Show ' OGDEN 12C UTAH OGDEN - V rV' v" ’" STANDARD-EXAMINE- R SUNDAY MORNING JUNE Three Paintings Fitting Memorial To Controversial Alvan Tuffs Fuller - WASHINGTON (AP) Three priceless paintings serene in their magnificence are stirring to life the memory of one of America’s most tempestuous times Newly hung by the National Gallery of Art which welcomed them as exceptionally important the pictures are a gift of the American people in memory of Alvan Tufts Fuller ) And who the younger generation may ask was Alvan Tufts Fuller? For one thing he was one of the most interesting and controversial public men of this century He was a Boston millionaire auto dealer who got his start selling bicycles - He is best remembered as the unyielding governor of Massachusetts at the time of the still debated ti trial and executions of th8 1920s When Fuller died President John F Kennedy then a senator joined in the eulogies with a statement saying "Massachusetts has lost one of its most able public servants" SCORNED FULLER Another prominent man who remembers Fuller is Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter but Frankfurter was not one of the eulogies' In fact in a book published last year the justice scorned Fuller as a "crude illiterate ar Alexander H Cohen a Broadway producer suggested a year ago that instead of showering telegrams flowers and gifts on performers when a show opens send a message: wish on your opengood “Every ing night- A contribution in your name has been made to the and went on a musical tour of South America She ha?i her own radio program in Uruguay for nine months and appeared on numerous benefit programs for church women’s clubs and other civic events She has had the lead in several college and small theater shows as well as “All Faces West" At present she is soloist with the LDS Choir of Southern California She also sang with the Civic Light Opera Association of Los "Angeles and traveled with a 'popular show which wras presented in several of the larger US cities well-wishe- rs i s - Actors’ - I & V NEW YORK (AP) S Jift - A six-fo- ot bundle of energy who has just passed his 82nd birthday is busy making countless pictures of a shadblow tree at his home He has been taking still and motion pictures in color of that same tree since 1955 In every kind of weather season light and condition In another two years or so he will have a color movie of that tree and you can bet it will have all the significance of the Tree of Life This will give you an Idea of the intensity of the man as an artist and the devotion he pays to the artistic ideal- - You will find the same characteristics in a retrospective exhibition of his work at the Museum of Modern Art where he has headed the photography department since 1947 Steichen has been making pictures since he was 16 Five years later he was encouraged by Alfred Steiglitz went to Paris and began sending back to Steiglitz’ famous studio two kinds of works — his owti photographs and the paintings & Ilti mu Rem-GAINSBOROUGH’S Master John Heathcote iniscent of eBlue Boy’ Frankfurter’s feelings went back to the time when as a young Bosto in later years "one of the most winning renditions ton lawyer and Harvard law pro- plyIn questions the three paintings of childhood ever created” presenting self-confide- nt creature” fessor he was trying to save Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanxetti from being put to death by the of Massachusetts Commonwealth It was a case that aroused international interest and at one point there were angry demonstrations in many American and foreign cities Frankfurter and other liberals fought hard and long for the defense in the interest of civil liber- ty They protested that Sacco and Vanzetti were on trial and being punished not for murdering two men in order to steal a factory payroll but because they had radical Ideas Sacco was a fish peddler and philosophical anarchist Vanzetti worked in a shoe factory and was a left wing agitator Fuller was the man who could have spared their lives but didn’t He apparently never wavered in his belief he was right and the liberals were wrong "I have no regrets I did my duty" was his re- - EDWARD STEICHEN Camera into art With Photographer Sfeichen Camera Work Is Art Form Too white-whiskere- A? sJ Fund” A number of theater people have adopted the idea since- Sacco-Vanzet- —John Musters by Sir Joshua in behalf of the Fuller Foundation Alvan T Fuller Jr said of his Reynolds a portrait of a gentleman huntsman set in an open field with father: "We thought it only fitting that a a great expanse of sky proper memorial to him be estabTIDY SUM lished at the National Gallery of ‘The gallery won’t say what the Art in Washington where his pubpaintings are worth in dollars Howlic service began” d ever it commentsJhat the picture The elder Fuller was a member of the Heathcote child is "reminisof Congress in 1917-1- 8 and was cent in its appeal of Gainsborough’s prominently mentioned as a pos- Blue Boy” And Blue Boy brought sible Republican vice president $620000 when Lord Duveen sold it ' nominee in 1928 and 1932 to Henry E Huntington 40 years The paintings which honor Fuller ago for the Huntington library in are three from the golden age of California British art: There’s another unusual memorial —The Dogana and Santa Maria left behind by Fuller: a batch of Della Salute Venice by Joseph uncashed paychecks totalling Mallord William Turner a view of which he received as salVenice from the entrance to the aries in his terms as congressman Grand Canal aglow with gold and lieutenant governor and governor red reflections Across the backs of the checks he —Master John Heathcote by had written: "Cancelled and left Thomas Gainsborough a portrait to my sons as a souvenir of my COURT OF CROWS by Robert rated by the National Gallery as public service” A Knowlton Harper $4 The scene of this novel is an island off the Carolina coast where TROUBLE the natives make their living off the tourists and summer renters It is about a murder but even more than that it is about a wToman struck dowTn by tragedy The man who gets clobbered fatally with a crowbar is one of the renters Jay Mowery an elderly grump It is understandable that William Glover his wife Mercy would look someBy Early this season Yarnell reached S' AP Drama Writer for love and affection but where his goal of stage performance with NEW YORK— "I’ve managed to she made a blunder in taking up a part in the musical “Camelot” with stay in trouble pretty good” grins young Ashley Wister a native With a long run assured he quit who is handsome Bruce Yarnell the tallest singer on and in favor of a larger role in another crude Broadway "When you’re musical “The Happiest Girl in the It is inevitable that Mercy and everybody wants to be a giant killer” World” Ashley are tried for murder but d There was the time a In it he enacts a general of an- it is not inevitable that Mercy will redskin threatened to scalp him in cient Greece who must rally troops be convicted That factor is taken the wilds of northern Canada to battle in the face of determined care of by a city lawyer surrepti'I the night a teen-ag- e gang went after distaff effort to end war by boy- tiously hired by the island’s old him in the wilds of Times Square cotting romance for the duration doctor who had fled there from j So the day he broke a hand in Such fictional amorous- dilem- a trouble that was deep in the 5 I ' line of duty 4 ma pales for Yarnell alongside ini- past ' En route to a busy first season The trial presents a fine op' A tial discovery of romance in real on Broadway Bruce crammed a life to the author for a study portunity lot of variety into his 25 years J the time I was 12— that’s in characters — local and visiting “By bartender Among his chores: — and reveals some curious things when I discovered girls— I was Y commercial tuna fisherman bounhe says “The girls didn’t about almost everyone in the court? I cer investigator and ditch digger— want anything to do with me That room Ironically the old doctor’s j i for a movie studio in hometown was a terrible experience” past is dredged up by the city Los Angeles Yarnell found the of ' t finally lawyer lady O'v 4 "I kept hoping some producer his life His wife Frances ChadKnowlton has been contributing 4Y5 4: V-V ft j would discover me but none ever v' wick is a former beauty contest to magazines and this is his first k ' u:- looked my way” he says winner She stands without novel He has come up with a In school— he went to the same BRUCE YARNELL of heels They have two daugh- polished production and has hanhelp academy as the four Crosby boys— Broadway’s tallest ters and dad is confident they will dled an unusual theme in a way Bruce developed his vocal talents be just as tall that reaches out to the reader From Gregorian chants he moved attorneys” Bruce says “Some jok “We’re out to eliminate little very effectively on to a choir Then at 18 he set er got a bit messy one day when people” Bruce says Miles A Smith up a private detective agency His I wTas on him a paper serving mother still runs it "Most of the work was servicing broke my hand cn that assign1 Berna Goodwin Fitzell coloratura pubhc at the age of five When she soprano will be presented in a con- was 14 she moved to Utah and cert Friday at 8 pm at the South studied with Emma Lucy Gates for four and a half years Ogden Stake Center 4075 Orchard The concert will be sponsored by Following a two-yeLDS misthe Sixty-fift- h LDS Ward and pro- sion she moved to California where ceeds will go into the building fund she has been studying with FrederMrs Fitzell is a daughter of Mr ick Davis for the past year and a and Mrs Alvin L Goodwin 4184 half Madison She was born in Idaho Mrs Fitzell has in con-Falls and started singing for the j certs in Utah Idahoappeared and California NEW YORK (AP)— An innovation in opening night ritual has brought more than $10000 to the Actors’ Fund philanthropic organization of show-fol- k (1878-1958- purse-prou- d Ogden Soprano Will Present Concert in Chapel on Friday 'SEND NO GIFTS SAYS PRODUCER 'GIVE TO FUND' 1961 25 rVw'vrVV' 'v $80-646- Strange Doings Unfold in New Murder Novel 94 of such artists at Matisse some of the great French artists were first known in this country because of that arrangement During the first World War he had a photo- graphic assignment Then for years Steichen did portraits of celebrities and fashion pictures for “Vogue” and "Vanity” The exhibit contains many of these famous images caught at the perceptive instant In the Second World War he was in charge of naval combat photography in the Pacific In short he has seen much of the world and its people One of his principal acheivements since the wTar has been to create a special kind of photographic exhibit through an amalgamation of many diverse images so that the whole creates a greater and broader image in the mind and the emotions bird-brain- semi-annu- al "lr “3 Z2 J“L Hundreds of pairs of spring and summer styles from current stock REDUCED ji Uto WE HAVE A All our famous makes — Andrew Geller Barefoot COMPLETE LINE ef Orl-glna- ls Jinni DAntonio Geppetto Amalfi and others In a tremendous collection of fresh sparkling styles All heel h eights all colors — including whites and black MIA Executive and Class Manuals patents Come in early tomorrow for these Get Yours Now! fabulous-savings- ! shoes regularly $995 to $2695 NOW as low as STAYS IN Singing Broadway 'Giant' Finds Path to Fame Strewn With Wde famous 498 to 1348 3065 Harrison Blvd ed red-eye- s - - X - ff li Y rai i I' M fl ment" Later he signed on with a small traveling show as baritone vocal- Hoover Collars Make Comeback ist and emcee While in the back-woodof British Columbia an Indian dissatisfied with the entertainment vowed to get him "Fortunately the mounted police located the guy before there was any trouble” the singer recalls Eventually Yarnell worked his way to New York His first job: throwing out uninvited guests at a New Year’s Eve party given by Lee Slrasberg mentor of the renowned Actors Studio Night club engagements followed Escorting several chorus girls home one night Yarnell found himself embroiled with a teen-ag- e pack that gave up when the cops arrived s - NEW YORK (UTI) The Her-be- rt Hoover collar is back It isn’t the stiff celluloid collar of the 1920s and it isn’t even detachable but the first thought on spotting one from a distance is that it is the kind made famous by the - former president before men w7ere liberated from such tyranny The new model shown for fall is soft and comfortable and designed for elegance Actually the manufacturers have merely raised the standard collar height from l inches to two inches It comes in tabs spread collars eyelets and button downs VPkj pay $ ISO or $200 for Contact Lemes? ONE LOW PRICE is iust dJ j Including scientific eye examination Invisible Comfortable fluldiess Smeller than a dime Eesy to iniert end remove it a (k($ I ( ’! f ?H) EASY CREDIT No Money Down hj&2B&k4Ml£kJ OCDEII 2449 Washington Elvd Dr Stepan T Dearden Optometrist in charae Jpanciie 3 533 26th Street SELECTED GROUPS Now accepting Reservations for & August September Weddings Also Reservations for Auditorium useage Specialized Catering available A HAW3SJSR WOME'ON HOUI ivy " e Dr Don C James Optometrist in charge SPORTSWEAR JUNIOR DRESSES BLOUSES COTTON DRESSES SKIRTS - PHONE TODAY ENJOY WONDERFUL O MILLINERY si WHOLE-HOUS- E L JONDBTIONIW- i t TOMORROW HAPPIER HOMES BY SALT LAKE Wcin of Second South " MISSES DRESSES CONVENIENT PARKING AT OUR REAR ENTRANCE 3525 Grant Ave EX 3-15- 51 X Y s O |