anaheim-bulletin 1953-10-12
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— ANAHEIM (Cal.) BULLETIN Monday, October 12, 1952
Published Daily Evenings Except
Sundays and Holidays by
ANAHEIM BULLETIN PUBLISHING CO., INC.
$22 S. Lemon St.
Anaheim, Calif.
Phone $231
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 FISCHLE, JR., Secretary and Business Manager
DON SHAFFER, Editor
CARRIE LOU SUTHERLAND, Society and Women's Department
C. WM. BLAND, Adv. Manager
Legalized in accordance California State Law December 28, 1851.
Entered as second-class mail matter August 16, 1852 at the post office at Anaheim, California under the Act of March 1, 1878.
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Accident Prevention Week
Many public officials have joined with safety organizations this week in a campaign to educate the public on the need for vigilance in accident prevention in the very place the average citizen thinks he is safest—in his own home. The urgency of the need is dramatically set forth in grisly statistics:
In the last year, according to the National Safety Council, more than five million persons were killed or disabled in home accidents! This is more than double the total of two million persons who were victims of on-the-job accidents in all plants and industries of the entire Nation. The figures also show that the rate of household accidents is on the rise, whereas the industrial accident toll is decreasing year by year.
Among home danger factors stressed by the safety campaigners are stairways poorly lighted or without seating.
Your Birth
MONDAY, OCTOBER 12 — On Columbus Day you have tremors due to hope and consummate faith in the future. Nothing appears great for you to accomplish your adventuresome spirit may send you off into the far places the earth in search of excitement and adventure. You men, especially have very fine minds and exact sciences would probably deal to you. There would be excitement of experimentation open up new fields of mental
In the last year, according to the National Safety Council, more than five million persons were killed or disabled in home accidents! This is more than double the total of two million persons who were victims of on-the-job accidents in all plants and industries of the entire Nation. The figures also show that the rate of household accidents is on the rise, whereas the industrial accident toll is decreasing year by year.
Among home danger factors stressed by the safety campaigners are stairways poorly lighted or without secure handrails, loose electrical connections and frayed cords, sharp tools left out where children may get at them, and the perilous habit of smoking in bed. A safety essential for every home which any druggist can supply, is an adequate first aid kit.
Responsibility in the householder is the keynote of the campaign appeal. Industrial machinery is designed with built-in safety features — but in his home every man must be his own safety engineer.
Beardsley Ruml's Pipe Dream
At a time when a new Administration is striving to make tax reduction hopes come true, the budget revision proposal of Beardsley Ruml, inventor of the withholding tax gimmick, is as ill-timed as it is unsound.
Mr. Ruml's idea is to split the annual federal budget into two categories. In one category would be the direct expenditures of running the government and its agencies for the year — veterans benefits and pensions, all salaries, interest on the public debt, etc. These are costs that are out in the open and cannot be hidden. But Mr. Ruml would also have, by a weird system of double-bookkeeping, a second budget, in which could be lumped enormous expenditures, such as public works ventures, in form of debt obligations to be paid off, if ever, at some time in the future!
The instant budget cannot be balanced by changing the rules and shifting methods of bookkeeping. This is the essence of the Ruml proposal, and the effect would be to hide huge annual expenditures in a debt budget, use trust funds for general purposes, and create endless confusion. In the Federal government, this would be a paradise for political spenders."
Well said!
Piggy-Back Transportation
An inventive manufacturer, Eugene F. Ryan of Chicago, has come up with a novel plan for speeding truck transports on long hauls. He proposes to weld the services of railroads and heavy truckers by means of new flatcars, to be leased to railroads, capable of carrying two loaded truck trailers each. Truckers would bring their trailers to the loading point. At the end of the run.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 12 — On Columbus Day you have tremble doushope and consummate faith the future. Nothing appears great for you to accomplish your adventuresome spirit may send you off into the far places the earth in search of excitement and adventure. You men, especially have very fine minds and exact sciences would probably deal to you. Theres would be an excitement of experimentation open up new fields of mental venture for you.
Although you may not be relaxed to the extent that you want to make the church your work, you have strong spiritual leanings and your sense of ethics exceptionally high. If a woman you are home-loving and domesticated and will enjoy having a milly of your own. Yet you do not have a one-track mind and want to continue an active culture life after marriage.
You both have a talent money-making and although you may not appear to work hard at you usually manage to be comfortably off. If you really did conceive on fortune-making, you probably have one, long before you reached middle life. You are born leader and are able to get cooperation of others in almost any project which you may want undertake. You do not like opposition and know how to wield strong disciplinary hand among your subordinates.
To find what the stars have store for tomorrow, select your birthday star and read the corresponding paragraph. Let your birthday star be your daily guide.
Tuesday, October 13
LIBRA (Sept. 24-Oct. 23) — If appointed with results so far
Science
By DELOS SMITH
United Press Science Editor
NEW PORK UP — When a mates one pound of cod, he'll at top of a huge pyramid although doesn't know it—the food pyramid of the sea."
To manufacture that pound flesh, the cod ate 10 pounds smaller fish. The smaller fish eaten 100 pounds of even smaller fish. Those fish had consumen 1,000 pounds of very small fish. The shell fish had built the substance from 10,000 pounds water animals so small a microscope is needed to see them. The had fed on 100,000 pounds of water vegetables ever smaller than the Dr. Francis Joseph Weiss, chemist and noted authority on food and nutrition, sketched the pyramid to demonstrate that while the food-for-man possibilities the sea are tremendously large than those of the land, man practically no effort—comparable
Piggy-Back Transportation
An inventive manufacturer, Eugene F. Ryan of Chicago, has come up with a novel plan for speeding truck transports on long hauls. He proposes to weld the services of railroads and heavy truckers by means of new flatcars, to be leased to railroads, capable of carrying two loaded truck trailers each. Truckers would bring their trailers to the loading point. At the end of the run, new drivers would pick them up and deliver their loads.
Should the plan prove out, whole trainloads of trailers could be moved at passenger-train speeds or overnight delivery. The benefits would by no means be limited to shippers and both great branches of the transportation industry. By packing double, the iron horse would lessen the wear and tear trucks inflict on the highways and at the same time ease the traffic congestion that so plagues the Nation's motorists.
SONGS OF A SONNETEER
"COLUMBUS DAY!"
The one lone task which is impossible
Is that you've abandoned: naught you can do
Or hope to do, tho it seem plausible,
Can resurrect your urge to carry thru
Until that task be done! Once cast aside,
Its incompleted structure warns each who
Might finish it! An abortion which died
Before accouchement: something better dead
Or, better still, that you had never tried!
Columbus did not hesitate: instead,
He forced his crew, thru labor and travail,
To find an unknown world! He, too, knew dread,
But did not truckle to his fear—nor quail
At what yet lay hidden—beyond Time's veil!
ROSE AND THE FLAME—Page 116—
Jonreed Lauritzen
October—46/94
BAD LUCK?
Othman’s Views on Washington Scenes
By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN
(Editor's note: Following is the first column from Frederick Othman on his tour of the Spanish Main. For the next two weeks or so he will be reporting from such exotic points as Jamaica, Curacao, Venezuela and Trinidad. We only hope that on his return to Washington he finds the nation's capital as lively and exciting.
AT, SEA—Do not, dear friends and neighbors, ever take a flying machine first when you're figuring on an ocean voyage. Else you're likely to wind up nearly naked at the captain's cocktail party.
The trouble is that an airplane will carry 40 pounds of baggage, while a typewriter weighs 17 pounds and a suitcase 14. That doesn't leave much for clothes and shaving soap, while excess baggage per pound costs as much as people. So Hilda said when we headed for our first ride on a steamship that she supposed I have to jettison my union suits. This I did and I also left my shirts in Washington, as well as my socks, my spare pair of shoes, and my dinner jacket.
I made the weight, all right, but when we got to New Orleans my entire stock of haberdashery was on my back. In a clothing shop on Canal street I became a child of the synthetic age. I bought two pairs of acrillan socks, two dacron shorts, two nylon undershirts, two dacron neckties, and two dacron shirts, woven something like mosquito netting to let in the air.
So then we boarded the S.S. Alcoa Cavalier in a welter of confetti, New Orleans jazz, champagne and 50 of the most handsomely dressed people I ever saw. These were my fellow passengers and I watched with some misgivings the porters lugging in their trunks and portmanteaus of clothes. Made me feel a little damp in my synthetic ensemble.
pression; more waiters than tomers. The chairs were white leather, the walls turquoise, the trimmings in carved satin lined aluminum; this ship, all, is owned by the Alumina Corp. of America, which takes dim view of materials like wood and steel.
For those few of us able to nourishment it was an elephant meal. We plowed through shrubs, soups, fish, rare roast beef, tards and also peach ice cream as well as a small dollop cheese, and nobody paid the least attention to my crinkled tume. I read a detective story a while and eventually ambled stairs, where Dr. Sacks' 11 yellow pills seemed to have no effect. Hilda said she no longer wished to die.
So I did my laundry in the room and I will say this for Ron et cetera: The dirt swirl out of it almost instantly. The hung it up to dry, which also supposed to happen in a hurdle. And so it did, except for the tic in the shorts. The follow morning this still was wet. I suggest the scientists at Mr. Pon's go to work on it at Fortunately, I had another point.
Unfortunately, the sea was calm by now, the Cavaller was gilled in the direction of Cuba as slowly as a swan boat in East Potomac Park, and my fellow passengers were bright-eyed in their pressed sports clothes. It matter little to them if they spilled down their fronts; they and pants and dry shirts, too.
Camer sunset and there was cocktail party in the main lounges attended by ladies in every gowns, officers in whites wired gold braid, gentlemen in dark jackets (including one dark one), and Othman in his dress shirt, which didn't dry as wrinkled as the advertising ad.
This I blame on Eastern lines and it's 40-pound bag limit. I felt like a coal show walking by mistake into a snowy place.
Your Birthday Forecast
(BY STELLA)
NDAY, OCTOBER 12 — Born humbus Day you have tremenhope and consummate faith in nature. Nothing appears too far for you to accomplish and adventuresome spirit may even you off into the far places of earth in search of excitement adventure. You men, especially very fine minds and the sciences would probably apo you. There would be the moment of experimentation to run new fields of mental ar
month, take stock and determine to do much better.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)—Kindness shown to a close relative will bring you lasting happiness. Try it out and see for yourself.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 22)—A friendly social day. Make it a point to gather with close friends.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 23-Jan. 20)—Make plans for the future, but don't begin a new project until somewhat later on for best re
BY STELLA)
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 12 — Born in Columbus Day you have tremencope and consummate faith in nature. Nothing appears too far for you to accomplish and adventuresome spirit may even off into the far places of earth in search of excitement adventure. You men, especially very fine minds and the sciences would probably appeal to you. There would be the moment of experimentation to up new fields of mental advice for you.
Though you may not be religious to the extent that you would make the church your life you have strong spiritual beliefs and your sense of ethics is rationally high. If a woman home-loving and domesticated will enjoy having a fair if your own. Yet you do not have one-track mind and will continue an active cultural later marriage.
Both have a talent for making and although you not appear to work hard at it, usually manage to be comfort-able. If you really did concern on fortune-making, you'd only have one, long before you middle life. You are a reader and are able to get the attention of others in almost any which you may want to make. You do not like opposite and know how to wield a disciplinary hand among subordinates.
Find what the stars have in for tomorrow, select your star and read the corre-spiring paragraph. Let your birth date be your daily guild. On Tuesday, October 12 (Sept. 24-Oct. 23) if disjointed with results so far this manufacture that pound of the cod ate 10 pounds of fish. The smaller fish had 100 pounds of even smaller ones fish had consumed pounds of very small shell. The shell fish had built their presence from 10,000 pounds of animals so small a microbes needed to see them. They had 100,000 pounds of water bodies ever smaller than they. Francis Joseph Weiss, a noted authority on nutrition, sketched this aid to demonstrate that while food-for-man possibilities are tremendously larger those of the land, man makes them all effort—compared to month, take stock and determine to do much better.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)—Kindness shown to a close relative will bring you lasting happiness. Try it out and see for yourself.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 22)—A friendly social day. Make it a point to gather with close friends. Be convivial.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 23-Jan. 20)—Make plans for the future, but don't begin a new project until somewhat later on for best results.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21-Feb. 19)—Sick to your normal pattern of work today. Don't attempt to make any startling changes in procedure.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mar. 20)—When you get determined to do a thing, no kind of opposition or delay will stand in your way.
ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. 20)—Adequate commendation for work well done comes without you seeking it, if you have honestly earned it.
TAURUS (Apr. 21-May 21)—Best for you to consider all angles of a project before you put too much time and energy into it.
GEMINI (May 22-June 21)—Ask and receive the advice of a close friend, if something is seriously bothering you. Don't go it alone! CANCER (June 22-July 23)—If you are practical and follow a regular, well planned routine, you will get a great deal done.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 23)—If you are wrong—and you could be once in a while—accept criticism gracefully.
VIRGO (Aug. 24-Sept. 23)—Be very careful in all you do. A day for accidents, so avoid taking risks in anything, at all.
(Distributed by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
Adherents, two discern neckties, and two dacron shirts, woven something like mosquito netting to let in the air.
So then we boarded the S.S. Alcon Cavalier in a welter of confetti, New Orleans jazz, champagne and 50 of the most handsomely dressed people I ever saw. These were my fellow passengers and I watched with some misgivings the porters lugging in their trunks and portmanteaus of clothes. Made me feel a little damp in my synthetic ensemble.
First night out all was well. The sea was rough after we passed the Mississippi delta, the ship pitched, and hardly anybody had an appetite, except Capt. G.M. Dumlop his officers, and myself. Dr. Harman F., Sacks, the ship's surgeon, got no dinner; he was too busy passing out pills to passengers, including my bride, who groveled in their beds and wished they were dead.
The dining salon looked like a night club de luxe in the 1932 de-
As It Was Told to Me
by-HARMAN NICHOLS
WASHINGTON (UP) It has been said that the American soldier can lick anything in the world but a busted button.
The Army does wonderful things for a man who is awkward, clumsy, unschooled, and untrained.
It can teach a playboy how to lug and clean a garbage can. A ballet舞者 how to build a log bunker. A kid with fingers made for piano playing how to have at the enemy with a bayonet. Or it can give a Texas plainsman claustrophobia by bedding him down inside a tank.
But hand any one of these needle, some thread, and a button and he starts yanking his topnot out by the roots. The Army across the years, until now, has messed up on this vital training. And still the services demand that all buttons be on, and all buttons but tened.
Few Know How
A lot of books have been written on buttons, where they come from, etc., but very few on how to tack a four-hole to the front of a man's shirt.
A soldier can stand long marches
Letters to the Editor
October 7, 1953
Dear Sir:
I noticed recently that a new advertising manager had been appointed atthe Bulletin and I have noticed since that the general layout of the ads is much snappel and otherwise greatly improved. You little to them if they spilled dirt down their fronts; they and pants of pants and dry shirts, too.
Game sunset and there cocktail party in the main lounges attended by ladies in evening gowns, officers in whites with gold braid, gentlemen in dress jackets (including one dark one), and Othman in his daisy shirt, which didn't dry as wrinkled as the advertising this I blame on Eastern lines and it's 40-pound bag limit. I felt like a coal show walking by mistake into a Crawford movie set while cameras were rolling. I must however, that the well-dress feelings and treated me as equal. I even won 64 cash a later in the horse race game.
morrow, if I get my wash in time, we'll consider the nuance the newest, gentlest and most prising asset of the U.S.A.
(Copyright, 1983, by United Image Syndicate, Inc.)
Those fish had consumed pounds of very small shell. The shell fish had built their course from 10,000 pounds of animals so small a micro-isms needed to see them. They had on 100,000 pounds of water bodies ever smaller than they. Francis Joseph Weiss, a bot and noted authority on nutrition, sketched this aid to demonstrate that while food-for-man possibilities of sea are tremendously larger those of the land, man makes really no effort—compared to poor in cultivating land vegeta- and food animals—to exploitough he avoided anything so universal, he was pooh-poohing write notion of the science of motion — that man's ultimate will be to achieve extinction by action because he is multiplying himself much more rapidly he is multiplying his foodMarine Culture Simple waved from the atmosphere of modern highly developed land, marine culture appears crabs simple and seems to something for nothing—or at very little in comparison effort needed to gain food the land." he said. Stemial culture require acra- of the root system and a sup-water and nutrients. These conditions often require land and expense for tilling, irrigation, and fertilization. Marine grow naturally and profuse a complete nutrient solution not only all essential elements, in concentrata-varying geographically, but large quantities of dissolved bison dioxide is the raw ma-terial for photosynthesis which is chemical process by which water or land—grow. He did to estimates that the heat of carbon dioxide dissolved in water-covered areas of the is a million times greater the gaseous carbon dioxide in atmosphere. Furthermore, the mineral wealth land washed into the seas, mining their supply of nutri- Sea vegetables have a high ability for accumulating these essential chemicals, and he point-
Farmer McCabe
October 12, 1953
There seems to be a lot of com-motion about the 23 service men who thrown in with the Commies and refuse to come back home. I don't think anybody will deny that that's bad, but shucks, on the other hand there's a whale of a lot more than 23 over here who's thrown in with the Commies and they walk down the street as big as you please ever derm day.
Farmer McCabe
(All rights reserved)
Squeezing Orange County
BY FRAN STEBLING
The glass lawn at 8152 7th Buena Park is caused by the reluctance of a milkman to pick up any bottles except those of his own route.
Bob Waddell, salesman of Wilsey Dairy, is not on his own delivery.
(All Rights Reserved)
Letter to the Editor
October 7, 1953
Dear Sir:
I noticed recently that a new advertising manager had been appointed atthe Bulletin and I have noticed since that the general layout of the ads is much snappier and otherwise greatly improved. You are doing a good job.
Tonight, as I read the want ad columns, a daily habit and pleasure of mine, I read with some distaste the four prominent ads head "Eskinos," "St. George," "Battle Axe Gone" and the inoffensive fourth headed "Trade TV Equity!"
When does cleverness become bad taste is the question that arises to my mind first? Then the second question that follows. When does the Bulletin draw the line?
Realizing that your newspaper and any newspaper survives because of advertising revenue, I am aware that the advertiser needs be treated as a guest in the house, so to speak However, when the guest's bad manners become so offensive to the rest of the family, something must be said.
As a member of the Bulletin family, I wish to protest running further ads of "Nature Boy". He sounds as if he must need to return to the good earth for a while, to re-assess his values and get life in its true perspective. Let's hope he gets his sporting equipment.
Editorially the Bulletin seems to profess a Christian viewpoint, a feeling of its tremendous responsibility to the community, etc.,—won't you give these ads a second perusal, remembering the power of the printed word, even if it does appear only in the want ad columns?
Sincerely,
Mrs. Marjorie Thompson Freeway Park
8141 Adams St.
October 8, 1953
Dear Sir:
European strategists of the corrupt days of the Middle Ages held that no fortress was impregnable that could be reached by an ass
laden with gold.
Adaptation of that technique the liquor lads and the game lads and their associates is best on the theory that no institution person need remain hostile can be reached by a contribution.
The lads are, therefore, o can offer generous contributions build a new church, to finance hospital, to aid a charitable ca-etc., etc.
They sort of specialize in chaiy causes. For example: The Bay Meadows race—the gambling establishment, until cently, put on "charity races" the benefit of the Saints and mers Milk Fund for poor children Eventually, a little girl was ported to have refused a bottle Saints and Sinners' milk with "Thank you kindly, sir, but don't need charity milk any Mapa has stopped playing the rai now."
So the Bay Meadows "milk chaiy races" faded away. The Saints and Sinners now raise their money by lottery—all for charity and quite against the law.
Our current lottery is a big fair. In shopping districts, boys were set up with women in chari-gring the pubio to buy lot-tickets. A Chinaman or denizen Skid Rowl caught selling lot-tickets would be jailed. The "City" label causes the law-enforcement authorities to look the way.
May the liquor lads and the gambler lads and the gangster lads contributions in hand, never ceased in invading that citadel Western civilization—the Christ Church.
Sincerely,
FRANELIN HICHBO
Dear Sir:
Two nights ago your paper all the boys involved in the re-gang fight in Anaheim has' record and last night in your材orial you said the boys invoveme from average American hoi I feel sorry for you in your illusionment.
Sincerely,
M.T.T.
Results Are the Proof of New paper Circulation.
Washington Scenes
OTHMAN
The David Lawrence Dispatch
(BY DAVID LAWRENCE)
WASHINGTON, Oct. 12 — The most important happening in the world at the moment is the realistic change in British policy toward Communist Imperialism occasioned by the sudden threat of Communists to take over control of British Guiana.
With a swiftness that used to be characteristic of the Colonel blimps of British diplomacy in the old days, an aircraft carrier and three other warships and several hundred troops have been ordered to prevent the Communists from taking over the Colonial government and establishing a dictatorship on the Northern coast of South America. The Prime Minister and five other cabinet officers in British Guiana have been booted out by the London government and a six-month-old constitution has been scrapped.
Now nobody in America is arising to propose a "non-aggression" impact between the British government in London and the Communists in British Guiana. Nor is there talk of "negotiation" rather than a show of force as the best way out. Indeed, nobody in the United States is expressing alarm that the British have been too "impulsive" or "impatient" and that this is the kind of thing that leads to "war-mongering" or enlargement of the "Cold War."
On the contrary, the United States government, with a deep-seated belief in the importance of maintaining good faith in alliances, has promptly endorsed the British action and has notified all Latin-American governments that such endorsement has been given. That's unity with a capital "U."
Maybe the London government will appreciate what the United States government didn't do—as for instance, rushing in to recognize the Red government in British Guiana with an argument that, after all, the local government there exercises complete military control of the whole country and, therefore, is entitled to diplomatic recognition as the British have arisen; usually confines his epithets about "irresponsible government" to the South Korean regime. He never criticizes Moscow or Peiping, but aims his verbal bombs at the United States because it refuses to treat as a Satellite the South Korean government, set up originally by the U.N., and regards it as an Independent government which has made great sacrifices for freedom, the developments in British Guiana will certainly furnish a test of Nehru's consistency.
What has occasioned surprise here, however, is that the British government in London has itself risen so resolutely to the occasion and that it discovered before it was too late how Communists infiltrate a free country. The British evidently are not so much in need of a McCarthy, after all, as has been thought by some American observers, including this writer.
For somehow the British government now has come to believe that the "Left Wing" people's progressive party in British Guiana isn't just a political party but a treasonable conspiracy, and that to interfere with the sacred right of "Free Speech" and the right to "political beliefs" in such a situation is merely to assert the right of self-preservation for British rule as against a plotted rebellion.
Maybe now, there will be less scoffing in Britain at so-called Americans' who insist on exposing a Communist plot long before it gets to the point of actually taking over a government. Certainly this concrete example in British Guiana of what Communist infiltration can do—when its activities are too long looked upon as merely "political beliefs" without regard to conspiratorial acts—will have a salutary effect throughout the world. It certainly vindicates the persistent efforts of the committees of congress here in exposing Communist "methods" for, if the British government, known everywhere for its tolerance, cannot brook the treason of the Communist leaders in British Guiana, Britons can hardly sneer
to them if they spilled drinks their fronts; they and plenty joints and dry shirts, too.
mor sunset and there was a party in the main lounge.
led by ladies in evening us, officers in whites with braid, gentlemen in dinner sets (including one dark red and Olhman in his dacron which didn’t dry as unkened as the advertising said.
I blame on Eastern Airlines and it’s 40-pound baggage.
I felt like a coal shoveler by mistake into a Joan Ford movie set while the veras were rolling. I must say, ever that the well-dressed managed to conceal their hags and treated me as an I. I even won 44 cash a little in the horse race game. Toow, if I get my wash done time, we’ll consider the nutria, weewest, gentlest and most surging asset of the U.S.A.
Copyright, 1953, by United Feas Syndicate, Inc.
Led to Me
MICHOLS
g the dusty trail. He is willing master any obstacle course, or out of the fire of the foe. He polish his brass. He can clean rifle so well that he can see itself in the mirror of the barstool buttons!
Martermaster laundries company are operated by guys who in the laundry business in human life. These fellows long mastered the technique of making buttons through the iron-process but still leaving them intact.
The Soldiers Prayer now, the kids can relax. appearing in army post excerises around the world is a butt that answers the GI’s prayer. these buttons, with neat loops of thread through the four cans, can be clipped to army socks and pants. To the platoon they look for all the world sewed-on buttons.
Inside the buttons are the old-like metal prongs which are used through the cloth—without sewing it—and bent double. An trick put to a new use.
With gold,
adaptation of that technique by liquor lads and the gambler and their associates is based on theory that no institution or need remain hostile that be reached by a contribution.
The lads are, therefore, quick offer generous contributions to a new church, to aid a charitable cause, etc.
They sort of specialize in charities. For example:
Maybe the London government will apreciate what the United States government didn’t do—as for instance, rushing in to recognize the Red government in British Glana with an argument that, after all, the local government there exercises complete military control of the whole country and, therefore, is entitled to diplomatic recognition, as the British have argued in defense of their recognition of Red China.
Maybe Prime Minister Nehru of India will disagree with what has been done in British Guiana. He has a sentimental interest, because half the population of British Guiana came originally from India.
New Products
(By V. G. VARTAN)
United Press Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK — Shoes that shun the lush are being readied for winter footwear.
Thanks for a new type of leather, the shoes are estimated to be 250 times more resistant to water than the ordinary variety (Brown Shoe Co.)
The shoe prevents slush, rain and snow from passing through the outer pores of leather. At the same time, the water vapor resulting from foot perspiration is allowed to escape from the inside.
Ballpoint pens are taking on the jewelled look.
A new retractable pen called the "Clicker" has a ruby tip in place of the conventional steel ballpoint (W. A. Sheaffer Pen Co.).
The ruby-tip pen is said to boost writing capacity six times and to do away with,"weepage", which results from wear at the point.
For the average person, the firm says, the pen will write a full year without refilling.
The goat is succeeding the pig in house painting.
Hardy pig bristles, for years the chief material in fine paint brushes, began to go out of style as more and more home decorators turned to paint rollers.
In this type of paint applicator, other animal fibres were used as basis for cover fabrics.
Now a paint roller manufacturer reports that mohair, which is made of goat's hair, provides the best cover fabric for paint rollers (Essex Graham Co).
The secret lies in the shorter hairs which, according to the company, leave a minimum of roughness in the texture of the applied paint.
Here is some good news for the home handyman who dabbles in woodworking.
Certainly this concrete example in British Guiana of what Communist infiltration can do—when its activities are too long looked upon as merely "political beliefs" without regard to conspiratorial acts—will have a salutary effect throughout the world. It certainly vindicates the persistent efforts of the committees of congress here in exposing Communist "meth-ods" for, if the British government, known everywhere for its tolerance, cannot brook the treason of the Communist leaders in British Guiana, Britons can hardly sneer at the American attitude toward Communist conspiracies. It could lead to a decided improvement in British-American relations.
(Reproduction Rights Reserved)
or
(Copyright, 1953, New York Herald Tribune Inc.)
with gold.
adaptation of that technique by liquor lads and the gambler and their associates is based on theory that no institution or need remain hostile that be reached by a contribution.
lads are, therefore, quicker generous contributions to a new church, to aid a charitable cause, etc.
sort of specialize in charities. For example:
Bay Meadows race - track building establishment, until recently, put on "charity races" for benefit of the Saints and Sinners Milk Fund for poor children.
A little girl was relied to have refused a bottle of its and Sinners' milk with: thank you kindly, sir, but I need charity milk any more.
Has stopped playing the races able to buy our milk for us
Bay Meadows "milk characes" faded away. The Saints Sinners now raise their milk by lottery—all for charity quite against the law.
Current lottery is a big af. In shopping districts, booths set up with women in charge the public to buy lottery. A Chinaman or denizen of Row caught selling lottery would be failed. The Char-label causes the law-enforcement authorities to look the other way the liquor lads and the gambler lads and the gangster lads,ributions in hand, never succeed in invading that citadel of western civilization—the Christian Church.
Sincerely,
FRANKELIN HICHBORN
Sir:
No nights ago your paper said the boys involved in the recent fight in Anaheim ha', police dade and last night in your edi-l you said the boys involved from average American homes. Sorry for you in dis-ment.
Sincerely—
M. T. Tarr
Results Are the Proof of News-Circulation.