 vegetable ingredients formulated over 50 years ago. Uncoated or candy coated, their action is dependable, thorough, yet gentle, as millions of NR'b have proved. Get a 254 box or larger economy size. today The 7 tea towel designs and the matching panholder are on transfer Z9376, IS This argument will have to be restricted to the number of players involved, since basketball is ahead when it comes to attendance. Bowling supporters claim something like 20,000,000 players. Basketball backers speak of millions, with no set figures. On the playing side, bowling should have the call since it is a simpler family game to take up and older people can give it a try. Bowling is now on a new boom, covering the entire map. On the playing side it leads the list. Barbara Stauv, .i may have contributed a new sianj phrase to our language. During the making: of "2?all of Fire" she happened alongr v.licn Director Howard Uawks and the picture's authors were trying to tiiink of something slightly slangy for her to say when she walked up to some men she didn't know very well, in a night club, "That's easy," said Barbara. "I'll say 'What's buzzin', cousin?' That's w' at we used to say in Brooklyn." It's in the picture. The picture at the left, made somewhere on the Egyptian-Libya- n border, shows a Bren carrier coming border as the British opened their attack on Axis through barbed wire that marked the Egyptian-Libya- n forces in the desert. At the right an artillery piece opens fire in a desert attack to push the Axis forces into the Mediterranean. Soundphotos. Guardians of Our Western Coast "For Whom the Bell Tolls" is under way even though the cast isn't complete. More than 120 technicians and actors left Hollywood recently for the loftiest location site in film history a spot 9,300 feet up in the Sierra Nevada mountains. Technicolor and long shots had to be made now because of favorable snow conditions, similar to those in Tops in Chemistry I xl NOTHING nirSTHESPOrN, I QUITE LIKE A CAMEL. THEY TASTE SO J CHANGED TO CAMELS FOR MORE 1 MILDNESS. THERE'S LESS X WICOTINE IN THE SMOKE J J Fifty Years Ago "Dear Grant I saw Harvard and Yale play their annual game in Springfield in 1889, and I was just thinking about the changes that have taken place when you move up kid to 1941. I was a when I saw Yale beat Harvard, 6 to 0, that day, with 20,000 looking on. Those were two great teams. Among others, Yale had Heffelfin-ger, McClung, Hartwell, and Morrison. had Cumnock, Upton, Bernie Trafford, Lee and Stagg, r. 51 V ' Vl C I . Purkey knew what she wanted years ago; now she's got it She wanted to get into the movies; she worked hard in high school and college dramatics, for four years, and a Paramount talent scout plucked her out of a college play and sent her to Hollywood for a screen test. You'll see her, probably, in "The Fleet's In." Oh yes--she changed that name to Laura Donivee L , , Kb 'w-- ' .V..-- . a 1 , ' v.- ... ? f " ; v...:. 'Mi,;,.-- ''' y 4 - ' f i v r,.w V Harvard Cranston. Dean. :f f I . McBride, "We youngsters had never seen this new type of football. When the two teams started warming up we 1 V.'V-V CAMELS CONTAINS THE SMOKE OF 'J t . thought they were playing with old footballs knocked out of shape. Also, there were only two substitutions in a hard, rough game. "The big thrill we got was the than the average of the 4 other arrival of Frank Hinkey at Yale. I'd largest-sellin- g like to say that any one who doesn't cigarettes tested lesa than e put Hinkey on his of them any according to independent ' t simply doesn't know his ! scientific teats of the smoke Itselfl He weighed football. only 155 pounds, but he was the hardest, surest and deadliest tackier I ever saw. And yet in his four years of play Frank never had time taken out. "Hinkey was the star of football's 1 e roughest game. This was in 1894. I remember how busy the CIGARETTE stretcher-bearer- s were all through -T1 fcrtftturiinwriiiirtiiiiMifc the game. The big howl came , OF COSTLIER TOBACCOS when Hinkey tackled Wrightington, Harvard back, so terProf. R. J. Williams of Texas, a (top) who was awarded the chemisrifically that Wrightington was carUnderrated Duty Failing of Pessimism try medal of Columbia university ried off with a broken collarbone. There is no duty we so much Pessimism leads to weakness; for his discovery of panthothcnlo Fred Murphy, a Yale star, was Wi- underrate as the duty of being acid. Below: His brother. Dr. R. rushed to the hospital in a serious optimism leads to power. lliam James. R. Williams of New York, who re- condition. happy. R. L. Stevenson. ceived same medal for Isolation of "It was In the 1891 game that vitamin BI. Harvard introduced the flying and revolving wedges, which Hinkey. 'the disembodied ghost,' helped to solve. The game has improved in i many, many ways, Grant, bnt not o in the manner of fighting spirit. How that old gnard loved body con- -, V ! tart, especially Hoffel finger and f of twa the game's greatest, Hinkey, -Prices ft htm $2.00 to $4.00 S"m9T E tV "Jark Doyle." FO I0OMS lW "1 5 YIT 00M No one has looked through a run '"l of 50 years or more with more obJ--serving eyes than Jack Doyle, the I (trsy MWtlrsmJr-tmtimbetting commissioner, Fernet ii ' -WWJ5000 , one o'. the few left who has seen cume from thcin along Heffclfirgef - r V fVL e ' ! the book. SLOWER-BURNIN- 28 LESS NICOTINE all-tim- Id? Lee. t, T When Gilbert Roland, Philip Reed. Errol Flynn and other Hollywood-itc- s who like tennis enter the annual motion picture tournament next spring they're likely to rue the day that Paramount signed up Jim Brown, who's now playing the romantic lead In "Out of the Frying Pan." Brown is Texai tennis cham- all-tim- HE pion. Radio's "Woman of Courage" hat who made two leading women names for themselves in the movies in the days when radio was lot of strange machinery and a couple of ear phones. They are Esther Ralston, one of the most beautiful blondes of that day, and Enid Mar-keone of the most striking brunettes. Soon after word of the Japanese attack on Hawaii was flashed from the White House, American aviators took to the air and the V. 8. fleet steamed out of Pearl Harbor to meet the stealthy Japanese. This photo (taken before the attack) shows the Pacific fleet steaming through the Golden Gate. Caught Short Behind the Enemy Lines If you're star of "Meet the People" you're destined for Hollywood fame, apparently. First Virginia O'Brien, then William Orr, signed up for the movies. The third member of the cast to face the carr cras is Betty Wells, who was nabbed by r Recovers Sight A' foil " - t j ; arairo cn. amp mm " r.''113I. I'je1Jer '' Jf h 4 we'l-know- n v - i if f j f , i n si This photograph, vh!ch ai passed by the German censors and received in New Yoik, shows according to Its accompanying caption, hundred of Soviet prisoner, rap'urrd behind the German lines. They are being marched by IV.c'.r can.ars to an Internment ramp somewhere behind the battle I: e en t'.e rs'.rrn front. f yS tVIWl'i cere-num'- 'fttTtr to Kndicott ;t ODDS AD rumnr,l tbnut that Errol Hynn ucceded in making himiill txceedtntly unpopular ti ith the newspaper photographer! uf tew York recently . . . I'reuilonl Hmur-tel- t uill be heard orer the Mutual chain December 24 during the ul the annual lighting of the Aofifin Chri'tmat tree . . , 1 he of "True to the Army" hat been offered to the V. S. army signal corpt, uilh the urmy'i carrier to Hob Hope and Id la I, pigeon north hate been telnted by the cameramen assigned to llollyu'O-iat "the most phntogenerout start of IVII MnW.ii o ; y, d rv bowling. Bob Hope and Victor Moore are to be teamed in Paramount's version of "Ready Money," the farce about a young man who becomes a financier by mistake. Last time it was filmed was in 1914, after it had been a succor"' production. n-- us Kansas City, Mo. Enclose 15 cents for each pattern desired. Pattern No Name Address 1G6-- Stop worrying about what to send that man you know in the He's answered that service. ... Christmas gift problem for you in any number of surveys made in camp and on shipboard. It's cigarettes and smoking tobacco first. The favorite cigarette is Camel. CANDY The big favorite among smoking tobaccos is Prince Albert, the NaCOATED tional Joy Smoke, according to REGULAR I actual sales records from service stores in the Army, Navy, Marine TOMORROW ALRIGHT NR Corps, and Coast Guard. Local The Popular Call dealers are featuring Camels in Not all the arguments belong to your choice of two gaily wrapped Immortal Memory football, although football brings out packages, also pound tins and The life given us by nature is, is another There heat. the greater pound glass humidors of Prince debate on now as to which is the Albert as ideal Christmas gifts for short; but the memory of a well-- i more popular sport basketball or the men in the service. Adv. spent life is eternal. Cicero. -- ... AUNT MARTHA Box Transfer No. Z9376 CALICO cat performs above calico corners for a gay tea towel motif. It's really not a very strenuous week he puts in asleep behind a flower pot, watching the fish bowl, drinking milk, etc. but your kitchen will welcome the decorativeness he gives to tea WVfl changed his mind since. "Buddy Baer is a Grantland Rice fair boxer, and he is big and game. But, above all, he can punch. And he is capable of showing more speed than he has turned in so far. Buddy needs an extensive' training campaign under smart handling. If this happens even champion Louis will have a busy afternoon." In the other Louis contest Buddy proved that he could punch, and that he could take a bundle of punches on the side. But he was entirely too .slow, and if this weakness is corrected in the next six weeks the younger Baer can be built into a threatening challenger. Above you see a "mosquito boat" of the U. S. navy tipping across the bows of a freighter In New York harbor during a test run. Officially designated as "P-T- " boats, these little craft carry torpedo tubes and machine guns in turrets and have terrific speed. Inset: Slipping into the waters of Los Angeles harbor is the 10,000-to- n John Panl Jones, its name reminiscent of an earlier American ship. The cost was $1,650,000. r.rothcrs. with Charles Boyer and 5 Washington, and he Do you remember that delightful story, "The Constant Nymph"? It v.ill be made again by Warner actor-rave- mix-j- Louis-Bae- r d Metro. cents. Use a bright plaid for the cat and the corners, and finish the motifs In outline embroidery. Make the extra stampings this transfer will give you Into gift sets. Send your order to: Jeffries, has thought for some time that the young Baer was the most dangerous challenger Louis had to He thought face. that before the first prove to her husband that she is glamorous, has been used in Hollywood over and over. Will H. Hays' office had passed the picture. There is hardly a picture-goe- r who hasn't seen things on the screen that shocked him. But since "Two-FaceWoman" was banned, there must have been some excellent reason for it. ' fp Baer and Louis ; . ( The Year of Hacks ,... ., Peabody. ii ; - ? The merchant who advertises must treat you better than the merchant who does not. He must treat you as though you were the most influential person in town. One of the features of this season has teen the nunibcf of brilliant backs supplied by the Midwest and" Sjlh especially. The Midwest offers Bruce Smith. Graham, Wcetfall, Hillenbrand, Bertclii, Harder. Steubor, DeCorre i vont. Kuzma and many others. Th South has Dudley, Jenkins, Lach, I K I C and Sinkwich, Hapes, Hovious, from the Southwest urh talent at Moscr, Layden and Crain. Bernard M. Rrllmurray of New Haven, Conn., who suddenly recovered hi sight after being blind for nearly five year. He Is shown with his "seeing eye" dng, Shrp. ARE AN till matter of cold fact you axe. You hold the destiny of his business In your hands. He knows it. He shows it. And you benefi t by good service, by courteous treatment, by good value and by lower prices. As a i S, l. I I W C Kl I l TI II PERSON A --v I k. j |