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Big Spring Daily Herald from Big Spring, Texas • Page 16

Location:
Big Spring, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
16
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Page Eight Big Spring Herald, Big Spring, Texas, Friday, November 23, 1945 Buy Defense Stamps and U'' DAU urn ROMANCE! Plus "Fox News," "Hockey Homicide" and "In A Musical Way" LyRICBQUEEN iifiORADO ROY ROGERS "Purple Monster. Strikes" No. 14 CORNFIELD RODEO BLOOMTNGTON, 111., Nov. 23 Farmer Abe Brown is hunting for some joyrlding tractorists. They went into Brown's corn AT YOUR DEALER also "Secret Agent" No.

1 and "That Justice Be Done" Gov't. Short. field at night, unhitched his tractor and drove the tractor all over the field and even attempted to drive the machine to the top of some nearby gravel piles. Tractor tracks criss-crossed the entire field and wide swaths of corn were laid to the ground. Brown found the tractor nose down over the bank of a creek.

Smith Robbins We now have 2 bulldozers, one at work in town. Have your lots cleaned and levelled at a saving. IMPROVE YOUR LOTS 1740 -Biff Spring, 31 Coahoma 'IT'S AT YOUR NEW THEATRE" -ENDING TODAY- DOKWY JOAN MtGUIRE BlONDEtl DUNN tlOYO PECCY ANN NOLAN GARNER DONALDSON SATURDAY ONLY DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM AND UNIT SHOW FEATURE NO. 1 ADVENTURE! THP.ILLS! FEATURE NO. 2 A Gay Thrccsomt OUJfORJEUNI EDGAR KENNEDY COMEDY DONALD DUCK CARTOON RITZ Starts Sun.

THEATRES (OMANCE! PAUL HENREID MAUREEN O'HARA WALTER SLEZAK Mirrors Of Excerpts From UlreyV Writing, Influential In Educational Circles The name of Lewis Valentine school patrons to know more Mister Breger By Brigcr On at the Box Office 1 Not Including- Tax Ulrey of Galveston has assumed some importance in educational about Ulrey. One way to know of a man is thrugh his own writing. Lewis Valentine Ulrey told circles since the disclosure that he, sometMng before thg San Antoni is advisor to Maco Stewart, the Rotary club on Sept 17i 1937 chairman of the state Board of Education, and influenced the submission of at least one textbook at this year's purchase of texts for the public schools. It was disclosed that a letter from Ulrey influenced a textbook publisher to forego submitting a text. In this role, it may be of interest Eisenhower Enters Hospital With Cold WASHINGTON, Nov.

23. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, newly designated Chief of Staff, has entered Ashford General Hospital at White Sulphur Springs, W. Va.

In announcing this "today, the Army said Eisenhower had entered the hospital on the advice oJ his physician, Maj, Gen. Howard M. Snyder, to prevent development of complications from a severe cold. When Eisenhower testified yes terday before a House Foreign Relations Committee, his voice was hoarse and his face flushed. He disclosed at that time that the cold might prevent his following out his plans to return to Germany by air today.

Mrs. Eisenhower is ill with pneumonia at Boone, but is reported improving satisfactorily. GROUND BROKEN ON MEMORIAL WARM SPRINGS, Nov. 22 (fl 3 of this community where the "Little White House" is located broke ground, for a memorial shaft to mark the spot where Franklin D. Roosevelt decided to re-enter politics 17 years ago after being stricken with infantile paralysis.

The shaft will be a huge projectile donated by the war department. It will be placed on a base of pink marble. Inscribed on the four sides of the pedestial will be: "Love," "Thanksgiving, 1945," and "And a Little Child Shall Lead Them." Fourteen year old Billy Humphries, a Warm Springs patient, broke ground for the memorial, which is expected to be completed by Christmas. SANTA'S SLEIGH, A 1945 MODEL PORTLAND, Nov. 23 (--P) Santa Glaus has forsaken reindeer and sleigh for a quicker vehicle on his trip to Portland.

Announcing details of a fairly tale parade, the retail trade bureau said Mayor Riley would meet Santa at 'the airport today. Saint kiddies were coming by rocket ship. USE 666 COLD PREPARATIONS LIQUID, TABLETS, SALVE, NOSE DROPS USE ONLY AS DIRECTED That he was born ni Illinois, wa brought to Texas in a covered wa gon, lived for a time in Colli county, then was taken by his par ents to Indiana. There he event ually was elected to the Indian; senate. In the same speech he tells tha he had "made a lifetime study that he "studied lav and once spent "sev en months and six days making an undercover investigation of th and from 1931 had "spent at least three-fourths ray time in.

anti-radical activities In addition to acting in an ad visory capacity to Board of Educa tion chairman Stewart, Ulrey pre sumably is still active in the or ganization called the Christian American. How he and Vano Muse launched this organization is told in part in a bulletin issuec under the organization's letter head dated July 1, 1942. This -bul letin said that some six years be fore Ulrey and Muse had taken an active lead against the "Emer gency Peace Campaign." The bul letin described this campaign a "a bunch of cunning radical, whose scheme was to subver peace-loving Christian ministers and laymen the campaign was launched from the White House by Mrs. Eleanor The bulletin goes on to say, in substance, that the Christian American grew out of this activity, Prior to that time, Mr. Ulrey had written several pieces for a magazine which was called by its sponsor, Gerald Winrod of Kansas, "The Defender." In one of these Defenders, he deals with the causes of World War One.

This was in the mid- thirties. The article signed with his name in part: "During the war, the vast majority of Americans believed the German Kaiser and his Prussians were solely responsible. Many Americans now know better. All historians and most scholars now know that it was NOT the Germans, but the French and Czarist Russians who started the war and that the Kaiser did everything in his power to stop it." Mr. Ulrey has written at some length concerning the Federal Council of Churches.

He absolves this organization of being "socialistic or communistic" but wrote, "It is part pink and part red. It has many pious dupes trailing along who are seemingly oblivious of the fact that they are being led to the altar of the Great Red Beast." He was violently opposed to the Federal Child Labor amendment. One paragraph from an article on this subject: "What the radicals are after, of course, is to take our young folks away from influence of the home, church and Sunday school during the plastic years of their youth and place them under the control of some government jurcau which the radicals will openly or surreptitiously dominate." The signature on the articles ire variously signed by Ulrey as geologist, attorney, engineer or consulting engineer, or by a com bination of these titles. Call JACK at 100 for PRINTING (Adv) iv i Today Sat. HERE'S A SWELL FAMILY SHOW 4 UNITS HEBE'S YOUR FAVORITE AT HIS BEST ROY ROGERS EDGAR KENNEDY COMEDY CARTOON "GOOFY NEWS" CHAPTER 10 "BAT "Pardon me, while I put on my The Nation Mr.

Truman's Simplicity Must Get Him Out Of Three Problems PROMOTED Appointment of S. L. (Buck) Wright to the position of executive general agent of the Texas Pacific railway has been announced by L. C. Porter, assistant to the president.

Wright is a brother to W. E. (Bill) Wrig-ht, general agent In the Big Spring area. TWO LETTERS, TO THE POINT SALT LAKE CITY, Nov. 23 Judge M.

J. Bronson granted Russell Matthew Bishop, a sailor, a divorce, after Bishop told him he had received only two letters from his wife during his nine months overseas. The first letter, Bishop said, told him she didn't love him, and the second said she wanted a divorce. Say You Saw It In The Herald By MARLOW WASHINGTON. Nov.

23 (-T) It was nice while It lasted. When Mr. Truman took 01 last April, there seemed to be general agreement to hold back the brickbats, to let him show what he could do. His simplicity and directness made a good impression. But now that the war Is over and Mr, Truman has to make decisions to fit new situations, home and abroad, criticism is hitting him hard.

This week one commentator undertook to tell him how to run his day: Whom to see, not to see, what telephone calls to answer or ignore. That advice was intended to show Mr. Truinan how he could devote more time to important affairs. The president's day is a fairly open book. The list of White House callers is published.

The list has included radio and movie actors, a football team, any number of fellow-Missourians, and two days in row this week delegations of his lodge brothers. In the midst of the most delicate foreign problems, Mr. Truman made trips around the country and got criticized for them. He tried to solve the biggest domestic problem, prices and wages, by saying industry generally could raise wages without raising prices. This wasn't popular with businessmen and business sympathizers.

Meanwhile strikes and strike threats have piled up around him, even here in Washington. But the domestic situation is no more disturbing than the foreign one. Our relations with Russia have deteriorated gravely. And even the London conference of foreign ministers, including our own, failed. Up on Capitol Hill Mr.

Truman started out to get along with congress by feeding it honey. Then he laid down his 21-point program in congress' lap. Most of it is still lying there. So Mr. Truman still -has three gigantic problems to solve.

Those three problems are: Smoothing out the country domestically, improving 'our foreign relations, and trying' to get congress to see his way. Christ Ambassador Convention Closes Dr. Cecil Lowry, Oakland, Calif, told delegates to the district Christ Ambassadors convention in the closing session of a three-day meeting last night that events pointed to the "soon coming of Christ." The convention of the Assembly of God Young People organization attracted approximately 800 delegates from 100 churches. All sessions were well attended. Rev.

Frank J. Mack, Lubbock. district CA president, expressed thanks to the city for use of the auditorium and to the community for its welcome of delegates. Call JACK at lOy for PRINTING (Adv) Helps break up cold's local congestion so AWAY GOES COUGH'S TIGHTNESS Juat rub on. child's chest, throat back and 7011 help break up congestion, case chat muscle soreness.

(2) relieve pain at nerve ends In the skin. (3) loosens phlefjn. coughing as vapors help you Pene- tro acts fast, for it's Grandma's famous mutton suet idea made even better by modern science. The family, children especially, enjoy Penetro. 25c, double supply 35c.

Demand PENETRO JAS. T. BROOKS ATTORNEY Office In Courthouse WE HAVE ER YTB.ING (almost) COURTNEY'S SHINE PARLOR 3rd LOOK NEW GRAIN ELEVATOR Cars and equipment to handle one million pounds grain daily. SEE US FOR TOP MARKET PRICES TUCKER GRAIN CO. T.

Tucker Day 1892 Night Let's Get Going What this country needs is more goods, more production, more people For four years America, hasn't been producing enough of the things people need new cars, new clothes, washing machines, radios, refrigerators hundreds of necessities. We need these things and we need them badly. But what is happening? The whole postwar production program is in danger. Union leaders are closing down threatening to close them they hold up industry for more wages for less Instead of mounting production, there is mounting confusion, Fifty-two hours' pay for forty hours' work "or else." The public interest deserves more consideration than The veterans are entitled to a. better homecoming.

Consumers are entitled to better treatment. The working men themselves deserve a better break. Right now, what we need is production, production and more America needs more goods more people at work. Let's get going! GENERAL MOTORS.

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About Big Spring Daily Herald Archive

Pages Available:
38,655
Years Available:
1930-1977