Show War54'4ka ' - KcW00111 - - 41' - 40 M0641A1060 W a tikoamidoW b6toerrwiaamtv 430333340333333tteradMMILIV133OWA1311A333033We3033033314332133334-313333-134-ellei33- 3r e 40 t 1 I C ' h j 0 S 011771 )71J-T- Still 1 -- hri11s eh7 '" y i 1 woo IP— 1! 1 1 a- - eiIS 4 a I )411144 Sam Woe eE f I — i ) 1 1 a h all-roun- i I ' 1 i ' I i 4 11 1 t ' ' 1 ' ot - - '- - - 1 ' s k41 I ti1 4 - - v" 4 worthwhile i i - guished fiction ever given to a New V' r erT a rt el writer by the New England Women's Press Assn Miss Ogilvie has done much short magazine fiction ("The Ebbing Tide" by Elisabeth Ogilvie Thomas Y Crowell Co New York) ih' s "The Unleashed Will" is not a pleasant book In fact it is a sorry choice for a first novel— ' which should be a fair sample of others to follow It is a skillfully NV ri t t e n tale of an uninhibited lad who ends in the hands of the law with an Insane asylum in the offing Not that roses and moonlight are preferred as reading but the book is laid aside with a trifle of relief and hope that the author will conform to public fancy in literature when be begins novel number two ("The Unleashed Will" by Christopher Clark Little Brown and Co Boston) The beloved Ohio hills of Louis Bromfield and the France that he loves equally well form the setting for the three short stories making up The title story tells of a fine lad who escapes from an orphanage grows to manhood on a farm and dies with his pet dog in a blast of mortar fire on a Japanese island in the Pacific "The End of the Road" is a col- tale laid in France 1t3ra —while "Retread" is a warming story of an American veteran who catches up with his past in a httit French village It is Bromfield at his best ("Kenny" :1 kAll L by Louis Bromfield New York) ' ' ' ' iJ i 31 g By IIEDDA - ' '' ' ' ' ' : '"- - 2- " I t t ' ' : ' - '- - - -- ' - - : i t1 - - - - ' - - 4 ' :' -- s I - 1 f - 1 ! ' - - ' r" - - ' 4 i ' gr " 4 s - -- - 1 f : it ' ' 1 4 -- --- 1 - ' '44 '' i 04 -- 1 ! ' ' : t 'i - - 1 1 vk) ' c: I i ( - - '' ' - - I If - psycho-analys- - - ss i 0 "( ' - i $ ' - i - '" :' ll't:- - '1- - N ' - NI 3 4 - 1 1 : t ' I 1 - : - ''''' 11 41 ' 4 - ' ii -- " - 1 !:': t ' 1 ' I - :- i ''''4 ' ' ' "P t ' 111 - - - 1 l t It - - 4 t -- ' 11 0 Iti i i 4 i i 1 ' I ' ' - '" is' i4 ' 4 ' I i ! ' -- 1 - i- i - z 3 - T -- 11 4115- - : 1 - rk ": ' :' ' tt V :t1 ' At 4:- !I's f'S v' '4tiL 14 io "4 -- '- I i i - - '' S It - - g I - $ : 'Ar N ' : 4 ' 'l -- :ri i " '''' I g' It:e - I ' : 1 ''' l'S'I:-':- i ' : c - i t ' 5- - - f '" ' : - :'- - ' : - 1 ' I Utah's Centennial celebration would be Incomplete without Its share of rodeos Queen of the corral at Lehi's western show June 8 will be Miss Norene Felt above of Lehi d her attendant Is Miss Shirley Child left of Springville Award of a "cowboy crown" to the best performer will highLehi rodeo light two-da- y all-arou- -- - - ' 1 titian-haire- 1 I - — 26-2- --- 1 ' - 1 tI 's- ' - ' i - I 4t - ' ' ' - :? ---- --- F - : : : k r ' ' 4p1- - : - zqa- 4' 41''''' F ''- d''''r 41 't : - t27 - - :: - f - s - ::'''-- -"--- - 4 & 4 I nd ' 1 1 -- - p - 3 t - ' i i -- ' It'' 2 - 44 ' ''' - w' '- 1- -' -- ' I - I"-- '' - - p- 1 t - t A 11 4 '" 4- - - i t 071 ' ' 0 " - - ' : 4 ' I 3 - '' 3 s'- 1- t fit4- ) fr f ' ‘ 1 V)1 !3 N :' - - - : ‘ 'si '' - 4 ' -" - '!J' '- 1 ' ''-- r - ''''''i-AI Ps' -- - ' ( ti t ' T 4 e4 $ ' - 04x'41: I'''54" J - ''' ' ' -- - ti 0 df - - - ::- f' 'I N : '' 1q - - : ig - '''" '1: - t '' ""' — '' 'f' 1 I - '1' 4:- 4 ' '' I - - n- - 2' ' ' - 1 ' i 1 1 ' k ‘ -- -- f -- t ' 't 1 I 1 - - : ' ''' - - - 1 q i 'k - -- -- '" - - - — 5 - 1 - rder'271? 4 - 4 i 1 i - c --- - - t 4" - - ' Is" 1- - if Ii' I dl — ! f 1 ' i' -' 4' d'':-- - I 4 41 6 e - 4 - - 1 2 4 -- A '- ' j II - - i r t" vg- "- - :: - - ' ' - : it1: C- - - 1 '' 'Ilt I ''' f c - !1 VAt ' f- 1 ' C 41 k t I A 1 i- tec - to' ' s i - 'i 7s -- - ' - t c- 4 1 - - 2i! 1- ' -- t 1 i - 1 7 - ft Scribners :? - :'r'r -:- : ' r : ::: is 4 - — — ' 4 - 1 - the dark through tangled emotions is the theme of Lilla Van I : I I ' - ii 1 1 1 the idea that Hollywood recognizes its natives only when they meet success elsewhere "Wherever you are" said she "you've simply got to work for what you get "Kids are discouraged from taking up acting as a profession today If I were a girl again and wanted to be an actress I wouldn't hesitate rd line myself up with a little theater and read aloud for two hours a day from some book—even the telephone directory—to improve my enunciation I'd steep myself in written drama I'd work and have patience And I'd be an I t - 1 1 IVI9N:rie f t iTilin04 E I in 1 I - & i "4"Iftmowop10m0fmoe0mvF40 — - — - actress" The "movie dog" is about to have his day No longer is he to be merely an adjunct of melodrama as was his screen ancestor His heroism courage and intelligence will not be a projection oe the same qualities in the human hero Instead like "Smoky" "Thunderhead" and the many other famous horses whose stories have been unforgettably told on the screen he is going to emergeas a principal character Proof of this new trend is the' 20th Century-Fo- x technicolor picture "Bob Son of Battle" which was filmed last summer in southern Utah and which on July 2 will have its world premiere showing at the Utah theater in Salt Lake with simultaneous opening throughout the intermountain territory Two dogs dominate the action of the Alfred 011ivant classic—Auld Bob descendant of a long line of purebred Border collies and Red Wull a brilliant mongrel whose performances rival the champion Laid in the Scottish highlands the story deals with the shepherds' keen sense of sportsmanship and the vital part their carefully trained dogs play Louis King who directed both "Smoky" and "Thunderhead" attributes his success with this type df story not to a particular love of animals but to his interest in them as actors As far as the picture is concerned he treats them as characters and expects them to contribute as convincing performancesas are given by the stars In selecting the dogs to portray the rivals he spent some time watching the Border collie field trials in northern Cali: fornia and Montana The American champion Tweed plays Auld Bob while a Scotch collie now owned by Wynn Hansen of Collinston Utah protrays Red Wull Drama in the magnificently photographed film centers about the accusation that Red Wull is a killer Twice winner of the district championship cup for his owner played by Edmund Green the dog nevertheless hated and distrusted by the neighboring shepherds Human conflict is further developed when Gwenn's son trains Auld Bob for the championship Amazing intelligence is shown by the two collies in their almost human understanding of the dramatic values of the story Their obvious skill at handling sheep will be a revelation From a pictorial point of view "Bob Son of Battle" with its pastoral settings of craggy hills and lone valleys promises to be a further revelation of the possibilities of the scenic Utah lands near Kanab as backgrounds for movies regardless of the locales of the stories Rin-Tin-T- I -- e Model Wile South Utah t 4 or - e -- i IHEROES FOUR-FOOTE- D Pàg In ' - ' a ' ' - i- - 1 If 140 - - I - - x c-- t - ' (''" 4 L'1 'A r t I ' - :- 1 J - i ri-I''''4'- -- I r' 7 k s -t 4 - '' -- " ' It - 1 ) ' - 1 - 1 t - m- I I -- -' ' ' - it i '' 4 b -' ' ' ' 4 -' E She's completely disproved --- --- - - - a - '- - i t Talent Will Out t I1 ' ' f Loretta has no pretensions Last year when she was helping judge my and Tom Brenemants hat contest she worked for seven solid hours Her feet finally began to hurt so she yanked off her slippers borrowed a pair of man's shoes from Rex Ferris and continued to inspect the bonnets She's the perfect answer to d critics who those condemn Hollywood as a place to live and raise children Having come here at the age of 4 she's truly a product of our town: and it would be hard to find a life more exemplary than hers anywhere Not only has she attained and held for a number of years a top spot in her profession but she's also created a happy home for her husband and children 1 ' - f-- ' - -- -' 1 z ' -2 - 7 t ST t !fr - ' ': ' rrn - ' 4 c 41e - : - IS ''"4 " ''- 4 - - e 7- 'P 4 4'41 i - ' - ' wftil 4 - 'i I ' :- ''''''' ''' - - - - 1‘ 0 ' 7 - ' - - ' - : ! ! - - "- - It 'KIP --ym 11 9 ' ' i ft' - ' ' - -:- -- 0 - ' - J ''- i -- o - ' -- - --- ! t long-nose- '4 : - I 1 - - - - in which you are interested "The Echo" will tell in great detail the process by which a decidedly rieurbtic young woman was led ta norrnalcy Thisgroping in it's ' t -- i made together ' I 'I - t It's the fifth picture they've 1 t - - 1 - - I liorrEn said "A week later we were dinner again when the 3'oung man announced 'Oh incidentally Sam Goldwyn signed me to a movie contract today' When I heard that I slid right under the table" The man was of course David Niven Today 14 years later he's one of Loretta's costars in "The Bishop's Wife" s- - p 4 I plenty ef brass but little ver was invited to Loretta Young's house for a week end He stayed four months "One night at dinner" recalled Loretta "he turned to me and asked "By the way chum how does a man go about getting into pictures?' 'Oh no not that not you' I - 'The Echo' 1 i - the first' award for distin- "Is-enn- i - - "- - Undoubtedly the book has won Ohio and France ' Advice — st -- - men two of whom she marries tangle the life of Joanna —and there are unforgettable pictures of family solidarity of people fine worthless or 1 I ' ' ! sil- '1 'c - 1 tiOLLYWOOD—In 1933 a young Scotch gentleman with z th--e---- - The Unleashed Will 1 Tr ' '''''' ' - -- - V - ge -eg”en modthings—she took itr tot eling and thence in star parts Now in America this personable person has settled down to write She does that too and well—and shorn of scientific technicality her next atcry will make a just bid for popularity ("The Echo" by Lila Van Saber E P Dutton and Co N Y) There is the sea wind and the sun the raging ollcoast gales the tang of salt water throughout the story Three ! 1: “ - 1 - ' ' - Saber's novel The author a Hungarian studied medicine at the Sorbonne with psychiatry Then—of all her specialty The third of a trilogy about an island off the Maine egast Elisabeth Ogilvie's "The Ebbing Tide" reasserts the fact that she is to be included among the younger writers who can weave a well-kn- it story and look into the hearts and minds of her characters Born in Boston as a young girl she spent many summers on the Maine coast—and with faseinatihg - - 1 - island 141 ! -- F- r 44ZIVZ4S :: - - 1 - the royalties from her first books she bought herself an 1 - '3 4 " I I i t to"1 ' ' - By MAUDE ROBINSON i t t N 1M Maine Navel Wins Prize for Author' I 'kit' t i ' d s 4 t ! ---- In addition to Lehi's rodeo queensMiss Nadine Mitchell Utah county queen Miss Beverly Powell and 'Miss Glenda' Hunger attendants will appear in featured roles The "step right up folks" entertainment along the midway will be provided by Monte Young's attractions 11 ' e tee tf - Cal-ke- i t1 ' '' ' - - ' miniature parade n Centennial royalty will include visits by lovely Miss Robinson American Fork state queen her attendants Miss Marie Burnett and Miss Mary Louise Gardner Gov Herbert B Maw and David O McKay chairman of the Centennial commit- - -- ' 0 Lehi and Shirley M Child Springville ' Cowboy Crown The cowpokes from the W e s t e rn glamOr circuit will be com- peting for $4200 and entry fees in prizes plus a "cowboy crown" for best performer Competitive events will include bronc busting bareback riding bull Ting aalf roping and bulldogging Dick Griffith recognized as an international champion trick rider has added a new thriller to his stunt routine He rides two stallions Roman style—one foot on the back of each automobile mount—and jumps them over a standard-siz- e Parade Set As if the rodeo were not enough attraction Lehi's Civic Improvement Assn nonprofit sponsoring organization has ' arranged appearances of the Lehi Riding club plus a colorful i -' '' smo Col-led- I - : g chap-wearin- I - I Actress i I — 1 '- :ii LEM—The "kleig lights" of Utah's Centennial rodeo circuits will swing around and focus on Lehi June 26 through 28 there for the sixth annual fenced corral event ' western log arena of the all of stars the top Practically circuit will be on hand to pit their skill against the buckin' horses ornery calves and mean Brahma bulls—all for entertainment of visitors to the Lehi Roundup high-boSharing the spotlight with these daredetils will be three of Utah county's loveliest lassies— Norene Felt Uhl named as queen and attendants Reta s ) -- c111 a i STAGE YOUR GOAL? 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