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Show UINTAH BASIN RECORD, DUCHESNE, UTAH fcW -. j-- Newspaper Union. VIRGINIA VALE Shore tCK when Dinah 1.ac getting started in l)v COt- she was on w in New York, - Kisu, li i f MJT as a h Kathleen Norris Says: ,t, T' y - -- I ' Marrying From Fear Syndicate. WNU Feature Phil-lipp- ers. r Jimmy and a few Seb-rin- g oth- Apparently beaten, the tonian delegation Rice d rallied to ride home on the stout right arm and the stouter heart ol Big Bill Dineen. That was victory No. 1, although the world series of 1903 was on the unofficial side. Somti ontams that home IOK ( Nine years later the Red Sox found John McGraw and his Giants in the road. Tttis series went to eight games, where in the final spasm Giant support blew wide open as Christy Mathewson lost a contest he should have won in a IS? !PEA8 Drasi ok - - ". of 1903 came from behind to whip the able Pirates with such stars aboard as Hans Wagner, Tommy Leach, Fred Clarke, Sam Leaver, Deacon that we all could when Nashville, from came up tot Van- after graduating from radio some and doing nght 'wjT V . J? BeU to do everything we That was her along. Fit t-'v- A somewhat dusty files show that a Boston club has never losl a world series contest, with s six out of six starts five for the Red Sox and one for the Braves This world series mop up began 43 years ago. It began when the Boston A L. entry gjlt fas, with a ' - 'THE kid" they say, Id N Station and the with her worked n who to tribute her; still pay such a perfectly e was Basi ; - J hv Western By "- . Mtmnmmmo SCO e , ? -- No MOLOTOV WALKS OUT . . . Piqued because the Russian delegation was assigned to second row seats on the reviewing stand at Paris Hotel de ViHe during the celebration that marked the second anniversary of the liberation of Paris, Commissar Molotov, leader of the So iet peace delegation (foreground) w alks out on the ceremonies. He is followed by M. Manuilsky, Ukranian delegate. common canter. SHORE DINAH IF. I Dinahs still a swell kid; brush off autograph e doesn't rs no matter how badly shes Jiid for time, or how tired she is. ACC js been doing a stint at New 4 s Paramount theater, and her I EELS radio program, with Peter Lind fallen fes, starts September 18 over kooee g yj.om Hollywood. Up- one 47 y picture actors usually call homes when the script Ires that they dial a number; ction favorite restaurant or dials a golf club Hope frequently But Radio Theater Producer ley has a long list of for use on the air; ne people, when a radio actor a number, just have to I to the phone and call it. Ad-sare just as bad; Keighley i list ol those, too, in New York, in, Paris, and other big cities, theyre all vacant lots! ne dial a Bing Crosby he and Bob Us es I Miracle Can Happen Is going thats ,iave an all-stcast really star. Producers Benedict Bo-I- Ss and Burgess Meredith, who it for United Artists, added Fred MacMnrray to including Henry Fonda, making laiiaat LL s HAM a CilJ ntly list ws Stewart, Charles Paulette Goddard; by Laughton the time read this theyll have aniseed some other feminine stars. chy ODonnell is worried be-S- e she cant cry for the movie neras has to be -- Bob cenne helped out with with Working tears. s Qeorge and seven-year-ol- d cne Aames in The Best ir Lives, she watched Earlier in this meeting around the fifth inning, Harry Hooper saved the day for Boston with the most spectacular of all world series catches when he pulled down Larry Doyle's almost sure home run over the right field fence. The ball already had passed over the fence when Hooper made the miracle catch, crashing into the crowd. He must have used a net. "Rose-Marwishes to marry a fine young lawyer , uho already shows signs of political adiancement. He is rich, handsome, devoted ." it By KATHLEEN NORRIS T X OVERT Y was the cause the miserable cir-- i cumstance of which I am writing you, says the letter of a Portland mother. "My husband died in 1932, leaving me with two children, a boy of 14 and a girl of 10. Destitute, I had to work hard for some years to support them, and at 16 my girl took a job in a law office. The boy had then won a scholarship and was living in another h--of Speaker Clinches Flag After that Fred Snodgrass dropped Clyde Engles easy fly to center that popped ipto his glove and then popped out again, Engle reaching second. That was a bit discouraging. But a moment later on, Matty fed Tris Speaker a slow floater and Tris lifted the ball on a near first base high foul pop-u- p that Fred Merkle lost. Chief Myers made a futile chase as Merkle was vainly looking in various directions for the ball. The high pop-udropped between these two only 10 feet from first base. Then Speaker broke it up with a single scoring Engle. Two years later the Braves crashed Into the big show by beatfour straight ing the Athletics Rudolph, Tyler and James did it The famous Athletics curled up like a feather attached to a burning match. In these three world series Boston was three up. In 1915 the Red Sox broke back into the great white spotlight again. They lost to Alexander, one of the great pitchers of all time, and then won the next four games. In 1916 they won the pennant again and took on the Dodgers. The main feature here was Babe Ruths extra inning victory over Sherrod Smith. The Babe was then in the box. a great town. . Members of the crew and passengers aboard the United States transport plane that was forced down August 9 over Yugoslavia, by Yugoslav fighter planes, after their release by Yugoslav authorities, when the United States government had made an issue of the incident. Ten days later five American flyers were shot down over Yugoslavia, and perished. Marshal Tito assured Ambassador Richard Patterson that there would be no repetition of this event. XfmW Mfk left-hand- er ft post-seaso- n It Is only natural that Boston supare looking for another porters b Apple was being held mop-umaking it series world UCU w S0me , 25 key cities be-- ji mi time This row. they have in a seven "t New Fork, rolling up top the best team the home of the bean V's everywhere. United Artists and the cod ever has sent into 1 es ce says the two illuminat- action. It is an even better team erected in Times Square 1912 outfit that knew 'unce re the largest ever than the Lewis and Hooper for the Speaker, ! ?dvertise a Broadway finest defensive outfield in baseball Production one is ICO by 21 history. Plus Smoky Joe Wood in the box. Tlus Bill Carrigan back of the bat. y SrnaU c says the trend in The 1916 Red Sox carry baseis definitely toward the Sldehitting and and she should know, balls two essentials But the Red Sox road recsnares pitching. honors arry Babbitt on the ord proves that Joe Cronins young nnmond" sh.v - By Pop-- j men are far from being invincible. on Mutual, which plays the They are the best team in baseball, 1 anyway, although their rZ selection doesnt leave any .fmRers m cates and bali- or it e selections are wired in wide margin over the Dodgers also can play their who Cardinals, Ingram1 popular ones land on share of baseball. ji. Ranks $8,000,000 Caes-Cleopat- ra p, & tx cx j. 4A i v . V- " v r Vi fV Ji U Rosc-Mari- . . . Enacting modern Jack and Beanstalk version, John Bchlke, five, of Chicago, measures sunflower growing at 30 E. Division street and finds the phenomenal plant has attained a height of 10 feet 4 Inches. A TALL ONE FIRST U. S. PRESIDENT ON BERMUDA SOIL . . . Landing from his Bermuda Yacht club, in Hamilton, yacht, Williamsburg, at the Rojal Bermuda, President Harry S. Truman becomes the first United States President to land on this British possession while in office. Mr. Truman was accompanied here by Sir Ralph Leatham, admiral and governor of Bermuda, who went out in his launch to greet the President. Rose-Mari- I D g J ',, e - clean-hearte- f Query and Comment 'Bystanders and 1 can think up more questions than bea few are can answer. But here lated attempts from recent mail:ImAmong the more Sidelincr football portant and leading college season you the of coming games can list r lr. 6rst Law--I - Ieter twit on th "u!'leiud k, j hu Laby Artln )lirotihlyn" ; I. ,, .? Dame; Dame, Army-Michiga- e e and A. and . . -- Army-Notr- Ilhnois-Nolr- 1 -- e, V V Pasadena tu r cloth Suddenly It't Spring Z I ievn tiwJr',!1!rni.t whlskd so loud ltn'idtiil7,!ir'1' s(,own w,arinK a wot) hear ir, m l !"1e nbody could ' thing doing the .c(ur ' Charles 7 rou bridge i Aoiiorm llepburn- .s Lowell ,,, , ,i rotPrluctiun men on :P & 4 ,e -6 yean b :Hr Mlfl '. to a brondi ust, imdt . arr,,,! wt6 more than 111 Rose-Mari- 1 H; . Rose-Mari- eight-year-ol- - irrit1 of 61, , . ." d pop-n'isi- mal Russians Like Jais Eddie Roznor, one of the most popular and hottest ja?z band lead-e- l s in the Soviet Union, has been brought sharply to tusk by the government newspaper Ivestia, width diclarid that his programs were trivial and had "nothing in Common" with what Soviet audiences love Razner directs the White Russian state jaZ band, and tickets always eie sold out for his shows. He svys he picked up his technique in Ids youth in New York's Hatlem. ie Rose-Marle- top-notc- h Arthur Jane is established as your child, the child of your late marriage to the old man. To break out with evidence of her real parenthood would mark Harold as a scurrilous blackmailer, and hurt him incurably with all decent folk. The chance of hi doing this is, I believe, negligible; that is, if he knows has made it all clear to her promised husband. If she marries him keeping these facts a secret then Harold really holds against her happiness and security a deadly weapon, that may well ruin her life. It is too bad that women must pay so high for the mistakes of girlhood, but we are mode that way, and everything that and emancipation independence can do cannot seem to lessen that situation. For your sake and the sake of innocent little Jane I can only advise an honest explanation to Roses young man, and then a confident Eoing forward in the hope that any scandal started by Harold would react against himself more than against the girl he betrayed. For you to make two loveless marriages to save the situation would merely complicate everything. Rose-Mari- w Years while Ruths Last Hurling easily burst into tears, and have In 1918, the Red Sox returned to wept herself with carnival for the fifth Her only consola-- s the the fact that That time. they whipped the year Myrna Loy Wright, also starring in Cubs where Babe Ruth, dating back to and actresses to 1916, turned In 29 scoreless had to rely on glycerine too. innings. Babe was the mas'r of that party, his final as a pitcher before he turned to home-ru- n hitting at ":y Bliir, Gene Kellys wife, Ed Barrows Babe suggestion. 1 the ingenue lead in the usually carried the world series Douglas My with him, using his pitching kfi Heart, her first picture. along or batting eye for this worthy purplaying on Broadway in pose. It has now been a matter of an s play, "The Beautiful Peo- 28 years since Boston saw its last hen she and Gene were mar-- I world series. At that time Gene was 17. In the last 10 years, Tom Yawkey he joined the navy, she re-l- o has spent enough money to win take care of their daughter, three championships, but this hapr DWho's thtee now- - old enough pened in the era or epoch where the Eetsy resume her career. Yankees had too much stuff. OUK Four months after she started my daughter confessed to me her love for the office boss, her relationship with him and that she expected a child. I was then keepIn which my ing a boarding-hous- e oldest boarder was a man of 76 who had considerable property. He had long wanted to marry me, and in my desperation I now consented to the marriage, closed my house, and insisted that he and I and e go on a trip to Mexico. Where we really went was to a big eastern city, where the baby was born. At this time my husband wai stricken with paralysis; we came back to our home, where all our interests were, and I represented the child as mine. At the time I was only 38, so that that statement was not questioned. This man lived until a few months ago. The situation now is that Rose-Marwishes to marry a fine young lawyer, who already shows signs He is of political advancement. rich, handsome, devoted. Meanmarried while the contemptible s boss man who was has been widowed; he is 61, a successful business man, but to me he would be personally disagreeable even If I did not bitterly resent his betrayal of my little girl when she was only 16. The man she to has now promised marry knows nothing of her story, and if I can prevent it, never will, but the older man, Harold my splendid hltle granddaughters real father. Is quietly blackmailing me into a third marriage; the thought is unspeakably revolting to me, but by marrying this tiresome, little man of 61 I fed that I can my safeguard absolutely daughters new happiness. Future. It is great happiness, it is real e happiness, Mrs. Norris. has grown, has developed in these bitter years She truly loves this new man, she wants to share a dignified and interesting life with him; she can do it, I know she can and Bhe will. But it will be at terrible cost to me. Harold knows that this d girl is his darling e child, for my heart-broke- n naturally told him of her agonizing plight. He can hold this knowledge over us all; he has letters to prove it Can you advise me? Just two points more. Jane, the little girl, dislikes Harold. And inl.nscly believe me when I d say tills, is a gentle, fine, girl, far stronger in character than many girls her age who have b. en more fortunate. As 1 began by saying, poverty wrought this terrible and perpl. xing pattern work p M There Genrgia-Okia-nom- a will be many the others, out these will be among best. 1 ft I V f i I ... Representatives HEADS MEET FOR SI RII S TALK nn t with A. B. ( Happy") nf boib the American and National leagut forth. oming worlds series. Left to f handler to discuss plans for the ut of the Amcri. an league. John Collins, pre-aIi Will irridgf, It A. IS. (Happy) Chandler, business manager of the Biool l.vn Dodgers; .idle Coffins, of the Boston lied Sox, and has. b ill commissioner; I of the National league. o d Frick, president I l r AGUE W - i-IN NEW ROLE , . . Tbo one-ma- , k n army, Maj. Arthur Wcrmulh Of liataan fame, fills tip a gasoline tank of ar at a filling station Whl. h he bought In the Black Hills town of Hill City, S. 1. Everybody wish, s him good lu.k. DREADFUL PROSPECT Covering up the first false step generally weans that a chain of difficulties has been started. So it was for the unhappy mother whose letter is answered in this column. Rose, the daughter, is engaged to a young lawyer whom she loves dearly. lie is handsome, rich and politically ambitious. A dark secret in Roses past threatens to mar her happiness, however. She has a child, born when she was only 16. Her mother, a widow, married an old man, and passed the child off as her own to protect Roses name. Now Roses seducer, a middle-age- d man who was her employer, threatens to expose Rose unless her mother will marry him. A "I ini tiresome little man and surely it is cruel to have the generations go on paying so bitterly for what is no ones fault. Poverty is hard, my dear Janet; I know it well. But no girl gives herself to a middle-agemarried man in the first weeks of their acquaintanceship just because of should have poverty. Rose-Mari- e been better armed for the fight with d life. Your idea of marrying her seducer is fantastic; he has no legal claim upon her or upon the child. can clear this whole thing up and I think in by telljustice to you she must ing her present sweetheart the whole story. Harold Cant Do Much Harm. It is possible that he will break the engagement and leave her. Political careers and histories like this one dont mix. Or it is possible that he will look at the situation honestly and generously. Nobody knows these facts except Harold. Even if he were contemptible enough to start a whispering campaign, the probabilities are all against his getting very far with Rose-Mari- e it. Rose-Mari- e |