Newspaper Page Text
®UESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1948,
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
AP Newsfeatures Writer
NEW YORK —Oh, it wasn't
<uch a bad year after all , . . It
was the year we expected to win
o first lady whose favorite recipe
was Berkshire pudding, made with
rice, and we actually received a
{irst lady whose favorite is Ozark
pudding, made with corn meal.
It was the year a couple of im
portant male socialites proved
.new that the Cinderella story
really is a true one.
It was the year that skirts
stopped dropping around our
.nkles and started the long climb
bhack toward our knees.
It was the year a whole pack of
Paris designers stopped pretend
ing they were oblivious to Ameri
can markets and opened shops on
our own fair shores.
[t was the year people started
setting telephone calls from radio
<hows and picked up items like
washing machines and mink coats
for NOT answering simple ques
tions correctly.
It was the year - -a fresh-faced
Conadian girl Aamed Barbara Ann
Seott won Olympies honors and
came closer to being a national
ieroine than anyone since Helen
iille
It was. the year women were
rged to crop their hair short, like
he flappers of the twenties, and
limb into clothes like Napoleon’s
vise, Josephine, wore. .
It was the year ‘Life with
VMother” opened, and showed signs
{ being just as healthy a stage
how as “Life with Father” was.
It was the year people with tel
wvision sets really began to grouse
hecause their living room was al
vays full of people—many of
vhom they didn’t even know.
It was the year that a few peo
le all over the place were able
to say out loud they’d been lucky
nough to find an apartment.
It was the year they discovered
hat ice could be frozen in the
shape of balls instead of cubes.
It was the year Charles Boyer
ypened in a Broadway hit without
oupee.
It was the year that one perfume
ranufacturer broke down and
yublicly confessed that a touch of
is product was NOT guaranteed
o deliver the man of your dreams,
og-tied, at your feet. .
It was the year they attached
hbands to the end of eye-glasses
bows which permitted one to wear
hem draped around the neck, like
ecklaces.
It was the year that a lady
showed up at the Metropolitan
Jpera opening with the ends of her
air dyed purple to match her
[lress.
It was the year that women
wvie stars kept pretty much out
pf trouble, but several male glamor
boys didn’t.
It was the year a $2-bill bought
pbout a pound of butter, a dozen
pges and a stick of gum.
It was the year they started
waking bobby pins with real dia
wond decorations, a considerable
mprovement over last year’s solid
pold jobs.
It was the year that lady writers
peccupied themselves with reams
bnd reams of autobiographical
books or, in alternative, historical
ovels.
It was the year when there
wasn’t much in the way of new
bopular tunes, but every nice oldie
‘e ever heard was dragged out of
oth-balls.
It was the year when they tried
0o persuade the girls to go back
) closed toe, closed heel shoes—
nd a whole raft of them refused
change from open-toe, sling
backs.
It was the year when necklines
ropped from a-way up here to
~-way down there, and are still
lunging.
It was the year of the pastel
hades in cosmetics and alto shades
stockings.
® It was the year—heavens above,
was a pretty horrible year when
ou think about it, wasn’t it? Glad
’s over with. ‘
R |
—
OVIE PROGRAMS 1
ALACE— |
Tues. — ‘“Paleface,” starring
Bob Hope, Jane Russell. Texas
edheads. Pluto’s Purchase.
News. ‘
. Wed.-Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. — “Road
louse,” starring Ida Lupino, Cor
el Wilde, Celeste Holm, Richard
idmark. New Year’s Eve Mid
fight Show — “Night Has A
housand Eyes.” 3
EORGIA— |
Tues.-Wed. — “Jack London,”
arring Susan Hayward, I/lichael‘
)’Shea.. Screen Snapshot. - Pest
hat Comes to Dinner. }
Thurs. Fri. — “The Strawberry
oan,” starring Gene Autry, Jack
§olt, Gloria Henry. Go Chase
ourself. News. |
Sat. — “Bring Em’ Back Alive,”
arring Frank Buck. Parlor Bed
] .(f)m & Wrath. Hector’s Hectic
ife. |
TRAND— |
" Tues.—“ Mummy’s Tomb,” star
ing Lon Cheney, Dick Foran,
lyse Knox. Winners Lose All
riple Trouble. Frozen Fun.
Wed. — “The Mark of Zorro,”
arring 4 Tyrone Power, Linda
arnell. Mystery Mountain —
ap 7. " ;
Thurs. — “Mystery in Mexico,
arring William Lundigan, I.hcar—‘
Cortez. Murder Case. Pigs in
Poka. : S
Fri.-Sat. — “Renegade Trail,”
arring William (Hopalong)
yd. Uninvited Blonde. Adv. of
ank and Jesse James—Chapter
TZ— T
Tues. — “Badmen of Missouri,
arring Dennis Morgan, Jane
yman. Flat Feet. Strikes to
are. £
Wed. - Thurs. — “Babe Ruth
ory,” starring William Bendix,
gire Trevor, Hillbilly Hit Pa
e.
Fri.-Sat. — “The Fighting Ran
r,” starring Johnny Mack
rown, Raymond Hatton. Bachel-
Bllaes. Adv, of Rex & Rinty
3 - 1 \
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Ape Man Twice Size Of
Gorilla Roamed Earth Once
i By JOE WING
‘ AP Newsfeatures Writer l
} NEW YORK--Once upon a time,
Isay 750,000 years ago, an ape man
|twice the size of a gorilla prowled‘
"the volcanoed slopes of ancient
Java. '
‘ About the same period, give or
take a quarter of a million years,
another giant, still bigger, tougher !
rand (who knows) hairier, peered
lout of a cave across the plainsl
|near modern Peking. To get the:
‘picture, imagine a hulking, 1,000-
pounder with over-size jaw and
undersize brain.
’ All that was known several
|years ago. iy
‘ Now a third giant has been
ladded to this grim company. His
ymortal but petriiied remains have
I just been reported found in South
Africa by a world-renowned an-|
thropologist. Dr. Robert Broom,"
who already had to his crcditl
ithree other types of ancient ape
men. ]
| The South African giant was
jeven larger than his Javanese
counterpart, Dr. Broom reported
by cable to an American colleague,
Wendell Phillips.
l In museums and laboratories all
over the world scientists await
'eagerly Dr. Broom’s full account.
(It may go far, says Dr. Harry
/Shapiro, head of the Department
of Anthropology of the American |
|Museum of Natural History, tol
Istrengthen a revolutionary theory
!advanced only this decade by the]
'eminent authority, Dr. Franz Wei- |
denreich. g
This theory is that these giants
actually were man’s remote an
cestors. \
The theory of giants has strong}
emotional appeal. i ‘
No less eminent a scientist and |
explorer than Roy Chapman An
drews, former head of the Ameri
can Museum of Natural History,
once wrote:
“It always has seemed to me that
such a universal character of world;
folklore must have some basis in
fact—perhaps in legends reachingl
back into the far, dim past, told
in half language by primitive
mothers to the wide-eyed chil
dren.” ¢
Remember Jack the Giant Kill
er, and the monster men of Greek
and German folklore? l
It has been said that the ‘bad
old cannibalistic Neanderthal man
of Europe, who disappeared only
about 30,000 years ago, might have
been the kernel of truth in the
legends of ogres and giants.
But whether any folklore could
carry on for half a million years
or more, the momery of a giant is
something’ else again. It isn’t
known from present evidence,
even, whether the giant men could
talk. § ‘
There’s no doubt at all that the
giants existed. ,But should theyl
be blazoned on mankind’s coat of
arms, or do they represent merely ‘
a dead branch on the family tree?
The story of the discoveries
themselves is as fascinating as Dr.
Weidenreich’s startling theory.
It starts in the last century with
an éccentric Dutchman named Du
bois who went to Java to fihd an'
lancient man merely on a hunch—
and found him!
His find was the classic ape
man—a iype far more px'imitive]
than the neanderthal man of Eu
rope. Scientists agreed that this
ape man was the granddaddy
among all ancient men known un
til then. l
' Then in the thirties an energetic
young German, Dr. R. von Koen—!
igswald, went poking around the
Java region where Dubois had
been. It proved a veritable mine
for bones of ancient men. Among
them Koenigswald spotted a jaw
like that of the ape man but so
much bigger and tougher that
scientists eventually surnamed it
“Robustus.” it
Just before Pearl Harbor, von
Koenigswald found in Java the
{fragment of an enormous lower
jaw, the Java giant jaw, with three
teeth. still in place. This was the
most sensational thing yet.~ The
German scientist was caught be
hind the war’s iron curtain and
spent time in concentration camp.
But not before he had communi
cated his discoveries to Dr. Weid
enreich, who go: away safely to
America with déscription and casts
of the previous fragments. /
The Java giant had a jaw twice
as large as a gorilla, Weidenreich
figured. The gorilla is only as tall
as a man, but weighs up to 500
pounds. Whether the giant was
taller or merely broader will have
to wait on further discoveries.
This put Weidenreich in mind of
three teeth he picked up in Chin
ese druggists’ shops in the'thirties.
They were enormous—bigger than
the Java giant’s feeth, and four or
five times as big as the teeth of
modern man. The druggists re
garded them as “dragon’s bones”—
like any other petrified bones,
There were to be ground up. as
remedies for belly-ache and what
not.
Indications were they had come
from certain caves. These estab
lished a rough date—somewhere
near the start of the ice age. That
in turn linked them with the age
of the Java giant. ; A
Pondering the tiny but con
crete’ bits of evicence, Weiden
reich theorized ‘that the Java ape
man, the Java Robustus, the Java
and Chinese giants and other types
formed a line from man back to
the age of apes. .
“I believe,” he pronounced,
“that all these forms have to be
ranged in the human line and that
the human line leads back to
giants, the farther back it is traced.
In other words, the giants may be
directly ancestral to man.”
In making tea be sure to rinse
the teapot with boiling water be
fore the tea leaves are added. Al
low the boiling water and tea
lgaves to stand from three to five
minutes before pouring.
“Cosmic noise,” which Ileft a
region in outer space 300 years
ago, is interfering with television,
radar and FM and . short-wace
radio communication today. These
mysterious energy waves have
been recorded by scientist.
BUSY DEPARTMENT
The United States Patent Office
received more applications for
the registration of {rade marks in
1946 than in any other year: 27,-
739, including renswals.
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plumes lends scphistication and ex
citement to a Ted Shore evening
ensemble made of a lovely soft
crepe woven with Celanese yarn.!
The versatile stole and shorter, for
| mal length, are typical of this sea
son’s favorite fashions for cruise
and resort wear. The hodice, which
bares the neck and shoulders, has
narrow string straps, and the stole
may be worn as a cape or hood.
. The outhoard motor principle,
successful with small boats, now
can be applied to such ' shallow
water larger craft as barges and
canal boats. A removable combi
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| power applied from an engine on
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PAGE SEVEN