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Newspaper Archive of
Indian Valley Record
Greenville, California
June 28, 1951     Indian Valley Record
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June 28, 1951
 
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i Easy to Make Outfit Designed for Juniors THE ,d BY...DREW PEARSON Pcaoe Propaganda EN. BRIEN IIcMAHON of Con- necticut bumped into Justice Felix Frankfurter, close friend of Secretary of State Acheson, at a cocktail party the other day and re- marked: "What's the matter with Dean? Why is he so cautious? Here the Russians are out promising the moon to the world, and we sit with our mouths shut like a bump on a log." "I know it," replied Frankfurter. "It's the English in Dean. He won't promise more than he can give." Frankfurter referred to the fact that Acheson's mother belonged to the weU-known Canadian Goader- ham family. What Senator McMahon re- ferred to was the fact that American propaganda abroad has not always shown lmagina- ben and initiative, and that we have not pounded home the very real fact that the American poe- Junior Summer Wear pie want peace. Regardless of Achesq's English FAVORITE outfit for junior forebears, however, part of this fail- summer wear--the easy to ure is probably more due to the ake circle skirt combined with a fact that the state department has iainty peasant blouse. Try a bold qower print for the skirt, sparkling white for the blouse. $ • • Pattern No. 8595 is a sew-rite perle* rated pattern for sizes It, 12. 13, 14. 16, i8. Size 12, skirt, 4 yards of 39-inch Dlouse, l yard pin n fabr c, ,b yard eye et. The Spring and Summer STYLIST ia [filed with ideas for a wearable summes wardrobe; special features, gift patterns printed inside the book 25 cents. i i i i i __ SEW|NG CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT, West Adams St., Chleage 6. |11. Enclose 30c in coin for each pat- tern. Add Sc for Ist Class MaU Lf desired, Pattern No ............. Size .... o. - Name (Piease Prlntl L(reet Address or P.O. Box No. ..... mt state - i [ ii i i i been so hounded by senatorial critics that it is punch-drunk and timid. If it makes any peace moves, for instance, it immediately gets tagged with the appeasement label. Tests Popularity W Fm The First White Sox Stampede The new White Sex stampede, which the wearers of the Pale Hose started some time back, i'ecalled again the first White Sox rally which Grantlan0 Rice won a pennant and later a world series back in 1906, a mat- ter of 45 years ago. The 1951 charge is led largely by fine pitching, as well as consistent all - around play. it is also a stir- ring tribute to manager Paul Richards, who has turned in an amazing job, whatever happens later on. At the time of the first White Sex upheaval, we were toiling in the Cleveland vineyard where Larry Lajoie was in charge. Late In July or early August, Cleveland had a good chance to win the pennant. The White Sex Hltless Wonders were in seventh place, and rapidly going no- where. Their team batting average at that time was around .229 or maybe .230. Then suddenly it began to hap. pen. The helpless Sox began to win game after game, untU they had won 19 in a row and moved into first place. Vice Versa "Some time ago," said the pom- General Texas is much more than a visit to admiring friends. Actually, it is a carefully timed test of political popularity to see whether the gen- eral's backers should go any furth- er in their latent plans to push him for the presidency. One of the men behind the Texas trip is congressman A1 "Doe" Miller of Nebraska, the same GaP leader who promoted MacArthur for president in 1948. It was partlyon Congressman Miller's urging that MacArthur entered the. Wisconsin and Nebraska primaries. Both primaries proved .a disap- pointment, and MacArthur telt that How did this happen so suddenly? MacArthur's trip to In the first place, they had a grand catcher--Billy Sullivan. In the sec- Ond place they had a fine pitching staff headed by Big Ed Walsh, Doc White and Nick Altrock. The Sox couldn't hit but they had a strong defensive club, with Jiggs Donahue, Frank Isbell, George Rohe in the infield and a good outfield built around Fielder Jones. The ballplayer who actually led the White Sex insurrection was Jlggs Donahue, the fiery Irishman playing first. He not only handled the bag brilliantly, but he was the flaming spirit of the team. If any one of his fen , ous doctor, "when I"started the' his Republican friends had let him ractice of medicine, I was very: down. Earlier, in Tokyo, the general oor. I used to sit in my office day l had talked with optimistic visiting niter day, waiting for patients. I politicians who predicted that the lat, indeed, like Patience on a American people would rise up al- most unanimously to draft him. monument." I MacArthur had even told Lieut. "And now," suggested the young Gee. Robert Eichelberger, then in loctor deferentially, "you have Tokyo, that he exlected to be sum- monuments on all your patients." maned back to the United States water crystals t. rfui whqm yOU feel wondedul.., atrgi you Id not r from he,thet kJas, ute ach. pltro-inteJml d,u, bilte ner, e, aa, ammmniL IoN M sppet zte or lack G4  ff r vdumta*n e Sue Sut acidity  cmstileltw ,Ire con. ,tifavl¢ Get Cry Waer Cryseds Or Pov14 It the S5€ or S1.25 ti or " 1' t,.i.d ,uid i. qu.. tm., ro,|[ Write Io Frye , mphle¢ " " DO YOUR FEET HURT? during the GaP convention in 1948 and that he, Eichelberger, should be prepared to take over as com- mander of Japan. However, MaeArthur head- quarters during the 1948 con- vention proved to be the emp- tiest place in Philadelphia, and MacArthur felt that the party had taken him up on the high mountain. Since the visit to Chicago was disappointing, in that the general failed to fill Soldiers' Field; and since the trip to Murfreesboro, Tenn., also failed to fill the local stadium, the Texas visit will be ex- uick and easy relief for all foot prob- tremely important, Texas has prom- eros. No more tired sore feet. Guaranteed esults. Send for our free 32-page foot ised a tremendous ovation, and If it goes over big, his close political ealth catalog, t backers hope that MacArthur will IIULTOR PRODUCT. Dept. W, let his campaign cap be tossed into 10t Equitable Building. Portland 4, Ors.  the ring. 1 %ONSTIPATI0000NE-. FEELS LIKE OLD S[LF "For the past 3 years I have eaten ALIBRAN every morning for breakfast. It's no mean trick for 8 man my ago (73) to be regular. Thanks to ALL-BRAN I , am." Wm. H. Tern-  plin, Sr., 124 Brown St., Watseka, Ill  One of many n- AI2b-BRAN users. If you, too, euffer rom conL, tipation due to lack of dietary bulk. eat an ounce (about cup) of crispy Kellogg'e BRAN daily, a drir plenty of water! Ifnenot ati$fl after 10 days, send empty carton to Kollogg' Battle Creek, Mich. Get DOUBLB YOUR MONEY BACK! NU--12 26--51 S M00EMME l EX WASTE .When kidney function dows dawn, many fohm complain of ngging baekoehe, lore d and energy, headaches and dlmflneu, uon't euffer longer with these dtscomfort if reduee.d kidney function is gettis you dovn-t to such cmmoa eaue m atrst and strain, over-exertion or exposure to cold. Minor bladder irritations due to cold, dampae or wrong diet may cause getting p mght$ or frequent pasge. Don't neglect your kidneys if these condl- Uoos botheryou. Try Doan's Plll--a mild diuretic. Ud suecefully by mfllioxm fo over 50 years. While often otherwise calmed. it's amazing how many times Doan'e giv happy relief from these or--hetp tl-15 alice of kidney tulsa and fltenl out wute. Got Don s Pills todayl DOAll'S PILLS Eisenhower on Ethics It has never been made public, but General Eisenhower has written "amen" to Senator Fulbright's plan for drawing up a moral code for government conduct. Ike sent the Arkansas senator a letter, warmly praising his "ethics in government" speech. "It would be difficult for me to express the fullness of my agree. ment with your sentiments," wrote Eisenhower. "There are so many specific points in your talk to which I am moved to say 'amen' that the only thing I can say is that, as ,a citizen. I am truly grateful you made your talk. As to the suspicion that you may be called naive, I have so often had this adjective applied to myself and for such odd reasons, that I have come to look upon it as a very distinct compliment; at the very least, it would seem to imply the opposite of deliberate racketeer- lng." Eisenhower also ealled Ful- bright's attention to a New York Times story: "The rise in illegal border- crossings by Mexican 'wetbacks' to a current rate of more than 1,000,000 cases a year has been accompanied by a curious re- laxation in ethical standards ex- tending aH the way from the farmer-exploiters of this contra- band labor to the highest levels of the federal government" Washington Pipeline Senators have turned down a re. quest from Vice President Barkley for a new Cadilla  limousine, They decided hecan get along on his old one.. The Dutch government has made discreet inquiries to find out whether it's true that "Call Me Madame" Perle Mesta may be the next American ambassador to Hol- land. . . The agriculture depart- men has requested the national production authority to tone down its reduction of steel allocations for farm machinery. low players started loafing or not giving his entire all, Dona- hue would threaten to brain him. He rode the team with savage and untiring venom. That Sox rally won the 1906 pen- nant although Cleveland had a areal team, with seven or eight .300 hit- ters and a fine pitching staff that had Addle Joss, William Bernhard, Otto Hess, Dusty Rhodes, Earl Moore and others. But this team, which Lajoie, Bill Bradley, Cotton Turner and Claude Rossman on the field couldn't qult, meet that wild Sox counter-attack. The World Series Upset The White Sox carried their rush on through the world series, where they were not given a faint look-in. The Cubs had just won the National league pennant with 116 victorious games. They had the brilliant Johnny Kling back of the bat; Three- Finger Brown, Ed Reulbach, Jack Pfeister and others in the box; Chance, Evers. Tinker and Steinfeldt in the infield; plus a star outfield. They looked unbeatable. But what the populace at large over- looked was the Sex pitching staff. Ed Walsh was just coming into his own as the greatest spitball star of aU time. Two years later he won 40 games and saved 12 others; working in 60 games that season. Dec White was the sole Ty Cobb nemesis. Nick Altrock was another star. There was one funny development as the series started. There was a big Irishman named Fog Finnegan who had been a hot Cub rooter. Fog worked in a saloon on the West Side near the ball park. Most of the players or many of them were his friends. Just before the first game started. Fog stood up and shouted: "Two hundred dollars on the West Side." There were no takers. So Finnegan tried again: "Three hundred dollars on the West Side." Still no takers. Then the batteries were an- nounced: For the West Side--Reulbach and Kling. For the South Side---Walsh and Sullivan. Fog Finnegan swallowed twice, |caped again to his feet, and called out: "'Five hundred on the South Side,--there's the byes." It has been a long, long time since the White Sex have had the chance tO wipe out that 1919 series, where the white suddenly changed to black. They have been shooting at a recovery, now a matter of 32 years. • $ The Other DiMaggio More than a few pieces for news- papers and magazines have been written about Lou Gehrig's long span under Babe Ruth's gigantic shadow. Big Lou of Columbia and the Yankees drew more tan normal cheering during his brilliant career. but no one can doubt that his part- nership with Ruth was on the junior side. There was only one Babe Ruth. In the same way, there Is no ques- tioning the fact that a better than fair player is known as Dominic. By INEZ GERHARD LAN LADD is looking forward to the day next year when his con- tract with Paramount ends. He ex- pects to sign a contract for ten pic- tures to be made for Warner Broth- ers, but as if that were not enough to keep him leaping from saddle to fist-fight day and night, he is start- ing a company of his own. Alan Ladd Enterprises will produce radio ALAN LADD shows and television programs, and will also film "Shadow Riders of the Yellowstone". This novel by Les Savage made such an impression on Ladd that he bought the screen rights himself without even asking his studio to get the story for him Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh, triumphant stars of the current festival in Great Brit- ain, are doing something never before attempted by an acting team. On alternate nights they play .ntony and Cleopatra as written by Shakespeare and by George Bernard Shaw. Shaw's heroine is a young girl, Shakes- peare's a mature and wily siren. Vivien Leigh, meanwhile, is the talk of Hollywood because of her brilliant performance in "A Street- car Named Desire". Not yet re- leased, this tragic film is causing a sensation among the Hollywood big shots who have seen it. Paulette Goddard, Rosalind Rus- sell, Hume Cronyn, Gloria Swanson and Lillian Gish are just a few of the top-flight stars who will appear on a CBS dramatic series this Sum- mer. Determined not to have a sum- mer slump in radio entertainment, the"Philip Morris Playhouse has put out a dragnet and snared popular plays as well as players for this series. John Barrymore Jr. has moved into Aunt Ethel's house so as to take best advantage of her offer to coach him for his biggest role to date. He will be starred in "The Big Night" a suspense thriller for United Art- ists.' Curt Massey Time, well-launchel on its third year over CBS, won't go off the air while the company takes a thre-week vacation. Mas- say, Martha Tilton, and Country Washburne's orchestra will tape. record fifteen shows in advance for this Monday through Friday show. They started in June 1949 as a 13- week replacement, you may recall Abbott and Costeilo are going to film "Jack and the Bean- stalk" and far-sighted Warner Brothers have bought the re- lease rights. This will be the first venture into Technicolor for the comedians, and their first try at translating an immortal fairy tale into slapstick. Costello will be Jack, Abbott the magic- bean salesman, and Buddy Baer the giant. Ronald Caiman and Benita have signed up for another year in "The Halls of Ivy", an encouraging sign to all radio producers who belidve that there is a large and growing audience for adult entertainment on tte air. Margaret Sheridan, star of "The Thing", one of the great box-office successes of the ,car, has turned lecturer. Color movies she made on a 'round-the-world flight with her husband last year accompany her talk on the evolution of culture, A group of college students were on the trip, and they invited Margaret. the air-line hostess, to jpin them in their lessons. Sterling Hayden voluntarily con. fessed long ago to the F.B.I. that he had once been a Communist. His full cooperation and sincere remorse won Hollywood's admiration, and better yet, a big break. Paramount has given him the co-starring role with Edmund O'Brien in "The Den- ver and Rio Grande". The rough- and-tumble railroad history will be filmed high in the Rockies. ODDS AND ENDS: Veda Ann Borg, an American model with a Swedish name who looks like a glamorous Hungarian, will play a siren in "Aaron Slick from Punkin Crick" . . Lionel Barrymore will portray Andrew Jackson in "Lone Star" for MGM. Last time he played the role was in 1936 in "The Gorgeous Hussy" . . . Jennifer Jones and David Selznick hav moved into the beautiful beach house once the home of Norma Shearer and Irving Thalerg . . Linda Darnell is off to Jamaica. Needlework Fun purpose, all simplest embroidery. I Fun to work up beginner-easy I motifs. Pattern C 7470; transfer of six motifs about 5½x8 inches. Sewing C'lrele Needleeraft Dept. pP: O. Box 5740, Chicago 80, In. or o. Box 162. Old Chelsea Station, New York If, N. Y. Enclose 20 cents for pattern. Pattern No. ....................... Name (Please Print) Street Address or P.O. BOx N0'-- - City State ; • 4NOTHeR # DAMPNESS IN SUMMER TIME IN CLUB CELLAR Question: I had a club cellar put in. The cellar wall is of cinder blocks, over this, paneling of knot- ty pine was placed with a two-inch ai r space between. The ceiling is a porous-looking material, prob- ably an insulating board. The floors are asphalt tile laid right on the cement floor. Here is where the problem comes in. During the humid months of summer mois- ture forms on the walls and panel- lag. At times there are puddles of , water on the floor, nd the panel- ing is soaking wet. The paneling is turning black, the asphalt tile is coming up, the ceiling is getting brown spate all over it and during these months, the cellar is un- usable. 1 Answer: Some of our readers bare solved a similar problem by the use of calcium chloride, has the property of moisture out of the air. claim they have dried up a cellar by simply leaving the doors of the heater open, thus viding a draft up the chimney carries off the dampness. might also consider making an up-to-date dehumidifier to connected to the plumbing TO KILL APHIDS One ounce makes 6 contact and friendly harmful residua Can mixed with € sprays. Pray, by 39years o vegetables a flowers. lobscc9 By-Pro  & Chert Corl)orstJes • Richmond. Virl Keep Posted on Values By Reading the Ads It's Wonderful the Wo Chewing-- .Gum Laxative Acts Chiefly to Jig 00|REMOVE WAS' Ill GOOD FOOD • Here's the secret millions discovered about r-A-r, the era chewlng-gum laxative. Yes. here why rEE-A-Mr's actloll is so Sully different! Doctors say that many other start thelr "flushing" action too soon digested. Large doses of such upset digestion, flush away food you need for health and ou feel weak. worn out. But gentle rZ-A-rmT, taken as ommended, works chiefly tn the bowel where it removes only waste, good foodl You aVOid that tired, worn-out feeling. Use and feel your "peppy," energetic eell YEIN-A-:E[lqTi NO lne.,@ in 25, GO# or only 1O#. IJU(AllVE DO YOU HATE and 'l HOT FLUSHES? Do you suffer from hot flushes, nervous tension, upset emotions due to functional 'cleanse of life' (38-52 years)--that period when fertility ebbs away, when em- harrassing symptoms of this na- ture may betray your age? Then start taking Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound to relieve such symptoms. No other medicine of this type for Women has such a long record of success. Taken regularly, Pink- ham's Compound helps build up resistance against this annoying middle-age distress. 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HADACOL IS SO EFFECTIVE Because HADACOL helps build up the hemoglobin content of your blood (when Iron is needed) to carry these precious Vitamins and Minerals to every organ sad to every part of your body. You may havb tried other Vita- min preparations or other Vita- Louise Merritt rain and Mineral preparations, so we make you this offer. Try a bot- tle of HADACOL today. You b the judge. If you do not believe that HADACOL is the best Vitamin and Mineral preparation you have ever taken, we will gladly send back your money. That's our poop live money-back guarantee. Yet; take no chances. So be fair to yourself. Don't go through life suffering from ging aches and pains when caused by lack of Vitamins Niacin and Iron, when relief be as close at han d as your drug store. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES There is only one HADACOI# Don't" let anyone tell you thing else is "just as good". on genuine HADACOL. 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