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FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1948.
WHITE HOUSE COPS WISH THEY WERE
BACK THERE; BLAIR HOUSE
(AND COMMUTING) IS BIG HEADACHE
BY DOUGLAS LARSEN
NEA Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON.—(NEA)—Life
{or White House cops has sud
denly become very complicated
<ince the President moved across
he street into Blair House.
It used to be a relatively sim
ple routine. They sat in their lit
ile sentry houses just inside the
cates. Few persons ever tried to
oet in who didn’t have a pass. The
only time they’d see’ the Presi
dent was once in a while in the
morning when he’'d take a walk,
or going or coming in the car.
That peaceful existence is no
more. Four guard stations have
been established around the Blair
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ATHENS LUMBER (0., INC.
: Athens, Georgia
House, two in front and two in
’back. The ones in front are tiny
- sentry houses which sit right on
|the sidewalk because the house is
,practically orn the sidewalk, too.
| This puts the guards in the
'path of every curious, ‘passing
i pedestrian. And according to the
’guards. they all are curious.
lEverybody who passes, almos{,i
lasks what room the President
!sleeps in. You can’t see his room
ifmm the frent, It’s in back. Where
‘dces Margaret sleep? Back room,
too. How long is the President
going to live here? Maybe a year.
1 Does the President come here for
:lunch? Sometimes. Is he due to
come in soon? I don’t know. Is he
Got a Neck? |
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Is there a neck on your Christ- :
mas list? New York model Cindy |,
Heller suggests a scarf as/a\ gift,
like the new print' one she's |
wearing, or the leopard print in i
the tiny box she's holding.
lin there now? No. Is Mrs. Tru
man in there now? Sorry, I can’t
say "
l The salesmen, peddlers and
unauthorized ‘visitors who can’t
seem to resist the inviting .stair
case from the sidewalk are the
real problem. There never was
trouble with door-to-door sales
men at the White House. The
guards fignre it'll just take time
to get everybody wised-up to the
fact ' that even though it might
look like an ordinary private res- l
idence, you just can't knock on
that door for a stab at selling a
can opener or 2 set of books. )
It’s tough for the guards in
back, too. The President’s bed
room looks out on a dingy park
ing lot, a dirty alley, the rubbish
cans of several office buildings
and a couple of garages. Instead
of a balcony for the Blair House
they’ve had to build a tall, lat
tice-work shield to hide the
worst of the view for him.
A lot of the people who use the
parking lot in back were in the
habit of driving out to Pennsyl
vania Avenue through the Blair
House driveway. It was a con
venient short-cut for everybody
—the laundry men, the milk men,
the mechanics who worked in the
garages anad the office girls hur
rying to catch a streetcar home.‘
Rerouting this traffic has caused
the guards considerable strain,
. Big spotlights have been set
up in the alley as well as in
front to keep the whole building
well-lighted and easier to pio
tect. e 4 e R T
{ There’s another traffic problem
ibecause tne President has to
cross the street four or five times
la day to get back and forth from '
'his office ‘o his temporary home.
Actualaly he has to cross two
'streets, Jackson Place and Penn
|sylvania Avenue. The Blair
‘Ho-rse is caty-corner from the
White House The police started
lout stopping traffic along the
busy avenue each time he cross
ed. That ended when an irritated !
motorist, not knowing what was
going on, let out a colorful blast
against the whole procedure.
Then the cops tried to be subile
about it and juggle the stop lights
when the President stepped out
of the door. That held up traffic
longer than ever and the Presi-'
dent himself stopped this proce
dure, ‘ '
Now he crosses the first street
on which he gets the green light,
and he waits for the other lignt
to change before he crosses the
second street, .
Practically the whole Secret
iService is on edge until the Pres
ident is safely across each time. |
The guards hepe that they hurry i
up and fix what's wrong with
the second floor of the White
iHouse so that they can relax be
hind that comfortable, high iron
’fen(-e. |
Fiesh vegetables contain many
necessary vitamins and mineral
elements so important to good
L'nealth during the winter months. ]
Short Term ™
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One of the shortest termys in the
history of the -U. S. Senate will
be served by Mrs. Vera Bush
field, widow of the laté Sen.
Harlan Bushtield, South Dakata
Republican. Mrs. Bushfield will
take over her husband’s post for
the remaining weeks of Con
gress, until the new Congress is
sworn in.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
By India's Refugees l
"By STEVEN V. DAVID
AP Newsfeatures
NEW DELHI — India's capital,
jammed with 500,000 refugees, has
become a city of sidewalk shop
keepers.
You’'ll find them in front of
buildings, tucked away in corners
and in the shade of trees. Some
boast stalls and other keep their
wares in large wooden cabinets,
But most go into business simply
by spreading a piece of cloth on
\the ground and displaying a fewl
articles. .
i They’ll sell you almost anything
'——if you're not careful. Toys,
trinkets, cigarettes, food, cloth,
toilet articles, shoes, clocks and
countless other items are for sale.
But prices are no cheaper than!
those of established shops. The |
“street wallah” will tell you hel
has to pay higher wholesale prices
than do legitimate shops. ‘
The street wallah is an institu
tion in India, but New Delhi and
old Delhi have more than their
share of such entrepeneurs. They '
are quick to tell you stories of
past suffering, and many of the
stories aré true. The presence of
| their would-be shops is an indica
ition of the resourcefulness and
courage of people who lost every
thing in the partitiofh of India and
‘the rioting which accompanied it.
* # #
Street wallah activity in New
Delhi centers in Connaught Circle,
where hundreds sit side by side
along the verandahs in front of the
'shops of established merchants.
Here women in flowing sarees
bargain heatedly with bearded
hawkers who fled the Punjab riot
ing. Vendors hold up bananas or
beads or betelnuts. Darting ur
chins )ffer “‘shoe-shine—controlled
'price.” |
Dust mingles with the smoke of
incense and flies find their para
dise.
{ Street wallah business extends
down the side roads. A bicycle
tire hanging limply from a tree
}heralds the open-air establishment
of a cycle repairman who may
have started with only a pump to
inflate flat tires. A dispenser of
ominous-looking soft drinks op
erates from a wooden box on small
wheels. He also sells hot Indian
tid-bits wrapped up in green
leaves. The flies love them.
Some simply sell services. A
tailor sits outside an airline office
sewing unhurriedly at three rupees
($1) a day, pretty good pay. A
barber squats down on a side
walk, Oriental fashion, to shave a
customer, who must also squat.
You may have your head mas
saged in the park by a youngster
whaose charge is four annas (eight
cents). The ear-cleaner’s fee de
pends on the results he can show.
| You may have a tooth pulled at
a moderate charge. Just sit on a
misplaced kitchen chair and open
your mouth. The* “dentist” has
no license, but neither has the doc
tor” who offers powders and oint
_ments for headaches and iq@jq-,
is a little leath‘m glso is a self
made professional man.
;. The Sikh fortune tellers get by
without crystal balls and shrouded
booths. They walk up behind you,
murmuring softly that you are
about to inherit a lot of money or
that “you will be going home .to
England soon.” An American who
has never been near Engiand is
inclined to suspect the fortune tel
ler’s ability.
| The sidewalk wallahs have been
removed from chandni chowk
(moon market), old Delhi’s fam
ous bazaar. Things got so bad
that the trams which run on both
sides of the street could scarcely
move between the pushcarts and
benches of refugees.
) &
L | Season’s |
| Grectings | B
To one and all we ,
: extend .. . sincerest
\\ wishes for a very glad
Yuletide, and a happy,
\ happy New Year! .
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WALTER DOOLITTLE
Clothing Store
433 E. Broad
RUSSIA LOSING GRIP ON EUROPEAN LABOR
s Cpposition to Marshall lan_
By LEON DENNEN
NEA Special Correspondent
PARIS— (NEA) — The Kremlin
is losing its grip on European la- ‘
bor for the first time since the
continent was liberated. |
The pro-Soviet World Federa
tion of Trade Unions appears tol
be on its way out. The WFTU |
never has been of much impor—(
tance as a labor organization, but
it has been very useful to Moscow
as a sounding board for pro-So
viet propaganda, and as a cover
for Communist activity in the Mid
dle East and the Far East. ‘
- The break, which European
trades wunionists are confident
‘means the quick death of the
iWFTU, resulted from the Federa
tion’s opposition to the Marshall
Plan. Louis Saillant, general sec
‘}retary, has followed the Soviet
line, including bitter-end opposi
ltion to the Marshall Plan, con
sistently.
Now the British Trade Union
|Congress and the American Con
gress of Industrial Organizations,
principal non-Communist backers
of the WFTU, have withdrawn
their support. The American Fed
eration of Labor has reiterated
~vigorously its opposition to Com
munism in organized labor. Euro
pean unions have been released
fro mthe squeeze that had handi
capped them badly.
Ever since the liberation non-
Communist labor leaders over here
have had to walk t chalk-line be
tween the two big American trade
union rivals, the AFL and the CIO.!
“For the first time the AFL and
the CIO are united on the question
of foreign policy,” a leader of the
Force Ouvrier, French trade union
-organization that recently split off
the Red-dominated General Con
| federation of Labor, told this cor
respondent. ‘“This will help us in
wour fight against foreign domina
tion.”
So concerned is the Kremlin
about the weakening of the WFTU
taht Vassili V. Kuznetsoff, spokes
man for the government-controlled
'Russian “unions,’ is renorted will
ing to compromise on the Marshall
Plan. This would be in line with
Moscow's new attitude of avoiaing
undue friction with the West. Kuz
netsoff is known to be a supporter
,of the Politburo’s “moderate”
iwmg.
! But in the views of French and
Italian anti - Communist labor
leaders, the Kremlin’s second idea
has come too late. They feel that
'the split between West and East is
"so deep, now that the WFTU is
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beyond saving. {
Without taking any credit from |
the European labor leaders who
have fought against Communist‘
Icontrol over here, where they were
on the spot, it was the belated
agreement of American unions on
foreign policy, that turned the
trick. i
Last July David Dubinsky, pres
ident of the International Ladies
Garment Workers Union and a
vice-president of the AFL, visited
several countries in Europe, os
tensibly on other business. With
out fanfare he talked with union
representatives from France, Italy,
Germany and other countries
about the Communist situation. He
assured them o fthe AFL’s fullest
support in their efforts to regain
ltrade union independence.
| At the same time Irving Brown,
|the AFL’s able and energetic Euro-
Ipean representative, was carrying
on a-wigorous campaign against the
WETU.
At that time the CIO was not
ready to break with the world or
ganization of which the late Sid
|ney Hillman, a foremost CIO
{leader, was one of the founders.
Then came the recent national
Iconventions of the two big Amer
{ican labor organizations. The AFL
listened to Brown and others, and
adopted a series of strong anti-
Communist resolutions and propo
sals for a vigorous global policy
aaginst Russian aggression. It in-'
‘cluded support of proposals madel
by Major-General William J.,
‘Donovan, war-time head of the‘
(OSS, in an article distributed by
NEA Service, for quarantining the‘
Soivet Union by elosing ports and
world-trade canals to their goods.
Meanwhile Philip Murray, pres
ident of the CIO, took off his vel
vet gloves and flayed the Com-‘
{munists for their interferencel
with trades unionism, and the CIO
made clear its full support for the‘
Marshall Plan, 1
So now the WFTU is on its ways
out. The Kremlin is upset. New
orders have gone forth to Soviet‘
‘agents in labor circles. Follow-‘
ing the Cominform’s instructions
of Nov. 5, reported by this cor-.
respondent—and in face of the
iFrench government’s threat to act
jvigorously against any sabotage
against the Marshall ‘Plan—the
t General Confederation of Labor
has been cautiously avoiding all
strike action.
‘ The mine strike has been called
off. There may be sporadic or
spontaneous strikes from time to
“time, but they will be of limited
nature. Communist agitation is
dying down in mines and ports.
COOKING BACON AND
SAUSAGE
Slow cooking on low keeps ba
con and sausage from becoming
dry, hard or scorched and keeps
fat from reaching the smoking
point: where it becomes less di~
gestible and changes in flavor,
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PAGE ONE
. STORING=BANDgCHES e
. Sandwicheés, mode up the night
before using thom should be kept
cold overnight to bLe appetiz?ng
and wholesorie. Wrap each one
separately in' waxed paper or slip
in a waxed’ sandwich bag before
putting into the refrigerator. ;
Farmers with électrical service
are using = more electricity now
than they did a few: years ago.