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About The Dillon Examiner (Dillon, Mont.) 1891-1962 | View This Issue
The Dillon Examiner (Dillon, Mont.), 11 Oct. 1950, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053034/1950-10-11/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
’’’V*'» - ^ w&y +***1-* f i ^ - ÿ j ^ ^ o . \ ' ‘ < Vfl> «r.r-w-\î ; THE DILLON EXAMINER Look Neat and Pretty In T h is House Dres Looking Pretty T OOK NEAT and pretty while “ you work in this easy to sew house dress in the popular wrap around style. A joy to take care of, too. Note the scallop trim, the handy pocket. * • • Pattern No. 3139 comes in sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20; 40 and 42. Size 12, 5 % yards of 35 or 39-inch. Don't wait — send an additional 25 cents now for your copy of the fall and winter FASHION, our complete pattern magazine. Smart, easy to sew styles; special features; gift pattern printed in side the book. SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. 5S0 South Wells 8t., Chicac* 7, HI. Enclose 25 cents in coins for each pattern desired. Pattern No ........................ S i z e . . . . , , , . . Name ................................ . ..................... Address .................................................... A handy rack for your kitchen towels can be made by tacking a pinch-type clothespin to the wall near the sink. Or, a small spring mousetrap. When the nickel faucets in your sink become stained, polish them by rubbing with a soft cloth dipped in spirits of ammonia. Wash them off afterward with hot water and soap, and polish with a soft dry cloth. HEAD COLD NASAL CONGESTION WITH FAST 2-DROP ACTION OF t PENETRO NOSE DROPS R E A L ECONOMY WITH QUALITY St. Joseph a s p ir in WORLDS LARGEST SELLER AT 104 'POPULAR CERAMICS\ ' It a monthly multine derotid to tha Intanala of Ceramic hobbylita and atudloi. No» in iti 2nd year. Telia you: WHERE TO BUT TOUR SUPPLIES, HOW TO DO - WHAT'S OOINO ON Educational • Interaitlni and Profitable Ta Cannila Habbylata and 8tudlet , SUBSCRIPTION «3 par year Send 2Se Cor lampi* copy Ptpulcr Commit!, 4I7B North Fliuerea 8L lee Annie« 12, Calif. M a d e E S P E C I A L L Y F o r K C H E S T C O L D S to relieve coughs—aching musde* There’s a special Child’s Mtld Mus* terole made for kiddies’ tender skin, Mueterole not only gives speedy relief but it breaks up congestion in upper bronohi&l tubes, nose and throat. Just rub it on chest, throat and back, __ Olid's Mad MUST ero LE H e y , S K I N N Y ! —want solid pounds of flesh? • If you're thin, run-down, and under weight— lack pep and energy due to no organic reason— cheer up! Here’s real help— thanks to a great medicine devel oped by a doctor, called Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. This proven formula with its wonderful stomachic he tonic action should help you gain the weight you want as it has helped thou sands o f skinny folks. Take It regularly. Quickly, your appe tite will Increase, and Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery will aid your digestion to change the food you eat into solid pounds of flesh. Try I t Get Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery today. Recom mended by druggists everywhere. (Cut this ad out—it means extra pounds.) W N U -X 41—50 When other cough drops fall, get real 3-way relief with Smith Brothers Mode Cough Drops. 1 • Ease dry throat tickle 2« Soothe yovr raw membrane* 3 . Help loosen phlegm •AwtswIS* S M I T H B R O T H E R S srar COUGH DROPS Secret Tax Conference T HE 81st CONGRESS, despite much constructive legislation, will probably be known as the con gress which increased the working man’s taxes by as much as 20 per cent while refusing to tax the war profits of big corporations. The most important debate on this was not in public but in the closed-door session of the senate and house conferees where house members battled savagely to gain a few concessions for little taxpay ers. One of the battlers was Demo cratic Congressman John Dingell of Detroit who at one point de manded: “ While we are making all these concessions to upper-bracket tax payers and war profiteers, we should at least repeal some of the excise taxes on working people. “ Instead of plugging loopholes that benefit the oil Industry and stock-market speculators, you are making the loopholes bigger—and more of them,’ ’ Dingell angrily chided the senators. “ As long as you are in the mood to throw away money, why not make some conces sions to the working girl and man with four or five kids?’ However, the Michigan Demo crat’s demands that the excise on baby powder and oil, etc., be lift ed fell on deaf ears. Finally, Ding ell turned to GOP Sen. Eugene Mil- likin of Colorado, a stanch defend er of tax benefits to big bracket eers, and half jokingly asserted: “ Gene, if you don’t support me on this—woe to you when you go back to Colorado to campaign this year.” Millikin chuckled, but said noth ing. Gen. Bradley Rebuffed Dingell then hurled into the teeth of the seators a letter Gen. Omar Bradley had written congress, urg ing that the excise tax on G.I watches be recinded. “ I want to see how much faith you have in General Bradley— how much weight his letter car ries,” the Michigander challenged. “ How about it?” This time Millikin didn’t laugh. Neither did granite-faced Sen. Walter George of Georgia and the other architects of the bill that exempts war profiteers. The sen ators sat mum and defiant. There was another bitter blow^ up over the proposed witholding tax on stock dividends. This was aimed to capture an estimated 160 to 170 million dollars which Uncle Sam loses each year because stock holders fail to report dividends in Income-tax returns. Again the senators held back, though house conferees Bob Dough- ton of North Carolina, Jere Cooper of Tennessee, Wilbur Mills of Arkansas and Dingell strongly sup ported the withholding tax on divi dends. George, who consistently battled for the top-bracket taxpay ers in every other phase of the bill, made the amazing argument that the dividend clause would dis criminate against “ poor widows.” “ The government doesn’t withold taxes on wages under $500 a year,” sermonized the Georgian. “ Why tax the dividends of widows and people of moderate circumstances, which in many cases amount to less than $500 a year?” “ That argument doesn’t hold water,” hit back Dingell. “ The ob ject of this amendment is not to hurt women of small incomes, but to compel the reporting in income returns of about a billion dollars a year in dividends that escape tax ation. Failure to report these divi dends is a violation of the law. \Furthermore despite what you say, working people with wages under $500 a year sometimes are taxed. A Detroit auto worker may work only one week in a year, but a portion of that week’s wages is nonetheless withheld by the gov ernment.” GOP Rep. Dan Reed of Dunkirk, N. Y., sided with the senators, however, and the big-bracket tax payers had a majority. Note.—Other senate tax conferees were Byrd of Virginia and Con- nally of Texas, Democrats; and Butler of Nebraska». Republican. Of them, only Senator Connally fought for the little taxpayer. V.F.W. Combats Communism Congressional witch-hunters who smear innocent people could take a lession from an “ American way” campaign which the Veterans of Foreign Wars has launched against communism. The V.F.W. cam paign stresses “ community serv ice” to combat conditions on which foreign “ isms\ thrive—poverty, un employment, illiteracy. As the V.F.W’s new commander, Charles C. Ralls of Seattle, ex plained to President Truman the other dayr “ The best way to lick communism is to get at the roots that propagate it. And those roots are chiefly poverty and ignorance. If we see to it that there are no hungry children or impoverished families in this country, we don’t have to worry too much about communism.” “ That’s the proper approach,” agreed Truman. “ Communism ’a a state of mind that is aggravated by bad economic conditions.” DEPARTMENT OF STATE 'Good Neighbor' Policy Proves Successful in This Hemisphere By WALTER A. SHE AD This Is the fourth ef a aerie* of alx artlclei on the state depart ment and Its personnel by Walter A . Shead, Western Newspaper Union’s Washln(ton correspondent. Washington, D. C.—There can be no doubt but that the foreign policy of the United States, as carried out by the state department, toward Latin and South America today has brought about stronger ties of friendship than has ever before ex isted. The dollar diplomacy of by-gone eras has given away to the “ good neighbor” policy of former Secre tary of State Cordell Hull, and this has been carried on and strength ened by successive secretaries of state Edward Stettinius, James Byrnes, George C. Marshall and Dean Acheson. Through the Pan-American Union, the inter-American affairs institute, as a result of non-aggression pacts and economic pacts of Mexico City and Rio de Janeiro, Bogota and Havana, there has come to be mu tual cooperation and respect be tween the American republics. The bureau of inter-American af fairs in the state department is headed by Edward G. Miller, Jr., born in Puerto Rico, a graduate of Yale and Harvard, a former law partner of John Foster Dulles in New York, and who speaks Spanish and Portuguese as easily as he speaks English. In a recent address, Secretary Acheson said that as a result of Miller’s operation of the inter-American affairs bureau “ our relations with the southern hemi sphere are on a basis which I think they have never been before. They are on a sensible, sound basis of mutual advantage, and both they and we know that we both really mean business when we talk and when we talk, we talk business.” The main object of our foreign policy in the Americas is to main tain the security of our nation and of the hemisphere. Second our ob- By INEZ GERHARD R ONALD and Benita Coiman had no idea, when they embarked on “ The Halls of Ivy” series last Janu ary, that they were launching a show that would become so popular so soon. “ Really adult entertain ment” is the description given by its many devoted listeners. Not only the show, but its theme song, immediately became popular; in fact, so many people wanted a re cording of the song that a record has been made by the group that sings it on the NBC Wednesday night broadcasts. College presi dents and faculty members have praised the series; students lament the impossibility of finding a college president like Coiman. Joe Wilman, whose records in American Bowling Congress compe tition stamp him as one of the greatest bowlers of the decade, has signed to star in “King of the Ten pins\ of Columbia’ s “ World of Sports” short subjects series. U-I’s Universal City covered a total of 256 acres before the recent purchase of a 140-acre tract adjoin ing the studio in the San Fernando Valley; makes it the largest self- contained film plant in the world. JOHN E - PEURIFOY DEPUTY ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE Born Waterboro, 8. C., Ana. 9, 1907, son of John H. and Emil Wright Poerlfojr. Student U. 8„ Military Academy, 1926-28, American Univer sity, 1985, Georye Washington Univer sity, 1939-40. Married Betty Jano Cox, Oct. 2, 1936. Two children, John Clinton and Daniel Byrd. Entered department of state October 1, 1938. Designated deputy under secretary of state on May 81, 1949, jective is to encourage democratic representative institutions and to cooperate in the economic field. It is our policy to strengthen the or ganization of the American states within the framework of the United Nations as the most effective ex pression of law and order In this hemisphere. • * • OUR FOREIGN POLICY with re spect to Germany has been sty mied for the time because of the Russian aggressive policy. But from the first we have supported a uni fied German government based on free and democratic elections. It is our policy to rebuild Germany economically with the help of the Germans themselves, but to keep from them the potentials of making war. As an occupying power it is our objective to prohibit institutions and activities dangerous to peace and to encourage a truly democrat ic society which can become again closely integrated with the free na tions of Europe. In the near east, Africa and south Asia our policy is to offer economic and technical assistance if these people want it. Also, we are ready, if they want our aid to help them solve their complex problems of in ternal, political and social life which such nations as India, Par- kistan, the East Indian Republic and other newly formed nations In that area face as a result of the dislocation and disturbances fol lowing the war. The foreign economic policy of the United States is aimed at break ing down barriers to world trade and to increasing the international flow of investment capital through the reciprocal trade agreements program, the proposed international trade organization and the point four program. The Marshall plan, the North At lantic pact, the military aid pro gram and the Truman doctrine In Greece and Turkey have withered Communist hopes for over-running the European continent. Our sup port of the so-called Schuman plan, it is believed, will end their hope of communizing western Germany. It may have appeared that we had neglected or abandoned Asia and China, but as a matter-of-fact, negotiations had been going on for some time with a number of nations for economic and technical assist ance, particularly in the field of agriculture, before the invasion of Korea. One of the things that has been lacking in United States foreign policy Is an effective world informa tion service to successfully combat the Russian propaganda of lies and deceit. 2 ecu/ 7 7 LAST w o n t's 1 ddll U ANSW ER ■ ACROSS 1. Steep, rugged rock 6. Resorts, ’ . 9. Nlhibus i 10. Plant or herb lit Disclosed 12. The elbow. (An&t.) 14. Undivided 15. Pig pen 16. Negative 17. Scrape with claws 20. River bottom 21. Masculine pronoun 22. Conflict 23. Feminine nickname 24. That which is unpaid but due 26.Inter 28. Epoch 20. Part o f verb “ to be\ 31. Insect 32. Painted scenes of a stage 34. Music note 35. Expression of contempt 36. Abyss 37. Stalk of grain 89. Humiliate 41. Ireland 42. European fish 43. Hastened 44. Branches of learning DOWN 1. Fortune 2. More' infrequent 3. Malt . beverage 4. Deity 5. Sweep o f i a scythe 6. Small horse 7. Portion o f a curved line 8. Rocks 11. Nonsense (slang) 13. Bends the head 15. Harsh, shrill screen) □ D O D 3 Q Ü Q □ 18. Crooked 19. S a ilor, 20. God o f pleasure (Egypt.) 23. God o f the Brythons 24. Skill 25. Land- measure 26. Food fish no .'71 27. Joins 33. Excess ot 29. Ascends . ■ 8olar 30. Ancient A year story 35. Peel 32. Planted, 38. Tear as 39. Girl’s name seed 40. Obstacle I' 2 3 4 fs / s W i t s . 6 7 e \ f / < I ? 1 IO il i IZ I « H W A W t IS 16 17 ia 1» i ZO ¿1 W / , 22 m 25 I 1 2 4 28 m m \ ¡ M / / A Z i 27 i 28 l Y r r 2 » 5 « 81 ' i u 55 $4 i 58 i i K 57 U i to 40 41 V / À 4 Z i 4* 1 44 I THE FICTION CORNER DAFFY ENOUGH By Richard H. Wilkinson AVNE DAY last spring a transconti- ^ nental air liner got off its beam over the Rocky mountains and smashed up against a rocky peak. It was a few hours before the dis aster was suspected, and then the airports could only guess at the lo cation of the wreckage. Glen Owens, sitting alone in his cabin on the slopes of White Crest valley, heard the 3 u i « „ i . announcement ov- * Minute er hjs dry cell set Fiction Young Glen’s cab- ______________ I in was located on the course of the liner’s flight, and earlier in the evening he had heard sounds that now he remembered as being rather queer. Glen strapped on his skis, loaded a pack with provisions and supplies and set off up the valley. Three hours later he saw a light and came to the wreckage. Two people were dead, and another was so badly in jured that unless he had medical attention pretty quick he too would die. On an improvised sled, Glen pulled the injured man to the near est town and doctor. Glen Owens not only received a reward, but he became, overnight, a figure of national reputation. Three days after this a man from Hollywood, Calif., arrived in Crest, looked up Glen and offered to pay him $500 a week to make a moving picture. Glen smiled and s h o o k his head. “ Nope,” he drawled, “ I always wanted to be a legcrde- mainist, and now with this re ward money I reckon I got my chance.” \Good gosh, man, it will take 20 weeks to make this picture. That’s $10,000. Do you realize that!\ \It’s a lot of money,” Glen agreed, BROADWAY AND MAIN STREET Israel Revisited' Answer to What New Nation Is Like By BILLY ROSE Early in 1949, my missus and I took a trip around the world, and one of the countries we got to see was Israel. At the time, many of the streets of Tel Aviv, Haifa and Jerusalem were still criss-crossed with barbed wire, and the roads leading through the hills of Judea were littered with bumed-oul trucks. Nevertheless, thanks to an old Chewy ar.d a pair of even older legs, I managed to see most of this tir.y country, and when I left it a few weeks later I was pretty ex cited about what I bad seen. When we got back to New York, my old boss, Bernard M. Baruch, asked me to put my enthusiasm in my pocket and try to estimate Is rael’s chances of survival in this highly competitive world. I told him that one swing around the globe wasn’t enough to make an econo mic expert out of a Broadway jumping- jack, but that I had come away from Is rael with the gen eral impression that its people w e r e (a) intelligent, (b) tough as nails, and gj|jy (c) prepared to work like all get- out to make a go of their new lives. “ A business or a nation with those qualities usually gives a good ac count of Itself,” said Mr. Baruch. SINCE MY VI8IT, I’ve beard nothing to change my snap ap praisal of Israel’s chances. On the other hand. I’ve read darned little on the subject which could be classed as good objective reporting Most of the favorable stuff was too favorable — obviously the work of men who were out to make as good a case for the new nation as possi ble. And as for the dissenters — well, as was to be \expected most of them sounded as if they were carrying a 2,000-year-old chip on their shoulders. Recently a copy of a new book by Ralph McGill—-\Israel Re visited,\ published in Atlanta, Ga., last month by Tupper and Love—showed up on my desk and I began to thumb through it out o f a sense of duty. But what started as duty quickly became compulsion, for McGill, editor of one o f the South's most trustworthy papers, The Atlanta Constitution, had obvi ously gone to Israel ™witb an open mind and crammed it with facts and figures before making it up. I’ ve met Mr. McGill once or twice, and before 1 was halfway through his book I found myself wondering how this soft-spoken and hard-head ed gentleman from Georgia had come to write such an incisive and Insightful commentary on the com plicated events now shaping up at the far end of the Mediterranean. • • • 1 GOT TO THINKING about it and, as I hunch it, the answer Is triple pronged: First, McGill is an Irishman, which means that while he has a lively sense of justice in general he has no axiom to grind about Israel in particular. Second, he is first, foremost and fastidious ly a newspaperman, avaricious for facts but plenty leary of special pleading propaganda. And third, he has a long record as a fighting Southern liberal, and once he’s got ten his facts straight he’s not one to by-pass those touchy areas where even angels fear to tiptoe. When l finished reading \Is rael Revisited,\ I was, of course, tickled to find that McGill’s conclusions jibed with mine, but that’s neither here nor there. The important thing is that, without pulling any punch es, be has written a book about this controversial little country which one can read without prejudice or without suspect ing the author of same. Here, at last, is a meticulous and meaningful answer to the often-ask ed question, “ What’s Israel really like?\ Then he fashioned a sled, using his skis as runners, twist ed some saplings Into the shape of snowshocs and wove them * with twigs. \ “ but suppose folks , liked me? Then I’d have to stay out there and keep making pictures.” \You’ll be a dumbbell if you don’t grab this chance.\ “ Maybe,” said Glen good-natured ly, “ I’ m a dumbbell already.” \Glen! What is the matter? Last summer you wanted to start a dude ranch down in Arizona, but you didn’t have any money. So you de cided to go trapping for one winter so you could save enough money to buy a half-interest in a ranch and we could get married. 'And now you’re offered $10,000 and you mum ble something about being a leger —leger—whatever it is.” “ Legerdemainist,” Glen told her patiently. A LL of which made swell newspa per copy. The reporters ate it up. So did readers. If Glen had been famous before, he was twice as famous now. The next week three movie pro ducers arrived on the scene. One of them offered a flat price of $25,- 000 for a single picture. Leah Conroy was almost in tears. “ Glen, for goodness’ sake, try and understand what this means. In an other month you’ll be forgotten. It’s your chance. Do you want to be a trapper all your life?” “ Thirty thousand!” said the movie magnate desperately, Glen heaved a deep sigh. “ O. K. If that’s the way yon want it, Leah!” So Glen Owens went to Hollywood and made a moving picture. Glen returned to Crest, bearing his $30,000, and the next day he and Leah journeyed down into Arizona. Within a week they had purchased a ranch. They were married in the ranch patio, and left immediately for a honeymoon to Honolulu. It was while they were on the boat that Leah asked the inevitable question. “ Well, honey, it was tike this,” Glen replied. “ That offer of $10,000 was good, but we needed $15,000 to buy a ranch of our own, so I fig ured if I tinned down the first offer folks would think I was daffy enough to make me more famous, and the movie folks would offer me more money. Which they did.\ ’Glen Owens, what is a leger—?” ‘I dunno,” Glen grinned. \And I figured nobody else would, either. All I know is I saw it written out once and copied if off so’s I’d be sure to get the spelling right in case I wanted to um It\ HAZEL BISHOP'S LASTRA NON-SMEAR LIPSTICK STAYS ON AND ON! ____ ___ only color-true lip make-up that won’t coma off when you eat, bite your lip* at idee! Now, say goodbye to mesay “ red grease” on everything—and everybody I Today-get HAZEL BISHOP’S non- smear, eatin-amootb, LASTING LIP STICK. Flattering new shades. Latte 4 to 6 times longer. Only $1 at drug A dept, stores. Money-back guarantee! N I W Q U I C K - M I X H C t P I M O U S S E S S I S ' No creaming, no egg-beating—-one easy mixing this Kellogg-quick wayl 1 cup Kellogg’! }h teaspoon (alt ,Vi cup Noyv Orltans Molaitts 1 ogg 2 tabloipooni toft ihortonlng •A cup Modlou ralilnt and milk In All-Bran */« cup milk I cup lifted flour 1 toaipoon baking powdor Vi toaipoon baking toda 1 . Combine All-Bran mixing bowL 2. Sift together flour, baking powder, soda and salt Into tame bowl. Add molasses, egg. shortening, raisins. Stir only until combined. 3. Fill greased muffin pans % full, or for pan bread spread in greased 8\ x 8* pan. Bake In preheated moderately hot oven (400'F.) 20 to 25 minutes. (Slightly longer for pan bread.) Makes 12 medium muffins, or 9 squares 6f bread. America’! most tom- out natural laxative cereal tor dials of insufficient bulk — try ■ bowlful todayl Q U I C K and T A S T Y M E A L Van (amp 5 P o r k B eam 5 V a n Cam p ’s P o rk a n d B e a n s in Tomato Sauce Choice, plump, whole beans ...a secret savory tomato sauce...sweet tender pork... with fla v o r through and through. Only Van Camp’s ...originator o f canned pork and beans. . . gives you so much good eating at eucb little cost o f money and effort. K\ en 11 ■: h’ t niud ic i nr - h .i\ i failcil t'i nTii \ ( \ \ i COLD MISERIES Y O U O W E I T T O Y O U R S E I T T O T R Y 6 6 t > l i 5 D I F F E R E N T . RdpnlmdMrmef MONTHLY ^ F E M A L E C O N F U n n i Are y o u troubled by d la troe ct fje| male fu n c tion a l perlodte disturb-^ ances? Does t h is make you suffer from pain, t e d so neroona, t i r ed aft each time*? T h en s ta rt taking la d le ’ E. Pln k b tm ’e Vegetable o o ta w a n g about ten days befom tO 'im le fe i each symptoms. Hnkhem ’k.na»;: ~ grand toothing effect on one woman'# most im p o rtant T r u ly the women's Y M e n d l H Y illL P