Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 213, Decatur, Adams County, 10 September 1953 — Page 9

SECTION TWO

England Cuts Queen Off From Reality 1 M, I 11 ' ■■' t I ’ ■ ■ ! Play Acting Must . Often Weary Queen i LONDON, UP — Elizabeth reads all the papers so she know's Vy now that Colorado state authorities slipped extra rish lijto their streams when President Eisen-

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hower went fishing. And a wave of sympathy must have gone out from Balmoral Castle to the White House. Fur a good part of this nation of 50 million also tries its best to cut its sovereign off from reality. If the queen went fishing—unless she went unannounced — there would be some beautiful salmon in the river stretches to which she would be taken by her equerries \ ? If such a thing were possible, the salmon would be coached to

bite loyally and at the right time. As far as the qtfeen sees it, this country is all flowers and beauty with healthy happy chil- ' dren and citizens hardly able to wait for her appearance to raise thunderous cheers. It’s a bit of national play acting that must often weary the queen although she reales it is futile to struggle against it. If she insists on yisiting a slum, she sees only the nicest slums. Red carpets and iflowers appear almost everywhere she goes. When she made her state visit to Edinburgh, gardners were up at dawn filling the streets with hydrangeas. They were cleverly placed and the queen must have thought what a beautiful city is her northern capital. J/\ ’i | K If she goes to a show,\ all the double entendres are cut out except those that would not shock a kindergarten studertt. If there 4s any nudity, the showgirls suddenly sprout brassieres. The queen is 27 and the mother of two children but she must never hear the facts of life hinted at in public. She never rides the subway, jostles shoulders with the crowds on Piccadilly, or lines up for movie tcikets. She leaves the Buckingham Palace area through a special gate, has a royal box in every theater in town, never goes-to 4 movie ekcept for a special charity showing and then they rip out a few rows of seats and install a gilded armchair for her. banked with flowers. The fabulous London traffic jams are magically cleared whefl her car passes. J And so it goes. If Queen Elizabeth ever raises the Colorado fish matter with Ike, it will be to warn him to stop the trend now before it is too late. a — ' r ii' Trade in a Good Town — Decatur

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pß*' W1 b ■ ’4'l ■i- • . * i ’ I i j : ■ ’ ; I K, t ..„. -BHUDHHN AFTER overwhelming Wimbledon champion Vic Seixaa in a surprising, straight-set All-Amer-can National Men’s Singles final at Forest Hills, N. Y., Tony Trabert, 2.3-year-old power machine from Cincinnati, is "congratulated by his Utah fiancee, Shauna Wood. (International)

Getting The Bird jST. LOUIS, Mo., UP — The hot St. Louis summer was especially nerve-wracking this year sot- the ißussell Beal family. The parakeet insisted on warbling, the song “Baby, It’s Cold Outride.” U gi Son Shows Dad fii LINCOLN, Neb., UP — sorm Brown, pitcher for the Lincoln Chiefs of the Western League, probably has quit ofteringlhis young son, Roger, tips on to play baseball. Roger pitched a no-hit game as his team won h juvenile league game 19-0. He also got three hits.

Youngest TV Star To Have Own Show Comedian Joel Gray Is A Star At 21 YIOLLYWOOD, UP — Comedian 5 ' Joel Gray, the youngest television frtar at 21, lias grown up in a Jiurry—he already can reminisce gbout his ulcer, a comeback and a romance with a striptease danJoel, who looks a soulful 18, begins his • own network television program this fall. Last season he made his debut on Eddie Cantor's TV show, became the talk of the grmchair viewers, and now is behaving like a seasoned veteran. He sat sipping MovietoWjn’s ulrftcr cocktail —milk—and apxiously contemplated his busy future. ! “If I can’t make this go, I'll be a has-been at 21,’’ he said mournfully. Joel is being touted as ABC’s Answer to NBC’s Wally Cox, ‘’Mr. Peepers.” “Wally Cox—he’s so well adjusted I hate him.” said Joel. Cantor found young Gray in a Miami nightclub and gave him his break. Later Joel lived “in a tworoom apartment with seven guys” in New York an<i finally got a chance to try out his nightclub act at the Copacabana. Tie wasn’t old enough to order a drink in the place, .but he paralyzed the cash customers, as they say. He won a movie role and other night club jobs, including one in Canada where he was no howling success, he admits. But he came back to further victories. “All this pressure brought on the ulcer,” he sighed. “George Jessel said, 'if yoa have an ulcer at your age, imagine what I should have at mine.” In a Las Vegas, Nev., club Joel was smitten witht his first ro- ■ mance. She was a beautiful brunette, Sheree North, and she was a stripper. She was 3(1, too. “She’s my girl but I’ll never marry her," he explained. “When we first met I wanted to rush out and get married but Sheree said wpit. She knows a lot more and is wiser about these things. She thinks I haven’t lived enough.” There are other disadvantages /o being a star so young. when they want you to do some-

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rJy ■L'Hw'* wrtwß 1 IWHWr F .'B|F <>j ROMOMrS. k /I Ol v jbL : r Ji Iwjl bh Ilk Jm Ml a bV< rji 4hM BB fey' 4' JbMH 8 B IBBIBBL' \ SUDDENLY BECOMING ILL In his Washington apartment shortly after 2a- m. Supreme Court Chief 1 Justice Fred M. Vinson dies unexpectedly of a heart attack at the age of 63. A personal friend of President Eisenhower, Vinson was appointed Chief Justice by former President Harry Truman in 1946. His death creates the first vacancy on the high court bench which President Kisenhower will be called on to fill. Highlights in the life of Vinson are shown pictorially (top, from left): as a Kentucky rep- x resentative to Congress in 1927; as a Kentucky judge named economic stabilization director ifi 1943; secretary of the U. S. Treasury in 1946; appointed Chief Justice In 1946; one of the best and latest photos; (bottom, left) congratulated by son James after appointment as Chief Justice, as his wife looks on; (right) swearing in Dwight D. feisenhower as President of United States. (M9inationalJ

“Adults treat you as an adult thing for them,” he said sadly. “But it- they’re jealous, they say, oh, he’s just a punk kid.” His young years have one advantage, though. ' “Lana Turner and Ljli St. Cyr mother me,” he beapiedj. Badge Brigade \ ' | OXFORD, Miss., up — LaFayette County has eight ex-sheriffs Living within its boundaries And the Chamber of Commerce thinks this must be son\e sort of a record. • GOP Loyalty COLUMBUS. Ind.. UP — NJ* and Mrs. Herbert Hoover Bray of Columbus have named their son Dwight David.

Evicted pOONVTLU?:, Ind., UP -U Warrick Counity Recorder peloris Day. irritated by*h6t Weather and longtime overcrowded courthouse conditions, pushed out desks and typewriters of local abstractors who over the years edged into her office, leaving the surprised lawyers |{o set up operations in the courthouse lobby. Police Rescue SAGINAW, Mich., UP — Victor j Hollerback and Carl Cook telephoned police to get them out of their predicament. The pair walked into a tavern washroom shortly before closing time. When they emerged, they found the proprietor had closed for the night, leaving them locked inside. ------ S T - i '

Well Groomed < BOSTON, UP — Some 3,600 combs are sold yearly through dispensing machines at Logan airport. Democrat Want Ada Bring Result* f ■■ "1 ■"ln j k KHBBBtSnr \ "NICE RIDE. No trouble at all,* comments RAF squadron leader Neville Duke, 31-year-old British test pilot, after setting a world \ speed record of 727.6 miles an hour over a measured course at Tangmere airport in a Hawker Hunter jet fighter. The radiophoto shows Duke in the cockpit after bettering the American jet record by more than 10 miles in hour. (InternationalJ

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