OCR Text |
Show SUNDAY HERALD fllfJWll I I I I I M I f f I I I I -I I I IMlllSIIIISII ld57 TJT11? I m MM T7, Utah J V 'X V ' (I Zfep Modern Women to Make Headlines 1 l.V r- - .... . . T . By WINIFRED JONES The women who left their homes to cross strange oceans and build a new country; who fought Indians from behind log wralls; who struggled for the right to vote and who flew earljT vintage airplanes have left that heritage of brains, courage and beauty to today's modern woman as the news wires and photos show. A mother of four shines as a bright new picture Sr i?2 1 cv 111 . jit' 2f star; a lady of distinction who could easily claim rocking chair privileges flies to Russia on behalf of her country; a young miss raises unusual pets; a woman dares to take her family through a wall of Reel fire, and talent and beauty vie for honors as the top lovely of America. These are but isolated instances of the many new and varied ways in which women today make news by distinctive acts, talents and intelligence. W J, f In -- I n 0 , 0 4 n - ! 6 a V -- ft .4 I phi it f ir tin ?r 1 1 v v "ST NEW STAR IN HOLLYWOOD SKIES Lovely Mary Hosford is the most highly talked about new- comer to Hollywood. A housewife, who one year ago was signed to star in the C. V. Whitney's film, "The Missouri Trave'er," Mary is 81 and has four children. Before the year is out Mary will have become an authoress and will announce her marriage to Mr. Whitney. Odds are that she will be as highly publicized as .Marilyn n - HAPPINESS FOR WINNERS Smiles on beautiful faces mark the triumph of these four girls in the. preliminary competition at trie Miss America Pageant in Atlantic City, N.J. Holding trophies, from left, are Jody Elizabeth Shattuck, Miss Georgia; Gloria Ruth Rupprecht, Miss Indiana; Sara Ann Cooper, Miss Missouri, and Lynn Freyse, Miss Arizona. Jody Elizabeth and Lynn won bathing suit honors and Sara Ann and Gloria won talent honors. ' ( , . 0 l JaLwJ ' v7 UNUSUAL PETS FOR YOUNG MISS- - Most girls have either a dog or cat, but Betty Sprous, 11, of St. Louis, IMo., has both plus a old fox named Foxy. She nth g received the fox as a s a issued fee. special permit to keep the fox as a pet. baby-sittin- She-wa- 4 je Wr y is 4 J 4- iff n SI ?W1 fry; iti ; ii . - 1 CITIZENS Mrs. Marta Uhilk and husband look at document signed by Pres. Eisenhower that gives them permission to live in United States. The Uhilks escaped Red Czechoslovakia in simulated Russian tank (see painting background) built with their own hands. They now live in Los NEW RUSSIA HAS DISTINGUISHED VISITOR Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt is greeted at Vnukovo Airport by Hay ward Isham, second secretary of the U.S. Embassy who represented the Ambassador, Llewellyn E. Thompson, on her arrival in Moscow for her first visit to the Soviet Union. At left is Mrs. Roosevelt's secretary, Maureen Qorr. The late President's widow will tour Moscow, Leningrad and Stalingrad and take a ride down the Volga. . Angeles. t:C iW' feir 'M'T fx ;-,- t" 'r-- Jjl ixr ,1.1 - ,., inn , 1. .m.u ' , - nn ... it, l .1 nil inn, a ,. ,,,. . 1 v,.'.. 'tMM I ' c-- -- S;;rr. " ,y;-- 7 .... 1? f, y. HOW LUCKY CAN Utah, Frandne Louise Felt, makes music with violin while Miss Indiana, Gloria Ruth Rupprecht, makes with song as they serenade George Breen, Buffalo, N.Y., Olympic champion swimmer at the Miss America pageant. Breen won the annual mile and ;a half ocean swim in the time of SO R minutes and 17 seconds. BE?--Mi- gs 1 :;; s |