The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, October 22, 1948, Image 3
THE NEWBERRY SUN. NEWBERRY. S. C.
WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS
Security Council Gets Berlin Issue,
Inconclusive Meeting Stalls Action;
Russia Proposes Big Four Parley
By Bill Schoentgen, WNU Staff Writer
(EDITOR’S NOTE: When opinions are
Western Newspaper Union’s news ana
* n these columns, they are those of
y*ts and not necessarily of this newspaper./
DEBATE:
Inconclusive
For better or tor worse the U. N.
security council had become wed
ded to the problem of what to do
about Berlin, but there was no
Honeymoon.
Russia had boycotted the secur
ity council debate, and although An
drei Vishinsky, Soviet delegate, at
tended the first meeting in body
he remained monstrously aloof
from the proceedings in spirit.
THAT FIRST session was not
only inconclusive but downright
dull. No one would have thought
that the 11 men mulling over this
world crisis in the Chaillot palace
in Paris were engaged in delibera
tions of so momentous a nature that
they might turn the balance for
peace or war in the world.
While Vishinsky sat dourly and
silently—playing the part of the vi
carious witness to the hilt — the
American and French delegates
read polite tirades against the man
ners and morals of Soviet motives
and politics.
WHEN THE T\yO western speak
ers were done, Juan A. Bramuglia
of Argentina, acting president of
the council, was forced simply to
drop the whole business, temporari
ly at least, with a hollow thud.
After the French delegate had
completed his review, Bramuglia
waited expectantly for a time, then
observed mildly that since he
didn’t seem to have any more
speakers on the list the meeting
would be recessed.
It appeared probable that the del
egates would take considerable time
for studying the charges of the
U. S., Great Britain and France
against Russia before meeting
again. There was a possibility, too,
that the security council might de
lay further formal meditation on
the oCF chance that Russia might
lift the Berlin blockade and the
Big Four foreign ministers might
take up the entire German ques
tion.
BIG FOUR:
More Talks?
Russia, whether the Kremlin ad
mitted it or not, was dissatisfied
with the way its pet Berlin situa
tion was being handled. The Sovi
ets wanted it out of the hands of
the U. N. and in the hands of the
Big Four foreign ministers.
EVEN WHILE the United Nations
was deciding to discuss the issue,
Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Mol
otov was sending a note to the
U. S., Britain and France urging
that the four foreign ministers meet
to consider both the Berlin crisis
and the problem of Germany as a
whole.
It was a peculiar development,
^inasmuch as it set the western na
tions to wondering
how the Soviets
could justify such
a conference in
view of their fla
grant defection in
the long, futile and
disillusioning Mos
cow talks which
had ended recently.
Molotov’s note,
however, claimed
that the U. N. security council did
not have the authority to deal either
with the Berlin crisis or the overall
subject of Germany.
REVIEWING the six weeks of ne
gotiations in Moscow, the note said
that the talks did not break down
over a Russian demand for control
of. all air traffic in and out of Ber
lin, as the allies had contended.
All that Russia wanted, said Mol
otov, was some control over air
transport to prevent black market
money deals.
U. S. Ambassador Bedell Smith
had agreed with that condition, Mol
otov insisted, and quoted him as
saying: “It is quite understandable
the Soviet government wishes^ to
have certain guarantees against
utilization of air transport for il
legal currency deals or black mar
ket operations. Satisfactory guar
antees of such kind could easily be
• secured.”
IF SMITH’S statement is correct,
Molotov reasoned, then the Soviet
Union believes it is possible an
agreement may be reached be
tween the four powers on “a mu
tually satisfactory basis.”
Anyway, Molotov continued right
eously, he couldn’t see what all
the fuss was about. He claimed
there was no blockade of Berlin,
adding that the “defensive, pro
tective measure” did not threaten
international peace and security.
One More Alliance
Sen. Chan Gurney (R., S. D.) f
chairman of the senate armed serv
ices committee, has proposed a for
mal military alliance that woald
pledge the U. S. to fight if the na
tions of western Europe were to be
attacked by Russia.
He announced that he would ask
the next congress to approve his
proposed alliance and to back it up
with a new lend-lease program to
help rearm western powers.
Ex ‘Vice’ Twice
Former Vice President John
Garner and President Harry Trn-
man, also a former vice presi
dent, staged a cheery reunion
when Mr. Truman came to
Uvalde, Tex., in the course of his
pre-election campaign tour. The
two are old buddies from way
back, and (he visit didn’t hurt
the President any politically,
either, because Cactus Jack is a
mighty popular man in Texas.
INFLATION:
What Price Bread?
Ever since the price of wheat de
clined under the impetus of this
year’s bumper crop a good many in
flation-harried Americans have been
asking when the price of bread was
going to take a corresponding drop.
The answer is that it probably
won’t, and the reason is that al
though the price of wheat is down
the cost of the other basic bread
ingredients are not.
BAKING INDUSTRY leaders, in
a considerable ferment over recent
charges that bread prices are de
liberately being kept aloft, have
said—and with some justification—
that the present costs of bakery
goods reflects “a remarkable
achievemept in resisting inflation
ary pressures.”
They base this contention on bu
reau of labor statistics figures which
show, among other things, that the
baker today is paying $2.53 for the
four major ingredients of bread that
cost him $1.00 in 1939.
THAT FIGURES out to an in
crease of 153 per cent in the cost of
raw materials; yet the American
housewife is paying on the average
only about 63 per cent more for her
.bread than during the 1935-39 base
. period used by the bureau of labor
statistics in computing its cost-of-
living index.
Last November, BLS figures show,
flour reached a record of 164 per
cent over the base period, and in
December wheat of the type used
for bread flour hit a record high of
214 per cent over the base. And
although flour and wheat prices
have slid somewhat recently, the
flour used in bread now on the
grocers’ shelves was purchased by
the baker several weeks ago when
prices were up.
OF THE FOUR major bread in
gredients—flour, sugar, shortening
and milk—only sugar now has a
lower BLS index than bread.
And still another factor which has
the bread-makers beside themselves
singing in the wilderness is the
mounting costs of other elements in
volved in producing the staff of life
—such as labor, machinery, distri
bution and packaging.
Any way you slice it, it’s still in
flation.
ASSISTANCE:
For President
Former President Herbert Hoover,
who knows whereof he speaks when
he dwells on the rigors of being the
nation’s chief executive, has a cam
paign under way now to add more
members to the U. S. cabinet who
could act as “operating vice presi
dents” assisting the president.
HOOVER IS chairman of the non
political government reorganization
commission which will recommend
additional cabinet members to act
in that capacity.
He did not specify how many will
be urged beyond the present nine-
man cabinet, but members of his
commission said the figure under
consideration was three.
“Every president has recommended
additions to the cabinet,” said Hoo
ver. “There are nearly 80 independ
ent agencies of the government
running around loose in addition to
the nine cabinet departments.”
Members of the commission have
revealed that among the additional
cabinet departments that have been
considered—but not decided upon—
is a social security department, in
cluding public health, public works
and education. They are separate
bureaus now. ‘
THE REORGANIZATION commis
sion, which is working on all angles
of government reorganization, was
appointed under an act of the last
congress. President Truman ap
pointed a third of the commission
and the senate and house each named
a third.
LEWISIAN:
Anti-Truman
*
It was an accomplished fact that
sooner or later John L. Lewis would
have his say about the 1948 elec
tion, feeUng as he obviously does
that no political campaign would
be complete without his having ex
pressed an opinion on it.
At the United Mine Workers’ 40th
convention in Cincinnati the UMW
chief shoved his foot in Mr. Tru
man’s campaign machinery by
turning a sour and sarcastic eye
on the President’s bid for re-elec
tion.
PRESIDENT Truman is "danger
ous to the United States,” said
Lewis, and he had his mine worker
convention delegates agreeing with
him. They made it clear that they
would not go along with the bulk
of AFL, CIO and other independent
unions now working for Mr. Tru
man’s election.
While the delegates cheered and
applauded his criticisms, Lewis de
clared that:
“Harry Truman is totally unfit
for the position. His principles are
elastic. He is careless with the
truth. He has no special knowledge
of anything. He is a malignant,
scheming sort of individual who is
dangerouk not only to the United
Mine Workers but dangerous to the
United States of America.”
PROCEEDING oratorically in
this vituperative vein, Lewis devot
ed 25 of the 50 minutes he took for
his speech to derogating the Presi
dent in general and specific terms.
He charged that Mr. Truman ve
toed the Taft-Hartley labor law only
“for the record of his campaign.”
He said the President prosecuted
the mine workers and had them
fined twice “because he was too
cowardly to send me to jail.”
“I WAS WISHING he would put
me in jail,” Lewis went on remi
niscently, “which is what a white
man would have done rather th%n
rob you.”
John L. Lewis was saving his
opinions on Gov. Thomas E. Dewey,
the Republican candidate, for a lat
er phase of the UMW convention.
Lewis doesn’t especially like
Dewey, either.
Statesman
Cordell Hull, former secretary
of state, observed his 77th birth
day anniversary quietly at Be-
thesda naval hospital where he
has been a patient for the last
two years since his retirement
from the high public office. Doc
tors told him he would be able
to leave the hospital soon.
URANIUM:
New Find
Practically nobody, except the
people who look for it and work
with it, knows much about uranium
—the raw material of splitting
atoms—but the world-wide search
for that metal is constant, often
frenetic and .of inestimable impor
tance.
CLAIMS THAT “another uranium
deposit has been discovered” are
becoming more and more frequent.
And more often than not, the dis
covery flops completely. Or if it
does turn but to be a possible
source of supply the whole thing is
immediately wrapped in atomic se
crecy and the world hears nothing
more about it.
The latest of these discoveries, an
nounced recently by Columbia uni
versity, might turn out to be pro
ductive enough to be of vast sig
nificance to the world.
SCIENTISTS have unearthed a
new, green mineral which was found
clinging to mine walls in the Bel
gian Congo. It is a relative of the
yellow camotite, from which the
U. S. gets its domestic uranium in
the Rocky mountains. Camotite is
one of the two best sources of the
atomic element, uranium.
Whether the green mineral is
plentiful is not yet known. It now
is being analyzed at Columbia uni
versity. Like the yellow camotite,
it contains about 60 per cent urani
um.
If the new mineral proves a good
uranium source, the discovery
might be the most important of its
kind since the atomic bomb first
burst upon the world. More than
100 minerals containing uranium
are known, but the element has
been too difficult to extract
FOOD, COAL:
Root of Evil
Two shortages, food and coal, are
responsible for most of the discom
fort and quite a few of the major
troubles in the world, a report by
the United Nations economic af
fairs department says.
Scarcity of basic foods and coal
have lamed reconstmction efforts,
provided an impetus to inflation and
generally upset the world’s economy
by reducing human strength to work
and produce.
Salvage Crews
Comb Berlin
For Treasures
BERLIN.—They call themselves
the “Kings of the Ruins.”
Theirs is a perilous profession.
Its . dangers run from collapsing
walls to bites from overgrown and
ferocious rats.
They are the men—and boys—who
make a profession of digging in Ber
lin's thousands of bomb-ruined
buildings for such treasures as
scrap metal, plumbing and heating
fixtures, furniture and wood.
This "treasure under the rubble”
is a much greater lure now than the
old boyhood business of picking up
scrap metal for sale to junkmen
for a few pennies. In Germany's
battered cities, it’s more danger
ous, too.
Perilous Work.
The greatest peril to the salvage
gangs is the collapse of walls.
Hardly a day passes in Berlin but
someone is killed or injured in such
an accident. Another ever present
danger is the explosion of old
bombs or other munitions in the
ruins.
The salvagers have a system
which requires that every working
crew always must post a sentry to
keep an eye on the weak walls.
"We also post a sentry to keep an
eye on the rats,” one salvager said.
“We run across some pretty big
ones in the ruins, large and savage
ones.
Smells of the Dead.
“But no sentry coqld do anything
about the terrible smells. They are
the smells of the unburied dead of
the bombing war, or dead animals
and of stagnant pools.”
These probers of the ruins need
no maps to find the treasures they
seek.
“All one needs to know,” said the
foreman of one crew, “is the ordi
nary architecture of an apartment
building. What we are after espe
cially for salvage is the plumbing
pipes and fixtures. Metal eaves-
troughs also fetch valuable re
turns.”
Cattle Buyer, 9, Claims
Title of Youngest Trader
MOSCOW, TENN.—Nine-year-old
Corbett-Yeager Jr., sop of a farm
er, strikes a hard bargain as a
cattle buyer.
He’s making money, too, for a
youngster, because he knows a good
calf when he sees one.
Corbett started in business for
himself when he was five years old.
His father gave him a patch of cot
ton—half an acre to be exact.
Corbett was too young to plant
his own cotton the first year. But
he watched over his crop. When he
marketed his first bale he got $75.
His father helped him buy two
heifers.
Two years later he swapped one
heifer for a saddle horse. He sold
the other for $116.42.
Corbett has been buying and sell
ing ever since. Now he grows an
acre of cotton which nets him
around $190.
Some time ago young Corbett
bought a 250-pound calf for $65. Lat
er he sold it for $251.12.
“Now I think I’m going to get me
a heifer to raise as a grand cham
pion,” he said.
Sailors and Marines Swim
Underwater in Arctic Ice
SAN DIEGO.—Marine corps and
navy underwater swirmners trained
during the war have penetrated
Arctic ice and slush in below-sur-
face forays in recent Alaskan ma
neuvers, Vice Adm. George D.
Murray, commander of the first
task fleet, disclosed.
Operating from submarines off
Kodiak island, the rubber-suited
swimmers knifed through slush six
inches deep and brushed against
four-inch ice to carry out assign-
ments.-They were able to remain
in water estimated at four degrees
below freezing for periods of more
than an hour.
Adm. Murray said that not even
during the war did swimmers oper
ate so far north. Underwater scout
ing teams were developed by the
marine corps and the navy during
World War II to blast obstacles from
enemy beaches in pre-invasion mis
sions.
Pilot Receives a Ticket for
‘Parking’ Over White House
WASHINGTON.—A helicopter pilot
received a ticket for “parking” too
close to the White House.
The piece of aerial history was
made by Roland Roelofs of the
Rotowing air service. He kept
the White House police force in a
dither for about 20 minutes with
his windmill.
They complained that he flew
down to within 200 feet of the execu
tive mansion and hovered motion
less in the air while his passenger,
Luis Marden, snapped their pic
tures.
A similar complaint came from
capitol police. They telephoned the
civil aeronautics administration for
some advice on how to shoo off a
helicopter.
CAA Inspector Robert E. Bell
promptly drew up a whole string
of charges against Roelofs, all of
which added up to illegal air park-
ing.
This lamb shoulder takes on its
extender in the form of a delight
ful fruit-bread dressing. The dress
ing has in it prunes and apricots
as well as orange for tartness.
The boned meat also makes an
easy Job of carving.
Dress Economy Cuts .
Of Meat, Save Money,
Please Family Tastes
EVERY WOMAN will agree that
there are very few cuts of meat
that are really
economical, but
it’s true there are
some that are at
least a bit cheap
er than steaks,
roasts or chops.
You’ll do well
to watch for bar
gains weekly. If
you don’t want to
buy as much meat as formerly, then
extend what you get with vegetables
or stuffings, and have plenty of oth
er things to g<P with the dinner.
Don’t economize to the extent that
the family will grumble about what
they eat. Make everything palatable
and attractive when served and pay
particular attention to having plat
ters look lovely. Here’s the time to
use pickled fruits and rinds to gar
nish meat platters without anyone’s
knowing that even these are an ex
tender.
Fruit Stuffed Lamb Shoulder
(Serves 6)
1 lamb shoulder, boned
2 cups bread crumbs-
6 cooked apricots
6 cooked prunes
1 small orange, chopped
1 beaten egg
, Salt 'and pepper
Have lamb shoulder boned and
sew it on three sides, leaving the
fourth side open for dressing. Make
dressing of bread crumbs, diced
apricots and prunes, orange, egg
and seasonings. Pile into pocket.
Skewer or sew edges together.
Place lamb shoulder on a rack in an
open roasting pan and roast at 300
degrees, allowing 30 to 35 minutes
to the pound.
HERE’S A MEAT loaf that has
vegetables right in it. You'll like
the interesting flavor combination.
Vegetable-Meat Loaf
(Serves 8)
S tablespoons chopped onion
% cup ground green pepper
2 cups ground carrots
% cup soured cream
1 teaspoon salt
% teaspoon pepper
1% pounds ground veal
Mix all ingredients together.
Shape into a loaf and place in cas
serole or loaf
pan. Cover. Bake
at 400 degrees for
40 minutes, then
uncover and bake
for 20 minutes
longer.
• • *
HERE’S AN
INTERESTING
variation for
drumsticks, using only a pound and
a quarter of meat:
California Chicken
(Serves 4-6)
H pound ground pork
1 pound ground veal %
1 teaspoon salt
% teaspoon pepper
1 tablespoon chopped green pep
per. /
H cup crushed pineapple, drained
1 egg, slightly beaten
1 tablespoon water
Lard for browning
Bread crumbs
Combine ground meats, salt, pep
per, green pepper and pineapple.
Shape like a chicken leg on a wood
en skewer. Combine beaten egg with
wat£r. Roll “drumsticks” in bread
crumbs, then in egg-water mixture,
and again in bread crumbs. Let
LYNN SAYS:
Make Winter Foods ,
More Savory
Next time you’re serving oyster
stew, add a sprinkling of grated
cheese just before you place it on
the table.
For your steamed puddings, serve
hard sauce which has been patted
flat on a cookie sheet, chilled, then
cut with fancy cookie cutters.
Leftover pieces of fowl which
aren’t enough to make a meal, can
be mixed with com kernels, milk
and egg and baked in a casserole.
stand for 30 minutes in the refrig
erator. Brown in hot lard; cover
closely and cook slowly for 45 min
utes.
• • •
THE RICHNESS of pork sausage
combines with nourishing kidney
beans to make a hearty, meat-sav
ing but appetizing casserole for cool
er days:
Barbecued Sausage -Casserole
(Serves 6-8)
1 pound sausage links
2 tablespoons water
I onion, chopped
H green pepper, chopped
6 pieces of celery, chopped
1 can tomato soup
% cup catchup
1 No. 2 can kidney beans
Place sausage links in frying pan.
Add water; cover and simmer for
five minutes or until water evapo
rates. Remove cover and brown
links. Add onion, celery, green pep
per, catchup and tomato soup. Cov
er and simmer slowly for 30 min
utes. Add beans to cooked mixture
and heat thoroughly.
SPANISH PORK is pork simmered
to perfection. It’s a beautiful red
brown color with
peas and toma
toes combined
with potatoes to
make a perfectly
extended meat
dish that’s com
plete enough to
serve as a main
course.
Spanish Pork
(Serves 6)
2 pounds pork shoulder, boned
and diced
Flour and lard
4 medium-sized potatoes
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
2 cups tomatoes
2 cups canned peas ^
1 green pepper
Salt and pepper
Have pork shoulder cut into 1-incb
cubes. Dredge in fldur and brown
in hot lard. Place alternate layers
of meat and vegetables in a casser
ole dish. Pour tomatoes over all.
Season and cook in a moderate
(350 degree) oven until meat and
vegetables are done, from one and
a half to two hours.
Spanish pork is a delicious as
well as handsome vegetable-ex
tended meat dish. The pieces of
succulent pork ride in a tomato-
red gravy with green peas which
will make the family delighted
with its eye appeal.
WHEN PROPERLY prepared,
kidneys can be <*. very tasty dish.
Why not try these delicious veal
kidneys, braised and served over
hot, steaming noodles?
Braised Veal Kidneys
(Serves 6)
3 veal kidneys
Salt and flour
2 tablespoons chopped onion
2 tablespoons fat
1 cup canned tomatoes
1 bay leaf
Hot, cooked poodles
Cut kidneys in half lengthwise;
remove white membrane; soak in
cold water for 15 minutes. Cut into
one-inch pieces, season with salt
and dredge with flour. Brown onion
in hot fat. Add kidneys and cook
with onion until browned for about
five minutes. Add tomatoes and cook
for 10 minutes, covered, until kid
neys are tender. Drop in bay leaf
during last five minutes of cooking.
Roast Beef Salad
(Serves 4 to 6)
1 cup diced cooked beef
2 hard-cooked eggs, sliced
2 tomatoes, quartered
1 small head of lettuce
French dressing or mayonnaise
Toss first three ingredients togeth
er. Serve on lettuce with dressing.
Use diced cooked ham, tongue or
corned beet if desired.
Released by WNU Features.
Canned cling peaches make a de
licious salad-desert if you fill them
with cream cheese mixed with a bit
of orange marmalade and candied
ginger.
Chop orange pulp which has been
scooped from orange shells and mix
with npashed sweet potatoes, sea
soned with butter, milk and nut
meg. Refill shells and heat.
Let slices of bologna fry slowly
in a skillet in a bit of fat until the
edges curl. These make excellent
little cups for scrambled eggs—a
good luncheon combination.
China Can Be Stored
In This Wall Cabinet
M ANY folks have requested a wall
cabinet that could be used to
display their prized china, silver
ware and small bric-a-brac. The
Dutch Colonial style illustrated above
is the answer.
The simple design of this cabinet per
mits its being used in almost any room.
Anyone can build it from the full size
pattern offered below. No special tools
or skill are required to do a really pro
fessional looking job.
User merely traces pattern on the wood
Which the pattern specifies, saws and as
sembles exactly as the pattern indicates.
Complete, easy to follow Instructions,
step by step assembly illustrations, plus
a full size printed paper outline of each
component part of the cabinet are in
cluded. All materials specified are obtain
able at any lumber ^ard.
Send 25 cents for Pattern No. 36—Dutch
HowTo Relieve
Bronchitis
Creomulsion relieves promptly because
it goes right to the seat of the trouble
to help loosen and expel germ laden
phlegm and aid nature to soothe and
heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial
mucous membranes. Tell your druggist
to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion
with -the understanding you must like
the way it quickly allays the cough
or you are to have your money bade.
CREOMULSION
for Coughs.Chest Colds, Bronchitis
ALL-VEGETABLE i
LAXATIVE
NATURE’S REMEDY (NR) TAB?
LETS—A purely vegetable laxative to
relieve constipation without the usual
griping, sickening, perturbing sensa
tions, and does not cause a rash. Try
NR—you will see the difference. Un
coated or candy coated—their action
is dependable, thorough, yet gentle aa
millions of NR’s have proved. Get a
2 Sc box and use as directed.
FUSSY STOMACH?
RELIEF FOR ACID
INDIGESTION,
GAS AND
HEARTBURN
Why
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