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Show ROWAN TIMKS. 1WROWAN. 1 iD$t57?cst i Loaders lnlrigut Pits. kyilli Llocl ion Prospects n N rtVr If Street, - i!h uluN, I, f I). C. C. D u'hmgUm iiiiil V. . 1 ! ,tc I t.i 0 a- c. I km a I ., -- jtur. .ft i r t we ns H I' s I ,.1l- 1 l e Quiet, Popular Chief i' a Slight, greying, W G at t 54 ! 6. are nut im.irf en.iii.-lthe fall . jnli, mill he resentt it 1 1 pall wl.u h .; the e'!e..ig e -- Dot' a, a tr cirt a i or '.itec, pi r interviewed 46 (reference Keub!.can pref- a ier- - e!a ved a goad, fi.lt.rg 15 c1 -- bc-bc- .e gau-rnarsl.i- - cum 1 nivneed nan whose Tennes-t- e ce.! ren.u.ds one occasionally of C'audc Ft; per in one of Claude's moments if you can 5'jroratorual eaten him in one. (Personal confes-- I Ike Pc pper and Keece b( th a lot of people who would j and so ci the views of ,M the first to say, these U..h!es do not NECESSARILY agree with those of the ! n; ai ; gr.ed.) v of ti e It is a little presumptuous itorefir to Keece as greying'1 j be-- f had to stretch year January to December to lock) between my bnth-da- y Ins taught m almost adern.c institutions as I attended. He was a ,r:: I '-- a 'J&W v 6 a -- - v'i 4 ' ; f i Zi I h Man-tan- tainlv if he a - Hender- colonel. , doesn't lack assurance even doesnt rattle sabers in ex- pressing it But v.c Reece We job. He is are not talking about are talking about his out on the hustings, although his trip, which will take him as far wot as Seattle and as far south ns Georgia, is mildly camouflaged ns a vacation. Anyhow Mrs. and Miss Keece are going along, and a puit of the time will be spent at a resort in the Rockies. Backstopping Reece here in the capital where nobody votes, but where a lot of writers and talkers will be Clarence Brown, remain, representative from the seventh district of Ohio, a state which might publican candidate, John son, has a chance against the popular gentleman from Wyoming. 1 heard a lot of talk, too, about the interesting possibility in Connecticut wheie Repr. Clare Luce was expected to oppose former OPA Bowles, Chester Administrator which would be a colorful affair with all the technical skill of her skill publisher husband, and all the of an advertising man, Mr. Bowles, pitted against each other. As to the house of representaticcs, has been machinery Republican grinding m at least io districts. OV Kentuck Bloody Battleground still Kentucky was catalogued as dark and bloody battleground. At the time of the luncheon, Representative Mays followers seemed to according to press reports, be called a latter-da- y mother of thatfeel, he was a martyr. If something preside "tv and which right now is should come out to change their looking hi pefully over the patterns minds on that scoie, he might go ofma'cin.ty gowns. to defeat. And we are down ; Broun and Reece complement that, as one Ri publican each it,fr very well. Reece is put it: everv 20 yiarsor so Kenlit, minified, Brown tucky changes its mind. s large, ud enough to be heard Other debatable districts were ' in the the listed in Pennsylvania, Indiana, De,i k row without using and , PA m, ancj 'wi laware. Maryland, West Virginia w he New York. manager campaign com to is goi" t. svveqf it out (that is What toe Republicans era' '' i the rest of the Washing- - count on most is the nafir.d re0Rmn- throw the rascu out o dont vacate in the action, the SlirP TTf r always Americans which theory a I line o a fellow feeling for have "reverted to after so lor., m peine.m 'ey. of raitv's any riod tinged perhans natural deference a re-l- In addition, say the GOi s --ofnnt, the uys has for a publisher. there are the usual mistak. m the ' .dishes several country paity m power which result e of one n (thats the way he put well known att.tude constituents w o tnJd F in the Brown's congressional . hereas I merely write FL'R, but or 'su-nabesides this one. Also hlI don t know who I'm who Im fle hu well M durtifd know t.p more children than I I have Ht, AGIN on the once met j ev have dabatn g The Republicans think t platform, and while I cenfrom trend Would r ,t away a urally never admit that discoveud may whim t i resent the best government : argument, tralized voters I Will i against the adminturn the ncide somewhat grudging ly into Republican pasand that Browns resounding oratory istration him the most tures. We applause. a soft-spoke- n. -- Rep-Brow- n, Ciai-c-nc- i BARBS I ! by f. i. A. ."i KATHLEEN NORRIS men want to m.irrv women and d n't to marry others, is a mystery no one has ever been able to solve. A woman can be everything admirable; pretty, clever, capable, pure and men will pass her by. Older men, younger men, popular men anil unpopu lar men, no man sees Winifred at all. Her women friends tell them about her; Ive asked Winifred Martin for you. She's a darling. Youll love her." Hut they never find her a darling and they never love her. runt rrmtnm gning: that li the guTt , a ' By WHY pi. nrw: in n r hit Sunn' it onion are mpiilur uith men, uhile other u ho may he firittier and more intelligent are not. Win Aorru explain that li onion ii ho pain ami hold men s interet hnote a fete little tru I., and l ie them. She tell nhout a iroman in her thirto ti ho, although neither heantifiil nor uealthy. i aluaxs aide to attract the atti ntion of almost an man she it ishes. Her little let hnitpie M to he aliinys feminine, aluast helpless anil dependent She h t the man she t.s tilth help her over rough sjiots in the road, or ghou her into to su im hotter ; anxthinp to tnal.o him feel superior and caje nhle. Her conversation is not brilliant, hill she Keeps it going. and she puts in a goo hit of flattery for her male companion. She gives the ini pression that she is frieiully and happy. . On the other hand, theie are women hie Adele Ade.o has been worthless character a completely all during the 20 years since she was 18. She has marned three times, she is treating her picsent husband just as she did llie two previous ones, and this marriage will end in divorce as the earlier ones Too mans girls, sass Vi did. ris. are shy and an .u ard herause mr Adile is rot pretty, somethey are really egotistical. I hey has -- he wealth. But she has male ex pi it the man to p las to tin lit, t1 at r the nders avoiago thing I co as She is to flatter them, to carry the harrelp!e-- s in her talons. Vans turn as a female col ra inv':e. she is den of conversation. as a woman can be, she is do this. I ftes unafdc to are intellectually a complete h's. But the girl to Keep the tall . r.o matter, site has a wav with men, Honing, to tiia. main the easy, ; ml at 7(1 she will still be (harming denlalionship of ilose most pleasant the thorn into thinking her in friends. sirable little armful of cuteness realizes II hen a girl finally the world. and her one she must makes that is part, she play The impression is she and easithe a hit more in game, of friendliness, hai piness natall its tilth her ness. If unni.n nod women, going south, past lonely and vv.stful into their 30s, ural charm. She must then try three of these could grasp the value do, illy hard to he interesting. no more qualities, there would be t mean I don unwilling spin-ter- s that Adele is really fncndly im-or Ive evidently gat the boy non that she merely gives one else wants. Adele got tin happy; boy and Marian got that Yale pression to And I'm suppo'.-H i bov Youre Wonderful with this big clumsy thing If it is a picnic, Adele slips a entertain H;i I should worry to the the confiding warm little hand into that interests him! nearest male hand and says, find something to pair me off with the want If thev little feet a I m onto pel me, Hang or one they don't l.ke, I'll simply sit, or woods fool about hils I have moie loams in my beaches, as the case may be. If it here than he has in his whole little whole her finger surrendeis she is a dance if he won t talk, neither and of bodv. arms the fragrant little body into will" I. her partner, presently to say, wonderful This sort of thing at 17 leads to Youre franka with lonely 37. A smarter girl would fire, beach a If its on the discafded bov with all take chords, furters and barbershop nearhir power of charm. She would Adele leans against the man come his. into hand her get him talking, ask him to She est her. slips He some night. have a and supper glitterShe sends him by fiiebght he of I960; the be surgeon big and challenge. mav ing look of affection who is going 9 be the But engineer work. may doesnt it Sometimes to take his wife some day to the times out of 10 it does. most fascinating places of the whole What Adele knows by instinct, of woi Id. course, for she has no brains, is He a The Ad'des of this world may be as shv as girl. man is that a d empty-heathe with terms callous, ( wants to be on easy The ofT tl.cv ; But give. girl with vvh m he is pairedhe has little (lilts. table, a Irmrable girl quiet. respe he wants other men to think onlv to take. She a terrific wav of getting on with trio often expects b'-- s 'tie harmless occuwill not stoop to a them; he v.'-- In- o er AYhv should sue0 Men are k over his way flatten pied coupks t, She will not and wonder h v he and that little quite conceited enough' the quiet, clumsy, d so mut h to trv to Intel foie have brunette been spec tK led buy who 'as laugh and chat r ah .t men, the to fascinating her; nice. Mill. qhv girl, If he gr's l s and tinn- - pliveis, the iar.i tic a pauses, whose special' is '.riwai who have tikm the nc ".comers who can't foi the life rf her be tc w, gnK by stoim, have been natuial and p 'ax he feels humilic ated rj by nine sop-n-s not buvs M M ate iated and an.,';-' Sloano. who , Sa a An sh" , g,Mnart enoug i n he P a conversa, wth her m granniar school t i toe girl's job, tion going: to v. o 'tr.Mim'-rial down fahs he if ind he resen' it ;t 't.unmerer nev he pc Ring an it. senate some Uav Those f t, ir Shy Girl is Egotistical. : ig.hted eyes may he correct ci a form of of Shyness in a girl is auth. rs proof on t ,e novels mg ob-i is But that won t "gotism. Self next the generation. musly egct- i- Stiffness is pride. rrc-anything to a certain prim, feels Very often Re unpopular girl or ex- lota y unmarried vvonmn, back in esnt analyze -- even if she the home town. it sonumng like this: oi-pe- htkl'on cn.mander in World War Carroll B. Keece and Hep. Brown w! cu js I never rose above the ea tc st.iMon of shavetail, ;.nd muri (I m still t. 'kirg about the i ri f.e decorations are the senator... rate) They called t.'. Service Cress, the and Washington piobabihlies D st ed Set vice Medal and rather tl an nine tre Furj o Heart. He was cited for 0 Mahoney knows he has a fight, ReCfatery ly a marshal, three genthey say, and they believe the Pir' :s the same qualities which on Hecce his decorations qualified him for his present job. He cer- - IH Fer-gii'o- d s , i . ' l -- -- press Baukhage Truman s Its said that President those navy on ti.e Palby tie war assets administra-- i has some WISE advice . on os d estine situation. apers it seems a o.uari f cloth is mat-e- r no just that, t hunt howA friend of mine loves oU drape it. cemeold epitaph? in neglected have activit.es his ,.?V'r Puns conference seems to be teries. Lately an discovering been curtailed by .K.rg a leaf and a mouldy one a country cnarc..ya;3 u tr'Tl t ' resss book, with their lergy m Not Mi h. international rules com- - may have been poison ivy. s are grey. dung the ruling. t t'-- e arm-sling- They Wont Make You Fat Potatoes are not fattening, according to Edith Lawrence, specialist in food preparation for the A. and M. college extension service. of She says studies by the bureau hun an nutrition and home ecoponomics show a medium-sizetato contains about 100 calories, no more than the amount obtained from a serving of green peas. Potatoes do not step up pourdage, Miss Lawrence says. Its the company and rich they Keep, such a? butter it. does that gravies d 27-in- . - ZL2SW. X&feJ This lends to a lonely 37." m s lav at I d 1 s ! in e ov i r n .a y '! c . 1 li 1 I. . o. lb , all Will, hr, me mail ttl.rll, il u u in v I n. oi r ' p ill V ol Ill.'eU tie of a l li.lligeii they inee to win to 17 senatari.il e,.ts fiorn their or ponents In N. w Y ik, tl.iv sav G vernar Dewic's g. ,,i neaid and t1 pi. .ruing ought campaign he pull in a Keju.l la an senator e Crey wont say warn). They Dcninctatic S n.,tar Mead will I to run ir the They lilt ti ey had a chance in I), ..ware and Wed Yu g nia and that if trie h. elats wiu- i a - t at that moment they wiuld win in Mis- - hal Reece erals and a ! - c ' '. It lak t The GOP i : n , inti-i- j Dcmaut erence. v D ; . t Fl I I n in ti- u and futuu-c.l-T.- ac f, : .1 IK attU sh.-wi- Rep-bl- K ;asir...n ha'.e i , w i.il. )en Sl - l ci nt ' i ' ; u ; nan u I sl.awid tn.it. . from Lithe t. and his. He i , i I V P irties For example, of radio folk was look at the rg machinery behind the RoFuHn an lines. Our hosts were .m Chairman Carroll B end of the table, and ne at .rut'ce f.ipabla ..a Campaign Manager (A C.urtnce Blown at the other. s.milar v mt into Deniccrat.c teiri-;.rvt:.! te reported in a j j.t-e- , , - lit ' ! N, i . , 1 tin- r. sat'.-f.- re- - cause t.'.c ; r--; J r- . utders . , .t I n UN lie..' ' , c - c. l i . i n, ,1 I In tl c f -t p.ai i I un,1, the Republli al.s ta. i . t f v "igs they did which duin with O eir consciences. the volte of the vote-fiVVi : r is t card in the land. '.d newspaper correspond-r'.sVt tins; courted by both cer'.ly. n crowd nun a hmcheon-tabl- e K mu ', npait f Callup Poll Hearten $ COP r i j . ' i '.f .'m t ty- - Ml iM'S tT .;? t ! , i:iH ( .1 I mary 0f lT ; notc-gOt- h - at- - II. I M muM v I fi ! and wan! .ought. I ! 1.1 J Ill . r;7 J MI S FUG" ! la.1i grace- - 3, ! mniF's t. . If full. at Cl l.I.g . ITS .-- 1,4 - 1 - ' , On' 1 ( It -- I .tc to;. . (I : v- -t t.l jur M JtM(t . M. j.f g: hi S. w , s c I.., i 1 ' illlc Mi ll Nt L nt, iili I I'ur tin Niii'iTV heat mure s Il , i NAV.. f. HC . sn-1- ni m ( i II r IU- it.u kiia(;i: tnih 'I ik ai It ,1V .1 1'imm orris Savs: katlilcpn (JOF tTAII . .i'll 1 ! t o Fein Vienna whin th gll-.lpaWols divided up Fun pc and bi client on Ilian w.il. ran! today li drprfsnnly the iiaiiie. We invent nioilern lurlhixlN nt warfare. . . . I(iik-ethat may reach the moon, atomic Im m !ii that Miik navies. germs that can destroy rivilialuins. . . . But the weapons uf peace never keep pace with the weapons of war . . . nor do the diplomats who wield the weapons of peace. The '.m,e iruwd which f.ulid to head ell the last war is here again even 'nine of tie same iiowd which sat in at tie last Falls peji e Cnlifel cm e , Look at their laces. Poker fac es No life, no lift, no pas. sum fat the peace they ere m bond faces, ptcnecnpicd facts, bnied with the endless translations. Boied with the whole hole-doiNot a man of diplomacy. among tin in who lost nn arm or a leg, who knows vvh.it it is to suffer on the ball lelield. These are the men who me wilting the peace. lo-lit- i Jimmy Kyn.e.s is not boied. Byrnes , pain nt, precise Jimmy sits on the Imnt row peib.qs he You . is too polite, too patient. . Kt tec shoiilmg down dt Jimmy. You w ,h you bad u toil phone to le.uh I. mi theie, way down below. You wi h you could tell lum T:. it w.i, a great spend you m. ale tne mm i day, Jimmy, but hni.'h it. Tell them tne lest of the stoiy. Tell them not only that Urn United States isnt going to remain isolated but also that vveie going to ldise I, ell with anyone who blocks our path to peace. Tell tin in t!,at millions of Americans ure fed up with all tins training; that milbuns of Amei leans mean business and will back you up in anything t . a star and sliding down the moon . . . thats what our ('el sonality plus bears do. CWINGIV on tse lor (nh, carriage covers, nut scry linens. t . a fat nii.1 (iinnv you'll Ituu.U 1 hi 1.. riiiuor 'liu-lirs- . Ml 7oV tl..' Han tor at 17 malits fiom Iaiu 2 Ov 2 to Sj til ill mein i. St ml lour HI dor ta ri h.-- i ) i ii ih. . Sonin Omni Victoria of Finland Hail Sword of Her Own IlohaMv the only queen of modern times to have a sword of her own was Victoria of England. Forged for er in 1850, this sword, 27 inc hes in li lgth and two pounds m weight, was used by the queen dining the lemninmg 51 years of her reign in conferring knight- - I i ... If the days of the de Medicis. Fn nch had only been smart. If they had only painted out the gold and substituted white crosses! Then pel haps the bored diplomats sitting below would remember. . . . white crosses . . . from Guadalcanal and Stalingrad, from Salerno and New Guinea, from Tobruk and the Kap-ldfrom Normandy and Aaciun . Close your iyes and you can see them. . . Thousands of white The dead speak .rosses. . Ve who lie here have nothing lelt to give. To all your praises we axe deaf and blind. "We may not even know if San 7taniti.ro. (alii. cents t..r IatU'lO. N.rm . gold ornaments. VVoodwoik carved in ornate shapes, heavily encrusted with gold remnants of the lush 20 No n Aiumid the senate chamber of the palace of Luxembourg arc great, Irrlo N'oodlorrnft Itrpt t In'lotc goti-ntin- you do. ( 1217 Ui hood. j Get O'Sullivan SOUS as well as Heels next time you have your shoes repaired. you CAH WALK FARTHER WITHOUT tiring: . . . . you . betray The hopes we cherished for mankind. But ti.e diplomats below dont cm to hear. . . . Men in red p'u-seats, fastidious men in led ph. h seats, their nails polished, pin cravats carefully tied. They il o t seem to hear. They are thmk-ii- , about proceduie and maju. ity iii'ii, vetoes and prestige and iiotlir they will get out in tune t. kc tea with Mis Ogden M..O. Oi e man does hear. He sits op-- p Heres One Of The Greatest i . h ... A big, Jimmie Byrnes u i ,',lh man, bis hair not even . Evutt of Austraba IKs p.i'id ne ney accent is uni u lured but e the only man d.ai ' to speak. He w o mines anywheie rear preach-- .to t . w , j UO YOU CAN BUY If you lack BLOOD-IRO?ou girls and women who suitor so from simple anemia that you're pale. weiiK, "cl ragged out" this may be due to lacfc of blood Iron So try Lvdla E Ptnkham's TABLE1S one of the best Home wavs to build up i"d b,09o 's case". get more strength lnsui fn the greatest Tablets are one an bov' tonics you -- PlnX-Lam- c nod-tro- . . ; ing the Sermon on the Mount, who bored men in tl e led pi i h at' Mat they must love ti.eUn-a- r u . v iji! ois as themselvir. a'atitly Evatt steps on the ties tells them tl cy h ne lag nations i.i . e no business sabotaging ti.e dcclui goal of others. . . . They jon t like Evatt, but they listen Even patient, polite Jimmie Byrrus jj. sn t like Evatt. But he listens. Thousands of men under white jrosses listen, too. ,i4 t .e I. . . CALOX . bartering over peace Clement Attlee, prime minister of d the man who Bntain, speaks the miracle of defeating vVar Leader Winston Churchill a modest man, a sincere, earnest man. His bald head shines under !he kheg lights. But it is no halo. . Some hours before Attlee was . aaggling with Byrnes over the of Germany bartering over die peace of the world; wanting to :rade off a British policy m Palestine for an American policy n Germany. per-orme- fu-.u- change to for the tottic on your smile ect F ffirient Calnx t tu-trays: film . . . bring out remove Helps all the natural lustre of your s smile. special ingredient in Calox . . . encourages regular massage which has a tonic effect oa gums . . . helps make them firm and rosy, lone up your smile. ..with Calox! M.d4 m jarmm, Me Kroon UboroUrm, know-bo11 ytan o pbarmsctutKsl 2A |