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PAGE TWELVE
J 14 PAUL JONES EFFECTS
v 1T NAVAL ACADEMY
ANNAPOLIS, Md.— (AP) —An
excensive collection of items once
owned by John Paul Jones now
belongs to the U. S. Naval Acad
emy. The relics have been on loan
to the Academy for several years
and exhibited in the Jones’ crypt
beneath the chapel and in the
Academy museum,
The collection was formally
presented to the Academy by Mrs.
John L. Senior of Lenox, Mass,
Her husband, lawyer and cement |
industry executive, had assembled
the scores of relics as a hobby.
The collection includes the orig
inal conmission of the country’s
first naval hero, Signed by John
Hancock in 1776 and issued to
Jones as “Captain in the Navy of
the United States,” the commission
has been appraised at $50,000.
Jones carried it with him when he
boarded the captured British fri
gate Serapis from his sinking ship,
the Bon Homme Richard . .
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Radio Clock
SUNDAY
6:3o—Sign On.
6:3o—Folk Music.
7:ls—Rev. Boddy.
7:3o—News,
8:00—~The Sterchi Trio.
7:45-—James and Martha,
B:3o—Rev. H. R. Burnley,
9:oo—Community Sing.
9:3o—Glory Bells.
10:00—News and Sports.
10:15—0Ild Favorites.
10:30—Pipes of Melody.
11:10—News.
11:15—Church Services,
12:15—Ted Dale.
12:45—News in Review,
I:oo—Souvenir Songs.
I:ls—Love Letters and Love
Songs.
I:3o—Sunday Serenade.
2:oo—Major League Game of
Day.
4:oo—News.
4:3o—Revolving Bandstand.
s:3o—News,
s:4s—Kiwanis Show.
6:00—Bold Venture.
- B:3o—Adventures of Frank Race.
7:oo—Candlelight and Silver.
7:3o—“File 13.”
7:3o—Sign Off. :
MONDAY
s:3o—Sign On.
s:3o—Reveille Roundup.
6:oo—News.
6:3o—Farmer’s Daily Guide.
7:oo—News.
7:os—The Blessed Hope.
7:3o—Down Melody Trail. »
7™5-—Vocal Varieties. 1
B:oo—News. /
B:ls—The Musical Clock, *
B:ss—News.
9:oo—Morning Devotional.
9.IS—WRFC Trading Post,
9:3o—Evelyn Knight.
9:4s—The Feminine Agenda.
10:00—Love Letters.
10:05—Melody Magic. '
10:25—Mid-Morning News,
10:30—Debut.
10:45—Gene Autry Show. .
11:00—The Chuck Wagon,
11:45—Bill and Evelyn.
12:00—Piedmont Wranglers,
12:15—News.
12:30—A Song At Midday.
12:45—Eddy Arnold.
I:oo—News,
I:os—Luncheon Serenade.
I:ss—Major League Game of
Day.
4:3o—News,
4:3s—Record Room,
s:3o—Lone Ranger.
6:oo—Easy Moments. .
6:ls—Tomorrow’s Headlines.
6:3o—Sports Roundup,
6:4s—Fishing Is Fun.
7:oo—Candlelight and Silver.
7:4s—Sign Off.
Fish do not drink water; they
get enough moisture in their food.
WGAU-CBS
1340 AM -99.5 FM
SBUNDAY MORNING
6 55—News,
7:oo—Sunday Morning
Serenade,
8:00—CBS News.
B:ls—Church of God Program.
9:oo—The Bible, the Book to
Live By.
9:15-~The Gospcl Messengers.
9:4S—AP News.
10:00—~Forum Class Discussion.
11:00—Music to Please.
11:15-=First Baptist Church
Worship Service.
SBUNUAY AFTERNOON
12:15—Home Worship Hour,
I:oo—News.
I:ls—Serenade in Blue.
I:3o—Columbia Masterworks of
Music.
2:3o—String Serenade (CBS).
3:00—Bill Shadel and News
(CBS).
3:ls—News Analysis (CBS).
3:3o—Starlight Melodies
(CBS). .|
4:oo—Music From Avalon §
(CBS).
4:3o—Here’s Frank Sinatra
s:3o—The Phil Regan Show
(CBS).
s:ss—Ed Morgan and News
(CBS).
6:oo—Guy Lombardo Show,
o g ‘
SUNDAY EVENING
6:3o—Summer ih St. Louis '
(CBS).
7:oo—Salute to Reservists.
7:3o—The Peggy Lee Show
(CBS).
B:oo—Mario Lanza Show (CBS).
B:3o—Horace Heidt Show (CBS).
9:3o—Proclaim Liberty (CBS).
10:00—Your Sunday Date.
10:30—The Symphonette (CBS).
11:00—WGAU N ews, Night Final
—Ed Thilenius.
11:15—Muis America Loves.
12:00—CBS News.
12:05—Sign Off,
MONDAY MORNING
6:3s—Sign On.
6:4o—News.
6:4s—Hillbilly Highlights. 3
06:55—News.
7:00—~Good Morning Circle,
7:3o—World News Briefs. ~
7:3s—Geod Morning Circle.
8:00—CBS World News Roundup
(CBS). i
B:ls—Bread of Life.
B:3o—Music Shop Parade.
9:oo—Broadway’s My Beat
(CBS).
9:ls—Strength for te Dhay.
9:3o—The Contented Hour
(CBS).
9:4s—Barnyard Follies (CBS).
10:00—Arthur Godfrey (CBS).
11:30—Ring the Bell,
11:45—Rosemary (CBS).
12:00—~Wendy Warren and News
(CBS).
MONDAY AFTERNOON
12:15--Mid-Day Roundup of the
News.
12:30--Romance of Helen Trent
(CBS).
12:45—Farm Flashes.
1:00—Big Sister (CBS).
I:ls—Ma Perkins (CBS).
I:3o—Young Dr. Malone (CBS).
I:4s—The Guiding Light (CBS).
2:oo—Designed for Listening.
2:ls—Perry Mason (CBS).
2:3o—This Is Nora Drake (CBS).
2:4s—The Brighter Day (CBS).
3:oo—Harlem Review.
3:ls—Hillbilly Matinee.
4:00—1340 Platter Party.
s:ls—Red Nichols Show.
s:3o—Songs For You.
s:4s—Curt Massey and Orchestra
(CBS).
There are 40 mountain peaks
more tha na mile high in the great
Smokies of North Carolina and
Tennessee.
‘One out of every three freight
cars on the railroads of the United
States is used to transport coal,
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. REAL ESTATE MARKET FLOPS - Time was when a good Korean foxhole was worth money in
‘re-sale value to old Army men with a flaiz for the fast buck, But all this “cease fire” activity hasy
shot the front-line real estate market all to Seoul-and-gone. So M/Sgt. William H. Ellis, left, of %
ik ' Fort Worth, Tex., finds himself up against ;hhard bargainer in Sgt. Dimas Gongales, of Jerome,}
{* 'Ariz., who knows it's a buyer’s market. (Photo by NEA-Acme Staff Photographer Walter Lea.) ?
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CEASE-FIRELTALK — On western Korean front,
Cpl. Earl W. McKittrick, of Milan, Ind., discusses with ROK
Army Nurse Chay Bycing Ha the news of cease-fire discussions.
Economic Crisis Grips Sovief
Safellites, So Report Declares
BY LEON DENNEN
NEA Staff Correspondent
FRANKFURT, Germany. —
(NEA) — Soviet Russia’s salettlite
countries are in the grip of a se
vere economic crisis unequalled
since the immediate post-war per
iod of 1945, delegates to the Inter
national Socialist Congress which
just concluded its sessions in
Frankfurt report.
From the Baltic to the Black
Sea, millions live in a state of
total or semi-hunger. Hunger
strikes and new acts of sabotage
and partisan warfare are reported
to be on the increase in all the
satellite countries, especially in
the Soviet-annexed Baltic states
of Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania.
The economic collapse and the
new wave of restlesses behind the
Iron Curtain are believed to be one
of the reasons why Moscow decid
ed to seek a truce in Korea.
The latest economic breakdown
behind the Iron Curtain is due in
part to the complete failure of the
various Russion-sponsored and M.
V. D.-directed five-year economic
plans. But in a large measure it is
attributable to the war in Korea.
To keep the North Korean and
Chinese Reds supplied, Moscow
imposed severe economic strains
on its satellites.
“Even Czechoslovakia, which
was once the most, industrialized
country in Central E£urope, has
been bled white by Russia since
the outbreak of the Korean war,”
the Czech delegate to the Social
ist Congress told me.
Two months ago Czechoslovakia
was late with machinery deliver
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ies to Russia, he said. Moscow im
mediately embargoed shipments of
food grain to Prague. At the same
time, the Cominform demanded a
widespread purge of Commmunist
and non-Communist officials re
sponsible for such “Titoist” and
“nationalist treason.”
Representatives of Poland, Hun
gary, Rumania, Bulgaria and the
Baltic States also reported that
the Kremlin hit a snag in its ef
forts to turn the collective farms
into agricultural factories . (agro
towns).
In Soviet Russia, as well as in
the satellite countries, the Polit
buro has recently been carrying
on a campaign for the “mechan
ization cf agriculture.”
Collective farms were to be
amalgamated into larger units
equivalent to towns and peasants
turned into a “rural proletariat”
under the commplete domination of
the M. V. D. (Secret Police). This
would have given the Kremlin
greater control over the peasantry.
it would also have set free sur
plus farm labor for work in the
armament industry.
From Poland to Albania the
peasants—frequently resorting to
armed violence — resisted Mos<
cow’s latest attempt to enslave
them. So .strong was this resist
ance that Red chiefs were forced
to relax their campaign to “prole
tarianize” the peasants. According
to some reports it may be dropped
altogether,
Apparently in an effort to find
scapegoats for the food scarcity
and the general economic crisis
behind the Iron Curtain, the M.
V. D. has instituted a new purge
of Communist members and offi~
cials. More than two million Com
munists have already been purged
in the satellite states alone.
. The situation in the little Sov
iet-dominated state of Estonia is
typical.
“All Communists and their fol
lowers who in June, 1940, formed
the so-called Communist transi
tion government in Estonia have
‘since lost their liberty,” Johannes
‘Mikhelson, prominent Estonian
leader and delegate to the Con
gress, told me.
“The majority of them have
.been sent to slave labor camps,”
‘he said. “Likewise, all secretaries
of the Central Committee of the
Estonia Communist Party and all
trade union secretaries who serv
‘ed the Russians beginning with
‘]94o have disappeared from pub
lic life.”
Soviet Estonia is today a per
fect example of the fate in store
for native Communists the mo
'ment Moscow succeeds in consoli
dating power and realizes its pol
icy of complete Russification, Mik
helson said.
Meanwhile, delegates form 27
countries behind and this side of
the Iron Curtain, including the U.
S., organized in Frankfort a So
cialist International for the pri
mary purpose of combatting Com
munism.
For the first time in the history
of international socialism, the rep
resentatives of the 27 countries
virtually repudiated Marx and the
“Marxist dogma.”
Quoting Abraham Lincoln to the
effect that “Democracy is govern
ment of the people, by the people
and for the people,” the Socialist
Congress adopted a declaration of
principles which closely resembles
the United States Declaration of
Indepensdlence.
AT THE
MOVIES
PALACE—
Sun.-Mon.-Tues. — “Go For
Broke,” starring Van Johnson, The
heroes of the 42nd Regimental
Combat Team. Slamming Sammy
Snead. Lonesome Ghost.
Wed.-Thurs.—*“Coming Around’
The Mountain,” starring Bud Ab
bot, Lou Costello, Dorothy Shay.l
Law of the Badlands. Anything
for Laughs. News. !
Fri.-Sat. — “Fighting Coast
Guard,” starring Brian Donlevy,
Forrest Tucker, Ella Raines. Tex
Williams Western Varieties. Rooe
and Bird.
GEORGIA—
Sun.-Mon. — “Painted Hills,”
starring Lassit, Paul Kelly, Bruce
' Cowling. One Wild Night. Peggy,
’Peg and Polly. News.
Tues.-Wed.—“Bitter Rice,” star
ring Silvano Mangano, Doris Dow=
ling. Doubie Cross Country Race.
Thurs. — “Up Front,” starring
David Wayne, Tom Ewell. Gal-
Joping Gals. News.
Fri. — “My Forbidden Past,”
starring Robert Mitchum, Ava
Gardner. Jumping off Place.
Miners 49’ers. l
Sat.—“The Texan Meets Calam
ity Jane,” starring James Ellison,|
Evelyn Angers. Don’t Throw that
‘Knife. France. I
|A O 1
STRAND— |
Sun.-Mon.-Tues.-Wed. — “The;
Great Caruso,” starring Marioi
Lanza, Ann Blyth. Test Pilot'
Donald. News.
Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. — “Strictly Dis- I
honorable,” starring Ezio Pinza,i
Janet Leigh. Frank DeVol and
Orchestra. Rabbit Fire. News. ’
RITZ—
Sun.—*“One Night In the Tro
pics,” starring Bud Abbott, Lou
Costello. You Hit The Spot. Chew’
Chew Baby.
Mon.-Tues.—“Tomahawk,” star
ring Van Heflin, Yvonne De Carlo. !
Stranger in Lighthouse. Early tol
Bet.
Wed.-Thyrs. — “Pagan Love
Song,” starring Esther Williams,
Howard Keel. Sons of the Plains.
Big Little Leaguers.
Fri.-Sat. — “Fort Savage Raid- |
ers,” starring Charles Sta\rrett,k
Smiley Burnette. The Soilers.!
Altom Man vs. Superman, chapter |
1l |
Gy i
DRIVE-IN— |
Sun.-—*“Back To Bataan,” star=;
ring John Wayne, Anthony Quinn.t
oOld Rocking Chair Tom.
Mon.-Tues —“At War With The'
Army,” starring Dean Martin, Jer-|
ry Lewis. Odor - Able Kitty.f
News. |
Wed.-Thurs. — “Grounds For |
Marriage,” starring Van Johnson, |
Kathryn Grayson. Home Made
Home. News, :
Fri. — “Emergency Weading" |
starring Lart'y Parks, Barbara;
Hale. Mutiny in the County. Un-|
sure Runts.
Sat. — “The Great Missouri
Raid,” starring Wendell Corey,
Ellen Drew. Will to Win. Hound
for Trouble.
Nearly 90 percent of the people
of India live in villages.
About 200 l'anguages are spoken
|in India.
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Show Starts 9:00
JOHN WAYNE
ANTHONY QUINN
"BACK T 0
BATAAN"
55.% P % % e
! woNDAY, JULY TV, ‘lur'!.
Carriages in England during the
rei of Queen Elizabeth were
mflld “Whirlicotes.”
The Grand Canyon of the Colo
rado is 217 miles long and more
than a mile deep in some places.
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