Newspaper Page Text
(I URSDAY, JULY 10, 1952,
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I e e
Flzfiron Building
By SAUL PETT
AP Newsfeatures Writer
NEW YORK-—The once-famous
Fl-liron Building is observing its
50:h birthday like a lonely old
{reak—loo short to show up on
today’s skyline, too far down
town 1o have any glamor, too du
rable 1o excite alarmists any
more
Todav, only a handful of tour
iste visit the 21-story building and
most of them want to go up in the
Flatiron only to take pictures of
other tzller buildings.
Today, nobody is afraid to walk
on the Flatiron’s side of the
strecet. Years ago, many pedes
trians stayed on the other side.
Thev feared that a strong wind
would topple the thin structure
which is shaped, as one critic said
in 19002, like a “stingy piece of
: By now, the Flatiron has con
vinced the public it’s here to stay.
“And it will be here another
150 vears,” said superintendent
George Bonhag. “This was one
of the first skyscrapers in New
York built on a steel frame.”
In 1202, when the Flatiron was
completed, it became the number
one tourist attraction of its day.
Its picture was reproduced on
postcards sent all over the world.
In 1904, William Ordway Part
ridee, an artist, called it “a mon
strosity, a disgrace to our city, an
outrage 1o our sense of the artis
tic and a menace to life.”
It was built on a small triangu
lar island on 23rd street, where
Fifth avenue reluctantly crosses
Broadway. It stands 280 feet high.
1t has frontages of 214.6 feet on
Broadway, 85 feet'on 22nd street,
197.6 feet on Fifth avenue, and
only four op five feet on 23rd
street.
Offices occupying the apex
come to a point only three or four
feet wide inside, only wide enough
to get a chair in. Frank Munsey,
the publisher, used to have an
oftice on the 18th floor, in the
corner. He had the floor raised so
that he could get a better view of
the two rivers bounding Man
hattan and also a better view of
employes working before the
throne room.
When the Flatiron was built,
some neighbors complained that
its strange designm increased the
wind. It’s £till one of the windiest
corners in New York.
In the ¢ld days, local drugstore
cowboys used to watch women’s
skirts blowing up. The cop on the
23rd street peat was forever chas-
Ing them. This, according to le
gend, gave birth to the expression,
“twenty-three ski-doo.”
~ The Flativon building is strange
in various ways. Its topefloor is
above ihe attic, Originally, the
building was built to a height of
20 stories, plus an attic. Later a
21st floor was added. The attic,
used only for water tanks and
equipment, still lies between the
20th and 21st floors.
The very top of the building's
apex is adorned by statues of two
cherubic boys holding scrolls
around a pig tablet bearing the
;{‘;‘:alx of the builder, George A.
INFLATION IN INDO-CHINA
HANO], Indo-China — (AP) —
Cigarettes, soft and hard drinks
are leading the steady boost in
brices in this headquarters city for
the French Union forces battling
the Cormnmunist-led Vietminh.
\n American-type soft drink
Which selis for 5 cents in the U.
S. costs 90 eents. American ciga=
relles—often stale—bring $1.25
Per package. A Scotch and soda—
-4l a so-called night-club—often
costs five dollars.
[he U. 8. doubles tennis cham-
Plonshipg will be held at the Long-
Wood Cricket Club, Chestnut Hill,
Mass. Aug. 18-24.
'he smallest kangaroos have
L“ it ¥maller than those of rab-
UNTIL STEEL STRIKE SETTLEMENT
OUR FACTORIES ARE DOWN ON ACCOUNT
OF STEEL, AND WE HAVE RECEIVED OUR
LAST SHIPMENT UNTIL THEY OPEN AGAIN.
4 PLYMOUTHS
12 DODGES
GOOD TRADES AND PROMPT DELIVERY
UNTIL THIS SUPPLY 1S EXHAUSTED.
J. SWANTON IVY, Inc.
o £ 3
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CEEBGATn T T e e e, |
PRESIDENTIAL hats that have been thrown in the po
litical ring from the campaigns of Washington’s day are
exhibited at the New York Historical Society. Jeffer
son’s fur cap, worn with the fur side in; Daniel Web
ster’s straw, top hats worn by Andrew Johnson, James
Garfield and Grover Cleveland are included. T. R.’s
Rough Rider hat is in the parade.— (AP Newsfeatures.)
DOGS Y% 7nlr-
Junior Kennel Club
MOST of our dogs were bred as
working partners for men en
gaged in the deadly serious busi
ness of hunting for a living. Re
cently, as man and dog generations
go, their status in human society
has changed. Now, most dogs serve
as playmates and companions of
children. This new association—
child and dog—still presents un
explored opportunities for both.
This fall, Dog World magazine
has launched the Junior Kennel
Club of America. It's planned as
the least exclusive organization in
the world. Membership is open to
any boy or girl between nine and
sixteen, whether he own a dog or
not. Dues are a low $3 a year, for
which the youngster gets a button,
card, a subscription to the maga
zine, and a chance to learn the
facts of dog care and dog psychol
ogy from those who know it best.
The program of education, dog
shows, clinics in dog handling,
training, first aid, grooming, and
judging is planned from national
headquarters in Chicago. Local
chapters may be started by any
organization or adult over 21. Ten
boy and girl members and two
adult sponsors, a man and a woman,
are all a local group needs to _get
a charter. But any boy or girl who
can’'t find a group can join the
“open group” as an individual. M.
C. Myers Bardine, National Direc
tor, Junior Kennel Club of Amer
ica, 3323 Michigan Boulevard, Chi
cago 16, Illinois, will be happy to
answer all inquiries.
EASY LIVING FOR KIDS |
If your living room must do
double duty as children’s play and
study area, there’ll be no need to
scold when paints, ink or foods
spill, if you use carefree rubber
flooring, A damp mop will whisk
away ordinary soil. Extra stub
born stains such as nail polish or
iodine should be rubbed lightly
with fine steel wool. A light re
waxing with a special water emul
sion floor wax keeps the original
gloss of the rubber flooring.
Skeeter Kell, rookie infielder
for the Philadelphia Athletics,
played for Arkansas State Col
lege.
The USLTA Father and Son
Clay Court Doubles Championships
will be held at St. Louis, Mo,
Aug. 5-10.
The largest crowd ever to at
tend a Cincinnati Reds’ game at
Crosley Field was 36,961 on April
27, 1947 for a doubleheader with
Pittsburgh.
Mr. Bardine, who was formerly
program director of the National
Youth Administration for Illinois,
has some exciting plans up his
sleeve. There will be holiday par
ties and summer picnics. There
will be dog training classes, an
annual dog picture contest, and an
annual essay contest on some dog
subject. The young members will
get a chance to serve as runners,
workers, and messengers, at Amer
ican Kennel Club dog shows in ad
dition to holding junior dog shows
of their own. .
Topics on the.agenda for-monthly.
study include how to brush and
bathe a dog, how to approach a
strange dog, and how to train for
obedience. There’ll be explanation
of the basic rules on showing and
registering and the legal rights of
dog owners. Boys and girls will
study the dog’s body and learn the
names of the various parts. They’'ll
get the answers to their questions
on specific breeds—how they came
to be, what their disposition is, why
judges set certain standards of
color or shape for the breed.
Young people should have a lot
of fun running their own kennel
clubs. Mr, Bardine hopes that in
the process they’ll learn some price
less things from each other and
their dogs. “A good citizen is in
variably a person who is consider
ate of others,” he says. “No boy or
girl who is kind to and considerate
of the needs of our dumb animal
friends is ever a problem child or
a statistic in juvenile delinquency.”
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The Magic Cape
BY SUE BURNETT
Certain to be your favorite
summer outfit—the youthful bare
top dress, trimly pocketed, with a
magical bution-on cape that turns
it into an attractive street cos
tume.
Pattern No. 8800 is a sew-rite
perforated pattern in sizes 10, 12,
14, 16, 18, 20; 40, 42. Size 12, dress,
33% yard of 39-inch; cape, 1%
yards; 1% yards trimming.
For this pattern, send 30 cents
in COINS, your name, address,
size desired, and the PATTERN
NUMBER to Sue Burnett (The
Banner-Herald), 1150 Avenue
Americas, New York 36, N. Y.
Send 25 cents today for your
copy of Basic FASHION ’'s2. It
shows how to make your ward
robe do double duty with econom
ical, time-saving styles. Gift pat
terns printed inside. 25 cents.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
The United States expects to
send 22 teams in 17 sports to the
Olympic Games to be held July
19-Aug. 3 at Helsinki, Finland.
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V& : : you 10¢ when you hand it to your grocer. Get yours today, and enjoy a refresh- = %
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% : bodied, because of Lipton’s special way of blending choicest orange pekoe and f??f ,; ‘
5 { pekoe teas. Lipton Tea meets the taste-test for iced tea—it stands up when #=3 ‘h i
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They’re white as snow inside. Naturally—you can t buy a w‘}mvr HuR RY ' ; « .
flour than Red Band, the flour thut bim'ux_ts made {(umnus' Count ® N s = ZZ
on the white magic of Red Band Flour for lighter cakes, too—more ‘ ; . — 1
tender pies. Look for the sack with the Red Bund of quality. Buy g:’;o?“;":’ac‘;:"rm:h"e these special §\\ i /
Red Band Enriched Flour, plain or sel!lrlsing t(.)duy! If you u?\\;z : s # 7
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Listen to Joe Emerson HYMN TIME every week day, WGAU 12:45 to 1:00 P. M. .
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fi RED BAND Enncned Flour ¢; ,/ MR. GROCER: You are authorized to act as our agent for the redemption of this % ax&:
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To Gfocar SAVE » ’;fi@ the customer. Any other application constitutes fraud. Customer must pay sales tax, 3 %
see f: *x/‘ M any. If you prefer, mail redeemed certificate to General Mills, Inc,, Department 255, ok ’f
'}'f 7 628 Marquette Avenue, Minneapolis 2, Minnesota. G
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} During hig famed 56-game hit
ting streak, Joe DiMaggio belted
I“ different pitchers for one or
more hits.
i CAT CAPERS
It your cat is the type who
misges you and you are worried
about being away om vacation,
console yourself that he will be
better off at home. If at all possi=
ble leave your pet to the care of 3
neighbor who can feed him an
give him water in your apartment
or house.
The tabby who has access to
the outdoors such as from the
cellar while you are away will be
perfectly happy to stay home as
long as he is fed, If your neighbor
would rather feed him in her cel
lar or garage begin feeding him in
this manner a day or two before
you leave on your trip. Then when
you leave he will have become
accustomed to the new feeding
arrangement,
Frank Gifford, new backfield
man for the New York football
Giants, made 64 of 79 conversions
last season for the University of
Southern California.
The Cinncinnati Reds hit 44
home runs at Crosley Field during
( the 1961 season. The Reds also
hit 44 homers on the road.
ANCIENT THEATER
DISCOVERED
DAMASCUS, Syria—(AP)—An
ancient Roman theater, parts of
which are complete and in good
oondition, has been discovered in
Palmyra. The Syrian antiquities
department also announced the
discovery of the tomb of an an
cient Palmyrene family. The tomb
contained statues of members of
the family and other objects of
archeological importance.
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— Dixje |--
72\ Corsal =
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E sNG GRSE
AL IV -VJHUES * F’RE-SERVE;' W
PAGE ELEVEN
~ Sophomore Bobby Hill
g;:iversity of flmrfi
utheasters conlfl'“
champion%?kye‘r /ith &
over par or 72 holes.
¥rank Secory new Netional
League umpire, started hig .#“'
ing career in 1948 in the West
Texas-New Mexico League.
Strawberries belong te the rose
family.