Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR
Published Every Evening Except Saturday and
( Sunday and on Sunday Merning by Athens Pub
tishing Company. Entered at the Post Office at
Athens, Ga,, as second class mail matter,
E. B. BRASWELL ........ Editor and Publisher
B. C. LUMPKIN .............. Associate Editor
NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES
Ward-Griffith Company, Inc., New York, 247
Park Avenue; Boston, Stattler Office Building;
Atlanta, 22 Marietta Street; Chicago, Wrigley
Building; Detroit, General Motors Building; Salt
Lake City, Hotel Newhouse; San Francisco, 681
Market Street.
MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Accociated Precs is entitied exclusively to the
vse for republication of all ihe local news printed
in this newspaper, as well as All AP news dis
pateires.
DAILY MEDITATIONS
1W Have you a favorite Bible
SN Y verse? Mail to—
a Q‘i‘:; ‘*‘Q Hlolly Heights Chapel.
A. F. Pledger,
For t'ie eyes of the Lord are over the righteous,
and his ears are op2n unio their prayers, but the
fuce of the Lord is against them that do evil.—
1= Peter 3:12.
Rivals For King-Maker Honor
Caek 4-Year Power, Influence
BY PETER EDSON
NEA Washington Correspondent
CHICAGO.—(NEA)—There’s another race on at
Chicago, in addition to the race for the Republican
presidential nomination. It's the battle of the king
makers,
Who will be the men who swing the deals that
swing the votes that throw vi/ctory to one candidate
or another? Who are the men who will occupy the
smoke-filled rooms where the final deals, if any,
are made?
The rivals for this honor want it primarily for
the power they hope it will give them in the next
four years—if the Republicans win the election.
And even if they don’t win, the influence of even a
defeated party’s boss is supposed to be something.
The first place these would-be President-makers
4urn up is in the states with large uncommitted
delegations, Michigan’s uncomrmitted 33 of 46 dele
gates and Pennsylvania’s uncommitted 25 of 70
delegates are the big chips here.
If this combination of 58 unpledged delegates
could be used to swing the full two-state slate of
116 votes, it could make or break Taft or Eisen
hower. That is why many delegates like to hold
back and play hard ot get.
The key men in these two states are National
Commitieeman Arthur Summerfield of Michigan
and Governor John S. Fine of Pennsylvania. Neither
fully contorls his state delegation.
Senator Taft claims 24 of the Michigan delegates,
but has only six for sure. Eisenhower is given seven.
The 3% unpledged hold nrajority control.
FIGHT COMING WITHIN
PENNSYLVANIA DELEGATION :
In Pennsylvania, Governor Fine has two powerful
blocs 10 contend with, Some 20 delegates lean to
wards General Eisenhower. They are under the
leaders Hip of Senator James H. Duff.
Taft is given 18 sure Pennsylvania delegates but
claims 25 under the leadership of National Commit
teeman G. Mason Owlett. The fight within this
delegation will be as dramatic as any waged on the
convetnion floor,
Equal in size to Pennsylvania's delegation is
California’s 70 votes, pledged to Governor Earl
Warren. The governor is rcally his own political
boss, but he has promised to make no deals.
On a somewhat lower level in point of power are
Ex-Governor Harold Stassen of Minnesota and
Governor Theodore R. McKeldin of Maryland.
Governor Stassen has 24 Minnesota votes plus
two in Colorado. The general belief has been that
he is in this race only for what he can get out of it
later, or as a stalking horse for General Ike, Stas
sen’s trouble is that he does not control enough
votes to be a real power.
The same is true of Governor McKeldin, Talk of
a possible Fine-Summerfield-McKeldin alliance to
throw the nomination has been denied by all three.
But it is a possibility, if the going gets rough.
The perty stalwarts listed atove are the men who
will be sought after by the managers and floor
leaders for Taft and Eisenhower. In this contest,
Taft is an able and experienced professional poli
tician in his own right. Geaneral Eisenhower is a
complete amateur who says he wants no part of
politics and must rely on others for his maneuver=-
ine,
IEE PLANNERS ABLE, BUT NOT OLD HANDS
The general’s principal board of strategy is a
group of U. S. senators. They are able in their own
rights—aside from Senator Duff of Pennsylvania—
not old hands at convention campaigning.
Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, jr., of Massachusetts
is national chairman for Eisenhower but is not ex
pected to stick at that job if Ike wins the nomina
tion.
Senator Frank Carlson and National Committee
man Harry Darby (a former senator) of Kansas
make up the first team, with Lodge and Duff, Sup
porting them is Paul Hoffinan, former Marshall
Plan administrator, in politics this year for the first
time.
The only two professionals on the Eisenhower
team are Governor Thomas E. Dewey of New York
and his former campaign manager, Herbert Brow
nell. They built up the organization that took the
nomination away from Taft in 1948, and hope to
repeat in 1952,
The Taft board of strategy is pretty much what
it has been in past campaigns. It is headed by David
S. Ingalls of Cleveland, a Taft cousin. Tom Cole
man of Wisconsin is Taft’s convention floor man
ager. Congressman Clarence Brown of Ohio and B.
Carroll Reece of Tennessee are big wheels.
Others include Ohio GOP Chairman Ray Bliss,
former GOP National Chairman John D. M, Hanr
ilton, Tait's (formerly Stassen’s) gampaign man=
ager, Vic Johnsen, and his secretary, Jack Martin.
These are the potential powers behind the now
empty thrones—the wire pullers and fixers to watch
for at Chicago.
No maiter how early big sister's boy friend ar
rives, it's always 'way past kid brother’s bedtime.
We're beginning to take new stock in the idea of
living on love. A couple in a poorhouse eloped.
Trees cover one-fifth of the earth’s surface—and
that’s ne place to stand when a thunder and light
ning stcrm is raging.
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
ESTABLISHED 1808
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Daily and Sunday by carrier and to Post Office
boxes in the city—
-1 Week .. Seee SEED Geth Ses Beve 25
1 Month S 0 SOOO 8000 GOOB 000 sben 1 108
DI 6 hsei snvi srsivens snie KID
R& ik vuis vosisans suve DD
TR 0 etk e 2
Subscriptions on R. F. D. Routes and in Towns
within the Athens trading territory, eight dollars
per year. Subscriptions beyond the Athens trad
ing territory must be paid at the City rate.
All subscriptions are payable in advance. Pay
ments in excess of one month should be paid
through our office since we assume no responsi
bility for payments made to carriers or dealers.
American Independence Stands
For Plain Old Self-Reliance
Independence Day celebrates our birth as a na
tion. What we gained on this day in 1776 was polit
ical independence, freedom from the domination of
a mother government whose colonial policy showed
little understanding of the problems and goals of
remote America.
Yet too often the fact is lost sight of that we won
another kind of independence in the American
Revolution War. That historie uprising was a social
as well as political revolution.
We fought for more than the lifting of the yoke
of foreign domination. We wanted freedom from all
manner of econonric restrictions. We wished the
liberty to be ourselves completely, to develop as
our talents and ir}terest and our particular environ
ment gave promise we could.
From that struggle grew a nation wedded to the
ideals of independence and experienced in the
practice of it. Americans made up a rugged com
pany, self-reliant, rich in individual resource, proud
of personal freedom.
The circumstances of life in this country, and on
this earth, have changed mightily since the first
century and a half of America’s growth. Industrial
civilization, a tremendous engine of production, has
transformed the things we do to get our essential
substance.
The complex interplay of economic forces turned
loose by this great engine has brought many prob
lems that are beyond the control of individual men.
They are often victims of economic events far re
moved from their small spnere. They find them
selves helpless to comrbat the effect of these inci
dents. :
To men in a breadline, independence is a hollow
word. €o when the great depression struck, they
looked to the only force they could see which was
big enough and powerful enough to hit back at the
mysterious forces robbing them of their livelihood.
That was government.
It happened that Americans called upon the Dem
ocratic Party to use the power of government at this
moment in our history, But many historians believe
that any party sooner or I2ter would have been
compelled to follow the same course. Men could not
have been allowed to starve through no fault of
their own.
No one can quarrel with the ainr of safeguarding
free men from disasters beyond their control. What
seems unfortunate, however, is that somehow in
this painful adjustment to the complexities of a new
age, we seemed to lose some of our traditional rev
erence for the independence of spirit that had made
us great. ;
Whether the party in power is or is not partly to
blame for this is for the politicians to argue. It is
important here to note only that the loss appears
real. The habit of independence, of drawing on one’s
own resources, is not so strong as it once was.
It would be absurd to argue that we could return
to the kind of independence we knew as a budding
nation in the 19th century. But it is just as absurd
to contend that because our difficulties are vastly
complicated today, we therefore can do nothing for
ourselves. .
A mran whose house is demolished by storm or
fire may rightly welcome rhe zand of neighbors
who pitch in to help rebuild it. But he should not
therefore look expectantly down the road each day
for neighbors who might 2elp him tend his fields
and his stock. The normal labors and trials of life
he must shoulder alone. -
This is an occasion for Americans to remember
their old habits of independence and to begin to
give them fresh meaning against a totally new
backdrop. The task calls for courage, for a rising
to the challenge. Americans have that courage, and
they have never run fromr a real test.
Prices and Inflation
As a device to curb inflation, price control is
attacked on a score of grounds. It is a burdensome,
intricate device, difficult to administer, which in
terferes with the operation of free enterprise. And
despite price control the government'’s cost of living
index remains near its all-time high.
Meanwhile, inventories pile up, sales are held
which are perhaps not at once reflected in index
figures, and there are less than seasonal gains in
some industries and markets. Those, in and out of
Congress, who favor abolition of price control on
unrationed or unallocated goods, which means con
sumer goods, argue that, with price controls re
moved, prices would seek their own levels which,
in view of piled up inventories, would be down
ward.
All that the consumer knows now is that the cost
of living seems to mount higher from month to
month, or at least to remain at levels so high as to
strain the household budget and drive the standard
of living lower.
But there are other factors, more complex and
less obvious, working for inflation. One of these is
the Treasury Department’s latest major borrowing,
which is a bid for bank money. It follows the recent
unsuccessful attempt of the Treasury to raise a
substantial sum from nonbanking investors through
a nonmarketable 234 percent bond. The latest effort
was the offering of unrestricted 3§ percent bonds.
The issue, totaling $3,500,000,000, was oversub
scribed three tinmes,
While bank subscriptions were limited, it was
indicated that the subscription lists were heavily
loaded with “free riders”—that is, buyers interested
not in keeping the bonds but in making a quick
purchase and sale ot the banks before July 1, de
livery date of the bonds. This is a reversion to war
time financing mianly through the banks, which can
have no other effect than to increase the money
supply. The results cannot be other than infla
tionary.
TN ‘Gu
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATZeNe CEORGIA
i . . »
S Jhe Air We Breathe
';’”‘ o it o . w i } Y £ lOy &AW }
Notg TWP N Ay TR Boe RV N |
PPN BN G A BT .% R e TR LLT
'*;!r' e _,"ff.‘ ‘’w. ) '«:‘,_,_Av";.;ra Wil ’,-'3;5“_";," \ Jfl,_:_?* «r/—?-\_";.\’\ 7 >o 4
W R sty TR .‘"‘*‘-, o A - o .
wa'r WUI e r;ug',w..«( ‘-‘v,"' \-»:vb X 'f‘” : v?‘;"‘ % ‘ ot
.}f:'.;z;' 4ANv S e e f 4.2 i‘ AP “'fi"‘&m&s'“ % ge 4
. OL s G e<+-,0l b | : . eL e R,
et T e My A ,;J%.w« |
&»’fi“f,i, e Gt o UK N RO YA= ID N
e /;«.. o "y"fi. Sl,v ol s ,/.,« 6\ \ o b/ M : Z g
's‘-I."' et TTR ~‘-.‘, W, 5 ‘-;. Ao -"/ /s "/‘_ -'.I. A /\\.”“ p— B ¥i :A
.‘.u' ,'.' 19, ,- A ;_‘_‘,.:,..A ‘\ h[' //’ _/ ’ 7 vy, v - 5o d i
.ey e . b & \Y f' " ‘~‘4l‘/ L . ’
. i . . A ob 7\v 74 i If s ,_:4‘ IA e ;
eBlYy W My /)
;'- eg , y L«j/ 0 { e a"éf{," " g g%
| oSR 4{""/ /8 7 ‘(‘ Tl AP /e /
| e MYN% >AN ST
| ' TR,k Aée' i G Oy
i i XN RY2 v s OAN g e y
4 AN N TR OAN
{ OV~ RTP N RB N ’/‘%
BT RN NN W Ao
} IR /0\ 7_'l4 N 7z ’ A 7'\ "\ //, k 1 i
L ORONUCKNN K AKX S
60\ “ L'v\ g "N\ W 4 A\ oRB /< ’\?2»*/' Wi, \ N
= 1 O » \ ; 7/ >TR NG Y,-r .
&SN NS AN e, D
,47 / ; R J—é AN (TR
VY ¥ 7 o N 3\
’/ ¢ é- /| W 7F* () AS A Y \\
7\‘ 7 7 f" ol "o i vi‘:;."‘. fl i s‘;? ‘/‘"
. [/ MY AP e oB SN
4 §{/ 5 e B e
) | R ” A BARL 5 ] S,
3 ,_l4/? Y i f RS fi,‘fl’g‘ P o
< TR Ay
O\ T T eL L R » ;
AC VA T\ 5=
-~ 0 A ‘:_::',i‘. ; i‘ (1/’-’) _: '
it (o 30\ [0 g(s 20
o Ll T G T Ay
Bsparr " nflll ! ~.,.,;..-:;:;:::;:;:- e e R Bb e
20 flm ||| Ll
W o j
o e ,'.;:n;g;;»n:.-/ piid 4 :-:;:,f._.:.;:;::.;-.:»:-;-;~:~:-:<;~:-:-:-:f.-'.é:;:- i
Mo / . gebe
g g 3
AN R s e Db
dcsyan r,,;, 51 ![,
R R R ™ il§ |
g A b {f,fa‘»'~“ Wl W
: ol , ; '?,L“"" NEA Service, Ine, ™
— P s oy
2, A e A ;:31:-'
Ruth Millett
Know When To Cast Off Old Roles
That No Longer Become Your Type
“There comes a time when a
man can’t do the kiss-and-hug
type of movie, and I kind of rec
kon I've reached that stage.” says
movie star Clark Gable,
It’s just as necessary in real life,
as in the movies, for an adult to
know when a particular type of
role is no longer becoming.
For instance, a bride can be
right cute the first year of mar
riage being dumb about every
thing that has to do with house
keeping. But if she clings to the
helpless-in-a-kitchen role after
the first year, it’s no lenger cute.
After that, folks mark her up as
being either stupid or too lazy to
try.
A gir]l can get by with being a
flirt, so long as she looks like a
girl. But once others start regard.
ing her as a woman, rather than as
a girl, the ways of a flirt only
make her look pathetic or ridicu
lous.
WISE WOMAN KNOWS
GLAMOR ROLL IS
SHORT - LIVED
While she is still a bride the wo-
Erskine Jobnson
Dean Marfin And Jenry Lews Wail
Flimsy Films #afal To Fans' Favor
HOLLYWOOD —(NEA)— Be
hind the Screen: Dean Martin and
Jerry Lewis battling with Pro
ducer Hal Wallis for better film
stories are putting the ‘‘Career
Crisis” label on the fight. Another
flimsy plot like “Sailor Beware,”
they’re arguing, will send ‘their
box-office rating into a permanent
slump.
. - *
There's been big talk of Rhonda
Fleming hitting the might-club
trail as a warbler but Rhonda her
self says: “I won't accept any
night-club engagements until there
are no more mov.ies for me to do.”
* *
Before Gigi Perreau leaps into
TV, she’ll hop to London to star in
“Sara Crewe” with an all-British
cast. The Frances Hodgson Bur
nett classic was dramatized on
“Studio One” ‘a few months ago.
* *
Claire Trevor’s telling it on her
self. A neighborhood lad, visiting
her home, spotted her Oscar on a
shelf and asked her seven-year-old
son Charles about it. “Oh,” said
IMPORTANT NOTICE
Effective with last trip July 8,
1952, passenger service will be
discontinued between Athens and
Macon and between Porterdale
and Macon.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
RAILWAY
Railroad Schedules
SEABOARD AIRLINE RY.
Arrival and Departure of Trains
Athens, Georgia
Leave for Eiberton, Hamlet and
New York and East—
-3:30 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
8:48 p. m.—Alr Conditioned.
Leave for Elberton, Hamlet and
East—
-12:15 a. m.—(Local).
Leave for Atlanta, South and
West—
-5:45 a. m.—Air Conditioned.
4:30 a. m.—(Local).
2:87 p. m.—-Air Conditioned.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
RAILROAD
Arrives Athens (Daily, Except
Sunday) 12:35 p. m.
Leaves Athens (Daily, Except
Sunday) 4:15 p. m.
GEORGIA RAILROAD
Mixed Trains.
Week Day Oniy
frain No. 51 Arrives 9:00 a. m
I'rain No. 50 Departs 7:00 o m
man who goes in heavily for the
“George. says”. .and “George
thinks” routine meets only tole
rant amusement. But Jet her keep
it up through the years and others
get more than a trifle bored with
hearing “George” quoted as
though his opinions were the only
ones in the world that mattered.
A woman can play the glamor
girl role only for a short time, too,
with any becomingness. There’s
nothing more ridiculous than the
middle-aged woman who still fan
cies herself a glamor girl and ex
pects to be treated as one.
And so it goes. There are many
roles that women can get by with
at certain ages that are becoming
only to to those ages.
And it's a wise woman who
knows when she has gone beyond
the age when she is appealing
cither as a scatter-brain, a flirt, a,
glamor girl, or the type of blind
ly adoring wife who thinks every
body ought to be as impressed
with what “George says” as she is.
Charles, “that’s just Mama’s mon
ument.”
* * *
Margaret Sullavan, who hasn’t
made a movie since “No Sad Songs
For Me,” is being wooed to return
to Hollywood for Fidelity Pictures’
“The Gardenia,” Vera Caspary’s
suspense tale about a telephone
operator.
* * *
UI has signed Robert Monnet,
the singer—a tipoff to the musical
cycle that the studio is about to
launch . ... Geraldine Brooks says
it’s legal battle between invest
ors, not censorship, that’s keeping
“Volcano,” the controversial Ital
ian movie she made, out of the U.
S. American and Italian money
men are deadlocked over who gets
what out of the profits.
TEEN-AGE LAMOUR
Daria Massey will play Dor
othy Lamour as a South Sea
Island teen-ager in “The Road to
Bali.” .... Shades of Bette Davis.
The part that Orson Welles plays
in “Trent’s Last Case”—Michael
Wilding and Margaret Lockwood
are the stars—llasts exactly 15 min
utes on the screen.
* ® *
Lynn Gilmore, ofter watching a
Hollywood actor down enough
firewater for a lost weekend,
quipped:
“The man obviously has a Scotch
tapeworn.”
* » *
Now Marilyn Bufred, the former
Miss America, may become a
French movie queen. She's co
starring in a picture in Paris and
spouting French gll over the place.
Hollywoodites may scream about
UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT
Carrol’s Truck Stop is
now under the manage
ment of Bob Bailey. We
invite your patronage.
Regular Dinners, Sea
foods, Chops. Will be
open July 4th.
Carrol's Truck Stop
(Across From Uppy's Drive-l‘n)
the horrors of live TV, but there’s
a “No Temperanment” report on
the movie kiddies from Director
Joe Santley of the Jimmy Durante
show. Durante’s guests this sea
son have included many of the
movie greats and this is Santley’s
report;
“They worry about blowing
lines, but there were no fireworks
from any of them. All of them
acted like kids with a new toy.”
Jimmy’s only bad memory of his
guest stars was Jose Ferrer's re
fusal to do the show after being
booked. “He didn’t like the scriot,
or something,” Jimmy dismisses it.
“It was a big mess.”
COMMUNISM TAKES COUNT
There’s another punch at com
munism coming up at Ul under
the title, “Ivan’s Left Hand.” It’s
a satire about & Russian M. P.
who’s imported to fight as a pro
fessional boxer in the U. S. The
fun beging when the lad with the
Red Doctrines meets the American
way of life head en and changes
his viewpoint. .... Irving Hoff
man’s description of Johnnie Ray’s
New York night club debut: “A
nervous breakdown in public.”
Ray’s also being labeled “The
s WS . oo SV
cira um wofRE . BT, wocisl ST / : 1
e N e Gt R ey
§4 o Y iLW 7e S
IR Ret e T i
/%? T A
st g N I .
eey /T
“w«*u/%‘*" ”;’:’“‘4’9" s f G
R B(1 nnmvr(l:{ff s FP R i
W Ememmewied C | G EE R
.T R Y
L flY&/ 4 e e
f*: e ¥Q 3 ”; E 2 7 a“,,’; i N /
%5, L 2 =AYI A
_;k:.' = %’i a 7 4{ : 5%5
X el AY e e 2
.00 foen "y .
s S 3 N, i s
& Wy 2 (__; -;\ N 2%% LS
e %2 A cving \‘4.-:524 o
T\ = G gl YAT
s~\ i: 3 ":-—'-5 4 ,g.gs/:,‘ffy Tl ‘)s ‘n SR
e.NG A 2. @, ;\, 0> N \LN\ L
a 2 RBN Y LS
% o S . % I;l;'?’\.\.,', v{:\\‘\,‘\ »
i ol o N k-
Y .7:2’ ‘¥";\ %‘\ NNy s B
. ~',,f;?'_ b ' ;“'";:' \,‘ a 1;:‘ ;’h ’;\ a® :':,fiaftx:?-.:a::-:,-::: 5% 7’
P NG, CYM Y
’, 5»,"’( S, g ‘%g ’ },‘/ ,‘ :‘}?7; ,::z;;i-'__:-_:_'f:‘ 2HA
" A Te, BT R, S ei T o ¢
[iiase RISy os, .
... we mutually pledge to each other
m our Lives, our Fortunes, and our
% 2 sacred Honor.” ~ . and with these
d words thirteen sovereign colonies
‘Z// ‘it united to fight for their freedom and
/? \\ independence, for only in such a Un
ion cold they succeed.
Differences of background, differences in religion, differences in
political belief were sublimated so that all Americans could live in
blessed freedom. With these words, written 176 years ago, Liberty
was born,
Member - Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
Your Deposits Secured Up To SIO,OOO
105 College Ave. Athens, Ga.
Muriel Lawrence
New Mother's Early Separafion
From New-Born Child Unnafural
A young doctor I know was per=
mitted to be present at the birth of
his first child.
His wife was given an anesthetic
that dulled her pain, but left her
semi-conscious. After one of her
last intervals of struggle, she visi
bly relaxed, and her husband was
startled to hear her whispering.
He leaned over her anxiously. To
his astonishment, he realized that
her words were not for him, but
for the baby who was cooperating
with her to get himself born.
To her yet unborn son, his wife
was whispering words of encour
agement drawn from her secret
expectations and hopes. Drowsily,
che was saying, “It’s nearly over,
darling . . . don’t be afraid, I'm
here . . let's try again so that we
can really be together at last ...”
But she could not keep this pro
mise to be together with her baby
after he entered the world. Nurses
in sterile white seized him, wrap
ped him in sterile white and
rushed him down a long corridor
to a sterile white nursery far from
the person with whom he had just
shared the momentous and inti
mate experience of birth.
A fine article in this month’s
issue of Parents Magazine comes
straight out and asks for a revis
ion of hospital rules that separate
mothers and their newborn. It
tells us what leading psychiatrists
think of this unnatural arrange
ment and its effects on the emo
tional flow between us and our
baby in the early hours and days
after birth.
Qur passiveness in accepting
such a silly regulation is some
thing I have never understood.
We'd never stand for such an in
terfering rule in any other hu
man relationship. If anyone tried
to tell us, for example, that we
couldn’t have a honeymoon after
cur wedding, we’d tell him to take
his interference elsewhere.
Prince of Wails.”
e
Friends vow it's true that Zsa
Zsa Gabor decided she didn’t like
the beezer of a close Hungarian
writer friend. S> she presented
him with a plastic surgery nose
bob as a gift.
- - -
Dana Andrews’ kid brother,
Steve Forrest, just landed an act
ing contract at MGM. .... Harry
Brian’s set for a comeback via a
telefilm, “The Doctor Prescribes.”
* * *
Evelyn Keyes and mag photog
rapher Bob Capa are an item in
Paris. .... Mary Pickford’s shed
ding 20 pounds for her movie
comeback in “The Library”. ....
James Cagney’s back in town from
his Martha’s Vineyard farm. His
next film will be “A Lion Is in the
Street.”
* * -
Basil Rathbone is planning a
movie comeback via new agert.
He's been clicking on TV but
hasn’t made a big-screen movie in
years. .... Lucille Knoch, the
blonde in Red Skelton’s TV life,
will play the role of Gilbert Ro
land’s girl friend in MGM’s “Trib
ute to a Bad Man.”
FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1952,
That's because we recognize I},
honeymoons are emotionally 50, |
institutions. When John maryi..
Mary, everyone r§cognizes thei
right to uninterradpted closer..
so that together ¥yey can adjust ¢,
their changed k“\aonship‘ Quite
properly, Mary aud ohn put aci,
friends, relatives and jobs to .
vote themselves to exploring ne.,
aspects and meanings in each ot},.
er.
If their hotel manager rapped
on their door the morning (~
their wedding to insist that t},c.
take separate rooms, can't v,
hear what they'd say? Theyg
want to know what the world .
coming to.
Yet when Mary goes to the ho..
pital to have her baby, nobod.
thinks of protesting separate
rooms for her and her child. Ang
theirs is also a relationship {hy;
is equally needing of adjustment
If Mary is a modern mother
has decided against nursing he,
baby, she's lucky if she’s permii
ted to touch his finger.
No wonder she has to begin t,
read books encouraging her i,
show confidence in her treatment
of her baby—that anonymoys
sterile bundle that pops in and oyt
of her room every four hours lije
a poor little jack-in-the-box.
After a normal birth, a mother's
overwhelming feeling is one of
depthless peace. It comes to her
by plan, not by accident. It has
been created by her baby ang
should be shared with him. It hy:
been given her for the purpose of
gratitude to him and wonder gt
him.
As this feeling is needed to colo;
all her future behavior toward
him, it should not be wasted on
idle chatter, admiration for some
body’s roses or the new sweater
set Aunt’ Jane has brought, It
should be given to the baby who
needs it to feel welcome.
The Library of Congress has
acquired a printer’s copy of ti
Lincoln-Douglas Debates and
a letter from Abraham Lincoln t
the Chicago Press and Tribune re
questing two sets of that new e
per’s reports on the debate:s
Goody’s
HEADACHE POWDERS '
3 e /- : REGULAR 25/ SIZE
3 o
A
N e
£ 19¢c
; \"o""‘
FAS R
V 7874
HEADACHE S. NEURALGIA
oL AR
e DRUG STORE)
(X VOou ALWAYS SAVE SAFELY )
T R PHONE 76T