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] •
Neat Outfit' for, I,00ther-to'Be
HI ,n, ig _ Pretty Skirt Thri ty to Make.,
/ SlECRE Ut By Reo's uureHelen Langworthy " ! -
By INEZ GERHARD €
Hope for Peae0 IRENE DUNNE and Fred Mac. ,LTHEnick.namedreas°n mYBighUSbandRed ishaSbecausebeen
Murray held out against starring he's over six feet tall, carrot-topped
I have come back from Europe in a radio series until the Frederic and peppery dispositioned. While
with a new feeling of hope-- W. Ziv Company came along with a painting our home
re°re h°pe than I had °n any pre" perfect set'up f°r them" "Bright 13 I
Vious trip to Europe. Star" presents Miss Dunne as a -Minute and reaching far
out from the top
The United States, in my opinion, cruIading newspaper ditor and FJotJon of the ladder Big
is definitely winning the cold war. publisher; MacMurray is her star Red fell• There
Furthermore. time is running on our reporter and romantic interest The
side. If it runs long enough, I be, show is transcribed, so that they
lieve, it may still be possible to I have time for movies and vacations.
accomplish the miracle and bring like Miss Dunne's trip to Europe
about permanent peace, with her husband this August and
This may seem like a strange September. "Bright Star" is sold on
summation coming from a hard-
boiled and sometimes cynical news-
paperman. However, I am con-
vinced it is accurate. Like most
newspapermen, I sometimes get so
close to problems that I can't see
the trees for the leaves. This is
likewise true sometimes of govern-
ments and of the public. We read
the pessimistic headlines and we
conclude that the world is in a
helluva state.
To some extent, of course, it still
is. But success does not make head-
,lines. while tragedies do. When the
train gets in on time you never read
about it in the paper. If it's
wrecked, on the other hand, it's all
over the front pages. A wreck is a
tragedy, and that's news. But while
we have been reading about the
diplomatic train wrecks in Europe,
actually most of our trains have
been coming in on time and the
American people by their policies
and their patience have built up a
tremendous success story•
Three big things are happening
today in Europe and in the world:
long term, exclusive contract "Hair
1. Eisenhower has accomplished Trigger Kid", his first assignment.
will present him as a frontier build-
er in a colorful story of the growth
of Austin, Texas. For the first time
at U-I he won't play an outlaw.
miracles in welding a United Eu-
ropean army.
2. Time--which is on our side
--has given us a chance to make
tremendous progress in perfect-
ing new weapons. These weap-
ons are so deadly and we are so
far ahead of the Soviets that it
becomes increasingly dangerous
for them to make war.
3. The man in the street in Eu-
rope has been given new hope. This
may be more important than either
of the two other factors. For when
men lack hope they turn to the
phony promises of communism. To-
day, however, the Marshall Plan,
plus various gestures from the
American people such as democracy
letters and the American Legion's
tide of toys, plus the fact that a
new European army is now camped
alongside the iron curtain, has
given the man in the street hope.
A Bleak Christmas
Four years ago I spent Christmas
in France and New Year's in Italy.
It was the most depressing holiday
season of my entire life• Paris was
they had become accustomed to the
-habit of living.
Even the great cathedrals and
palaces which had looked down
on conquerors and revolutions
looked gloomy and weary. Even
they seemed to lack hope.
That was the crucial winter the
Communists chose for their deadly
strikes and riots to 'take over west-
ern Europe, a winter before we had
adopted the Marshall Plan or begun
to send postwar food. That was also
the winter when the American peo-
ple, usually ahead of the@ govern-
ment, sent western Europe a token
of encouragement through t h •
friendship trains,
That was the winter of 1947. But
this year it is so different[
Plenty of Mistakes
This optimistic report does not
mean that we have not made mis-
takes, or that the Job . finished. We
have made plenty of mistakes, and
the two most important are:
1. We have failed to sell Eu-
rope on st United States of Eu-
rope. Here at home we have
shown how 48 different states
can apply the principle of fed-
erolizatlon yet simultaneously
live under a central govern-
IRENE DUNNE
a syndicated basis to sponsors all
over this country and Canada, And
its stars are each guaranteed a
minimum of $300,000 on their fee-
plus-percentage agreements.
Audio Murphy, the young soldier
who has rapidly carved out a movie
career for hij:nself, has been signed
by Uiversal-International to a new
Tony Curtis, co-starring now with
Piper Laurie in "Son of All Baba",
at U-l, is scheduled for a complete
change of pace in his next picture.
He will start immediately in "Hear
No Evil", the story of a deaf and
dumb prize fighter.
CBS Radio Network's "Na-
tion's Nightmare, actuality-doc-
umentary on organized crime in
the U.S., has made radio his-
tory. The broadcasts comprised
tape-recorded testimony of rack-
et victims and crime leaders,
spotlighted the narcotics racket,
gambling of all kinds, and
crime on the New York-New
Jersey waterfront, which takes
a toll of more than $75,000,000
annually.
As a youngster in Chicago, Robert
Ryan was thrilled when a movie
dark, the street lights barely flick- company used the Ryan front porch
as a set and him as an extra. But
ering, candles were used part time'i he was more thrilled when he saw !
in the hotels; there was almost no the 1928 Howard Hughes film ver-*
heat, food was scarce, and worst of siGn of "The Racket". But certainly
all people had lost hope. Sometimes he hadn't the faintest idea that
it seemed that they went through some day he'd be in what he calls
the routine of living merely because
"the acting racket"--and acting the
top gangster role in "The Racket."
Jean Renoir's "The iver" is not
merely one of the best pictures
made this year, but one of the best
of all time. Screened entirely in
India, in beautiful color, it has an
excellent cast. Much of the action
takes place on the hanks of the
Ganges, which flows past the home
of an English family, This is. a story
of life, birth and death, portrayed
with realism and beauty. Kenneth
McEldowney produced it, which in-
volved his spending three years on
it and making five trips around the
world!
Director Elliot Nugent and
Bing Crosby did so well together
when they turned out "Welcome
Stranger" four years ago that
they'll team up again in "Fa-
mous", Jane Wyman co-stars,
as she did with Bing in "Here
Comes the Groom".
What Dress Designer Milo Ander-
son describes as "the sexst dress
since the days of Jean Harlow- is
worn by Ruth Roman as a dance-
hall girl in Warners' "Tomorrow Is
Another Day"; he made it out of 27
yards of black fringe.
ment; yet in Europe we have t
fulled completely to put this [ Betty Hutted visited the set of
across. And this Is the only t"At War with the Army", heckled
long-term solution for Europe's /Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis, and
economy, I
2, We have failed to sell the De-[
claratlon of Independence in Eur-/
ope. Though we live under the g
greatest political document known
to man we have failed to get Eur-
opean governments to adopt the
principal of "equality" of economic
opportunity•
finally worked in one scene. They
retaliated by dropping in on her to
do a bit in her "Somebody Loves
Me".
Alan LadEs three youngsters,
David, Alana and Laddie, will make
their screen debuts with their fath.
er in Paramount's "Shane".
ODDS AND ENDS , . . Kirk Doug.
las, after making "The Big Carni.
vat" and "The Big Trees", is cur-
rently starring in "The Big Sky"
• . . Vilma Kurer of the CBS radio
serial, "King's Row", got a leave
of absence so that she could fly
from New York to Portsmouth,
N. H., for a role in "Walk East on
Beacon" . . . Joel Gray, ,19-year.
old protege qf Eddie Cantor, has
been signed by Warners to make
is screen debut in "About Face",
a color musical . . . Mitzi Gaynor
stars in "Farmer Takes a Wife.':
Washington Pipeline
General Ike has told friend un-
fidentially that he would run as a
Democrat if Taft gets the GOP
nonfination. He regards Taft's fight.
China-now policy as disastrpus and
his election as a "catastrophe•"...
Wily Senator Brewser of Maine,
Taft's chief strategist, has a plan
to nullify Eisenhower. He would
send TaR to Europe, stage a con.
ference with Eisenhower, then an.
nounce that Taft would follow any
European policy of the gene:.al.
were more people than the doctor
and I to realize that my husband
had broken his leg. He was howling
mad!
Surprisingly, though, Big Red
wasn't too bad a patient during his
long hospitalization. Yes, leave it
to him--he did a royal job, nothing
simple and routine! His fracture
required specialists, operations and
enough paraphernalia around his
bed to make it resemble Franken-
stein's nightmare. That's my Big
Red!
During those long months be-
fore he came home Big Red
said that the thing he was most
thankful for was that he was
away from the Sanders, the
Markhams. and the Keaiings.
Perhaps in other neighborhoods
there are more family's like those
three. If so, I can sympathize with
all who live neighbor to thoroughly
nice but thoroughly tiresome folks.
"If this cure doesn't work,"
Big Red agreed, "I could al-
ways do a repeat."
Take Mr. Sanders, for instance. He
has gall stones. The way he de-
scribes the pain, the many medi-
cines the doctors have tried to dis-
solve them is something to remem-
ber for days. When anyone suggests
an operation, Mr. Sanders gasps,
"Oh, no!" You wonder if one would
cob him of his only conversational
topic !
Little Mrs. Markham is sweet and
lovely. She seems so--until she men-
tions she didn't sleep last night, the
night before and for weeks has
aeard the clock strike every hour!
She's tried counting sheep, hot
milk and drugs. Nothing helps.
Then there's Mr. Keating. He's
next in size to Big Red. His woe is
an allergy• When he and his wife
come in maybe it's the new daven-
port pillow that he stares at like it
came from Mars. He's spent hours
receiving painful shots and telling
about them.
HEN Big Red finally came
home and was established in
bed he told me to ask the Sanders,
Markhams and the Keating's all to
i visit. Those bores--and all at once.
O o
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},
i2-42
Maternity ]Frock
A neat, youtbfully styled matern-
ity frock that's so comfortable
to wear. Waistline drawstring in-
sures needed adjustment; pattern
provides for slip and loose cut
jacket.
Patern No. 3189 is a sew-rite perfo-
rated pattern in sizes 12. 14, 16. 18. 20;
40, 42. Size 14, dress, % yards of 36-inch;
slip. 2% yards; coat, 3 yards,
Send today for yor copy of the Fall
and Winter STYLIST. 48 pages of smart
new styles; special features; gift patterns
printed inside the book.
Lining Cake Pan
To line the bottom of a cake
pan quickly, fit waxed paper into
the pan, and cut around bottom
circle with a razor blade. You'll
get a neat-fitting liner.
/
8608
24" 32"
Tailored Skirt
A slim tailored skirt that is so
thrifty to sew. It requires just
one yard of 54-inch fabric and will
delight the beginner with its few
pattern pieces.
• • a
Pattern No. 8608 is a sew-rite perfo-
rated pattern in wist sizes 24, 25. 261,.
28. 30 and 32. Size 25, :I y;rd of S4-|nch.
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
$7 West Adams St.. Chicago 6, IIL
l-nelose 30c in coin for each pat-
tern Add 5c for .tat Class Marl ff
desired.
Pattern No...: .......... Size .....
Name (Please Print)
Street Address or P O Box No.
City State
N
iiii00i,i,+ ....... ........ +::
place a blotter over the spot and
go over it vith a warm iron. The
grease will adhere to the blotter
Tossed Salad
Foods and nutrition specialists
advise against adding salt or dres-
sing until you're ready to sere
a tossed salad• They draw the
hquid from foods.
Dish Towels
Cotton cree makes inexpensive
dish towels T h e homemaker
doesn't need to iron them and they
leave no lint on the dishes, ac-
cording to Michigan State College
specialists.
Tired Feet
Your feet will not get so tired
from an ironing job if you stand
on a throw rug folded into several
Wondering if complex broken legs th,.cknesses.
I could upset a man mentally, I • * *
argued gently. Big Red roared so I Woven Fabrics
asked the three couples over. Closely woven fabrics are best
It must have been the first time fez slip covers because they give
,none o had dared hav'mg the three ' greater . protection against dust
chronic complainers under one roof. held their.shape better• wear long-
How the conversation flew! -Meier and tailor more easily than do
painful gall stones--" was inter-tl°°sely woven materials•
rupted with, "not a good night's I * * *
sleep for three years!" Then Mr. t Fresh Fruit
Keatmg pounced on one of Big
• ] Fresh fruits saould be stored in
Red's affy blankets and gave US la cool, dry place. Berries should
a run aown on awful auergies. lbe spread carefully on trays and
.looked at my husband. He was stall, soried, but not washed un[il pre-
rag.
• pared for the table.
Then he began! With a voice [ * * •
that could make a general stand I Remove Grease
at attention, Big Red described I To remove a grease spot caused
the troubles he'd undergone. He [by hair rubbing against the wall,
reeled off treatments, doctars, ['
specialists, traction affairs, the t
silver plates that had been ap-
plied to his leg bone during the
operations, the pain, the sleep-
lessness, the discomfort, the
way the doctors had been per-
plexed, hundreds of shots! It
was terrific. ! think my mouth
flew open and I forgot to shut tt.
When our company looked at each
other in extreme boredom and wig. I
gled their feet experimentally as I
though they wondered how soon I
they could decently leave,Big Red t
winked at me! He took a deep
breath--and began again on the hor-
rors of his case•
The three couples almost ran fm i
the front door. I
Out on the porch, with Big Red'.,!
voice just a muted roar our guests
expressed their sympathy "Such I
a one track mind!" said Mr Keat-i
ing.
I
"Don't you get tired ot tearinl
him talk about pain?" asked Mr I
Sanders who never tires of hisl !
I stepped inside, closed the doo i
on their pity. Then I went to 8ii
Red . . . and we giggled we roared
with laughter. Big Red's bed shook I
"I can't wait 'til we see them . . ]
next time," I told him, finally•
"lf this cure doesn't work," Bi
Red agreed, "I could always do s
repeat!"
Somehow, though--I'm sure,there
will be no needl
Too True!
T h e hard-to-please custome ii
shook her head. "I don't like tlese
shoes," she told the salesman.
"The soles are too thick."
"Is that the only objection m-
dam?" asked the salesmn Sue ln,;-
nodded. "Then, madam," ne ad-
ed: "if you take the shoes I can
asure you that the objection will
gradually wear away."
--o-- EAC
Oops ! Veterar
A clerk in a miscellaneous store ....
was serving a caller. The manager D].
was at a desk some distance away
but he overheard the clerk ay: Meets l
"No, madam, we haven't had ,,no 12
for a long time."
"Oh, yes, we have," interrupted t
- the manager; "I will send to the i
warehouse immediately and nve !
some brought for you." ---,,,,,,,
The lady went out laughing• The
manager turned to the clerk: -
"'Never refuse anything; always
send out for it." Meets
"Well, you see," replied me VIal1
clerk, "she said to me, 'We
haven't had any rain lately.' " i
Pardon My French, ram,, .......
"Oh Marie, je t'adore."
"Shut it yourselfl You opened LIJ
it.' + WC
Mts
FEEL ACHY? "v:.:
DUE TO €OLD
MISERIES,g|ves as|
666 symptomat;o
RELIEF
" t's Wonderful the Way-"
Chewing-Gum Laxative
acts Chiefly to !
REMOVE WASTE
• -//0/"
_Mana,
GOOD F00OD ++ .f"OqulreAug,
• Here's the secret millions of folks ha Of The
discovered about -a-P_vr, the rood- Llh d .
ern chewing-gum laxative. Yes, here iS
why r-A-M'S action is so wondel or Oct
fully different!
Doctors say that many other laxativeS ore
start their "flushing" action too soon. • • Or the
right in the stomach where food is being {rons
digested. Large doses of such laxativeS J0hnsol
upset dlKestion,-flllsh awy nourishing BW0rn
food you need for health and energY,
ou feel weak, worn out. S
But gentle rZ-A-MrN'r, taken as re --f The"
ommende, works chiefly in the lower tt th
bowel where it removes only waste, no
good roost You avoid that typical wea Of his
tired, worn-out feeling. Use z-a-'z tatem
Lud feel your "peppy." energetic self[ _elTlel:
-b-rgt NO increase 1 prlce--st£11 eoresa
25€, 0 or only 1o#. 8ho
.. qtllred I
az'ne
1933, e
tal Lay
IF PEl13t PAIN SHOOTS YOU FULL OF
Head
Cold
Ben-
QUICk!
RUB IN
the w00y'they agree
my 00rozl- ["
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