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The Indiana Gazette from Indiana, Pennsylvania • 5

Location:
Indiana, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

WPfAMA EVEfflMG GAZETTE, INDIANA, PENNSYLVANIA, TOS9PAY, SEPTEMBER lfl, 1947. ft y-'wajs he stilt learned to dance. He'll specter General, returned probably steal my show. the butt of his 0W1 jokes. Let a blind man step on a banana peel and somebody Is bound t6 laugh.

The guy who laughs can also be found laughing at Carson's screen 'Hollywood' "Maybe someday 1 keep hoping there'll be a Carson movie and you'll be able to find Carson in It." If you think a recession isn't on the way and you'd have to hunt hard in this town to find somebody who thinks it isn't -lookit what oatw PCA05QM WASHttWTON (so Merry-go-round from Italy where he went tf 0 praise conditions after publllhex! 10 ports of bad food end crowded ditiona among GU end high among officers In Gen. JoHB Lee'a Mediterranean theater 6W; gafts. gaged oh new construction and rna-1 jor repair project costing for the month. The employment figure Is up 14 per cent and 239,000 workers com pared with August a year ago. The greatest increase was In employment on private residential building, which engaged two -fifth of all construction workers.

This represented a shift from private nonresidential construction work. In which there was an employment Marsha Hunt and Gail Patrick have which would be an understatement of the first magnitude. People are Always stealing shows from Carson, In "Romance In High the theft, committed by newcomer Doris Day, assumed the proportions of grand larceny. "And she," said Jack. "Isn't even supposed to be an actress.

She sings." Jack's role at Warners is that of a workhorse. The big (six foot, 200 pound) lug is perfect for the job. mand. The inspection wai' ordered WASHINGTON Ai ihe General of tribute to Evatt, the Australian The trouble with Jack's dressing room humor is that "dressing fdom" is a misnomer. It should be "locker room." It's funny, but aot in print.

I stopped by the "April Showers" set to see Carson In a "vaudeville routine with 12-year-old Bobby Ellis. They had been dancing all morning, but when Cflrson stepped down off the stage it was as if he Oen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, ehllfJ Assembly of the United Nations cynically replied; MOW TO MAKE MOftfet mm out BfttNo rtmNt fty RALPH ttfGftifON (For BOM THOMAS) Hollywood, sept. ia v--You may not think Jack Carson Is funny and even Jack will admit you could be right but around town he's known as one of the greatest "dressing room comics" fn the business.

That's a left-handed compliment. That's like saying your collie Would of staff, Lee had requested an MJ! There are many things might found: The 1948 wardrobes being designed for them to wear in "End of the Rainbow" coincide exactly with the styles in two topflight fashion ages of 15 years ago. And In 1933, in case you've forgotten, was the year of the great toboggan. BuildinsHiir Postwar Peak say at this moment, but am afraid vestlgation after publication, 8- someone might exercise his power serics of newspaper column! by The bureau said expenditures for all types of construction and repairs If a gal can make a good movie of veto over me." Robert Ruark on condition, IB Lee'i with Carson In it, she's star mater amounted to $8,900,000,000 during the command. One year1 later at the Paris Peace hadn't danced at all.

It was more ial. first 8 months of this year, or about $2,000,000,000 Increase over the same Conference, Evatt' was fightlna; side like he had been wrestling hogs. be a great racehorse if only he by side with Jimmie Byrnes against 1948 period. Wyche was not available for ment. War Department official! 18 Id they doubted there would be any public report until after Elsenhow were a horse.

In the dressing room or during rehearsals, Carson is ir the Soviet's sabotaging tactics. In fact, Evatt sometimes seemed to be repressible. But on the screen his er has studied Wyche'j findings. goading Byrnes into action. WASHINGTON, Sept.

10 (P)-The Bureau of Statistics laid that construction activity readied a new postwar peak In August. Expenditures and employmenl Carscn Is getting a little weary of the workhouse routine. "The studio appreciates it, and you get a lot of money that way, but you don't get any credit," he sighs. "But what can you do? I work up a new story, with real gags in it for me. I sell it to the studio and what happens? Somebody else plays the movie.

gags have all the spontaneity of a of Lee Command Is Back-No Comment Yet Carson found a seat and sprawled. "Never try to be a dancer late in life," he whispered. When he got his breath back, he pointed to little Bobby, still dancing away on the stage, and said, "would you believe it, that kid didn't know how to dance six weeks ago. 1 helped him all 1 could, and Evatt married an American, laves bankers' board meeting. American baseball, collects American books.

At the age of 36 he Was On his radio program and In most The deepest spot In the ocean yel reported la oft Mindanao, in the Philippines a sounding of more than 35,000 feet oM made. of his movies Jack has alien back both rose to the highest monthly levels in nearly five years. The bureau said 1,048,000 workers were en a member of the Australian Supreme WASHINGTON, Sept. 10 tfP) Ma). Gen.

Ira T. Wycho, Army In- on the old reliable dodge oC being Court, since 1940 a labor member of the Australian Parliament, since 1941 Foreign Minister of his coun meets In New York today, two ueft hold the ipotllght as Its possible Presidents. They are: Oswafdo Aranha of Brazil, ex-gaucho, ex-Foreign Minister and best champion ol the United States in South America. Herbert Evatt of Australia, great champion small nations, twister of the Soviet tail, and an original architect of the United Nations. Though General Marshall and the Russians Will retain the power, Aranha and Evatt will represent the hopes and dreams of millions that someone may lead the world away from the widening chasm that now yawns between the communist and capitalist worlds of the USSR end the USA.

Aranha, who served as President of the United Nations. Assembly at its special Palestine session, is so strongly pro-American that it has hurt him in Brazil. An Ambassador to the USA he came to know and love this country. He Visited the Kentucky Derby with Jim Farley (and Incidentally won took in both Republican and Democratic Conventions; inspected Boulder Dam; played roulette at Elko, try. Jap Appeasemant In London, the British don't parti cularly like Evatt, consider htm too pro-American.

On one thing, how ever, he emphatically disagrees with the USA the future of Japan. En route to New York, Evatt stop ped in Tokyo, visited General Mac- Arthur. It was predicted the sparks would fly. For Australia, fearful of another Japanese invasion of the South Pacific is harsh in criticising MacArthur's so-called Japanese ap peasement. put his children in American schools Australians believe Japan cannot be trusted, cannot be allowed to re and toured the USA from one end to the other.

An impatient, indefatigable ex- build her industry, must be kept a third-rate power. Many Americans on the other hand, led by Mac- A I UCKY PURCHASE JUST Arthur, consider Japan an Asiatic cattleman from the ranches of South Brazil, he spent one year in the saddle, sleeping outdoors, leading a revolution; has one bullet in his shoulder, one heel shot away. No ordinary diplomat, Aranha chafes at base against Russia. Arriving in Tokyo, Evatt and MacArthur were photographed to gether, walked arm-in-arm together. In Tiwt roR im delay, has been the only man able to put Soviet Ambassador Gromyko in Rumor had it that Evatt-had fallen under MacArthur's magic spell.

his place. In New York last winter Gromyko would keep the UN Coun Underneath, however, Evatt still remains a staunch Australian, still cil waiting a full hour, arrived whenever he felt like it. Courteous turns an emphatic thumbs-down on US delegate Warren Austin patient a soft peace for Japan. New York's Great Problem ly waited. But not Aranha.

When it came his turn to preside over the For the next three months dele gates to the United Nations Will window-shop along Fifth Avenue, sample New York night spots, and gripe at high U. S. prices. Also, they will tackle-three all important prob lems affecting the peace of the world. They are: 1.

Palestine Where the British will pull out if the country is parti Council, Artmha delayed not one minute far the tardy Russian. And when Gromyko attempted some of his fancy sabotage, the Brazilian nearly bit his head off. Australia's Evatt Herbert Evatt, other outstanding diplomat in New York, is equally pro-American, equally anti-Russian, very much the champion of the smaller nations. At San Francisco it was Evatt who foresaw the danger of what now has nearly wrecked the United Nations the veto. He fought it to the bitter end, was just as much the critic of the United States on this point as he was of Russia.

When the battle was all over and Modern Walnut tioned into Arab-Jewish states. meaning that the United States will be called upon to send the already thinly spread American Army, Ideal solution for Palestine would be to BEDROOm have it guarded by an international UN police force. But persistently deliberately, the Russians have' sab otaged our efforts to create such a 4 force. They want world chaos. Peruvian Foreign Minister Manuel Gallagher proposed a standing vote Obviously, a UN police force would help prevent chaos.

2. Greece Here the General As sembly can override a Russian veto and act collectively to put down an aggressor if General Marshall can muster a two-thirds majority. Rus sia, which has stirred up Yugoslav, Albanian, Bulgarian attacks on Greece, is considered an aggressor, and the USA proposes to have the UN act. This will be the greatest test of the United Nations so far. 3.

Can the United Nations work? Basically this is the most import ant question to be decided in New York. Scores of diplomats, millions of non-diplomats are getting dis couraged, disgusted with the UN Die mm Council. They see if as a futile de bating society, made impotent by Russia's unreasonable rain of vetoes. tWb one thing tht tw It has blocked peace rather than MR. JONES Ui hU bow When Penn 9oy promoted it.

The big question now is: Can the greater powers be pumped into the United Nations by the General Assembly? If not, the hopes of mil- to I lions may go glimmering. That's no time why this session of the United Nations is so Important. (Copyright, 1947, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Snesl It ha ePxample, DISTRIBUTED BY MARION CENTER MILLING CO. Marion Center Erupting volcanoes may result In an average lowering of temperatures amounting to one degree Fahrenheit over the entire earth. Chest-robe ing BP ad with lots Ol rrvacefw v.

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About The Indiana Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
396,923
Years Available:
1868-2006