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The Brussels Post, 1962-10-02, Page 6time, instead.. Heretofore, all the blacksmiths 1 have known were, people, but this has changed, too. The blacksmith was sitting at a little bench with a loupe screwed in his eye, filing on a thin alumine u mhorseshoe which he said was for a pacer at the fairgrounds, and he couldn't help me a bit until after the fifth race, During the season hp said, he was in great demand, 1 noticed he bad a station wagon to pull the little trailer in which he carried his portable forge for paddock calls, and his assistant was weighing nails on a goldsmith's balance, The racehorse, I gathered, was, heavy on the left side and would need considerable careful cor- rection. I left my pieee of metal, with a template to show him where to bore the holes, saying I would return on the Friday. 1 hoed a few rows of corn in the mean- time with abated enthusiasm. but weeds won't wait, The blacksmith said on Friday that he was terribly sorry, but the press of important things had kept him from his shop work, Things were piling up on him, and if he could just have a rainy day, — . Why didn't I stop in again on Tuesday? I hoed some more and went back Tuesday. And he had done a beautiful job — he had successfully bored three holes of the precise diameter needed, in exactly the right ' places, They were nice and round, and they went all the way through, If I had owned a drill- press, I couldn't have made them ' any better myself, although it would have taken me all of five minutes, and I would have saved myself $3.00, That's what he charged me. A dollar a hole, I admit they were nice holes, but when you have seen one hole you have seen them all, pretty much, and I couldn't see that his were any better than some others I've looked at, I told him he ought to get a clean frock with his name on the pocket and a time clock, but he smiled. There are things in this world which do not reasonably lend themselves to the great forward thrust of affairs. When I bought my cultivator in 1939, with its A0-20'7 I did not intend to in- valve myself in such expensive and time-consuming intricacies as progress has developed. I hoped to remain a simple country boy to whom a cultivator is a basic, uncomplicated implement, de- signed for a plain, rudimentary task. It had been my belief that I could get a new A0-207 any time, speedily, for 65 cents. If you can't trust an A0-207, where are you? — by John. Gould in the Christian Science Monitor, N9 Wonder The Cost Of Living Goes Up Seine things just shouldn't cm- eters Not long ago. I broke a piece on, my spring-tined cultivator, and this turned out to be a major Problem, It's more than frustrate kg to get involved in some of these things, but I had some corn Mill to do, so I went at it. This cultivaterwas manufactured away back in the forgotten past of 19a9, and is today what the trade calls an. orphan, The maker amalgamated with a competitor, then sold out to a subsidiary, which merged with the main company, and they changed the name and went to making storm windows. On the Part I broke is a magic number, 40-207. The original purchase Was predicated, of course, on the implied warranty that if I ever broke my A0-207 I could go right to the nearest dealer and get another A0-207 and install it quickly by taking up three bolts. What I had to do, instead, was forget all about A0-207 and go find a structural steel plant and beg the man to cut me out a piece that would be shaped like AO- 207, He was working on a bridge for a state highway bond issue and reluctantly turned to oblige me, It cost him money he said, to pause and accommodate these Charities. I felt badly, because the Original parts list that came with my cultivator showed that A0-- 207 cost only 65 cents in 1939. It made me feel a good deal better about my bothering the steel man, though, when he charged me $3,85 for a rough, ap- proximate copy of A0-207, I did not feel he was wasting his time as much as he said he was, But the piece had rough edges from his torch, and I had to hold it against my emery wheel at home and smooth it up so it was safe to handle, I then took it to a blacksmith shop and asked him to drill three holes in it. I could have taken it to a machine shop I tangled with once, but I hesi- tated to undertake this with the corn growing. Well, first a man comes out and introduces himself and asks if he may be of service. He doubles as personnel director, He wears a neat frock with his name on the pocket, and he has a clip-board. He takes down your name and address, color of your eyes, and your preference in politics. He writes these things all down and inserts the slip into a clock which punches on the phases of the moon and the closing Dow-Jones average. Then he gives you a number which will be called out over a loud speaker when your job is ready, or which may be turned in on a later day to reclaim it. It took three days there one time to get a grease fitting screwed into a hole in the bearing on my cement mixer, and then I had to supply them a fi- nancial statements from the bank. So I went to a blacksmith this WHAT A MAN!!! ISSUE 40 — 1962 When Columbus started out, he didn't know where he was going. When he got there, he didn't know where he was. When he got back, he didn't know where he had been, And he did it all on other people's money. What a politician Columbus would have made today! teyerbske. Reidiyah Zinjori rici Kony#' tj:k K Denizli Antarya mess TEXANS CHEER KENNEDY — President Kennedy, in Houston to inspect the Manned Spacecraft Center, epeakes to a crowd of 45,000 in the Rice University stadium. Yellow Attempts Fail To Smear President Just How Low Can Journalism Get? all kinds from this period,,? any' of the cheaper fans ATA attrae, tive and are More essentially .o t. their moment than the costly fans executed in the grand man- ner. Amongst them are fees of crepe with epangled deeoretion, which had reeppeared in the 1850's „ . The famous firms of. Duvelleroy and Rimmel sold. plain fans fcr this purpose od' ivpr y, er the (eloper, while- enamelled wood. Small brisk fans of eandalwoed, which were the fans of outdoor uses were also printed. Flowers end eirde, were the usual subjeete far their decoration. • Feather' fans were popular the 1870's, Feathers of many different kinds appear in fans. of this date — cook's, peacock's, pheasant's and pigeon's, There. are examples of painted quill fans from the 1840's, but fans which make decorative use of contrasting kinds of feathers et different natural shading and patterns, a is ci of natural and dyed feathers,. are likely to be of the 1870's. Fans with leaves entirety of •bobben or needlepoint lace be- Came. fashionable in the 1860's and remained fashionable until the end of the century, At the Paris Exhibition of 1878, Lace fans were by far the most nu- merous amongst the fans exhi- bited, and fans with leaves of finest needlepoint and. bobbin lace rivalled the ceremonial fans. of the eighteenth-century tradi- tion in costliness during the last quarter of the century' — From "Victorian Costume and Cost:tune. Accessories," by Anne Buck, When, Ladies Spent Fortunes For Fans At the beginning of the reign the fan was A nu' less imper- toot accessory than it had been in the 'eighteenth century or even din the first quarter of limo nineteen century, The 'fens 'of the early nineteenth eentury were generally fairly small and plain, with lenves of tido silk spangled and lightly painted; their sticks, also, compared with those of earlier fans, were plain. and tmornernented. Fans in the eighteenth-century fsptynise ,‘.v,s,.tahppsetaierci:sd rl8y40'e, 0a, mother of noel elaborately carved and gilded, with leaves of vellum, each a small-scale, beautifully executed painting, The paintings were copiea of t It o s• e cri eighteenth century fans, or scenes painted a la Wat- teau. These elaborate fans were imported from France into Eng- land; but most, of the fans used. in this country during the poll- o7, .er imported;j?ppn from France, c11 o The most costly and aristo- cratic of nineteenth', century fans were made in this ensile eeenth-century style, but not all the surviving fans made in this traditional style were of the first , quality. The cheaper ones had Teaves of painted p a p ex, The treatment of the painted figures and, their dress will' usually, if compared with an eighteenth- century fan, reveal the nine- teenthscentury Origin, A new nineteenth-,century leaf .may, of course, replace en, earlier dam- aged one, sa that a fan may have eighteenth-century sticks and a nineteenth-century leaf. By the 1860's the fans was more generally fashionable and popular, and there are fans of Many a child has grown up to be fairly level-headed because his parents couldn't find the guidance book they were look- ing for. putting the President into a pos- ition where lie is damned if he denies the story and. clarrtned if he doesn't. His dilemma is even more acute since information in files of the FBI and Secret Service indi- cates other organizations have been distributing hundreds of thousands of specially photostat- ed, 4-page folders entitled "The Blauvelt Family Genealogy." A major distributor is the Christian Educational Associa- tion, headed by Conde McGinley, publisher of what the FBI calls "the vitriolic hate sheet, Com- mon Sense." Others include Right Brigade, described by the Cleveland police department as a "crackpot" organization a n d headed by Allen Paul Steiger, an early organizer of the John Birch Society in Cleveland, and the Valley Paper Co, of Holyoke, Mass., whose mailings are han- dled by Hubert W, Kregeloh, an associate editor of "American Opinion," the magazine publish- ed by Robert Welch Jr., founder of the John Birch Society, In Washington, many congress- men—and such organizations as the American Gold Star Mothers —have received folders mailed anonymously from Wilmington, Del., and hand-stamped "Why the furor to confiscate all re- cords on President John F.: Ken- nedy's first marriage?" The same mailings contained a type- written note: "We feel this in- formation is too important to be suppressed. Have your'` own nega- tives made, and distribute copies to your entire membership," One woman wrote the White House to report that she found copies of "The Thunderbolt" where she worked—at Republi- can Party headquarters in Salt Lake City, Utah. "What is the law that allows these . people to disgrace the country?" she asked, Like many another confused citizen who has written the White House, she received a simple reply; "The President has been married only once—to his wife, Jacqueline Kennedy." The President and Mrs. Ken- nedy—who celebrated t heir ninth wedding anniversary last month — are philosophical about the "Blauvelt campaign." They recognize that it is motivated by extremist groups and circulated for political purpose. from NEWSWEEK EVER HAPPEN TO YOU? Ever since the heyday of yel- low journalism, the sense of re- sponsibility of the American press has been more censured than praised. For political profit or for readers' pennies, sensation has often triumphed over relia- bility. But for the last sixteen months, virtually every major newspaper, magazine, and wire service in the U,S, has refused to publish a sensational report — familiar to hundreds of thousands of Amer- icans and millions of Britons — about the President of the United . States. They have spiked the story despite what appears at first glance to be "documentary evidence" and. despite scattered publication of it—or hints at it — by hate groups and gossip columnists, The "story" falsely alleges that before he married Jacqueline Bouvier in Newport, Re., on ,Sept. 12, 1953, John F. Kennedy was secretly married to a two- time divorcee. The story first appeared in a beatnik Greenwich Village mag- azine of slight circulation ' "The Realist," dated March 1962, and headlined "The Story Behind the Rumor About President Ken- nedy's First Marriage." It next turned up in an anti- Semitic, anti - Negro Alabama hate sheet called "The Thunder- bolt." Under a headline Ken- nedy's divorce exposed! Is pre- sent marriage, valid? Excom- munication possible, the "official. White Racial organ of the Na- tional States Rights Party" charged the President was "sec- retly divorced" before he mar- ried Jacqueline Bouvier, In June it appeared in another racist sheet, The Winrod Letter, published in Little Rock, Ark., by the Rev, Gordon Winrod, son of a Kansas Fascist, the Rev. Gerald Winrod, indicted under the Sedition Act during World War II, The same month it ap- peared in *a Tennessee weekly, and in July was broadcast over radio station WAIL in Baton Rouge, La. A story on this broadcast was moved by one wire service, Unit- ed Press International, on July 24, 1962, and was promptly killed three hours later. The UPI log of July 28, 1962, said "a thorough investigation by UPI — comple- tely disproved reports of a pre- vious marriage by President Kennedy." Last month United Features columnist Henry Tay- lor distributed a column on the "marriage," branding it false, The syndicate sent a "kill" order, and only one paper ran the story. No one of these stories, nor all of them together, achieved any national circulation, because the same "evidence" had been found wanting by a dozen national news organizations — ranging from The Chicago Tribune to The New Republic, including News- week, Time, The Washington Post, The Washington Star, the Cowles papers, The New York Daily News, Scripps - Howard, The New York Times, The New York Herald Tribune. and U.S. By Blake sur JUST' WNW / G51* t-i I IA LocA-rep- fis QUITS CNI !`PIN G AND Nics5! FIRST ESCORT — New type Soviet armored car waits in rear as a Soviet officer standing in a jeep foduses his camera at, Checkpoint Charlie in Berlin, waiting clearance by an Allied sentry. The Soviets supplied their own escort for three armor- ed cars for the first time as they made the daily trip to the Soviet war memorial. OBEY THE SAFETY SIGNS ! ! seess'ese" Xing k'eature9 Syndicate',,'Iec„ 1962, World rights xt kervect News and World Report, The story first reached a na- tional audience on September 2, when the Sunday supplement Parade, distributed in 70 news- papers, published a letter from a Palm Beach, Fla., reader asking "once and for all, will someone please tell me the truth" about reports of a previous marriage by the President, Parade said the rumors were falee, The British press then. front paged them. Then the aging dean of key- hole columnists, Walter Win- chell, reprinted the Parade item in his syndicated column and asked: "Why hasn't the White House debunked it?" What was the basis of the ru- mors that so intrigued. Winchell and the hate sheets? The "evi- dence" is contained in one para- graphed on page 884 of an ob- scure, privately printed family history, "The Blauvelt Family genealogy," written by a mem- ber of the tenth generation, Louis L. Blauvelt, who died at 82 a year before the book was published in 1957. Contrary to published reports, the book is readily available — and in unu- sual demand—in the Library of Congress, the New York City Public Library, and elsewhere. In tracing the history of the Blauvelts, who migrated from Holland in 1638, one entry under the eleventh generation reads: (12,427) D URIE (Kerr), MALCOM, (Ieabel 0, Coop- er, 11,304), We have no birth date. She was born Kerr, but took the name of her step- father. She first married Firmin Desloge, IV. They were divorced. Durie then married F. John Bersbach. They were divorced, and she married, third, John F. Ken- nedy, son of Joseph P. Ken- nedy, one time Ambassador to England. There were no children of the second or third marriages, The third "marriage" never took place. The only mystery is why Louis L, Blauvelt, in his confused chronology, said that it did. The answer, may well lie in Blau- velt's family records, now in the custody of his daughter, Mrs, William K. Smith of East Or- ange, N.J, Blauvelt kept doc- umentation for every entry in his book. Under the entry for the al- leged marriage to "John F. Ken- nedy," there is only an old clip- ping from a Miami gosisp col- umn, reporting Miss Malcolm and young Jack Kennedy had been seen in a restaurant right after World War II. One Blauvelt in-law described the entry to Newsweek as "just one colossal mistake." lie said: "It was likely that the old man formed the idea In his head, see- ing that clipping, and. the family hadn't had anyone famous for a long time," President Keil:testy , arid Miss Malcolm (now,'"' :d since July 1947, married tedsociglite Thom- as Shevlin of Feelm, Beach and Newport) have denied the story privately. They have been reluc- tant to issue a public denial for tf ieo:or. of giving a further circula- se addition, scores of reporters, working independently before the story was ever publicly printed, have found no evidence to support Blauvelt's statement. In :fact, they found this addition- al evidence proving him inac- curate: Miss Malcolm's maiden name was lYfalcoIrre not Malcom. She first married Bersbach,. then Desloge, net vice versa, She", married Shevlin before a Justice of the Peace in Port Lee, N.,I„ in July 1941 — live months after divorcing Desloge, ten years before the Blauvelt Genealogy was published — and yet this =triage was not even noted in the genealogy. This evidence kept the story but of the responsible American Dress. But irresponsible group keep' printing it to this day, time . . . . LINKING EUROPE Mitt AgIA—Within Jive years,. two modern, all-weather highways will carry cornmeitial Old tourist traffic between Europe arid Asia es far as Teheran Ag ShOWn-Oit blap southern add northernkOtiteb' will begin European Turkey And cross into' linking KO :Major In both cou ntries, The mast er than is the reSult L6f 'Co-operationbetween 'the two gOVerrithetitS, 'With advide assistance front the Piked ItitettiMiOnat Federation well as Other intertiatisMal iletteleee