Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Daily Chronicle from Centralia, Washington • Page 4

Location:
Centralia, Washington
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Tfee Chronicle, Fiidty, Jwwtry 2, 1953 IDJTORUL Or jlSflitjiiTl PuSlltber OFFICIAL PUBLICATION FOR THE C1TT Or CINTRAUA World-writ Neva Itrrlct ssarwrss wtll all AP dl.p»trh«i, A A I 11 7 of couitry; loyalty A If afaFiui til Ju un 1 vl! Ih. flat a to tht blu.lnji of libtrtr to and to tti til Let's Give 'New Printer' Time To 'Publish' History of 1953 TL i i a a The United State, need not resolve to be different in' 1953. For the time ainc, 1933, ft. will be in WASHINGTON REPORT Newspapers Suckers for Red Propaganda Pitches By FULTON LEWIS JR. 1MI, Kinf FeatWM OUT OUR WAY By J.

R. WILLIAMS OUR BOARMNG HOUSE with MAJOR HOPPLE TM i i a explaining benefit get dull around the Kremllnilhe Ktcmliti whether Acheson Soviet leaders pick out a gulliblejreally meant what ta said in (he reporter ind suggest diplomatic cables. i that he ask Premier Btalin a few questions about world peace. A New York Times writer was st li The slaughter of Chiang Kai- shek's reputation as an able ally of America in Asia was accomplished utBjtii JUU31, JCVcIJli Uncle Joe" act. As usual, the "a- elusive" mail interview was timed recent in this fashion.

The State Department, for the record, kept on informing Stalin that we were nanas ot another political party. ever, with a new outlook. iiuvi uuug ouiin inai we were lor us greatest impact on the staunch of a Free China, American and foreign press --jbut Acheson's propagandists were day of 1S5J when world'coyjy writing that the aecretary of ebb.lrtate and the President of the the leader of Free a A new learn ii taking drops word at a cocktail ehince to handed a can what it can do. mandate to invoke change cmnnot war, General Eisenhower But in this tugged llul Two American Presidents have lhat Pre en- been overripe suckers for Stalin's President BoaseveHrmaiDly because there were fewer Commit- the so that both Communum in government, orean war, i a i ommunum in government, a such as cablin, via abort Beds in high government councils, federal economy, all the issues that seemed to resist solution wav to Moscow that the time is such as Alger Hiss, have been spot- under the Democratic administration, will not now with sud- 0 1 prop rMd lu uri Truman era by under- den m. ic yield to ea.y answers.

ako the hangover Jhe party in power has had years to grapple with W1(hln 3 hours after the State Department tea and never! year, to examine the catalog of te the Wi i. Eisenhower administration i noi solve then, Ihe space of one to six months. jsuf fering. in an editorial it appears likely that his selection own correspondent secretary of state, John Foster time to learn their way, time to cut away the deadwood of world government habit. Complexity is the great common 1 If It is, the Times' Washington denominator of today's problems.

New policy i not born helped Jay the trap. rif difK Mtnericans, then, must be patient with their new leader', reply, which the newspaper labeled That not nay 'they should be le 8 exacting in their exac recovered the demand for a better result. jmorning after. Rut i7Iere ls an embittered little co- nut. while it would be to expect too much toojterie of State Department syco- 1 muc Kon, the people rightfully look for an early shift in the 1 political climate of Washington.

Obviou.ly. new oul of new The capital', climate this yearW, disguised as reporters who around it. Why not tell Stalin that when be pulls ou( of China, acts reasonable in Germany and takes my ux trap, his hands off of Poland and a few And the Times helped spring it other European countries we will wnen.it printed Stalin's propaganda talk peace? Or is that too simple rewv. whirh nptu.xon... I.K^.J or our One thing is certain: we can't afford any more cease-fire debates similar to the fiasco in Korea.

If Stalin wants peace he can have it. Just quit shooting in Korea, tomorrow. "f- in. vnl'ltvl vllllldLC (I11B and after will be conservative, because the American citizenry voted for a conservative President and Congress. The an- produced must be judged against that background.

Here'and there one petulant disappointment over Eisenhower's choice of cabinet officers. There is complaint he ii not reproducing Democratic patterns. But if the people had wanted those patterns, they would have chosen Governor Stevenson. Of Eisenhower and hi- men they may indeed demand The Times' Washington correspondent is one of them; Elmer Davis is another. The level of his diplomatic understanding was best described.by a federal grand jury in New York which reported on Communists in the United Nations and added that during the war the Office of War Information was used as a Soviet 'propaganda outlet.

Elmer was boss man in that joint. Whenever Achejon or President YESTERYEAR IS YEABS AGO From The Daily Chronicle Jitmiry 193S Postmaster Al Pilson announced today the 1937 receipts of th Centralia postoffice totaled 144, 642.86, the highest of any year to the history of 'the office. The death of Chris Nelson, aged nl men tney may indeed demand Whenever Acheson or President Th deaUl ot chris Nelwn performance. Surely, they will appreciate that this Truman wanted to convince the 80 of Centralia nearly a performance cannot be a weak carbon copy of the actionsi vot rs were walking hand inlhalf-century, occurred at his home, a performance cannot be a weak carbon copy of the actions i vot rs were walking hand ef the predecessor government. hand down world The history page of 1953 will written with fresh ink, clean paper, new type and new processes of printing, with a new master printer in charge.

That is what the American 4 them now not or a substitute out of old stock on the peace they simply organlied another state Department tea and called in the "diplomatic" reporters. Nobody ever dared ask an em- ask either a rush a West Second street. TEARS AGO Frwi The Dally Chronicle January 2, 1921 J. C. Kitchel, for the past Jied of pneumonti.

of his son, Guy Ketchel, at hl American Willapa. Surviving Mr. Kitchel are Sr constanu this three sons, Ernest and Lee of 11 83 11 designed to halls, OUT of Willapa, and two cov-r up the Administration's for- however, wanted to if Acheson or say anything he used the diplo- ne Fern Ferrier of Belle Bruce daughters, Mrs. Pitt, i of Centralia. The Chehalis firm name of four and Brown, has been Pr 1 I I I JIBS Dffl muttering changed to Chehalis Hardware com he Ameri-peny by the owrierj, Fred Bal- 1 in on the four and L.

C. Young. Some months wor- ago Mr. Young purchased the learned I terest of Roy Brown, who retired things to come from the business. Methusoleh Was No Match We were listening, half-awake, to a popular song on i the radio the other morning.

Unlest our played false, the.girl was wailing to this general effect: I had a penny for every time I've cried for you, I'd be a millionaire." Well, it isn't our custom to apply arithmetic to popular songs, but you know how hard it sometimes is to get a song out of your mind. On the way to the office we ilarted thinking that if she cried every hour on the hour, waking up if necessary, that would make 24 cries a day! At a penny each, 24 cents a day. And 24 cries a day, with no Sundays or holidays off, would, come to $87.60 a year at the same piece-work rate: or $87.84 in a leap year. To earn a million dollars or more at that rale, as the lassie on the radio said she could have done, would there-1 NEW YORK Ifl-l had a horrible.home at night so regularly tMt fore take more than 11,300 years. (dream the other night.

icvcry wife was douWy suspidous Crying must be a wonderful rejuvenator. We never. dreamt tvef Person in Ameri-ithat he was carrying on a day- would have was that old. nCe WS en Hal Boyle's Daily Column If Everybody Kept New Year Resolutions They'd Ruin Nation XTCMlr i i Farm Units in Basin Offered WASHINGTON UH Fifty-two farm units on the Columbia Basin Foreign Cadet Pair on Visit Home on leave with Homer Stepp son of Mr. annd Mrs.

the result four months The nation was completely set. The sudden wave of over-, whelming virtue had normal life in school, home and in-l or dustry. i leir But husbands were begging. Pete's sakt, slay in bed, won't You've got me so fat now I iddle." tiustry. I- 7 ft" 11 annq Mrs Th fi country faced the greatest.

03 har wa reclamation -project were madeiHomer Stepp Cheiinlis for the depression in history. I Everyone was available Thursday to part-time holidays were two for-i Every saloon was closed, every stood on th. farmers. leign cadets in training; at Ihe sanie' sh fl ad its wan'ed to take the other person's! Michael Strauss, force bare in Texas as the' doors arlli liquor store proprietors; seal Commissioner, said the units to be sold range in size from .69 to 9.30 younger Stepp. The serviceman's guests were so courteous (hey on the buses.

Nobody peddling candy. 1 Old ladies were airaid to ventur Bartenders stood in breadlines, joat, as Boy Scouts no longer were acres. They are primarily of int- Robert Dhcnian of Calais. France Racehorses were applying for jobsicontent Wash.lguests of the senftr Slcpps were taking out a loan. Banks bulged so feel so unnecessary in this c'ivili- Straus said the farms are priccdW and Shreve ol with money that depositors were zation, Doc.

There's no reason to nil'ina a 1. 1 I from $100 to SGOO but buyers nlsoiRaymnnd. She is the daughter paying them interest just to keepjbawt anybody out." FUNNY BUSINESS By HERSHBERGER ijiic me uflU2nIPr ol must pay from $510 to S1.872 for the and is a teacher in H. "I There even anv Sundav mg ITM yS Car he Ha TM nd sch Wtcm. Automobile salesmen g'drivers-they were aH Jrivfn on a to pach farm.

Tne charges iheir hands in dismay in show- a Tuesday Wednefdav may be repaid over a period. Read the CHRONICLE Classifieds'rooms stocked with new models. Thursday. Friday and Saturdav But there were no new Some 512 veteran Internal Revas everyone had pledged to "make enue Burea'. agents had dropped the old car last another year." 'dead of shock after checking 5 Hopalong Cassidy had gone income tax returns without the garage busness because child- finding a single error by a taxoav ren had quit watchini the lelevis- er in favor of himself Ion screen.

I No one bad gossiped, said un- Teachers were threatening to kind word, or taken advantage of quit. "The kids study so hard now another human being I they know more than we do," ran Professional reformers come- the complami, "We can't keep up.dians, pundit columnists and judg- with them." cs were in deepest melancholy. I i In offices and factories no one For there was nothing to criticize had run downstairs to get morn- ridicule or sit in Judgment on ing coffee or missed work because Everyone had gone to see his ''one-day pneumonia." 'doctor at least once and everyone So most employers had cut either had his teeth fixed or staffs in hnlf, finding that was all arranged to visit his demist employes they reallv needed to; The appointments ran into pel the Job done. The nation had never Department stores were most people never No one was buying 1 on the Inslall-'been Individually wealthier or bel- ment plan. ler behaved.

Kight club owners had turned: But the stock market had plum- joints into Chinese resuur-'meted to a record low, the bfcked- were taking in saving had created financial laundry cut down ex- chaos, and everyone was worried Ipenses. All the top dance orches- and fearful, saying: jtras had become wandering street, "If people change their habit-; TM As a there is no telling what Darkness reigned In everymovie you can put money In as long- theater, silence in every bowling term investment and feel safe alley. People were sternly living.They might even start cobblfiiK up to their resolution to "stay shoes." home more ofter." I woke from this dream In a I Husbanos, mindful of i cold sweat of terror. And the wives' old wall, "You never talk to'moral, I guess is: me any more," were talking soj "Don't worry too much about much tliat their wives were saying, jthose New Year's resolutions. If Oh.

shut up for a everybody kept them, they'd ruin la fact every buitend cameitbt country." ''Your honor, wiN you tiT white I my HOW A8QUT. YOUR CUTAWAY THE OTHER DAVI THE WHISTLE, 7H' TC DAV IS CKERAHALF HOUR. AGO FOR. THEM BOtSt ANVTIMEVOOSEEA IfJMEED Of I TAKE- Off lOM Of QOEEW WOULDMT IB BE SEEN LUXURY. OF PALACE IM A gAWROSS THAT 6M6LLD LIK61H6 SACK Off A --HOW'S CREDIT OR EXPLOPE OUT WJ7H IH' OF TH 1 WHISTLE LCCWW SOME Torr MOVJ THAT Y0O 3ENNY LU HAS COME IM NOW, PRISCIULA'.

IT'S TIME FOR WED CHICKEN, BUTTERED BEANS, MASHED MY GOODNESS! ELSE HAVE? ft 6,0 UP VlSWHJS CWVN'S I'M ON wKBLts ftvo KR TOR -HDW WOOLO VOU UVt ft OT? DUDE ME UP IN feNCY aOTHES.WIU-THeY CANT TWW US.LMERMORC/WE STAND OF siiw Fieoacs- BY 2S NO-SALE FEBRUARY--aV DROUGHT VVIU-BP OVER -AIL I HAVE CONSOie MVSetFWfTH 6 THIS JOURNAL OF SO VOU'RE FLJSJT. "THAT A I--. C7.FPEZENCE. SOU CAN PUT XXJK I TWOJHT OUTSCTE A PULLS A PIN FROM AH4M7SR- WERE OP SLAWS WEM COME HEee TQ ME, TOO. LErrro, cisee COAST TH6RE SHE ABOUT TO GOUWOER TUNNED FOR MAONCHT 5V THE I LOOKS NWUMP FOR THftTU 8RIPGE.

LEAPEP RIGHT TO TOW HER. TO SHORE. THSRE'S THW i CMI6ELINS A Ltt. TOO FltMOTOHANG.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Daily Chronicle Archive

Pages Available:
155,237
Years Available:
1890-1977