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Show I'AKOWAN TIMES. PAKOWAS. ITAH Anniversary ol Sound Movies Recalls Eariv Panic of Slars Com. j I Truman Iuriic Aimed al IJcsloriiuitv Parly Machinery Public. Pres n HAi KiiAor. Ami innl't and ( omni tttifor. Editor's -- Uncnlliu.scd at Lmharklnl in n flarjeilt Fve Mrert, S.W., loading I.ii.iM!. ui .1 the perfect-oPer- k f g i t Spiralled ( f r.'.rg jsinini'in, i). r. t.'ic barrel which fore the grooves at WAMIINUlo.N, D C-- I.' t ir projectile a Round c.nne to motion tun got gave tie Faria Feme i i.i.fi'ii-ni'pictures th it tii' tvustirg n cv it tit. Olid kept it we It .in i u; just 2d yeais ago yet most of the rules coit.n.i'tce, ul.iih I card mi from t.i"i! ' g "hi n over heels. nn.eh l.t.itrj or- - This m u. i il r.u re ut.d oecu-r- u 'excitement over the invention that today makes nuivies one of Amey. ftory, was as ricas chief in iustries didn't come ns tup : Mill n en The the i .isis w.is j juuiiful or puh'ie, tmt from til r rs riflcii :ir i atier than the artillery, from the ju pow who stars winpanicked by the Itte-e ( ht the and ui h statistii ns we lave mil n at ti their voices might house (.f ret te- in. In ,.te that the u f ntry in the re.liut.i I he for refolding. st ntutiv cs. Kr.uu a - Irussi.in v.ar of 1!70 not e inti ed an ui. enthusiastic public, It w.i n't ui t.l wiiuniiil 10 tunes .is many n en ns on I p: uiucers of the first n f t e r the p r - u IV ('.it. fin: iuht( d!y the .,t ; UNC .Service. DHfi Talkie Advent - Bevt . 1 weeks a ski-ti-.i- l U n flinn Sin iu ntutiv i .in ! i .1 of 11. ( c ( d ni.ni.v It It. h ft' r) .i M n ,i I'.v i '1 slow. i, g In a v one-li.i- III ( f t' C luh s con Tl'.t'l c, w s (h th.it most liviien Izcd the importance (if th it h.ittlc, and why the Fie side nt fink his rack out os far as t.o did in helping to teat tiiin. 1 can see the Prosnii r.t ii"W as he looked up with t! at p it, bird-lik- e glunie tie lias just enough (f a smile to make you try to listen and sav that if sympathetically Slaughter was right, he (the President) was wrong. Think what Slaughter could have 6aid if he had been elected But tie was defeated and the day after the primary, the real significance of the battle became Artillery, ae is ii.it.uH, : l the raji in j ait, nude rui ki t again 111 3 I t r, (eit, ry forget the cording to the old def- i v . d, mount'd gi cuter than Ins defin.t.on l.e :i ude to mchnie si. ells, or hombs cars, (untamed in the of a roi ki t. ir warhead I iiiir.l.nn the ( Ifec tiveness f "attiih ry" in tne latter sense. n,jt t" belittle the doughboy who IS really the ultimo ratio," but the projietile, eitl er carried in a plane e,r ly pit uhion in u rut hi t, is what nrglit he called the definitive wea( ii. The joint is we did not develop the rocket in the Civil war because we felt we had something better (bieeeh-loadinrilled art.llery and small arms). And again the rocket was set aside by a decision arrivtd at before we engaged actively in World War II when our experts, both in the army and out ed it, including the great Indus- tnahsts who could gauge our production capacity, felt the airplane was a sujenor weapon. We did not entirely neglect study and experimentation on the rocket during the war, however, and now we are probably farther advanced in this tvjie of "artillerv than any other nation. We also have learned to project our artillery by means of the "drone (pilotless airplane). On August 7, the dunes droned their way from Honolulu to California. One of them dropped a bomb. The rest landed successfully. A plane with no pilot can bomb a nation that far distant without risking human life. g d been violated. Outstanding example was the rules committee. There were five southerners anti - administration Democrats on that committee, and with Slaughters help, they could tie up the vote and tie up any legislation Truman asked for. Now maybe the fact that the administration couldn't get its legislation before congress, or couldnt get it passed when it did, was a good thing. I am not discussing that. I merely say that what happened is not a good thing for the y system. And as the situation grew more acute, congress Is This the Army, Mr. Jones? wasnt a woiking body. In World War I when YMCA Let's take the testimony of a and Red Cros,s canteens weie thoroughly loyal Republican member of the committee and acting established right up into the zone minority leader. Representative of the advance, and even nearer Michencr of Michigan. If the Demthe front, some of the "old timers ocrats retain control of the house, of those days wrote to the editors Michener said, the absence of Rep- insisting that the Civil war was won resentative Slaughter will permit on "salt horse and likker (I recall the rules committee to function the that phrase in one of the letter t,J way it was intended to function; and we were just softening the boys Well, it didn't soften them too namely, the legislation of the party in power will be sent to the soft for Chateau Thierry and the floor. Argonne. That didnt mean Michener wantThen came World War II, and ed the rival partys legislation some of the veterans of the earlier passed. It simply meant he knew war raised their eyebrows at the that Slaughter, teaming up with USO, tuikey dinners at the front the ration Democrats on Thanksgiving, ice cream (m- and the Republicans, was able to stead of beans, salmon, corn willy tie the vote and stymie action. nothing). And that isn t But, soldier, you aint heard two-part- anti-admini- st two-part- Air-Pow- y When they say This is the army Mr. Jones, to you future G.I s youll hardly believe it. Did you hear what Field Marshal (blood, sand, and green for the Normandy hedges) Montgomery had to say? He believes enlisted men in the British army ought to live like other folks. Bedrooms, not Big Killer in War This has been an aviation year. The first peacetime year that America has been acknowledged as mistress of the air as well as of the sea and the land. It has been a time of reminiscence, of barracks. recapitulation, as well as forecast You had your breakfast in bed and foreshadowing I remember the interview I had before, goes the warning song, with a certain army official dur- "but you won't have it there any more." Maybe not. But if Monty His ing the war. impatience, smashing the ordinary rules of cen- has his way, British soldiers can sorship, had reealed the seeiet read in bed. of the bazooka kept "confidential" And what about those tricky after it was in use, and the forms American soldiers are "going details of which Germans had long wear? BIue' (like the boys in blue who since learned to their soirow (The bazooka functions on the rocket good-byto Blue Bell). And principle ) perhaps "two-note- , with a light- The officer pointed to an old er ffoade for the trousers! And print on his wall. It was a pictuie oercoats AND CAFES! of American soldiers discharging You aren't in the army now Mr ' a rocket projectile in the War of Jones You're in grand opera! uni-lon- g 1 e t,un f'ate that terminal Why, then, if the rocket princi- - kae pay bill passed bv congress pie was known to us in these eariv suppose, to the fellows days, did we not develop it as the y, lo got out of paiify tlie army without Germans did, I asked. iw mg what they weie going to The reason the rocket was iss. Almost t.iiee billion dollars neglected in the Civil war period, dumped into GI pockets to even I was told, was because ordnance t.i m up with v t at the officers experts were concer.ti ating on for fui loughs they hadn't the development of the breech- is : taken. BA B S . . . by B a I G Ownes, said to be an en- gmeer economist, alters me (and you) this suggest. on Orly by sup- plying the mou-- e wi, cheese to e of Mf-- i sfaction can t Roy BJ-n- ttcalmg. much advanced savs He uju.a .ab'tain man is this point Ren ci: Li r th, t or to each a little lam must ta.l race-tiac- k u k Mcv "V and Muv art-li- ti - wounti t. a I. ante whnh. caliber . trios." "'lie Jo Sngei" shirring talkies, . group-'-- i fin arms of that f sin. dl could easily the tin arms, ried by j lulu, clear. Never in American history has any administration been up against the situation which dev elided when the Koosevclt honeymoon ended. I am not arguing how or why that situation came about. But the fact is we have had a situation where party lines meant little, and the principle of majority rule, the theory on which congress, as a working bexiy, is organized, has age-ol- U Di-pit- t rele.i-- i Mat's W .IS l t I in . II Al V ' I. - ' c. - 1'V tr.d. - M. - fy i ii i r phone lme over' a rural party Prmpted the first certed manhunt, when 50 tele- con-nutti- farmers, PacklnK 8uns ln o!d vigilante style, set out on a quest for rustlfrs- - The neat a wooded sector from midnight until dawn but the rustlers had disappeared Bernard Kroening, who lives in nearby Rock, saw a car slip up to woods on his farm, two occuAlthough hampered by fog, the pants emerging and entering the farmers beat through bushes and woods. He fired three shots, chas- thickets for hours without finding ing the men deeper into the woods. the rustlers. Two Marshfield trafMeanwhile, his wife got busy on fic officers and several deputies the party line to round up the gang helped them. of 50 farmers. An electric wire which charged Before their arrival, however, a fence on the Kroening farm had the mysterious cur raced off down been turned off by the thieves, and the road. Kroening gave chase in the farmers theorized that the his car but lost the quarry. Kroen- men had made careful preparaing told the vigilantes he believed tions for herding the animals the two strangers still were in the through the fence when a truck woods and that the car had been arrived later. driven by a third party, who had In a previous rustling incident, temained in it. mysterious strangers fired on a farmer who came upon them unexpectedly on his farm near Wisconsin Rapids. . 'j - a iLga ar- American world con-fort- a'crj H 1 cry-ta- l faS s i'd , 1 Kith te col tropical an a'crage bathers a day! Cabanas, by th U' S" are usualIy Wlt 5or, Atlantic City shut evr sf stage. Donne tit lons PUyh her ti own Dialo direct it do' iccon o! furmisj up tighter the , Si wht-J- Jack who Tfmi $p& The cops just sent around, and the wrd i Lyna, lost his historic cLb Phillys Walton hotel roof wfo sudden fire regulations closed it, it sjet hunting a new street-floo- r there; meanwhile, he wants to ton over the now dark Rainbow ro:3. in Radio City but the Rocke!i lei dont sem to need the money When George White, rivaled Ziegfeldi "Scandals pposedly hard-hearte- into Diego, the rer Gordon Ruth . It's . star aa official-Jc- Crawfords Possessed, next is with Van Heflin, based on a Cnovelette, osmopolitan magazine by One Mans Secret, a Weiman. . terr ligl cas . Civil aeronautics bureau may act know this: When it approved an around - the - world route for TUA linked with Northwest Howard Hughes, who owns TWA, had an option on control of Norm-wes- . . . is TWA to Shanghai, via west is to pick up there, . Alaska and Seattle. option was to become as and when Northwest . So govern- got PacA-V- to fly the it appearb Hughes, air broke the around-the-worlaround-tord, has in hand the world route he laid out on yec I rep dio Go La gei a C it, effective ment permission . Y. North flying Hughes . . N. to fly Europe; J; mor as mor The wit mu dra a . sary for fort! Jeff havi Faye (Mrs. Roosevelt) Emersoa returns to the stage at Cape Ccd, Mass., August 12, in Here Today," . wife, brate neat $50,000! of 1934. Sti "Phc Th alon suBroa- d boys called a meeting and chipped in for a defense fund. . . . Buddy de Sylva was (lit leader. . . . The kitty went to warmed-ove- r r n dway a 'Mr. and nive whost ran "Follies, trouble in San si T'.ey'l ib'.e tenal. frs' m VI appear wild, awaiting settlement. . government local and naticr- -. caScr to stl fit ridiculously kifj. Cancel bay, c: k J'in (ne of the U. S most breath-tic- j SrouP' bac on earth rests its spreaizg arms 33 t-- f cc-- shi - to . (oi who c d WENDOVER, Reminiscent UTAH-NEVAD- of the Civil war ron-tr- o ersy is the move sponsored bv 2,000 residents of the Utah part of this lP'le Bonneville salt fiats town of 2,500 to secede from Utah so they can join their other 500 townsfolk as residents of Nevada, where a man can do anything he wants weli, almost anything "Utah doesn't even seem to know we're in tie state and apparently doesnt even care if weie m tie bewailed Lester Giffen Union, spokesman for the seeessomMs o complaint 5 ag unst Utah is 'the fact that the Beehive state's laws are ton strut A tourist, conong from the Eas, stops in my plate and looks for the slot mathincs," expkuned I a cafe owner on the Utah side have to tell him we can't have them, so he says to heck wito Ilouse-IIunScr- s ha ge - I or wt stui, , Boy Presents Own Program on Radio MESQUITE, TEXAS. Although only 17 years old. Dale Berry, Mesquite high school senior, has been booked on a sustaining "In Nevada, if a man wants a over program radio station WRR with his own he orders drink, one or two, then hes happy and satisfied," Giffen cowboy band. Berry, who secured said. "In Utah, he has to get a his own sponsor for the program, with Bill Boyds permit, go to tbe state-owne- d store formerly played and buy a qunit Then he feels he Cowboy Ramblers and was onthe Ole Opry program over a has to drink the whole quart So Grand , mT" lshville t.on. show doesn't le up for work the the guitar and other Berry plavs next dav members of the band are Robert PeMtinns will be prt-s- nted to Jenkins, Ch o Landolt, Benny Will-- 1 the Utfii legislutuie and, if banks and Matt McGlothern. nroved there, must be accepted In Instruction in piano and a few the Nevada Then con- guitar lesions represent Berrys gress wifi he a,ked to niter pi, only musical training. He is a son hour la ry to include of Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Berry all of in Nevada Mesquite. best-stocke- d i legi.-latur- e Utah-Neva- Cove! Mansion Quilt to Appease Ghost? Covetous vation f meed of the RN JOSE. CALIF. from mjrind hr It seems to me White Russia glances the current hnus ng shnr'-ag- e Iduntig and Ukiuine have as n ,.ch are attracted neht being by a manto a separate vote in C e UN as sion here vv'uch orig.nally was ! u:'t uo CaUorma and Maine, not to to at eu-- e giiosts mention toe D.Mi.u of Oh - hu dp i Staft 27 years U'uo u'Kh to have a wte some: nv Mrs Sarah Wire r wife wlcic. t1 e irvci ' r of t' e W m ' i di r rd'o f C.vi! fa" e t' e sin.Gnc Aati -a ,fi a n't" re so n t Soon wdl be so;j t am v P"t exchaiges. p an architect!. d rrer :ug'i Ac. 'her con.-tra- i Ch t or and reno jeep nor cheap. m-r- vou' and drives across the border to Nevada While this same innkeeper can sell only 3 2 beer, his fellow barkeepers across the state line have some of the bars the West. Texas High School Rl w tha zoom. famous with announcement of the gb approv circling license, plus the change of the Constellation1- with TWA stock leaped so that Hughes at a ra holdings have been rising a a day of about $1,000,000 lies and listens to ins ribs dc four-da- y a , ting. j will rate. Saratoga bit deeply ... nun-dre- i ... . (uip s -n pa--,i- ei ki S Jack Dempsey and Jake ormer Hollywood rt .taurant enIT have made a flossv per for taxfiain-e- t Lustigs Longcha.nps restaurant chain. . . be Road" earned a fortune large) cause Harry Oshrin doesnMjj wild on payday. John Bar onlet. draw $350 a week stalling asseason, Lester on tour next which gives you a rough j what the lesser hillbilly Per into NaW ste The best and o nightlife. many fi eked Following the death of her hus- lost have of windows in the hmi-- . spenders to band, Mrs. Winchester f became Spa, which, with ail 1s,jnl, pen on solid wals Some of the conscious - stricken the by such a g doors on uppt r e open ri i fit- rn.e of the rifle in war and lethal didnt anticipate Mem to i doesn't . . OPA . on The peace tt'e outside with no st i.r- - and built ad l.tions ly to the a vs th ugh " a VlMfy and entertain thehouse to penetrated there. . - PnceSeacn prrvied. ghosts "iun 40 each ,v steep for a pj of gun vii Urns. a She continued pegged But when the New Yorko ns. are scatttered ti n, p,, buiui a iri lions for natives many iteri- r Many of F'em, I.... p e eu h ears, fluxed in, the piov idirg a new Mr. to s and d 55 monstrosity. some notches in the rs. have i n mb n Every 37 for got ' v vr.'u" years, serv-a't- -; Now the common man wr f, r g l( ,ri -and served lavish bill doesn't know whether t0 prejanj tue raze of secret g t j, mque-spreads, as Mrs. Win. hes-tc- r on the favorite to show or idden panels and trap doors chatted with her "guests." I ,t 3j ai - , 4 y f authentic old world atm like the South Sea islands bad. . . . Natives live in t:r,y the beaches ,,re Hue nrd water dear, wth vaita-s- Farmers Pack Guns to Curb Rustlers An SOS I Ct-t- he d new OLD WESTERN STYLE old-tim- I J j ,.K.mh!s fifth, ... -- Defying modern methods of criminal detection. Wood county farmers have bande ed together in the vigilante svstem to curb a recent out- break of cattle rustlinS hcre-o- m, e who ls appointed ill im MADISON, WIS. nr-to- 4 I,4 President No V. I. dtvoS J yet been ce misted by ,ny Lawyers feel that the federal c octer of the decree put, it In this trap, cal protest. h: ' " . - :'m tO Ytrc - a i Mu vi c 1.--4 0 t-- it carton, shot mg for nat products M pn war prxe, buck worth loj cents. Anierican ho'et Hotel the government . run f astle t.i.,1 ..ccommodit-e'Ple! . . Tie Virgin divorce decree is the only the country signed by , ! -- IV- 55 0 I fi.irrv uu le and Conrad - ' Vs. e t l Nagel n a la the transition f re m K I, V IN CM It I KK . . . Douglas Fairbanks, acclaimed by millions I silence to sound without a hitch. as idol of thr screen, is shown with his liist camera staff while makNagel, wo was umh r contract to MGM at the tune and leouving ing one of his early pictures. Actress Bessie Love played opposite the $2,5(,U, was loaned to ever other star in above picture, title unknown. con punv in Hollywood and in the first two years of talkies, he made miie In Old At i.n.i" with War-in- : nmv total more box office receipts 31 Baxter as the star and such than any otlur tvjie ef picture. films film gnats as Wiliam Boyd, now Westerns Take Lead. Joan Crawford and Greta sound for Westerns It a pg Cas.sidy, and the late Bill Garbo both thought someone Recording was playing a joke on them at first seemed impossible but Fox Unit r"'C to their fame. Westerns by substituting men's voices tow yr when they first heard recordings of their own voices. Wallace Beery made a talkie for Paramount his first was fired and went promptly to MGM. He's been there ever since. Zazu Pitts of silent days wc cc sidered a great dramatic actress, Her voice on the sound track ruined it all and she wisely switched to comedy and made her fortune as a funny girl. Charlie Chaplin, silent and sound .comedian of the early days, even now is planning a comeback after six years of absence. Started in 1927. Picture and sound recorded and synchronized on the same piece of film caused little excitement when 4 it first was shown to the public 'V in Schenectady, N. Y., in 1927. So 1 the late Charles A. Iloxie of Schen-- i 4 t ectady, who developed it in the laboratories of General Electric, iV carted his Kinemagraphone, as he called it, back to the plant. It wasn't until a year or so later that the .president of the company took it with him to Europe to introduce an educational film. There it was received with such enthusiasm that company officials believed the & s ix ( movie was perhaps best talking v -- I," suited to educational purposes. Be4 fore more educational movies had 5 4 been produced, however, the movie iiiiA lalMinii iMtwa, industry put into general use the HISTORICAL STARS . . . Among the most famous stars in early days Hoxie machine. Today it is used of silent films were Charlie Chaplin and Jackie Coogan, shown here in by practically every movie coma scene from "The Kid." pany in the country. VV decree .1 M New" reside!., $2 50 a John p V nent to hem, ,r M.arri j . Ttie v irg n id.n.dj , tically ur.kmwn parad la st tourists, V y f tl use-hunt- ; I JnNon. Was I iJT Kiom timn on a W.I. I i'i Old. die or he V is Jut., y Virgin K:. takes eight Thomas from flying the nev 1 CJ American fastest, Federal I nmry n turns were in. n n u . mii, Si n T a |