Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 62, Ed. 1 Monday, October 23, 1950 Page: 4 of 8
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T
MeaBay. Oct U. 1S59
4
ON THE WORLD FRONT
V
:r>
Berlin s Industrial Fair
For Gur nomination
3"
♦
r
Gives Allies A Boost
By PETER EDSON
i
7
J
the
y
«
4
• t •
too old
I
he
HOLLYWOOD
■i
outcome.
east
By BOB THOMAS
Drop l
Covair Workers
YOU AND THE
THE LITERARY GUIDEPOST
EV
Author So Busy \\ ith Characters
SERVICE—
Magic
once
ROGERS
By W
G
set
t
After Re’-
State Banner
B-.atw rlgfft
of
r
LOOKING BACK
Denton Yesteryear
BROADWAY’
*
c
moral of
A NA I YZING THE NEWS
FT
S
A
i:
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n
not
11. V
Q
B
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1.
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B"
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rt
of
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0
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RTF
r
H
era!
B
Our Boarding Houm
With Major Hoopla
Out Our Way
By J. R. W illiam*
D i'
4
l
*
?v
TODAYS
itfd
BIRTHDAY
Fi
S
♦
3
♦
XJK
JUUfc
*
5
4
K
w
it
Answer to Previous Puzzle
ZMBNTON (TaD RECORD-CHRONICLE-
Ike \\ ill Have To Work
^-ir
-1
«
+ ■
Independent Producer Finds Life
Without Bankers Most Pleasant
'Mota (
- Hold;
to
l>e
HORIZONTAL
1 Depicted is the
state flag of
Ore ,
said
ducts
plastics and rubber
Mrs
Mrs.
Mrs. J
supplying
Danish
*•■24
JQwh.u*m>
atitfia..
By DON WHITEHEAD
< For Hai Boy is •
WBJDOHGetB
A Q0KK V4M.M-
”----State"
12 Greek cliannel
11 Ocean liner
(ab )
70 Puts back
21 Pithy sayings
77 S’
cr-
colunin barreled down the road.
At times the tanks were racing
36 miles an hour and the Reds -
didn’t have a chance to pull back
Linda Darnell Jeff Chandler Cor-
nell Wilde and some fine photogra-
phy help make it passable enter-
tainment
FIELD
[SPANIEL
49 Ventilate
51 Linen
vestment
53 Low Latin
( nb )
55 Caius Julius
(ab )
tn
I .< a tie-
producer
who
’ fhe
Id-
in
II
i OKisUrs
Mate all
9 Level
13 Distinguishing
marks
14 Eager
15 Sparse
IB Portals in
fences
18 Our (Scot >
19 It is-----the
south central
United States
20 Set free
22 Nickel
(.symbol)
23 Grant
25 Took slyly
VIITKAL
1 Post of
authority
2 Sharper
3 Statute
4 Near
5 Immense
0 Spoken
7 Allot
8 Bewildered
* Egyptian
sun god
10 Past
11 It M
24 Moves
rhythmically
26 Whole
ST
f JC sALE
CW
W--
i a <■ so-
it.u. th*
■
-
Pa '
fl
TW pubiiahm are dm rsaposistbia fee copy oma
stasM. typographical errors ar aay uaiatenUonai
errors that occur other Umb to correct la asst laeue
after M Is brought to then asteatloa. AU edvirWag
orhers are accepted oa this basts only.
PYANGYANG. Korea —
U
to
Korea is one ol the great atones
of modern American military tac-
tic*
It
Gen
Mam-
south.
IS H
ItforiaJj an J ^JeatureS
■F“”
Danny Kaye Shuns Television But
\ oung Daughter Is All For It
/
BOYLE'S NOTEBOOK
U. S. Army in Korea Moves W i th
Speed Like General Patton s Outfit
MBMMB OF EBB ABMM1ATR® ERBAS
rhe Aamat*« Pews h eattwek ecciuatreiy w the
oeo fne tepuMteatM ef aU the local ae«e prtasoa
■s tale ■rwpafar. aa ««U aa aU AF aew eiapatchaa
Admiral
li. 1509
Drake and Infant daughter haxe
returned home from a Fort Worth hospital.
farm
and
.. The lota
pa Gamma
ner meetirJ
hs State c|
day. Mrs
erta presld
Members
of the bi-J
Hon of De
Programs
the regiona
•PH Gamins
43 Sacred bull
44 Nostril
45 Sprout
33 Regal mansion 46 Austrian rtv*
nicknamed the 34 Herb genus
39 Some of its
Indian* still
obserx e —
customs
37 Withdraw
42 Plural ending
/ I TlGU< -HT I SAW
/.S ‘ T.'‘.Al
l cJtEEK VUASH/
I HAW-HAW A \
I ST1IFFPP SOCK’
of the
Barren-
uni 4(Rl*J
ucjwi-itr __________
UHUiZat Ikinnist?
LJllkJ «ZM M JUt
t-»gE?liJ --------
■ 14LU4
I
»et But that will ao<xi be chang-
ed His three-year-old daughter,
Dena who was with him in his
dressing room, has pressured her
father into ordering one She wants
to look at "Time Ft>r Beany -
t\r
1
has been
He Whs
which first
»IBM aiFIIOK BATES ASD ISPOB.MATiON
■tngie copiea: be tor weeadaya; 10a to» Bunday.
Clay Comer: She per week
■y man in Dent-n and ed)olnui< eounuae. CCS)
per year da moothA 04.00; three aacntha t»M.
•wie month. SAe.
Ouaaioe thia county: SIS per year ala aaocUm. S*.
three tnontba MJO. one mc*th. »1M-
TKZJraOKB BOM
NOTKB TO fWI PUBLIC:
Aay err etna— reOecMon Bpea the eaaraewr, repv-
MMCB or ettMiag at aay nna. tMBvMuai er oorp*>
rattan artu be gladly tmeieelag upon being called te
the publlahm attentlou.
?£ACB/
28 Nested boxes
29 Niton
(symbol)
30 Great (ab.)
31 Company
(ab.)
82 "Smallest
State" (ab )
33 Wharf
35 Wile*
38 Recea* in a
church
39 Simple
.40 Behold!
41 Sittings
47 Adjective
lufflx
48 Eucbariatiej
wine cup
50 European
country
51 Lincoln's
nickname
52 Line
54 Armored
M Nobleman
• 7 Reaannable
He Forgot To Include A Climax
BentR SADCX.E up old . 5
PAltrr, M/ttdMKLL MlCkOK ’ J
ARC rtude
mniKRS AMO MORSE Y<
► THieM» LEFT THE
GAMG * I BLASTED FOUR
LEADERS — BEAT 'EM TO
t the DRA*I.'~~ vJE'LL 4
TAKE ALOM9 A FEW
CKTRA 6K-C4JK'S AMD
MZS «OME
We
Lift The |Cc*HUR^
live upToT*^*!^0
CFTrtf U-fUflN^R
JOIN T»e dl*RW.V'
NA^Ois IN
UfON NORTH kOk'C* I
•10 ■
**wnr*<
ml
14
Denton Record.Chronicle
Tubnahed every arwmo b (except Seturoayi ane
Bunaay by: Denton Publlahlng Ce_ lae. lit B
Rlcaory Bt.
xnterea aa eecond ciaae mail matter at tne poatoffico
•t Dentoa. Tnaa. January 11. 1S2L according io Act
<< Congreea. March S. 1S?>.
e«UV
~*-T
There la one veteran ol World
who is having himself
an exciting tune in this war. He
13 Maj. Gen. Frank E Lowe, re-
tired. peiaunai representative of
I
4
under tire fra-
with the oattH-
entered Pyong-
Lowe has been observing this
Army in operation at divisional
and regimental levels and not
from the stai studded higher eche-
lon.
He
This quently
lion
yang
I. A. Is Meeting Test
here I^eanue Failed
The ............
8 tanks and Infantry drive in- and"defend Pyongyang. They were
» *• bol»'rr the league the Locarno
forced taj 1»J5 wuh the primary idea of
lag aav further German-French opbea
tan* Id UM, because the League of Natkina
aboUah ear M of the M tode
I «»»•* nt the wurid Mgiied the Paris
FecAfw “rtananciati.m of war "
I *MC» Bboves wort followed bi dia-
M>_O<h0*tWn li And of evure* much ha»
■M IB W» IMSMMe of peace tn the western
f *“ ““ —•
I
THT ADVENTURER, bv M>ka
Waltari, translated bv Naomi Wal-
ford 'Putnams $3 50’
This Finnish author, who
hia popular The Egyptian in
the Eastern Mediterranean, many
centuries B C . pii ks Scandina-
via a d Europe m the 16th cen-
tur for this nine! about Mi-
chael Bsst Bereft of all relatr.es.
including hu- unwed parents, when
Ruud laid waste
y ’u:.g Michael 1’
a witch
ment. hwnrr
•.I f.c’ion
•.ne relat. n< question -> that
uere are the persevulea aie the
ta.r-sx.uu.er. it lor.lalr.s some
ious and unpalatable modern
loms, and seems to me insipid
and tasteless
It is not possible to predk t
decision a doctor will make
on a man s physical condition. Tiki
bad about your being nervous and
timid The Army might fix that
lor you
Q I am in the inactive Naval
reserve. And I hace Just passed the
draft board's physical exam. Can
1 get into the Navy on active duty?
If not i an I get a commission in
the Army? I am a graduate me-
chanical engineer.
A You can ask for a deferment
oti the basis of being in the Naval
reserve, or request active duty with
the Navy You can also enlist in
the Army for the specific purpose
of attending Officer's Candidate
«th«xi|
Ju’.ish
to Abo
nursed bncx t he i.’h Li
t.ikes lessons in tip
Bv DEWTTT MACKENZIE
AP Foreign Affairs Analyst
piled Nations' adop'ion of the plan to halt
aggrfcAlor. an . where and everywhere, by force
if necessary, represents the mo<t powerful
ganiaed pea. e move ever made
In effect it acknowledges that there
Bi SAUL PETT
’or Mark Ba.to
Capsule Review ' Two
West" la Just a fair western, des-
pite ita big cast and handsome
settings. All of the elements for
greatnew are there, but the whole nn,,n(fj earlier Ryan said
thuig stumbles into a mudav plot, company ts still dicerkmu
It centers around a headstiung the International Association
ravalrv commander, who is get- Jta himsis and some o'.!,'•:
Ung to be pretty familiar In big gaining groups at its B 3(5 Bombci
time horse operas Joseph Cotten, plant here
he
Iron, the priests, .u ;.,\e fi in
Agnes, in gumnakuig from a Cn-r-
man master, ai.d In medic::.e in
Paris With his bra.io and friend
Andys brawn they adventure wide-
ly, winding up at the sack-? ol Rente
in 1527. There's alikely ohit.nie fla-
vor to the book, there .v no ex-
cessive romantic gesturing, and
we al! certainly get taken for a
very long ride But while Waltari
was working Paracelsus, Luther.
Cellini and many crowned heads
into his story, he might also haxe
worked in a climax.
fVXM TH'gTV W SOCb-i
NEW YORK ? The
this story seems to be
own money to make a
the bank’.’
Frank.y.
until I
an
BERNT RALdHKN born Oct
23. 1MB. in Tveit. Norway, la
one of the greatest pilots in the
world He la now an American
citiaen and a colonel in the U 8.
Air Forces Balchen was chief
pilot of the Byrd Expedition
and made the first aerial trip
oper the Booth Pule During
World War H. he headed a
ferry service supplying Nor-
wegian and Danish under*
grourxlA.
HOLLYWOOD — (.<’•— While near
ly every other top comedian is
scrambling to television, Danny
Kaye is in no hurry.
"I don't think I’ll do TV for a
couple of years." he remarked on
the set of "Or. The Riviera n . n •
•Everything is in too much ot a K(*CeiVe KfllSe
turmoil. I'll wait unit it simmers
down."
At any rate. Kaye said he would
never do a weekly show He fig-
ures such a format would expend
loo much time, energy and mater-
ial He has not studied the new
SO GREAT A QUEEN, by Paul
Fuschauer ' Scribner's »3 •
A hermaphrodite is unveiled
c ,;'.e literally, at the start of thk*
level about the King of K.ngs,
a: ’ about Es’i'.er, and Mordecal.
.it'd Haman, than whom no one
'-upjused to hang hnrher And
’..".ties a harem headed by beau-
t.ful t.'-htl, whom the Seven )’: n-
ces and other revelers count on
seelie, eve:, on seen.c nude a:
the most splendiferous banquet ev-
ci >i.xen m Shushan, or in liter-
.re .s an overstate-
Though this bibli-
.» tne table
■ question
persec uleu
FORT WORTH O t 23 T —
About 7 000 Convalr workers haxe
been given a six per cent pay
raise
the new ^*5 O Ryan. Convair Vice Pre-
medium. In fact, does not own a sident and Fort Worth Division
manager, said the raise was ef-
fective last Monday It applied to
all salaried empir es'and hII em-
ployes not represented bv any bai-
giiuung agent.
Six per cent raises for hourly
FUg^ pa-d employes represented by the
International Brotherhood of Elec-
trical Workers and Federated In-
dependent Texas Unions were an-
nounced earlier Ryan said the
Company ts st. 11 dicerkinc w:-h
the International Association of
get- >f» 'hiiu»ts and some ot!, r b-1
led in a perform^: s box oftu • j» w
er—not whether he is sui’cd f : *
partuiul^r par.
"And if vou wa:.’. to make a
change .n tlie s, ri: ' the bank in .st
approve that Im And a.i the xxhlle
you're waiting with your ( ompany
and paying their saiarie1- "
Luchachex itch. » h> w n
r ated several vears ago al
production of 'Summer Storm" es-
timated that if a conventional Hol-
Ivwxxl company had made The
First Legion ' it would haxe coat
twice as much and taken a third
longer to produce
"We dldn t haxe to build any set,"
he explains ' We didn't need an
art director We needed fewe:
no carpenters and no
nomination, to line up the delegates you
need to win. A half-hearted effort is no
effort at all.
So if the genera! d>es have any no-
tions lurking in the hack of his mind,
he must «oon decide whether to translate
them into a real try or forget them. And
he must pass the word to those he wants
to help him: the nomination isn’t gained
without assistance.
There s plenty of evidence Eisenhower
could get t' at aid if he Mants it. bew^v
has public!'.' endorsed him and presum-
ah|v would back him in the convention if
he wins the governorship and controls the
New York delegation Gov James H. Duff
of Pennsylvania, now bidding for a U S.
Senate seat, is known to look favorably
on the general's candidacy.
But even among h’« !»ackers there's a
feeling of uncertainty not alone about hi*
p<isible intentions but a!>out his political
know-how Some think he's extremely
green as a political thinker and fear this
would mean he would haxe to relv too
heavily on the advice of others should he
plunge in.
However this may 1*. it is plain that
Eisenhower cann't wait more than per-
haps another six months to act. behind
the scenes at least, if he has any real
wish for the presidency To let matters
drag Ixeyond that time would t*- to make
clear that his mind i> irrevocably se*
against a political care.- a draft
forces it upon him.
. Vf THIS GesJT-S ATPFEFUL 1
Tf Of2 CUCKOOS' I'M COPI’IM’
^<4 K 5M6AK OUTA THIS UO3P1TAI
8EFOR£ Mt STARTS FiGURwl
ME'S AM (MDIAX3 OUT ~
HUMTIM' BREAKFAST V
AxV I'M A ^7———//l
BUFFALO* "■
A
W
y cuts
War II He received many decora-
tiol.s al.U saw a li>l ot combat. Ha
really didn’t know what he wa«
duinx wile:: he ►.gned up tor the
reserxes And he xxasn t married
then. Is it fair for them to take
him ' H w i an I live on Uie small
allo.me:.1 I will get’
A Tak.ag your husband into
the service under these conditions
is not any more fair than the
Communist Im axion of South Ko
During World War II a lot
wr.e* got jobs to supplement
xinall allotments.
My xou is
rea
of
thr.r
Q My sou is in college and is
19 years old. Should he ask tor a
ueferment before he gets his i all
irom the draft board 1
A When h man legistcrs ti-
the draft tie should state all the
lactx ol n.s case bearing on a pos-
sible deferment ft he waits for his
Induction notice it'll be too late.
Will they take me into the
serx.ee with blood pressure of 160?
I haxe always been xery nervous
and timid.
A
what
Gov. Thomas E. De^ey » eiidoraemenl
of Genera! Eisenhower for the 19.>2 Ke-
publican presidential nomination probably
has to It' rvgardcxl as the opening gun in
that campaign, vwn tlii'iigii it s a long
way oft.
Since Dt'wex tiei]Uciitly disclaims in-
terest in political ullicc oiii) to reverse
himself later, this pronouncement can
hardly la1 taken as his 'ma! word on 19-’>2.
But cerlainlt H represents ins present
estimate of liis own chances for another
GOP nomination at that time.
If circumstances have altered m the
interim, it would be no great surprise to
leant that the governor had again made
liiiuaelf available. This is not intended to
lie a caustic judgment of the governor,
but only a recognition of the fact that
he has the presidential bug and probably
won't be nd of it until he'
serve. He's not the only man ever to
bitten thus.
Eieenhower promptly denied, as
has many times Ixefore in different ways,
that he has any presidential ambitions.
Those who want him to make the race
profess to see in his denials some loop-
holes through which he could later squeeze
should he change his mind.
It may be that the genera! would i*
willing to accept the nomination if he
were genuinely drafted by the Republi-
cans and thus could enter the political
wars free of any entangling alliances.
But the brutal truth is that there
lia\e been few real drafts m political
history, (.retting a nomination is some-
thing you work at. if you keep saying
you don't want it. a lot of people will take
you seriously and look elsewhere You
have to indicate somewhere along the
line, privately perhaps at first, that you
are nally available.
It takes skillful maneuvering,
you’ve made un your mind to seek the
has the dash and color of
George S Patton'* drive on
Palermo in Sicily and the smash-
ing thrust acros* Europe by the
American Armies
1' is the sort of operation which
the Americans understand and ex-
ecute well
This was the waj it happened.
Wednesday the U. 8 First Cal- And as a result most
vary Division's Seventh Regiment bypassed Reda decided to
DAUGHTER OF STRANGERS
by Fhtabeth Boatwrigfft Coker
'Dutton. $3'
Another historical novel:
ly about the ante-bellum
a girl who look* white, and
slave love passion, bull whips
overseers horses, duels and
ail too stilted. It seemed to me
moved agalnat the little village ol dcr rather than fight.
Hukkyo which nestles In a line of
ridges blocking the main approach yv;lr Qne
to Pyongyang. There the enemy
had made his stand.
All afternoon and all night the
seventh Regiment fought at Huk- President Truman
kvo, repulsing two counterattacks Lowe has
during the night. Army in operation
Then Thursday morning the filth and regimental
Regiment was shoved into the bat-
tle
Fhe Fifth moved across a river
with tanks leading the way
thrust broke through the thin crust
of Red resistance. After that the
TEN YEARS AGO
O M Buddyi King, Jr. made application for
a place in the United States Air Force sorr.»
weeks ago and was advised to report for phx.
sicai at Fort SUL
J W Page has taker, a chair in the J
Smpp Barber Shop, east side of the square
Ells Perux of Beaumont is a guest
D L. Lindsey. 502 Fulton.
A Reeves, 211 West Sycamore, u ill
Miss Mary Covington and Mr*. Dollie Statler
ot Aubrey were in Denton
(Hi the Barrelhead, Joe, and It's All \ ours
____ will be oc-
casions when only force, or a display of force
can turn the trick.
TTfis far-reaching project is given teeth bv » pro-
vision requiring that U N members' place
apecihe units o! their armed forces at the disposal
of the peace organization to meet crises. It repre-
sents a perpetuation of the emergency measure
under whi. h the U N was able :■> send its own
■ oroes into K uea to era! the aggression from
(he north
T?W program '-ti.'. has t go through the for-
mality of being passed bv the general assembly
Howexer, the big mainritx in which .1 was adopt-
ed in the assembly » pelitic*: committee en-
sures its passage
It k Just eve: 50 veal's ago that the world saw
the first meeting of nations ever assembled to
ixacuM wax* and means of maintaining peace
In 1399 countries met at the Hague and adopt-
ed a "convention for the Pacific settlement of
nternatiorul disputes "
Thia a as followed m 1907 bx the • second peace
(•Uference whet: 44 stales xirtuallx all the
independent nations of tb» globe—reaffirmed the
oonvwtx>n anti added to it The convention pro-
' UieM for mediation, arbitration, and international
cooiBuamons for inquiry into situations likely to
lead to war
west step and tt »aj a seven-league stride -
the creation of the League of Nations at the
MM ®f WtwH War I That did exme good wort—
BtHfaded in the great emergera >es becauoe It
l9M»<tt^cWira«9 and the means to take force-
. 1
li fl
I
■ ' «M
I T HA-HA* I KA
SCAVE KlOS IN THAI i &LAC I PiCWXT
> SHOOT' DICK.
\ htXJ BETTER
] G-4 T Our A THERE
' . J4E FORE TH FARMf K.
J SEES THAT 7RTEE.'
u-v HAW-HAXV.'
TWENTY YEARS AGO
At a directors meeting of the Denton Building
and Loan Association, M L. Ramey was named
manager of the association
W S Donobo will lead the services at the First
Baptist Church tonight
Mr and Mrs. J E Selz and Mr*
Munch of Pitot Point visited in Dalia*
Mr*. Jun Jacobs of Aubrey underwent » ton-
sllar operation Wednesday morning
The baby of Mr and Mrs Herbert Trietscb.
North Locust Street Is ill
Grets Garbo is featured with Lewis Stone in
• Romance at the Pals, e Theatre
FIVE YEARS AGO
Dr Jack Skiles is exhibiting his fine Tennessee
walking horse which he bought last week a’
Franklin. Tennessee
The temperature went down to a tow of 35 last
night and some people thought there might have
been frost ir. the towlands
Mrs Owen Griffin. Denton, underwent sur-
gery today in the Elm Street Hospital and Clinic
A gir. was born to Mr and Mrs C F Barne«
Route 2. Last night in the Elm Street Hospital
and Clime
Mrs J B
this vear
two ksxociates invested
WOO 000 of their own money round-
ed up a director and a cast head-
ed by Charles Boyer and Walter
Hampden, and went to work
The whole movie was shut in 27
days at the Mission Inn. Rr. erslde.
Cal . with a company of 120 actors
and technicians, all of whom work-
ed and lived together at the Inn
The 'JOO-year-old inn was used m
the movie as a Jesuit mission
"It is a very nice way to make
pictures." Luchac hevltch says, "us-
ing a natural setting and our own
money If you get the money from
the bank, you have to hire an extra
staff of accountants to satisfy the
bankers, you have to haxe lawyers
you normally wouldn't need
"When bank money la behind a
movie, the bank has to approve
the cast, and a bank is on<y interes-
1 EDITOR'S NOTE: Here*
•ne of a question-and-answer
series that tells how the Korean
war affects reservists, veter-
ans. drafVage men. and any-
one likely to be railed to serv-
ice. The author. » member of
the Washington staff of NEA
Service, conducted a wtdely-
read column an “Your GI
Rights ' In the months follow-
ing World War 11. He will
answer questions only in this
space, not by niail.)
BERLIN—i NEA>—Bunting files again on the
nu... Atxeeta iu the American. British and French
sectors The German Republic's black, red and
orange flags fly everywhere The terrible beat
up ex-Gernian capital seems to have a bigger
lift, spiritually than It got out of even the air
Un
Reason for al! this is ihe German Indus!lies
Fan It was a masterpiece ol Allied prirpaganda
It Haunted west German recovery right in the
face of the Soviet zone.
The contrast is tremendous In the Soviet sec-
tor the only new construction is half a dozen
Communist Party headquarters buildings and a
new Russian embassy In the west zone, recon-
struction is everywhere The people are working
and the stores are full
Part of this i» admittedly front Maj-Gen Max
well D Taylor, U S commander in Berlin ad-
mits that he has 26 per cent unemployment With
Marshall Plai money, he has a WPA-type recon-
struction program going which employs 58.000
people A year ago. Berlin production w«s only
19 per cent of the level And it is still going up
The thing thst expressed this confidence was
the Berlin Industries Fair. It mn during the first
two weeks of October. Bv intent or otherwise, the
fair ended Just as the Soviet bone elections were
held on October 15
While there was no doubt about that one-ucket
the Berlin Fair should give any
Berliner who visited It pause for thought
the fair showed what postwar Germany can be
and will be ’/ it ts unified and freed from Com-
munist control Here was all the old German
technical genius and scientific development, re-
born and on display.
In 19 spacious exhibition halls, any visitor
could see what is Made m Germans- todav Tn
give a brief resume, here are some of the pro-
radios and electrical products; chemicals.
leather, textile and paper
products office equipment and furniture, print-
ing maclunerx porcelain and glass toys and
handicrafts optical goods, precision and surgi-
cal instruments, hardware and plumbing
machinery, machine toois and heavy iron
steel products
There was an abundance of household ap-
pliances The prices on many of these items are
tower than average prices for comparable items
made in the United States For example, there
are table model radios at 96 marks, or the equiva-
lent of *24: vacuum »weepers at M2, electric
refrigerators at *150. and baby grand pianos in
mahoganv at 11200
These items could hardly be considered as com-
petitive with U 6 made products, however,
ettber a* to quality or to style, except possibly the
pianos, which are standard design
"George C. Marshall House " the main Ameri-
can exhibit was an interesting and educational
ahownng of photographs, books pamphlets and
movies But perhaps the best sight to an Amen-
can's eyes at the Berlin Fair was one simple U S
exhibit.
It tn an American-made ranch-tvpe rambler
house in white shmgies and green roof It had a
Breeieway and attached garage with an Ameri-
can automobtle parked in it The inside had three
bedrooms and all modern conveniences. It was the
t'pe that sells for M000 to »14.000 any place m
the U S
The thing that did the heart good was to see
the Une-up of Germans, half a block long, wait-
ing to get Into it and go through it even earlv
in tne morning It was the swellest kind
propaganda Imaginable.
W.ASHINGTON — 'NEA' - Q
I va< a private tn U’.e last war and
served for three years
tuu out I got mv degree from med
sthool v. .th Gl training Does
being * ve'eran keep me out of
the doctor draft?
No
Mv husband served for three
the Army during World
He
this Red stronghold of North OyfT-run before they could retreat
"* to prepared positions before the
city.
Col Marcel Crotnbez ot Portland.
Filth Regiment commander
"Ihe Red* were shooting au
us all the way but we kept going
7711* hard hittuig column didn't
halt for small pockets of Red
troops. It Just shot them up from
the road and ke.pt going ahead to
let following units deal with them
later
And
this never <><■ ur
me until I met J x-eph
vitch. an independent
of Paris and Hmlvwood
has just completed filming
First Legion "
The movie is ba.-ed in Emmet
Lavery's famous play, which was
Introduced to Broadway 15 tears
ago and achieved a world wide fol-
lowing Lucachevitch. a White Rus-
sian emigre, saw it in Pans ir art director
1938 and decided then to put it gl jps. and
on film. painters '
He got around to it this rear Lucachevttch liked the intimate
He and two avacxiates invested and informal wav ihe company
worked together We never had
to wait " he says, ' for a” perfor-
mer to come to work from some
faraway ranch hon e He was right
there in the hotel all the time
There were very few delay* and
a* I Mild, no bankers "
■-..■s'ii
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 62, Ed. 1 Monday, October 23, 1950, newspaper, October 23, 1950; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1348478/m1/4/: accessed June 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Denton Public Library.