Modernized Cavalry Practice Wartime Maneuvers Weather conditions and rough terrain do not stop the mounted soldier. He operates as well in fog or rain as when atmospheric conditions are favorable. To the horse cavalry the passage of bad terrain is a'1 in a day’s work—rocks and hills, sand and mud, forests and rivers never stop them. Graphic illustration of this is fur nished in the picture at the left where a 75-mm gun battery unit nears the top of a steep hill during First Cavalry division maneuvers at Fort Bliss, Texas. Right: A 75-mm gun unit photographed during night firing. GLOVED GOURMET miw i——i ir r ~ i f i■ mif. ’ v'MMHMMiaaiaiaaHi Either the corn was too hot for this old fellow or else he couldn't wait to take off his gloves before digging into the delicious corn-on the-cob. He is one of the many hun gry, homeless vagrants fed by the Volunteers of America soup kitchen In Detroit. ‘Dizzy’ Confident Arm Is in Shape Take it from Jerome "Dizzy” Dean, his "ahm” is all right. He also stated that the shoulder which w:g injured last season has been given a complete rest all winter. Dean v^as one of 13 pitchers In spring train ing practice at Santa Catalina lslaiJ|, Calif. Left to right: Charles Leo ("Gabby") Hartnett, manager of thg Chicago Cubs; Andrew Lotshaw, trainer, and Dizzy himself. Royal Guest—Award Winner—Stylist _ In an official announcement from London recently Lady Nunbnrnholme was listed as a member of the party of King George and Queen Elizabeth when they visit Canada and the United States in the near future. Bette Davis, center, pictured as she appeared In “Jezebel,” a role which won for her this year's Motion Pic ture academy award for the best performance of a film actress. “Women’s hats will be saner this spring,” ac cording to Lilly Dache, fashion authority, who arrived in New York from Paris recently. Bachelor Hairdresser Adopts Baby Boy Happy indeed are Sydney Guialaroff, 30-year-old Hollywood bachelor, and Jon, the 10-months-old baby boy he has adopted. Guialaroff says he is the nation’s highest paid hairdresser, and, as far as he knows, the only bachelor in the nation to adopt a baby. He took the boy when be was six days old because he likes babies. • DEADEYE DICK Young Dick Shaughnessy of Ded ham, Mass., set a new world record in the annual Middle Atlantic skeet championship in Morristown, N. J., recently. His high-over-all for the three events, the .410, 20-gauge and ail-bore was 295. CLOSED DOOR POLICY I As a protest against what he terms a "misuse” of science by the totali tarian states, Professor Percy Bridgman, Harvard university phys icist, has shut his research labora tory to visitors from those coun tries and refuses to discuss his ex periments with them. Lion Cub Quints Thrive in Circus Clyde Beatty, wild animal trainer touring with a circus, has a soft spot in his heart for the baby lion quintuplets which are on the road with him. Birth of five lion cubs is a rarity, according to Beatty, and as sen sational in the animal kingdom as the Dionne sisters are to the world. World’s Largest Carillon for New York Fair m : i. mumm mm Work on a 75-bell carillon to mark the hours and provide music for New York World’s fair visitors was started at the Deagan p'ant in Chicago recently. The carillon will be the largest ever built. The 25-ton musi cal instrument will be removed to White Springs, Fla., after the fair, where it will be placed in the Stephen Foster memorial. Left: A workman checks a collection of more than 100 tubular bells from which the 75 will be selected. Right: Mljis Jeanne Brown sets the Westminster chiming device which will automatically sound the hours on the carl.'lon. iff Governors Salute Idaho Potato I rmhm :« ,® -m. -Ws - . . %. s Gov. Julius P. Hell of Wisconsin (left) and Gov. Frank D. Fitzgerald (right) #f Michigan take their hats off to the Idaho potatoes sent by Gov. C. A. Bottolfsen of the Gem state to feed 2,000 diners at the Republican rally in New York recently. Former President Herbert Hoover addressed the gathering. Oscar, maitre d’hotel of the Waldorf-Astoria, displays samples of the famed potatoes. A SENATOR STEAMS If the senate chamber isn’t hot enough for North Carolina’s Sen. Robert R. Reynolds, he can al ways rely on the gymnasium sweat box. Through exercise routine he keeps his weight down and stays fit for his duties. A Democratic mem ber of the foreign relations and mil itary affairs committees, he has been a leading critic of the adminis tration’s co-operation in the sale of planes to France. Thousands of ‘Heroes’ Souls’ Sent to Japan UIP illmi"1 lill» ii*1 n* K■■■Sr The white boxes being loaded aboard ship in Shanghai, China, contain “Heroes’ Souls,” the ashes of Japa nese soldiers who have been killed in battles in China. Every ship leaving Chinese ports for Japan carries these telltale white boxes. The Japanese admit 51,000 were killed in 1938. Previously they admitted 115,000 before the end of 1937. Foreign military experts estimate Japanese lossee, killed and wounded, at from 150,000 to 600,000 since fighting began July 7, 1937. Q' UICK UOTES. _-’■T'"*- - PERSONAL LIBERTY * A ME 1ICA lives in the heart of ev tj man everywhere who wishes to Snd a region where he will be free to v’ork out his destiny as ho chooses ."--Woodrow Wilson. A, N' IK' * --—*■■■■ - ■ _ _ DtSAi’POlNTiNC stands of vege table • and flowers may be cause! by seeds that have be- P come too old to prodoco first class i rops. It it difficult for gardeners to distii