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mg GO-ROUND
DREW Pt
JzL &
EISENHOWER AND RUSSIANS
Gen. Dwight Eisenhower, a real
diplomat, has been making progress
toward friendship with the Russians,
but got a setback the other day.
U. S. officials entering Eisenhow¬
er’s office found him despondent.
He was holding a copy of Time mag-
“Look at that,*' he said, “six
weeks’ work gone.”
Eisenhower pointed to a picture
of a female entertainer in a Berlin
night club standing on her head,
legs apart, holding a picture of
Stalin between them. Time had re¬
produced the picture.
‘‘And just as I was rpaking Zhukov,” some
progress with Marshal
Eisenhower mourned. “First he
would scarcely see me. But re¬
cently we have become pretty good
friends. When I go into his office he
says, ‘Here’s to Ike.’ ”
Eisenhower went on to tell how
Zhukov was blazing mad over the
Time magazine picture. He had just
come from seeing the Russian com¬
mander who had demanded:
“What are you going to do
about this?”
“Nothing,” replied Eisenhow¬
er.
“What! You let the American
press make mockery of the mar¬
shal?” exclaimed Zhukov.
“That’s what we fought the
war for—the right to criticize,
the right for people to say what
they please,” said Eisenhower.
Eisenhower went on to explain to
the Russian that because one news¬
paper or magazine published a pic¬
ture of Stalin, it did not reflect
the sentiment of either the Amer¬
ican government or the American
people, and that the American gov¬
ernment scrupulously refrained from
censoring the press on matters of
this kind.
However, the Russians continue to
be sensitive. It is hard for them to
understand the difference between
a regulated press as in the Soviet
and a free press as in the U. S. A.
• * *
NEW SUPREME COURT JUSTICE
President Truman really let his
hair down with Senator Burton when
he called him in last week to tell
him he was being nominated to the
Supreme court.
Catching Burton just before the
Ohio senator was about to leave for
Cincinnati, Truman told him that
he had actually promised the Su¬
preme court job to another man,
Robert Patterson, now secretary of
war, but changed his mind.
“Harold,” said Truman at the
start of the interview, “I’ve made
up my mind to appoint you to the
Supreme court.
“You were always my first
choice,” Truman continued, “but I
had some vacillations. I considered
appointing Phillips of Denver, Park¬
er of North Carolina and Patterson.
“Finally I decided to appoint Pat¬
terson and told him I was going to
appoint him.”
Truman then explained that It
was better to leave Patterson in
the war department to replace
Stimson as secretary of war.
“One of the things that disturbed
me about your appointment,” Tru¬
man continued, “was the probable
claim that I might be playing poli¬
tics in order to get a Democratic
senator from Ohio.” (Truman had
in mind the fact that Governor
Lausche of Ohio, a Democrat, now
can appoint a Democratic senator
to replace Burton, a Republican.)
“So I talked it over with Alben
Barkley,” Truman explained, “and
he advised'that if I was convinced
you were the right man, I should
appoint you and let political conse¬
quences go hang.”
Note—Truman had picked up
Senator Barkley at Paducah,
Ky., the evening before and
flown him back to Washington in
his special plane, at which time
they had conferred regarding
the Burton appointment. Tru¬
man, incidentally, seems to be
leaning more and more on sage,
experienced Barkley for advice.
* * *
CAPITAL CHAFF
C President Truman still keeps up
his rapid-fire early-morning appoint¬
ment pace, sees as many as 15 visi¬
tors before lunch. Greek Publisher
Basil Vlavianos visited Truman the
other day, caught him sneaking a
yawn and long stretch between call¬
ers.
C. A new breath of fresh air in the
post office department: Gael E. Sul¬
livan of Chicago, assistant postmas¬
ter general.
<L Visitors to the Franklin Roose¬
velt Memorial library at Hyde Park
have doubled since the late Presi¬
dent’s death. Mrs. Roosevelt gave
each of Henry Morgenthau’s chil¬
dren a trinket from the former chief
executive’s desk as a paemento.
<L When Nelson Rockefeller was
eased out of the state department,
workers in that building were
startled to see truckers removing
the furniture from his office. He had
furnished his suite with his own fur¬
niture. When the truck pulled away,
even the chandeliers, which were
Rockefeller’s personal property, had
been taken.
C. Suggestion to Paul McNutt—
check on why General MacArthur
and Philippine President Osmena
permitted so many Jap collabora¬
tionists to keep high office in Manila
since liberation of the Philippines.
First Rubber Shipment Arrives
The nation’s first shipment of rubber from the Pacific since Pearl
Harbor, produced under the very noses of the Japanese in the Philip¬
pines, recently arrived at San Francisco. Forty-two tons of the precious
crude stock was shipped from the Pathfinder plantation of the Goodyear
Tire and Rubber company in Mindanao.
Labor Management Talks Industrial Peace
'
Up
Shown around the table are, left to right: Sec. Henry A. Wallace,
Sec. Lewis B. Schwellenbaeh, William Green of the AFL, Eric A. John¬
ston, president of the U. S. Chamber of Commerce, Charles Symington,
J. Paul Douglas, Robert L. Watt, Joyce O’Hara, Ray Smithurst, Ted Sil-
vey, Ira Mosher and Philip Murray of the CIO, as they talk labor peace.
Here Come the Brides—555 of ’Em
lt~ T
When the former luxury liner Lurline docked at San Francisco re¬
cently, the cargo included 555 Australian war brides of American serv¬
icemen and some 200 of their children. Hundreds of other war brides
are awaiting transportation from Australia as well as from England,
France, and other European countries. They will all be brought here soon.
Airliner Soon to Circle Globe
Above is an artist’s drawing of the Constellation’s interior, showing
the seating accommodations for the passengers. This will be typical of
the accommodations that will be found on most airliners in this country,
as well as those covering around-the-world routes. They will also be pro¬
vided with kitchens and service rooms for comfort of travelers.
THE DADE COUNTY TIMES. TRENTON, ft A- THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1945
The Lions Club has set October 4
as the date for its annual carnival
to raise funds for community funds
and charities.
R. F. DeLamar recently sold his
interest in the Hawkinsville Dispatch
to the associate owners, Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Dilliard, who will continue the
publication of that wide-awake paper.
Organization of the Georgia So¬
ciety of Safety Engineers, with Frank
A. King, of Atlanta, as chairman, is
announced in the Capital City. King
is southern manager of the Mine
Safety Appliance Company.
The Playhouse, Carrollton’s newest
theater, burned to the ground re¬
cently despite a six-hour fight by
firemen who were called in the early
morning hours.
Expansion of advertising and re¬
search programs is recommended to
naval stores leaders in Valdosta by
Harry Langdale, president of the
American Turpentine Farmers’ As¬
sociation.
The federal government paid the
State School Department $924,036
for a national defense program du¬
ring the fiscal year ending June 30.
State Auditor B. ]£. Thrasher, Jr.,
reports.
Georgia Tech has been advanced
$5,600 by the Federal Works Agency
to prepare plans for alterations and
additions to a research building
costing an estimated $150,000, ac¬
cording to an Associated Press dis¬
patch from Washington.
Informed that the slate is able to
finance a modest building program
over a period of five to 10 years,
State Welfare Director A. J. Hartley
will ask a federal loan of $150,000
to draw plans for a $6,815,000 im¬
provement of Georgia’s mental hos¬
pital.
Colquitt county farmers have start¬
ed cutting hegari, called “high-gear,”
in this section, a heavily seeded sor¬
ghum introduced in the county four
years ago by Sheriff T. V. Beard and
R. C. Turner, both big farm op¬
erators and livestock raisers.
The Association of Georgia Artists
will hold its annual exhibition and
meeting in Augusta October 20. A
jury of art critics will select the best
pictures from those submitted by
members of the association for a
traveling exhibit to be sent to as
many cities in the state as possible.
Mrs. Mary Brown, home demon¬
stration agent of Lamar county, an¬
nounces that the grounds surround¬
ing Fredonia Congregational church
in Redbone district will be land¬
scaped at an early date by W. H.
Harvey, state landscape gardener.
The church is one of the oldest land¬
marks in the county.
There will be food on the table of
Pullman employees in Atlanta this
winter, regardless of the canned
goods outlook. Rudolph Mohr, vic¬
tory garden consultant for the Pull¬
man Company, has reported that
Pullman home gardeners of Atlanta
were expecting an estimated yield of
1001 tons of food on the 2,002,338
square feet of ground which they cul¬
tivated this year.
Hancock poultry raisers are re¬
ceiving hundreds of baby chicks now
from hatcheries which they expect
to grow out for fall and winter broil-
ess and fryers. They had good luck
with their chicks in the spring and
expect to have more ready for the
market in from eight to ten weeks.
Prices have held up well during the
summer and the growers feel sure they
can make a profit on the chickens
they raise now.
Expenditures of $1,500 and possibly
more for enlarging and modernizing
facilities at the Atlanta Federal pen¬
itentiary are contemplated, Warden
Joseph W. Sanford says. Included in
the plan is a new power plant, mod¬
ernization of the prison hospital and
removal of the water tanks to ,a lo¬
cation outside the yard. The power
plant will be without stack, thus re¬
moving a hazard to airplanes.
Governor Arnall has asked State
Park Director Ward Harrison to seek
federal funds to develop Georgia’s
parks. In a letter to Harrison, the
Governor urged him to try to obtain
houses from Army camps in Geor¬
gia and place them in the state
parks. He pledged the state’s co¬
operation with federal agencies in
the possible development of parks
along the lakes to be formed by the
Clark’s Hill project.
More personal attention to the in¬
dividual patients in Georgia’s mental
institutions has been recommended
by Dr. Samuel Hamilton, head of
the mental hygiene division of the
United States Public Health Service.
The noted psychiatrist said that the
hospitals should give more time in
the individual treatment, training,
rehabilitation and comfort of the
hoys and girls at Gracewood school
for mental defectives and the men¬
tal patients at the Milledgeville state
hospital.
Cotton production methods are on
the eve of drastic and far-reaching
changes, E. C. Westbrook, cotton
specialist of the Georgia Agricultural
Extension Service, declares, pointing
out that “we are at the beginning of
an extensive shift to mechanized
production of cotton and other
crops.”
Jackson county farmers are busy
gathering their crop 0 f cotton. All
of the white schools dismiss at
11:45 a. m., in order that the chil¬
dren may assist in picking the cot¬
ton. The colored schools were Op¬
erated and are closing during th®
cotton season.
Only Lady Exerciser
Marie Batzer, the only feminine
exercise rider at Hollywood Park
track, is shown with Wing and
Wing before one of her regular
morning workouts.
Doolittle Gets Steak
En route to Washington, General
Doolittle arrived at San Francisco
from Honolulu in a “war weary”
B-29 and asked for a steak. Jimmy
shows that he has not forgotten how
to do away with this precious item
of food. His future plans are un¬
certain.
‘Gotta Sign Off Now’
; W.
v. y
. _____
“General Wainwright is a great
guy. Gotta sign off now, the Japs
are closing in. Notify my mother in
Brooklyn. What wouldn’t I give for
an ice cream soda.” This was the
final message sent out of Corregidor
by Sgt. Irving Strobing before the
Japs entered.
Ford II Advanced
^ i
• ■
Henry Ford II, who was recently
named president of the Ford Motor
company, is pictured talking to his
grandfather, who resigned from th#
office.
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