S o u th ern Oregon News Review, Thursday, May 19, 1949
Simple Afternoon Dress
Planned to Slenderize
IF MEN CAN FIGHT AND DIE AS ALLIES . . .
A ll Races to Have One Place to Pray for Peace
. . . THEY CAN WORSHIP AND LIVE AS ALLIES
By H, I. PHILLIPS
PRAYER FOR U N. CHAPEL
("The United Nations is to provide
a non-denominational chapel in its
new home where men of all nations
may p ra y ."—News Item )
In this small room w ill be the
cathedral, the mosque, the syna
gogue. the temple and the parish
chapel.
Within these four walls w ill be ever God they worship.
the prayer-room of the world.
Here the representatives of
To this place let the white man
all peoples shall rome humbly
and the black man, the Christian
and devoutly In their separate
and the Jew, the yellow man and
faiths and reaeh understand
the brown man, the Hindu, the
ings that w ill save a stricken
world.
Moslem and the Buddhist—men of
all races and creeds—gather to
Here let them kneel separately
hear the still, small voice of what- and at a time of their own choosing
and ask their God or gods that
their words and actions may never
make a mockery of the precepts
of whatever religion they observe
and cherish.
-----* -----
Guide them as they invoke You.
Keep their minds clear and make
their decisions Just; rid them of
suspicions, fears and hatreds.
Let them never lose sight of the
belief that the Supreme Being of
their own faith and of all faiths
loathes war and holds peace and
the brotherhood of man foremost.
-----* ----
Seldom have the representatives
of peoples from the four corners
of the earth been in a more d if
ficult spot: rarely have human
his
beings faced tasks more colossal:
never have their decisions meant
life or death, joy or misery, laugh
ter or tears to so many millions
t c ", r
The
Fiction
T HAVE NEVER known a man to
be more wholeheartedly disliked
than Henry Spafford. The reason
for it is his braggartly qualities,
his oversearing sense of im port
ance.
We tolerate him because we like
his wife, Madge, but even so our
toleration is a chore. The other
night I was over to the Spafford's
and sat through an hour of Henry’s
bragging. It seems that the big
boss in New York—Henry is em
ployed by the Jason Reid Steamship
Company—called up the Philadel-
phia office where
Henry works and
■MiniltB Henry answered
3
Fiction
the Phone
“ Jay’s a great
guy,” Henry told
me, referring to the incident.
“ He’s asked me to run up to New
York to see him a couple of times.
I must remember to do that.”
“ Who’s Jay?” I asked.
r
MARTIN AND LEWIS
time. They have just completed
a Paramount picture, "M y Friend
Irm a ” ; M artin is Jane’s romantic
interest in the movie version of the
radio show, and Jerry, an orange-
juice salesman is his side-kick.
Give them another two year« and
there’s no telling what they’ll be
doing!
Atlantic Pact Combed
by the use of a common meet
ing place for meditation and
prayer.
urgent questions affect
T ERSE,
Ing our hopes for pence came
Here may no man forget that In
every faith a man of any other
faith may find the essence of his
own faith: The belief In divine
guidance.
Prayer is universal.
How strange that until now those
who have come together from all
parts of the earth to face the most
complicated problems of recorded
time have failed to provide a com
mon meeting place in which tc
seek guidance!
Of all moments in history when
men of every race, color and creed
needed divine council, this is the
most desperate. How barren and
hopeless have been these edifices
of world peace without recognition
of a God above! How futile these
proceedings in council chambers
of 100 rooms without one room for
a Creator!
May this quiet room be hal
lowed! Here there Is no publi
city: here no photographers,
no newsreels, no microphones,
tensions.
boiling to the top the other day be
hind closed doors of the senate
foreign relations committee. An
swering them, the men who must
Implement the North Atlantic pact
were kept under steady fire for
4W hours.
Big, bull-voiced Senator Vanden
berg set the pace, but each senator
got a load of questions off his
chest. They combed the pact's fine
print for pitfalls and loopholes, and
searched for hidden meanings be
tween the lines. As a result, many
tough problems were plowed up.
The chief targets in this verbal
shooting gallery were Secretary of
State Acheson, Secretary of De
feme Johnson and ECA Ambassu
dor Harriman. They talked brll
liantly, but not quite enough to
please the senators.
“ I can’t be offhand and free
about information that involves
Afternoon Dress
other countries,” Acheson retorted
im patiently, when pressed for de w B E A U T IF U L L Y sim ple o ftc r-
tails.
noon dress fo r the la rg e r
Johnson also buttoned up during figure th a t's c u re fu lly planned to
a barrage of questions on atomic fla tte r and slenderize. T ry a sm all
energy from Senator McMahon of flow er p rin t and finish w ith un
Connecticut. The queries were usual novelty buttons.
based on secret information which
McMahon had learned at the Pen
P a tte rn
No
B443 in « R ew r ite p er
tagon, and Johnson objected to fo r .tie d p .it t e r n In size s .Hl äti «• 42. 44.
4(1 4H fill a n d .12 S ize :tfl 4 ’ e y a rd s of
going into detail in front of com □0 In c h .
mittee clerks.
This c a u s e d
D o n ’t w n lt «en d 25 c e n t» to rin y fo r
conv t»f th e S p r in g a n d S u m m e r
McMahon to declare that he your
F A S H IO N
C o n ta in » 64 p a g e » o f » ty le .
wouldn't support the pact if he c o lo r e a s y to in .ik e fr o c k » ; f r e e p a t t e r n
P ilo te d In s id e th e book
couldn't get the information he
wanted.
S I W IN G C l l t C I F P A T T F .It N l» l - T T .
3 t t S ou th W e llt Nt.
C h le a g e 7. I I I.
" I f the price of the senator's
E n c lo se 25 cen t» In coin» for ea ch
vote," bristled Johnson, "is my vio
p a ttern d esir ed .
lation of what I consider the secur
Size
P a ttern No.
ity of the nution, then we may have
N am e - - - —
to forego the senator's vote.”
Here he may sit not as an im
portant statesman, harassed dip-
lomat or instructed agent, worried
Grant that they may not
over the reactions at home, but
quibble over the details of this
rather as a child reaching for the
room, its appointments or Its
hand in which he has confidence,
mood.
pleading for the light, believing
Help them realize that if men that nothing matters more than a
can fight and die as allies, they cause be just.
can worship and live as allies; that
men who serve together in the
This room shgll be no device of
same armies and navies and in the architects, blueprinters and con
same cause can worship in the struction crews, its value to be
same cloister and in the same hope! measured in dollars; this shall be
a room dedicated in the spirit of
--- +---
Here let all men find that if all faiths . . . a hushed chamber
there is to be one world there must where every man may find the
be one brotherhood, one depth of mood of his own temple.
Senate Stairs Steep
devotion, one abiding confidence in
To add to the turm oil, the meet
Within these walls may the United
a Supreme Being.
Nations see the universal altar and ing was interrupted 13 times by
Make them understand that
find that guidance, inspiration and roll-call votes on the senate floor
wisdom without which there can be This kept the senators straggling
If a man is not contaminated
In the use of another man’s
no lasting peace and no brother up and down stairs to the senate
hood of man.
floor until 71-year-old Sen. George
council chambers, routines and
customs in daily considerations,
Here at last there is "room in the of Georgia finally snorted in dis
gust:
he can never be contaminated
inn!”
“ By God, I can't go up and down
tl (lose stairs any m ore!”
And he quit the meeting.
Another problem was how much
By
t(
a
st issuing any release until
Richard H. Wilkinson
tl
ecretary of state form ally pre-
s
d the m ilita ry program to
c
■ess. The Michigan Republi
“ Have you heard about Henry?”
“ I guess,” I grinned, "that's the can warned, however, that “ Drew
answer.”
Pearson has a dictaphone hidden
I asked when we were seated.
in here.”
Hal nodded, avoiding my eyes.
And it was. Henry and Madge
Later, chairman Tom Connally
" I met the poor devil on the street were over three days later. “ I un
this morning. I don’t mind saying derstand you’ve got a new job?” I stamped angrily into the meeting
after a trip upstairs to vote.
remarked to Henry.
that it was an ordeal.”
“ Somebody has already leaked
“ Yes.” he said with a bored look the amount (of the proposed m ill
I thoughtfully lighted a cigaret.
“ Hal,” I said, “ think of Madge. on his face. “ Bob Taylor called up tary aid),” he thundered. “ Some
Isn’t there something we can do?” as soon as he heard that I was free, newspapermen told me the figure
and asked if I'd consider a position and asked If that was correct.”
“ Well,” said Hal, " I ’ve been
with him. Well, you know when a
Following this incident, it was
wondering, too. Poor Madge.”
man offers you more money—”
agreed to release an outline of the
He coughed. “ I called Bob Tay
one billion, 130 m illion dollar plan
I glanced at Betty. There was a
lor of the Taylor Lines this
to help rearm the north Atlantic
faint smile on her face. I suppose
treaty nations. Here are other high
morning. Bob says that he might
she was amused. I hope so. Be
lights of the meeting.
be able to do something for
cause an hour later, with Henry
Senator Vandenberg wanted to
Henry on our recommenda
still blowing, I was mad enough to cla rify the important question of
tion.”
choke him, and almost did.
whether the pact was just another
A d d ress
—
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POP OUGHTA USE IT >
lavvn mower / /
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Of C m ,
C O R D I A L L Y D IS LIK ED
Corner
By INEZ GERHARD
n LIT T LE over two years ago
* * two young men, a singer and
a comedian, decided to form the
team of Dean M artin and Jerry
Lewis. Today they are considered
top entertainers, switching from
night clubs to radio to movies with
the greatest of ease. There is no
definite form at for their NBC pro
gram on Sunday nights, except that
they can be expected to show up on
À À a a ik m ¿¿¿Ma.
---------------------------------------------- ---------
“ Jay?” Why, Jason Reid, who
owns the line, of course.”
“ Oh.” I said.
"The way to get along in any
business,” Henry went on, “ is to
let the boss know right off he can
depend on you. That’s the way I
am with Jay.”
I left the Spafford home an
hour later, furious that I had
stayed so long, pitying Madge
and disliking Henry with a re
newed sense of disgust. “ Some
thing,” I told Betty, my wife,
“ ought to be done about that
punk. Now he’s calling Old Man
Reid, Jay.”
K irk Douglas is back in Holly
“ The thing to do,” Betty smiled,
wood after a New York visit that
is to be amused at his ravings,
was strictly business; he covered
the swing cafes, getting back not annoyed. He doesn't hurt any
ground m aterial for his firs t star one, and there’s always Madge to
rin g role, in Warner Bros.’ "Young think of.”
Man With a Hom .”
“ Even Madge,” I replied, “ won’t
keep me from hitting that guy one
The famous coach In which
of these days. Something,” I re
King George V made his cere
peated, "ought to be done about
monial drive at the Royal
him .”
Ascot race meeting w ill be
Whether or not my thinking about
■sed in a sequence in Alfred
it had anything to do with what
Hitchcock’s "Under Capricorn.”
happened a couple of days later I
Ingrid Bergman, Joseph Cot
w ill never know. Henry was fired.
ton and Michael Wilding star.
Without warning or explanation he
was given a couple of weeks’ pay
Lucille Ball, of the movies and and was bounced out on his ear.
CBS’ “ M y Favorite Husband,”
My firs t reaction when Betty told
m ay be a glamorous star to other
me about it was one of exuberance,
people, but to her bandleader hus
a fiendish desire to rush over there
band, Desi Arnaz, she’ s “ Johnny.”
and gloat, to sneer: “ I told you so!
He gave her the nickname because,
Why don’t you call up your friend.
around their ranch, she looks like
Jay, wise guy?” But this feeling
a tomboy. Her favorite “ at home”
togs are dungarees and an old passed immediately. Curiously it
was followed by one of pity. The
sweater and straw hat.
more I thought about it the deeper
became my sympathy. What greater
Barbara Stanwyck, whose au
humiliation, I thought, could a man
burn hair is now mostly a beautiful
endure than this that confronted
gray, refuses to dye it for films.
Henry Spafford?
She feels that would be dishonest!
Anyway, she thinks dyed hair T ^ E X T DAY I called Hal Wheaton
looks a rtific ia l and gray hair is
’ and asked him to have lunch
with me.
usually becoming.
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Low,
concave
vessel
5 Plant ovule
9 S-shaped
molding
10 Long-eared
rodent
11 A dia criti
cal mark
(Sp.)
12 Rub out
14 Employ
15 A skin
tumor
16 Chromium
(sym.)
17 Deck with
vulgar
finery
20 Marsh
21 Part of a
locomotive
22 Narrow
roadway
23 Flower
26 Wades across
stream
27 Shower
28 Tease
(colloq.)
29 Strange
30 Canadian
city
34 Officer
of the Day
(abbr.)
35 Portion of
a curved
line
36 Breeze
37 A smithy
39 Think
41 Chef
42 Fuel
43 Casks
44 Concludes
DOWN
1 Capital
(Idaho)
2 Eyed
3 M arry
S o ls tlo n In N e x t Is s u e .
old-fashioned m ilita ry alliance or
a genuine instrument of collective
security. He pointed out that the
U. N. charter recognizes the right
of nations to “ collective self-de
fense’ ’ in case of attack.
The charter, however, adds in
A rticle 51: "Measures taken by
members (of the U. N.) in the ex
ercise of this right of self-defense
shall be immediately reported to
the security council.”
Does this mean, Vandenberg
asked, that the treaty nations must
report their secret defense plans
to the security council—where Rus
sia has easy access? This was
something none of them wanted to
do, but Senator Pepper of Florida
warned that the pact, itself, prom
ised to abide by the U. N. charter
Secretary
Acheson
explained,
j however, that the only "measures
J we are obliged to report to the
security council are whatever meas-
I ures may be taken jo in tly—after an
( armed attack occurs.
Only Arms to Europe?
No. 35
4 Side away
from wind
5 Gloss
6 M erit
7 Epoch
8 To go down
11 Slow,
clumsy boat
(colloq.)
13 Sea eagles
15 Network
18 Sacred
picture
(Russ, ch.)
19 Slate-ax
20 Distant
22 Timber wolf
23 Test
24 Fish
25 Cover
26 Coniferous
tree
28 Fabulous bird
30 Migrates
31 River
nymph
(Class,
myth.)
32 Colors
slightly
33 Metallic
rock
35 Eager
38 Spawn of
fish
39 Open
(poet.)
40 Enclosure
A nsw er I» P a t i l * N am b er M
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I
Serla» K— M
“ What I want to know,” chimed
i in Utah's scholarly Sen. Elbert
(Thomas, “ is what do you mean by
J the rearmament of Europe? One
i thing Europe knows how to do is
(arm. The idea of supplying arms
I seems archaic unless we give them
(our best bombs and techniques
But if we do that, I am against the
whole program.
“ The aim of the Atlantic pact is
to bring about an atmosphere to
make arms unnecessary. If we are
not going to teach the processes of
peace, we may as well quit now.”
Another question, raised oy sev
eral senators, was whether to fur
nish Europe with American-made
arms or help the treaty nations
manufacture their own arms. If
the United States tries to produce
all the armament needed for the
allied world, the production and
logistic problem, it was argued,
would be terrific. But, on the other
hand, plants built in Europe would
be easy prey to the Russians and
might be turned against us. No one
had a ready answer for this sober
question
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