aiu* Jtaita jLicatrd we wish She hadn't picked him tor a spouse. Part of our reason is purely selfish. Miss 1 on the eyes and we are some#tot saddened B bility that she’ll be traipsing Off to Monafco an from movie screens for a spell, perhaps even ly. The chief reason, though, has to do with c happy marriages between American girls fern eigners. Actress Kelly seems to to a rrxlghty lot nicer than the average run of female HoUj and we think she deserves a better chance th marriages between American girls and princes indicate she’ll have, Perhaps it’s unfair tq mention Miss Kelly sentence with Rita Hayworth, but the allusioi ble since Rita ’had a prince, too, and the jn work. Then there were others, although our me zy. There was, we recall, a print* with the name of Reventlow-Haugwits, pr something Ji* married an American heiress — Was it Both maybe? Anyway, that was a flop. And those •# of .brothers named Mdivani, as we recall. They Russians and they came to jaie referred to by 'the marrying Mdivanis,” so successful were 6 ging U. 8. gals with rich fathers. Those mart* tOO. . •' > , So it would seem thft Miss JCe&y W pttj which the prospects aren’t too good, at ftost ; sail, it should notbe forgotten that one An >the same ts.inevltar tch didn’t ory tut e, but actually a king, HU The Wallis Simpson - td ar as we.knbw, happily so and her prince do aa well. Prom The Greensboro Record It Takes Courage To refrain from gossip when others atx about you delight in who is being abused, and not dishonestly To stand up for an absent To live honestly within on the means of others. To be talked about and yet remain silent when a word would justify you in the eyes of others, but which you cannot speak without injury to another. To be a real man, a true woman, by holding fast to your ideals when It causes you to be looked upon as strange and peculiar. To refuse to do a thing which is wrong, though others de sire it. . . v To dress according to your income, and to deny yourself what you can not afford to buy. , • To live always according to your convictions. <—The Trdmpe&r. Mayfield + son, almost 37 has-been f steady with a tine girl . . . » graduate. . . school>*ctoer year* -old . .same nMtortU. •IIU A tvu fortunate ' ggp^son lnsis£ there mtftr gnyonbljiw, tune."; Thl*. . ife .spite Up ail her time. K; «*VtJ as soon as he ge» home He Vni discharged from thd.Navy a #ifcr *a#» : after serving four yearn •}.' and came oat rather changed... and his health rather aertoLiy affected. In fact >. the doctors both at college and here at hem* . inaiated he_«ire op hfkb blood pressure . family trait . Consequently he is not settled in b& life’s w®£ V\ as he wtntt to complete his education, etc. So, he does have reasons . for not com aiming himself romantically. That much I understand. My young aon 25 . has done and Is doing all he can to diaeowr age the UVendtfiip between his brother . and this nice girt. He feels be could . "do better." This gin, you see. while educated. . . traveled even abroad -i is not the glamorous clothes horse, night club We* . which toy young er son prefers She is attractive. . wholesome. . but a large girt ..' not fat but large, boned . being , of Scandinavian ancestry. However. . my son is over six feet 210 pounds so they look well together. since the two boys have always been very close . *aring bank accounts »- . clothes, etc., it is most unfortunate that the younger 'boy Is against the gtrtj Several months ago my son told her to go out on other dates... which should have given her an Inkling. I have discovered, though ... . she is deeply to love with him . .v and my heart aches for her. She .would make him an exception al wife . one in a thousand . Mkm her own clothes;. kni»s beautifully •„>. fine character. Of course, I realise there must be love to make a marriage but I km afraid t my son is suppress ing his Teal feelings. . beeabs* of his brother’s attitude; . . and ridi cule. t should state he approved Cf her at'first but his current glri Mend being a sophisticated grad uate of .a private girls’ school. , former model ■ J was and is re i,poiuiibl<f*lor Jds change of feeling. . The tdo' girls, being such oppc. altcs did not 'click at all <. and the "curteht 1W T helifeve to hr < at the bottom of the Who.e thing. ■ * ‘ ?;.JM My son went ouX.oaa.jlate with an ex-girl friend the oth« right. • and when this girl friend called. . to find out why be had not dropped by. as usual. . . * trie* to hedge fee him but she guessed. 80® broke down completely. then felt so-ashamed and embarrassed t . she apologised for enibaiTasB ing me. - »? ? > Now I doi t want to interfere in my som' llvt* . . they ire grand ya,..*’^«fd I love thr" . .. but it .breaks my mgs,,<S...4d I love them deart}’ ,g . i but it .breaks my heart to ;«e my' son Suppress what I rCTHy feel Js love for this girl .. .because of his brotafera ridiculous attitude off”. '.~t or should I try-to encour “f* ttfe this girl to spend a little more on ciothes- She doesn't spend much K . as she is helping her brother through college. Also . . should I teal her to try making him Jealous is g little competition. . .or do I dare? y" She is a gin' of high principles . gage to chun* every Sunday . . don't know If ahe would ap of advising her to "go after man.*' But X am so anxious to lp her. . . As I feel if my son d finally make up his mind. . he'would be so happy about it? fh will men realize “all is not that gutters?" After a coupie ivorces. families alimony? ■ MOM ■ T «-hc-ia-i iri T~1 *+ irt all i snouion i. . \ in an honesty. . . advise you to inter art. . but 1 can't help feeling as you do . that a slight nudge .. % might not do any harm ,» Oh, let 's both of us admit, how even that it might. Stirring your finger in other peoples' romance can do a lot of damage . usually does. . . but not always. And it's mtCl — GREENVILLE TUESDAY, JAN. 17 7:00 looming Show 7:36 Weatherman 7:30 Moraine Show 7:55 Farm Rows 3:00 Capt. Kangaroo 3:00 Romper Room 10:00 Morning Meditations 10:15 Coffee Cup Theatre 11:15 Arthur Godfrey Time 11:30 Strike It Rich 12:00 Newt •11:10 Weatherman 12:15 Love of Life 12:30 Search for Tomorrow li:43 Guiding Light 1:00 Jack Paar Show 1:30 Love Story 2:00 Family Fare 3:30 Art Linkletter's nousepaffy 3:00 Big Payoff 8:30 World Geography 4:00 Brighter Day 4:15 Secret Storm 4:30 On Your Account 5:00 Cactus Jim Club 6:30 Cartoon Carnival 3:00 News 3:10 Weatherman 8:15 Tarheel News St Safety Tips 8:35 Sports 6:30 Eddy Arnold Show 7:00 Jewel Box Jamboree 7:15 Doug Edward* 7J0 Name That Tune 6:90 Phil Silvers Show !:30 Eddie Cantor :00 Make Room For Dally 8:30 Cavalcade Theatre 10:00 $34,000 Question IftSO Do You Trust Your Wife 11:03 World Tonight 11:03 Sports Nlteoap 11:13 Weatherman 11:15 tale Show WfVD — DURHAM - TUESDAY, JAN. 17 7:00 Today 8:00 Feature Playhouse Didg Dong School Ernie Kovace Show 18:00 Tennessee Ernie 13:80 Feather Your Nest 2:00 Afternoon the ' not always” you and I have to gamble on. I can teli from your attitude to ward this girl. . . what a deserving . . honorable person she is. And you. knowing your son. . . must have a pretty good idea. . . as to the real state of his heart. That’s why I aay . t .if talking to this girl fairly frankly . might help matters out it’s a chance you’d want to take . . isn't It? This doesn’t mean you’d want your son to plunge into matrimony right now. . before he is ready and this is a point you ought to make. But. ... if there is any thing she can do . . to keep his interest up. . I hope yon can Help her do it I might add. . . I sure wouldn’t let my son guess . you’re trying to season the porridge for him. Id sure talk . . and stiffly, too . . . to the younger son . . .about trying to run his brother's heart affairs for him. I’m still tempted.to aay “don’t meddle” . but somehow I just can’t! M. M 3:00 Matinee 4:00 Invitation Playhouse 4:15 Modern Romances 4 :00 Queen For A Day 5:00 Mickey Mouse Club 6:00 Superman 6:30 Sportsview 6:40 Today’s Weather 6:45 France’s Buried Treasure 1:00 Carolina News 7:15 John Daly News 1:30 The Great GOdersleeve 8:00 Hie Chevy show 9:00 Make Room lor Daddy 9:30 I Led Three Lives 10:00 Racket Squad 10:30 Big Town 11:00 Lata News Final 11:05 Late Evening Weather 11:10 Dateline Europe 11:40 WTVD Previews & Sign Off W.N'AO — TELEVISION TUESDAY, JAN. 17 6:45 Morning Almanac 7:00 Morning Show 8:00 Captain KangkVoo 9:00 Captain Kangaroo 10:00 Morning Movie 11:00 Camera Carousel 11:30 Strike It Rich 12:00 Industry on Parade 13:15 Love of Life 12:30 Winter Scenes 1:00 Jack Paar Show 1:30 The Piggly Wiggly 2:00 Robert Q Leads 2:30 Featurette 3:00 Big Payoff 3:30 Bob Crosby 4:00 Ootfee Break 4:30 On Your Account - 5:00 Pinky Lee S40 Howdy Doody 6:00 Capitol ^igest 6:10 Sports Report 6:20 Star Time 6:40 Weather 6:45 Doug Edwards 7:00 Amos Si Andy 7:3C Name That Tune 8:00 Phil Silvers Show 8:30 Navy Log 9:00 Meet Millie 9:30 Caivatadr Theatre 10:00 104,000 Question 16*80 Do You Trust Your Wife News Roundup * — * — * EARL WILSON ON BROADWAY * — * — * GUYS St OALS St GAOS St GOSSIP ... NSW YORK—It s ft strsn** World. A couple oft Inebriates were dispensing each other in a Mad ison Av. bar and one said, "Take off your contact lenses and TO punch you one-" Did you ever think how much TV adorer'iyou? Dinah Snores personality lit up a drato rehearsal room on W. 97th St. She was eating a hamburger, taking 35-rnm. pictures—and wait ing for Perry Como with whom shell do a -duet on the IfDC Tues day night program against Phil Silvers. m ^ ^ ^ ^ -t, _ DINAH SHORE He* Hollywood troupe of almost 80 had all come in to do this ahopr. At $1300 expenses each, that would be about $30,000. ••This to all coming from ME?" Dinah said laughing, but a little teriouk, too. A high school reporter confused the wealthy Dinah recently by asking her. “Wbatfc your goal?" “Its not fair to make people think! ' she said. "Since that I've been asking myself ‘What s my goal?' My goal 1$ to find mit what my goal Is." Dinah's sending dtr, Missy to a g<wi-'nro«rreaaiv* school: “She wbn*t be able to read,’’ Dinah said, tout shell be happy about it." Sonja Henie was left hanging, literally, for about 30 seconds at the Roxy, way up In the air.Hoo. The rope for her Peter Pan en trance stuck. Too many people crowded around for the stagehands to pull it. She was caught there, unable to move, mighty nervous, too. But after her 4th show, in one day. she felt fine. At midnight she was at the £3 Morrocco Champagne Room downing sirloin and mashed potatoes. Fellow ? No, Mama f Dallas’ Jayne Mansfield has evi dently been grabbed for the movies by Marilyn Monroe’s studio, 3$th Century-Fox. Jayne, the gal in the towel In ‘Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? ", has agreed to teat for the lead in their picture. "The Wayward Bus,” the John Steinbeck novel, here this week. George Ax elrod n direct the test, and since he wrote and directed "Rock Hunter." Jaynell feel comfortable ’the part’s described as "a young lady who's handicapped by a body that attracts men and bctys.'* Lillian Roth came down from Boston for a party for the ‘TU Cry Tomorrow” picture and told fcne she hopes the picture ll do people good, but added. "Self-sympathy doesn't help anybody Hurt s -a crutch. Anyway, you axtot get sympathy from others, until you quit sympathizing with yourself ." Football -Star Story from North Caroline. St*te% Bill Hensley; -the Dean called In the star and re buked him Mr hit- low grader— 4 F.s and one D. "How do you ex piain. this?" . . . “I guess." sud the star, ‘I just put too much tbne in on one subject." THE MIDNIGHT EARL . ... Audrey Meadows to taging her father, the Rev. Francis.J. Cotter, to Havana for the weekend The N. Y. Yankees may, sell ticket* in Penn Station and Grand Central Station ... A husbend-and-wife team to back at work because they -were hit with a back tax rap |. . StoMr Jack Cassidy at The Jta* sallies, says he and Shirley Jobes \ * (DSON IN WASHINOnrON ♦ Hirt Farmer John Faces Fancy Figuring on Soil Bonk Plan by rsnat kdbon NBA ffMMiff CtlUBM W/ASHINGTON—(KiA>—Tb* «W»»e ” will find himself In weeds U high M he aits down with pencU «d paper to eat of President Eisenhower** new average Fanner John, owning end have Ween under cultivation. To make it simple, say that he hadtoaere* In «tn or < •'ttto the north, ray he had the other «0 acre* in wheat, tt to j the south, say he had 20 acres to cotton and tbO twnainlng 40 » soybaart* or peanut*. Under the acreage allotment* now to wheat acres were cut down to *0, or that cut down to IS. On top of this, pile the **Part one, the “reserve” plan, is aimed to reduce ----- ... - , duction whUe the huge government surpluae* are being diapoeeo of. So it la propoaed to reduce acreage undid WvvstKB ear an average of 20 per cent. Bla idle FABMEB JOHN CAN’T BE ABEKO to take * totoi acreage. So the government proposes to pay him a of the value of the crop he would have raised.” Since he wouldn’t have to buy teed or fertiliser 0 harvest the crop, Ms costs of operation would bo counted as a saving. The 50 acres of wheat ait 20 p be reduced by 10 acres. If this land had averaged 20 bulbeU to the *cre, at its crop would be worth >300. If farmer la by three acres. If this land averaged two thirds of a acre, at $175 a bale, its crop would bring $$50. If th paid half this, hell get $175. In return for this, the fawner would have to this reserve acreage in any cash crop and not to it. • . . | Payment would not be in cash, ho wove Credit Corporal ion “certificates," issued at would be good for an equivalent amount of surplus wheat (or cotton) at current market could sell the certificate* back to COC for toe commodities, aril * them on toe open market, or Bis farm for a price rise. Assuming this la a& jdtor, turn now to the tkm reserve,” part of thia . _ This i» applicable to an the rest of tha told the under cultivation, regardless of crop. It in New England, where few of the basic crops the government would say to Farmer John in "The government will make a three-year (or maybe contract with you to take more land out of production.” It must net be planted in other cash crops or BrMMp o» ' i - S Thereafter the government would pay the fanner annually to keep this land in reserve. MEG MYLES wen t planning a wedding — yet . . Busty Meg Myles (of “Fbebix 3ity”» makes her local cafe detout at the Stage Coach Inn Feb. 14. The A-sub Nautilus has dived ;hree time* as deep as any other sub . . « Note irom the Riviera: One of the major gamblers is Bdda Piano, Mussolini's daughter . . . Oanny Kaye and his daughter will record novelty tunes ittr Decca . . . 3tripper Lola deFee says her book. Don't Give Dp the Strip,'' will do more than name names—it'll give measurements . • ■ Next spring’s H-bomb test will feature a bomb dropped from 60,000 feet .. . . Elsa MarUnelli. the Italian actress in * FUNNY BUSINESS <■ _gs^‘ k_ M Jg g *. af- -WL si Aik- &

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