Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / Feb. 15, 1945, edition 1 / Page 8
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Exclusive Lake Placid Now Army Rest Home > Mushing is one of the sports now enjoyed at the army's Lake Placid clnb. New York, left, which has ?cm turned into an army redistribution station, where returned lighting men may relax. Center, two G.I. ?oaples are having fun riding on a one-horse open sleigh. Lower right, no transportation problem when a nkate chair is at band. Upper right, the G.I.s have a spin behind a team of sled dogs. India's Sikhs Honor Their Royal Martyrs lb Sikh* ara tha warrior, of "Mather India." Leader of the 5 million U the Maharajah of PaUala, S3, af tha atale aI PaUala. Oa December ST they >tared a treat featival ta honor tha founder of their rclifJoo, ?Cam Coblnd Sloth, and his two sons who became martyr*. Tha story toes that the tons of Guru were ?than and held hastate by Moslems in an attempt ta force their father U.slw* ap his retitiec. Be rrtniad, sand thai Moslems built -a tomb around tha seven and ntae-yearmld hoys, bnryiat them alive. Canter shows ?he Maharajah. ahaelMsiwarrylat tha Orst basket at earth from the site of the new shrine. Blfht shews Shn war fieri la eoiarful contintent. m /n Rescue Airmen in Yugoslavia v AntrkM ilnin, ik?n, who crashed la TageslaTia, were rescued Aakf HTn-alMli landing of Allied planes. Below, (ho rescued men. nu*o had beoa aided hp General MlhaUorltch and Marshal Tito aad ?hair farces, before being rescued. They were members of the 15th air Carre combat crew rescued from behind Germaa lines. Bomber Group Command Change ?UJ. On. OjrtU B. muuIn Nth Cist b?m*urt?mmHs^rsttgrsi Brt<^0??. Hlsywwl 8.Hm?u ir.. I Lt. Budge Drives On Aiding In a benefit match (or the war wounded, Li eat. J. Donald Badfe lathes out with a forehand drive to win Loo Angeles professional versaa amateur duel. Badge's post war plans call for continued profes sional golf competition. Commands 7th Fleet Staiy i Vlee Admr. Thamaa Kte kaii, niMiaiir itaC.L In aath Saat, aa ha daaaai a ataal hal lalual by lata Niw*pap?r UnJPO ST VIRGINIA VALE IT SEEMS like sheer inspira tion to team Eddie Brack en and William Demarest on the air as well as on the screen. Nobody who saw them togeth er in "The Miracle ot Mor gan's Creek" and "Hail the conquering Hero" will ever forget he hilariously tunny scenes they >layed together. Now, at 8:30Sunday evenings, E.W.T. on NBC, we have "she Story ot Eddie Bracken," sup posedly scenes trom his lite, with i EDDIE BRACKEN Eddie playing the bewildered youth caught in a whirlpool of events be yond his control, and Demarest as the bull-voiced, irascible older man, goads Bracken into asserting him self, finally causing the worm to turn. ?*? Jerome Cowan reported on the set of Republic's "Return at Dawn" one morning recently in high spirits. He'd gotten up early enough to have a real breakfast, said he?fruit, cereal, bam and eggs. "That's too bad," said Director John English, sympathetically. "Because in the first sequence this morning you've got to eat a full turkey dinner, from soup to dessert." Clandette Colbert is ia for another of thosg ageing screen roles. It's the second time in her screen career that she's been shown going from youth to advanced age, which is none too early; it's a matter oI so much more than Just make-op, and only a good actress can do it con vincingly. Bat Clandette succeeded In "Remember the Day," and re peats to International's "Tomorrow Is Forever." ?*? When Shirley Temple was to ap pear en ? that coaSt-to-coast radio salute recently, casting trouble arose; Shirley's career was-to be traced from her first picture to her latest one?and who'd play Shir ley at the age of seven, in "Baby, Take a Bow"? A casting director finally solved the problem?and the impersonator, letter perfect, turned up in the person of Mary Jane Wong, aged twenty; a full-blooded Chinese I ?*? Biog Crosby was painting a life raft as part of his sailor chores in "Here Comes the WAVES." As the scenn progressed he laid on more and more paint. Finally a gob visiting the set remarked, "If he puts another coat of paint on that raft it'll sink the second it hits the water 1" And what good news that Ingrid Bergman will do "The Bells of St. Mary's" with Crosby. She'll portray a nun, he a priest. w "A Song to Remember" Is mar velous technicolor, good music, sad bad history. This tale of Chopin and George Sand, with Paul Muni and Merle Oberoa, and with Jose Iturbi as the unseen Chopin, Is beautiful to look at, lovely to hear. ?*? , When Cliff Arquette arrived in New York to bring "Glamour Man or" to the Blue's Radio City studios, he posed for some pictures, pleading with a room clerk for hotel accom modations. But?when he asked about the reservation he'd made three weeks before, be was told that the hotel was full; no pleading did any good. So for several nights, Cliff slept on a couch in a friend's room. ?*? For more .than 19 years Bradley Baker baa barked, neighed and quacked his way through radio. And he's always longed to play a human being. He got his chance the other night on the Ed Wynn show?but as an Indian, all he had to do was grunt three times I ?*? Constance Bennett's launched as a producer; her first picture, "Paris ?Underground" is under way, with Constance Bennett, star, playing the lead. Her wardrobe's by Adrian, Gregory Ratoff is directing, and Grade Fields is billed as co-star. ODDS AND KNDS?CUHa BUMI ci mm a/ "Hollywood Mymary Tarn*," roe tmmmii mmUmt bi wlialdon m o ?d|ll i irfrw?obo loot fl panadi in an bow aador lb Ml ligka . . . Jimmy Dnmnm'i piano Jar IMS inaiads a now pmtmttmiitj /or Umsall; la mill of abadag tbo firU ao'D lot mo girb dm him Si boaoa ... film bol aoa Oaa Mym grmn tku ribbon mm pom. . . . Tboro mm rod blood m *o "faaar " myHor; f -A ? a S I ? . - m t Or nsdrgll MIIR /mm dnHMHL MUM tf /oca on, om bio boo mbiio rrmbbu slam. ?. , Ami fimaaaoa, oi "Ciail Con ?mi fimiloa," bs/m a/da Iwsm bar (am la ifcm Ybr* am; bo ab dd mm (a Dado Sm /or war am. I li nitirr'- .jtm Kathleen Norris Says: Don Juan in War Time Bell Syndicate.?WHU Features. "He established himself on m comfortably informal footing in my home." By KATHLEEN NORMS SARAH HARRISON wants to know if she should tell her husband that while he has been away in the Aleutians she has been granting her fa vors to a man at home. This is B part of her letter: "Collins will shortly be on his way home. He was an instructor in Eng lish before he got his commission as an army engineer, and I still live on the campus with my small daughter, Evelyn. My husband and I went through college together. I am carrying on his classes while he Is away, we are in every way well mated, sympathetic, companionable, and deeply devoted. "You will naturally think it incred ible, under these circumstances, that I should be capable of the conduct I have Just confessed. I find it com pletely unbelievable myself. The man to whom I surrendered my hon or is a very old friend, ten years older than I, who once lived in this neighborhood. He is a masterful type, and when, as a girl of 18, I had an oSer of marrigge from him I declined It, saying that t ? was a tittle afraid of-him, and didn't want to be despotically ruled. "When he reappeared in our circle a few months ago he Immediately took the old attitude, bossing me, laughing at me, having .his own way. He established himself on a comfortably informal footing in my house, made plans that absorbed al most all my time, and generally took possession of the situation. The rest followed. I do not understand nor explain it, and God knows I do not forgive myself. 'To Distract Suspicion.' "Now Collins is coming home, and this man is still in the neighborhood. He is paying very marked attention to a charming girl, a professor's daughter, he says, to distract any possible suspicion away from our af fair. He told me yesterday he might have to marry this girl to complete the deception. Her mother is a friend of mine, which adds to the wretchedness of the whole situation. "Mrs. Norris, I adore my hus band," the letter goes on. "If he should discover this affair and ask for ? a . divorce and possession of Evelyn, my life would be- ruined. My position here is an ideal one, friends, common interests, beautiful environm?nt, satisfactory school for my four-year-old. To sacrifice all this, and because of my own folly, is more than I can bear. "And yet the thought of secrecy is even more dreadful. Collins is simple and honest and he trusts me completely; how am I to conceal from him what would Shatter that love and trust in one single minute. He will greet the other man like an old friend, that other man will dinp with us, come and go familiarly, and I feel as if I simply couldn't face it. I have been lying awake night after night, worrying. I have gotten up and walked the floor. Do ?do write me something that win help me to find the right way out, and no matter how hard it is, I win follow it." ? ?? ? Unfortunately, Sarah, there's no right way out. It's an wrong, as it has been from the beginning. Right m ? AN VGLY SECRET An old flame reentered Sar ah's life while her husband, an army engineer, was absent on duty. Even though Sarah loves her husband, Collins, dearly, she teas unfaithful. This other man I is a masterful type. He made \ himself at home in Sarah's i house. This man has been paying court to a friend?s daughter, a young and charming girl. He says he is merely doing this to divert attention, but that he may ? marry this innocent woman. ] Sarah does not know what to do. She would like to warn the girl, but she is afraid she will lose Collins' love. She is in a torment of indecision and self-reproach. Collins will soon return, and she must act soon, if at all. things set ? long train ol other right things in motion. Wrong things have exactly the opposite effect, and from them stem countless other wrong things. That is why the responsibil ity ol those who abide by the law is so terrible and so magnificent. It is not only for themselves, and their own lives. It is to affect the current of human affairs for all time' to come. Nothing will make this affair right. But it seems to me the best thing to do is ignore it from this moment on, completely. Never allude to it again, even in your own thoughts. Stop right here. Your only safety lies in denial of it; "It did not hap pen." A.ccp i? mi xoarseii. Make no confession to your hus band; make his homecoming as warmly happy as you can. If the other man hints anything by his manner or by any allusion to what has taken place, ignore that too. Take the attitude that Jack?or whatever his name may be?was al ways apt to think of himself as a lady-killer, and try to maintain a sort of amused contempt for him. You may have tq ensure his pres ence In the neighborhood for awhile; you may have to endure the humili ation of seeing him marry your friend's daughter, but there is no help for that. If the girl loves him, she will marry him no matter what admissions you make, and even her mother will not thank you tai de stroying her romance, destroying your own happiness, your husband's happiness and your daughter's fu ture at one fell swoop. You will have to keep your mouth shut and carry the burden alone. Face this difficult thing bravely. You have made one bad mistake; don't make another. The debt you owe to your husband, your child, and society is not one that can be paid easily or quickly. Only years of fine and generous living, affection ate and eager service to all three will make you feel'right again. Don't try to hurry matters by tear ing everything to pieces now, break ing more than one heart besides your own, and destroying a little girl's confidence in the goodness of her mother and her father. "Shrine of Bill of Bights" The oldest Protestant Episcopal parish in the United States is that of St. Paul's church in Eastchester, N. Y. It is known as the shrine of the Bill of Rights because hefe it was that the principle of the freedom of the press was challenged and es tablished. This church likewise served as the court-house where Aaron Burr pleaded. . The parish church was founded in lMt, the pres ent building erected in 1766. It has recently been restored by the Daugh ters of the American Revolution, | ff? tUmla to fa a Ur-Uhr , , . Concrete for Poultry House Prove* Ideal I Can Be Built to Suit Flock of Any Size '"PHE ideal poultry house will pro 1 vide plenty of ventilation, with out drafts, direct sunlight, and be free from excess moisture and ex treme temperatures. The ideal house will also allow for expansion, unless small upits are desirable. A 20 x 20 foot house will prove sufficient for from 100 to 190 hens. The features of an ideal house can be secured from a poultry house made from ooncrete blocks, which also has other advantages, being rat-proof and long-lasting. Regardless of the shape of the roof, a tsraw loft will add year- 0 around comfort to poultry in the house. The laying house should include proper roosts built over concrete or matched dropping boards; nests protected against the light, easy to clean; covered dry-mash hoppers, easy to fill and clean; curtains for open fronts, or movable windows; running water, with sanitary drink ing fountains. In most localities, a poultry house, unless also used as a brooder house, may have one-fourth of its area in front, open, but protected by curtain rolls. A south or southeastern slope pro vides the best location for a poultry house. In building a long house, solid partitions should be erected every 20 to 30 feet, to prevent drafts. Agriculture In the News W. J. DRYDEN New Potato Facts. A scab and blight resistant potato, early producing, good cooking qual-' llj CU1U IUCCU115 market require ments ? is the promise of new varieties being developed for the 32 potato breed ing states. A starch is now being produced from domestic po tatoes, equal in quality to the Holland and Germany imported starch. Plastics are being manufactured from potato pulp, by-product of starch manufacturing. German chemists have produced a rice-like food, mainly made of pota toes and whey. Larger potatoes, of higher vitamin content, can be produced by seed potatoes being treated in gas-tight chambers. Potatoes are being used to manu facture paper and alcohol in addi tion to furnishing feed. Swine Pox Shows Rapid Increase . A substantial increase in swine pox has been reported. Swine. raisers should recognize the fact that there are two types of pox virus, says a report of the American Veterinary Medical association. One type, swine pox virus, does not cause many death losses but does undermine the hog's health. The other type, cow pox virus, causes a severe disturbance and a number of deaths. The important step in all cases is to eliminate lice from the ani mals and the premises, because lice are the actual carriers of this dis ease. Where there are no lice, there is no swine pox. If lice is present the hogs should be treated with an oil and sulphur solution and quar ters thoroughly cleaned and disin fected regularly. TELE PACT SUOHT OCCUNC Si WOOi SSOOUCWOH rvm.1 U.S.A. AVWAGS W3S-1M2 1943 vnWSnim ? II
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
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Feb. 15, 1945, edition 1
8
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