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Show r L BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, AUGUST 1. 1835 GOING HOLLYWOOD (By Slay Mann) in HolThere are more all the in observatories than lywood in the world. Visitors and are constantly on the hunt star-seeke- rs lor them. They haunt the boulevard, the entrances of the fashionable restaurants and hotels and then their pleasure rendezvous. But few are able to learn the addresses of their homes, and there the stars nave real privacy. W. C. Fields, the fat, jolly comedian, even has his name and address listed in the phone directory and thi jovial gentleman, who makes several thousands a week, has never fc11 married, so if you have the right appeal you might give him a ring some time, he answers his own phone. ) Greta Garbo seldom resides in any one house for more than a six month period and then changes from apartment hotel to a private estate and then to the beach or the mountains, until even her own studio has a difficult time finding her. Greta takes daily sun baths and not so long ago was lying in the seclusion of her estate on the lawns basking in the sun when someone jumped from the high hedge and snapped her picture. The intruder was arrested and of course the film destroyed. So a movie star has little privacy. This past Sunday in Hollywood: Ann Harding, Jack Oakie, Ida Lupino and others were guests at the Harold Lloyd home, watching the tennis and thereafer going for a paddle in the pool; Carole Lombard was hostess to Bing Crosby, Dixie Lee and others for tennis and tea; Claudette Colbert gave the same kind of a party; Gail Patrick and Grace Bradley flew over the mountains at the controls of chartered planes; Marlene Dietrich took her small daughter, Marie, to Venice, where they took in all the beach concessions; Henry Wilcoxen and Fred MacMurray were reeling in barracuda off the steeps of Santa Monica, and Larry Crabbe attracting a gallery as he breasts the breakers at Catalina. News Flash: Janet Gaynor, who bumped heads with her leading man Henry Fonda by mistake and who was put to bed seriously ill is now recovered ; Jean Harlow has been taking a taxi to the studio the past week, for her mama took the family auto keys with her to Kansas; Gloria Swanson and Herbert Marshall have been vacationing at Agua Caliente; The magicians convention has been holding sway here this past week; O. O. Gunn and Charles Hoffman staged an automobile race blind folded down the boulevard and at the convention center Patricia Ellis was "beheaded" which proves you can't believe what you see as she is working on a picture today; According to the records of the tax collector Charles Chaplin is still the wealthiest star with a valuation of $2,692,490. Others were Mary Pickford, $1,465,740; Douglas Fairbanks, $39,540; Will Rogers, $226,440; Joe E. Brown and Joan Crawford's assessed valuation has increased since last year, and the other stars have dropped some; Burke has returned to Broadway, the first time since her husband Fro Ziegfeld's death. There she was once mistress of "Burkely Crest", their estate in the fashionable Tarry Town district where they lived in great splendor. Six Rolls Royces stood in the ten car garage and a baby elephant was among their daughter's playthings. Ziegfeld, who was an enormous money maker was also a big spender and lost everything in the big crash of '29. His widow, Billie Burke, had to return to the screen where she. has now reestablished her self as an actress. She is as lovely and young today as in the old time with Will silent films. She Rogers in "Doubting Thomas," one of the most entertaining pictures of the year. Mae West says "Come up and see me sometime," so now is as good a time as ever. Through heavy traffic, over hills and down dales we finally arrive at the Ravenswood apartment hotel where resides Miss West. In a fashionable location with rentals at a thousand per month, Miss West resides on the fourth floor. The doorman hands you out of your car and over the heavy thick rug under the awning of the hotel marquee and into the luxurions lobby which is furnished with elaborate decorations and Harnessing Electricity to Make Radium Experimental Laboratory at Round Hill, Mm , Teats II age Generator SINCE the discovery eighteenandmonths ago by French t, his wife Irene Joliot daughter of the late Mane Curie, of how to make some ordinary elements radioactive, physicists and chemists have attempted to Jean-Freder- ic Curie-Tolio- proanc Bumeiem qaanuues oi these element to try their value In bombardment experiments. On the treating malignant diseases such as top ot two towers are large metal balls which collect the charge gea cancer. The difficulty, reports The Liter-ar- y era ted electrostatically. Between the balls will be placed Digett, Is that only a tew atoms of the element become radioactive the world's largest vacuum tube, a under the bombardment ot atomic foot in diameter, twenty feet long, etilleU. Two things are needed: dlrided into fire sections. It is pro higher yoltagea to increase the num- - Tided internally with specially da Bil-li- e Le-Go- dance-a-litt- The United States Civil Service Commission has announced open com- petitive examinations as follows: Specialists in maternal and child health, $3,800 a year to $5,600 a year, associate in maternal and child health, $3,200 a year, assistant in maternal and child health, $2,600 a year, Children's Bureau, Department of Labor. Optional subjects are: Pediatrics, obstetrics, orthopedics, and general (maternal and child health). Pathologist (rice investigations), $3,800 a year, associate pathologist co-sta- rs CAR-LOA- DS Our stock was never more complete than now. We invite your inspection. We have never had better Building Materials SHINGLES Better Shingle That Old Leaky Roof Now! CANS CANS FOR CANNING VEGETABLES Get Your Supply While Our Stock Is Complete FARM MACHINERY AND HARDWARE We Supply Your Every Need Farmers' Cash Union "YOUR GOOD WILL OUR BEST ASSET" A Good Business DESERVES Good Stationary A Poor Business NEEDS Good Stationary to help it become a good business When you write a letter, distribute folders or send out a statement, these printed messengers are your sole representatives If cheap ink is used or flimsy paper or broken type, they cast a slazy reflection on you. We can give your printed matter and you a fair fighting chance with your customer or prospective customer BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER Personal Printing Department -- full-tim- NOTICE Bids will be received by the undersigned for the publishing of county reports, notices and advertisements, for the year commencing July 1st, 1935, for Box Elder county; at of the undersigned up to 1 p.m., August 3rd, 1935. Said bids to be presented to the Board of County Commissioners for awarding to the lowest competent bidder, circulation considered, by the undersigned on August 5th, 1935, provided that any or all bids so submitted f may be rejected. C. HENRY NIELSEN, (Signed) County Clerk and Auditor. the-offic- e Ex-offic- lo Wide World tHectrottatia generator ditcharge at the experimental station. Round Bill, Matt. signed metal shields to act lik lenses in focusing the highly charged particles passing through the tube. Starting from one end, particles, swept along by the enormous volt age, will strike at tremendous velocities a target of the substance to be bombarded at the other end Electrical pressure up to 7,000,001 volts wili be at the command of tha , i physicists. bar and power of the bombarding particles, and a quick method of separating or concentrating the radioactive atoms after they hare received the activating treatment. World's Largest Vacuum Tube At Round Hill, Mass., a huge generator, built by Dr. Robert Van de Graaff, of M. I. T., and his associates, Drs. Lester and high-voltag- e j j , We Still Have a Good Stock of Old Wheat on Hand It is from this old stock that we make our JP Big f WILKINSON & SON PHONE 3.a-- 3 if muuit cm NOMTVUU, VXUL ' ? g pjrrjr-- We Solicit Your Grist Business HONEYVILLE, UTAH '. Ford FOR THRIFT ! ' "0; don't have to choose berween thrill YOU thrift in your driving today. The Ford both! You get better command of your horsepower It's not so much at the wheel of a Ford V-a matter of speed as of responsiveness. Not just quietness but smoothness and quickness. A Ford V-- engine under your toe puts more fm in your driving, all day long. Yet you get all this, with a Ford V-at cost today. This newest Ford V-costs less to oun than any car Ford ever built before! is famous for V-- 8 8. i and thrift has always been a leading factor in Ford history. Go see this latest Ford V-- 8 yourself. Take it out on the road for the thrill of an run. It's a car that's already setting new records for sales the country over. Near you is a Ford dealer who will gladly and quickly show you why. Go see him today. , AUTHORIZED FORD DEALERS 8, tork-botto- OS THE 2 Bro-4- i AnEigfoJor Thrill A si Painting - Tinting Paper Hanging Flour Would suggest that you purchase from your local dealer enough to insure you of GOOD FLOUR until the new wheat is properly cured 8 See Our New WALL PAPER SAMPLES Sun Tested - Washable i f Jensen f ' : 7 HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID FOR ALL GRAINS able west side in a small old theater, The originality of her performances toe daring way they were pre. sented attracted aU of New York and her name became famous through the country which of course brought her to screen. She wears more mondg than eny0ne else in the world, save a crown head of Europe. Her pictures are not sensational, it's the way she speaks and the West movements that give them that flavor. Her father was a fight promoter in New York and Mae loves the fights and goes every week. She rarely goes to a night club and does not partake in any wild parties and in private life neither drinks nor smokes. She is Catholic and attends mass every Sun- - ferns which stand six feet high with a spread of about eight feet. The big- gest ferns we had ever seen. At the desk we call her apartment only to be informed that Miss West has not yet arrived and so we sit and then sit some more. After three hours a huge swerves to the curb and out ' ngnis a Dig lau genueman wiia we broadest shoulders you ever saw. He is dark complexioned and carries a cane. He extends his hand and out steps a little blonde Tady with a very important air and with a swish-swis- h before our awed gaze .enters the lobby and vanishes in the elevator. That was Mae West some one says and we suddenly are aware that we have actually seen that famous person. The gentleman with her we are informed, was none other than big Jini Timony, her manager and closest friend. Well, we get ourselves all announced over again and up we go. We are shown into a beautiful living room, all done in white. Everything is quite modernistic in taste and utterly feminine. A perfect setting for a vampire we reflect. Miss West is dressing for dinner and the fights at the American Legion Stadium, the latter which she attends every week, and so the maid invites us into the West boudoir and I doubt if there was ever enything quite like it in the whole world. Cleopatra couldn't possibly, in her wildest dreams, conceived such a The entire ceiling is one bedroom. large mirror and Mae lies in bed and looks at her self as she writes the dialogue and scenes of her pictures, of which she is sole author and playwright. In the center of the room stands a bed eight feet square, heavily draped in white satin. The furniture is white and a lounge is filled with white satin pillows. White bear rugs grace the floors. But Miss West herself is the real surprise. As she arises we see a small woman about five feet two inches in height and slender, weighing about a hundred and fifteen pounds. Where are all those curves and mounds we wonder, and this little woman is so different from the one we know on the screen. And she doesn't say "How'm I doln' " with a swing of the shoulders, but in a business like tone says, "How do you do, what can I do for you?" She is not exactly gracious so we state our errand and learn a few facts about Mae West. To attain that hour glass figure she pours herself into especially made corsets and wears the highest heels adding four inches of height to her self. In the gay nineties she was a show girl on Broadway. With the financial backing of her mother and Mr. Timony, then a lawyer. She opened her own show in the unfashlon- j We Have Just Received Two Carloads of HIGH QUALITY LUMBER le (ceareai smuts), 13,200 a year. aistant agronomist (forage crops diseases), $2,600 a year, assistant ag-- v ronomist (sugar plant investigations), $2,600 a year assistant geneticist (tobacco investigations), $2,600 a year. Bureau of Plant Industry, Depart ment of Agriculture, Alphabetic Accounting Machine Op- erator, $1,440 a year. Applicants must show that they have had at least e three months experience in the operation of an electric alphebetic accounting machine which carries an card. Senior Educationist (State School Administration), $4,600 a year, Of fice of Education, Department of tha Interior. Full information may be obtained from the Secretary of the United States Civil Service Board of Examiners at. the post office or customhouse in any city which has a post office of the first or the second class, or from the United States Civil Service Commission, Washington, D. C. CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATIONS Chest? Van Atta, will undergo TWO day morning:. She Uvea a quiet life and has no love affairs that can be headlined in the papers aa is the ut ual case of Hollywood film stars. She has amassed a fortune and at present is writing: the scenario for "Klondike Lil," which will be her new pie ture. Nothing awes Mae West With all Hollywood outdoing itself to do honor to Governor Harry Nice of Maryland Wednesday, Mae West kept the executive and his party waiting from 12:30 to 2 p. m. at the Paramount commlsary where a luncheon waa to be given in his honor. Mae West is keenly sensative to criticism and has no particular regard for women who have given her much of it Perhaps Mae West is the most discussed woman in pictures today and she leads the quietest life. And so, till next time when we shall visit Hollywood's Harlem where the "Chocolate Drops" and "High Yellows" dance off their shoes to Jelly Role Blues and coon orchestras' blat n and wail and Bill Robinson, Jeni Fetch-I- t and "Step-A- n and pokey," are the stars and life goes on in a big way. 8 AtR-- PR FD WARING. TUES, BIA Easy terms through NETWORK Universal Credit Company, the Authorized Ford Finance Plan. . . .VISIT FORD EXHIBIT SAN DIEGO EXPOSITION Callister Motor Co. TREMONTON, UTAH |