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Show SATURDAY, JANUARY 19, 1952 h Tf y pU, , hil' x'H' . v M:k 60 . , I :' $& 'ss ffi3Za ""v I? W-- ' - ' n . JNas-'vft- y' a & ' , ; lii ull '' l ' ' ' rjfu''' Jt, f I ',7' A? ft fl r i T ' . Imp Sferf rtf r ', Pe THE JOURNAL ' - i ' ' ;' ' - - ' ft ' , . If, , - ' w ' , I 11 I Vv y'A j ,'s 'yp.'.s'' , . '''v 4idrr A . A 'rw hw,t ",K f. ,',' ' a C'fV , ; I I" W'W ', ' -- fr, , r ; f '''' j by'1 '' A'''wt Irv S W &&' .yjZZgzZL m JaMwa fe3S$V . : .X. 3 .V. . . A J AW LUXURY LINER STANDS BY SniP IN DISTRESS . . . This photo made at sea from the French luxury liner He De France, which docked In New York recently, shows the British freighter Chiswick wallowing in the gales that delayed all New York liners with high swells. The lie De heavy seas during the France, the boat davits of which are in the foreground, stood by the Chiswick for 11 hours, ready to take off the straining freighters crew of 45 and save them from the angry waters. With the abatement of the gale, the Chiswick rode easier and the skipper decided he could make it to port. mid-Atlant- ic ABANDON TAFT, ALL YE WHO ENTER HERE . . . Senator James Duff of Pennsylvania stands beside the doorway of the Eisenhower-for-President headquarters which were formally opened recently at the Shoreham hotel in Washington, D.C. We like Ike Is the motto over the door. The various Eisenhower headquarters have received no open support from their recommended candidate who is busy in Europe. NEW WHITE HOUSE AIDE . . E. Bell, Palo Alto, Calif., was appointed Administrative assistant to President Truman recently. The President is currently working on his committee to clean out fraud in Washington and silence criticism. ... BELLES RING OUT In New York City, societys fairest buds of 1952 open into full flower for the coming season at the sixteenth debutant cotillion at the Waldorf Astoria hotel. Here is a line-u-p of this years newest belles in their coming-ou-t finery at the cotillion. The party for the young debutants occupied the grand ballroom at the Waldorf Astoria and also four adjacent suites of the hotel. Proceeds went to the New York infirmary as charity. FROZEN SMOKE? . . . When the thermometer dropped to 10 degrees below zero recently, shivering Milwaukee, Wise., citizens would have sworn the above scene depicted a column of smoke solidified in the frigid air as it attempted to rise from the chimney of a local residence. Actualplans ly this smoke was caused by the engine fumes of a high-flyin-g passing over, or so says the news service photographer who made the picture for us. It is one of those camera illusions that make picture snapping interesting. IN NEWS AGAIN . . Richard D. Russell, Los Angeles, and fiancee, Gloria Spires, walk in hospital hall. He is the man whose delicate heart operation was viewed by doctors coast to coast on T.V. But it belongs only to Gloria now, instead of the doctors. HEART MILK DRINKERS WIN PRICE WAR . . . There was a price war going on in the east New York section of Brooklyn, with milk as the bone of contention. For once the customers were getting the better of the deal as sellers tried to undercut each other. Here Abe Vernikoff and a clerk are mobbed by eager milk buyers as they snatch quart containers at 15 cents each. The usual retail price in this city is two such containers at 45 cents. LEWIS IN NEWS . . . John L. pledges sympathies to steelworkers. BUSY BOBO . . . New baby at the Will Lowman house in Anacortes, Wash., is Bobo, the baby gorilla. He weighs 13 pounds and Is about five months old. |