anaheim-bulletin 1953-09-25
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4 — ANAHEIM (Cal.) BULLETIN Friday, September 25, 1953
Published Daily Evenings Except Sundays and Holidays by
ANAHEIM BULLETIN PUBLISHING CO., INC.
222 S. Lemon St.
Anahiem, Calif.
HAZEL D. LOUDON, President
L. H. LOUDON, JR., Vice Pres. and Co-Publisher
STANLEY LOUDON, Co-Publisher and Treasurer
MILDRED TAGGART, Member of Board
RICHARD FISCHLA, JR., Secretary and Business Manager
DON ELAFTER, Editor
CARRIE LOU SUTHERLAND, Society and Women's Department
C. WM. BLAND, Adv. Manager
Legalized in accordance California State Law December 28, 1951.
Entered as second-class math matter August 16, 1951 at the post office at Anahiem, California under the Act of March 8, 1979.
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HOW TO GET RID OF A COMMUNITY CHEST WORKER
Every year the volunteer Red Feather collectors hear some stock answers from householders. Monday the residential campaign begins—the final phase of the drive for $31,049.
"I have come to receive your Community Chest donation." That's what you'll hear. What will the volunteer hear in reply? Here are some of the stock answers:
"My husband donates through his business." (If he did he was given a Red Feather emblem to display in a window at home and the worker wouldn't even have rung the doorbell.)
"We can't afford to give anything." (Really? You may need some Community Chest services yourself in a few months. Why not give a gift of gratitude that you don't need them now?)
"I haven't any money in the house right now."
(Make an appointment for the worker to call back or page also gives you this trusting world newspaper.)
"My husband donates through his business." (If he did he was given a Red Feather emblem to display in a window at home and the worker wouldn't even have rung the doorbell.)
"We can't afford to give anything." (Really? You may need some Community Chest services yourself in a few months. Why not give a gift of gratitude that you don't need them now?)
"I haven't any money in the house right now." (Make an appointment for the worker to call back, or put a little money in the sugar bowl right now so you will have some when the worker calls.)
"We give to other charities." There are many worthwhile charities, but the Community Chest is the charity that takes care of YOUR neighbor and YOU when you need it. The six agencies in Anaheim Community Chest do work that is specialized and is not done by other charities. For instance, who could take the place of the Visiting Nurses, or the one-of-its-kind Children's Hospital, or provide the service to the military or the prisons that Salvation Army does?
It's a sure thing that someone in your neighborhood has been helped at one time or another by Catholic Welfare, though their work is not publicized. And there are few homes that are not touched by the fine work of the Boy Scouts or the Girl Scouts.
"NO!" (To that we reply, PLEASE? Won't you give a little extra this year?)
It takes GOLD to fill a treasure chest, and the Anaheim Community Chest needs to be replenished with $31,149 worth, so that these agencies may fulfill for you the GOLDEN RULE, "Do unto others whatsoever you would have done unto you."
Corporations and business men, professional men and civic leaders have given their time and money so far. The campaign is two-thirds done, but the biggest share of the money comes from the people—the householders who know the best way to get rid of a collector is to say, "Just a minute 'til I get my purse!"
TURN CLOCK BACK
Well, you can get back that hour of sleep you lost last April when the clock was put ahead one hour for Daylight Saving. Sunday, we go back to Standard Time. So, Saturday night when you go to bed turn the clock BACK one hour. If you don't church won't start for an hour after you get there on Sunday. Of course, you could sit there and doze while you waited, but that isn't customary BEFORE the service.
Ten Years Ago
Mr. and Mrs. John Orr of Buena Park are the parents of a son, Russell Lee, born at the Pullerton Cottage.
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elwayne Errington of this city. Her father will be remembered as the slow-ball pitcher with the Anaheim Valencia team a few years ago.
feet: they are constricted them for more than w happens to them that they are. It has been lens through which w and, indeed, the world er for a moment when the news that sticks reports over radio and newspaper for the full page also gives you th You can read it at you over again if you wish you. Neither can mag paper for they usual occurred. Your local community which help one another better. ing vital issues and n it serves as a watchdog the channel through w express their views. for a good community ber 1-8 is National N
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 today, you have a highly en nature. You must learn and control if you are to the heights to which your should entitle you by right o There is a real touch of within you, but it must be under disciplinary control if function properly. Once you learned this lesson, there are heights in the arts to which may not quite properly aspire You have a great deal of confidence which is warranted though you may have a great of contemporary criticism your lifetime. The world is challenge something new t has been proved "popular"
Probably you are one of who will fall in love at first and if you do not wed "this son" you might never marry ever, it behooves you to "spare when this happens, for you never be completely happy with your own family and your home ties. You are not one t el very widely for you enjoy own hearth too much for Home's best as far as you are cerned.
To find what the stars h store for tomorrow, select birthday star and read the sponding paragraph. Let your day star be'your daily guide
Saturday, September 21 LIBRA (Sept. 24-Oct. 23)
Ten Years Ago
Mr. and Mrs. John Orr of Buena Park are the parents of a son, Russell Lee, born at the Pullerton Cottage hospital last week.
PFC Donald Mills of North Carleton Ave. has been advanced to assistant to the chaplain's office, 55th Service Group, Port Dix, N.Y.
Mr. and Mrs. C. Otte of the Ansheim and Olive Rd. will be honored Sept. 28 at their golden wedding anniversary party.
Barbara Errington is with the Earl Carroll Pollies show. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elwayne Errington of this city. Her father will be remembered as the slow-ball pitcher with the Anaheim Valencia team a few years ago.
Homecoming rally for the White Temple Methodist church is slated for Sept. 26 beginning with the 9:30 Sunday school hour. Many of the former ministers will return to the church for that day with the Rev. A.W. Harker to be the guest speaker.
Date of Oct. 18 has been told as the date for the marriage of Catherine Wethered, daughter of Mrs. Cassie Wethered and Russell Hess, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hess of Chicago.
SONGS OF A SONNETEER
BY R. LOUIS SCOTT
"BROWN BIRD SINGING"
Somewhere a brown bird—a brown bird singing—
Singing as dawn crests the Eastern-most hill;
While far below the earth bides hushed—and still!
Day wakes swiftly—tribulation bringing—
But the brown bird warbles his care-free song!
Soon will come man-sounds—the claque of the mill—
Hustle and bustle—swift moments winging—
Into Life's stream, while the brown bird's singing,
Jeers at man's hurry, in notes clear and shrill!
The brown bird a-sway on his aspen limb.
Yields no allegiance to right—or to wrong:
He carols the dawn—until shadows grim
Cease from their efforts night's rule to prolong—
While the brown bird's voice chants his matins hymn!
RIDINGHOOD A LA MODE
Othman's Views on Washington Street
By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN
MC LEAN, VA. — If you have bumps in your front lawn, my advice is to leave them there. We're bumpless around our place at the moment, muscle weary and dang-bear bankrupt.
Ever since we bought our beaten up acres here, my bride has worried about the hills and valleys out front. Little ones, mostly, which made the grass hard to cut, were inclined to tip over the tractor, and cause unsuspecting pedestrians to turn their ankles. She finally called the man with the bulldozer to smooth out a couple of acres.
He rumbled up with his machine mounted on a flat-ted trailer truck. He said it would cost $0 per hour to smooth down the place, plus $15 for bringing his machinery to location. This struck me as a little high, but to be a bargain.
His earthmover was one of the smaller models on caterpillar tracks and powered by a Diesel engine. It cost him $10,400. He couldn't run it on the public streets, of course, on account of tearing up the asphalt and so he had to buy the truck, which set him back another $5,200.
Out of the $0 per hour he had to give the operator $4 and how he was ever going to pay for his machinery and also eat, he wasn't exactly sure. These statistics made me so sad that I told him to go to work at $0 per, and please hurry. What he did to the good earth was a pity. He turned up lawn of 40 years standing, but with a good deal of shorting, geeing and hauling, he managed to knock off the tops of most of the hillocks and fill in valleys.
After one day of that machinery broke down and he almost wept. A new part cost him $300. But that wasn't so bad; what worried him was the mortgage and the hourly $0 he wasn't getting. It was almost two weeks before going again and now I days of hill removing a day.
So I told him I'd do the self. The delicate part, mounted the earth-scrap on my little red tractor on headlights front and rearing earth backwards on nights) and got busy. That is that when you've shit high on a tractor, you can the depressions in the east.
Mrs. O. took care of the aid of a chalk line adding, she guided me as I the acres around. Now this was dried and in clumped the place. I had to rake by hand. Then I used the plow for getting the landition and now it was time.
I think maybe the way a fortune is in the great business. The seed man problem was to grow the first place. For two years the crop has been down full; no Federal subsidies seed growers, either.
So he offered me one seed at $1.10 per pound, might no. What I really said, was a high class of blue grass and bent gnome maybe a smidgeon of wolf For a quick cover. This is per pound. I needed 40 yr same.
This I planted by hand was no small chore in it. I raked it slightly and put rain, only not too much, a shower almost at once, downpour will give us gut trust we escape that. My wife is satisfied. We and eventually I expect er, physically, if not financially.
(Copyright, 1953, By Uni-ture Syndicate, Inc.)
they are constantly with us and we depend on them for more than we realize. It isn't until something happens to them that we are fully aware how important they are. It has been said that the newspaper is the news through which we see our community, our nation, and indeed, the world. This no exaggeration. Consider for a moment where you get most of your news—the news that sticks with you. To be sure, you hear reports over radio and television, but you turn to your newspaper for the full account of events. The printed page also gives you the chance to contemplate the news. You can read it at your leisure and go back and read it over again if you wish. TV and radio can't wait for you. Neither can magazines take the place of the newspaper for they usually arrive well after events have occurred. Your local newspaper is an instrument of this community which helps people to know and understand one another better. It is the principal means of bringing vital issues and needed reforms to public attention; it serves as a watchdog on conduct of government; it is the channel through which groups and individuals may express their views. In short, a good newspaper makes for a good community. Incidentally, the week of October 1-8 is National Newspaper Week.
Your Birthday Forecast
(BY STELLA)
PRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26—Born today, you have a highly emotional nature. You must learn balance and control if you are to achieve the heights to which your talent could entitle you by right of birth here is a real touch of genius in you, but it must be brought under disciplinary control if it is to metion properly. Once you have earned this lesson, there are few nights in the arts to which you may not quite properly aspire. You have a great deal of self-confidence which is warranted, although you may have a great deal contemporary criticism during your lifetime. The world is apt to challenge something new until it has been proved "popular"!
Probably you are one of those who will fall in love at first sight, and if you do not wed "this one peron," you might never marry. However, it behooves you to "speak up" when this happens, for you will be completely happy without our own family and your own nieces. You are not one to travel very widely for you enjoy your innearhood too much for that same best as far as you are concerned.
To find what the stars have in store for tomorrow, select your birthday star and read the corresponding paragraph. Let your birthday star be your daily guide.
Saturday, September 26
BRA (Sept. 24-Oct. 23)—Health
As It Was Told to Me
by HARMAN NICHOLS
HOUSTON, Tex. (UP)—It was a waste of time to fetch along a little nickel booklet on how to drive a nail when I started out to look over the new housing in this part of the country.
It is a fine leaflet, to be sure, put out by the Department of Agriculture in Washington. It tells how to whack the head of a brad or 10-penny nail square on the head and drive it through a slab of timber.
The learned gentlemen from the DOA were smart enough to warn the uninitiated hammer swinger to hit around the fingers and be careful of small try who might be in line for a near miss if the hammer slips.
Nails Not Enough
I found out that it takes more than a hatful of nails, a hammer and a bucket of cement to build a house. At least one that will stand the wear and tear of the years and have inside plumbing, wood-burning fire place and electric light switches that won't wake.
PHIL NEWSOM
It is becoming discouragingly evident that neither the United Nations nor the Communists expect any real peace soon in Korea. The best that can be expected is a long, uneasy armistice with troops of both sides continuing in the war-torn peninsula for several years to come.
Such an analysis results from factors long in existence, and others newly added.
Last Thursday, United States Secretary of State John Foster Dulles said the United States was "forced to doubt" that the Communists either intended to withdraw their troops from North Korea or to permit a truly free and united Korea.
Oct. 28 Deadline
Dulles added that it was becoming increasingly impossible to meet the Oct. 28 deadline originally set for the start of the political conference on Korea's future.
This week a North Korean pilot flew into Kimpo airport outside Seoul and turned a Russian-built earth was a pity. He turned up lawn of 40 years standing, but with a good deal of moring, geeing and hauling, he managed to knock off the tops of most of the hillocks and fill in valleys.
After one day of that his machinery broke down and he almost wept. A new part cost him $300. But that wasn't so bad; what worried him was the mortgage and the hourly $0 he wasn't getting. It was no small chore in it I raked it slightly and put rain, only not too much, a shower almost at once, downpour will give us puil I trust we escape that. I my bride is satisfied. Wand eventually I expect er, physically, if not financially.
(Copyright, 1953, By Unique Syndicate, Inc.)
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1- Baseball
2- Impement
3- Jump activity
4- Wind
5- Ripen
6- Spear
7- Confederate general
8- Growing out of lyric poem
9- Concour
10- Condensed mirror
11- Point of hammer
12- Above
13- Jewish month
14- Be mistaken
15- Controve
16- Roman tyrant
17- Land measure
18- Dreading
DOWN
1- Prohibit
2- Time gone by
3- Immature
GORED ARRINE MITTERS LA DOER FARD AGED ROMAN NESEERS MATINES DEEP WRITE DESERT RESAL IR SPORT RUSSE MAIA SPIRE SAAM SEENE PORTE IN SEEDED POLLITER STERE PAINS
4- Killed
5- Indemnite article
6- Mark left by wound
7- Part of jacket
8- Chicken
9- Still
10- Lair
11- Flight
12- Manage
13- Legume (pt.)
14- Mistake
15- Mountains in dogpole
16- Debate
17- Inventor of dynamite
18- Patent
19- Abebelle beverage
20- Palm leaf
21- Compass point
22- Calendar of events
23- Season of year
24- Evergreen tree
25-Trial
26-Dental
27- Part of locomotive
28-Collection of facts
29- Armed conflict
30-Girl's name
31-Soak
32-Knockout tabbr.
Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle
Women's Work
(By GAY PAULEY)
United Press Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK — Mamie Eisenhower's designer says American women would do well to follow the lead of "The First Lady" and pass up fashion fads.
First Mamie isn't one to shorten or lengthen her skirts at the whim of a certain Paris designer, pointed out Molly Parnis.
Mrs. Eisenhower wears skirts of the length most becoming to her," said Miss Parnis, who made many of Mamie's inaugural clothes. "Every woman should do the same.
"I think it's perfectly foolish for women to be asking constantly 'shall I wear my hemline at 14 inches, or 15 inches, or what is the correct length?'
Middle-of-Roader
"I get so bored with all the hemline talk. A woman should judge the length by her body proportions. The best way to decide o'm becoming length is to stand in front of a full-length mirror and adjust the skirt until it looks just right. Short women need a little more skirt... tall women can wear a little less."
Mrs. Eisenhower, who is on several of those lists of best-dressed women, is classed by Miss Parnis as a "conservative dresser."
She chooses her clothes carefully and with an eye to long wear and versatility," she said. "I call Mrs. Eisenhower a middle-of-the-roader."
The designer added that every woman should be the same if she wants to avoid the pitfalls of shopping.
"Don't go to extremes," she explained. "Don't wear skirts too long, too short, too tight. Tight skirts don't make hiplines any slimmer." Start your shopping with Set down an inventory on paper carefully decide what can be over from previous seasons there's a lemon—an umbrella dress, blouse or hat—get rid of Buy Good Things Better have one less than you clothes closet than to unbecoming one.
Choose your clothes as to your way of life. No citrine robe should be chock full of and walking shoes.
Don't buy on a whim. Try of this, and I'd save myself money if I'd just say before Now, where would I wear dress?
The designer said it's shopper who buys the best afford. She suggested one made garment of good over two of lesser quality, the one will give you better in wear and appearance.
Miss Parnis is against "shopping—buying one dress suit and getting a complete accessories just for it."
Get good accessories, which are interchangeable advised.
Tm all for women per their wardrobes with one primary colors—red, blue, yellow. One of the best women I know never is with couple of red dresses in her closet."
If It's News You'll See The Bulletin
Washington Scenes
The David Lawrence Dispatch
(BY DAVID LAWRENCE)
almost two weeks before he got going again and now I had two days of hill removing at $72 per day.
So I told him I'd do the rest, myself. The delicate part, I said. I mounted the earth-scraping blade on my little red tractor (with the headlights front and rear for moving earth backwards on dark nights) and got busy. The trouble is that when you're sitting up high on a tractor, you can't see the depressions in the earth below.
Mrs. O. took care of that. With the aid of a chalk line and squinting, she guided me as I sneared the acres around. Now the old turf was dried and in clumps all over the place. I had to take this off by hand. Then I used the disc plow for getting the land in condition and now it was time to seed.
I think maybe the way to make a fortune is in the grass seed business. The seed man said the problem was to grow the stuff in the first place. For two years now the crop has been downright awful; no Federal subsidies for grass seed growers, either.
So he offered me one brand of seed at $1.10 per pound, but he might no. What I really needed, he said, was a high class mixture of blue grass and bent grass, with maybe a smidgeon of winter rye. For a quick cover. This cost $1.85 per pound. I needed 40 pounds of same.
This I planted by hand, which was no small chore in itself. Then I raked it slightly and prayed for rain, only not too much. We got a shower almost at once, but a downpour will give us gullies and I trust we escape that. I also trust my bride is satisfied. With luck, and eventually I expect to recover, physically, if not financially.
(Copyright, 1953, By United Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
Told to Me
WASHINGTON, Sept. 25 — Government-by-headline seems to be a rather painful experience sometimes—if one sympathizes at all with the people in business, industry and finance who have the daylights scared out of them by a speech by the President of the United States which they read in the morning papers, only to be followed in the afternoon papers by a prompt reassurance from the Secretary of the Treasury that there was really no cause for alarm.
The sequence of events and the facts thereon are interesting to examine as an example of how jitters are often produced in the business community.
On Monday afternoon of this week—several hours before President Eisenhower was scheduled to deliver his address in Boston over radio and television—copies were made available at the White House to all members of the press. There was ample opportunity to read the text and discover, somewhere along about the middle of the address, a startling paragraph which spoke of how the enemy was "equipped with the most terrible weapons of destruction" and warning the world that for America "there is no sacrifice—no labor, no tax, no service—too hard for us to bear to support a logical and necessary defense of our freedom."
What did this mean? The reporters had plenty of time to ask the President both before and after he delivered the speech whether it mean that the scheduled repeal of certain tax rates on January 1 next had been decided against by the administration or whether these tax reductions all of a sudden had become matters of doubt and conjecture.
But no such information was obtained for the morning papers, either because the reporters didn't ask the President or because the White House staff didn't find out his views for the reporters, if they did present such queries.
On Monday evening, like a dutiful cabinet officer, he interrupted his labor on his own speech and, with his alides surrounding him at his home, watched and heard the President on television. Nothing that the President said seemed to Mr. Humphrey afterward to be in conflict with what he himself intended to say the next morning on taxes, and he wasn't at all conscious of any reason to revise that section of his address to the bankers.
But the next morning, when Secretary Humphrey read the newspapers and saw the headlines emphasizing the doubt that had been raised by the President's reference to taxes, he was surprised. He sure Mr. Eisenhower had not intended to create any such doubts about the tax program for new January. But he decided to call the President anyway and read to him over the telephone the tax section of his proposed speech to the American Bankers Association. The President approved the passage at once and told the Secretary the speech was right on the button. It will be recalled that the Secretary emphasized to the bankers that the planned reductions for January 1 were the same as had been announced weeks ago. The Tuesday afternoon and Wednesday morning headlines displayed Mr. Humphrey's prediction of tax reductions—which would not have been front-page news but for the double expressed in Tuesday morning's papers. The stock market instead of taking a nose-dive Tuesday afternoon, actually started upward.
It appears that the President himself was somewhat surprised too, by the headlines about his Boston speech, because he was talking only about the extent of the sacrifice that would be made if a war crisis developed. If that information had been obtained by the press on Monday, some nervous hours for the business men of Am...
Told to Me
IN NICHOLS
mama up in the middle of the night when the old man gets home from toll, or wherever he's been.
The "more" that is needed is the pretty green paper that Uncle Sam puts out in small and large figures at the government printing office.
Money, that is.
Big Money Man
It was kind of funny to watch one of the big builders at alumuney trying to put the arm on a bunch of bankers for a fast $3,500,000 until his next take-home.
The builder had just confided to several intimates, including this startled one, that he was what he called "rich rich." He could be said, sit down and scratch off a check for several figures and if necessary sell his vast holdings and count his stack at around $50,000,000. Which is a pretty good stack.
What this gentleman needed was cash. They do big things in a big way in Texas, but let's face it, folks. Money a getting tight.
EWSOM ---
and the U. N. command gets a close-up look at the fighting machine which faced our FB6 Sabre jets during the Korean fighting.
But of possibly more lasting importance than any secrets the MIG may have is the other information the former Red pilot brought with him.
The Red pilot said the Communists expect the war to resume and that they were stocking North Korean fields with both jet fighters and bombers in violation of the armistice.
Food for Thought
If Lt. Noh Kuem Suk, formerly of the Communist air force, is telling the truth, then the Allies indeed have food for thought.
The armistice terms permitted reconstruction of North Korean airfields but specifically forade the use by warplanes.
Noh's story would indicate that the ink scarcely was dry on the armistice documents than the Reds began violating them.
Assuming that their word would no better be an official answer.
Books
By United Press
The spiritual disintegration of defeated Germany and the burden of guilt borne by individuals for a nation's sin, is somberly depicted in "The Quest" (Knopf), written by Elizabeth Langgasser. Published in Germany in 1950, and the first of Mrs. Langgasser's 11 volumes of novels, poems and short stories to be translated into English, this is an account of seven Germans in search of understanding for themselves and for the future.
There are the actor Albrecht, the tormented young widow Lotte and her brother Ewald, who bears the pain of murder for a life lost because he refused his hand in help; the soul-scarred girl from the underground. Drene; the homecoming soldier Friedrich, lost in cynicism; and the elderly Levi-Jeshower couple whose nights are shared with the dark horrors of the program. Sitting out individually for Anastasienford, the village of the Resurrection, from still crumbling Berlin in the summer of 1945, they share their pilgrimage to the ancient convent where each hopes to "find the beginning."
I look through all his life, and recognize but a bow and a grin. Thackeray wrote of George IV a volume for the beginning stamp collector has been made available through "Ambassador" album. (H. W. Harris & Co.), and at a most reasonable price ($2.95). In loose-leaf form this well-illustrated album provides plenty of room for adding pages and should be in big demand around Christmas time with parents who want to start their young collectors out with a complete, but inexpensive album.
The body and its functions are the basis of thousands of volumes many of them technical and uninteresting if not unreasonable to the general reader. To remedy this situation 242 doctors and specialists contributed brief articles on their specialties to a medical book designed to inform the layman in simple language about the complex machinery of the body — what keeps it running, how and why it gets out of order, and what doctors do about it. The book is "The Book of Health," edited by Drs. Randolph Lee Clark and Russell W. Cumley (Elsevier Press). The hundreds of clear illustrations and well-written text make it as fascinating as it is instructive.
BEST SELLERS
(Compiled by Publisher's Weekly)
Fiction
Desiree—Annamarie Selinko
Battle Cry—Leon M. Urls
Beyond This Place—A. J. Cronin
The High and Mighty—Frnest K. Gann
The Bridges of Tokyo-Ri—James Michener.
Food for Thought
If Lt. Noh Kuen Suk, formerly of the Communist air force, is telling the truth, then the Allies indeed have food for thought.
The armistice terms permitted reconstruction of North Korean air fields but specifically forbade the use by warplanes.
Noh's story would indicate that the ink scarcely was dry on the armistice documents than the Reds began violating them.
Assuming that their word would be no better on any political agreements reached, then what is the use of a political conference at all?
Don't make hiplines any slimmer.
"Start your shopping with a plan. Set down an inventory on paper and carefully decide what can be carried over from previous seasons. If there's a lemon—an unbecoming dress, blouse or hat—get rid of it."
Buy Good Things
"Better have one less item in your clothes closest than to have an unbecoming one."
Choose your clothes according to your way of life. No city wardrobe should be chock full of tweeds and walking shoes.
"Don't buy on a whim. I'm guilty of this, and I'd save myself lots of money if I just say beforehand. Now, where would I wear that dress?"
The designer said it's a wise shopper who buys the best she can afford. She suggested one well-made garment of good material over two of lesser quality, because the one will give you better returns in wear and appearance.
Miss Parnis is against "costume shopping—burying one dress or suit and getting a complete set of accessories just for it."
Get good accessories, and those which are interchangeable," she advised.
"I'm all for women perking up their wardrobes with one of the primary colors—red, blue, green or yellow. One of the best-dressed women I know never is without a couple of red dresses in her clothes closet."
If It's News You'll See It In
The Bulletin
A comprehensive and complete usually for Anastasiendorf, the village of the Resurrection, from still crumbling Berlin in the summer of 1945, they share their pilgrimage to the ancient convent where each hopes to "find the beginning." Disjointed at times yet brilliant in evoking shifting moods of gaiety, love, terror and hopelessness. "The Quest" gives a remarkable picture of postwar Germany.
"I look through all his life, and recognize but a bow and a grin." Thackeray wrote of George IV a century ago.
Since then, historians have tended to agree that George IV was perhaps the least admirable monarch Britain ever had.
Still, more than 120 years after his death, people write about him and read about him — his early brilliance, his good looks, his charming disposition when he wanted to be charming, his extravagance, his vanity, his casual cutting of his most intimate women and men friends.
The latest book on George IV is an excellent one: The Great Corinthian by Dorla Lee (Oxford). Miss Lee, a British novelist, and biographer, makes no attempt to gloss over George's faults. She is content in her romanticized story, to make him a very human being and to try to show what made him the way he was. Her story combines the interest of a novel with the factual treatment of history.
"Journey to Bethlehem" by Delos W. Loveplace (Crowell) is a lifelong recreation of the forced trip of Mary and Joseph from Nazareth to Bethlehem where Jesus was born. Gessar Augustus had ordered the whole world taxed and everyone had to return to his chief city to be counted. The journey through the valley of the Samaritans with Mary riding a complacent donkey and the sun-blackened Joseph striding along with heavy staff as guide and protector against thieves and wild animals winds through ancient towns skillfully brought to life. The humble travelers are beset by danger; see the criticism of a Zealot by Roman soldiers and are tormented by the growing rumors that a Messiah is soon to be born. The simple narrative style lends dignity to the story and vividness to the life of those times.
Wanted—An author. There are two secretaries out at Union Oil Research, named Irene Wheeler and Sally Cowger, who want some body to write a book instructing children how to treat their parents. Could be they are mothers?
(Fran Sterling)
Farmer McCabe
September 25, 1953
I reckon that most everybody has had some of them days where everything goes wrong. Well yesterday I had one of them days myself. It seems that no matter what I done, it was salt to my nerves. It's a mighty good thing that tomorrow is another day; how some ever, I rarely ever look forward to it as early as 10 o'clock in the morning.
Farmer McCabe
(All rights reserved)
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