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Star Tribune from Minneapolis, Minnesota • Page 66

Publication:
Star Tribunei
Location:
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Issue Date:
Page:
66
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Nov. 6, 1949 MINNEAPOLIS SUNDAY TRIBUNE Sunday Crossword Puzzle 6 in CHILD CHATTER Red Grange Stars Again This Time on Television Harold (Red) Grange once again is becoming a celebrated figure in By LEONARD LYONS NEW YORK, N. Y. GORGEOUS GEORGE, the marcelled wrestler, performed In a Yakima, arena recently. He and his valet, Jackson, went to a local hospital to gee Justice William O.

Douglas, who is recuperating from the accident which broke his ribs. Before Gor-. geous George shook Douglas' hand, Jackson sprayed the wrestler's hands Then the four doctors who are attending Douglas lined up, and had a nurse spray their hands before they shook hands with Gorgeous George, and spray them again before greeting Douglas. "Enough," the jurist ruled. "A laugh is as hard on broken ribs, as a sneeze." ONE OF THE EDITORS of Israel Speaks returned from Tel Aviv with the story of a lady who visited a kibbutz where she saw her 4-year-old nephew and his kindergarten group in a swim football.

The Old Redhead, who 103 Son of 1 Fat Isaac 2 Central 105 Crown American 106 Memento tree 110 Cans, British 3 Close 112- Crisp 4 Has 116 Eager walked 117 Fast with long 119 Whey of steps milk 5 Evident 121 A metal 6 Vanquish- 122 Cultivate ing 123 Localized 7 Coal vector distillate 124 Music of 8 Tinge lyric 9 Liquid poetry fat 125 Cape Cod 10 Modest fish dwelling 126 Partner 11 Wing 127 Hard- 12 Perfected hearted 13 Open 128 Principle 14 Gayety 129 Views 15 Famous starred brilliantly with the Fighting Illini of Illinois and later with the A Chicago Bears professional team, is carving a career for himself in tele vision. In fact, Grange is the voice of the National Football league, TV style. The league has a contract with VERTICAL 16 Become 73 Freighted oxidized 74 Stay! 17 Move 75 Fleshy 18 Calm fruit 28 Twofold 76 Have 30 Meadow share in 32 Catkin 77 Brisk 34 Found 78 Claw 36 Impose by 79 Deputy fraud 81 Registers 38 Gambol S3 Mark of 39 Unearthly omission 40 Conserve 86 Eel-shaped of grapes amphibian 41 However 87 Four rods 43 Midship- 89 Weaken man 90 Visionary 45 Swine- zealots like 92 Fearfully animal 93 Oriental 46 Mountain 95 Hindu crest garment 47 Musical 98 Capuchin 50 Gloomy monkey 52 Girl 100 Wood- 54 Outlet chuck 55 Return to 102 Ware-59 Blue or house green 104 Undo set-pigment ting of 61 Of origin 106 Polynesian 63 Keen chestnut 65 Prepare 107 Sinful 66 Weight 108 Grind of 109 Estimate India 111 Dry 67 Color 113 Corner 68 Climbing 114 Informa-plant tion 70 Executed 115 Son of again Seth 71 Japanese 118 The alcoholic heart drink 120 Sailed 72 Marsh before bird wind HORIZONTAL 58 Jlold session 59 Grasslike reed 60 Support 62 Becoming 63 The buckwheat tree 64 Custody 66 Disjoined 68 Kelp-ashes 69 Play 70 Purifier 71 Respectful title 72 Drudge 75 Read carefully 76 Choral composition 80 Hub 81 Soft-finned fish 82 Caused to glow 83 Fuel 84 Silence by violence 85 Scene of judgment of Paris 86 Pacific Islands 88 Decoction (Med.) 90 Set in order 91 Deadly epidemic 94 Vehicle 95 Drawing-room 96 Complete 97 Periods 99 Durable 101 Set right an oil company for 15 live shows from the field this season; Red is the 1 Magnifying or diminishing glass 5 Lemuroid animal 10 Billiard shot 15 Celtic language 19 Advocate 20 Help 21 Tree of antiquity 22 Change (Music) 23 Ostrich cry 24 Roofing tin 25 Narrow to a point 26 Wife of Osiris 27 Mocker 29 Tip 31 Conduct of 33 Dolt 35 Low tide 37 Duration 38 One holding lands by feudal tenure 42 Culture medium 44 Intellectual 48 Delight in 49 Reward 51 Rudimental 53 Asiatic country 54 Conqueror 56 Designed 57 Through Mrs. George Wright of Minneapolis is the kind of young mother who has fun with her four children you can tell it in the way they act' that there is training, combined with humor She said to me, "My six-year old Susan always makes her bed in the morning, she never fails. Of course, when she sometimes tip-toes out of her room, and sees me standing right outside in the hall with my bull whiD.

she goes back and makes her bed so nicely!" Mrs. Wright has an original idea for decorating the youngsters' rooms in their new home. She papered one wall with bright flowered paper, and the door with the same paper. "The door is so anyway," she said, "and there are so many really lovely pictures for children that should be hung with a plain background." I agree with her. I have seen nurseries with four walls in such a confusion of circus animals and even airplanes, that it's like being on a cpnstant merry-go-round.

I should think a room Answer to Last Week's Puzzle ace commentator. He uses a fine mixture of color and technical treatment. Grange's background of actual playing gives him an edge over commentators who have shifted from disk-jockeying. Red was the "Galloping Ghost of the Gridiron" in the 1920s. The picture at left was taken when he was broadcasting the Min ming pool, naked.

"Aren you ashameai sne asked the boy, who was puzzled and didn't understand what she was talking about A week later he received a parcel from his aunt. It contained a small pair of swimming trunks. He put them on, went to the pool and when he was asked why he wore this strange garment he replied: "So I can be ashamed." Mn. Polly Brooks Hoe, who attended the Charles Cushing party for Celeste Holm, later was heard complaining that she'd caught pneumonia because of the air-blasts from the popping of so many champagne bottle. nesota-Illinois 1948 football game for a radio station.

Celeste Holm Pin-Uptuous Lass Now a Bride Lt. Shelden Biles, former Army with a few 0 ell 1 QJJUC ctures would be more restful! VOICE OF AMERICA recorded the music at Bop for beaming to the Soviet zones. An observer told Benny Goodman that Soviet transmitters probably would jam this broadcast. Goodman, listening to the weird bop music said: "Even if they do, will anyone know the difference?" Roy Rogers who has 90 products bearing his name from pencil boxes to cowboy suits has heard complaints that children won't remove the Roy Rogers suits, hats and boots when they go to bed. Rogers therefore is seeking a manufacturer to make Roy Rogers underwear, A current story concerns a friend of Peter Donald, who told a psychiatrist: "My wife says I act like a piece of rye bread." The doctor said: "She's wrong.

You're normal, healthy and, incidentally, you have a wonderful tan." The patient replied: "Naturally. So would you, doc, if you spent minutes in a toaster every morning." TOWN HALL'S concert manager received a request for an aisle seat "for my friend who has to stretch her bad leg in the aisle." The concert manager replied: "Is it the right or left leg, because we have right and left aisle seats." WINTHROP ALDRICH and his nephew.Winthrop Rockefeller, lunched in a mid-town restaurant. Rockefeller, who was the host, then realized that he had left his money home. football star in the days of Doc Blanchard and Glenn Davis, must be the envy of several million ex-GIs. Or, at least, the record would indicate it.

For he recently married Louise Hyde, the gorgeous damsel who was once named as Miss Pin-Up No. 1 during the war. Miss Hyde had been working as a model In Manhattan. The beauty was named Miss Chattanooga (Tenn.) in 1942 but later was disqualified for the Miss America contest because some high school tattler had revealed that she was only 17. Even so, she won a scholarship and went to New York to study dramatics.

There she met Biles. The new Mrs. Biles modestly says she doesn't think she's beautiful. What about her husband? "He was the most intelligent man on the the oil-new CROSS-WORD CARD GAME Army football team," she boasts. Ida Has Talent to Spare 2.

3 4-5 1 6 9 10 II li li 14 15 it, T2TJ if! WsWW 40 41 41. 45 4 AS 4b 47 IL 1" l5b II iZ M1ZZZ fe4 bS fate W7, bb 111ZZ1ZZZZZZZIZZZ11I i2 i3 74 ylb 11 7ft 19 rvirV ZZ 10b 101 108 09 77, 110 III VyVy 112 113 us 22 i lib in 6 i9 'io ui zzzzizzzzzizzzzzizi I 1 irl 1 1 I iH 1 I 1 iH 1 ri Ida Lupino, film actress and pro ducer, is considered one of the film colony's most talented members. Be sides being a top feminine star, she He asked1 the restaurateur if he'd accept a check. "What's your name?" the man asked and was told: "Rockefeller. Winthrop Rockefeller" "Oh, sure," the restaurateur snickered, and then looked suspiciously at Aldrich, with an "and-I-suppose-you're J.

P. Morgan" look. The head of the Chase National bank thought it would be inappropriate to give his name and made a non-interest loan to Rockefeller to pay the bill. DARRYL ZANUCK, head of the 20th Century-Fox, assembled his producers and directors Play it afoii of a party! Sark is fun for the whole family! And it's so tssy to play just shuffle the cards (each bears a letter), then turn them up one by one and mark each letter on a special squared offscore sheet, trying to make 3, 4, or 3-letter words. It's a wonderful party same for any number the perfect solilairt came for travelers.

I Rockefeller Ary convalescents, etc. has established herself as a composer and writer of no mean ability. Her Aladdin Suite has been played by several symphony orchestras and several of her short stories have been published. Her latest efforts are in film production. Her Not Wanted won acclaim from critics.

Currently she is working on a movie which she has written. In addition she's working before the cameras in another. But talent has always been plentiful in her family. In 1780 the Lupinos already were well-known Thespians. Ida started her career as a film extra in London, England, at 13.

She's married to Collier Young, film executive, after a marriage and divorce with actor Louis Hayward. and showed them the company's books how much each of their pictures, since 1943, had earned or lost. "This may shock, disappoint or elate some of you," said Zanuck, before showing them the figuies. The books showed that the gay, escape movies made money. And the movies, even the prestige pictures which won the critics' esteem, lost money if they ended on a note of futility or despair.

If not available at your favorite department store, send $1.00 to OWENS KR ASS, RocTiester 10, NX Unbelievable Comfort Guaranteed Hot to Slip or your money refunded AFTER LAST NIGHT 31 -Year-Old Brain Truster Front New Textures Electrify Jones By WILL JONES President Truman, I noted with great interest, was presented with a portrait of himself done in macaroni during his Twin Cities visit. I don't know whether the portrait was executed by a macaroni promoter or by a member of that school of art which He looks like a basketball center. But 6-foot-two George McKee Elsey, youngest and newest of the five administrative assistants to President Truman would rather collect rare books. Elsey, a graduate of Princeton university with a history M.A. from Harvard, joined the almost -secret Presidential staff in August.

But for many months before that he was a key member of the White House staff. He helped write and perpared research for many of Mr. Truman's major speeches; he went along on the President's coast-to-coast campaign tour last year. The "youngster" first caught the eye of the President when he was an assistant naval aid under Clark Clifford in 1946. His flair for writing and research soon made him Clifford's right hand man.

During the war he helped run the secret map room and message center at the White House. ft it i hi for new and exciting lor new goes in I SINGLE $10.50 DOUBLE Heiress 'Does Something' injoy en active life with motor oil, cottage cheese, barbed wire, tobacco juice. The more I think about it, the more excited I get. I want to try new materials! I crave to experiment with textures! Molasses soaked BB shot on sandpaper! Black rubber heels on kitchen linoleum! Tinted dew drops on Kleenex! Tinfoil balls and butterscotch pudding on bleached burlap! Paper clips and oatmeal on satin! Chewing gum on mouse hide! DDT on blue serge! Shredded carrots on asphalt pave nt! After I've had a little practice, I think I'd even like to try macaroni. Maximum protection rna lifting httvy weights, bending, etc -'alii When Aline (Pat) Rhonie finished school in the 1920s she took one look at high society and decided to heed the advice of her grandfather.

He, Nathan Hofheimer (who with W. C. Durant founded General Motors), had told her: "Do something. You may not always have money, so be prepared to stand on your own feet if you should lose it." So, Pat at 21, learned to fly and with her late husband, Reginald L. Brooks, formed a famous flying team.

During World War II she ferried planes, drove ambulances and assisted in hospital evacuation under fire. Pat's newest accomplishment is painting. She recently completed a huge mural at Roosevelt field on Long Island. It is a pictorial history of flying. Now she's backing a new radar gadget, which she thinks will aid private Athletic TRUSS Steel truss wearers Now it is possible to get maximum retention with real comfort.

The Sportsman has no steel bands or metal parts to gouge or pinch. There is nothing to bind. Every part is flexible. Yes, and it CAN'T SLIP! Why? Because the inner pad remains fixed in its position, while the soft, pliable truss moves with the body. textures and materials.

Whichever it was, however, I'm sure the President took it in stride. He must be accustomed to having his picture done in new art media by now. I'm an exciting texture man, myself. That's why I was so interested in the President's gift. I've never done anything artistic, but I've been thinking about it quite seriously.

If I ever decide to try to crash the art world, it'll be with new and exciting textures. It's the easiest way. Painting with oil paints and canvas has been going on for so long, with so much success, that it's hard for a newcomer to break in there. Come up with a new and exciting set of textures, however, and you're in. If I were to make a claim, for instance, who could dispute my position as the world's foremost artist working with am- moniated toothpaste on overcooked fudge? I also have a yen to try working with milk-soaked Cheerioats on granite.

Think of the excitement that contrast in textures could cause! Knackebrod impresses me as an exciting material. It could serve as a fine primitive background for any variety of original art supplies shoe polish, split pea soup, owl bile, roofing-nails, cig-aret ashes, caterpillar fuzz, egg yolk, leg make-up, dirty Maximum protection when squatting down. Tnts prod, net is designed for the AC TIVE man at work or play. Strong Man of Greece The Sportsman provides maximum retention for all reducible inguinal hernias and won't slip under strenuous activity, active sports and everyday stretching and bending. Conr fiis nmntial faturt Scientifically Designed for Self-Fitting Maximum Protection Real Comfort Without Friction It is Unconditionally Guaranteed.

Perianal Fitting! lay Ovtr fkt Cannttrl Tokt Ham Pat an and Farpat Yaar Raptart! Foe acbv iportt work this tms provides miimum protection. It works when most trasses till. Day Brightener: Johnny Weissmuller, who got very much overweight while he was making Tarzan pictures, now stars as the screen's Jungle Jim. His contract with the producer of Jungle Jim specifies that he can't be over 200 pounds while a movie is being made. He gets fined $1,000 for every pound he goes over during shooting.

Ph Lake- Hinnipln JTIh ft Liki 26 Se. 7t(f St. Stb ft Hinnipln Day Spoiler: The word "dictatorship" bobs up eften in speculation on the coming general election next spring in Greece. And the man whose name is linked to the word is Marshal Alexander Papagos, Greece's greatest living military hero. Papagos led the Greek army that threw back the Italian invasion from Albania early in World War II.

He is grand chamberlain of Greece, giving him authority over the armed forces. He has lired, retired and shifted his generals around so he is assured of personal loyalty in every key position. Lt. Gen. James A.

Van Fleet, chief of the American mission to Greece, does not think he has intentions of making himself a dictator. However, Papagos stepped into the fighting with the guerrillas and whipped them; and observers think he is in a good position to take over as a Greek "Franco" if he wishes. WILL JONES writes an enferfain-ing and often hilarious column on radio, -movies and television and their fabulous celebrities every day in the Minneapolis Morning Tribune. This is an example, reprinted from the Tribune. Thousands of avid Jones fans will tell you you're really missing a big morning treat if you aren't reading his column regularly.

So order the Morning Tribune now! Call your dealer, see the carrier salesman en your street or write us. In Minneapolis, call AT. 31 1 in St. Paul, call NEstor'6121. Bob Hope's report that southern hotels don't have towels labeled 7 PlnH rush nf an uncondltionallr (uaranteed with the usual His and Hers.

Just one towel marked You All. SPORTSMAN TRUSS at once. I understand that my money will be refunded Immediately If I am not aattifled with my SPORTSMAN TRUSS. Paasa chock raqulrarf trutt Right side $9.50 Lerft side St.50 loth sfdas $10.50 Poataie Prepaid IMPORTANT: My waist measure is inches. liklBL .1 ajj City.

Stat. -4- i g-.

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