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ODHAM

TUDOR,

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PROUDLY. PRESENTS

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FOURTEEN BEAUTIFUL THREE BEDROOM TW O BATH HOMES
THAT MUST BE SEEN TO BE APPRECIATED.

S ales P ric e * 1 4 , 7 5 0 00

Each Home Has:

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1. Spacious G lass Jalousied Florida Room
(Giviox You Open Perch Comfort)

V .A . (G:l.) Financing

2. Two Full Tiled Baths
3. M arble Terrazzo T ile Floors
4. Beautiful N atural Finish Kitchen Cabinets
(With Beautiful Built In Hotpolnt Oven and Range)

Down Payment As Low

5. Kitchen Exhaust Fan
6. Fully Landscaped Yards
7. Hotpolnt Stove and Refrigerator

As $5 0 0 00

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8. Venetian Blinds
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9i Five Fly Built-up Roof W ith M arble Chips
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10. Extra Large Closets and U tility Room
11. Long Roof Eaves
(8o You Don’t Have To Ckna Up Your Windows Each lift*
XtXalna)

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Act Now Ana You M ay Choose
Your Paint And Tile Colors

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FO R INFORMATION
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&amp; TUDOR,
OFFICE: 2625 S. FEENCH AVENUE

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Inside

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Editorial T. A
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Society "9. i
Story y. a
Radio — T.V. r . »

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AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER

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Silence
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SID RICHARD LOOKS ON aa helper* alert to work on the well at 7:30 this morning. The safer will
Hew upward »o that it can he controlled. It will take at lecal two day* to fill the artificial lake In
Fort MoHon Park. (Photo by Jameaon)

CLEVELAND UP) — A wom­
an'a suspicion provided tha tip
which last night enabled the FBI
to cut abort a months-long effort
to find a young bank teller aeeuitd of embeasling 181.760 from
a Staten Itland, N. Y., bank lait
SapL 26.
The woman had aeen a picture
at the tellsr's wife ia a New York
newspaper, and last Saturday aha
feoughht ana saw her bring a pale
of men's trousera into a dry
tleaning shop in neighboring Lo­
rain County. She was right.
As a result, FBI agent* last
Bight arrested John C. Sterner, 24,
and his wife Henrietta,' 26, in
■out*. Amherst (pop. 1,000), 35
miles west of hare,
i The Bleatera ware lirins there

No. 135

Associated Press leased Wire

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Dissolving Of Groups
Into One Is S u g g e s t e d
Memo Subm itted To Com m issioners;
Resignation O f Johnson Revealed

Segni Presses Vole
For Confidence
Of Italian Senate
ROME UP)—Premier Antonio
Segni pimped today for a vote of
confidence from the Senate after
getting a 2D3-2G6 approval from
the Chamber of Deputies for his
coalition government.
Tha vote in tha Chamber last
eight, T above tha required ma­
jority of 280, wae Segul's first
parliamentary " lest. " The new
Premier, a left-of-ccnter Christian
Democrat and advocate of social
reform, formed
his coalition
July 0.
Hit support came from ths
Christian Democrats, the allied
Social Democrat*, Liberals and
Republicans.
Asking approval of hi* govern­
ment last week, Sognl told the
Chamber the political and econom­
ic unification of Europe “ remain*
an absolute necessity.”
"Our entire foreign policy," he
Said, “ remain* based on our ab­
solute support of Western Euro­
pean unity, and our corM tued loy­
alty to tha Atlantic P . '• as an in­
strument of defense."

Last month a 1955 memo was
'submitted to the City Commis­
sion from the City Manager's
office informing the commission
of F. H. Johnson's resignation, to
go into effect October I, 1955 He
is superintendent of the City Wa­
ter Department.
Parts of the memo stated, “ sug­
gestion was made to combine the
water and sewer departments into
a Utility Department under a new
Individual with engineering back­
ground and experience In water
and seurr work. It-Is helieved
that this perron should he 45 or
joungcr so that the city may have
his service over a period of year*.
The memo furthrr suggested
a department of Public Works
"This would combine .the streets,
refuse, shop, parka, swimming
pool, zoo, cemetery, maintenance,
engineering and street lights de­
partments Into one department
This would provide for esse, co­
ordination, and planning of work
and the utilization of personnel,
equipment and material," It was
staled.
“ If such a reorganization is
felt advisable the City Commis.
slon shall instruct the City at­
torney to prepare an ordinance
abolishing the above named de­
partment and Treating a utility
department and a public works
department. It is further sugges­
ted that the appointment of these
two department heads be left to
the City Manager but subject to
approval of the City Comission.’ ’
It went on to ssy thst "the City
Manager be instructed and pre­
sented a plan of the Internal or­
ganization of the two departments
to the 'City Commission for Its
approval, but not pirt of the
ordinance."
The memo ended with, “ the
City Commission la urged to un­
dertake this reorganization plan."

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CARSON CITY, Nev. (JP-An
occasional catcall pierced the des­
ert silence throughout the night at
the Nevada State Prison as some*
223 convicts stubbornly carried on
a sitdown strike in the flood­
lighted prison yard.
The prisoners—less 136 trusties—
started their rebellion at 3:40 p.m.
yesterday when they began milling,
about the open yard' Instead of
lining up for dinner ai it custo­
mary.
They demanded an Interview
with Gov. Charles Russell and declsred they would not return to
their cell blocks until they talked
with him
Among the inmate* demands
were "more variety in food. . .dis­
charge of a prison doctor and cap­
tain of the guard . .twice yearly
personal appearances before the
State Parole Board . more work
for Inmates. . no reprisals be­
cause of the rebellion . . . lower
prices at the prison commissary"
"I'm not promising anything.
Most of the grievances are un­
founded," Warden Art Bernard
said.

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Vaccine Provision
For Many Children
Is Voted By Senate
NEW YORK ( f t - The fenite
has voted to provide free Salk
polio vaccina for millions of chil­
dren under JO and expectant
molhert.
The next move Is up to the
House, whose Commerce Commit­
tee last week approved a some­
what different free vaccine bill.
Senate action yesterday came on
a voice vote. The only audible “ no"
vote waa cast by Sen. Morse (DOre). He objected that the megaure “ only scratches the surface*'
During debate Sen. Welker (RIdaho) look the Public Health
Service lo task for what he said
was a failure to aet against the
Cutter Laboratories of Berkeley,
Calif. Welker said Cutter vaccine
Is “ directly" responsible for 118
polio cases In Idaho, four of them
fatal.
Cutter officials have said in the
past they prepared the vaccine
according to “ rigid safety tests
exactly aa laid down by a com­
mittee of polio experts." They
have said they have furnished full
information to the government and
the ultimate determination must
come from tha government offlcials. No formal report has been
Both Morse and Welker charged
federal health officials with “ cover,
ups" in the vseeine program, but
the Idaho senator was not in the
chamber Ahen the vote waa Liken.

American Farmers
Tour Soviet Lands

TIIK CITY'S LAST srw.-r contend

hole on
hardline

Second and Myrtle. Thin i* rnnlinct N
|60,00rt jolt. (Photo liy Jameson)

House To Be Asked Anierican Legion Post No. 53
To Sneed up Action Vofes T o U p MembershiP Dues
On Controversy Senators Keeping
Fainl Hopes Alive
For Bill's Survival
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Local Delegation A d d r e s s e s R o t a r y

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G M C Appointment
Told For Company

S M W A T w S b Ear

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Bid Is Accepted
For Two Trucks

Dentist's Mother
Ends Hunger Strike

Foodroart Offering
Reward For Info

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iH e r n d o n
C om m ends
C o u n ty

Tha
The Amapiria
American fppinn
Legion Pneft
Post No.
33 met last night for regular meet­
ing in the Legion Hill with Com­
mander (irorgs Maybury presid­
ing.
Alter the usual buxlneas the
post
had fnoniinriHjgiitin
recommendation »n
of the
n nsu
mr
maijoritx of the expeutira committec5 thi) the due* of tn« M ' b e '
Ised three to
raised
tn five
m e ‘ dollars j
year. This hax hern a controler«ial subject for several years and
action is Just now being takrn, it
was slated.
Last night at the meeting when
Die vote of the post wax taken
it was unanimous. Dues lor 1956
are payable now. Five dollars ia
the new rate.
Also (here were two major com­
mittee appointments made. The
first; marie up of J. I). Cordell,
.1. Q (Slim) Galloway and It. 7..
Johnson, will be a committee to
have charge of the floor of the
new fair building. Aa of now the
floor is not suitable for dancing or
extra activities and Ihe commit­
tee will see about having the
floor finished.
The second committee, having
R. Z. Johnson, W. C. Hires, Jim
Singletary, Karlyle Housholder
and Gordon Frederick on it, was
formed lo *0 ordinate the social
arlivities of the post 10 that It
will be more interesting for the
members and their families.
Guy Stafford, an old member
of the post who “ held it together
durirg World War I," was a visi­
tor. Hr Is now a member of Foil
33 m rensaeola.

TALLAHASSEE ID-The House
will he asksd today In spied action
oix the rarpportinnmcnt question
were their three children, aged 4,
byruttifry down recce* rime, end
6, and 1, Utey had been there
ing vote pairing and withholding j
elnce November, and Slemer was
the expense allowances of mem-1
working off and on eelling reel
WASHINGTON ijr - A
Demobrrs absent more than one day
Batata.
rralie-sponsorrd hill In broaden
tn a row.
H. O. Hawkins, Cleveland FBI
Both House and S»nate return social security benefits for women
chief, said 620,000 was found in a
tn work at 4 p. in. after an ex­ and disabled workers appeared to­
suitcase tucked away over eome
day to have run its course for
tended weekend recess.
rafters in the house. Previously at
when it passed the
Tim House will have lirfore it this K it
Blaster's home In New York, po­
its trio of speed-up resolutions plus House yesterday.
lice had recovered 66,500.
However, key senators were re­
a pending amendment to .1 reap­
portionment bill which would have luctant to pronounce dead for this
the effect of making the measure session a measure with obvious
virtually the same ax the one vr- political appeal. .
The House pushed Iho measure
loed by Gov. Collins lad week.
The Senate has nothing before it through yesterday 372-31 with only
unless it derides tn take final ac­ 8 Democrats and 23 Republicans
tion on a House reapporlionment voting “ no".
The bill would lower from 65 to
bill which has been dangling for
MIAMI, Fla. (At—A Miami eonsome day* now. The House meas­ 62 the age at which women may
pic with six children and another
ure, which was passed before all get social security benefits and
am the way were looking for an
attention became focused on the permit payments to disabled work­
apartment or h o u a e today—a*
bill which wound up with a veto, ers after age 50 instead of at 65
would give a senator each to Bay.
The increased benefits for wom­
They aaid they had tried 161
Monroe,' Manatee and Sarasota en and the disabled, estimated to
times to rent a place aiaee they
counties.
amount to about fioo million dol­
moved here from at Louis la Jan­
T . D. Singletary
lars in the first year, would be fiuary.
, •. •
a
nanced by adding 4 per rent earh
"You know these Ada in the MOSCOW UP)— Twelve Amerf
Dies In A tla n ta
Civil Service
to the payroll tax paid by the em­
paper Rut say children are web oan farmers heeded for the Soviet
Word has recently been received
ployer and employe.
eomoT” Robert AQen aaid. “ That’s hinterlands today to see how Rus­
in Sanford of tha death of T. D. Thursday Election
aksy eatU they see those six kids sia's farmers do it
Singletary, 66, oe July 8 In AtV* FIREMEN INJURED
The Sanford Civil Service Board
af ears, with another ea the way. Ths visiting American farm da
lanta, Ga., where he made hit has railed an election to he held
ATLANTA CD — Fifty firemen
That kills It"
legation left last night on a 30homa.
In Cily Hall Thursday from 3:30 were injured yesterday in a fire
Alloa, 64. working aa a RH - day tour of the Ukraine, Central
’ HJs survivors Inelude Mrs. Mae U» 4:30 p.m. to elect, tu-o members that heavily damaged an envelope
weak typewriter repairman, has Asia and previously virgin* land*
Paekard, sister; Mrs. C. H. Moss, who will sarv* at reprssenlativcs manufacturing firm.
I hi* family lata throe email af Siberia now being cultivated.
nftet: Richard Paekard, nephew, for ths employes.
The firemen arrived at Grady
lered itaHNi by hie Tha Americans got their first
and Mrs. O. L. Parkburit, niece,
All permanent Civil Service Hospital tn drove* — six hours N ear-Trag ed y
hat the hoMtegs have b* B -—i— soil in their shoes yeeter•11 of Sanford.
employes are requeued to vote. after tho four-alarm fire at the
day in a visit to Looch, a col­
A1 eight AOnt appeared before lective farm 20 miles west of CORAL GABLES, ria. (ft—Mrs. A former resident of this city, There will'also l&gt;« a Civil Ser­ plant of the Jiistrife Envelope O f Rudderless B36
(he Miami Coswtemnatioe Board of Moscow.
Martha Blumenbach sipped a glass hs was burled ia Montgomery, vice mretlng Friday at 8 p.m. in Mfg Co. had been brought under
control.
ths City Hall.
r, sad wee a three- They reported tha livestock of milk last night to and a three- Ala., on July 10,
Told By A ir Force
delay ia teariM dowa tha looked fine but ths expenditure of day hunger strike the started in
SPOKANE, Wash. &lt; * -The story
labor would shock fanners et protest against ths military draft
of a near-tragedy involving a rud­
iawi.
derless B36 with 29 mrn aboard
The number of women at work
"M l have to take it easy on food
wax disclosed by Ihe Air Force
startled them too.
at tha beginning," she said, " but I
The first meeting of the San­ turs sreompiithed, vlx:—the selee-! the fact that.the bill for the con- yesterday.
“ We saw as many as 30 peopla hope to regain my health and my ford Rotary Club undar the ad tlon of s 37 msn committee to mlidstion of the tax agencies and
The bomber hut a big i*rtion of
in a hay field," Charles J. Haarst, strength aoon."
ministration of William Bush Jr, rsvii* the antiquated constitution the milk hill revixion failed to its tall as It headed for Denver
Chutes K. UtetoiM, aua*» ad af Cedar Falls, lows, reported. "U
She agreed to atart eating again for the year 1966-56 was high' and report harg to the 1967 leg­ pn»», he related, Tha coneolida- last week In fly over dedication
Mm fbodaart which was gabbed hack boose ia Iowa wo had three after her husband Earl railed in lighted by the appearance of the islature. He quoted many conflict- ;
tlon of the varioua tax collection rerrmonles at the new Air Force
Sunday eight, anatmirtd today
l* Working the earns hey field several frienda who talked with Seminole County Legislative De­ ing and Incunsiitrnt items and agrnriea would cave, it was ex- Academy. Tho plane was about 30
(hat MW (award ia bring offered
would bo a lot."
her.
legation at the Yacht Club ye£ stated there were over 200 gram­ timatrd, belwrrn two and a half mile* from Denver at the time,
ter definite taferauttoa leading to
She started the hunger strike at terday, although Bush was away matical error* In the pre»rni doc- and five million dollars. He did. and lot* of the 32-font-high rudder
the arrest and ceavkftea af any
3:30 p m. Friday after her dentist on s vacation, Past-presidsnt ument. He pointed with pride to us he called it, "A Drew Pearnon" section left the craft without ef
all parsons Involved la the rabbet
son Dr. Thomas Blumenbach, :
Georgs Touhy presided and after the fact that no new- general and predicted a tax Inrreasa in fective controls, tha Air Fores
Tbs terideat was discovered yes­
entered the U. 8. Public Health ths introduction of one visiting taxes were impoxed and regret­ 1957 either In the sale* tax or in said.
terday morning after tbs latraders
Service at Savannah, Ga.
Rotarian, Mort McDonald Jr., of ted that the ronxolldation hill to *ome other manner. He deplored
It made an emergency landing
pped a hois to tbs reef sad car­
The roreet appointment of the He aaid ha volunteered when hla DeLand, and tho singing of a few eliminate duplicate taxing agen. the appiopiletinn of hundred* of with the help of ths aileron ran
away ths sate which wss later Sanford Motor Track Co., 1401 draft board told him ha would have songs led by Charlie Morrison elee failed tn pais as did the milk thoutandx of dollar* for county
trots on Its wings and a sister
BL A reported total af WJ66 Fiaaib Are, as tscluslvo dealer to eerve In the armed forces. Duty with Francis K. Roumillat Jr., at bill revision.
fair* and for hog cholera serum bomber that flew up alongside to
to rads aad checks was aaid to ha for fiaaferd and Seminole Coun­ with the Public Health Servlca is tho piano, tho mooting w u turn
Rep. Cleveland spoke briefly but not any increaie in the ap­ accompany It to Ellsworth AFB,
ty of tha well known line of CMC considered equivalent to time in ed over to William C. Hutchison and added to the Senator's re­ propriation for mentally handi­ S. D„ for a safe landing. Tha lost
Tracks, was announced by the the armed forcei.
Jr., general program chairman for marks by stating that he thought capped ehildrnti.
rudder was found on the ground
GMO Truck aad Coach Division
ths year who Introduced in this two outstanding contributions
Roth he and his rolleagus, Rep. near Umon, Colo.
of flanstal Motors Corporation.
M I U M f MOO
KERFS FALSE TEETH
ordsr, Hon. Douglas Stenstrom, were ths abolithment of proxies Cleveland expressed dltpleaxure
p i t t a s m M Abate six warite
Deals! Lopes, tha owner end * DALLAS UP) - R. B. Hamilton Senator of tho 67th district; Hon. and the organization of commit­ with tha method of submitting
ACTRESS'S CONDITION
age Mrs. M ania Lyons
general teenager of ths lec«l or. (bund one of th« windows of hla Mack Clovetand Jr. aad linn. Voile tee meeting* with prartlcatly no vouchers on the date of June 30
TO BE DIAGNOSED
shivering, ssdhteg • wet i
ganiaaUoB, has bed a long _a#&gt;d :kup truck broken, n act of A. William* Jr., local state re­ conflict in the attendance of the for payment Ju*t at the legisla­ DUARTE, Calif. tek-A diagnosis
verted sigsrisara ia trucks, edfechser-Jaw false teeth lying on Um presentatives.
member* of varlou* committee*. ture was supposed to adjourn of artrcaa Suian Ball’s condition
fhe teak I b o a t, gave It fits as, and buses. Bora ia Wood- seat, and a 21-year-old man alnenHutchison mentionsd the fact Approximately 3000 bill* war* In­ which precluded the actual check­ will be Issued sometime today by
beat af teed gad stodtetee, aad bride* M. i-. Lops* was, at one ing beside the track.
that Bern Stenstrom was voted by troduced and it will be some time ing of the vouchers. This will be doctors at City of Hope Medic (1
■e, general manager at the The stranger had no tower hla senatorial eollyguaa as the before the delegation will have remedied they stated with tha Center. She is suffering from a
iddteaex Bug Co af that city.
teeth.
outstanding freshman Senator full knowledge of the actual work new interim auditing commlttaa recurrence of cancer.
Mi la nurrtad to ths former Yesterday the grand jury rated and that Volte WiUiama was again of the sexilon, he stated.
functioning bafors tha naxt legis­
She has been hospital lied for
t^ t e ? s ! l f t l s . Lyons took bar Mias ftggy Russell, of Passaic, the evidence of breaking and en­ voted by the press one ef the ten
Rap. William* told of the lature.
two weak*. Eighteen month* ago
't e / *
M. J , at ana Urn* a TWA Airline tering aa auto waa not enough aad itstoodfog Bepzeientativo*.
creation of the Wgiilativ* inThe three members of tha local surgeons amputated a lag ia which
bateau. With thsir tens children, fined the nun.
Sb his v w ii k i , fan. Etsiutroa tezia auditing committee aad delegation bald the attention of csocer hid bees detected aad it
Mstfiya gad Denial Jn, they ra­ AH right, said Hamilton,
.whs a f m m o f the pnrdralarty thst ail three voted against the their auditors past tha usual ad- w u believed Out the dread dited* * MU Fork Ara.
keep the teeth than. Aad he
tteBtetotet things that ths l*tela« tanpik* MIL Hs, too, regretted Journment time of the meeting.
***** Led been eoatroPed

Family Of Eight
Has House Problem

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Suspicion Aids
Lengthy Efforts
To Find Teller

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SANFORD, FLORIDA, TUESDAY JULY 19. 1955

E stablished 1908

V O LU M E X L V I

W t m lb

H a n fo rd

d ear to partlv etocd? through
Wednesday with antlered after
noon thundershowers; Mattered
morning shower* southeast.

A tentative County budget for
the next fuc«! x*ar beginning
October t. 1953 « » » ere»p**d at
this momtrg's »»»»ion of ths
County Commission meeting.
The budgot consisting of .* tots!
of 6930,022.51 will come up again
Before, the commu-ioner* for
adoption at their meeting on
August 2. 1935.
The tentative budget included
$148,701.25 in the fine and for­
feiture fund; road and bridge
fund, *421.326.23. of nhirh 3296,.
796.63 wa* for erpr^priations,
$10,264.37 for reserve for contin­
gencies, and *£4,263.23 rexerx-n
for eaxb. balance tn he carried
forward.
Th* general fund
993 01 with total appropriation*
being *257.649.21. Reserve for
caxh balance tn he carried for«
ward I* *71.90900.
Seminole County Clerk, O. P,
Herndon complimented the Coun­
ty Comminlnner* stating that the
County was i« a healthy financial
condition.
The commission *ccepted the
bid of gtrickland-Morrison to
supply lh* County with two
truck* for *1,010.32 with allow,
anre on old equipment. Other*
submitting bid* were Seminole
County Motor* and Sanford Mo.
tor Truck Co.
John
5lcLaughlin of I^Va
Mary appeared before tbe com­
missioner* requesting that th*
county open a street into *ont*
ar*y ow which he wanted to.
H O a m Tbw-xfiommisslOncr*
refused, stating that if they open­
ed street for one dm eloper they,
would have to do the tame fort
other*.
John Fox, county right-of-way .
agent, appeared before the com .'
mixsionrn with a deed from th* j
Overstreet Land Co. that was ac­
cepted for future u*e.
The property that ws* affected
wa* 26 feet at the Big Trea
Crossing faring Henxous Arret
one half .mile from the Sanford
Orlando Highway.

Fallen Power Line
Blamed For Deaths
During Rainstorm
ALEXANDRIA. L«. (Jt-A power
line that Jell during * rainstorm
w u blamed for the death of four
persons and tha Injury of a fifth.
Killed last night were Y. E. Ttllman, .V. trurk-lm# operator; Wil­
liam Bmsette, 23, dairy truck
driver; William L. Voorhiee, 33,
supervisor of a fleet of dairy
trucks, and Voorhics' 6-)ear-old
daughter Linds Carolyn.
Voorhies 5-yeir-old son William
Jr «** treated for minor burn*.
Tolice said Ihe Voorhies family
had been visiting the Brosettei,
and derided to go home about th*
time a rainstorm was lotting up.
The Voorhics boy ran to open Ihe
rar door and was hnmed by the
current from a power line that wa»
lying in the flooded gutter parallel
lo Ihe rar.
The father ran out to help the
boy and was killed. Lind* Carotya
and Brosette then met a like fite.
A passing motorixt. Tillman,
•topped to help and also was (Icetrocuted.

Sergeant Pleading
To Lesser C h arg e s
FT. BRAGO, N C. (Jft-Sft. Joh*
L. Tyler, J3. pleads today te
leaser charges of aiding the memy
while a prisoner of war In Korea. 1
MaJ. C. E. Noel), law officer, ;
yesterday upheld • defense motion .
thst certain charges wera “ not •
plain, not concise and indefinite.** j
The charges dropped Included one
that said Tyler told Chines* Com- j
munista fellow pnionera were
planning an escape.
The remaining charge# allage
tha Moundsvill*, W. Va., soldier
Informed on fellow prisoners,
wrote pro • Communist articles,
asked fellow prisoners to sign
peaee petitions aad attempted te
ooavert them te eaarauaitm.

i

IJju
'ilm

�m*
,. .

w-v*
a

o

.

FTC WILL REEK
TO BLOCK MERGER
WASHINGTON (A-The Federal
! Trade Communion aald ‘ Sunday
it &gt;4ill reek to block mergdr of
the two biggeit rivals among agri­
cultural magntnei, the Farm
WESTERHAM. Enjlind &lt;jr—'The( Khen iturad by major cventa Uk? Journal and Better Farming, on
old man put and* hia ratal and (hr Big Tour eonfrrrnrr opening
Kinl to tha window. Hr looked yeiterday. Hli M yeara dictated
Into tha blua iky and than, ittll him a place on the iidulutca—but
wearing aUppcn, walked outilde bit thought! arc there.
along aw iHvttvl path,
Morn' than two yeara ago. on
Thr flowrri were in full bloom. May 11. 19.U. he Mid in the Houie
Along thr way ha itnppad to frrd of Com mom:
N o n r o iK . v « . tntTNC) • “ I brlieva « conference on thr
acma goldluh in a pool.
The Navy’* third summer mid­
HI wai in no great hurry, and higheit lrvtl ihmild take place
shipmen trainmc rruli# |i »chwa uulet mmnier day at CharlKCll betwern thr leading powera with­
dulr.t to ilepatt Irntti thr Not folk
In the Kent countrjilde ti a good out long delay
Naval Ham tomoimw morning.
"Thu conference ihould not be ,
diy for remlnurlng — a good day
Jdnrt&gt; Uun 1,100 liildthipnirti ol
overhung by a pondetoua or rigid
(or dreaming too
tha Nival Rtitrve Offlrtn Trimfo r Sir Wmiton Churchill rrm* agenda, or 1H into matti or
tag Oarpt tiom &gt;1 cn lltm *n«l
tnuccncei and dreama corn* any junglct of technical dttadi. realumvrrMtir« *UI riubark In II
ouily contaited by bordei of rx
rhiln of thr AtUntle flw t today.
peril and ofitciali drawn up Ui
t'rulir ‘ ’rhirtte * *ill bo convail, rumbroui array.
durtfit in th* Wr4t«rn Atlantic
"It mieht wq]) be taken no hard
ocd Caribbean, viiiun* .P&gt;'Ma ui
fared agreement! w o u l d
be
J'anama and Cuba, tarljjar a#*
reached, but there might be a
; turnms bait Au|»«l to - rracllco
general leiUng among thoie gath­
■ cfuliri arc the maM'r 4iperaiiopal
ered together that they might do
tratetat pt'ur o| uDdiuradnata
icmethuig better than tear the
n m l aducation. Tbiy proiidr
human race. Including themirlrei
♦ea.exrencnrr to round out pminto bill.
|e.*mnal itudir4 anil to tnliTNliieo
• If there ti not at the lummit
imitihlpmrn to life aboard a tpanA mimbar of Ccrapeitt# Squad* of the nationi the will to win the
TNI
lATtJT
to
arrive
to
Long
*'( *ar niUi the main characterton Nina atgnad up tbla waak to gretteit pm# and the greatrit
luach. CaUt, to compete to the
1 title —"irarnlng be ilolni **
add i ll y a m to tha twalra ha haa honor oxer offered to mankind
i u u i I Min Universe content
Lath mltiblpman it inticratwt
airs 1 dv «anr«d to tha l'. S Navy. 1doom-1 iden mpomibility will fall
•ro
Min
1
1
*
I
t , Elena m o o n ,
Into a ihlp'e battle orcaniiatinn
Ra.anllitminl erremonlra war* 1 upon thoio Khn now ponria thr
N , of Rome. and MUo Canada.
and aitltnml tnitrurilonat vat
held Thuridty morning for V. 0 . |poHvr to dreide
Cathy ntnlM . JO. of Tneemin.
Chri In each of the ehtpa main
Teten. Aviation Structural Mech­
At Korit. the participants in
iSrpatlmrnti— opriaUcm, »"ltn*|
&gt;,
•
anic, Fuat Clan, who hai been the meeting k UI have established
•artni and gunnai* Tha cruiic I f ) P n i s t p H A l p n with VC-&gt; leii than a month
mere intimate centacti. At the
vriit afford Junior ofttrrr tralntn* l v
tn iiO lC U
/r lC T f l
re fill, who ti from Bradmten. bait, k i might hare a generation
tor the midshipman tint clan.
Fla . ti married t» the farmer Mlia of peace ’* ~
*h * •ill be commiiiloant cfflcm
Dorn Solei af that city. They re­
Today the godfather &lt;&gt;f the
after graduallon trrm roilegc,
side at ICO! Trinch Avt in San- Geneva cerJtrenc* could think that
(ard with their three children.
perhaps. Just perhaps, the world
Cojutnanded by Rrar Admiral, A r 6 A d v Q n C G C l
Entering the vNa»y tn IMS. was inasKhat nearer the enduring
W R Mft,»an. d r . l ’ ?N, t&gt;» ta il
^ ta inliited man laretng *-ttk Tetera terved hia ftrit permanent peace he ence filled - "the last
gioup ii mute up ol t»o eruliin, r . ^ U t a Rr-iadioo Ntoa at tha duty with the Overhaul and Re­ priee I leek to win"
#i.vr dailtvrari. thrao a.rort de»•;
Auxtitary Atf M a t to n pair Activity at the l ’ . R. Naval
tw e ri
and tMvo hi*h^ap-d
to new Tatty 00l* (Air Station. Jacksonville, FU« unt
ttaaiporti.
—
^
J »«r H lai Saturday.
hi m
5 u ef tha man *tr* crtgluUy month* with T.iit Air Training U A r c , , a , T i * '
R A N F O R P R R R A T .P
Tue». July IT. IMA

It’s A Good Day For Thinking
As Old Man Puts Easel Aside

Navy's 3rd Summer
Training Cruise
To Leave Station

TREMpft 1ET0RTED
AGENTS ASBESTBD
MOBILE. Ala. cb—Tha leiiftio*
SEOUL ur—The South Korean
graph at Spring Hill Collega re­
corded a "deep" earthquake Sun­ from Mobile in an undetermined
day located about 4.000 mike direction. Father L. J. Eisfle, di­
rector, said the quake was probgrounds that tuch a merger may ablv located far under the ground
"tend to create a monopoly."
or under water. _

aray*» eoantarlstaOlgaBM carpi
Monday announcad tha recent ar*
reit of nine Communlit agenta. U
said they were "plotting tha vio­
lent overthrew of the government
under orders from the North K®rean regime."

W e Welcome The Personnel Of The
New Naval Unit To Sanford . . &lt;

V. G. Pelers, VC-9

W ill You Be Our Guest?

Reenlists In Navy
For 6 More Years

We Have Leased 2 0 Air Conditioned

9 At Base

Rooms At The Beautiful M ar Lou Motel

! &gt; «, after which h* ipemnx Exocnsivc Proorani

Passcnaor Co aches »«h*4ui«dumo»m th#tra4*«*#.jumt T*e at R#-ana Riv*r. ria. Vofaej Bv C o naress
mint in Reptimber bat the pro me- In 1&gt;4T, hi Joined Tatret Squad*
. r
■*
w
tV.ASHtNT.TOV .P -C ongrtn hai
W rcckao e Combed t en was moved tethe»«Tli«r date ten U *nd served with that vetrd
Army Eagmeen mere than

« r u v ^ . , 4« ^ - v V
W
hy the Rateeu ef Neva! TenomeL 1quadion at Tatuaent R&gt;v»r. Md.
SAN BERNARDO. On.e -R —1 BUlism D Puiur wai ad- and Atlantic City, N. J . until f.va mUlioa dollan let r.-nitneLon next year ef a number cl
Jeltfe wmbed tb# wteckage of
^
„ n , l l | n ) |t r l Mata, ■m \
.?.*•
&lt;ww imashwl passenger coachei riri( ciaaa. Pulver. who enured
Hit sail dalt wai with Flight small Good control and navigation
We4.cUy i-k .n g ether vtct.mi id a xU N l, y
Fehmary. m i . re. Teit at Fatuxent River, after which project! c&amp;iLsg eii than $1JO.000
train -Unbm here tn whkh at l44#l t , u v # Mtry
! he spent a year aboard the air* j «*ch. ^
Wait M peri— i were tv^'rtevt
y * u n aveu He U e native vt 4‘taft 4-arrtrr V, S- r&lt;nalrg* ' * * » «
« « • P-*buf works
• t«. Trier te repertieg t» hia pie- app re^ atxe. b il now swatting
b.xtui. N. Y.
Newsman
u »r
Adv.nced*tn Tetty Officer. Se- *ert a.iunmewi. Teter, was »-.i*. l i g a t e * &gt;y Preutent Eienhower
Rtd counted M Kvliea fa the Ran ^
oaaa. were. James C. B— a.
tottfc Utility
&amp;11
C c i p t il 04 B?i
pn^Kti eeg.ween
i t t - n n •'fro ta i «! k (
^w-^Oke. hat effUitli |#y&gt; Avutioe Fire Cmtiwl Techwi- at S ctfr!'y V * . for two yean.
project*
bat IV
toll Ccugrese
slid t-jvlv u . id been found. KtD . 4T&gt; m *»j&gt;v* ef N ik berry. Ahe j
groenUy v** titx would *p**d
Imr feRntti id put the bid * t
ilarr. .Avlataia L"e*rrL:Uw'i
Uf ®oe»r inclusLnt:
** * * • * . .
_
.Mate, o f Mema TUia&gt;. N. J.1 A*Fu Lagwa to Tco-icwii Bar.
At lei it sw ether peraoos were
0. ivbard. Avlati— rtre
r t a . m .&lt;xo: New R im JW.CW:
Itperted H'ated
0— tied Te-.-hni.-mw. of Hvuttow,
R:c* Crml
Tn. r n
u , i u IW |
* rertUge. Aevu, ? } *
iwq rtte C— tied Tevhewan, whe
I ti»
l be— e»tmeted at M p - made* cm RID J. SapJervL win
jr r w tM une
J A V peop'.e.
Mi t !i ! and MiNin l i t tValt,
PtLLKS J '- . t Jet jC i:* b f b :
Avtalle* Tire Cwatrvl Tvvhnieu*,
U t *UtX r M
a jo m :
C*»U Km% started anRit m * . at Rabina.**, \\l
taa u i r L ett HtM S a i t y sugitf
Beetle* Iw the IBX0'» end cento
V ia wK» m w o i U ur f j i t
bat landed t*Jtly.
•tiU U the wualnt1* tVkot ttfW l.
1retty Qffiw t u t i l w t: Geecge l\
— A a a k . 'm 4 l ftaA n t eer’-ur'-** 1
|A\wh. A ^ N W m v R i W N J t e lf h
I m M itorirtti. P » * t : w » f j ? &gt; 1
c'am Third CUa*. of FWevSg. It.
lo tio n
eaid ttt n t t v ,
lV« wba T**vi*t with h'e wife at
trM fd) aai itor.td to o UWO vet. •
Ewell Lao
wire* ro rei:&gt;y pcJri.
t o r i i j i M bjte. t i l l $ u ! i c i .I 'M
• t*&gt;»*T*U n i ’.l n t . d&lt;«. D-bbe. A v4U«4 U n t i « u ; i T k A*
V i* ptiH. afeat-Led «*.&gt;r 1 1 Air!
-x»4-»»a» A
**
m
'
.
vvtaw,
a#
tVttis.
Ata.)
C
U
i
v
t
iVaxr*. T »'»» ‘
F.wvv tit U- A a b t « v t u M t V !
J.t-f w . I '.m
11&gt;}V&gt;
. .
3d. J t o li? Ja.A i&lt; 4laa Eleitorep.
tw *|4»ll U 111 144.
j « . tea at Mr. i » i Vrv C. X H i*.
» a lU '* 4 '» « &gt; aa'V" .Ml
l* » l
»♦*-»*'
toJMt tor S r. at Wtotor h t i i w t Ko*.
( w u n i t lU yvX ijlar, A « iit « a C m .

These Rooms Are Available ABSOLUTELY

FREE For A Period Of 3 Days To New Arrivals
-At Our Naval Air Station

Legal Notice

STO P By And Pick Up Your Key
A t Th e O ffice O f

ODHAM &amp; TUDOR, Inc.
“ B uilder*

of

re t

H om e*"

2625 S. French Ave.

1

iCta*,n**.w»

ft

►»» »..• &gt;411 H i 444
it » P l u i . tan. a*
4 &gt; «t »I«4 M C

aft.tSSTww

TevhnkrUs. at

Cray*—.

Thunderstorm Fatal
For Two Persons
in St. Petersburg

J u s t ......................................
lo o k w

h a t ym / o u r e

m

is s in g

ST K T t U M 'U t S J I w . m
tb
» t u ewe 0 .1
M b ta o W on yesterday aftrroogo
h&amp;ad two yon —a n t tu n ed — .
tnottO pNgootF i t M H
B n — &gt; u .o * i a sU elh ire Br.f
a Tmmmo ewajeei w t .’ w k Sowtb.
• f i W o u . wete MJjott to wuhrfct
.oofoaoTvt p om at *ra» h
e u * BUehbura * 0* akrwtk at ta
WdMtod —to r a gatt n o r — pain
t o o Tto VKr. Hat LJ&gt;vi Smith'
aw&gt; «mo i f t i t tto stork * wkutk!

■ .I

UVl

----- f T

» '•
-

•’

.

•;

-c .

• •

�TTIH SANFORD HERALD Tnea. July II. m i

[CHILDREN

P«r* »

AND ARMS AT 'SUMMIT'

«
•
Chief* of Stale are viewed b e a (roup nl
children as Mrs. Miller (right) answer* questions about the states­
men in (Jcnthod, Switzerland, where President Kisenhower is alay! Inc durlnc the talks. Mrs. Miller's husband la the boatman attached
In the villa where the Chief Executive ha* hi* haedquartert. Tha
photos show (I. to r.) British Prime Minister Sir Anthony Kden,
'Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin, Trench Premier Edgar Taure and
jthc President. At bottom are some of the arm* whieh Swiss soldier*
[art equipped with for protection of the delegation*, ffaienuftaaaff

M any

Hope

Disney I* no! picking up the lab
M ueh o f the opening
«m ft*»
for everyone." a park official said ston was due In a 90-minute tele­
Traffic jams, described as the cast which complicated norma)
worst ever on certain segments of operation. Many of the rides and
the Santa Ana Freeway, developed attractions were closed to visitor*
as automobiles moved bumper to while cameramen moved cable*
bumper. The California highway and lights. Some people, wander*
patrol assigned 25 extra officers ing into sections such as Tomor­
to duty along a five-mile section row land or Fantasy land, often
ANAHEIM. Calif. I* - Disrtey- n-.'ar the park and will keep them found themselves trapped fnsid*
with ropes barring their exit until
land, a 17-million-dolUr southern there for at least a month.
the
telecast was over.
California playground dedicated to
Whm the opening day jitters are
children, young and old. opens Its quited and the park slows down
All was not disappointment fof
gates to the pubic today.
to a routine operation, it will he the children. Davy (Fes* Parker)
Unfortunately, the opening Is quite a show. The 160 arres—100 Crockett, the hero of the nation'*
about one week too early as .to,- of them for parking—have every­ young, made sure that the kids
ooo invited guests learned Sunday thing In thrill a kid and his par­ got a look at him He elimbed on
a horse anil rode through the park
at a special preview.
ents too.
several
limes.
The fabulous amusement park tv
A nostalgic main street, com­
Park official* said (hat they hop*
the brainchild of Walt Disney, the plete with horse • drawn trolley,
be»t friend a kid evrr had. But, I will help many a grownup relive to gross 10 million dollars a yea*
with an average per head expendi*
probably for the first lime In his] hi* childhood.
,
career, disappointing thousands of
There's a stockade, pirale ship lute of $2 per visit.
youngsters.
and replicas of Mickey Mouse and
Haiti is tha only French-speak*
The park, which hopes In handle fellow- cartoon characters of Dis­
ing nation in lavtin America.
00.000 persons a day in peak oper- j ney fame.
ations wasn't able to handle hall
that number.
As a result, many parenls and
children skipped long, seemingly
endless line* in front of such l)isnev creations as Snow While’ s
HI-FI
castle, a Mississippi River show
E Q U I P M E N T
boat and jungle steamer.
The park's three restaurants
were unable to eare for all who
P H O N O G R A|P H S
wanted to eat but there was an
ample reason. Most of the guests
had five meal ticket*. And the
many ride* were free for those
who got on.
i
.tDR E. 1st SI.
rhnnt 417
"Lines Will not be so long when

T a lk s M a y B r in g P e a c e Disneyland Now

Communist parly boss Nikita S.
fly WILLIAM I - RYAN
Khrushchev, July 4, to foreign
AP Foreign New* Anal) at
Soviet propaganda has built up! correspondents:
holes insida Russia and abroad
"1 think in inv case -shat lie
that the Geneva summit meeting (President
Eisenhower*
said
opening todsy will lead to lasting (about the need to end the cold
peace. But it has laid the ground­ war) was a fresh stream ai
work— carefully abroad and almost orone."
N
recklessly at home—for dashing
That was not published for the
those hopes and blaming failure Soviet people to read. Instead, they
on the West.
read in Praxda and heard on the
When S o v i e t leaders make Moscow radio home service:
friendly atalement* to foreign cor­
Pravda, July It: "In actual fact.
respondents at various receptions President Kisenhower let it lx*
in Moscow, the home folk do not understood that the United States
hear about. They get the darker intends to continue it* interference
side.
in the Internal affair* (of Com­
Warmonger*, spies, imperialists, munist- countries l ami strive to
saboteurs and all the rest of the achieve a change in the regimes
catalogue of enemies still populate there. There is no need to saythe pages of the Soviet press. such statements by no means show
"Defense might" through heavy any real desire to lake the path
Industrial building remains the of reducing international tension."
prod of fear.
Khrushchev, •July 4. to foreign
The Impression Is gained that correspondents: " if we meet a*
the Kremlin want* whit might he equals something will come of it
termed a strictly limited relaxa­ . . , 1 know wo do not want a
tion of tension*. That is, the Soviet war ins I know tl.a' y-u do tv-L
leaders seem to want just enough If there must he a war, let's bf
relaxation in their relation* with on the same side."
the West to remove any immed­
That statement was not read or
iate danger that a global clash heard by the Soviet public. It gets
would bring the Soviet structure this sort of thing:
down about their heath Rut they
The youth magazine Sntena. July
seem In no way prepared to per­ 1955 edition: "The capitalist camp
mit the Soviet people themselves is intensively preparing a new- war
to relax.
and Is sending its spies, terrorists
and saboteurs into the Soviet
Her* arc same examples:

Union. The Imperialist* are resort­
ing to all methods to try Lr under­
mine the economic and military
might of the Soviet state"
Premier Bulganin says. "There
is no reason to believe that the
basis of a future peace cannot be
assured." Pravda, however, has
slated:
"The farts prove convincingly
that some people in the West do
not fancy the prospect of a solution
of some international problem*.
Aggressive circles want to hamper
its work."
The Soviet press and the Mos­
cow radio's home service is
threaded the idea that the United
Stales has approached Geneva
with the idea of preventing
agreement and blaming the fail­
ure on the Soviet Union,

GASOl.INi: IS USED
TO "WASH" n.OTHES
DETROIT i.TV—Strve_ Netnec. 4?
a truck driver, tried to wash work
clothe* Sunday in a washing ma­
chine loaded with 15 galluns o(
gasoline. The gasotine caught fire
apparently from a spark front the
electric motor. N'emec was treated
at a hospital for minor hum*. The
fire ruined Netnec'* utility room.
Worcester, Mas*., boasts it has
700 manufacturing concerns, _S.t
of them stalled silica Woild War
II.

Open To Public,
Children Awed

"

IK T i l l : r o t ItT IIP TIISC I'ltl STV
Jl IM1K,
SIIVIVIII.K
sol vrv.
arsTH os-* ri.oMiHs. in r a n HATH.
I N UK TIIK FKTATK OF:

:i.t r .A U r .T it D e c u u iiiiie r

Harassed.

n x a t . n o t h 'i:

Notice |a h crrliy * lv rti that «h#
tinitaralKiK-d
w ill, on tha
1*t li
«l«y of Atie oat, A. D, IS S i. p rrstn l
to th* Honorable County Jm taa of
M I.N
o l.K
i 'miin
inty,
Flo rid a, hla
KM
IN O
LK i'o
ly , Florida,
?IKInal
Ina return, account and vouchers.
la ‘rxi-i-MIur. of.......................
|ho K -la ts of K M C A IIK T II l'eCO U lU tKV.
dreeaaed.
-tend at an Id time, alien and tlicr*.
Jtn a U e application In Ilia said Judse
(o r a fin al aettlament nf hla adm inistratio n of eald ealate, and
(o r nn order dM chareln* him aa
in- h esai utor.
Haleo ih la th * U th day o( Ju ly ,

A. H.-JSV1.

VV\ C. PcCouraay
Aa rie i-u ln r n( tha K a la le
of
Kllaabcth
Irec'nureey
I ) teas sad.
P n u x ta i ftlenaironv
A ttorney at Law
lldnifrda tlu lld ln *
I ftS
ai.fnrd. Flo rid a
I n T i n t r o t itT o f Tin e rntMVTT
t
Jl IHil..
at:HI Mil.K
f 'O l N T X ,
" _ FI.OIIIIIA. IN PHONATK.
I N Hi:: k h t a t k o f
A iiTwi ii i . k k n o a i K n ,
Deceaaed.
TO A L L CHKHITOIt* AND PKMHONK I1.VVINU i-I.AISIH Oil l»KXIAXPH
AUAINdT
If AIU
K*.
TATIJi
. Tou and each of you art hereby
fentlfled and required to present
• ny claim* and drmande which
you, nr either of you. may have
‘ ha
eatate of
AllTIIOIt
•**•}• IIOfiKIt, dei-aaaed. lata of
eald County, to the County Juder
o f Remlnola County,
Florida, at
c - h la office In the court linu*e of
Florida.
within * lull* raleodar nmnfha from
lha lima o f tha flral publlraflon

H

lT

&lt;

NOW SHOWING

RE C O R D S

-

WINN TV &amp; RADI O

n o w *. .

*

PICTURES OF THE BIO FOUR

Le g al N otice

-

* •

The United St*tea had J9‘,4 mil­
lion children I to 17 years old *nrnllod In public schools In the (all
of 19S4.
of this nolle*. Each elatm or defiiaiid ahall t&gt;l In
wrlllnH, »no
ahali a u t a lha place » f raaldanr#
and poet office
address « f
the
claimant, and ahall he aworn l»
l&gt;y Ilia-clalmaMt, hla aeenl, ur a t ­
torney, and aiiv auch claim or de­
mand * " t ao filed ahall be void.
Carl I,, ltnaler. Aa admlnlttralor of the Kslafa n|
A I I T lt t 'lt
l.K K
tlOPIKH.
v
recessed
Douslaa Btanaiimu
Allnrney at le w
;n i M w i h i i llulldlnar
Sanford. Florida
IK COI'HT
IIP THK
ro tlN T V
Jl MttK.
■ HNINIH.P.
r o t NTT
B T S T K o p p i .o m i i i a . i n p k o atTK .
IN IlK TIIK KKTATK OP
W i t . 1.1 Ait WILLIAMft,
Deceased
TO AL L VTItOU IT MAT
CON­
CERNS
Nolle* la hereby * I t * k that *tfRAN It. WII-I.IAMfl filed her final
report *■ K ie cu ir li of ilia ra­
fale of WILLIAM W IL L IA M *, daeraaed: that aha filed her petition
for final dlarhar**, and that ah*
will apply to lha Honorable KftNKRT
liot-pliot.DKIt. C o u n t y
Judea of Henilnol* County, Flori­
da. on the ISlh day of Au*ual, IStl
for approval of earn* and fnr fins
dlarharae as Kierulrlx of lha a l ­
ia '* of W1IJ.1AM W IL L IAM *, i t -

ceased.

Ruean H. Williams
Aa K ie ru lrlt of lb* aefale
Of W IL L I A M
Wlt.t.tAMH
daraased

OLD TIMER
Q u a lity J ^ a in U
| ».k m *M Ram,
,k* P*hd yeyUarKy taaaeaa * he*

YOUGIT,..
M «n ta r for

ym u / I

• *

Tap ( h i h r

hr
yt»r presmt o r!

Ttpru th prite whet
h tm u Hm* t$ sett!
In d u rin g o u r

t*&lt;hfa (o o 4 ...f

0LD.TIMER
C osh m uck less
k tr itflh r

OLD TIMER

SAVE
3 WAYS!
it*a a fart! You can actually wivomonny by buying your now Kurd now during
our Summer Bandwagon Soll-a-braLitm . . . now wliilo wo’ro giving top "Scll-abration” dcalal You save 3 ways! ^ ■
p

BANDWAGON

In the fimt place, you get the car that «ell* more bocaiiRo it’* north more.
ITio '5.ri Ford feature* etyling inHpired by the Tbunderbird . . . renwuring,
quick-action Trigger-Torque "G o” . . . nnd n braml-new, Hmoolh-now AngleFoiaod rido. There's nothing liko it on the road I

SeUfOthuSoi^

Next, you get more money for your prouenl car becauao we’re out to chalk
up new Buies rocordn nnd wo want your husinotw! Ford* are nelling at n Icaderahip pace nnd you get the benefit*. And remember thin your present car will
never be worth more in trade than il i* right now!
In addition, you may expect an
extra dividend later. Foryenra, Forda
have returned a higher proportion o f
their original coat at reaale Uian

Gkr&amp;UcTSetyl

any other low-prioed car.
*•*•**, M*

mtp $ 2 .5 5 jwr f t ,

G e l a Sel a b re tio n D eal on a ’ 5 5

P a liW H iS o r y "

w# flpedaMm

la P alate

fm H e Petalten

SANFORD
FA IN T
'liU s t lU s I d f . TO ! a id !

v

-*•

nu t

CKLAND-M0RRIS0N, INC.

n£**

PHONI

PABXItM

MUtAT %y, rOUD THKATUE, WDUO-TV, RiM P. M. MONDAY
.

.If.

SM

�ft ft

Hindsight On Trieste
A purfion’A dearest wish la sometime*
disappointing when m illed. This well
known fact has been exemplified In the die*
Illuatonmtnt of the Trieste Italians, Trieste,
a valuable seaport, which had belonged to
IUlv alnco World War I, was, ifter the
Italian defeat In the sec. nd world war, as*
signed to Yugoslavia A« Trieste was in*
habited both by Yugoslavians and by Hal*
tween tha two nations. Recently an agreeIans, It becam e a bone o f contention boment war reached whereby the city wae aa«
signed to Italy, but part of the countrpalde
to Yugoslavia. Now the Trieste Italians feel
that they have lost by their new status.
Business hsa fallen off. The seaborne
commerce has been largely diverted to the
reconstructed Yugoslivian port f Rijeka,
famous In ldl&amp; pnder Ha old name Of
f'liftns. There Is no more Marshall Plan aid.
Unemployment la growing. As with otljer
poverty-stricken peoples, Communism ,1a
gaining popularity. •
’' ^ !
The Ti icatlnl might hava given some
thought to preventing this situation before
they agitated for a rtturn to Italy. But like

•DBSTOimON BATTS
B r c a r r ie s

e * r wrrfc
O ar a a a tB
*1 “•
T a t r a Maaifea
S I* Maalfea
Oaa T a a r
|1 t t
U -T I
ill M
A l l a b lla a r r a a lir r a . ra rS « a f Ik a a k * . r r a a la lla a a aa«
• • l i r a of • a lt r t e la t a r a f f a r Ik *
a f r a lt la a
f i a S a ta lll ka r k a r a a S t a r a * * • *■ !** » l . a r H t l * i tataa
■ aa ra a aa trS

Barrlaa.

laa.

B a il a a a l l r

Bkl

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A t la a la

® » al» *l

* • * • , H *t» *

*■•!•#•

B a a n rla

Tuesday, July 1§, 1988
TODAYS B1BI.E VERSE
The poor man had nothing but one little
ewe Iamb. —2 Sam. 12:8.—David sinned
abominably In taking the most precious pos­
session of Uriah the Hittite. He was neither
the first nor the last man who could not be
trusted with absolute power and great
wealth We should not envy such men.

JAMES MARLOW

ether human being!, they thought only of
whnt they wanted and not of the possible
consequence!.

Problem Of Germany Is Key Issue

Foreign Aid Effective
President Eisenhower recently reaffirm­
ed hit faith In the foreign air program and
gave an enthusiastic endorsement of the
House Foreign Affairs Committee which
credited the program w’th many signifi­
cant achievements.
Since the end of World War II Com­
munism hat mads a determined bid to take
advantage of the poverty and chaoa the
war left In Its wake. In friendly countries
honost, able men tried to rebuild their coun­
tries and at the same time keep the love of
freedom alive. This was never easy. That
It was possible at all was due in large metlure to our foreign aid program. This help­
ed theca cuntrlea get back on their feet It
fthua prevented Communists from luring
free people Into slavery.
» - In recert month! there has been some
Indication o* a change In Soviet attitude.
Some of the credit for this must be "given to
our foreign aid program which worked with
our military security program which work­
ed with our military security program to
make the fret world strong enough to take
its stand. The House Committee Report
states that the effectiveness of the pro­
gram so far il tha best possibls argument
for continuing it.

M asks A re Dangerous
Alabama's salutary law against wearing
masks In public will be enforced, says Gov.
James E. Folsom. Recently 80 white men,
some of them masked, broke up a meeting
of the Integrated International Relation!
Institution. Tho pollca were called In, hut
as sometimes happens In amall towns, thsy
avoided action when It had to be directed
against frlsnds and nslfhbori. The Gov.
ernr has therefore asked all state laW en.
forcement agencies to see that “ the law
against masked highwaymen" is obeyed.
Masked group! In small communities
have been known to resort to whippings
and eve nlynehlngi mnrnljr to Mtlsfy pri­
vate trudgen. The anonymity of tha mask
adds an element of terror to the operations
of the band Iliagal operations will greatly
diminish If members of mobs are forced
to eome ont In the open.
,

SAM DAWSON

NEW YORK. (A— The U. S. mint
is finding a way to lick the audden
shortages of coins that sometimes
plague various areas. In doing it
the mint la alio saving the tax­
payer aoma money.
Americana need more money
year by year. Twelve months ago
the mint waa turning out Ut bil­
lion new colna a year. By new
dlitrlbutlon methods the mint ex­
pects to get by In Uie current fis­
cal year with MO million new coins.
The U. S. mint is a monopoly.
It alone can produce coins. Also
it has but one customer—the fed­
eral reserve banka and branches—
forbidden by law to buy coins
from any one elae.
But even a monopoly can be
aapenilva tn run. When he took
offlet a year ago n director of the
Bureau of tha Mint, William H.
Brett, an Alliance, Ohio, manufac­
turer, ruled that the monopoly be
runi "be operated tn the same

Attempted Burglary
This Country Could Uso Napotoria Charges Are Placed
YORK (ft- Curbstone re­ la ether wardi, It's a plica when Beat up from neighborhood child­
ren assasslaatiag each ether at
you eaa take a u p .
flections of a psvameat Platat
What thia country seeds to half Tha napeterla la teday perhaps
—a.—., the avenge working On Titusville Men
eiviiuiuon'i grestest health ae
a minion napeUrlii.
mia easily needs hit hour loo
What la a napeterla? Well, eeBARABOTA (ft- Two Titusville
‘ ‘ • la tha middle a
being hekl today on a charge
tuatly tt hasn’t been Invented yet. f t r U S V S &amp; M «»
burglary told poUce
yhattempted
, . Sut It is aomethtog.Mw.il
new

BUICK
Brade-lns
Clearance S tic
n m iw • e e e
Clean, Gaad

*****

&lt; s w § ^ lIS
... j T r V - W ' V ''

t --

ie Immediate entry arises,
"WtU, In that case why don’t
people get that extra sleep at
home?"
And the obvloue answer, of
•eurae, la that tt le Impossible.
The madere home to a great ptase
ts
hut
•• visit, w
i Ia peer plica to live
‘ whoa a man u lookv . Toe many other la*
tereettog things to da la tt - Uhe
welshing titovtotoe, throwing per*
Urn nr listening to the euarreto
of neighbors la the apartment seat

M

i

*»or,

•rtjudten la this enua&lt; they hid broke into buildings tn
...
toktos a asp after e seven riorldi towns, Police Lt.
luneh. It Is regarded as sissy and Walter whittn md.
vaguely un-American. But the cus­ Lords Henry Qessford. 14. end
tom of the siesta, populai In Latin Frederick Symons, ar, were tipAmerican lands, is an honored sad lured it a ro»d blocs yesterday
sensible one.
after attempting to enter a city
Winston Churchill decided la his owned casino, the officer said.
youth that the human body waa Whitted said the men told him
ULedapted to eight hours at steady they usually drove around until
attention to a talk. AB his life he they spotted ■ closed cottage and
hsa taken a dally refreshing nap. then removed whet they wanted
Thomas Edison, who oaee said from
ho
It He said the sheriff of
ilopt 4 hour* A sight, alee Brevard County found a trailer
resular naps. BothChurchlli loaded with household articles at
and Edison managed to tivo to a Gesstord'a home.
ripe old age, end got three tlmee They admitted entering two
•a much work dooo aa the ordinary houses at Titusville Beach, two St
mss.
Titusville, one at Cocoa, thrte at
. As employers so far haven't put Inglewood, two at Him*, a Mansla ettse dormitories, the napeterla tee county youth center at Bradenseems tha boat solution.
ton. • bar-restaurant at Daytona
Herd's hew it works. You waddle •eieh and a ear here.
Into it iftsr e heavy lunch, plu
They faced only the attempted
down your kuartor nr half buc_. Wi-glary. charge here but Whttted
sm us iewa mi a slowly moving said enforcement officers in the

a

Ever try to take a nap at hornet
Can’t be dtne. Inside, the phone
r ia ^ the vacuum cleaner growls
la the rug, tha electrto dishwasher
froeaa sag huhhlea, the sutemsUc
laundry machine gaashee end
triads ae tt tears apart year sailed
shirts. Outside, dels bark, birds
heUew la the tree* by your bedream wtedew, aad marry sfeowds pwt*
n o ball earring you along until
you corns to a rest cubicle containlag a bod and a comfortable pillow.
You roll off Urn hmt onto tho bed
and a soundpreed doer joiemsia.
, There to a button yen sen push
If yen want eel! music. You tall
late deep dreamless stoop. Exactly
m Wee Tatar, musical ehimta
w*kin you and a door «s the ether
Hoes automatically. You
- JACXIOMVtLLB tgufla* cm
a t jtote
- a aanother
r m . -moving
y :? '
program la a m id e hospital c u e gU out of M
that
Ukoa
you
leek downim thaws unable to pay will go Into

Hospital Care Plan
To Go Into Effect
Starling Jan. I

e«*rt a s . l, * • Sate Beard af

The board acted

ra a tv a s s rt!

Bowles Resignation
Revealed To Public
MILFORD, Dm. (ft — Bryant
S
T 1!? . . " 'W
m
®f
Ike National Asm. ter tho Advaocoment of White People gunday, clung lack af Interest in

jkepMCopegaUae argsntosttod he
hocause of lack

RfltCMMI•el berg

mb'
skeirsua * Y rittomeaamtSSm

Bapeteriaa

___

reureal

D r H. Phillip Hsmpt

which grafleg a refart

H milUea gooars aa - 5 ^ 5
centributlen to tha program.
Counties participating (MB i
I ted tend w a per espHa B

etker towns were being notified.

*V ®

Aft ttsm
bAa^ii k«
etna. The committee la

nap-while

«i• » « — 1 t r , to

T !

on

01 tcourse,
-J
X T aSmen
i i s s l . _____ _ S T T . ’S S a r i i f V

-------------- *-------------?S»
*SL
•» ea wWte scbeeU here,
•am

m s

base la a T &amp; U h cth

Fastest Lady Flier
Hailed Officially;
715 MPH Recorded

Shortage Of Coins Being Licked

HAL BOYLE

r«B f a garage. * avr»e stale Maa,».Tfl *
In a eefeterte you serve ydor•elf food; In a garage you park
your ear. But In a nipeteria you
?; park your tired old body, take the
' weight off your feet end mind,
' and eerva yourself seme s

and was succeeded by Prime Uinl change in that mood.
American economic aid to Eu­
kter Alice.
That conference also considered rope — starting in 1P47 with the
Germany, now defeated. Tb*y Marshall Plan —Included eld to
agreed their foreign ministers the Western Germans, with thea
would work out a peace ecttlsmant result that thsy grew even closer**
with Germany one* 11 had been to the West. And as the West reable to set up a single aQ-Otmaa armed against Russia II decided
government In which the Western a reamed West Germany waa
end Eastern parte of the eeuatry Bt+dtd
Tha West dll net waft a dewould be united.
soon the cold wsr began and feesalesi Osrmanv which would
Germany la still not united al­ provide aa open plain lor Bustin
though the three Western Powers attack.
let the West Germans hive In­ Russia triad, hy threats eng
dependence end their own fev*m waascllng, to ktop West Oermany
merit, pending the time when Rus out of arms and out of the WeatarnO
ala lets loose Eastern Oermany Alliance. The Russians hald out
■nd ■ united Germany can choose to the West Osmans the halt of
reunion with Bast Oermany If they
a new alngla government.
U.l. anxiety to keep Germany stayed neutral. The West Oer.
disarmad began to change as the mans balked at that but tkay atm
cold war Intensified end the Weal want rcunifleaUen.
began to raarm. Russia halpod tha Over the weekend West Ger­
many's Chancellor A d e n a u e r
showed some concern that the
West, In Its desire far peace, might
mike some deal with the Rusflsns v
whereby Germany would be lcftvv
divided. He told tha West Mt to
try tt
Roughly, is the Itg Four meet
at Oanava, this to thafr position:
The West wants the people of
PARIS tft — Jaequtline Auric!, West snd Bast Germany — in
daughter-in-law of tha termer free election* net rigged hy the
French president, Monday officially Communist* — le chaepe a new
light as if it faced stiff competi­ Then the mints and the reserve beeama tha world's fastest woman single government with the right
filar
to join the Western AQiUee. The ,
tion from other manufacturers.”
banks studied seasonal demand in
The International Aeronautical West, of course, keltoves n united (I
Aa a result, the Tax Foundation various localities.
Federation said Mra. Auric! reach Germany would Join the Welt
Inc., (a private, nonprofit research
Federal 'reserve end mint offi­
Russia wants n neutral Germany
organization) reports today, the cials now e s t i m a t e upcoming ed -a speed of 1,111 kilometers
nation’s mints will cost the tax­ spurts in demand and try to sup­ 713.31 miles en hour Is a French ** at the price of re unification.
That's about the point where the
payers 17 per cent less to run this ply commercial banka wall In ad­ built Myitere IV turbojet fighter
plane May II,
two aides start talking la Oseeva.
fiscal year than last.
vance, but to keep inventories of
The federsUon. world governing
To tickle tho problem of recur- Unwanted coin* from ever piling body for records In eeroneutles,
ring coin shortages—which are ex­ up.
said Mrs. Aurio! "slightly exceed Sparkman Predicts
pensive for the mint to meet on
Other lavlngi were made with ed the speed” In another flight
an emergency basis—officials of eonsidtrabla pain ts localities and July to. The difference, however, Democratic Victory
the mint and the tedtrkl reserve persons affected.
waa too smell for this other rec­ WAIHINOTON (ft - Ben. Spark- .
banks got together and took the
In San Francisco and Seattle 74 ord to be registered, the tedcretloe
en (D-AU) predicted Manger 'F
first inventory of coins in the employes lost their jobs. Reshuf­ said.
ie Democrats will w(a next
vaults of the banks ever to be fling at the Denver mint cut off
The previous woman's world air year's president!*! electlm with
made. In one bank they found ex­ 43 more. Officials Insist, however, speed record was bsld by Jacque­
an upsurge of strength In the Midcess coins piled 13 fact high. The that all who did not retire have line Cochran of America at 1,067weit, New York and California.
excess Inventories were cut
been placed in other work.
.063 kilometeri about STS milts Sparkman, the party's 1SSI vice
per hour.
preildentlal candidate, said hit
This type of woman's record travels have convinced him Presi­
waa discontinued July l. Women dent Eisenhower's reputed pep*
now must compete with men If larity la net ee great
Repub­
they went to establish * new lican* contend.
s
record.
We can win next year’s else- »
fr mm ntt ft tiitmitHt - *
tint If we put the kind at effort ■
MD wtftdihlilii
OOUMtD
windshield* kttft
k m green wtndihtoHdrop.it to » / 49.
tote tha c a m p a l i n that we
Four ear eeeler end cut dawn tha .» u » that torn aU that Unted
should," he sail *it wfll he a
sun's glare on hot Bummer days. ttoaa Bom la nighttime drivers,
different story from ISO. I don't
1^1
t|
—
*
—
.
.
.
-However, they atoo eut down your
laatttute eaya. Testa show it
think President Elsenhower could
•eelag ematoncy et night, the
reguill your ability to diacarry n isttthsen Mate *a ed te­
time when pen grim e need aU tiagutoh different things.
day."
the vision n u nan list
TOKYO,' (ft—Red Yfelne has an­
Im
•eta which would ap- nounced its Intentten le prosecute
‘ to you at a distance two prominent Chlaoio Communist
"haat-abeorbing* glass no^ T Z “ " ‘ ’B a dear wlnd- party members as "countermolulag uttd‘ in
I BtanFnute whig*
ft like one big Umaries.” And Peiping hinted
ahklga to a
tt ‘
Mewed through n more Important number! may
until you were soon be purged.
away.
The
A broadcast heard here Buna glaaeee and tinted day ssld the arrests and ptaetog
red
nfra red
----------- covers have their
rays. But,
on trial of Pan Man-nten, vie#
place during the day time. But at mayor of Shanghai, and Hu Pong,
any tint*
dgnt^the Institute advisee, don’t a writer, had boon approved by
. . .W I T S
the standing committee of the Nii li the gtotanee at SW IM tim jumwm
Uonal People's Congress Saturday.
QUALIFIED C A M !
which you eaa just barely see aa Mrs. to. N.t What to tha disease
Pan and Hu were member*
exited Pica, and what would cur* ofBoth
abject
the
Congress,
Red
Chin!'*
Par­
ThU lose U between U and 4S an abnormal appetite la Boy 11- liament Under the ecnatttutted
per cunt at distances between year old?
3,000 and 100 feet Naturally, tha Answer: Plea Is a condition of they could be arretted only with
torn to greatest under pear via­ abnormal appetite, such as fating the approval of tha standing com­
bility conditions such aa garf af sand, coaL dirt, paper or wood. mittee. '
The broadcast tooted People's
■eaa, rain, snow or fog.
ThU does not Indicate that there
Is anything earloualy wrong with Dally, official organ of the Chineac
tha ahlld, hut he should be Communist party, •• saying "coun­
i clear glass tuts dev watched and prevented from in- terrevolutionary elements have al­ F i n f f i D r a t M
t
•Dual sharpnaes atmight
n
from a dulglng lnjhto abnormal craving. ready sneaked Into the Communist
1 *0/30 toj &gt;0/13.
30/N Light yel­ It would he well to have a physi­ party or government ergtna and N«ir P. &lt;k
Fk IM
low glass cute It to SO/34. Pink cal
made at tha some of them an holding impor­
glam lower* to la ifl/ea nag n
tant posts of tho party."
WASHINGTOM up-Tha rooti of
the Oermin problem — now the
key time at the Geneva confer
anee among President Elsenhower
■nd the British. French end Rus
slin Prime Mlnlsten — so back
10 yeara to the Roosevelt-ChurchlUStella conference at Yalta la Febm iry isiS.
Tha Big Three had eoaildartd
breaking up postwar Germany
into a number of U ititaa. They
abondoned that ld«a and Ironically
came up with om which raaulted
In breaking up Germany Into two
governmental West and Eaat Gar
many.
Thia was not Intentional by
Rooievalt and Churchill. They
agreed with Stalin that defeated
Oermany should be divided into
four tones of occupation—the
United Statea, Britain, Franee and
Russia would do tha occupying —
until a alngla, all-German postwar
government waa established.
A few menths later — in July
1S45 — there waa e Truman
ChurchUI-Stalin meeUng at Poti
dam. At that conference Churchill
waa elected in the British electiuna

fka Delaware Baarg ad M m *
Uy A n g .

t o M o w la i

UJL lu -

rm scot
mints
Psimt —

s

Tinted W indshields Are
Not For Night Driving

Red China Reveals
Prosecution Intent

shutgut

SiB

•s

(jo r v / w M

Clipper lope ka dsn la

jsr-tfity.Y.'JK;
iM a tte

a il

cars

in t h e

M edium -Pi ice

Field

�SojcIaL fcv&amp;niiu

Calendar

4

TUESDAY
The Sanford Tourist and Bhufflcboard Club will have a bam*
burger inppar at 6 p.m. at tha
dab. GueiU ara asked to brine
aalad or dcaaart. Hamburgara
will ba furnlthad.
O Tha Wara Blbla Claaa will not
hold IU regularly
aeheduled
meeting tonight.
Clrdea of tha Flrat Methodist
Church will meet aa follows at
&lt; 9:45 a. m.: Circle No. 1, Mr*.
C. E. Maaka, 2493 Orange Are;
Circle No. 2, Mr*. C. L. Echols,
W. 20th Sts Circle No. 8, Mrs.
• Roy Wall, 40S Virginia Are. for
A • picnic and swimming party;
Circle No. 4 with Mrs. Blaka
Sawyer, 206 Elm Asa. with
Mrs. Adam Miller aa co-hosteas;
and Circle No. 6 with Mrs. J. 8.
Williamson 204 W. 18th Street.
Tha Unity Class will meat at
7:45 p. m. in tha Valdes Hotel
with tha Rar. Carolyn Parsons as
teacher. Tha public is Invited.
Tha First Baptist Intermediate
a Royal Ambassadors will meet at
the church at 7 p. ®.
. Tha Pilot Club will hare adlnner
meeting at tha home of Mrs. At
Hunt, 2485 Palmetto Are* at
* The Gleaners Class of the First
Baptist Church will meet with
Mrs. M. C. H ags* JOS Park A t...
at 8 p. m. Mrs. John Foa will be

CO*holt*Me

.

The Fidelis Clan of the First
U Baptist Church will m eetw llh
Mrs. M. D. Bumisnter. 801 W.
90th St. at 8 p. ® . with group
.Four. Mrs. George Steele, chair-

fis A A O I U tld

man. In charge.
The Vacation Bible School at
Elder Springs Baptist Chape)
from 1:30 to 11:30 e. m.
The First Baptist Intermediate
Royal Ambassadors will meet at
7:00 p. m.
WEDNESDAY
The First Baptist Prayer Meet­
ing Service will begin at 7:30 p.

m.
Tha Firit Baptist Training
Union Executive Committee will
meet in the Chapel following the
Prayer Service.
Vacation Bibio School at the
Elder Springe Baptist Chapel will
be from 8:30 to 11:30 a. m.
THURSDAY
Tha Elder Sprlngi Baptist Cha­
pel Vacation School will be from
8:30 to 11:30 a. m.
The Flrat Baptist Junior R. A.'s
will meet at the church at 7:00
p. m.
The First Baptist Men's -Bro­
therhood will meet at the church
for their Supper and Program
meeting at .7:00 p. m.
The First Baptist Chapel Choir
rehearsal will begin at 7:30 n. m.
The Ladles Aid Society of the
Lutheran Church of the Redeemer,
will hold a brief business meeting
followed by a social hour at 7:30
p. m. In the home of Mrs. Ruth
Senkarik, 2413 Elm Ave.
All members of the Rebekeh'a
Lodge No. 43 ara Invited to at­
tend a aehoM of instruction In
Orlando by Lucerna No. 36 at
8 p.m.
FRIDAY
The Elder Springs
Baptist
Chapel Vacation Bible School will
begin at 8:30 a.m.
SUNDAY
All Remlnola Rebekah's and
Odd Fellows and their families
are invited to a picnic on Lake
Lome Dooa hi Orlando.

Ur. and Mrs. T. B. Middleton
left Monday for Chattanooga,
n Tenn.'j Washington, D. C., and
f other points north. They took with
,tbeen their daughter Frances.
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Lee and
children left today for Eastman,
G a, where their daughter, Allison,
will play a memorised concert.
After the coocert they will ride to
Ridgecrest, N. C., to the Baptist
Assembly Camp and return home.
Mr. and Mrs. R. U. Hutchison
left yesterday for Marts HIU, N.
C., for • abort vacation.
Mrs. Roalno Carnes left today
for Hendersonville, N. C , where
aha will spend several week*.

Miss Martha Warmaek Is visit*
lag Mrs M. V. Kudlac in DeBary
this month.
Paul Warmaek la spending the
'week with Mr. and Mrs. Matt
Xudlae In Pine Hills.

Fashion Designers
Having Hey-Day
In Garm ent Center
By DOROTHY ROB
aw Women’s Editor
NEW YORK III—Among the 806
or more dress manufacturers that
make up the world's largest gar­
ment center, there are many
whose clothes are known and worn
by women an over America, yet
who are not members of the New
York Dress Institute’s Couture
Group, currently previewing (all
collections (or some IN visiting
fashion editors.
Notable among these bonmem­
ber designers is Vera Maxwell,
(amous for individual tweeds end
functional fashions of the Mad
11vo la. Each aeasoa this
Hooking, silver-haired
( goes globe-trotting In die[ new fabrics, new «
tor bar strictly Ameri­
can riotbaa, Ibis peer she ie in­
trigued bp the Flam ties eotors ef
the Renaissance, end takes her
fabric tones from tha glowing
palettes of Titian. BotieolU
Beilin.
Typcal of her weerehie
la an oalflt aha *,n f Standby, can-

Wadding or Formal
Coming Up?

Try This
•
PICNIC PARE
“
These cupcakes carry wall,
taata wonderful outdoors.
Fried Chicken
Potato Salad
Relishes and Rolla
Gingerbread Cupcakes
Fresh Fruit
Beverage
GINGERBREAD CUPCAKES
Iegredienta: | 4 eupi sifted
flour, t teaspoons baking powder,
4 teaspoon baking soda, 1 tea­
spoon salt, 1 teaspoon ginger, 2
teaspoons cinnamon, 4 teaspoon
ground cloves, 4 cup shortening,
M cup cugar, 1 cup old-fashioned
molasses, 2 eggs, 1 cup hot water.
Methed: Sift together the flour,
baking powder, baking soda, salt,
ginger, cinnamon e n d cloves.
Cream shortening end sugar; blend
In molasses. Stir In 4 cup of the
(lour mixture; beet in eggs. Add
hot water alternately with remain.
Ing (lour mixture. Place paper
L-klng rape In fifteen S 4 -Inch
muffin pens. Fill each cup twothirds full of batter. Bake in
moderate (850 degrees) oven 85
to 30 minutes. Cool on n d u

slstlng of ■ sheath end loose eost
to gray tweed, with • little red
velvet toiler on the coat end a
red velvet kick pleat to the sheath.
Miss Maxwell haa been doing
costumes of coots tad matching
or salts tor years, long
the current furore, tad
tar coordinated outfits to
tweeds and tie silks provide the

BPW W ill Honor
Miss Carol Beck,
Florida Botantist
The Business end Professional
Women's Club of Florida will hon­
or Mis* Carol Beck, Botanist for
th« Florida Park Sen-ice on Sun­
day, July 24 at 1:15 p.m.
At that time Stats President,
Mr*. Mimi Southwick, will pre­
lent a citation to Mrs. Lillian L.
Hannerman, head of the Sabring
Club, who will then present It
to Miss Beck. The presentation
ill take place in beautiful High­
lands Hammock State Park near
Sebring.
This honor Is for the outstand­
ing woman in government.
Mlta Beck's headquarters Is at
beautiful
Highlands
Hammock
State Park, but her duties carry
her to all of the State Parks to
aid tha Superintendents in nature
trail, day camp, and nature study
activities. She alto 1* very active
In demonstrating and lecturing
In botanical and toologleal fields
before clubs and other groups
throughout the State of Florida.
State Park Director, Emmet L.
HIU, said, "The Florida Park Service and tha Florida Board of
Parka and Historic Memorials are
gratified to have bliss Beck so
highly honored, and many of her
fellow workers will attend the
ceremony. In all probability, It
will be possible for member* of
the Board of Parks and Historic
Memorials to be there also."

WNG MEATCUTS

y L

Stenting the Knife .
A n r A f Wife M
Mm * if o o f Mm I

Draw KnMo Acrote S t o a tW ilt* a quick Bringing motion of
Mao rigtat writI ond foroorin,
brkag Mao blado down across Mao
•tool towofd Mao loft bond. Tfeo
ontiro blado odgo th otM poaa
bgKMy owof •

Socond Stroho—Srirag
Mao balfo halo p etitio n a g a in but
owllta Mao blado ag o ln tl Mao raoof
•Ido of fbo afoot. Report Mao
BOmo motion, poaabag Mao blado
owor Mao itooU Alaomoto from
aid* to aldo. A b o ll dotwn ttro la i
on •a&lt;*» aido abouid bo aufl*uonl.

'Yep And Nope1
' Hibiscus Fanciers
Pretty Mamie
ManComesBack Priming Plants
WowsNewsmen;
Coming Show
To Hollywood For
Florlde Hibiscus fenders er* Beauty Queens
HOLLYWOOD OP—After e three priming their plente in readiness
yesr absence, the “ yep and nope"
man, Gsry Cooper, Is back before
the Hollywood cameras.
Coop is playing the air power
pioneer In "The Court-Martial of
Billy Mitchell," and It’s his first
film here since he won the Oscar
for “ High Noon." He has made
“ Return to Paradise'' In the South
Pacific and "Garden of Evil" and
“ Vera Crux" In Mexico since then.
He was reportedly one of the stars
who went overseas for tha 15month tax deal, but he claims be
didn't profit therefrom.
“ Don't you like working to Hoi
lywood?" he wis asked.
“ Sure, 1 like working In Holly
wood."
“ Then why have you been gone
to Iong7“
" 'Cause I couldn't find any
worthwhile properties to do. Oh, I
could do a lot of junk, but what’ s
the use of that?"
“ What do you do to keep busy?"
"Well, I figure I retd 1,000 fllm
treatments, 423,000 novels and sev­
eral thousand TV dramas. That
was enough to keep me busy," he
kidded.
“ And I also have done a pastel
of hunting and fishing. Went up
north for a whUs and kiUsd me a
b'ar whUa I was then.’ ’
Ha Indicated that his leisure waa
over for a spclL After “ CourtMartial," be reporta to WUllam
Wyler for “ Friendly Persuasion,"
a comedy-drama about a Quaker.
Hollywood took a long Uma to
getting around the BUly Mitchell
story, but now It's being dooa to
thorough style. The armed forces,
which long were touchy about the
Mitchell matter, are cooperating
with tha film. Tha company just
returned from shooting background
to Washington, D. C.
Billy Mitchell was a World War
I gsoeral who waa among tha first
to sea the value of . air power to
modem war.

for the American Hibiscus Socie­
ty’s Intemallonal Hibiscus show
to be held in Orlando, Sunday,
July Slit.
The Mid-Florida Chaptar will
be host to tha show which Is de­
signed to ba tha largest interna­
tional display of Ita kind ever
staged according to W. Bruce
Parnell, Miami, president of the
American Hibiscus Society, an In­
ternational organisation. All of tha
Society’s nln# chapter* will co­
operate In etaglng the show.
Mr. Parnell explained that Orlando
waa chosen for the international
show because of its central loca­
tion. Chapter* extend aa far west
aa Louisiana.
Besides tha many and varied
ribbons offered in the competitive
blooms and artistic arrangements
sections, three eilver trophies are
being offered; two for the first
time.
Tropical Hornet and Gardens
Magasin* will present a silver
bowl to tha chaptar whose display
l&gt;eit follows Ita chosen theme while
the second trophy will be pre­
sented by the Florida Nurserymen
and Grower* Association to tha
nurseryman exhibiting the best
nursery-grown flower.
The third silver award, given for
the first tima at tha local Orlando
show last year, la presented by
M. J. Daetwyler, Orlando, for the
beet Gower shown by aa amateur
Carrots may ba baked to a
moderate ovea along with a meat
dish. Shred the carrots and dot
with butter or margarine as you
put them to • biking dish with s
tight rovar. You'll need about
three cups of the shredded carrots
for four sarvtogs sad they’ll re­
quire about half aa hour ot baking.

Ha iraa court-martialed to IBB
for atatementa to a newspaper
strongly critical of the Navy and
War departments.
The lengthy trial featured Mlt
cfaell's beliefs to the value of all
power. He waa ausptnded without
pay and rating for five year*. Hr
resigned from too Army to IK'
and devoted the years antil hi
death to UN to w r i t i n g an
preaching about the nse af air
craft to modem war,

.

ON

Q ittt K 0 6 4 * *
W MCNh WCAft
A ea
,* V ; ‘

MANTHA CHESTNUT, IB, of Con.
way, an accomplished pianist, la
South Carolina’* choice tn the
Miss America beauty and talent
pageant at Atlantic City, N.J., In
Sc|dcm!icr. She la shown with
her trophy.
T/ntrmallonaD

to work at NBC."
“ But that mean* we will hare
to build a whole new studio for
filming," they protested. “ It will
cost $i50,oon. Wc can’t do that;’*
“ Okay with me. Luckily I have
saved my money. You can get
another boy."
" “ But Groucho-."
•Til he x x x x If I'll end my
professional career working in
soma converted grocery store."
And so they built the brandnew studio for Groucho. His rea­
soning Is: "If they can spend fabu­
lous amounts of money on big
shows with hundreds of dancing
girls, they can build mo a new
studio. Those shows somctimri
don’t get much of a rating, hut
the old man oa the stool ha- horn
among the top five ot tcvc-n VWfli*
since he went on Hie air."

WEDNESDAY MORNING
SPECIAL!
■I*

yda. for

$].00

O N LY

PRICE

Cotton
*

O V ER 4 0 0

M aterial

One tablo of cotton material* In Q
variety of pattern*, all wrinkle
resistant and washable. Valued
to 1.29 yd.

Window

Curtains

A group of Window Curtains and
drapee to closeout. Regular price*
6.95 to 9.95.

CLOSEOUT

8wf?d Bockm — Beg, H8Q — fij5o

PAY LESS FOR — THE BIST
AT

Croucho Tells
Amazing Story
O f New Studio
HOLLYWOOD CIU-Groucho Marx
tells e fabulous tale about how
NBC la building a film studio for
him.
This will no doubt cause con­
sternation all the way up to Pat
Weaver, but the Grouch doesn't
car*.
The story Is this: Oroucho hss
fUmed “ You Bet Your Life" st the
NBC studios alnce the show's in­
ception. The unions don't ordinar­
ily allow Aiming at a live TV
studio, but an agreement was
reached to allow an exception.
The agreement was running out,
and the network looked around for
an alternata sit*. A couple of
places around Hollywood were con­
sidered. The bran came to
Grouch* with the proposal of film­
ing the show 'at those spots. ‘
"N o," replied Groucbo. “ I want

REMNANTS
AT

R ED U CED

PR ICES

• HO ASSORTMENT OF FABRICS
•

MS

•

EM EATINGS FOB TO(J

Shop

AfflOMMENT OF PATTERNS

PEN N EY'S, You'll Sava

Page 5

f-sTUMEft DRESDEN DRESS
ot*N&gt;onu-«iourorocrta
h ..\
ttste, designeu »y iiauta.CUl*
nrgle for formal afternoon
wear. Buttoned down tho bod­
ice tn back, the dress la worn
over a pink silk »hp and pink
organza petticoat. The cnishej
cummerbund l* pink organza.
Hattie Carnegie Jewelry.

AT BARGAIN

M ill
»S Denver.

IdM b Day nr Nl*fct Set* (Beeps Otot) *
l-W N fana M a r
(M M
baby
1—T. V. Chair
m m

A buffet supper and swimming
party was given recently at the
Mayfair Inn by Mr*. Jack Ratigan and her daughter Patricia
for the former Miss Sylvia Hayes
and her wedding party.
Swimming amt game* were en­
joyed hv the group and a deli­
cious supper served. A hostess
gift wa* presented to the honoree.
Those attending the party were
the honoree*, Mr. and Mra. W.
M. Minielwhltc amt Hilly, Mr.
and Mr* Donald O. Brown, Miss
Gail Bitting, Miss Janice Reel,
Miss Ada Adams, littlo Miss Pat
Smith, Terry Cordell, Tommy
Speer, James U. Itrown, Ronald
llolda and the hostesses. Mrs. Ra*
tigan was assisted by Mrs. J. D.
Cordell.

SA LE

W ED N ESD A Y

$4930

3 PC. L IV IN G HOOM GRO U P

Former M iss H ayes
Honored W ith Party

were many million. And Uiat’a a
lot of people.
We, the captive audience, have
watched In recent weeks as a New
York policeman who's sn expert
on Shskespcsr* took his solid
$16,000 winnings snd depsrtcd
rather than risk its loss by going
for $31,000. Wa saw an Indiana
schoolteacher grab off $8,000 and
beat It. And we gaped last week
when a Blble-readlng grandmother
from Camp Hill, Pa., settled for
$32,000, foregoing the big $64,000
question.
Seising a crystal ball and a saw
and going away out on a Umb, 1
forecast:
Nobody ever will try for the
$64,000 question. Furthermore, as
time progresses end nobody tries
for It. I ie* this big question In
e try department of the quix get­
ting easier snd easier. It's a pipe
question, a giveaway. But nobody
will try It.
Why? Wsll, wa hare become a
basically conservative people. Per­
haps this Is because of inflation.
(Remember when the $64,000 ques­
tion was worth only $64 on radio
and everybody was equally excltedT) W* realise the fact of In­
flation, but we still can't grasp
its Implications,
Few of us can visualise what
things $64,000 will buy thst $32,000
will not buy. For example, you
can buy a nice house for $32,000.
But how many really know wbst
sort of a house you can buy for
double the amouhtT Thus, when
you have the herd cast In your
milt for that $32,000 house, why
chuck away the reality for the
unknown dreamf

SPECIAL

■ew*. Bar series ef laee er air
hmldenr trimmed cashmere awe:
era and coordinated sklrta for f
am worthy ef a place to the I
faahhm bracket

H O LLYW O O D BED

I.ONG BEACH, Calif. ID-Pre­
liminary judging starts today In
the Miss Universe contest, but the
international beauty querns all
hope the competition won’t be as
tough as that they got from ac­
tress Mamie Van Doren.
Two busloads of tha beauties
were the gueits yesterday of Uni­
versal-International Studios. They
broke bread and posed for pictures
with Lex Barker, George Nader,
Ilory Calhoun, Tony Curtis, Mau­
reen O'llara, l’ at Crowley, Martha
Hyer, Paul Kelly and other U-l
atari. They also watched Curtis
and Miss Crowley emote in the
movie ‘ The Square Jung|e,“ cur­
rently in production.
But the cameras started popping
hysterically w h e n the curvy
Mamie walked in tho U-I commis­
sary wearing a golden lame gown.
It could bc*t bo described as a
golng-away dress that had mostly
departed from Mamie.
Photographers Ignored the fouracore beauty queens ami the rest
of the iters to cluster iround
Mamie. She, of course, posed as
If the had Invented cheesecake.
Said Mamie: “ I knew I was go
ing to be in fait company, so I just
dressed for the occasion."
Mostly the besuty queens stood
around amaxed. Mine Prance
Claudia Petit, said, via an Inter­
preter:
“ That dren ihe's wearing would
even be banned In Paris, llow dr.
ihe ever get into 1(7"
Tonight the preliminary judgln
begins In the Miss U.S.A. contest
The number of American entrant
will be cut In half or less tonight
for the Miss U.S.A. finals loinor
row night.

By CHARLES MERCER
NEW YORK iD—Several million
Americans will tunc In their tele
vision sets this evening to WCBSTV when an ltalianborn New York
gentleman will try to answer
some questions about opera. They
will watch, mesmeriied, to tee
whether he will work his way to
a final question which, if he an­
swers it correctly, will pay him
$64,000.
“ The public has flipped on this
$64,000 Question program," a fel­
low said. Indeed It has. There
may not have been 35 million per­
sons watching last Tuesday, as
CBS estimates, but there certainly

Tuea. July 19, 1953

Quadriga Prlntf, 80 aquarn quality'. Excel,
lent finiah, faat color (tub or nun) 3(1" wiilu.
Regular 65c yard. (Some are short lengths).

SPECIAL

^ S J m m bb
-C &amp; 5

1 la p t r f id M t t oo ond to Iroo
klo do . T W » h o
Mm M
Imwovw, vMl procflco (I h • a 0 y atottomd.

H o rl h r* Mr o t i h old Mo
•tool tWWy In Mao k f l Kond,
Masonb on lop of Mao hondb, wirfi
Mao pobal wpword and efighlty
aw ay from Ibo body. Tbon ploco
Mao bool of Ivdfo bio da U W s
btodo t d t n Mao hondW) a go tat
Mao fo r atdo of Ibo atool. Nowo
fbo ftool a rad knlfm blado meet
•t O fllgM onglo.

places tad do things.
Porton Lishert, • phrasal Visamoo dostooor kaowa tor etogiat
blouses, skirts gad hostess gowas
Group
whs to auktog

i t &gt; i f &gt; U M t i baforn f A f . Tfcfc M p « to too*

THE SANFORD HERALD

People Have 'Flipped' OverShow
That PaysOff Folks InThousands

69c

yd.

%

price

�#1-

: * 7 ’ * V't’SrJr; r *p]$e§ ~-vY-'

*
r

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IJ jjj ^ T ‘ »f f V l f c r y f f i *1 • ;vf - . »

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IANPORD HEKALI)

Wilson
Keeping
Honesty
IB

r,
I'
I

r
f

■

i

_________ i t i r m w
Billy Bruton dropped a deep cen­
ter field drive by WUlla Mays for
a two-rua arror. Th# Braves had
taka* tbs Isad la (h* fifth with
four ntai. Warran Spahn, victim
At Ik* arror, suffarad hla loth da
laat. Dan Liddla won la relief.
Olan Oorbous ballad a threa-run
komar la gat tha Phils rolling as
tha auapanded game picked up In
tea laat of th* siath inning. Ilerm
Wahmalar want all tha way and
Bay Imallay hit a two-run homer
te tea nightcap triumph that aanl
tea PkOa Into sixth place ahead of
Cincinnati.
Th* Senators breared In against
tea A'a with Roy gfevari hitting
tote ham* nun and a double in
ter** trip*.

Storming Chisox
Browing Formula
o m U

cm cA o tffiL T h #
O il.
M B White (tel are hrtwlag a far
■f*Wk •# spirit and atratagy for
(Mfr teraa-gama aerlaa which he.
fltot teklgkt against th* league■Mdtag New York Yankaaa.
Tk* log, whoa* savea-gama win■f t
yaatarday
BMbat Baltlmora 1-e, wiU feed the
• teat af right-handed

^

Keith.
Holding
Top Spot

T umi. July 11. » * »

By KD W1LK*
H i Associated Preaa
Om pltrher can't tolv# th« pmb
lam for lait-place Biltlmoiw. but
If nothinf alt*, Jim Wllion't keep
Ing tha American League race
honest. None of the flag contender*
kat managed lo g*t really fat on
Mm Orlolea with tha ll-year-old
right-hander around.
Wilton, who pitched th» lone nokitter In the major* laat tenon
for Milwaukee, t pi th* Biltlmore
at iff with aeven victories. Four of
them bava been agalnit the top
taaaaa in the league—New York,
Chicago, Cleveland and Boiton—
and in non# of the four did he give
•p more than four hiti.
Tha Ian Diego Calif., veteran,
•oM la tha Oriolta by Milwaukee
Milt aprtag, came up with a tunklttar yesterday to knock off the
Whlta Bo*. who had won aeven
Btralght, 1-0. Chicago, looking
ahead to tha first-place battle with
Ntw York that opens tonight,
didn’t get a hit after Gil Coan tin­
gled with two out in the third in­
king.
It was tha third shutout of the
aeaaofl lor W i l s o n , who alto
blanked New York (4-0 on four
kite) and Boiton (1-0 on four hits).
He fanned five yeiterday and
walked non*.
Gus Triando* gave Wilson all the
support ha needed with a two-run
komar in tha first off loser Mike
fnreietea. Tha other run came in
tha eighth on an arror and Hal
Smith's double.
Th* dafekt left the Ins two
game* behind tha Yankees, who
war* Idle. Th* only othar AL game
want la Washington, g-l, over
Sanaa* City.
In th* National, Brooklyn re­
tained a livt-gams lead despite a
M defeat by Cincinnati ai aacondae* Milwaukee lost at New York
Philadelphia tumbled Chicago
la Me aavanth and eighth straight
Insaaa, winning tha wrapup of Sun­
day’s suspended game S-* and tfking a regularly scheduled eonteat
t-1.
Joe Black, Mi* wa-Dodgar, and
reliefer A rt fowler were effective
•nought to halt Brooklyn although
the ertpplad Brooks rallied for
lour nms la tha eavanlh That cut
the Clney lead to *4, but Stan
Palva and T#0 Klutaawtkl hit
baek-ta-kack homers to open a
tkr**-nia ninth.

y

WrCH/CK
V

HARBCRT

WHO'LL BB TH£
PEFENp/NS CHAM?
THE RO .A. TOURNM/
tn o r th v /u b . Mich.,

THE 0/0 MA/t /H THE
HU TOA Y OP TUB P S A
fO U RM BY / * W ALTER
M AO BN W /TH f
V iC T O R / B S , f C P ,
TEEM JM fU C C tw o H MO O TH ER PRO MAS
E V E R WOM M O R E THAN
2 WA RO N - S A R A Z E N

J U L / 2 &amp; 2 6 - W ,9 '

CHAMP/OMsNlP CON TBiTtP
at

Ma t c h

pla /.

/*

HO RE SPE C TE R O R
R O Y A L T / - TRE
CROW NEO # B A P
FREQUENT!./ R O U S
IN AN MARLY ROUNEK

In ToTALW/H^W/rJf^. |

Changes Told For North, South
All-Star Basketball Game Aug. 10
GAINESVILLE fou r ehangta,
three for tha north and oa* for
tha south, were announced today
in th* lineups for tha annual
High School All-8ur baakatball
gams to bo bald in florid* Gym­
nasium, August 10.
South Coach Bueky Hawk of
8L Petersburg ha* added highscoring Ed Reed, I ' l l ” guard
from ft. Myers to hla team. Ha
replaces Ned Latte of St. Peters'lurg, wh* la unable ta participate.
Nerth Coach Joe Kelson af
Seabreese ‘ High, Daytona Be , h,
announced that
Xonnlt “ Tex"
f lo r id * it a t b i,r.*niB
» i. rn Salyer af Julia London, Jackson­
.tu
Orleodn
»
ville, and John Mullatt, P. K.
.inn Youngt, Gaiaeevtlla, have accept­
.Ml ed Invitation* te join hla squad.
,4it
.it;
Aa Invitation has alas bate
Hey lone k ite h
»•
W. Palm Bcerh
••JJ tsi sent Jim Litkey af Bishop
si. I'atarahure
' 11 .tat
Kanny, Jacksonville, ta participate
n ce ii.T i vr.iTr.RDAi
O rlando I . ila ln a a t i l l s t
la th* gams with the North.
e a a fa rS 4. I.a k a le a i a
Salyer, Mullatt and Litkay, If
. . . .Pal ir___
ll.
. R;Vh I I . n i. Petarefcur* I
Cocoa 4, t&gt;a»J"na Bea'h S
he accept*, will rtplaca Bobby
iMwr.a today
MU**, Chattahoochee, and Dan
OrlanSn at U l i t l l M
eaatarS at !
I-ucey and J. foreyth, both of
Ml. Peieo h n ra *1 tle ln e irltt*
niwa'nwiVeee
™ “ Urn-North lineup. NMW
Y W W f r r x i ^ ^ i r - ^ J ^ c e y wtl[ play for tha IWtii
vs i. r-t in
tha annual All-fltar football
is si at*
hew York
si ti .e*i gama on Florida Plaid, tha night
Chlrsan*
si it .SM
nevelaR*
I* SI/ i n of August 11. Th* Athlete* ar*
Roll on
IS II .in allowed to play la only on* af tha
lietrall
ii it .i#» twa contest*.
K
ritjr
i« IT .ns
WathlBalna
It St .III
nalllmnr*
Th* ntw Bouth basketball ad­
RBan.T* vr.sTBnnav
dition, Read, wa* outstanding for
Reltlmur* I. f'blrsan 0
Ft. Myera High laat season, scor­
\\a■&gt;.inai&lt;&gt;•&gt; I. K»n«»» riir I
(Only asm*ing SOS points to sat a new school
fUHRI ro n * v
N»w York »l I'hlisen |,V| _ record.
h»rnv if-ts it John/on ft-*).
The North'* Salyer rang up 40*
W"»l"n at Kents* Hly |V| —
lltlnrk &lt;•. 1 1 r i Pltirtr ( !• *!
point* last season for London, and
Rsltinirre at Detroit — McDea* Jacksonville prop apart* writer*
•14 fl-tl vs. I-ary ft-tt).
called him thair city's strangest
ateea tl-tst vs. t.amea tlM ).
player. Ha is a *'«", 1BT pound
M T IO IU LKint'M
hroeblra
?l It ,W cantor.
Milwaukee
II |* III , Mullatt, a forward, alia la d 'i",
Mew Tern
H 41 .lit
Chleefo
II 41 .III and scorad SOt paint* last *#*at. Louie
is is .ire eon. Hla hast shat I* a right band
PMleasliiM*
it || ,|it set shot, and h* can driv# and ua#
Mnrlensll
i« n .ill
Utlekurah
it l* an either hand in aloe* ta tb* bas­
ket.
BKeiLTS TBtTBRtlAT
( InrinnUi f. flrnokltn 1
fork *, MllweukeS I
rhlli4elplil* *.I. rtilrase 4-1
Rookl# pitcher Warner Blrrar af
(Oelir atme* epherfuliei
trait T ig e r* w a s g rad u al
th * Da
DatrwH
n*WB# T o n e r
•t I^ mI# at Kaw’ Tofb ft tw|. ad from tha U n iv e rsity ai B u ffa lo
■'•htU 77J»7J,*«n ill-Sj ee4 fohel. and wraa purchased by the TTgare
•JfW *4 M .«r, achmtat &lt;•■*)
fro m B a n a l* ad Urn lataew atiaanl
l-aagv*.
litT.n iV.V,. **1 u d iu « • «
Ctn/lnnetl at Phllalelpkla (ttwi.afajiH —_______
...
c»lu»&lt; .(!•*&gt;
an4

Standings
and
Results

BSC*
aiMi*

«•
»

•

Manfredi Blanks Lakeland;
Cardinals Travel To Cocoa

Dan E. Keith continues as tha
hlg hitter of the Florida But*
Boland Manfredi ehutout Lakeleague. even through hi. average |iBd
flv# hlu „ d Don r
ie gradually eltpplng down to I., ,
..
.
, .
, ..
normal proportions. Last week I
* three-run homer last night
th* Daytona elugger dipped 1*! » » Sanford defeated the PUoU,
points to .391 hut still ha* a 33 4-0.
,&gt;oint bulge oa hi* neareet chelTray's blow cam* In the fourth
lenger for hatting honara, Weit Th# othar run came In the eighth
Palm Beach a Red Roberta, who oa Tarry Tarrall't single.
checks in at -SSI, • dawn from
Manfredi never was In lerfout
his previous mark. Keith again trouble at h* struck out 11 and
flys high In tha slugging cate­ walked only 1 before a Florida
gories,—pacing th* league once State League crowd of &lt;23.
■nor* In 3-ba*# blow* with 34;
Two shutouts, starring lefty Jack
font more than Bill Wyatt of Ilerllhy, of Cocop and Sanford's
Gainesville owns) deadlocking for
Manfredi, gave sparkle to Florida
meet bass hits with tha same State League baseball last night.
Mr. Wyatt at IIS; and regietar­
Herlihy allowed only four hit* in
ing another ttalemale in th* total blanking Daytona Reach SO. Fm
bee* column with Robert#, each
p oum ln g id ! bases.
Top* in horns runt, although ha
failed to improve on his record
I* Cocnn't Ino Rodnguet, who is
still out in front with IS harrier
klaitf. Th* oufielder-first-eacker
continues to drive la th* mmt
rune and sow hat Tk ta hla
credit. Rill Patriot of Daytona
NEW YORK &lt;Jk- Charlie Grimm
own* 11 triple* to ahow th# way
in that dlriiloa of slugging, sounded like a man whistling his
while Dave Drepp of Orlando hat way past a graveyard as he talked
raised home plate tha moat about tha pennant chances of his
seeond-plaea Milwaukee
times, 91,
*'Wa haven’t grvr“
Orlando Goneale* of Cocoa has
pilfered the most bases, S3, an after last night's
Improvement of on# over laei New York Giants,
weak, la * pitcher*’ ItaguS. no still l|avt a chanct
lest than It hurlera have earned Dodger*. W* raallie it's a longshot
tun averages of
than 1.00, and wt'va got to have help from
for ehuckara In 100 or more in­ the other elubt. But wt think It
ning*. Caspar Del Manta af St. can ha dona."
Pat* I* law maa with 1.01 far 1*4
Winners af nln* o f their laat
Iouii.Ii . On* paint abr.va him il games, tha lravaa flunk they're
Orlnnda Pawn *f Daytaa* wh# aa th* mev*.
eperts a nett 3.09 far 141 in­
"W* bava almost half tha season
ning*. Meat ahutautt hava baan left la which ta go placet," Grimm
ragiatarad by Ala* Garday af Or- pointed out. "If wa keep getting
landa wh# e*a baatt af k whltk- eur recent combination of runmak*
wash Jab*.
. . .
^ ___ ing and steady pitching, w* atil
atilt
Garday Joiwa Raland# *maga ef&gt;
a , ear#
Brooklyn
af Gainaavilla in twirling tha ■gut th* other teams will have lo
most wine, each •«"&gt;•»*
' taka a law falls out of tha Dodhoth losing 4 time*. Dayton* a g#rg |oa# # a « „ ' » do it all alone."
Bobby Atehdt w m m th* workcrimm'a . show of optimism
hors* aaddl* with hla lTk la »l«a »' •umt from th* fin# pitchlni perof tall, while Ortega display*i tb# j f#rmtBe&lt;1 turned in recently by
meat eomplat* grama*. IT. J#hn
gig four of Gena Conley, Lew
IvoYy Bmlth af Daytona t# way Burdette, Bob Buhl and Chat
out In front In atrlkaoult with
ptug tj,a hitting of Henry
2o«, whll* bl* t*l walks |j*k kirn Aarwl Johni,y LoIlni
M ll.
»h* unhappy dlatinetloa of head- haw* and D al C ra n d a ll.
trig that column onto again.
"W ith Bu h l and Nichole com ing

each. It wat hit 10th victory agair
at S defeats.
It was Herllhy’ s first ahutout o.
the campaign, ills mates, playin
before a home crowd of 49^
backed him up with an cight-h.l
attack featured by Inoccncia Ro&lt;
riguet' two-run homer in the thlr'
Orlando maintained its half
game lead over Sanford with an
8-3 victory over Gainesville. We*l
Palm Beach beat last pact St.
Petersburg 11-3.
St. Pete paraded five pitchers to
the mound but hitting on both sides
was light—five safeties each. Nine
of the fourteen runs were unearned
Including all of St. Pete's. The beet
hit of the night was Jerry William*

ilrd-innlng triple that brought in
run for Weit Palm.
AU of Orlando's runt war* an
amed at Gainesville committed
ive error*. An Orlando crowded
71 taw Howie Tresp pilch a three
'tier for hla 13th victory agalnit
• tones.
.iK r .i.n n

BY

usr
m
r M K h sii-'fc.U l
it
raaa* VJBt.Jfi31.Si4 t...
at.
Stales

Ms

hivars.

lb * w a y they bava bean during tha
past tew w te k a ," G rim m la id ,
" w a 'r* eat in tea pitching depart­
ment a * w a 'v * n eve r baan before
tela, y e a r ."
T b * (bifU Bg o f A aro n from right
Hold te second b a it in plaeo of
Ibo slum ping D an n y O'Connal h at
•la n proved a taale to the team .

ak
«
4
4
a
4
4
t
t
1
t.
*
Bl

cf
llrnrrtle tb
K ey/ If
S tn riltlc y Sh
rtenille rf
N’lvheut lb
ll'ko w -kt r

t'Hfi.'n *•
•*»wcii *
Kni.e P
1-I.I.Mi
Tetet*
s %b roil it

k
t
t
a
a
i
t
a
1
•
..
a
a

•
*
t
a
t
2
*
T
a
t
n
a
*4

ak k •
4 1 T
4 t t
4 t a
4 a 2
4 a 1
a t a
4
i
t I tt
. t * i
aa f t at

r r a v tb
t*.hm ltt cf
nutter rf
He&gt;rtcr ••

Braves Manager
Showing Slight
Hopes For Flag

Major League
Leaders

— c :

—maw

l&gt; Took Sb

T e rre l If
M iller tb
Th nell c
M frertl c
T o tal*

a — P it s * out fa r S e w e ll in l i h
l- a k e la b *
noo oa
ao-torU
OOO lo o O I,— e

_ B — T ra y . I&gt; Ceny. Aadereon R —
T - rre ll T li ,.1 i i ,l l . P ra y , It. L'nnk.
n HI — p m | . T e rre ll
U t l_ P r a v
AH— ft ro o k , T e rre ll D P—MeafraAl I.. P re y : A n ilrr.im to NIeliaut
I-eft—la k e la n d #. fUnYxrd * RR'U . *■ Xnoa. .Manfredi It!,
#1 1 Sfnoa I. Manfredi
I t . K G —Rewell 7 in T Innlnae
Kana I in I Itin ln r. TV—Manfredi.
I-—Hewell l —Kettlea and G ard­
ner. T — 1:11 A— est.

Schm itt Released;
K assab ian Signed
M ike K a ssa h la n w a s anld laat
rig h t ta San fo rd and Joined tha
C a rd in a l* today. Bine* th * beg in nin g o f th is season's p lay h*
ha* hean th# veteran outfielder
w ith tha O rlando F !y # r* .
F o rm e rly w ith P a la tk * and DaLan d in th# F S L , h * waa h ittin g
.359 *nd th is y e a r has seen action
In le ft and center fie ld *.
Released
fro m
th *
S an fo rd
tram was eentar fie ld e r Ron

Schmitt.

lOUHB BBOUgM, rotorntn* to
America after winning tha
Woman's Single* Tamils Cham­
pionship at Wimbledon, carries
her own bsxgaca on arriving in
Now York. Bha had ta handle her
luggage because of a longshore­
men'# strteOk
(Internal

E X - W R K S T L E R tg
P A R T - T IM E P A R M E R
K A N K A K E E , 111. O D - T o e s in g
around n few heavy
bags
of
fe r t ilis e r Is no problem fo r * x w re s tle r J im Jero e who farm

il

acre* *a n hobby. .V f comma
to Chicago every day where ha
works In an aircraft plant.
Tb* S7t-pound Jaroa grappled
with eom# of th* biggest names
In th* wrestling business but
gav* it up during World War 11
when h* served with th* Raahoes.

Fleck
May Go
Fishing
DETROIT Uh-Th* foW world l« w
his for the aeking, but Jaek Fleck,
the new U. S. Open champion, m af
go fishing instead.
The 33-year-old lowaa la finding
out that the life «f a ehamplon—
especially on# who has beaten th#
mighty Ben Hogan—isn’t all it’a
cracked up to ba.
"I'm not aura about my future"
Fleck muttered yeiterday after '
firing a practice round In prepara- %
lion for tha PGA tournament start­
ing Wednesday.
“ Maybe I'll play In a eoupl#
\
more tournament*, then go fish­
ing. I don't know, I Just don't
know. I don't want to make any
commitments."
Ever aince hit dramatic playoff
victory over Hogan for th* prised
U. S. till* last month, Fleck hat
been on a ditty merry-go-round of
handshaking, autographing, back- •
slapping and pictura-takng.
"It’a all great, tura, but It al»
fects your game," he said. "lYirlgtnally planned to make a tour but
now I'm not fit lo do il—mantally
or physically."
His fallow pres sympathlt# wttB
Flack.
"Thar#'* *o Riueh praaiur# *B
the guy that’l he'a a stranger tvem
to himself," laid Horton Smith, .
former president of tha PGA.
O
"He's dated by It all." added
Chick Harbtrt. tea PGA champio«
who'll defand hla title agalntf
Fleck and some Ilk-odd other*.
"All the handshakes and publicity
never helped. I know it hurt* hla
game. I went through th* lam*
thing after winning th* PGA laat
year."
Last weak Flack mad* hit first
competitive appearance alnea'whip- js
ping Hogan but failed to qualify "
in tha Milwaukee Open.
liarbert figures It will lak* Fleck
several months to gat aquarad
away.
"Ha'a a steady guy and rm postlive ha’ll do all right tftar a
while," Harbert laid.
“ They criticized him for B«*
qualifying in Milwaukee. But, r*&gt;
member, Ed Furxol alia failed t*
qualify for a Cleveland tourea- r .
mint last year attar winning tb* ^
Open.

Never

galsag*.

u.
Pltchiaa Mss* aa 11 4#clslaaa—
Poaevse. micag*. ll-l.
.
Hiriaauul* — acar*. Cl#»*Us4
•hSTTIO
teBiiu
111
h
h k uai
L B S h tB
nit lee
Baltina baesu nn
It ai bet#••
■h. .14*.
Cimnen*il*j Preuttlyn.
vreekira. Tl
Rues —#el4er.. Brae
Ie—Seller, BraebRun* bane* ia—Bel

Oldsmobll

'* situ - Aarae, Milwaukee. 111.
__
rues—hel4*r. Breeklye. II
Mem*
Stalea bases—Bayer. &gt;L Laela.
ll

PltcSlKg bate* ** * aactstews—
Nswt'emb*. iroeklra, 11*1. .Ill ■
atrikaauta—Jeaa*. Ckica**, 11*

Fight Results
la a a a t im a *«H
IB P A K . L'taa — T a t .
•IjF’iptB
, Pitteburga. aaipalat-

B a k e r. 1141*. .
M h * e L e .a
y all
*

at*, waai jeriaa.

XKW VnRM — Byatr hi wtlsea
ISIU. Bagtewea* k j. aatpala'M

tries pat Lowry its, fait**, OBI*.
l , 'BHorUTOK.. Maas. — Jakaay
Hoy# lITU, Tauetja. ttke* . aut.
palate* Viler Ta* Lower, til.
Avw Mevsn, fnea.. I*.
MAXILA Ital* Bcerllrhlal. II*.

rW R A T t i ‘ B IN K IV fl
P IT T B B U R O H ( ^ - T h # P it t * ,
burgh P ira taa hava won morn than
Ihk spirit eamea from thair ra«•"»•■ Hi B aetmm tw lea la
•kkt winning atraak which kac ear te a lr N ational Laag ua h isto ry,

m i team late second place, two
PteJ* haklnd tk* New Yoitara.
iW n M
Bp." said General
|*r frank Una "and I
MM’S (IM wa'D give team a
jP . tea *ay. 1 k»ok for as to
te teaat twa ate af Iktwa if net
teal# aariaa."
affwaa with lac Maaapsr

W S « -

1903
■ Si » • &gt;
Iko *. On tea athar
aid* a f tha ladgar they hava lost
mar# than 100 rs iw te a y a a r flv#

JJ®** “

tef l*at tiirs* ie

"Wlte
Yank*
Md -Ja# CoUina la tea
^

:

' **
, • . .

Ttt ♦'

/.» Vft
.

.T-juy 21
U O IM f

M
i l ^
w
" : ,

,

■

-

-

S U S lt H I

&lt;

• *-1 r* N

■

*

. r / ’k VI

'

it

* t e ^

^

- M

u V ! u

7 . I i Va L

l
T t * ■-

"

.%
»'k -' \S'Q
'. ;

y
4

■
■ - •

�History Is Changed By Big Blast
LOS ALAMOS. N.M. (ff - It
The New Mexican used two parsrocked the world and changed the graphs on tha story on its back
court* at history. But tha world psga under a headline: “ Magazine
didn't leant about It until thru* Lets Go at Alamogordo."
weeks later.
Dr. Gaelea L. Felt la one of the
It was the successful Trinity ex­ Los Alamos oKl-limrrs who wit­
p losion . 10 years ago Saturday of nessed Trinity. He cams to Loa
Cth# first atomic bomb-proof of Alamos in the early stages ts an
man's ability to harness the power Army noncom assigned to a spe­
ef the atom.
cial engineer detachment in a
The name “ Trinity’* was taken physics group.
f r o m an unpopulated railroad
On Aug. T, IMS, the day after
switching point, the nearest spot Truman’ s revelations. Felt wrote
to the steel tower where the first his mother of what K was liku at
A-bomb was detonated.
Trinity:
The blast came at l:M the
“ I waa seated on tha tida of a
stoning of July 10, IMS. on the
small
mountain tome 30 miles
southern New Mexico desert about
away . . . By S, the east was
^JSO miles south of this top-secret,
clear, though there were stlU
^heavily guarded laboratory city. It
climaxed the best kept secret of clouds standing over us, stars
shining through the gaps. It was
World War If.
growing light enough to see fairly
On Aug. ( the world heard about well, though the big expanse where
the blast when President Truman the shot sat on its tower was still
disclosed the dropping of the Hiro­ fairly dark."
shima bomb. He told of the bomb's
He lold of the tense last few
development by the University of
minutes before aero; then the shot
California Los Alamos scientific and the blinding flash followed by
laboratory under direction of the the first awesome fireball of the
top-secret Manhattan engineer dit­
to trict. And he told of the first man­
-m a d e n u c l e a r exphv.nn three
weeks earlier on the New Mexico
desert between Alamogordo and1
locorro.
j
Ths President’s announcement
officially disclosed the existence at
this hush-hush city and the im­
MARION, Mall. tff - William
portant role K played under lead­
ership at Dr. J. Robert Oppenhel- O. Tsylor, M. editor and publish­
star. It was a story that read like er of the Boston Globe for 34
something out of science fiction. years, died oarly Friday at hit
m For lit years the people of bomt here.
He wa* active to the operation
Santa Fa, 40 miles to the south­
east, were mystified and bemused of tha Globe untf only a few
by the obviously Important and months, ago.
He was named editor and pub­
big-scale activities occurring at
this remote spot high on a table­ lisher to 1331 on the death of hit
top known as the Pajarito Pateau. father Gen. Charles H. Taylor,
Until early IMS. when the Army builder at toe Olobe.
At a boy, be helped distribute
took over, Los Alamos was an extoe newspaper to newsboys at the
elusive bo/s' ranch school.
New Mexteo newsmen working Globe office. While a student at
wider wartime censorship condi­ Harvard he was a reporter of
t i o n s were aware of the cloak and yachting newt during tha summer
dagger aspects of the big project, months.
His active apprenticeship In tha
but they could ktve reported nothlag about Ms mission even It they managament ef the newspaper be­
gan to I N aa anon at ha gradhad *
My first eontaet with tha project us ted from Harvard. The Globe
•amt when I waa cautioned about waa bla principal concern from
having used ths name of Lot Ala­ that time on.
Taylor found Mme, however, tor
mos in a state capital atory about
two favorite sports: yachting and
a highway project.
rdfThe day fee President mads bis
m dlsclosure the Bante Fe New Metm lean described the dioroughness of
the ncwi blackout on Loa Alamos:
“ A wholu social world audited
to nowhere, to which people were
LAS VEGA!, Nev. Iff - A tonemarried and babies were born no­ day search for 13-year-old John
where. People died to a vacuum, Cooley ended at a sun-scorched
nutot and trucks crashed to a va­ body, a .33 caliber rifle, and three
cuum. Even the graduates of Los amal notebook pages scrawled
Alamos Ranch School ceased to with the boy's bitter farewell.
K graduates of Los Alamos; they
Sheriff W. 1. Leypoldt tald the
bounded direct from Publle School boy apparently killed himself af­
to No. T clear into the classrooms of ter he learned that Avery Cooley
• Harvard and Yale."
—whom he thought waa hit faOn the morning of July M, IMS, ttoer—was really hla stepfather.
tie New Mexico state wire of Use
The air and ground search by
Associated Press was interrupted more than 300 men ended Thurs­
a number of timet by number day beside ■ dirt road within
newspapers asking about a report­ sight of Las Vegaa.
ed big explosion. In response to
Part at the note found by toe
The AP's Inquiries, the Army even­ body concerned family strictness.
tually released a statement which It waa signed “ John Cooley er
•ould qualify as an all-tima mas­ Beasley —which la It to beTM
terpiece of understatement. The
Deputies ware unable to eaplato
ra Army at first restricted the state- the "Beasley’ ’ reference.
w ment’a circulation to Naw Mexico.
]r'*r permitted its use outside the
Tha average temperature of
■date.
Canada is below St decrees Fah­
n ammunition magatino had renheit.
exploded on ■ remote section of
the Alamogordo base doing no
There were 1,434,000 meirlaeea
damage, the itatement said. It in the United State* to 1M4,
alto suffered to pyrotechnics.
60,000 fewer than in IMS.

Boston Globe Head
Ends Active Career

Apparent Suicide
Ends Long Search

Hollywood Lovers
Of Art Worried

atnmie age; and finally the shock
wave.
The w a l c k i r s cheered and
slapped each other's backs and
chatterad like monkeys.
“ We knew,'* Felt said, “ that we
bad seen that morning the might
test explosion ever produced by
mian, as well as ona of the most
superb scientific demonstrations
•vtr performed. M defied the
imagination . . ."
A year ago President Eisenhow­
er, in a citation, hailed the La s
Alamos scientific laboratory of the
University of California as “ the
nation's principal institution for
tha development of atomic weap­
ons." He said its “ momentous suc­
cess in the field of fission weapons
(atomic bombs) has been followed
by equal accomplishments in the
fusion (hydrogen bomb* field.”
On Aug. I, IBM, Chairman Lewis
L. Strauss of the Atomic Energy
Commission said that since the
1641 Trinity test there have been
more than 46 experimental deton­
ations and an entire range of
atomic w e a p o n s
has been
developed.

Inside
Washington
WWASHINGTON INSIDE Boh _
WASHINGTON—Goverment la­
bor experts, elated because major
auto and steel strike# have been
auentrd, are costing a worried
look at She nationwide copper
walkout.
Th* «trike by the mine, mill
and smelter workers union has
halted mining in the wset at a
time when there already to a
critical copper shortage.
Even a comparatively ehert
■Wtoe to the mine# could epell
eeriowe trouble far the economy
for a long time to come because
thousands at email businesses mutt
rely am copper for their operations
An allocation system which #L
raady carefully alloto tuppliee of
copper Se users may have So be
eharply tightened and rigid price
control* may have to be Imposed to
meet the situation.
Inflation—The eoet eg living,
whieh hat remained relatively
•table over the pact tw# years
•acme likely to rice to toe coming
month#. The question to hbw much
of an upward movement In eon
turner price# can he expected.
Generally, economic expert* feel
that Bring eeeU may inch up in
slight apurta during toe reenalnder eg this year because at rising
costs for basic material* and new
wage agreements.
The steel Industry already has
aervsd notice U will boost pries*
U rover the wage boost granted
lu workers. Thia means higher
consumer price* for almoat all pro
duct* using steel.
The wage agreements to th*
auto Industry alee mean higher
price* for care, and consumer*
can expect to pay more for other
item* made in Industrie* where
wage increases have bcea negotiat
ad.
•tiff competition to expected to
prevent any major price Jump*
for consumers hut prices will go
up some and dealers won't b# so
anxious to give their customers fat
discount# in th* future.

TH E SANFORD H E R A L D '
▼»*«. July IB. 1UI
Pag* F

A CRAM I W M t a new tour^ton, 17-foot, steeple into place *4op
historic Old North Church in Itoston. This U the third spire since
(tie church was completed In 1733. A storm in 1804 blew down th*
first. On Aug. 31, 1BS4, Hurricane Carol destroyed toe eccnnd. Into
to* rebuilt structure is bring placed the original window, and other
woodwork, where hung the lanterns an April 18, 1778, warning Paid
Sever* of the approach of the MUah. (International SounAphoto)

A ir Power Shift ,
Told By O ffice r

TOKYO iff — Th# Communists
have shifted their air power !■
While Goldenberg said he had, the past year to whert It ean
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif,
llollywood art lovers, up to their attempted to verify the works be-| be used to support an attack
eyebrows in French impressionists fore offrring them for auction, he against Formosa, a U. S Far East
Air Force command officer re­
were given some trembling mo­ added on the stand:
ported Friday.
ments by t Jury which convicted
" l do not publish an authentic
Col. James T. Stewart, FEAF
• prominent auctioneer of falsely
catalogue; R is a descriptive |assistant deputy for operation*,
advertising five paintings as the
work of celebrated French artists. catalogue. I have never heard of •aid thrrt had hern a gradual
Roy J. Goldenberg was found an auction house which authenti­ movement of Red planet south­
ward from Manchuria and Norik
guilty yesterday of representing at cates its paintings."
authentic five paintings attributed
Dr. Rewaid, art writer and con­ Korea.
ti Edouard Manet Edgar Degas, sultant to leading U S gallieriss,
“ Such a shift." Stewart told
Raoul Dufy and Rosa Bonheur. called the Degas and Dufy paint­ visiting U 8. newsmen at a mili­
The Jury, weighing four days of ings "intentional forgeries" and tary briefing, “ would support anjr
expert testimony, concluded they the two ascribed to Manet "un- program to Tiberata* Formosa.’*
were fakes
intential forgeries." By "inten­
SMALL ESTATF. LEFT
The Iraffie to French art has tional," he said he meant obvious
been booming in and around the fakes by painters trying to copy
LOS ANGELES tff-Stage and
movie colony since World War II, certain artists. "Unintentional" in­ screen actress Gladys Georg*
with paintings bringing up to $1,00,- dicate! the painter didn'f try to who died last Dee. 8. left an es­
000.
ropy an artist's atyle, but- that tate worth no more than $306, %
Ths Jury of six men and six somebody forged a signature later. court petition for letters of *dHe doubted the authenticity of ministration discloses.
women found that Goldenberg
made misleading statements in ths Bonheur, but did not ust the
Public Administrator E. A. W onewspaper snd catalogue advertis­ word "forgery" In connection with stley told the court that MIsa
ing, but held that he did not make it.
George, who was 30 when she died,
tha statements with deliberate in­
Of one of th* Manets, art critic left no will and had no known
tent.
Arthur Miiller of the I a s Angeles relatives. She was found eaennGoldenberg had testified that he Times observed: "It’s the type of| •clout in her apartment and dlsd
believed the paintings to be authen­ painting any painter of no talent after being taken to a hospital.
tic, but the jury heard six prosecu­ could (urn out—it's Just a lousy
tion experts label them everything painting."
set for Aug. 10. Goldenberg la fir**
from "lousy’' to "intentional for­
Defense eounsel Tom C. Wil­ on $230 bond until then.
gery."
liams produced a witness, DutchTh# misdemeanor conviction car­
One expert. Dr. John G. Rewaid, born Cornelius L J Damme, who ries a maximum penalty of lit
of New York City, estimated that drew what he said were the strokes months in Jail and $300 fin# Com­
th* paintings, if authentic, might of Manel and Degas. Damme and plaints in th* rat* were filed hr
bring more than $100,000. Munici­ two other detent* witnesses ds- art dealer Frank Peris, who *om
tended that an influx of bogus
pal Judge Henry H. Dreager al­ fended the paintings as genuine.
Williams moved for « new trial paintings has hurt th# tegitlmato
lowed no testimony on what Goldenherg expected to get for them and a hearing on the motion was art market In Hollywood.
—v

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Het’e Preference—Forme. .
Ident* Harry g. Truman haa fr*
quently made it dear he would
have preferred remaining to to*
•eaato rather than going to the
WhHa Roues hot now H turns cut
that the government Job he really
had hie heart set on waa to be
librarian at Congress.
This came to light recently to
a speech delivered to Cleveland by
Or. Louie 1. Wright, director ef
tha Feller Shakespeare library in
Washington.
b r i g h t told hie audience,
“ From a 1Htie private Inquiry In
Washington, I have discovered that
Mr. Truman, during nil theta
rears, haa actually been a fru s
tratod librarian. The chairman of
mmmlttoo who see* conferred with
ktot abend to* appointment at a
librarian at Gangrene told me that
Mr. Truman declared if ha war*
bn would rather be

tin

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•d whin ton learned she had ___
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to dtocnaatoff the nepenelbUitiM
at United State* Surgeon General
Leonard A. Sckeel*.
Th* toridant aroaa whan Mrs.
an n radio
In imnenae to n
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— ----------that Or. Scheel* gad
th* PubU* Health service were
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GEI,THAT'S SWELL OF YOU OUYS,
NOWIF A LL MY FRIENDS WOULD
PUT THEIR. MEADS TOGETHER,
WERE BOUND TO COME UP
WITH TWO NAM ES JER R Y A
W- W ILL L I K E / J

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OBOOVEA

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WITH TWO
STRIKES AtO
NO BALLS CX
ONE BALL
ON THE
BATTER —
TRY BAlTiNC
HIM WITH
ONE HIGH—
OR. LOW—
OR OFF A .
CORNER/

I GAVE &gt;OU A RAISE
J j^ O L « A LLO W A N C E ■

SO YOU DUVALL

THAT WAS THE
AGWIEMENrRCMEMBEn

THAT MEANS YOU W f / / .
HOB A NEW DRESS J h o
NOW AND THEN" 4 * V l'

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- hSC L O T H E S/A

OET MV HANDS ON YOU/
GORDON/
WHAT KINDOF GAMS HAVE ] MR. REM3EN .
YOU SEEN FLAYINGflTXYMG J m L EXPLAIN.'
TO RUMMS DOWN-.
TOSSING A CRATE FROM
A ROOFTOP/ WHAT'S IT

.

CHATTER TWEZCTT-TWO
TUI hadn't known it was pos­
sible to nets n men me be hafed
Rob Mallory. Shooting was a quick.
A merciful death.
That wasn’t payment enough (or
Joe and Molly. Rob would dm, but
not before he'd known what It waa
to suffer. There was only one way
a ("■■ like that could suffer
through hla pride, pride la power
founded on possession. Broken
Spur — that arrogant one-man
kingdom sprawled across the coun­
try like a blight on the hopes of
honest men—Broken Spur m u
Rob Mallory. Well, then, amaab
them both. Ue’d nave to get the
other neeters together behind him
—that ahouldn’t hr too hard. They
an hated Mallory. U seemed to
Tim that there oould be no more
peace (or mm as long as he and
Rob Mallory walked the asms
earth.
e e e
"TTmow, Kerry, I hate to be the
one to bring up unpleasant sub­
jects, but It’s time we waa thin kin'
about flndln’ ourselves a couple o’
Jobe.”
Kerry nodded. They were sitting
at a table tn a saloon In a town
some bundled mllee from Sun­
down. and the act of paying for
their drinks had called their atten­
tion to the state of their pockets.
They'd been drifting out of
Dodge for ■ month now. and it
had been fun; you couldn't ask for
Better company to Ids the trail
wlir than Rusty.
“ Too bad.1* Rusty sighed philo­
sophically. “Beems like thu world's
plumb organised against folks like
you an me just enjoyin’ their•elves Should we start R isk in ' in­
quiries about whether any &amp; the
ranchers round icrt got a need for
two first-rate cow-hands T”
Kerry counted the email stack of
coins before him. “How much yougot left?"
“Nine dollars an' some chicken“I've got about twelve. That'll
carry us a little while, If we’ra
careful—and don't get in any poker
games. Pact is. Td just as soon
not locals In this neighborhood."
“Not meanln' to pry Into your
Business Kerry, but you don’t hap­
pen to be wanted around here. Go
rou?“

“By the.law, yon meant" Kerry
laughed. "No. I'm not wanted—not
wanted by anybody 1 reckon. It's
to lire

1—Pd rather nog ran Into anybody
1 need to know. It’s a long story
—" Looking Into his friend's lean,
humorous face, Kerry suddenly
felt It would be a relief to spUl It
all out. Thera wouldn't be any
condemnation m Rusty, and may­
be telling him would relieve some
of tha unrest and confusion of. mind
that bad been building up tn him
as be drew closer to Broken Spur.
Before be could go on, a cow­
boy with a glass In his hand waa
standing by thqir table “S'cuse
me. friend, ain’t 1 seen you some­
where before?”
Kerry recognised him .as a man
who'd worked briefly for Slosh T
a couple of yean before. “Could
be.”
“ Nice t’see you ’gam.” It had
clearly hot been his first drink.
Ha waa In the mellow, friendly
stage. “Mind t I alt down?
Thanks. I sun hats t’drink alone."
He raised a hand toward the bar­
tender, “Couple drinks for my
friends!" and promptly launched
Into a long, rambling and profane­
ly. cheerful account of a trip to
Mexico, Kerry's attention bad
drifted away, when It was Jerked
bach by Um sound of the name
•Slash T."
“Used t’work then," the strang­
er was saying, “an’ I figured t’rlde
by then an’ see If I could get my
old Job beck. But when 1 tee the
way things was bulldin up 'round
here, 1 says, not for a a I can
take my share &amp; trouble If it
comet along, but I ain't hankerin'
feet right down In the middle of a
hornet's neaL an’ that country
sure feels like a mighty good Imi­
tation o’ one, ever since Rob Mal­
lory shot that nester."
"Kerry's movement sent hla
glass spuming off the table: he
never noticed 4L "What neater 7
Whet you talkin’ about?”
"WeU,” the cowboy emtled apolo­
getically, "same folks says he shot
him. Course, some says different.
Ma I’m not esyln*—1 was Just
ridin' through, jr*understand?"
Kerry's bands gripped the tableedga “Will you tell mo what this
la all about?”
“Why. eura” ft took time to ex­
tract the story from the man's
rambilnga but finally It was clear
enough.
“Rob never did tt." Kerry aald
flatly. •
“I ain’t Baym* be Ad. friend—”
"He’s been called a let of thing*
—but hla worst

Over 100 Years A g t

him a coward. If he was going to
shoot s man. It wouldn't be in Lhs
back!"
Rusty Inquired, “ He a friend 0f
yours Kerry?"
"Sort of," Kerry agreed slowly.
He pushed hack from the labia
“I'm going back to Lhs hotel.
Rusty."
Rusty made a half-move out of
his chair, then dropped, beck, say­
ing softly, “Sure Kerry. I'll be
along later.”
When Rusty entered the dingy
hotel room, a couple of hours after,
the air waa blue end stale with
the smoke of cigareta, and Kerry
was sitting on the edge ot the bed,
with the drawn look of a man who
has been through a long, tough
fight—and perhapa he had—but
with a look of peace in his blus
eyes that hadn’t been there in a
long tlma
“Rusty,” bs began without pre­
liminaries, "you've been' a swell
partner, but I guess this la where
the trail spllO."
"How come, Kerry?”
T ra going back to Broken
Spur.”
"Wen, sura. If your friend's tn
troubla Don't you reckon he could
use an extra band 7"
"You don't understand. Rusty. I
know the set-up there. This Tim
Larrabee's a crazy hothead, and
he'll have all the other nestkra on
the prod—Pvt got to go beck,"
Kerrs added wearily. "Rob raised
me from a pup. Us took me in
when 1 didn’t'have any place to go
—there's some things you Just
can't rids away from. But it's not
your fight There's no reason why
you should buy into our troubles

TOKYO (M—Four black ship*
slipped silently into Tokyo Bey 101
years ego.
Startled Japsnese »»w strange
red, white and blue flags fluttering
over decks lined with menacing
snub nosed cannon.
-These visitor* who had dared
violate the Mikado's "forbidden
waters" were the Mississippi, Sus­
quehanna, Plymouth and Saratoga
—the fleet of Commodore Matthew
C. Perry of the U.S. Navy.
Now Perry’* arrival la celebrat­
ed here as a link with America
that opened Japan to weatern
trade.
Today the great adventure will
be marked in ceremonies at Kurdhama — midway between Hoke*
hama and Yokosuka—where Perry
and 300 ’ ’splendidly arrayed" of-*
fleers first stepped ashore.
•
U.S. Ambassador John M. Alli­
son will participate. So will Rear
Adm. Fitihugh Lee, chief, of tha
U.S. fleet air arm In Japan and
great-grandson of one of Perry’s
ship commanders.
A parade f o l l o w s at tho
Yokosuka, U.S. naval air baa*.
Stories of the “ black ships of
evil -mien" remain - vivld-Jo--Japi _
ancia memory. Tha strangers re*
fused to deal with local officials
and would not deliver a message
from President Mfllard nftmorw
to anyone but the Japanese Em i.
peror In person.
After threatening to land in '
armed party, Perry finally agreed
to tho Japanese stand that tha
Emperor was too exalted a per­
sonage to approach in person. Ha •
agreed to deliver tho letter to hlgV
ranking Prince Toda.
d
A special houso had been e rected
at Kurihama for the meeting.
There, July It, 1&gt;53, the delegatiuni met under the threatening
guns of the American fleet, and .
Japan wai lifted from a long ■
period of aelf-lmpoied isolation.
Some say the trade agreement
signed waa the first step along
the road that made Japan a mod*,
cm nation.

Rusty shrugged. “ Tou know me
an* trouble. Kerry. All these yenrs
1 been trytn' to stay away from
IL It never got me nowhere. It
mostly ain't my Tight" be con­
cluded resignedly. "But I gener­
ally wind up tn the middle of it
anyway. Might be ktnd of an In­
terestin' change to start cut tn the
middle.”
Kerry turned away and busied
himself with stuffing ■ few belong­
ings into bis warbag. He didn't
trust himself to speak Just th en end bs didn't want Rusty to see
his eyes. There was a wetness In
them that didn’t belong In the eyes
of a man who’d Just that dsy corns
ot age.

/To Be Continued)

Study Is M ade O f Fly's Action While Landing
MEMPHIS, Tenn. I*-When a
fly lights on • ceiling, doei It do
a half-roll or a halMoopT
Well, air, Lydel Slmi, eolumnlit
for tha Commercial Appeal, aasigned that complex queitlon to
SLURP—the Slmi Laboratory of
Unusual Research Problems.
Its findings?
Fait flies use the ball-roll. Slow
flies use a half-loop.
81ms glvoa all tho credit to
SLURP researcher Ben P. Doug­
lass a flying Instructor at the
Malden, Mo., air base.
During a recent Illness Douglass

fearlessly ordered the window
icreens removed and aettled down
flat on hla back to obierva.
Hla report:
"The method need dependi en­
tirely upon the fly’a ipe*d prior to
the maneuver. Hie speed ia de­
termined primarily by whether or
chased by another
not he is
"The fly, unlike some pilots I
know, ha* a healthy respect for
the laws of physics and acrodynamlei. If tho fly is flying at a
relatively high rate pf speed, be
will land out ot a half-roll In order

to prevent excessive Q loads on
hla wlngi. .
"A half-loop landing at high
speed would result In excessive
stresses on tha fly’s wings and
possible structural failure If the
ultimate load factor was exceed •
"And of what use la this know­
ledge?" asks Sims.
"Why, clearly," Slmi says, "If
we can figure a way to persuade
■11 flies to uso the half-loop, and
then get them to chasing one an­
other, we ean have freedom from
flies in our time."

FORMER ACTRESS
*
BUYS DESERT INN
HOLLYWOOD
&lt;M — Marion
Davies is now a hotel owner.
Tho former actresa announced
Wednesday that she hat bought tha
Desert Inn in Palm Springi for
two million dollars. Tho sellers
were Earl Coffman and George
Roberson.
Mlsi Davies, who said the will
be the sole owner, laid, "It'll coitA
a lot more by the time we get
through with it. I plan to davelip
it into a miniature Rockefeller
Cctiler."

For

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FOP BEING LATE TO J
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VCULL HAM* TO STAND
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TWENTY MINUTES
AFTER CLOSING ,

Father Released
A fter Judge Rules
Lure Not Correct
PROVIDENCE, E. L III —inprriar Court Judge Patrick P,

THE PU TllSM litkN fW

GETS HOME ANO J
H A S T O E X P L A IN \
TO HIS W IFE \W H V j A
HffS LATE F t p R /T £

• • • with a lower-than-ever price tagI

M ail Ordar System Adopted By Reds To Aid V illagers
MOSCOW W — Samovar* and Simultaneously, the soviet trade more needy
■ P »I k iin I H
■IM
■ heavy
agriculture.
bicycles from Tula, kerossue organisation U working gradualV Industry and agriculture,
Ia both merchandising
merchaadistag fl
f»tHt Um
stoves from Moscow Wju i. il. . &lt;* develop self-help in stores. The la
tram TiiKkMi.W 4 n .il
or. Mm la to out tales porooaasl for Russians
are Just
Haitians an
Jut making
auktag 1a tafiarigaad l EHliBr W aid Bttaaa
efiarmars aad villasm wta eflea
eaal Had wtat ttay seed la raral
‘ BMMt travel * the
ta bay.
NAPLES, Maly IIH-The faithful
"set On" Uat weak tn the ataapis
at the Cathedral of . Santa Maria

F a ith fu l'S a t Fire'
To C hurch's Tower

Use Not t a c t ic a l
rrr -

.— ™

. •

jg M
*

*

:

b |r
‘

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WANT ADS
TI1K SANFORD IIKItAl.D Tur-,. July 19, 1955

If Ills Worth Anything
It's Worth Advcrtiglag la

CLASSIFIED ADS

— Factory to Tea —
Oxier - W eller H om es, b e .
General Caatractiag
Vcmetlon Btinda
im A Low
• Commercial—Custom
Eacleeed heed. Sag-nroof bottom
Cost Homes
rail with ptaette ends. Plastic or
1199 Meneavilla Ave. Phene 1991
rayon tapoa. Cottoa or nylae
cards.
ANNOUNCING
I’m happy to have Annabelle Scmkorlk d m mod Paint Co.
Phone 331
Henderson associated with me 113-114 West had St
in Real Estate.

KelUwmy aaf Baby Boda

Week or month—TeL 14M.
US West Vint

tea Apts.
FURNISHED ApartmenL MO Park
Ate.
________ _
Vanished KU»eaette apt*. Air
CaocUtloaed. Slumberla ad Court
South City limits Highway 17-92.
• Bedroom Home.
Block troi
Southiide school. Call 3S4L
EE Seminole Realty tor D«*lrIble Homes and Apts. Phone 27.
FURNISHED A pt Thon* 432-W.
UNFURNISHED 4 Room House
with 2 Bedrooms. Phone 133&amp;-J.
S Room A pt MO Avacado.
FURNISHED 3 Bedroom House.
Clois iS a ii West 1st S t Phone
•18.
________ _
R RRoom
o o m Apartment Completely
L— , l te&lt;L 313 Palmetto Ave.
IVurnlahi
FURNISHED Cottage. One Bed­
room. Extra nice. &gt;14 Elm Ave.
(

Rooms and Bath. I l l Elm.
Phene 3 S B 3 - W . ________ .

D A IL Y C R O S S W O R D
ACROSS
1. Woo*ly
perennial
S. Oriental
nurae
9. Unctuous
10. Character
In "Othello"
11. Aroused
from eleep
12. Goddess of
the hunt
It. Monetary
unit &lt;Lat.|
13. Rog
18. Variant of
,
"ob " before
r
V
17. Gold (Her.)
18. Aids for the
hostess
21. One of the
kings of
England
,
23. Toward
(
the Ire
21. Tortlon of
a curved
tine
,
23. A while lie
28 Mix
28. Foolish
blunders

Miracle Ceacrete Co.
Living room. Dining. Sun room.
• Kim Ave.
Pheae 1333
Large modern kitchen with
Stove and Refrigerator. Cera­
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* METAL ROOFING
On 3 lots with shade trees. Now tn Stock. 9-V Crimp - t U "
114.300.
Corrugated— 2 4 " Corrugated.
Get all Your roofing needs at
ROSA L. PAYTON
Sherman Concrete Pipe Co.
(Reg Real Estate Broker)
Phone 34M
Annabelle Henderson. Associate Out West 13th St
New Location — Hignway 17-92
at Hiawatha. Phone 2&gt;71.
AIR CONDITIONING
Room o r ‘ House
Since 1949 We Have Built in San­
B. 3. POPE CO. INC.
ford Homes for over 1,000 peo­
Park A ve
Pheae 14M
ple t We have the home for you
—la Wynnewood — or Dream wold
—Loch Arbor. 9 end 4 bedrooms. Footlockere . . . . . . . Special *7.93.
1 k 9 Baths, Large Lou, Full Paint
..................... .*2.30 gaL
Tile Baths —Large Kitchens —
Ail sixes tarpaulins.
Screened porches — Garage or
ARMY-NAVY SURPLUS
Carport*. Best Possible Finan­ 319 Sanford Ave.
Phone 1321
cing No Down Payment Clos­
ing Coju Only.
Used furniture, applUnees, tools,
Wellborn C Phillip* J r,
etc. Bought-sold. Larry’* Mart
Builder
321 East 1st SL Phone-1931.
Phone 13*4
Seles Office on corner Osceola Dr YOU don’t have to see tho credit
manager to save dollars legiti­
end Mohawk Ave In Dreamwold.
mately on our GIGANTIC Remnval SALE.
TOTAL PRICE *3.000.
ROBINSON MUSIC CO.
One Bedroom Home outside City
Kitchen equipped. City water, S3* N. Orange Avr. Orlande, Fla.
City Sewer. Screen Porch.
RAYMOND M. BALL. RROI
FIT FOR A QUEEN8. D. Hltmieyaau, Associate
Foxm Rubber Mattresses, InnerO M. Harrison, Associate
S p r l n g Mattrtnas, douches,
Ml Soetn Park Ave.
Phase 9M
Baby Beds, Renovating, Uohol
at#rug and Slip Covar work.
For year Reel Estate eeeeat

Cullen and Barker, Realtors
lee N. Park Ave. Pkeee 2313.

Ave.

1*4-J.

C A. WHIP PON, SR.

QUICK CASH for furniture, boat*,
motors. Buy one piece or com­
plete home. Thousands of arti­
119 S ^ a r k
Pk. im
cles for sale at the
(leper Trading Vast on 17-92
OPEN HOUSE
1 MUe See Ik. Phone 2212-1
3—bedroom spacious home on nice
corner lot situated near school
and grocery. Home U open all Large Knotty Pine Hutch cup­
board. *100. (nrw), Hollywood
week for your inspection. Sell­
Bed complete *43. (new). Maple
er will redecorate interior with
wash stand *10.. Beautiful small
Buyer's choice of color*. See
desk *23.00, China cabinet *23.,
it at 1401 Sanford Avr. See ua
Rockers *3 00 up, good used
for drulls. Good terms availa­
m bs, buggies and play pen.
ble. Exclusive.

Seminole Realty

u—
USED PLUMBING

ierr

IIWW1U,

LAUNDRY aaCBWIC*

FIXTURES. CARPENTER WORK -REPAIRS
• Cabinet* Made To Order
Phone 1887-W —J. E. Rnhinnott

Are.

4HWRA1UCW

lii

—14-B

Key. 1 U U .

It-

FRA

L.

sad repair*.

THE CURIOSITY SHOP

furn­

ifr
belter treller living sea
Sanlando Trailer Perk. 4 Stars.
AH modern. 9 ml. south on 17-0
Highway at Standard Station.
&gt; Nice shady grassy lot*. cement
patios. Fine ahuffleboarda, Recreation room. Immaculate tiled
ebuwere. "Really cjoan for
folks who cere,". Adults.
GARAGE APT. for couple. 305V4
E. Ulh St. Phone 222-J.
ICE Bedroom. Private entrance
bath. Phone 3029-W.
APARTMENTS - FurnUhed 2101
Magnolia Ave. One bedroom
| &gt;30 00 monthly. Two bedroom
! $33.00 monthly. Phone 1873,
Hobart A. Williams. *
FURNISHED APT. Qulet, Sh«dr
for. rtflsad couple. ISO* W. 3rd
BL
2 Bedroom furnished Garage
Apartment. 1134 W. 19th St
/yCall 844-W after 3:30.

17-0 South
T. W. M K M
27 er 14! Frlgidalre refrigerator It Hard­ 0*4 Wool Ulh Cerrefe Co.
wick Gas Range. Excellent Con­
2 bedroom bouse. 4 4 per cent
dition. Reasonable. 2636 S. Elm.
mortgage. |40 monthly. 1903
Elm.
rL u m m e
Summerlin.
Caotract and repair work. Free
estimate*. R. L. Harvey. IN
NEW 3 Bedroom concrete block THREE PIECE Oak Lawn Furnllure Sets — *12.30 per set. See
home. Weatingbouse Kitchen,
Sanford Are.
Roy
Reel,
Sanford
Ave.
at
Uth
GI financed, Low Down PaymenL Phone 430.
Si.
p . m . c a m p u k i -l
Geoerei Qaatrsctar
2 Bedroom FRAME House. 3 LoU
"Heme* of Dlatteetteawith S3 budded orange trees.
l-Wey 17-91
Pheae IM!
Completely furnished. P h o n e Highest CASR. TRADE-IN prices
paid far nard furniture Call 931,
For Better Plu
Wilson-Maier Furniture Co. 3U
BEAUTIFUL N e w Ranch-type
See or Call
E.
1st
SL
house in choice spot on north­
W
. J. KIN G
ern shofe of Lake Monroe
M Sooth Perk
—I
for sale or possibly for rent to y—
responsible people. ConUctMrs.
D. C. Van mnkle, associate A PERFECT COMBINATION for Dragline service, Larmonts A
Inching. Estimates given. Phone
Floyd Maxwell, Realtor, 320 N. your dog . . . . PURINA DOG
CHOW XIBBLED-MEAL. This
Geneva 2484, Orlando 515*4.
Blvd., DcLand. Tel. 1118.
wholesome food combines klb*
Sanford 2221.
bled biscuit for palatability
2 Bedroom concrete block home.
with meal for full nutrition.
'
Lot 123 x 73, by
owner MHO.
It's So Eney
Builds vigor, stamina and top
DeBary. Phone 2369-M..
To Pise* A Want Ad
condition. Dogs lova it. Get
TWO-STORY Frame House on 2
lust Cull 1821 and sak for
PURINA DOC. CHOW her*.
acres. Call 1393-W after 3.30.
th* Want Ad department
Simpsoa Farm Supply
Phono I4U
Sanford Herald
» - jumcuM row m g -&gt; 119 W 2nd SL

50th Anniversary
SPECIA LS

NICELY furnUhed cottage. Free
electricity and water. By month Reg. IS 93 18x34 or 18x34
or yeer Yound. B. J. Carrol,
Bevel Plate Glass
Five Point* Motel, 8 miles south
Mirrors .....................
on 17-92. Phone S31-R-40.. after Reg. IS 93 Double Door
• p. m. or week-ends._________
Metal utility Cablast
93 54" Metal
EVERYTHING Nswl 2 Bedroom Reg. 24
Wal' Cabinet ............
House. 2 Miles City LimiU. Reg. M.9S
Platform Rockers
Shady lawn. Reference desired. Reg. 49.30 Berkllne
"Ballet"
Phone 1M-J.
Swivel Chairs .........
. Masonry 2 Bedroom House Reg. M.50 Contour Chairs
with Nylon Cover and
C a s s e l b e r r y p e r month.
Foam Latex Filling ..

10.30
12J0
14.30
1134
MAO
MM

Mather of Sanford

LARGE Furnished 2 Bedroom
Apt. Pbooe 1999. Apply 909 San- 998*9 R. is! 14.

-a * "-

FOR SALE Boxer Puppies. AKC. FLOOR aaadlag aed finishing.
Cleaning, waxing. Serving Semi
Excellent breeding. 34
mo.
note County slnee U S . H. M
*33. 2621 Elm. Phone 103.
Oieaaoa, Lake Mary.

MfcgjgnHL

Pheae l it

VENETIAN HANDS

-*

LAWNMOWERS n t i a r p e n a d
Bicycle A General Repair.
SEWING MACHINE OPERATORS
S ta aiejr's B ik e Shop
—Both Experienced and Learn210 C. 4th SL TeL I 4M
ari. Experienced preferred but
laareers will be trained in free ENVELOPES. letterheads. statevocational school. 40 Hour week,
mend, invoices, band bill*, and
pleasant Working conditions, in
p r o g r a m s , etc. Progressive
modem plant. Paid Vacation
Printing Co., Phase 404 — 403
and holl day, Free hospllallxa
West 13th SL
non insurance, *
Brook
field Mills, 208 N. £fm , Sanford. FLOG
R SANDD90 • Finishing:
Oak .floors furnished, laid 4 ffi
ED INSURANCE D e b i t
Uhed.
____
i la buateess
alaca 1130.
s - n J5f*‘ J***' Hospitalisation.
K. F. Steveoa: Route I, Bex IT :
Reliable Company. Experienced
Call 714-R-4 before f a. m. or
preferred, not essential. Wr
after • p. m.
Box M. Titusville, Florida.

GOODYEAR
•1 V A H IT IIS PANELING
Native gad .F o rtin
a . B

l a u

E

omm

tS m Emm -

,*v w n .£ s :

H SH m

~

112 N. Park Ate.

Uooel*
You have to see these I
ODD CHESTS of

It wiK pay YOU u see US before
y«&lt;u buy. Open Evening* and
Sundays.
Palalka, Fla.

ui

Y /
iy

(in

n ^

r * ill s e

y

11

HIGH SCHOOL BOY with Power

Ito
%

%

20

ltd

•7

1

25

22.
V ,

ii
%

%
2fc&gt; 2 7

29

2t&gt;
52.

Jt

1
50

ii
%

JO

Ji.

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7
it

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JO

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|
|

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1

1

1

Buy, Sell. Rent. Hire with want
ads. the busiest talesman In
lawn. Put one to work far you.
Phone lk2L We will be glad to
charge iL

IAMPLR M IN I AD

GET exrra cash for article* you
BARGAIN! 36 FI. Trader. 2 bedno tenner use. Place your ad to­
rooms, cabana, doliy. fenced.
day. Atone 182L
Days, call 1920 axL 230, aik for
W. m . Foster. Evening* eall 2103
For only 0 00 Qte above S-I!ne ad
for information. Ea*y term*.
la no Uie job for you or 3 foil
19BOATI . MOTORS
-4 9 days. Only 0.25 keeps it working
for yea for I days. 1 day la only
Hew wilt yen swan?
Hew will you Trade?
A bttle spate Uka thl* will get
Your old Motor far a
year a c u ig * before our more
Better grade — EVINRUDE!
tfcin 11.000 readers. Tell 'em te
ROBSON Sporting Goode
day! pkooe 1BX1.
Kvterude Bales 4 Service
3*4 K. tat S4.
The Went Ad Department la
from l:M n. m. until 8:30 p.
■
f n n n i a i open
m. each bujiness day except 8aterday
afternoon. Deadline for
iuy ___ _____
at Berry**
Warehouse Furn. Co., at Ml w. week-day insertions is 2:00 p. m.
l»t. St. Alt nationally adv, fur­ the day preceding Publication.
Any aai coming In later than
niture at warehouse prieea.
2:00 p. m. wiU ha published under
Lain To
,T&lt; Classify.
Too
22—KLKCTTJCAL B H V l C m - a
Advertisers are requested to no­
tify the Waet-Ad Department im­
mediately of any error* in their
rw . K m
UI1 m
ads, at The Sanford Herald will be
H49-W after • a m.
responsible for eoly ana incorrect
Insertion.

rS2?fS2.0* r s Z

RKAUTT PARLORS

CRT PROFESSIONAL CARE!

Madera Air-Conditioned Salea
Specialist in Peraanality Shaping,
Styling and Waving. Cosmetics
for your skin rare, Gyro-Lator
method of reducing.

HARRIETTS
BEAUTY NOOK
HnrnetL Ruth. Dawn
Open 1:30 a. m. alto Wed. p. m.
II* So. Oak Ave. Plaa* 971
f t TOOK AD WERE IN 1HH
SPACE IT WOULD ATTRACT

HOPINO 7 0 SOW "roods of-goodwilt," American farroera and odi*reUirs leave New York for Moscow to observe Sen-let agriculture!.
1A similar group i* coming tn tho U.S. from Russia. Shown (rear.
I. tn r.) nrc: Dr. Wllllnm E. Deed of North Carolina Agricultural and
Technical College, Greensboro; Charles J. Heiirat, Cedar Fall*, la.;
J. M. Kleiner. Nampa, Id.; David G. Johnson of fhn University n£
Chicago nnd Ralph Olson. Ellsworth, la. Ill conlrr are: W. V. !.am-&lt;
hert of tho University of Nebraska, group chairman; Asa V. ClarkJ
Pullman, Wnsh, nnd Ferris S. Owen, Newark, O. In front are:l
Herbert W. Pike, Whiling, In.: John M. Stcddom, Granger, la . nnd
Lauren K. Soth nnd llerlwrt 11.1'lambcek, newsmen of I)cs Moines.

Television
w iiao Ti- ru 4\xr.i, a
Tl KSII4 4-

4VTKII.MHIS
t
t :o
tu t
•:08
*14
• l-l
flit
1.1111
7 14
7 J-l
l.nn
4 10
4 0ft
» Jft
0:0ft
H.Jll
I ••
1u

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-1 4

For LortOer Hair

BARGAIN!
3 Bedroom Home in Wynnrwood. 2 Yearn Old.
This home has Oak Floors,
Ceramic Tile Rath, Dining
Arm. I.nrge Living Room
and Kitchen Equipped wilh
G. E. Appliance*.
Telaehane 121 after • P. M.
far aepolnlment to sea this
ham*.

A4»»-ntyr, —111* t 'n c li IS alt

(4«l»ly Kir»«

C .rto o n C arn |v» |

1Vf*lh»rN'»»«^rt4.

John I n ly N » » i
!»«n Xlntt ■ ('t ir n ir

h|&gt;(. rI»nu n'i f'lul*

Tftlk ,if Iti" T -,- n
M u .lr jl V a rU lle *

AND B U tl DING W E E D S

^

CONCRETE
PIPE CO.

YA R D

M S W .a M H .

n

1 n
2 i*»»
ja

3 ,0'*
8 11

8 it
« I

A rth u r O odfr»r
M rlkw li; H u b
V iiu n t L« .Iv
LflVfi of L i t .
Hrarh fa r T ro«r
ti u Idloc i.la h t
K »t* lien Hh&gt;,w
WmlC. T* lo t .
1triti. t*. i.« v* la
I la iji f p tri v
U lr I n off
Hob C ro ih r
H r ix h t .r D i r
h *r r ht £tnrm
on Voeir Arcounft
Uprn )l" ••I9ri

I L e i T h r . . I.lv ta
Hp'-illght T h t i l r *

R a d io

T-4len In Art Ion
ll&gt;»Mon lltft-'kl*
N , , , . | i p t i .W e t h e r
H M ilIn h l T l u . t r .
Hlt,n-u(f

n T R R -u x r n a D
ia«« K t t .o c ic i.e s

Bumm*r Thatlrn
lUi«(nw Stumper*

44 CDS 1:4114T

T l » :« II4 V
a P T C II.M lU X
I Oft
4.09

T h # l l hv t h m f l o u r
World A t his

4
»
.
*

T - tllxht Sn nt*
X- f W
H.«ntnrd Card#
Rddl. Put,hr#

tV IX IIO

MOEXISO
id*

* 1X0 -on

Pr-ur-.m IU i m i
N r .i.w t ilh ir
TiOft T h . Slnrnm x Show
a 4t

• ou T o t P a lle rn

It Ji

10 411
10.14

11!«H
II .1"
11.(1
11.44
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l1S
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It 14

A IT U IM U U
E la r-o n

Prnaram Itttum*
« &gt;-W t .'h .r
X i.u rri Ul|..l

' T r n n .M .. K r u l. Show
!.*«« of I.lf*
K i . u h f- r TntiiorrtltV
V i r .r r i Ills - .t

Na» t-xv.alitor
Jack I'.or
l.«nd Of Our*

MnvT. M arin .*
n ix Pavoft

V l.w .r. I&gt;ifni
r h .r n .l Crntarood*
Irftft D rlfhl.r Day
3 Ift On Yftiir aernunt
_ &gt;unt
4-.30 Iltos.lnx Arftund
4l 14 "Mr. a. &gt;1/4 "
4-14 Cartoon Carnival
w x a a t v n ia six K i. a
ItKSUAY
I nn 41. Moore
I in
I4CO K' f t
aoa
* w ., t v i l i r . Bpta.
•ill C'B8 T V Now*
4:44 V i r t l n l . A lta r
3 14
3 3ft

TO*
IlOft
4:3ft
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10.0 1
10:1*
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Hitt
12:41

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h p u lllxh l F lir h n u r *

tia.eoft ouo. uob

Th. Search
Toby I&gt;•'wer
1 Lad Thr#. Llr.a
y « » &lt; a, aixn o n

WBDRCSDA*

M oaRixo

«:tt
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H IL L LU M BER

fir SU P P LY

l
13

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The above 4-tine ad can be run
3 fuR dayi for only 0.40. a days
fer only 81.M and one day for 72c

CARS
BOUGHT SOU) TRADED
Ray Iie T i Usee Care
Sanford Are. 4 Uth SL

Fheoa U1

Whan Fan want to pick up
lumber or building mater­
ials . . call 83 first Every­
thing will b* ready to pick
up on th* double-quick
when you come in. This ii
another of our helpful
service* to make 83 the
number to csll for lumber
and material*.

1

7

31. Contracts
of insurance
33. Overhead
31. Tart of
"to be"
33. Skill
38. West
Indian
sorcery
« (var.)
37. Platform
39- Removed
th*
center
4LS-shaped
molding

i

iS "

nj

%

a

n .r *

17- A

Eva-Been Beauty Shop

M ,1) “ 1 ! F

f‘« aed S Piece See.
priced to pieaaeT you.

•?

7

S

i

A Site* ad. each ns the eoe above
la only Me par day on our low 3
day earned rate economy plan; 43e
—■
for a days and 34c for

Electrical Contracting and Repairi HAYNES

S e r o w f^ e te r P u m m -.

■r-

J

1

W A N T AD
RATES

24P e r i l i“
LOCAL BUHNKS8 Reeds private
Secretary. Business and Legal
experience desired. Must be
Pleasant. Courteous and Inielli-

\

i

I- Sill—Plano Technician.
Phone 2144. Route 1. Sanford.

.NEEDS MALE HELP!
TV SERVICE CENTER
-.ail late* Trainee. We are ex
panding. Apply by letter only Bendix and Croslry Appliance*
stating quaufications.
Ph. 112
lUflcations. etc
etc. P. o . 112 Magnolia Ave.

U L S £ £ »S U

h

%

PIANO SKRYICR

RANDALL ELECTRIC CO.

Weed*.

*4W »

Ooa kata'
Warn and Damp
Dry
One hour 4 - Wanh 1
On
Feld
Ploished Laundry
Sxnitnne Dry Cleaning
S ou th ed #
SMe Paodmart
IM East a tk 8L

BULLDOZER Service — Land
clearing and grading. Large
nrw Dozer. 1-rcc rslimalr*.
1x12
Perry D. Gillyard, Ph. 2IM-W.

V BEDROOM furnished Gang* W. DITTRICH
Apartment 2300 MeUonvUle.
INI Park Ave. .
BEAUTIFUL 2 Bedroom
Uhed A pt Call BSS-M.

42. Sr .1 port
13. Project­
&lt;Algrua)
ing
43. Disguise
end of
44. Chum*
a
DOWN
church
1. Tn the
Craze
direction
, Wheeled
of
vehiclca
2. Uprising
Gram­
3. Antlrred
pus
animal
River
Ti i Ii H i i ' i A n .ir ■*
4 Organ of
iGer.)
32. Smalt
sight
I-amcnt
stream
5 Assistants
Enemy
38. Spoken
Deserts
n. I’resrrvea
38.------Khsn
7. Turkish title
, A native
. 39. Conical
of honor
drum
mas* o f 1
8. French
Morsrl
name
thread
Flemish
40. Openings
painter
11. Astringent
(anat.)
fruit
Hastened

ICOlloq *

NIX
X. BEDDING MFG. CO-

19*1

Page •

By STANLEY

&gt;*UW| If t foW-t OMW*

RED-I-MIX CONKRETE

4 BEDROOMS

R U K A APARTTOfTS: rooms,
y O n U kitki. 114 W. Flrat SL

THE'OLD HOME TOWN

JSSL

Tool r a t t . r n

Mnr.lnx Mhnw

fhoppMS GuU#
*4*4

M
34
1ft
IV

1 3** e « ,if„rd I'a rd .

I"
Xt Horn. With Mutt*
to S4 N . w .
111 oft L .y m a n ‘ 4 Call T® Tray,
i l . o t ! * man Off

w r n x r iiu r
MUR.MMi
4: Oft Sl*n On
4|.t luom.n • r .ll T® I’raxar

4 04 luH-n Uit.ktra
4 10 N. w.
4 34 Wr.r.rn Jtmbort®
4 44 Ni s i

1 "ft

7:44

N.« 1

O 'clo ck C lu b

4.00 Hpprl. At A OlXnes
a „i J", k#y*. rhftlr.
ti.voimns
!1:44
*'» Mrirnlnx
Xturnlnx M'lodl.a
4 on World At Nln.
4:1 J Mu,In per Ladl.®
4:3ft Ilimn Tim.
S:(4 Ki.r Isd lr. Only
1. 11ft li f t Club
14:3ft N#-■■
tail i I Oft Club
II M n#ni. ut M#lnfty
11:0# Murid at Noon
APTCSXOftV
13:11 Radio Firm D la o l
13:1* Wtdna.d.F Matin.®
New.
II.r Non. Ranch
lath
3
Murid »l T h r..
1 ti Muiic.t Paiu. ,
i:( * to o club
4:1ft Nawa
4:11 Hoe club

A projtct has l&gt;e«n set up t*
make • study of Scandinavian iafluaucaa la Nabraaka.

�ODHAM &amp; TUDOR,

INC

W ill Have
Ready for you
THIS MONTH

TEN BEAUTIFUL THREE BEDROOM HOMES
"Designed Especially for Better. Florida Living'

EACH

HOME

HAS:
/. Spacious Glass Jdousied Flo-i4n P^nm
2. Full Tiled Bathroom

(giving

you open pobcu comforti

I

(WITH VANITORY AND MmRUK)

o

3. Marble Terrazzo Tile Floors
4. Beautiful Delmar Kitchen Cabinets
5. Kitchen Exhaust Fan
6. Fully Landscaped Lands

(grass

from

front m n

to alley )
C' 4

7. Hot Point Stove and Refrigerator iva m w
8.

Venetian Blinds

9. Five Ply Built-up Roof With Marble Chips
/

•

10. Extra Large Closets And Utility Room
J1. Long Roof Eaves &lt;«&gt;you do n t h a v e

to c l o m u p

TOUl WINDOWS EACH TIME'll KAINSX

For additional information

*

Sales

$
P
rice?7,9 0 0 .0 0

see

up

BRAILEY ODHAM
v s

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Inside
■dftoiiil P. 4
Sport* P. 6
Radio -

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Established 1908

VOl.UME XLV1

AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER

SANFORD. FLORIDA

0 . P. Herndon Can
' Feel Earth Shake'
A t City's Progress
! perty or maka a living off of it.
“ They blend in well with our
own reople and take part in re­
ligious, civic and political life of
this county. It is also encouraging
to find young people taking an
active interest in the community.
There is nothing wrong with
young people today and I defy
anyone to challenge ni&gt;. I think
DETROIT &amp; — A federal grand
they’re a fine lot and are doing
jury today indicated the CIO Uni­
a.wonderful Job toward being me
ted Au’ c Worker* Union on charleaders of. tomorrow. I am happy
Rges of violation of the federal cor­
to have contributed a small part
rupt practice* act in politic*.
to the whole.”
The grand Jury accused the big
In preparing the budget pre­
union ot using general union fund*
sented to the County Commission
to finance political activities in
yesterday and which was tenta­
the 1AM congressional campaign.
tively adopted, Herndon called
This Was the campaign in which
s'tenlion to the fine and for­
Patrick V. McNamara. Democrat
feiture fund, pointing out that
supported by the UAW and other
ivery effort was made to reduce
labor groups, defeated U. S. Sen.
the millagc, but that it wax ne­
Homer Ferguson, Republican.
cessary to set it up one to one
A weekly union-sponsored radio
and a half which l ath* same as
•program was involved In a grand
last year.
Jury Investigation of c h a r g e a
"For a good many years the
brought about by the Republican
fine and forfeiture fund was selfCentral Committee.
sustaining and operated without
John Fclkena, committee chairthe necessity of laying any tax
wan, filed the charges with the
on the people to pay for law en­
Justice department laat March.
TOKYO UTV—Prima Ministar U forcement. Under the present prac­
The indictment named only the
union ttaelf. None of Ita officers, Nu of Burma auggested today that tice of Issuing warrant* and fil­
who include CIO President Walter simultaneous admission of Red ing informations too, It runs up
Reulber. was named. Reuther Is China to thn United Nations and cost unnecessarily, therefore caut
A «lso president of the UAW-CIO. release of Chlnese-hekl American ing the raillage,” the clerk
“
Organized labor took a large prisoners would ‘ 'relieve a great brought out.
In setting up the general fund
deal of tension.”
foie in the IBM campaign.
U Nu, who flew here after _ and attempting to maintain the
tour of the Unltod Slat* also same millage levied last year, to
told a press conference that he wit, 7 mills, he was unable to In­
backed the proposal of Prime clude several requested Items
Minister Nehru of India for a such at a $2,400 per year increase
world conference on Asia prob­ for the Juvenile Judge, making a
total of 86,500, as well aa an in­
lems.
. „
•'A world conference of all coun­ crease of 31,100 yearly for the
tries Interested in Alla would be home demonstration agent. These
v WASHINGTON (/PI—Senate In- a very good thing,” U Nu said grants could not he made without
"w *it!r*tori today asked the Jus­ Answering a question, he said, “ I levying extra millage to care for
tice. Department and the Internal would be very difficult" if Red thuse item*, therefor# they were
Kevenuu Service to itndy a bear China dkl not attend such a con­ not included In tha tentative bud­
get adopted yesterday, Herndon
fair transcript containing new ference.
bribe accusation* against Harry
U Nu said Burma wanted Amerl declared.
In the road and bridge fund the
Lev. wealthy Chicago maker of can prisoner* In Rod China "re­
Capa for tha armed forces.
leased as soon a* possible, Just clerk provided kuffldrnt funds to
Forgetful Lev told the Senate as we want the U. N. to admit Increase salariea and w-agrs of
Investigations subcommittee yes­ China, perhaps simultaneously “ County road employes by 10 per
etnt. Fund* were alao provided
terday he still cannot remember
for construction by the board of
what he did with 120,000 in cash
County Commissioner* of ap­
be acknowledged withdrawing
New York Police
proximately 15 mile* of new roada
Iffrom hia Chicago bank In June
during tha next fiscal year and
and July 1958.
C ap ture Escapee
because of careful financing and
But he Insisted that "not ona
the reclpt ot additional money for
rent” of It went to pay bribes
the fund, the millage waa reduced
to halp him get government con From Ohio Prison
NEW YORK (JW-The slayer of from four mill* levied laat year to
tract*.
.. Chairman McClellan (D-Ark) crusading publisher Don R. Mcllett two milla in the 1955-66 budget.
This amounts to a savings on
cautioned Lev that such an an- 29 years ago, who escaped from
awer “ cartalnly casta a very an Ohio penitentiary last Novem­ taxes on non-exempt property of
strong suspicion on you” when ber, was recaptured by New York $2 on each 81,000 valuation.
The Clerk commended and con­
considered In light of other testi­ City police last night.
Patrick Eugene McDermott, 56, gratulated the Hoard on the
mony.
ot the Bronx, today admitted his healthy financial condition of
» ‘
-----------------------------identity at one of the FBI’* “ 10 this County and the progress It
is making.
Wanted Men," police said.
Legendary Tycoon Most
“ Yea, air," ha repealed, "I can
McDermott was seized after Pa­
trolman Harold Pogewelt thought feel the earth trembling al­
Dies In Portugal
hit faca looked familiar, and later ready 1 and In a few year* there
it when he searched the will not be enough available un­
O f Kidney A ilm ent confirmed
files and found hia picture on • occupied land In Seminole County
to build e good-alaed rabbit
I LISBON, Portugal (* -Catenate “ wanted" circular.
farlda Gulbenkian, legendary oil
McDermott told polpee ha had hutch."_______________ ____
■agnate and one of the world'i been in and out of Jail for minor
richest men, died today of a kid- offenses since his escape but waa
Love, A ching Feet
g| pay ailment He was 86.
never recognised.
• Gulbenkian was one of the most
He waa seized at Jewish Me­
mysterious men in the world. He morial Hopital, where ha had Could Be Reason
shunned publicity of any kind and been working as an ambulance
For Ending Plan
lived quietly In the Hotel Aviz attendant for five month*.
LONDON (IV—Whether love or
When he died. He bed been 111
aching feet conquered wasn’t clear
tine* January.
but the Jilted suitor stopped hia
In the oil industry, source of
pacing.
■oat of his fortune, he was called Parked T ru c k HitRonnie Hill. 2t year-«ld clerk,
i'Mr. O” or "Mr. Five Per Cent,
Early
T
h
is
Morning
began walking back and forth In
J reference to his reported share
Roy Howard Sheffield, 26, was front of bis ex-fiancee's home Mon­
' - f t the profits of tha fabulously
arrested this morning on a charge day. He said he had been engaged
0 wealthy Irgq Petroleum Co.
He wea rated probably a billion­ of careless and negligent driving to marry Sally Willlngale, 21, on
aire. yet his nafne was little and leivlng the scene of an acci­ July 20, but last week the told
dent when his 1855 Pontiac sedan him it was all off.
known.
" I ’ll keep walking until aha
. Ha devoted hia talents to ee- was reported to have hit,a parked
ug wealth, building one of Florida Power and Light Co. truck change* her mind," said Ronnie.
world's most
valuable art approximately 100 feet south of "I've loved her since the was 14
the Park Ave. -13th St. Intersec­ and I’ll go on walking until 1
collections and keeping himself
tion.
drop."
Obscure

Burmese Minister
Says Red Admission
Would Ease Tension

Investigators Ask
For Script Study

r

Damage to tha truck, which
waa hit oa tha left rear fender,
was estimated at 825 while Shef
field's car was said to suffer 1200
damages. The accident occurred
at 1:21 a. m.
In Patrolman Joe Hickson'* re­
port, ha stated that Sheffield,
whose address waa given aa 2204
Park Am ., waa going south an
Park and hit tha truck.
No Injvias war* reported.

„ Limp 'Gator Bites
Zoo Keeper On Arm

•if. Mr*. Arnold Hood, Sanford
'goo keeper, is none the srorao but
•o much the wisor as the is foalJng flat after being bitten by •
two and one half foot alligator.
’• The animal was presented to
iho see by a Volusia County realdeal. Whan it arrived bora a ropa
NO VIOLATION! BEEN
•as Mad aroust Ha Mack to keep It
HINTON. Okie, (ft — D. O. Peel­
ttk JNa making a test get away.
•&gt; Thn rape waa apparently to* er, 23, waa driving along U.-S.
Mght gad whan tha alligator waa « during a thundershower when
car wont into a skid.
late tha water, ha aaemad aa
Art Gordey quoted a
agh he had vary bttk Ufe laft
witeaao aa saying tho car skidded
Mrs. Band lad • than * Ul tent and dropped into a M foot
1 tea aarry ter tha craature, canyon when 11 sailed 48 fact and
wmiagiy limp bady anddaoly lasted on Its frmt and.
faster rlfaiberi ant of tho
•ft ad Ha stnaaad Mate te
a m hod ngr,

■' 'aSS—
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9
.

*

CASABLANCA, Morocco UF—Top
French officials today were re­
ported working to oust Sultan
Moulay Ben Arafa as a step toward satisfying rebellious nation­
alists in strife-ridden French Mo­
rocco,
Sources close to Gilbert Grandval, new resident general, said he
intends to rush a political program
of moderation toward Nationalistminded Moroccan* despite tha re­
cent bloody rioting and threats of
new violence. Granrival has met
bitter opposition from many of
Morocco'* French colonists.
Comparative quiet continued |r
Casablanca yesterday but violence
continued In Fedala, 17 milei
the northeast, where fire* set by
nationalist terrorists left hundreds
of Moroccans homeless. Some
French farm houses also were
burned. Unconfirmed Reports said
right natives had been killed in
Fedala. A Frenchman was killed
last night in the native quarter of
Rabat, 55 miles northeast of Casa­
blanca.
Four persons were killed and IS
wounded yesterday in Casablanca.

House Republicans
Try For Minimum
WASHINGTON (ft - House Re­
publicans, aided by aome Southern
Democrats, sought to hold the line
today on a minimum wag* In­
crease to 90 cgpta an hour, as
asked by President Elsenhower.
As the House neared a show­
down vote, Democratic leaders
conceded they faced lough opposi­
tion In their efforts to boost the
federal wag* floor from 75 cents
to |1 an hour Immediately.
P
Leaders of both parties agreed
there would be a hike. Disagreement centered on how much of an
Increase and when it would lako
effect.
Rep. Kelley (D-Pa), floor man­
ager of (he Democratic-iponscred
wage blU, predicted the House
would vote for ft. But he said
there was strong support for a
proposed ' g r a d u a t e d increase
spread over three years.

A ir Force Stations
Reduction Is Told
TOKYO (k*—Plans are underway
to reduca the number of U S. Air
Force bases In Japan from 40 to
about 10, it waa reported today
by Shlnlaro Fukuihima, director
of the Japan Procurement Board
The board is the Japanese gov­
ernment's clrartng house for L' S.
military needs in Japan.
A spokesman for tha Far East
Command said FEC headquarters
"has no comment on the report.”
There was no immediate comment
from air force officials in Tokyo.

Partly e*M&lt;te tfcreurh Tknrvdsy
with eeattered afternoon Ihuadershowers; occasional Bight tad
morning shower*.

*

Assorlafrd Preas leaned Wire

WEDNESDAY JULY 20. 1955

No. 235

Broader Field Taken
Heads

Sultans
Ouster
Sought

"I can feel tha earth tremblirg” , was tha way O. P. Hern­
don, Clerk of the Circuit Court,
described the growth of Sanford
and the state. Why, I think that
in ten year* Florida will be iho
biggest state in the union. The
county is on the verge of the
most substantial growth of any
one in the state of Florida,” the
amiable Clerk continued.
“ Roads are being constructed
In remote end undeveloped sec­
tions by the Board of County
Commissioner* end that is the
main factor leading to the devel­
opment of home* and businesses
all over the city. It la most en­
couraging to find people who are
coming here to live on thn pro-

Federal Grand
Jury Indicts
Auto Workers

H &amp; z m lh

S it#

Society P. I
story P. S
T.V. P. $

W eather

Specific
Program
Sidelined
Officials Convene
For 4th Session

JisivsVl
’
•'*
•’ClltC ITS TODAY AT 10:06" aav* On- alirn. Tho W ytinowo.nl Junior Oirru* has come to town. Started
*by seven enternrisinK vounir men It was termed “ n litc a si,ness". (Staff Photo by toimpkinl

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

Step Up Folks, Wynnewood
Little People Have Circus
Anti-Red Students
Rioting in Saigon
J

a

«»

•-

SAIGON, South Viet Nim i h Thousandt of anti-Communlst stu­
dents sacked Saigon's No. I hotel
today but 8lrt. Parle Mesta out­
talked them when they took axes
to her door.
The students were demonstrat­
ing against the Indlan-Polish-Canadian armistice commission. As
some of the rioters started break­
ing Into her second-floor, air-conditloncd suite in the Hotel Majestic
the former U.5. minister to Lux­
embourg threw open the door and
shoutaJ:
"Not W# are your friends: We
ar* Americans."
One of the student trailers who
understood English formed a eordon in front of Mrs. Mcsla'i apart­
ment and kept back the mob, who
laid uajfe to the five-story, gov­
ernment-owned building.
With Mr*. Mesta at the time
war* her two American aecrctariei, an unidentified American
woman visitor and tha latter's
baby.

TONGAY BEERS DIVORCE
MIAMI, Fla. Ml—Russell G. TonCALFIF.RV DIVORCED
gay,-serving 10 years for man­
CULVER CITY. Calif ,(JV-Movie
slaughter in the death of his swim­ actor Louis Calhern's studio has
ming daughter, has filed suit for announced that his fourth wife,
divorce from hit wife. He says Marianne Stewart Calhem. ob­
she no laager love* him. Kathy tained a divorce from him yrsterTongay,
In 1B53 aftrr
riiv- day In Juarez, Mexleo. An MOM
----- ---S, died
----- r-------------------Ing from a 86-foot board on her, spokesman m .l Mr», Calhcrn will
father's instrnctioni.
Jresume her acting career.

Hanford la In the way of seven I nrutlvea” made red and greon
promising young buxines* men. punch In sell and pup corn, suckEmmett McCall, J. C. Singletary, ere, bubble gum and cinnamon
Gary llreckenrldge, Hurlnn (irier, Ml#. “ Kveryliody had to put in
Larry Singletary, and Han McCall 10 cents to buy the refreshment#,
along with Hon Itreekcnridgo i on« tot remarked. "We figure w«
decided on a plan to haw a rtr- ran mete the expenses along with
rua. Tn he precise, thn Wynne »om* inleiiaL"
won^ Junior Circus.
Tha gal« parad a era* one of the
Having a meeting of the l«wtd finest. Clown* did funny trick*
they derided to sell stock. Signs the music boomed and a ring
wero made and tacked up in tha i master shouted. The laughing and
Wynnewood area where the child- joking of the gatheilng crowd of
rrn planned to have a parade. Ex- rhildien and "older folks" aa one
citenirnt ran high ax dancing girls little boy put it, made fun (ill thu
were hired, a trick dog obtained, air.
downs added and the music con­
As five rents was taken up for
sisting of clarinet and a garbage racli admittance, chairs wore set
top cymbal were taken rate of. in tlin front of the carport of thn
Toilay at I0:.l0 a. m. the start­ Grier honin which acted as a stage
ing signal was given. Mothers, for the show. The broom closet
along with the help of tha “ ex- served at a dressing naan, (the
kids didn't mind the light quart­
ers.) Arts started and the anting
nf |M&gt;p corn and blowing of bubble
gum began.
These was a little trouble when
the trick dog, Daisy, wouldn't
rooperate by jumping over her
master'a leg, hut when candied
dog biscuits were brought out sho
not only jumped but stood on her
hind legs and walked.
The fire-oat(ng act brought a
WASHINGTON OF—Several c a s ­ sigh of anxiety from tha crowd
tors said today the free world can­ ax matches wer* consumed at the
not abandon the North Atlantic rain of aoven in a minute! Next
Treaty Organization for any for- cam a the arrnluiU, complete in
seeahl* agreement with Russia on bathing suits, who did astounding
German unification.
feat* on Hia onmenl floor ot tha
President Eisenhower appealed port. (Sevtral muthera asked ii
to the Soviet* at Geneva yesterday insurance covered tho circus),
to acrept NATO a* a solely de­
Tha dancing waa done by three
fensive military apparatus. Rus­ beautifully costumed little girl*
sian Premier Bulganin conditional­ bedecked in sparkle and satin. A
ly rejected the appeal The Rus­ clarinet solo wax rendered and
sians have maintained NATO must brought loud applaua*. 1b* clown*
go as part of the price for Joining completed th* sldesbovr with a
East and West Germany.
funny eoinie routine. Their cost­
Sen. Barkley ( I)Ky) aald Hie umes consisted of dad's old shoes,
West "ran't even consider aban­ a mop (yallow) of hair, lipstick,
doning NATO until there has been and old tie and baggy dollies.
an air-tight world security agree­
When talking to one nf the
ment." The former vice president husineesman afterward, it was
said the atmosphere at Geneva stated that the stock holders
seems "propitious tor some pro- “ did pretty good"!
gresx t o w a r d composing the
world's difficulties" hut that he
does not'look for any Iron-clad Bronx Shocm oker
agreements to coma from it.

Eisenhower Makes
Appeal To Soviets
To Accept Treaty

But yesterday Rotmle disap­
peared from in front of tally's
walk without disclosing the out­
come of his overnight march. Bally
wasn't talking either.

BIRDSBORO, Pa. (JR — A high
school senior looped a belt around
the hranrh of a tree, then under
hia chin to support hia head while
he sat on top of a washing ma­
chine reading rnmic books.
Mat* policeman Janfe* Wood*
said the lid of tha washer revolved
under the boy, 17-year-old John
Sfattson, causing the belt to tight­
en around hia throat and strangle
him yesterday.
HU stepfather Charles Moire
found his body.
Woods said there wer* scuff
marks on the ground by the wash­
er where Mattson apparently tried
to free the b«!t from around his
throat.

T ra ffic Accident
'Keeps On-Coming'

HOUSTON (It - "I thought It
was the end,” says Fred Raemer
of g traffic accident which happen­
ed yesterday.
ttaamar waa ztttfng In hia ear
waiting for n red light to change
when another car plunged off tha
roof of a throe-story parking
garage-end foil an Barmar’a car.
Ike second car belonged to Elvia BU«. 88. who hid It op on
Jacks while making some repairs.
Btecn forgot tea engine waa run­
ning and in pear and let tha car
raazphhdag of n dewd oft the Jocks, n t Jut took

CRACK a Jeke for tha M-lookers of the Wynnewood
M 4 4kte ■water hr the jwanzw set eg the neighborS T S fis S r + *
-• w h a e t h a nadteno*.

—

ffp t
—
N lt M
---------■

DUKE IN HOSPITAL
LONDON ur-The Duke of Kent
86-year-old playboy cousin of
Queen Elizabeth IT. U to th* hos­
pital with bead injuries from an
automobile accident, ft* was mpotted Improving.
1 .

- -«8-

asBR

F K ifB fc lm
For SamSheppard
CLEVELAND P—Nearly a year
after he was arrested, it appeared
today Hr. .Samuel It. Sheppard
soon will start serving a life peni­
tentiary term for the bludgeon
•laying of hit pregnant wife.
An Appellate Court yesterday
turned down hia second and final
motion for # new trinl, and one of
the atomrya says (he young osteo­
path feels ha would got more exer­
cise and privilege* in prison than
he does in county Jail.
Tha million denied yesterday
was hared largely on a eriminalogy
professor's affidavit that he found
evidence a left-hinded sex fiend
killzxt Marilyn Sheppard July 4,
1964. Sheppard is right-handed.
Rut the 41-pagq opinion of the
three-judge court discounted tho
affidsvtt with sur.h descriptions at
'highly speculative and Fallaetous," "guesa work" and "sheer
iwppposllmn."

Nevada Prisoners
Finally Give U p ;
No Point G ained

DANCER AWARDED DAMAGES

CARSON c m ’. Nev. t»v—Tired,
hot *n.l hungry, Nevada State Pris­
on convict* who Monday afternoon
started a b l o o d l e s s rebellion
against the prison routine, gavn
up Ih# ghost last night without
gaining a single point.
More Ihsn
of the rebels wh»
hid spent a night and a day In
the prison yard lined np and
started filing hack into their cell
block a few- minute* after they
had been warned hy Warden Art
Bernard th* time had romt for a
ahowdown.
Nevada state patrolmen tatted
to replenish the guards around the
60-year-old brownstone prison wrer*
"tired and won't wait much longer," th# warden told a three-man
committee representing the *otsTide.
Minnies later the committee re­
turned with the word that the me*
were "Ured and aiek; they don't
want anything.”

LOS ANGELES UD-Damagea of
856.000 bava been awarded dancer
Zona F« for auto accident injuries
she claims sh* sustained while a
passenger te i s m p o i i r Vic
Schoen'i ear in Laa Vegas, Nay.

M ilwee Announces
Two School M eets

H its, $8,000 M ark

High School Senior
Dies W hile Reading

GENEVA « - Th# Big Four
traitors took up the broad question
of European security today, put­
ting *«ide the specific i«su# of
Germany alone.
Die heads of government met
for their fourth ses-ion at 4 p nr.
t to am F.ST) For Ivo hour*
earlier today thnr foreign mmisteri tried 'to arrive at same sort
ot agreed recommendation* on tha
German problem. One Western
source tan! they jhiat argued In
rirrlri. They got into the European
security problem to such an ex­
tent that Western leader* bernma
ronvinccd tt would ho difficult to
keep the issues separate
The West finally agreed tn rec­
ommend that the summit talks
move on to the security problem—
•erood on the agenda after Ger­
many. ft was expected Hi# two
questions would ha discussed together.
Western leaders had reeognire.-I
ih* close link between the German
and security Issues, but they ha-.i
won top priority yesterday for Ger­
man unification, which they con­
sidered the moat vital problem in
Europe today.
Although the outlook for any sort
of agreement on Germany appc ared dim. one American aouri*
said thr shift tn security certainly
•lid not mean that the German dltcuaaion was finished.

NEW YORK OB — A Bronx shoe
maker won 88.000 last night by
answering question* about opera
on tha CBS television show The
864.000 Question.
The winner, Gino Prato, 82, who
Is ot Italian extraction, ran keep
th* 88.000 or return next week and
try for 816,000. If he should miss
the 816,000 question, he would rereiv* an automobile aa a consola­
tion prize.
Th* quizzing gn*a step by stop
to • final 864.000 question.

Sh* charged that when aba re­
fused to let him kiaa her h* re­
fused to let her laav* foe ear,
which overturned aa ha drov*
away at high speed, kha alleged
that aha awfferwd bach and lag InJurlaa that prevented bar from
dancing ante

R. T Milwee, superintendent a|
pnhlie Instruction for Seminole
County, announced this morning
Ihat the Board of Trustees will
meet Friday at 4 p. m. te hia ofBe*.

On Monday1* agenda k 8 m etteg ft the County Board ft
lit teBtemkag f t t f *. m.

f

i

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                <text>Original 12-page newspaper issue: &lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank"&gt;&lt;em&gt; The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;, July 19, 1955; &lt;a href="http://www.seminolecountyfl.gov/parksrec/museum/index.aspx" target="_blank"&gt;Museum of Seminole County History&lt;/a&gt;, Sanford, Florida </text>
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Royal Welcome Sen
(you’ll like the friendly service, too)
One o f the nicest things about stopping at a Pure Oil station
is the "R oyal Welcome Service” you get there theee days.
You see, your Pure Oil dealer is out to make a lot o f new
friends. He’s doing it now by giving the best service in town—
he calls it "R oyal Welcome Service.”
So stop in and see your local Pure Oil dealer soon. You'll
get a real "R oyal Welcome” !

Now, more than
e v c ?» Yo u c a n •••

w ith P u r e
IMIr-s.

w.l~'
—

�f0

Inside
Editorial P. 4
Society P. 5
Sports P. 6 t
Story P. 2
Radio — T.V. P. 7

•
V O LU M E X L \1

H a n fo rd

_________________________ AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER

E stablished 19(18

BANFOKD. F L O R ID A .

First Degree Murder
Charges Are Placed
On Albert Brenson
X

9

.9

.
».

g
"

Pope Sentenced
On Five Counts
In Circuit Court
In Circuit Court artion Friday
Emmett Pop© entered a plea of
guilty and was sentenced by Cir­
cuit Judge Vassal- Carlton on five
counts of forgery of endorsement.
Each count draws one year im­
prisonment at Rniford State Pen­
itentiary.
Pope, a Sanford Negro fruit
picker, was picked up in May
when be confessed to passing
more than $200 in worthies*
checks and was identified hy
operators in Srmlnolo County
stores and gas stations, it was
reported.
Pope is said to have also cashed
at least one check In Volusia
County and may have cashed
others In Orange and Lake Coun­
ties. All the cheeks were drawn
on the Florida State Bank and
the Sanford Atlantic National
Bank.
An operator of a service sta­
tion in DeBary reported cashing a
check of $20 after whleh Pope
and his wife, Kffie, were arrested. Effle Pope admitted she
wrote the checks passed hy her
husband, Constable J, Q, Gallo­
way reported.
Officers reiterated that Pope
posed as a sawmill worker in
cashing the check*. Other checks
ranged from $32.50 to $42.75.
Pleading guilty to charge* of
bresking and entering on tha
property of Francis Meriwether
for whom he worked, Joseph
Alexander was sentenced hy
Judge Carlton for two year* at
Rniford. An additional two yeara
were added on a charge of grand
larceny.

U. N. Delegates
, Hopeful About Plan
Over Disarmament

\t

UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. HI U. N. delegates and officials are
hopeful shout tha French plan to
save on disarmament end spend
on a better way of life—tha plan
Premier Edgsr Faure plans to put
before the summit conference
opening today.
He has encouraged them to
believe that the UN. soon cen
move faster In promoting Its
stated goal of "higher standards
of living, full employment and
conditions of economic and social
progress."
The Premier his suggested that
the Big Four, "along with a pro­
gram of general disarmament,"
start putting part of their military
budgets into a special fund open
to all nations. This fund would be
devoted to "the development of
countries or regions of the world
which are insufficiently developed,
and to tha improvement of the
standards of living of the most
unfortunate populations.

Funeral Tomorrow
W For Mrs. M. Leland
Mrs. Mary Katherine Leland,
It, who bad made her heme In
Sanford for the past six years,
died Friday afternoon at 1S:43
p.m. at an Orlando hoaplta! fol­
lowing a short illness.
Born In Richmond, Va., April
IB, IMS, she is survived by a
nephew, Leland C. Tinsley, Beltimore, Md.; and a hrother-ln-• law, David L. Livingston of
Longwood.
Funeral services will be con­
ducted tomorrow at 10 a-m. at
Brlssoa Funeral Home with the
Rev. Lewis Futch officiating. In­
terment will be in Oaklawn Me­
morial Park.

'ork Is Started
n $60,000 Job

S

The Clty'i last sewer contract
started last week on Second SL
and Myrtle Are. It was report­
ed by City Manager Warren
Knowles.
This is contract No. 10 and is
located In the downtown area,
aid Construction Co. of Orfa h u dlfa* tha * M 0 » job.

g*r&lt;!

Albert
Brenson.
Altamonte
Springs, 34 yeer old laborer Is
being held in the County Jail on
a charge of first degree murder
after the stabbing and killing
of Timothy Lee Jr., 19, Orlando
whose given addresses are 715
South Division and 437 South Di­
vision.
The set took place in Altamonte
Springs on the shore of a re­
creation lake where boat races
and games were being held.
Sheriff J. L. Hobby and deputy
sheriff M. R. McClellan were "al­
most eye witnesses" to the hap­
pening.
According to the report “ Al­
bert Brenson tried to get Shirley
Mae Francis, girl friend of
Timothy, to go for a boat ride.
When she refused he then tried to
get her to go off with him.
Timothy came up and told him to
leave the girl alone. Albert pulled
a knife and stabbed him once in
the heart with a two-inch pocket
knife".
llohby and McClellan arrived
on the scer.e almost Instantane­
ously and immediately took Bren­
son into custody. Lee was taken
to a hospital In Orlando hut was
pronounced dead on arrival.
Timothy I*ee was a former em­
ploye of the Orlando Sentinel
Star with tha last working date,
shown in his wallet, as July «
and also an employe of the Or­
ange Memorial Hospital.

UndercoverMen
Aid In Dragnet
For Bootleggers
ATLANTA tfi — Two Negro un
dercovtr agents from North Caro­
lina, posing as produce Yeddlere,
have helped spring a dragnet for
Atlanta bootleggers-In the biggest
single raiding operation against
moonshine in Georgia’s history
State Revenue Commissioner T.
V. Williams said a predawn
round-un yeslcrday by state, fed­
eral, city and county officers
snared more than 150 persons
hall of them women.
Additional arrests which are
pending will bring the number to
250, Williams said. AU are Ne­
groes
Williams, who led the raids
personally, said while most of
those arrested are "hip pocket1
bootleggers, many of them are
"big boys who deal in wholesale
quantities."
The mass arresta culminated a
secret investigation started two
&gt;and a half months ago after the
commissioner borrowed the two
Negro agents and put them on
Georgia’s payroll as investigators.

House Leaders Map
Forced-Draft Slate
Calling For Action
WASHINGTON UN-Driving hsrd
for July 30 adjournment, House
leaders mapped a forced • draft
schedule calling for action this
week on social security, highway,
minimum wage and housing legis­
lation.
And, If that isn’t enough tg keep
It bqsy, sandwiched into the pub­
lished House program for the
week are votes on airport and
atomic ship construe lion bills,
mineral rights, amendments to
the Communication! Act and half
a dozen odda and ends.
While plans for adjournment
July . 30 are far from official and
definite, l&amp;mocratie Leader Mc­
Cormack of Massachusetts said,
"I do not see any reason why we
cannot, but that la my own per­
sonal opinion."
Minority Leader Martin (R •
Maas) said he believes Congress
can finish Ha work by July &gt;0,
but bn's not betting on it

Patrolman Receives
Bounce From Stick

New Carrier Routes
To Begin Aug. 16
In Various Areas
Beginning August lfi mounted
route carrier service will be start­
ed for an entirely new area not
now being served, it was annnounced by Postmaster Joel Field.
Proposed new mounted routes
will start in the area south of Ge­
neva Ave. between Sanford Ave.
and the Oviedo railroad tracks
south to Wyley Rotd then west
through the new section both
north and south of 27th street In­
cluding the new school now un­
der construction.
The route will serve Hist area
of Semlnol* Boulevard south now
being served by Route 2 and also
the patrons in Dreamwold on
those streets that ara 50 per cent
or more Improved. It will then
continue west on Geneva Ava. to
provide mounted carrier service
to those that are qualified; west
to the old Lake Mary Road then
north to include that section of
Loch Arbor that is 30 per cent or
more Improved as soon at tha re­
quirements are met; namely num­
bering of houses and marking the
streets.
"Although the Loch Arbor area
is outside the city limits of San­
ford this service will be provided
as soon as streets are marked."
Post Master Field staled.

People Over World
Pray For Big Four
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Hopeful people around the world
prayed (his weekend (hat the
Geneva conference might be
blessed with success in easing
world tensions and opening the
way to lasting peace.
In the United States tha tide of
prayer began Saturday at Jewish
services and continued yesterday
In Christian churches of many
denominations. Ministers, priests
and rabbis in many parts of the
land reported attendance heavier
than usual.
Many churchci planned to re­
new prayers for the four-power
talks at weekday services through­
out the coming week.
President Eisenhower, who had
asked for the prayers of his coun­
trymen before leaving for the con­
ference Friday, added his own
prayers to those of millions of
other worshippers yesterday.

BOA BITES ATTENDANT
ASHEVILLE, N. C. UN-Attendant
Kenneth Sexton was bitten threa
times yesterday by a boa con­
strictor he was holding at Park­
way Zoo. He laid Uie nonpoisonout snake, which usually erushei
its victims, was angered when a
boy squeeied lta tail. The biles
were not serious. ■

i&amp; ettdh

CHICAGO IN—Engineers are
examining each instrument and
part of a wrecked Braniff airliner
today to determine why it crashed
in flames, killing 22 persons and
injuring 21.
The iw in-engine Convair, loaded
to capacity was coming In low
for an instrument landing in the
early morning fog yesterday when
it clipped a gasoline station sign
at the edge of Midway Airport,
flipped over and plowed Into the’
ground.
The plane, en route from Dallas
attempted the landing," said Cook
County Coroner Walter McCarron,
who is conducting an inquest.
At Dallas, Braniff headquarters
said they would not comment on
his statement at this time because
"the investigation of the safety of
this operation now is in the hands
of investigators of the Civil Aero­
nautics Board.
The pane, en route from Dallas
to Chicago, ticked the 15-foot-hlgh
electric sign, crashed a fence and
spun onto its bark inside the air­
port. one wing ripped off and the
other aflame.
The wreckage skidded nearly
half a mile, to within a few hun­
dred yards of the airport fire sta­
tion. Fast-acting crash crews put
out the sea of gasoline flames
within three minutes, saving many
of the 43 persons aboard. The
plane earned 40 passengers and a
crew of three.

Defense Secretary
Continuing Plans
Despite* Protests
QUANT1CO, Va. UN — Deeplte
protests from Gen. Matthew B.
Ridgeway and some congressmen.
Secretary of Defense Wilson plans
continued emphasis on big atomicair power and smaller ground
force*.
"Obviously I think the program
la about right or I'd be advocating
■ different one," he told ■ news
conference yesterday at the v a elusion of Use annual secretaries*
conference.
He also said that President El­
senhower had approved hi* !m
pounding of 46 million dollars
whleh Congress added lo Risenbower’ s Marine Corps budget to
offset a planned cut In Marine
strength. Wleon disclosed Thurs­
day he had ordered the nrtney
held up "while we take another
look."

Only Sanford Bears
Boast Of 'Privacy'
The Sanford Zoo seems to h#
making progress In both dirertlons a* It was announced that
the shower and baths In the new
hear ragei hare been completed
and a mother coon gave birth to
four “ little ones'* and Is doing
nicely .
Sid RlCbard, superintendent,
stated that “ Utla la the only t&gt;e»r
pen In the U. 8. Hint bat a prleato bath and ahowert".
Ha alto brought out that the
too tips acquired a honey bear
In exchange for a bock and a
bear. It will receive two morn
animals, an albino deer and a
talking maynah bird.
Herb Thomai of Starke and
scout for the New York Giants
is starting a small aoo and need­
l'd tha animal*.

Clear to partly cloudy throufh
Tur’ dsr srith rslher vid;!y scat­
tered mostly afternoon thunder
showers.

*

M O N D A Y . H ’ l.Y 18. 1955

Group
Inspects
Airliner

Weather

A w o c ia lH I’ r r * l e a w d W ire

Vn. 23 i

Foodmart Robbed;
Safe Carried Aw ay
Ladder
Is Used
For Entry
'Someone Nervy'
Atkinson Thinks

*SOMK NERVE* says Chuck Atkinson of the person or persons who rotilved thn Knudmart last night.
The. safe reportedly w-a* carried awav lo a near h.- miner where ita contents were ransacked. At thn
r-ch*. one of the employee givea his version of hn.v the store was entered through thn roof. (Photo
by Jameson I
__________

Western Powers Give Reds Series
Of Plans For European Security
GF.NEVA IN — The summit con­
ference opened today with the Big
Three Western power* laying be­
fore Soviet Russia a series of new
proposals for European security,
built around a unified Germany.
In quick succession President
SDcnhowrr, French Premier Ed­
gar Faure and British Prime Min­
ister Eden advanced separate
ideas as to how Russia rouM tie
safeguarded against a united and
rearmed Germany.
Edrfl also frit forward a pro
posal that the Big Four seek agre.»
mcnl on arms ceiling* for Ger­
many and neighboring countries,
with the four powers Joining in a
system of control to prevent vio•
I lations.
I Despite the appearance of a ennrdinated progra mby the West.
* »» understood the leaden of
the U. S. delegation were rnn
rerned shout some of the pro­
posals in Faure'* speech.
These include*.! a proposal that
arms reductions ho controlled In
llir national budgets and Faure'*
rail for inclusion of Germany in
a genrral European security or­
ganization.

City 'Beauty Spot'
Work Is Underway;'
Lake To Be Stocked
Today workmen of the Maintrnanro and Street; departments
of tha City arc at vroik on a new
•beauty spot In Sanford’’.
Tbs big "hole’ ’ that has been a
sore spot tn tha northern end of
Fort Mellon Park on thn lakeside
Is “ being fixed up” . Crew* are
sre hsrd at work piping the
ell that la on th« tower end of
the park to tha lake so that it
will he nsed as go-between for
the reservoir and the park.
The well water will mine up
from the bottom of the nitifieial
lake and w-ill he used as a reser­
voir and feed-back for irrigating
the eastern end of tho park.
“ The drprrtment* are sloping
the edge* teday and taking away
the excess dirt from th* edge*"
Sid RiChard stated.

Penitentiary Back
p Vl f f , ' T o Normal Routine

for at least two day* *ince the
lake will ho quite large.
“ Eventually," Warren Knowlea
City Manager stated, "It will he
a beauty spot with small walk*,
shnihliery and other accessories.
The Seminole County Sportsman’*
Association has promised to stork
the lake with fish."
The water level ran ha kepi
either up or down and they are
planning to use tho lake, after It
is well storked, for the Jayree
Fish Rodeo held each year.

RAWLINS, Wyn , IN—Operation*
*1 the Wyoming State Penitentiary
were hark to normal today aftrr a
13 hour riot which ended early yes
terday in a face-to-face meeting
with convict spokesmen. Gov. Milward L. Simpson pledged a fullscale Investigation of the institu­
tion and promised no gtneral re­
prisal.
Hr also ssid he would seek In
Improve prison medical carr and
fiaal, tn increase recreation facili­
ties and lime.
v The riot broke out Saturday
when approximately 71 prisoners,
armed with butcher knives, seized
three guards as hostages.
Th* three hostages were freed
early yesterday. They were Iden­
tified as I-eo Ilari shorn, «l; Tom
Randall, 54; and Ted Charters, 50.
All were unharmed.

Local Baseball Reps
To Be Lions Guests
The Lion* Club, at its regular
weekly meeting tomorrow at noon
tn the Yacht Club, will have as
Its guests John Kridrr, president
of the Florida Stale League, and
Marin "Red" Muriello. manager
cf the Sanford Cardinals baseball
club.
Their appearance at th# elrlc
meeting is in the interest of the
local club's drive to maintain Its
position at or nrar the top in the
second half standing of the lea­
gue.

ST. PETERSBURG US— Patrol­
man Erie Waehsmtlth has found
this idea of killing two birds with
one atone cap bo carried too far.
Patrolman George Cotton says
ItABY VISITS GRAND MOTHER
"amen.*"
NEWBURYPORT. Mass. i/N i Trying to anbdna a violent pri­
Mr*. Francis O'Connor, 39, is one
soner in a patrol car, Wachsmuth
grandmother who got to see her
swung his night stick against tha
first grandson in a hurry—she was
man'a bead. The atick bounced
at th* delivery. Patricia O'Connor,
off the prisoner’s bead, rattled
a held 20. was visiting her mother-in-law
In Sanford, dances at*
against Costae's head, and sent LIVELY TEENAGER*—As a rest e f Use m m mar recreation tiro*rpm in
yqsterday when her baby was
Mfk
otofct
fa
tha
Ottr
Bril
Mditorim
far
alder
teenagers.
A
m attest Is betar mad* to itfatOhim to a hospital far treatment of lata Interest fa this —* armre la afared ir e fa R s a whto arevide far aa areata* «
enjoyment. born about an minutes before a
en
tm M w aid a aal.
doctor aad asm* fat to tha

New Safety Slogan
Is Adopted By FHP
For Month Of July
TALLAHASSEE — "P rim to
arnvr slu e", Ruhr safety slngnn
of the Florida Highway Patrol
during the month of July.
"And," says th* Patrol Cnmdr.
II. N. Kirkman, "There's * lot
of good steady advice packed inlu
Hiat slogan."
•"After *11, when a driver start-.
otit on a motor trip, his goal fs To
get where he t&lt; going and get
there healthy snd alive."
What kind nf driving,
then,
should the motorist be prepared
to do?
"To begin with." declares Kirk­
man, "He should bp a courteous
driver for the courteous driver
goes relaxed, gives other drivers
the breaks and is always prepared
to yield the right-of-way tn avoid
an accident."
This typo of driving Is Iaw
abiding, loo, stresses the Patrol
Commander. "The intelligent drtter knows that in order lo slay
safe he must stay with the law.
Hr familiarizes himself with Uie
laws of th* area through which
hr intends to dritr, so when he
drives through that area he obeys
the law," Kirkman said.
"The smart driver," said Kirk­
man, "knows Dial If adverse con­
ditions happens to arise, one of
th* best lifesavrra In traffic is
application of the rule: ‘Slow
Down and IJs-«\"
"Our slogan for July is s sim­
ple one," said the patrol official
Unfortunately, many may think
Ihey are loo smart to obey these
simple suggestions. To their
Mirrow, however. Ihey may ar­
rive in s battered rondltion — or
they may not get there at all."

Sergeant Is Faced
With Court-Martial

"Somebody "ire hn a lot of
uer\e." Or si least that's what
Chuck \'kin*r&gt;n manager of tha
Food mart grocery think*
At 5 o'clock this morning a
*afe robbery of Hie store was dis­
covered hy .lack Hickson snd
W. R Cnsgrnse at the grocery
located on 25th St. and Park Ave.
"The plare was entered hy us­
ing a *tcp ladder In pi up tn tha
roof, the report said. "A hole was
rut in Iho roof an I (they) went
in thp store hy u*ing a ladder
that was inside. The *.ifc was re­
moved hy using a hand ear and
going out tho rear door,’’ tt in­
dicated.
It s»rn! on lo say that "ihc safe
was carried about 75 yards down
In sooth Magnolia Ave. across
2.Mh Street where the safe was
priezl open by using a rrowbar.
There are two safes in the store
which normally sit side by sida
and the manager alternates put­
ting the money in them,”
"There were about 12.500 and
all the insurance papers in tt. A
rnnildnstion lock was removed
from the rear screen but was not
lorn up. The rear doors were put
back in order after being open­
ed "
The men said that they "cheek­
ed" the store at J 55 a. m. and
every thing was all right". When
they ehrrkrd again at 4 03 a. m.
the safe was gone.
No fingerprints were on the
*afe since it was wet and has a
rough edge.
Police Chief Roy Williams said
that whoever did the robbery must
have watched the store for quite'
a while to lie »ure the "coast
was clear........there were mark­
ings where they had stood and
smoked several cigarettes while
waiting ” he concluded.

Man Leaves Letter
Stating He's Last
Survivor Of Squad
TAMPA in —A Tampa man sshn
died Friday left s letter saying he
was the last survivor of an execu­
tion squad which shot down 11
Mafia members in a New Orleans
jail March II. tShJ.
He wa* Georg* O. Parke, FT,
who hid worked as a printer and
newspaperman over much of th*
country
Parke left a letter saving he hid
never res piled hi* connection with
the exeruUnn because of fear of
retaliation from the Mafia, aa
Italian secret society.
Parke said the It Mafia men
bad been indicted for the murder
of Police Chief David C. Hennes­
sey o? New Orleans. When the
leader was inputted and Hie oth­
ers got light sentences, 12 men
including I'.irko were selected se­
cretly lo execute the II prisoners.
Paikc said he believed the se­
lection was made hy a committee
j of 50. appointed by th# city couaI cil to fight the Mafia,

f t . nnAGG, n . c. &lt;
n sgt
John L. Tyler, 25. faces a general
rnurt-inartinl today on charges he
collaborated with the enemy while
a prisoner of war in Korea.
Tyler, of Moundiville, W. Vs
is rharged in right spcrlfiratinns i Rringiog additional honors to
Maximum penalty on each count Sanford and Seminole County,
could be dralh
Harry Weir has been elected a*
Ha is charged with writing pro secretary-treasurer of Ui« Central
Communist ar»J inti • American Florida Hospital Council which
articles for use in prison rsmp encompasses
approximately 45
publications with requesting fel hospitals tn this section of tha
low prisoners lo sign peaca pett State.
lions, with being a member of a
The memberi gathered in Mel­
volunteer study group, with In­ bourne Friday for the session.
forming on fellow prisoners, snd
Weir is adminlstrater.of the Me­
with in other ways siding the morial Hospital which Is nearing
enemy, contrary to the interest of the final stages of its construc­
tha United States.
tion.

Harry Weir Chosen
Council Official

Blind Mosquitoes
'Invade' Fair City

Postmaster Attends
Meeting In Ocala

In answer to the many Inquir­
ies concerning the little bugs
that seem tn be everywhere late­
ly, Sid RiChard says that they
are blind mosquito**.
“ Seems that st this Urn* nf
year Ihey *11 eome out of biding,
and for what reason no one
know*. They sure ara a nuisance
as they hump into any and every
object.
1 m U «M reins I**, he
' U
o fa s s l

Postmaster Joe! Field snd Mrs.
Field today attended the meeting
of Postmasters from the* sixth
district nf the Atlanta Regina
which Is being held in Ocala.
Maurice Smith, region person­
nel manager, explained publie
law no. M and Its effects on earh
individual Tost Office employe.
The stsslon. which was scheduled
to run Mirough th* day. began at
• e'etock this morning. ' .

%

�h it f ?
K n. loir
THL LOMB KA*UKH

tin-flick Sumer

Tell Off Your B oss-Tactfully
PHILADELPHIA UR-Want to It: "Gat it off your chaaL Blow
•void a h urt attack bacauM of your ataek.'*
worry at work?
Dr. Galfand haa a unique job
Then tell oli your boas—tact,
beidi tha c ardiac work aval#*
fully.
*. :*
tI
taKSttdilalphla Gddatal
Or a» Dr. David Oatfead pula
sponsorship of
toa'Haart Attn, of Southaaitara
Panmylvanla and In IH yaan of
canful study haa txamlaad t i l
man and woman.
Naarly all of tha paUanta a n
referred to the unit by induitrlei
auloue to datarmlne the heart
victim's capacity for work —
whather ha ba tired businessman
or frustrated dltchdigger.
Dr. Oelfand said 44 par cant at
PHILADELPHIA. Florida waa tha patient*—each examined by a
trail raptaaantad at tha National eardiologiit, a vocational eouasallor, a medical social workar and
fclka Convantlon hart July HM4. a piyehlatrlat—have a peycboloftOvar 300 Jlorlda Elka and thair cal factor which 'la a baale
famlllea attended.
Thta atata waa honored by tha
■lection of W. A. (BUI) Wall of
Wcat Palm Baaeh to tha petloeal
post of Grand Truatoa for a tarn
PROVIDENCE. R. I. UR-flr*
of five year*, conaldered a atap.
fllhteri uiad bosaa and hundreds
plng-aton* to tha poat of Grand
of fiUoni of water last week to
Exalted Ruler.
T
w
up « traffic jam at tha
Wall
the
Patt
„ ___
tad Ruler of tha Eaat District ad
Florida. Past Praaldant of tha Flo­
rida Stata Elka Aeeoetatioa and •pans thay found that tha I___
C h a i r m a n of tha HanyAnna had expanded tha staal and ttt
hrldga pafusad to close.
Stoma Truat Fund.
Finflfhten played haaaa m tha
During
ha aanmd
metal and-after an hour and ■
Fait Grand Eitaamad Knight
minute delay that hacked 19 traf­
the Grand Lodga, BP.O.E.
fic four hleehe—the hrldga cooled
Lena active la atvta attain ha and tha draw apeta atid Into plaaa.
aa praaldant at tha Waet
Cl
Film Baaeh Chambar
at
marc*. and praaldant at tha Elwp.
ACL BAFFTT MUTING
•la Club o f that etty.
BET FOB TOMORROW
Durlnr tha PhUadelphla conven­
tion. Florida Elka gave away orTha Third Quaitorly Mooting ai
ante juice to vleltlac deleiataa at the JaehaeavUle District Bento
thair national headquartara and

Florida Honored
With Wall Election
At Elks Convention

Traffic Jam Brokan
By Fira Fighters

o f auger grown In tha Xvargladae

%m

*T W t u y r o w ib w s ju d m

1*. 1W

security."
"Resentment that 11 not ex­
pressed goes Into the eardiovaaeular system," he eaid. "w hen it
tightens -the htood* vassals. Continued 'Iniutr to blood vassal tlssues results in permanent hyperhaart attack.
Dr. Galfand said the group's
findings on the emotional back­
ground of heart disease are the
moat aignificant—particularly to
industry.
"When the personality pattern
is damlnstod by an inhibition of
expression," ba said, "we adviae
tha paUanta to go back to thair
Jabs, but Just tot ait there quietly
in tha corner.
"We want them to go hack and
blew thair staeke-or at least, talk
it over with their bosses.
"Big business today sometimes
provldts for such conferences, but
too taw employes take advantage
of them. Young workers fall Into
a groove—which hopefully leads
up to higher stations and saleriej
—and they're afraid to say a
WSf4e*
TfcfefK
.D r , Galfand said at m

ta
a m e o ss
■ per rest at |heee n e t...

Engineer Killed
In Train Plunge
BRIDGEPORT. Conn, (ft-T lu
engineer of the Federal Express
was killed early today whoa the

•wgf*
Jram ah

ewi *****

W ELL DRILLING
Howavd C Loaf
P IM M *

381

raatrictfcns. Only l per cant 1
adtrlaad not to wwrk at all.

MmBOGRAPB PRINTING — TYPING
CREDIT INVESTIGATIONS M A M
ANYWHERE IN UNITED STATES OB
FOREIGN COUNTRIES

CREDIT BUREAU OF SANFORD

Co* "a*t 1M4 NV*

tWntoiad ir Lai fiaasm

CHAPTER TWENTT-ONE
1dammed behind him shook too
TIM STOOD staring down at his rickety building and drowned out
—
——
.—...
.
-------i-..t
mothers body, and tha merciful th* ahariff# parting words, “ Son.
numbnaaa hroka. and grlaf unshed don't you go doin' anything fool­
ovar him. f r n t drowning wa\*aa ish—" Looey sank back la his
of it Ha lifted Joa in his arms and chair, a heavy, tired, middle-aged
laid him on tha bed, trying to ereas man who wasn't at all happy about
tha *■«»«■■—* hands decently on his the way things were going.
breast, out of soma old memory of
He was aa honest man accord­
what his paoplo did at a tins like ing to his own lights—as honest
this. Than, looking into tha atlll
a politician who lived by hto
face, ha remembered that ha and wits could afford to ba. He'd been
Joa had quarrelled. And with tha sheriff for tan yuan, and being
realisation that It was forever too sheriff in Meecelero County meant
lata to taka back tha hard words staying on the right (Ida of Rob
ha d said, to tell his father how Mallory end Broken Spur. Not that
much ho had loved him. ho sank Rob had wanted much of him—
eato his knaao by the bad and only to go easy on that wild foster­
burned his face in his hands, while ton of his, or look the other way
his graat cheat and shoulders when Spelean Spur man la town on
shook with dry, tearing aoba that a jag got a little out *f hand.
brought no relief.
Murder waa aomathlng else. Lacey
At last tha atom wore itself out. had an open mind on th* question
and ha stood up. Thar* waa a job of Rob's guUt-Ttxcept that he was
ter tha living to do. The man who sure. If Tim was right, he'd never
was responsible for thia and there find the proof he demanded. Rob
was no doubt la Tim's mind who was too smart ta leave a trail.
that waa was alive and free, and
80 he wouldn't have th* prob­
probably piaaaad
his *****
night's lem of deciding whether to try to
^(uumaM/
f 1 —aiu with
wow* mw
--debt
work, but he'd scored up a d
arrest him. But these natter* were
„thst waa going U be paid to the changing ths picture of things la
’ last drop of blood. Tim had
bad taken
ta!
the county. Their numbers were
aa oath to his dead.
inrreislng—and If they didn't have
A taw hours later, Tim
money, they had votes. It It cam*
leaning aeroae tha desk of tha to actual fighting between them
sheriffs office in Sundown. His big and Broken Spur, tt might not be
data gripped the wood aa If thay possible to go on straddling the
weu'q tear it apart and his eyas fanea.
bored hotly Into Lacey Parian's
Maybe trouble could ba staved
heavy-fowled, faintly cynical face. off j e t tf it weren't for that hot­
“My father was murdered!" ha head, Tim Lerrabee. If only the
drove tha words savagely at tha
Idiot would do something ta
man behind tha desk. “ Shot in tha
locking him up until he
hack—with no mac* chance than
^ off • 1 .
ysu'd give a ccyota! Tou got the
nerve to alt than an' ten me you're "Tim '* first stop after leaving tha
sheriff's office was at th* under­
not goto' to do anything ?"
T im ." Lacey repealed with taker's, to make arrangements
weary patience, “your father was about Joe and Molly. His eoeond
a fine man, rm sorry about this. was at tha hardware store, where
And tf you'll give me any kind at ha bought a Colt .43, a gun-belt
proof of who shot him, HI do ray and a supply of cartridges. His
duty. But what have you given story had travelled ahead of him.
fart Tou didn't eee any and th* storekeeper, who had bees
a friend of Joe’s, handed ovar hto
body—you didn't And anything.
anyl
purchase with a sympethle cau­
Anybody could have done it—*
*Troof?“ Tim fairly anariad at tion. “Watch your step, eon." Tim
him. “What proof do you need? buckled tha unaccustomed weight
Wbo'd have wanted him dead ex­ about hto telpa, and stepped out
cept Rob Mallory? Who alas Into the street.
He hadn't had any definite plan
would have any reason to? Who
else did be ever hav* any trouble In mind, but tuck waa with him—
or against him. as th* evant might
with?"
“No Jury'S hang * man ea no prove. Aa ha stood looking up and
down tha dusty street a tail, highman's that" Lacey
“And tf you’ll taka an old sun's stepping black stallion rod* up to
advice, son. you w est g» throwing tha hitching rack of th* Last
chargee Ilk* that around loos you Chance, and tha rider swung down.
can back ’am up. Tou might gat
‘Turn around. Mallory!" Tim's
oercoa
pmAii
yourself to a pack o' trouble—"
Tim Aung away from tha da
noises at tha street, cutting them
1 should* known batter than to off to stunned silence. "Turn
to you. Evan If X had proof, around and reach for your gun!"
wouldn't listen. Tout* Maiyou \
Rob turned. To Tim's eyes, tha
’a sheriff, a n n t you? What handsome hawk face seemed to
lory's
do you car* about a two-bit
wear a emlto of gloating mockery.
tar? WaU. X guaas we know when Xt goaded him to n spate of words.
wo stand m w , Lawl" ha spat tha
*Tm glrin* you
word. “If wa waited far the to
to Aa
■A ba
Afi right,
nckoa

smbekmet.
,
The Naw Haven Railroad iden­
tified tha aaitnaar as Arthur
Ortaaasu, of New Haven.
Six people were injured, appar­
ently none seriously, tha railroad
laid.
PROBABLY WONT BELL
A spokesmen said five at tha
BAN LUIB OBISPO, Calif. UR—
derailed cars on tha Washington
to-Boston train had no pesseagari Norman Sharpe, s professor at
The other two care ware a sleeper
and n coach. Thera were ir ca n
la the train.
ACT EXTENDED
OBLO. Norway Uh-Tha
fitstoe and Norway annoui
day thay have extended their Fidbright Act Student exchange ar­
rangement for another five yaan.

m=

L I k m

California State Polytechnic Col­
lege, aays ha haa davlaad a holder
Uut removes more than M per
cant of a elgaratto’a nicotine. Ha

" f a k i n g

a

“ Beent body shot your father tost
night?"
•Tike you didn't know!"
"I didn't."
•
“Then tow'd you know tt was
tost night?"
"It musfv* been." Rob's vote*
wss almost gentle, "or you'd-'v*
come gunning for me before now.
Only I didn't da It. A dozen men
tell you I was in town ail last
night"
“Then It wss on* o' your hired
hands! Maybe you wouldn't dirty
your hands on a little job like
willin' a heater—but you don't get
out of tt that way! Reach! I'm
net tailin' you again!”
Tim's right hand clawed wildly
at the butt of th* Colt. The only
gun he had ever handled waa hi*
father's old shotgun. Ha wasn’t
familiar with handguns, and he
knew nothing of the lightning
draw that fills a man’s hand in a
"'steer of split seconds. Slowly,
awkwardly, ths Colt cam* dear of
tha leather and roe* to take aim.
Thar* waa a report, the Impact of
a bullet striking metal, a thud as
tha gun hit tha dirt—and Tim waa
toft staring dazedly at his empty

Three Boys Found
After Being Held
For Ransom Money ,

ANNISTON. Ala. UP - Thro*
small boys were recovering yes­
terday from a aix*hour ordeal dur­
ing which they were held priioaer
by a Nerro who demanded B . « «
for their releaie. Thay wars not
harmed bodily.
A search by neighbors bagaa
Wednesday when the boys fatted to
return from a hike. Later, after
ona of tha boy’s mother received
a telephone call dimandlng M.OOO w
ramom. etty, county and atata of.
fleers joined In tha teareh.
A pone of about 100, including
armed eitiiana, combed a wooded
section eaat of Anniston Wednaaday
EightPolice said the accused kidnaper
was identified by tha boys from
rogues gallery pleturei. Police
Chief J. L. Peek said tha man la
well,known to Anniston police.
Tha boys are Max Seroggla. I;
Perry Reynolds. S; and Horst Car­
ter. 11. Welter Merrill, aa attorney,
and W. W. Owens found tha boys
bound in an excavation beaaath tha
flooring of an abandoned housing
"Kid." Rob told him quietly, project
“before you try to pull a gun on
The boys said they went hiking
a ms" again, you’d batter learn and met a man who lurod tham to
how. If f d wanted to, X could've tha abandoned housing project,
plugged you six times while -'■tju , where ha displayed a Jfrcalibtr
were still reaching."
0
pistol.
“ Wan, why didn't you?" Tim
Young
Horst
said
tha
man
let
demanded bitterly. “ Tou'd a' had
plenty o' witnesses tt was salf- him fira the gun once. Tha othari
defense. Or do you Ilka all your asked to fire tt, but wer* told:
"Thera ara only three bullets
wiiiiw's to be from behind?"
Before Rob could reply. Lacey laft, and I’m going to aaad them
Tartan had coma striding up tha to kill you."
street. He kicked th* fatten gun
Tha boys said thay ware forced
aside and damped a heavy hand into a small opening into th* ax* *
on Tim's wrist.
cavation where they ware found.
“ Tim. you’re tinder arrest for
disturbin' ths peace."
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
_
•Tm miidnf no comnlilnt,
&lt;AP&gt;— •
Laeay. Tha-haVa out of bis b«*4
right now. Ha doesn’t know what bailors and Marines at tha Naval
Air Station hare really gat tha
ha's doing—"
“Tm not takln' favors from you, works on their birthdays If thay
Rob Mallory," Tim broke In. *TU mention it a week ahead at tins*.
go with you, lhariff." Lacey looked Tha man with the birthday fata a
to Rob. Tha handsome mask was special table with waiter service,
detached and Inscrutable. With a white table doth and plates — and
gesture of dlimliaal, ha turned
away and pushed through tha steak if it'a wanted.
•winging doers of tha Last Chance.
ROT WEATHER SCENE
“ Watt." Tim rasped, “what you
waitin’ far? Com* on, taka m* to
CHARLOTTE, N. C. (ff&gt; — Hot *
jail!"
weather seen* hare:
r
Someone la tha crowd tot out a
Man walking down tha atraet
nervous titter of released tension. with a room thermometer aticking
Lacey felt he'd been mads to look out of his back pocket.
like a fool, and hli face colored a
dull rad aa ho flung tha young
w ater's arm out of his grasp.
O. D. Farrell S10 X. Fint
“If Rob won't make a com­
plaint," ha muttered. “X reckon X For 10 vesra this store haa
consistently observed th* fol­
gotta let you go. ^lut get outs
low er hours1
town an* don't show your face
Wosk dart A a. aa. to S ill p. as.
hare again till you get soma
senes," ba added disgustedly.
Saturday* t a. au to TtM p. as.
Tim stooped to retrieve his gun.
Closed from T:M p. as.
Equally indlffetant to tha eurioalty,
Saturday until l a p . Mop.
tha rympith/, or tha amusement
that ha might hava read In tha
faces of tha bystander*, he got hto
horse and rode out of town.
(Ta Ma Contimuatj.

FARRELL'S

concedes commercial possibilities
for toe experimental filter are
about nil because "it removes all
toe smoko and teat* aa welL"

v a c a t i o n "

a sv m ry llm m

Arcade Package
STORE

y o u

d r lv m l

�THE SANFORD HERAT.D

Mon. July 1*. 1935

Pat* S

ATltMPnD
siMPR/se
BUNTS BN
mcmno .
N f AST l&gt;
tm evo po t

At BATTER

- iCKtV
Ml*

'h a n o b t o
•U N T ?

FLASH CORDONP w H V - THIS ’CRATn’ lO ALAPE CF
PAPER/ IT WOULDN’ T HAVE SCRATCHED
ME IP IT HAD HIT/ WHAT KIND CF
CAT-AND-AtOUSE GAME IS THIS'
51
WHAT IS THAT BIG STIFF AFTER? „

TM8
TO M A Kt
A CATCH
ON A B A O
THROW

to f ir s t *
THEN H U *T U
•A C H f

trsEAficA
TV4AM

tR x in q to

SCOOP A
B A U .IN .
THE OIRT/

ETTA K m

RL O N D IH -

•II

vjmv iV- /\
HARO-WORKING 1

MAN LIK E ME &lt;3

SniWEPACi o
URC/iKl'AjX i V

The United States has a third
more married women between 15
A .and 44 yean old thrn in IBIS.

P ain t a room
In
h a lf a day

A. D t i l l . I f yon fall to da no.
Judgment by default will ba takan
aralnat you f» r tha rallaf domandad In tha Complaint.
in r o t « T
o r the c o c m
DONR AND ORDRTIKD at I a n .
JI'DUK.
BENINOI.R
CO L' NTT, ford, F lorida, thla le d day o f July,
ST STM o r FLORIDA. IN FRO - A. D III*
(C la rk s S ta ll
IN IU3 T U B EHTATR OF
O. P, Itrrndon, Clark o f
OLGA P. TATLQIt
Circuit C o u r t , aamlnolo
Dh u i H.
County,
_Florida.
.
TO AI.L WHOM IT MAT CONIlyi a L* Hunt D. a
CERNl
Nat lev It hereby f iv e s that An
J. Ruaatll Ifornahy
nla P Waanon Iliad har final re­ Attorney for P la in tiff
port a Adm inistratrix a f tha at- 110 N Main I tr e e l
tat- o f Olya I* Taylor, deeeaaedi Orlando, Fiorfda
that aha filed har patltloa far final dlacharca, and that aha will
pply to tha llonorahla
Krnae
apply
Krnaat
lloaal
ouahaldtr, County Judea o f Ha
mlnol
__
___
mlnol*
County, Florida.
on tha
loth day o f Jajy.
July. 1111, lo r a pp ro­
val ot iim a and for final dlacharye
- Adm
* s s lip
----------- o .f Iho
. . oatalo
. .
aa
lntatratrls
o
o la a P. Taylor, dereaeed, oa thla
H th day o f Juna. 1111.
Annie P. W aynon Admlnletratrta o f tha aalata o f Ol—
aa P. Tajrli
Taylor, dacaaaad.

Legal Notice

NTATB O F FLO RID A
TO) HOW ARD ROT 8 RO D M ARD .
TOU AIIB H K RRBT NOTIFIED
that a ault has baan fllad ayalnst
you In lha C ircuit Court o f tho
Ninth Judicial Circuit, In nnd for
Hrmlnola County. Florida. antltlad
IRENE RROUHtARD P la in tiff, »«.
ED W AR D I t o r BROUSSARD. Dafaodant. Chancary No. SStt. Tha
nalura o f thla ault Ik la ehlalu
a divorce sa d far othar rallaf.
Ton ara raqulrad to fllo your
w rlttsu onawar w ith lha elarh o f
aald Coart and aarya n copy thereo f upon IT a ln tlffa nttarnayo on or

W O M E N M A K IN 0 G A IN
LO S

ANGELES

I M -D r .

Henry

bafora tha lt th day o f
Auxual.
A. D t i l l - or a d a r t 's pro m i l , »»u
wilt ba snlarad aaalnat you.
WITNICHH my hand and anti aa
ol lha Circuit iV u rt, In ar.l
S ark
r Hamlnola Cour.ty, Vlnrida, thla
Ilk day o f July, A. h . 1111.
O. P. Herndon
Clark af lha Circuit Courl.
In amt fo r Hamlnola Coun­
ty, Florida
(Clrenlt Court Haal)

Mat l&gt;l, secretary of tha National
Manpower Council, says that If
women continue lo take Jobs at
their present rale, the dsy may
romo when mri| won’t hava to
work at all. Ho told a regional
conference on womanpower yester­
day that female employment has
increased 12.1 per erntin the last
10 years. Man’s employment has
increased only H5 per cent.

iN s m v n t f ir m
STOCKROOM CLERK
PASADENA, Calif. Ut — Cali­
fornia lnititut* of Technology has
flied as a biology slockrnom clerk,
Paul Wright Orr, who refused to
tell a Housa Un-American Activi­
ties lubcommlttea whether ha hid
been a Communist
Orr, SI, was dlsmlsstd July It
on lha ground ha had refused to

cooperalo with instilutu officials n
an Inquiry aimed at assuring (heirs
of his iulegrily and loyally, sal J
an announrement by the instilu;
Orr deelined to It'll the sillier,m.
mitten w liether he wrolo an irliclo by a Paul O rr dcpli I n j Huisla as a w o rk e r's paradise.
Elntnnd
than

is

somewhat

smaller

C a liforn ia.

HELP YANKEES BEAT THE HEAT!

ICI-.
IN IlEltKIIT
UIVEN
noth
:
that I am
ai anaaaad In hualntat al
eat tat
under tha Ilfsat Waal
lat atraaf
Ntr
tllloua cam a o f Hanford Krrlyht
Halraaa Co. and that 1 Inland to
raalatar aald S a n a with tha ciark
o f lha
Clreull Court.
Htmlnola
County, F lo r id a In accordance with
lha pruvtalon o f tho
Flctllloua
Name
Htatute.
lo -w lli
Hectloa
SM.Sl Florida JStalut.a m i l

ctR c rr r coi-r t , ninth
jt u ic t a i. ciRCi-rr. in and
FOR SEMINOLR COI; NTT, FLO-

A U C E F. N XAU

m m oppm
■

in tmb.

M,T

H

n

a il loos! Florida's TUB ’BOUKD ECONOMY...

Flaiattft,

D e fe a ta a L

NftTtCR TO DEFKND

Al-ICIt P. N E A L
IS Ualfaat Htrtat
u n tfem ery. Alabama
^_oo auk h e r e b y notified
that a Complaint far D lvoroo haa
haaa fllod aaalaat you, and you
•ro required to aarve • &lt;

1

B
M E U l% K
North Main ItraaL Orlant
r ia i.a U

fllod tha arlalaal
i U # o ffice af tha
reu ll Court la and
ounty, Florida, on
th day o f A a yu it.

W
.............................. »QO«—

il m

d d M

FO RD

Call tk» L tabtr Nsabar

''83"
Far A r t w B en to

H ILL LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY YARD
Ml W. ThM Mr

»• »•

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�to -

I
Wm Lawrence, a mid-western eoTumnlit,
concluded an experiment tn determine what
books have moat Influenced th# day's news.
He checked closely a New York City dnlly
'paper to see which Items would not have
been there or would hav# appeared different*
ly if certain h»Kiks had not been written.
In that day's paper th# RIHIe did not
head the list. Its influence could l&gt;« traced
In only eleven stories. Twelve showed 1races
of the English philosopher. John Locke. Sir
Isaae Ntwtnn, discoverer of gravitation, al*
•o effected twelve stones and Einstein,
eight Tre two| whoae| Influence occurred
most frequently were economists: Maynard
Keynes, the Englishman who had much to
do with the policy of spending to relieve a
depression, and the formidable Karl Marx,
to whom Communism ow«s Its being. 'Marx
led all the rest with thirty-three stories
touching Communism, mostly against.
This experiment shows that writers are
often authors of a destiny they can never
know and that reading Influences thinking
to a derree r.o man can easily determine. The
greatest and the weakest of man's thought#
are recorded In books. Knowledge of every
*ort can he found In the libraries of the
world and the Influence of records read,
knowledge found, Is discovered In even the
most casual reading._________________ _____

The Sanford Herald

e«biub*e e*u»

sh w #m

• • * . r . . r ■■#

As America’s economy rooma past the
1065 halfway point, what do economists see
ahead’ Can the present business boom keep
booming? Will Ihe Indicators— production,
profits afler taxes, retail «a!cs, wages— keep
rising? Or is an economic downturn likely?
Experts in Washington are not fearful
of a sharn downturn, nor even of a mild re­
cession Ilk** that In 1054. The only thing they
arem afraid of is that Americana may be­
come overronfhlent and plunge themselves
Into inflation.
Overconfidence could push businessmen
Into expanding too rapidly and piling up
too much Inventory. It could push consumers
Into huylng hevnnd their ability to pay. Overconfidence could encourage too much specula­
tion In stocks.
The answer Is to put th# hrakee oa a
hit, to think through whatever speculation
or purchase or expansion la planned. Th#
advice applies to th# average consumer as
well as to businessmen.
Washington officials recognlae this.
Thev are keeping a foot lightly on the brake
pedal hv making mortgage money a hit hard­
er to get, holding down on stock credit, urg­
ing hanks to he more cautious about bualneaa
loans.
The United States needs to make haste
alowlv. Indications are that, If we do, our
present high level of prosperity will con­
tinue for aom# time to come.

Merriams Of Chicago

rust

The governmental team haa b e * n
strengthened hv namlnfr Robert E, Merrlam
of Chicago as Assistant Director of th#
nudget. Merriam la a young man of reform• r a a r t t iC T io b m s t r s
U,* Instincts who made a name for hlmaelf
B r r a r ria r
U a pat a « t
o * « - n u ll*
t i aa
as a Democratic member o f Chicago'# Board
V b taa ttaatb a
S i* tta a lb a
Oaa Taa*
al.as
ti.T1
ill M
of Aldermen. Falling out with th# party macB l l a b lla s r p aattaas, * a r« * a t Ib sa b a . ra a s la tla a a aa&lt;
bine,
he deHartd himself a Republican, and
• a t la s at a a ta *ta la a *a a t ta r tba parpaaa a t tv la la p
thla spring waa th# OOP candidate for ma*
f a s t * &lt;*lll ba a b a ra a v ta t a l r s a a la r a S t a r t t ila a rataa
vor. Though his personality and record won
Baataaaats* Nailaaallv bt Maatral aatattlsiaa him much support, the Democratic tide In
Varrlta. las. aai «aarala aatlaaa Saab BltfaAllaaia •••tala
Chicago was too strong, and he waa beaten
by Rlrhard J. Daley.
Vba Uatal# ta a Maaikar at tbs SaaaWataV Vraaa
Merrlum’e father, Prof. Charles E. Mer­
Mbltb la satitlsa atnaaltalt ta ibt aaa tar rspabllsa.
tlaa aa all tba laaal aaM* ariaias la tato aa«*aaaat. rlam of the University of Chicago, was both
a theoretical expert In city government, and
Page 4
Monday, July *18, 1055
one who practiced what he preached. He also
served as a Chlrago alderman and ran a good
TODAY'S H1HI.K VKRHK'
Confidence In an unfaithful man In time race for mavor. Lat#r, though a Republican,
•f trouble ta like a broken tooth, and a foot he gave valuable advice to th# Rooaevelt ad­
out of Joint.— Prov. 26:10.— A million men ministration.
Th# Merrlama have served Chicago well
^ere confident that they could get away with
robbery and murder and a thousand crimes. and would serve her better If Ah* would let
They ar* In prison now.
them.
■ * I* * * S • • a ( # H l #»••• M i l t i r O H abbf S t. IS IS bt
tb s V ast o f fir* a t •■■fort. r i s H i a . aaSaa tb s S a t
a t raaarsas&gt; at H arab * IS tS
V i t r o e r .n a i N S , M i l * ' s a t r .h llt h » C

HAL BOYLE

Physician Still Practices A t 9 4
* NSW YORK UR- Dr. John Huli*|sr, »ho ta M yean eld, la still
Setlve and likes the eemet.
Dr. RuUinger, whe etanda a bent
•B to#t • and weight a dwindling
U0 pounda, has hatel eyes, comes
from Clinton, fowl, and n y i the
American Medical Ana. h n des­
ignated him aa the nation's oldest
practicing physician.
Ha haa been a fin# lea ikiter,
Meant take plUt htmeelf, hasn't
been etek atnee he wag a youth.
Ike doctor, whose preierlptlon
•or longevity li baaed on dally
eaerclee sad abstinence from bid
batata, It married to a former
■urea, age M.
Ha ram# bare la appear on an
MBC-TV shew called "Make the
Connection." Here la kU Life story
to Ma ear* wordit
"1 wai bom Doc. T. IMS. I
Ived I* years with my first wife,
the died of the rheumatism of old
■ge the 1Mb of January, IBM. She
waa three years younger than I
"Before I went Into medicine
was a principal of achoolt. ta#
waa a Marker under me. ghe wai
a good girl and I married her
ead kept
key her..
"I remember the principal batof the Civil War
war iand the
euaisiaation of President Lincoln
«M .

you aak? Bad habits. I sever
used tobacee, liquor, coffee er tea.
Mints! bed habits? Well, worry—
but I'd rather'not go tote that.
"How &lt;aa you stay young? Well
enorclae. 1 have e garden tad
when I come la from K 1 have aa
appetite that taa lake on e dead
cat. Never tried to eet e live rat.
"Sleep? I sleep * i* • hours a
day. Yea, lately 1 have been taking
a nap.
"I started practicing madlrla#
on foot, then I got a bicycle, thee
a hens and buggy, f wore out
two hones, then In 1MM I got a
one-luag Cadillac. Since then 1
wore out gi ears. I had is Maiwells, Chryalera and Plymouth#—
oh, **a, and a Chevvle—and now
drive a Ford.
"I aet benei and I’ ve given
antheila son lime* hut | don't do
belly operations. That's whore the
hig money la. You can do three
In a morning. But I'm a general
practitioner.
"BaWes? I delivered II beta##
baton I wai eet i f medical
school. 1 delivered a baby Just
last weak, I sever leet e mether.
I hav* leet « tow babies, ewt of

MU.

"I'm

a Arm believer to toe

AimA I . . . . . . t i n , , to , * * * * * ita U * * - I think Ood baa

••USE? M rtS T W i

depending a* whether they ean
afford R, aid 1 give them the

mtdietoe.
"I'd aay If ye# really want la
stay healthy you should asertlse
regularly, trust la Ood, wear out
your pants In the knooo Instead
of the teat—and make poopla pay
you tn eaik.
"What am I afraid ef? Maybe
helUire. Retire? When I am Hi t
boa its feet underground and eaa'I
hoar anyona asking for help.
"I admire nature and the
heavenly bodies. Only a Supreme
Belag could have treated mis
Incidentally, Dr. HuHI#|#r who
never took a must# leiaoat—"I dug
R out myself. R earn# alow and
hard, but who# R came t had
It"—haa directed a Meal brass
band tor IS year*.
H« ean atUl lip II piece* from
memory cm the cornet be bought
second ka»* ta years a*# tor to*
"I figure H a vnrlli |U* new,'
tM to# feeter

Have Put On Good Show
WASHINGTON un-Tht Rusalans
art like people who hired e public
relation* adviser to give them a
new look. They've put on a good
ahnw, even It II should end at
Genova neat week. They mu»t
think It haa been pretty g"od too.
In the almnit so ytara alnce the
Revolution, they've been at cmy
aa Ire cuhea. In the pait tew
months they began defmiting. If
Only temporarily, and at a June
etnhaaiy party Deputy Premier
Anaitaa Miknyan told reporters:
"Horrible thins* are laid about
ut Bolshevist* but it stem* we
aren't ao horrible as tome people
think."
At tlmei they've been at eorny
a* soma American politician*. For­
eign Minister Molotov poted In
10-gallon hat in Wyoming. The
Kremlin's big wheela patted thll
dren on the head at the JJ.S. Em
batty party in Mo*enw on July 4.
Yriterday they s t a r t l e d Ihe
world by Inviting reporteri to
new a conference today . in the
Kremlin Itself.
The Russian laadera have attend
ed perhaps a dnten recent embai

SAM DAWSON

Fatter Pocketbooks Feeding Boom
NEW YORK UP—Falter pocket
book* of many Americana are
feeding the buiineii boom.
Paraonal Income totals have
topped the too billion dollars a
yoar for lha first time in history.
That hie helped retail sales to
climb itearilly. It hat also given
many families confidence enough
In their future le heck part of
their espected income and buy on
the installment plan. So roniumer
debt also haa riten to a new high.
In t u r n , hualnoumm have
•tapped »p their own buying of
raw maierlali. They hava in­
creased their production achedulei,
thua adding to their payroll totals.
They hava raised their sights on
futuro oipanalon. The*# three
things iwell lha lacomes of the
producer* of rgw materials, of fac.
lory workers, of Ihe conitrucilon
Industry and of the mekere of tool*
and oqulpmant.
It ia an aaample of what econ­
omist! mean when they talk about
the present buslaeu boom running
aloog for gwhlle oa Ita ow mo­
mentum. even if a*w ettmuli don't
•how up.
feme eyelet aay too boom on
top of the boom is * littla Uke
fimlUee proaperiag by taking in
aaeh other's washing*—that the
whole thing could grind la • Jolt
Ing halt If ronaumorl should atop
buying ae freely and atartiag ta\
lag Instead.
But figures released Oils week
point only to the sign* ef prosper­
ity ea every hand.
Department t i Commerce data
•how that ta the Brit five month*
to the year Mraoaal income wai
running at an annual rate 1* bil­
lion dollar* higher than the year

before. In May It reached a rc
The jump of two billion over Ihe
April rate waa credited by the rie-

International Kiss
Seals Wedding Vow
DETROIT UP — An Internation­
al kits-from Canada to the Uni­
ted SUtea— sealed a marriage
atop the Ambaiiadnr Rridae re­
cently. The epan links Detroit
and Windsor, Ont
The bride ttnod on the Ameri­
can aide, the groom on the Ca­
nadian a* Common rieai Judge
David Yoke*, of Detroit, read the
ceremony.
The principals were Vera Lang,
en attorney from Washington,
D. C„ and Waller Lang, of Toron­
to.
The Langa had been married tn

#
V i

^

I

- 4

I lit

I I

NOTTINGHAM, England UP Six young people set out from
thla Rubin Hood habitat Friday
for a wtlk—around the world.
They expect it will take them
five years.
The eextet—three men and three
girls—called themselves "lha Ovverlandera."
They were dressed alike in blue
Jeans and jackets, each carrying
a knapsack weighing S3 pounds'
They have a total of only M
pounds—tltt—in their jeans hut
hope to pay thtir way most of the
trip by working. They’va already
lined un temporary Johi on Ital­
ian farms' and Malayan rubber
plantations.
Speaking for the group. tt-yearnld Grnffrry Whittaker said they
are calling their trip "a fiveyear plan for six sensible peo­
ple."
Aa a side trip, they expect to
take a hui ride across Africa’s
Sahara Desert and wind up having
tea atop Capetown’s Table Moun­
tain.
Walking with -Whittaker are
Harr*- Harrison, It; BUI Youens,
IB; ' My Shaw. M; Sheila Wood
wart
); and Pat Ruggtna to.

CHOOSE &amp; USE
t o

O w U M fe to
PAINTS 0
In 1322 Colon
THC COLOR YOU WANT
WHEN YOU W A N T IT
IN ALL FINIMHES.

SANFORD
P A I N T CO.
K IT

W. riRST BT.

FREE PARKING

Trade-Ins
CJwsneeSsle
N

ew eyesat

*#«••

Ctat*. § • • «

j

f l *

* •** •

III

4 -D O O R
Q n c f&amp; 7 Q &amp; / fir Q Q t/o n •/

—

I

hi* * m you’ll fust bar* to

m o.

• hoouty. It’* a brand-new kind of
luick Riviera with ftrnr doora. And
— It’* ■ IfBCLAL — lb# kmest-rrice
i

su m

-

S

» her# you b a r* the soft, ftn# - ‘ m fln iW # T
■ M * *|J, *®ll, t p r l i | r id * and to r q a e -tu b a

i you oaa bar* tba uowtat hit io hardtop*
o#t *dvaa«*d new body deaka ya t-a n d
hav* it iu th * pri#* f n ** • TAiM rioa’s
•ora.
i you ••* hav* a at*#£rao'*l ear with th*
r , &lt;M**»i*d aportinaaa of • aoovartihi#

to n ? ■uTaase arm
M ••

*Vja u
vA dAAtd#
w v m P P i i NLa m
vLI
ioaf MM
w m ioLo^
w T O w§

hh to o MdMo M d— ra to the rear.
1 *M hav* *1 M b hardtop beauty with
M lo ri aud *a*v*ul**a&gt; at th* eaay-to-

to n w to

LOT TOO TODAY

Six Young People
Take Long Walking

To patch up the mesa, thrae of
Russia's most important men
made a humble pilgrimage to
Tito. The three were Prime Min­
ister Nikolai Bulganin, Mtkoya
and Nikita Khrushchev, bosi oiI
the Communist party.
They wound up their visit call­
ing him a goal hoy, entitled to
hi* nwn Ideas. In the rigid woild
of Communist discipline, this w-as
as fantastic as asking Wall Street
tn buy shares ta the Russian rail­
roads.
Th# Kremlin's treatment of Neh­
ru and Tito ean hardly be due en­
tirely to aheer good fellowship?
Both are next-door neighbors of
Ruisla'a Communist frontlara. So
is Austria, which Ihis year was per­
mitted independence by Russia 10
years aRer the war. Ran ia a close
neighbor too. Russia aent Iran
several torn of gold In a tattle*
men! on old problem!.
tf Ihe West can't be budged by
Rusila'a new look, al least the rest
of Ihe world may be impressed
and the men In the Kremlin mutr
hope by the red carpet treatment
they can keep thoae four tloie
neighbor* neutral.
A grin might do it whire a growl
would send them scampering to
the West for protection. Rut the
Kremlin made some concession*
to the West too. It made more con­
cession! on disarmament In Ihe
past few monthi than la tha p ut
10 ytara.
f

No wondar
this Hardtop is tha
HIT OF THE YEAR f

A CAR?

"What really kills most people did hare pleeed to to toeae haMet
at birth ta cblMtou homes. All
of them are doing Rno, rttili
know I feel tbi* way. tight *ew
!
fL’C? •PPu*totoaa tor kehtoe

each other once before, In Vienna
They wrte divorced In 1*4*.
Mis. Lang la an American eltlsen. She wanted an American
marriage license to help her efforu tu get permission for her
husband ta entar lha United
Stales.

ay parties In Moscow, mingling
with newsmen, answering ques­
tions, making speeches being jolly
good fellows, drinking highballs
and champagne.
When Indian Prime Minister
Jawiharla! Nehru visited Moscow
a few weeks ago children pelted
him with Rowers, trained white
dovea wheeled overhead, band*
played, and the Kremlin men
turned out in • bunch.
* Unlil seteral monthi ago Yugo­
slavia's Marshal Joslp Tito, who
had committed communism's mor­
tal sin of disobedience to the Igte
Joseph Stalin waa cast out of the
Rad fold, arnrned aa a renegade
devil and roundly euraed.
Then Moscow's new look set In

BUICK

BUYING

t o t ti lateral causes. What? and have your child, regard!*#!
What did you say? What Is b nat- * t* M p , aad I will *Uw the
wral reuse? Id aay she died of
|&gt; M ile aitorttte—the rheumatism ef child to a good bom*.'
" l b mo nborttaa |e mnrdar. |
tod age.

parlment to higher employment,
weeks, and higher
hourly wage scale*.
A lot of the inm ate tn Income*
haa flowed quickly into the banns
of the merchant* and the pro­
viders of various services—and
from them It is working its way
back to the prime producers.
Rut much of the additional cash
has alan gone Inin personal sav­
ings. Ihe percentage of personal
Income saved Isn't at high this
year as In soma previous ones,
but the total hat gone on steadily
climbing.

nrd Ml billion, figures annually. longer work

M M

end a monthi, and knowing what . "The meat charitable thing fe e
we d« • • | think wo coukl he*#
de*e to In un tingle gtria whe
came sad shook maaey at me and
&lt;?
&lt;ved to be to years
sakod tor abortions: *oe ahead

*1

TAMES MARLOW 1

Making Haste Slowly

Books In The News-

Dm h

•total ea. I treat a t o . I paiaats
* week. Nis- ! that Mhem
W a» sight tor nothing, per
aa efte* eta* I ekir#e t o t a l * .
m w

CARRAWAY $ McKIBBIN
GENERAL INSURANCE
:r » r e

v '

NichoIsM
luick Co.

A v tM
n .

-*■ ••
Cl

••■■
HI

\

\
\

to

Xbyi

�Story League Has Dinner Meeting;
Mrs. John Lee, Delegate Reports

So ciaL

Hi* annual meeting at th* San­
ford Story League wai held at
Toddy'* Reitaurant on Highway
17-N In th* form of a dinner party.
After a dellcioua meal a ihort
buiinrai aciilon wai presided ov­
er by tha outgoing president, Mrs.
Lillian Roche. At tha elosa of tha
meeting Mrs. Ethel Moor* pre­
sented her with a gold mesh even­
ing bag as a token from th* membera laying "thanka” and to
"ihow appreciation for th* sueceilful work contributed by her
in har two years ai president of
tha Story League."
The aesilon wai than turned
ovar to Mra. J. L. Let who repre­
sented tha club at th* Eaitarn
district meeting whleh was held
la Philadelphia, Pa. th* litter
part of June. The them* of her
talk waa "Our Master Storytel­
ler."
,
Member* of the leigue were
"thrilled” by the report she
brought back to the effect that
the Sanford Story Ltigut stood
out among th* many larger atoiT
leaguee at nur nation as having
dona pn outstanding bit of work
during the year. "W* a era pleased
to hive Mrs. Lee represent our
Story League at Philadelphia be­
cause ahe ia a gifted itory teller
and person of personal charm
and ability," aevaral of tha mem­
bers aUted.
During her report aha brought
out the thought that story tellara
could and should use th* Bible as
a guide to story telling. "W* all
know that our Savior, as a method
of teaching both old and young
th* great truths of eternal life
and way of living, used stories,"
aha gild.
One of the highlights of the re­
port was the telling of the vesper
service held on a Sunday afteYnoon at tha Chapel of th* Tour
MRS. ROHRRT k. BROWN
Chaplains, with the Rev. Daniel
(Dinte br Co*)
A. Poling In charge.
"As one enters the chapel," she
related, "a feeling of remoteness,
reverence and awa floods the
room and give* an awareness of
being In th# very presence of
God. A mural, showing tha scan*
aboard th* "Dorchaater," when
th* four chaplain* aboard, one
In tha toft glow td candlelight Jam** R. Brown at Ann Arbor, Jtwtih, on# Cithflllf, And two
Mitt Sylvia Dalen* Hayes, daugh- Mich., aerved aa hit brother’* beat
ter of Mr. and Mr*. W. M. Musselman whll* uaher-groomtman were
white, and Robert R. Brown, ton Ronald B. Bold*, Chicago, III.;
of Mr. and Mrt. Donald 0. Brown Terry Cordell, and Tommy Spear.
V o f Ann Arbor, Mieh., wsra united William Muaselwtilt* Jr., brother
in holy matrimony Friday evening of th* bride, **a junior uahar.
Clrel* No. • of th* Woman’*
at ft o'clock In th« Flrtt Raptlit
Mr*. MuaaalwhHa ehoa* for h*r Society of Christian Service of
Church With th« Rtv. W. F. Brook*
officiating at th# doublt-ring daughter'* wedding a cocktail tha First Methodist Church met
length dr*M of aqua lac* ever recently at th* home of Mra.
aeremony.
■qua taffeta
with a
Mny
The church wai beautifully de­ white hat and white aceeaaeriea. Ban Wlggin* on Cameron Ave.
with Mr*. B. U. Hutchison aa as­
corated with gladioli, white ca- Sh* wor* a eoraaga of ifhite ear- sistant boat***.
ladlum and palm (pure agalmat a nation* and pink awaathaart yosaa.
Mr*. J. N. Assarsllo presided
background of palm and fare.
Th* groom'* motaer, Mra.
Four aavan branch candelabra bald Brown, wore * Dior blua lac* over the teuton. Mra. Hutchison
gav* the devotional ualng "PYay, burning white taper*.
dreaa over taffeta with a email #r" as them*. Boutin* hualnasi
&lt;y&gt;' Organ!at, Mra. Event McCoy turbia at th* aama material. Her waa tbaa takra ear* of and Mr*.
played the traditional wadding aeoeaaoriaa war* af matching blua. Wiggins, study chairman, lad ia
mutie and the eong, “ Sylvia’1 for Sh* had plnnad on bar left should prayer.
which the bride was named. Dur­ *r a eoraaga ad tiny plak meat
Twa new member*, Mra. Frank
ing the rite* “ Clair* D* Luna" waa heart rose*.
Ridel] and Mra. Joseph Terlap,
rendered. Mita Norma Fay* Har­
A reception waa bald tsmadiate- were welcomed. Bafrosbmenta of
vey aoloiat, aang "Becauaa” and ly after th* ceraanany In tha Ed­ homemade Ice eream and brawn"Th* Lord’* Prayer”.
ucational Buildlag at th* ahurcb lea war* then served.
Given In marriage by her father, which waa taatafully deearated 'Those present were Mra. Asiathe bride waa lovely In th* tradi­ with th* bride'a flavor*. Tha rello, Mra. Volia Williams, Mra.
tional wedding gown of white brida’a ubl* waa avarlald with a Ruth Lundquist, Mrs. Harry
4 1 ehantilly lac* and tulle over ivory whit* linen cloth and banked an Brown, Mr*. Cogbura, Mra. W. E.
bridal satin. Th* bodice waa fash- each aide war* throe-branched Balnea, Mra. H. B. McCall. Mra.
ioned with a acalloped neckline cryatal candelabra balding whit* Amy Baker, Mra. H. W. Dick.,
featuring a Queen Ann* eollar taper*. Whit* gladiaU war* ala* and Mra. J. M. MeCaakill.
of lace. Of formal length, th* lace u**d. A three-tlerad wadding aaka
akirt waa cut In tha front ahew- waa cut by the amipla. Ok tha
Big a peplum falling into a chapel other Ubl* waa placed a large Ga.; Mr- and Mra. 0. A. Irby at
Fort Valley, Ga.; Mr. and Mra.
train. Her headpiec* waa a lace eryaUI punch bowl with lira. L.
William Millor, Orlando; Mr. and
eap embroidered with tiny teed P. Hagan, Mr*. Jack Ratigan and Mr*. R. W. Tat* and Prof, and
pearl*. A fingertip veil of ailk Mra. J. M. Leonard aereiag punch
Mia. Lewi* M. Eieh af Winter
French illuaion waa ala* worn, Mra. J. D. Cordell and Mra. W. Park.
•b* carried a whit* leather Bible, V. Bitting eat th* aaka. Aaalatiag
H m brid* aHandid schools In
I ' a gift at the groom, topped with hoeuaaea wara Mra. Smith, Mra.
* a whit* orchid tied with aaacad- J. W. Brenva, Miaa Cretebaa Baliatmrr. M. C. and In Sanford.
Sh* graduated from Seminal*
Big aatin atreamora. Her * only Klrehhoff, aad Miaa Jan* Davie
High School and worked aa a
jewelry waa a tiny gold area*.
kept IB* bride'a hack; Mra. Wat- eaarttaiy far a local attorney.
Mia* Ada Adame, gttid ad bak­ baa Wall***, Miaa Beverlg Gray Mr. Brow* graduated from th*
er, worn a bailtrina length gown and Miaa Lucia (toft wet* ala* University of Michigan High
ad whit* embroidered nylon with floating beeteaiaa,
School and attended HllladaU Colan apron effect over pink nylon
Mr*. Browa ehea* for bar wad lag* at Hilladalo, Mich, before en­
tulle and taffeta. M featured a ding trepa through th* Bmokay tering th* U. B. Navy, Upon re­
large pink taffeta bow at tha back. MeunUln* an route to Ana Arbor, ceiving hi* honorable discharge on
In her hair aha wore a pink a light gray auit with black pa Feb. U be works* with th* City
eoronet of taffeta and tulle. Her tent neeeeaoriaa. She were tha Product* (Meg. ia Sanford.
tf .wriet mitt* were pink nylon not vrhlte orchid front her bridal bou­
with tiny nylon raffle*. She rarri- quet- Hu aoupl* will re*Id* at
ad a colonial bouquet of deep 1019 Berkahir* Rd. Hi Ana Arbor.
orchid South American asters.
Out-of-towa gueaU
included
Tha brideeaaalda, Idea Gall Bilt- Mr*. Gertrud* Brantley, Parry,
fcg, Mia* Patricia Batfgaa. Miaa Ga, grandmothrr of th* bride;
Janie* Boat, Tampa; aad Miaa Fat Mr. and Mra. Donald O. Brown,
Smith, junior brideamaid, were Am Arbor; Mr. and Mr*. B. W.
dree am identical ad that *d the Gahar and daughter* Am and
■aid ad boner and *aivied boa- Bnily, Mra. Lam B*mbride and
quota ■ lighter lavender ebadee, Mra. L. B. Framra af Macon,

%

★ ★

★

★

★

★

Sylvia Hayes, Robert Brown
United In Marriage Friday

Circle No. Nine
Meets Recently

■dmsm

MRS.' J. L. l.F.R
(Photo By Jamaaon)

★

★

★

Prott*'ants gave their Ufa Jackets
to th* enllstad men abosrd then
went down, singing, with th*
ship, covers ona aid* of th* cha­
pel."
"A military guard stood at at­
tention as the choir cam* in sing­
ing atheips to glv* a 30 minute
recital, ending with the stirring,
‘God Bless America’, During one
of th* hymns, the altar, which
wai simply decorated m red vel
vet with a gold cross as th* focal
point, ravolvad slowly to reveal
tha Catholic, Jewish and Protest­
ant altars, symbolising all faiths
under one God.
After the report an Installstlon service was conducted by
Mrs. Roche which included In-,
stalling officers and tha mem-1
hers .pledging their tupport to in­
coming officers of 193330. They
are Mrs. Maybella Maxwell, pre­
sident; Mrs. J. L. Lee. first vice
president; Mrs. Claude C. Howard, second vie# president; Mrs.
C. C. Welsh, third vice presi­
dent; Mrs. H. L. Moore, recording
secretary; Mrs R w. Tench, corresponding secretary and Mr*.
S. J Nl« aa treasurer along with
Mra. R. C. Long at historian.

(P&amp;AAonah
Mr*. A. W. La* is in New Yark
City for a few week* visiting
friends.
Mr. and Mra B. L. Parkins Br.
left Saturday for Daytona Beach
for two week* They will have aa
their guests, Mr. and Mra. Richaid Brown of Miami and Mra. G.
V. Jones of Shrsvaport, La.
Mr*. H. W. Goodspeed baa re­
turned boma after spending aom#
time with her mother, Mr*. J. C.
Alday who la eonflnad to th* Ala­
chua General Hospital la Gain**villa.
Mr. and Mra. Jo#l Field attend­
ed a meeting for poetmaater* In
Ocala.
^

’ Tin? SANFORD TTKRAT.D

Mon. JaTy U . MSS ~

Page »

Church Of The Little Flower
Scene For Lamb-Kelly Wedding
A former Banford girl. Miss' of honor. Mra. Teresa PomerMuriel Doris Lamb, waa married vilta, sister of th* bridegroom,
Saturday at 4 p.m. to Roger J. and Mist Anne Brenneis, of LochKelly at Th# Church of the Little icosa, were bridesmaids.
Flower In Coral Gable*. Th#
Their walis-leogth dresses were
Right Reverend Monslgnor Thom- of blue nylon lice and tulle with
ai Comber officiated.
tiered skirts and matching blue
Mlse l.amh was bom In Sanford net over taffeta were fashioned
ind attended Southsld* Elemen­ for the bride by her matron of
tary before eh* and har parent*, honor. They were adorned on one
Mr. and Mra. Charles J. Lamb, aide by a spray of crepe jasmine
movtd their horn* to Miami. Her taken from the garden of the
mother, Mra. Dorothy B. Lamb, bride's home. They carried oldwai publie health nuret of Sem­ fashioned bouquets of blue corn­
flowers and whit* marroni dai­
inole County for twalv* year*.
Mr. Kelly I* th* eon of Mr. and lies.
Raymond Pomervllle of Star
Mrs. Hugh H. Kelly of Ruistll,
Lake, N. Y waa best man for
N. Y.
Mr. Kelly. His ushers were Hugh
Th# Bride
Given in marriage by bar Lamb, brothel of the bride, and
father, Mist Ijtmh were a gown David Perrin.
The Reception
of ehantilly laca with molded |
Th# Informal garden reception
bodice and lent point to hand
aleavet. The scooped neckline waa held at the bride's home was
outlined with roe* petal appli­ vary lovely ia a setting of palm
que*, dew-ed with eeed pearl* and trees and tropical flower*. Tho
aaqulns. Th* very bouffant skirt bride'a table was graced by two
was of lac* with Inserts of nylon statues of the Virgin Mary which
tulle to form th* sweep train, liar played Ave Marla. They were
fingertip veil of French Illusion placed on each side of the rake
fell from a tiara of seed pearl* and altogether formed a most
and eequtni, and sh# carried a beautiful picture.
For her going away outfit, the
cascade bouquet of ehasta dallies
hrid* wor* a pink linen ehrath
and stephanotla.
Mra. Ilalen Perrin waa matron drees with matching box Jacket
of embroidered linen. Sh* wore
pink and whits accessories.
After honeymooning at Day­
tona Reach. Mv. and Mr*. Kelly
will leave for New York state
In August, where h* will return
to eolleg* this fall.

Dinner Is Given •
Thursday Night
For Wedding Party

Try This One
INDOOR SKEWERED BEF.F
Ingredients:
1 pound sirloin
steak (about 1 Inch thick), U cup
wins vinegar, t* cup salad oil, v*
teaspoon thyme, te teaspoon nit,
dash Tabasco aauca, II small on­
ions, 1 tablespoon kitchen bou­
quet.
Method: Cut meat Into 1-lnch
squares. MU vinegar, oil, thyme,
salt, and Tabasco together and
toss with steak riihes. Marinate
for several hours, turning meat a
couple of times. When ready to
broil maat, peel onloni and par­
boil for 3 minutes. Drain meat
well and atrtng alternately with
oniona on 4 large akeweri. Brush
meat all over with kitchen bou­
quet. Place on broiling pan. Broil
quickly to desired dneness. Makes
4 servings.

» ♦•*• *•••••• |

A rehearsal dinner In honor of
the wedding party of th* fnrntor
Mis* Sylvia Hay** waa given
Thursday night in the First Rap.
Hat Church annex by Mrs. Donald
O. Brown and Sirs. O. R. Smith
Sr.
Th# table# wor# arranged In *
” T” with tha bridal roupla and
their parent* seated at th* head.
A clever arrangement of dolls
mad# up a mock wadding provessinnat down tho center of the
tables. Whito gladioli wrr# also
used.
A delicious m*a| was prepared
and aerved by Mra. F.stell* Rue.
sell to th# honores, Mr. and Mrs.
W. M. Mussrlwhlte, the bride's
parents; Mr. and Mr*. Donald O.
Brown, parent# of the groom. Ann
Arbor, Mtch.j Mra. Gertruda Rrantley, bride's grandmother. Perry
Ga.; the Rev and Mra. W. P.
Brooks, Jr., Miss Norma Faye Har­
vey, Mr*. F. E. McCoy, Mlsa Pat
Smith, Miss Gall Hitting, Miss

MRS. ROGRR J. KRI.I.Y

Calendar
MONDAY
Th# Vacation Ribl# School at
tho F.ldcr Springs Baptist Chapel
will ho form 8:30 to 11:30 a. m. for
toys and girls age 3 thru 10 years.
The Dependable Class of the
First Methodist Church will meet
at the home of Mrs. I.owcll Oiler,
ltd N. Summerlin Ave at 8 p. m
for its regular business and so­
cial meeting.
Th* Christian Women's Fellowship meeting will he held st 8
p.m. in the First Christian
Church.
TUESDAY
The Sanford Tourist and Shufflehoard Club will have a ham­
burger supper at A pm. at the
Pat Ratigan, Miaa Janie# Reel,
Tampa; Miss Ada Adams, and
Miss llouni# Dixon of Seville.
Also Hilly Musselwhite. James
R. Brown, Ronald B. Holds, Ann
Arbor, Mich.; Terry Cordell, and
Tommy Speer.

club. Guests are asked t&lt;» bring
salad or dessert. Hamburger*
will he furnished.
The Ware Rihle Clan will nol
hold lit
regularly
scheduled
meeting tonight.
Circles of lit* First Methodist
Church will meet at follows at
0:45 a. m.: Circle No. 1, Mrs.
C. E. Meuki, 2403 Orange Ave;
Circle No. 2, Mr*. C. L. Echols,
W. 20th 8t; Circle No. 3, Mrs.
Roy Wall, 408 Virginia Ave. for
a picnic and swimming party;
Cirri* No. 4 with Mra. Blaka
Sawyer, 200 Elm Ava. with
Mrs. Adam Miller as «o-host*ss|
and Circle No. 5 with Mrs. J. S.
Williamson 201 W. 18th BtrecS
Th# Unity Class will meet at
7:45 p. m. in tha Valdes Hotel
with tha Rev. Carolyn Parsons aa
teacher. Th* public la Invited.
Th* First Baptist Intermediate
Royal Ambassadors will maat al
the church at 7 p. nt.
rr..* •# f.r

r

W e Welcome The Personnel Of The
New Naval Unit To Sanford . . .

Mr. and Mra. Sheppard Brown
and children of Klngrtr**, S. C.
ar* visiting Mr. and Mr*. E. A.
Covington for a few day*. Mra.
Brown is Mr. Covington's ncic*.
Mr. and Mra. Donald O. Brown
will give a reception at their
home in Ann Arbor, Michigan on
Bunday, July 34, for tha northern
friends af Mr, and Mra. Robert
B. Browa who were married her*
Friday eight Mra. Brown la th*
forma* M|*s Sylvia Hayes.

W ill You Be Our Guest?

Mr. aad Mm . Donald 0. Brown
bar* been th* bousegueeta at Mr.
and Mra. L. P. Hagan.
Mra. T. 0. Blaledell returned
Friday from an alaren week va­
cation to Berkeley, Calif.; Wellesly, Ma*a.| Sunset Maine; Arling­
ton, V*.; and Laurel, Md.

W e Have Leased 2 0 Air Conditioned

Rooms At The Beautiful M a r Lou Motel

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DAYTONA (EACH!

■C H O U

These Rooms Are Available ABSOLUTELY
FREE Tor A Period Of 3 Days To New Arrivals
•Af Our Naval Air Station

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�THU SANFORD TTCHAT.D
Page I

Lakeland Tops Cards
In 5th Inning Surge

I’ d
.U, I
111

■coring A n d e r g o n and Dan
Amedia produced two more rum
with a alngle.
The Floridi State League iccond
half rice tightened up a bit lait
night when front running Orlmdo
and lecond place Sanford went
down to defeat and, at the bottom
ot the itandlngi, St. Peteriburg,
picked up a victory.
St. Pete’a victim wai Weit Palm
Beach 12-4 and Oalneiville thump­
ed Orlando 3-1.
Two other gamei were played
In the afternoon to make up tor
flrat half poitponementi. Flrit half
champ Orlando ihut out Galneavilla 2-0 in one encounter and Day­
tona Beach defeated Cocoa 8-1 In
the other to taka over lecond place
for the tint half.
Oalneiville rallied for three rum
In the eighth te defeat Orlando In
the night game. Joe Valmai had
a ihutoul up to that point but wai
ruined by five hita including Billy
Knlght'i double and Phil Ba'i
triple.
The eighth Inning alio wai de­
ceive for Cocoa. The Indiana
cinched thing* then on Orlando
Gonzales’ ilngle, Jerry Hlne’i
triple and a throwing error. A
crowd of 464 law the fray.
Lennie Pecou led St. Pete to
victory over Weit Palm by driving
in five rum on two ilnglea and a
homer In three at ball. Loiing
pitcher Claude Raymond hit «
triple In the fourth with the ba»e»
loaded to account for three of Weit
Palm’i four runs.

in

K t r r t l l cl

Lakeland bunched all Ha icoring
In th# fifth Inning to defeat Banford, 4-3, before 658 Florida State
League fane latt night.
Hrrm Nelhaue opened the In­
ning with a double, Walt Anderaon reached flrat on a fielder a
choice, and winning pitcher J°*
fiayno alngled In Nelbaua. Jack
Ferrell followed with a double

Standings
and
Results
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llllwaukea at Ntw York (night) li. Cook lb
•-Hurl (I-T) V*. Uomtt (7-4).
Tarrall lb
Cli lcaeu a t i’ h llad alp h ia ( n i g h t ) Millar lb
Mar ital (1-7) va. Walinirlar (4 -7 ). Hrhmltl cf,
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IJAM lie TO D AY

Sports

.III

lUltlmora at Chlraao —IVIIaon
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By JACK HAND
The Aaaoclaled Prraa
Now that the Chicago While Sox
have teven ilraight vlctorlc* and
ere 1W gimei behind the New
York Yankcei It'i time to tip the
hat to Dick Donovan.
The 27-yeer-old “ rookie,’ * who
flunked 10 many early It-aU, leada
tho American League pitcher* In
winning percentage with a diluting
12-1 record
They used to call Donovan a
“ ipring training wonder." lie wa*
a hot (hot In Florida but a bust
In tha North. In the exhibition
gamei he wai a new phenom.
When the iraton opened he
couldn't get anybody out.
Timci have changed for the big
Irishman from Quincy Man. Ifo
ham't lost lince May 71 and owns
four ihutouti. Ilii latcit Job yciterday wai to nail down the icc­
ond game decision over Baltimore
In relief.
Tho combination of Chicago’!

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l A n g f o r d (4 -4 ). tl— U a r d n a r . K a t llaa. T —1:40. A—I I I .

double victory over Baltlmoro 3-2
and 5-4 end tho Yanks' third
•tralghl defeat (0 out of 13) by
Detroit 6-5 halved New York's
lend. At the Sox and Yanks meet
Tuesday night at Comiakry Park
in the opener of a thrcc-gamc
aeries, Chicago has a chance to
take over first place by Thuriday.
Cleveland and B o s t o n each
picked up half a game on New
York by splitting a pair.
Washington's Spec Shpa, mak­
ing his first start of the year,
came up with a three-hit ahutout
to beat Kansaa Clty'a Vie Raschi
40.
In the National, the Dodgera,
hurting for pitching with a flocY
of Injuries, dipped Into the minor
league stockpile to come up with
a pair of firit-tlme winners in
rookies Roger Craig and Don
.Montreal with a 10-2 r e e p r d,
curbed Cincinnati's sluggers vlUi
three hits 0-2. Bcssent, up from
St.Paul with as 3-5 mark, failed

to survive a rough ninth Inning
but he also won bis first big
league start S-5.
Milwaukee awept a double-head­
er from the New York Giants 3-7
on two homert by Joe Adcock and
one by Del Crandall. However,
they remained 12VA games behind
Brooklyn.
The old Pennsylvania Sunday
curfew messed up double-headers
in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh as
usual. The Phillies topped Chicago
12-11 In 10 Innings on Bobby Mor­
gan's sacrifice fly but the eecond
game wai suspended with Chicago
leading 5-4 in the sixth. They’ll
finish It tonight before their reg­
ularly ichcdulcd game.
Rip Rrpulakl hit two homers and
batted in four runa for SLLouls
In a &gt;-8 first-game victory over
Pittsburgh In 13 Innings. Luis
Arroyo, who lost to Lino Donoso
Saturday, was tha winner and
Donoao the loser, both in relief.
St.Louis led the eecond game 1-0

after 7Vi lnnlnga when eurfew
■truck.
Tha White Sox winning streak,
their longest of tho year, was kept
alive by Walt Dropo's 12th homo
run, breaking a 4-4 tie In the
eighth Inning of the second game.
Lefty Billy Pierce checked tho
Orioles with four hits In tho opener
on a two-run alngle by Nellie Fox.
Earl Torgeson stole borne with
the "big" run of tha Tigers
triumph over tho Yanks, dashing
In from third while Bob Turley
wound up In the 10th toning.
Torgy singled and rod* home on
Ray Boone’ s homer in the eighth
to pull Detroit up even with the
Yanks.
DALLAS, Tex.
0P&gt;—School
8upL W. T. White recommended
19 high school band Instructor*
begin work two weeks early next
fall so "our high school football
bands may be in condition to play
creditably et opening football

By GAYLE TALBOT
NEW YORK (At— It must be
grand to Hava the sublime trust
in humankind exhibited by offi­
cials of the U.S. Golf Assn, to the
letter they are mailing to the
boys and girls who plan to play
to their respective amateur cham
piomhlps this summer.
The recipients are asked to state
at onca whether they Intend to
turn professional within the next
year, ao that In the event they
do, their entries may be with
drawn from the women's event,
scheduled Aug. 22-27 at Charlotte,
N.C., and the men's, Sept. 12-17 at
Richmond.
In other words, the golf fathers,
headed by l i n e B. Grainger, pres­
ident, are getting good and tired
of never having a defending cham­
pion to add tone to their prise
amateur tournaments. They've had
only one in their past five men's
events and only two in the past
five women's events.
If you intend to become a pro­
fessional within the next year
please Inform us immediately so
that your entry may be with­
drawn," says the letter. "Your
help in upholding golf's standards
will bo most welcome."
Nothing could be more fair than
that, surely. Only thing is, we fear
that the .gentlemen In golf house
are due to suffer , a grava disap­
pointment. As a sporting proposi­
tion, we will bet them a reason­
able sum against an/ «ar|ica mia
iron In their historic collection that
they do not flush a alngle custom
er.
We do not mean at all to Imply
that there breathe* a dishonest
amateur golfer, man or woman.
What wo do mean Is that there
cannot bo at this time a player
who knowi that he or she will win
the amateur title and then turn
professional. Thera might be play­
ers at Charlotte and Richmond
who ar* thinking vaguely of turn­
ing pro next year If they win the
title, but they cannot "Intend" to
do both.
If that ain't clear, let us suggest
that the USGA letter Is not worded
to aay what it has In mind. Whal
It means to say is: "Do you prom­
ise, providing you win this tourna­
ment, to defend your champion­
ship next year?"- That Is a differ­
ent matter from trying to put
every entrant on his honor that he
toteiida "to continue to be an am­
ateur golfer," which Is what the
letter does §ay.

Mon* July 18* 1951

Award Taken Home
By, Detroit Golfer
INDIANAPOLIS (*—The James
D. Standlsh Jr. trophy was bark
home today for the first time slnotf
the Detroit donor persuaded the
U.S. Golf Assn, to establish a tour­
nament for public course players
33 years ago.
Sam D. Kociis, expediter end
personnel man in a Detroit factory
won the Public Links championship
Saturday from L. T. (Tommy)
Bean of Summerville, Ga., 2-up,
to 36 holes.
B e v . * completely relaxed, to­
bacco . chewing autn salesman^
trailed from the first green - but
his constant good humor and never
quit attitude cantured most of th*
non-paying gallery estimated at
1,500.
MIGHTY MAlTnAEI
1
STRUCK OUT
D E T R O I T UP)—The Detroit
Doard of Commerce sent this
cablegram overseas to Fred Matthaci, the Detroit
IndustrialistB
who failed in his bid to land tho
1060 Olympic* for the Motor City.
1060 Olympics for tho Motor Cityi"On what date may w# plan
civic reception, banquet com­
memorating your efforts, welcom­
ing you home?
Matthari's reply:
"Somewhere the aun Is shining,
somewhere heart* arc gay, butlliere's no Joy or bahquet In Mudvllle, for Ca»ey, mighty. C aicy #
ha* (truck out."
In four seasons of Rig Ten
baseball, Michigan State first
baseman Chuck Mathewa compllsd
a ..753 betting average.

15
LAST

TIME

TONIGHT

STARTS 7:10

"DOWN 3 DARK
STREETS”
•

BRODERICK
• RUTH
CRAWFORD
ROMAN
7:58 and 11:13
PLUS

"THE DIAMOND
WIZARD”
•

STARRING
DENNIS O’KEEFB ~T
9:40 ONLY

Tuesday — W ednesday
"BUD ABBOTT ft
LOU COSTELLO MEET •
THE MUMMY”
"AGAINST ALL FLAGS"
•

• ERROI, FLYNN
MAUREEN O’ HARA
NEWS — CARTOON

WEEK

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____

If It’s Worth Anythin*
It'* Worth Advertising 1b

CLASSIFIED ADS

_____

*•*.

"

'

W
A N T
—
—
m
tm
—
—
—m .
r-

8—REAL C T A T t BOB

Oder • Weller Home*, Inc.

General Contractile
• C onm em il—Cuitnm 4 Low
Colt Homu
ISM MeUravilla Are. Pbo*. 1M1

ABTWXgB r o i SALK

—I

• ku

A

D S
T H E S A N F O R D H E R A L D Mon

THE OLD HOME TOWN •««&gt;&lt;»«_ By STANLEY

RED-l-M DC C O N C R E T E
Miracle Concrete Co.
M Elm Ave.
Phase 1XB

ACROSS
1. A house
CL)
3. A brown-

c v rr g re cn

tree
! C. Bay u-indow
i x Rugged
mountain
c:*!t
13. Kind of
rock
14. Kettle
13. Hawaiian
food
f'
16 Radium 1V
(sym.t
17. Terish
from hunger
,75 Close to
72 Cereal grain
C3 Broad smllo
6L Country
tn Europe
r Man's
nickname
(poss )
BX. Sailors
1 slang)
t+ Court
•3 Incite
At. Pet n*me
for *n »unt ,
15 Prrteelure
(Chin.)
W- Typo
\
tne*surr*'
35 Win#
receptacle
Biasing
light
A brother of
I a religious
order
j
»ir. More secure
44 Wedding
bands
3V Female,
tin-ca

A IR C O N D ITIO N IN G
Room or House
HL
PO PE C O - I N C
Sasth Park Ave.

a.

Used furniture, appliances, tools,
etc. Bought-sold. Larry's Mart.
321 E lit is t SL Phone 1UL

n U X A APARTMENTS: rooma,
YOU don’t have to see the credit
Fer yew Real Estsu neees:
private bath*. U4 W. Pirat St
manager to save dollars legiti­
Cullen and Harkey, Real torn
mately on our GIGANTIC Ra1M N. Park Ave. Pkoee 2313.
ReDaway and B aby Bcda
mnva! SALE.
Bay, Week or month—TeL 1423.
ROBINSON MUSIC CO.
C
A
.
W
H
ID
D
O
N
,
SR.
Psrmlim ( M e
i l l Weal First
220 N. Orange Ave. Orlando, Fla.
Pk. i m
l i t S. Park
FIT FOB A QUEENFoam Rubber Mattresses. InnerO P E N H OU SE
S p r i n g Mattresses. Couches,
•00 Park 3—bedroom spacious home on nice
FURNISHED
Baby Beds, Renovating. Uphol­
corner lot situated near aehool
Ava.
stering and Slip Cover work.
and grocery. Horae Is open all
week for your Inspection. Sell­ NIX BEDDING MFG. COFurnished Kitchenette apU. Air
er will redecorate interior with 13*1 Sanford Ave.
Coedltkmed. Slumberland Court
Buyer’ s choice of colors. See
South City limit* Highway 17 92.
It at 1401 Sanford Ave. See us QUICK CASH for furniture, boats,
for details. Good terms availa­
motors. Buy one piece or com­
f Bedroom Home. V» Block from
ble. Exclusive.
plete home. Thousands of arti­
South*! da aehool. 0*11 2541.
cles for sale at tbe
Super Trading Post on 17-92
BEE Seminole Realty for Desir­
1 Mile South. Phone 2212-R
able Home* and Apts. Phone 27. W. DIETRICHS
T. W. MEMO
1101 Park Ave. Phone 2T or 145
FURNISHED Apt Phone 432-W.
Large Knotty Pine Hutch cup­
3 bedroom bouse. 4tt per cent
board, &gt;100. (new). Hollywood
mortgage. &gt;40 monthly. 1905
UNFURNISHED 4 Room House
Bed complete 545. (new), Maple
Summerlin.
with 2 Bedrooms. Phone 132&amp;-J.
wash stand 510 , Beautiful small
desk &gt;25.00. China cabinet &gt;23..
NEW 3 Bedroom concrete block
» Room A pt » 0 Avacado.
Rockers &gt;3 00 up. good used
home. Westinctfbuie Kitchen.
cribs, buggies a*ri play pen
GI financed. Low Down Pay­
FURNISHED 3 Bed/oom House.
THE CURIOSITY SHOP
ment Phone 430.
* Close In. l i t West 1st S t Phone
17-92 South
•14.
______________ CHOICE BUILDING LOT -C o r ­
ner Maple Ave. and 20th St. 34* Studio Piano — small UprighL
a Room Apartment Completely
x 134*. Inquire 413 Maple Ave.
Finish and condition like new.
-furnished. 313 Palmetto Ave.
after 5 p. m.
Price &gt;163 00 Phone 1725-R.
FURNISHED Cottage. One Bed- LAKE MARY —3 Bedroom house. WALNUT DESK - with Oak
ream. Extra nice. 114 Elm Ave.
20 x 30 porch, a Car Garage.
drawers. Good condition. 102 W.
312.000. Phene J. W. Dodson,
20th St.
1 Rooms and Bath* 113 Elm.
1723.
fheae 2M3-W.
Two wheel Utility Trailer. Phone
3 Bedroom FRAME House. 3 Lota
2223-R or 2223-fa.
with 35 budded
buddtd orange trees.
t BEDROOM furnished Garage
Completely furnished. P h o n e
Apartment 2300 Mellonvllle.
B t f f t r l y A pptU aec CcaiUr
"Your Weatinghouse D u ler"
BEAUTIFUL I Bedroom furn­
BE OPEN
ished A pt Call 855-M.________ NEW THREE BEDROOM -L a k e Monday WILL
Evenings from A til* 9
front home, u n f u r n i s h e d
m. Refreshments! Knives for
or better trailer living see
318,000.00 Total. Large mort­
e Ladles! Balloons for the
Sanlando Trailer Park. 4 Star*.
gage. Leaving country, soon.
KiddiesAH modern. • mi. south on 17-82
Inspection invited. J. J. ataner,
COME ONE! COME ALL!
Highway at Standard Station.
Altamonte. House on Prairie
A s m lift
Nice shsdy graiiy lo lr.-e »m «t —Lake, South,, dirtcQjr opposite U3 Mi f o Ui Ave.
patios. Fine shuffleboards. Retheater.
Friiidaire refrigerator A Hard­
ration room. Immaculate tiled
wick Gas Range. Excellent Con­
ow es.
"Really cloan for BEAUTIFUL N e w Ranch-type
dition. Reasonable. 2AJ6-X- S.
house In choice spot on norihks who care,". Adults.
Elm.
fra ahoxa of of Lake Monro*
OARAGE APT- for couple. 203tt
for aale or possibly lor rent to
AKTMXMK WANTED - *
ETlIth St. Phone 223-J.______
responsible people. Contact Mrs. 3—
D C. Van Winkle, associate Highest CASH. TRADE-IN prices
NICE Bedroom, Private entrance
Floyd Maxwell, Realtor. 320 N.
paid fer wed furniture Call 653.
agd bath. Phone 2028-W,
filvd.. Deland. Tel. 1116.
Wilson-Malar Furniture Co. 311
E. 1st SL
dPARTMENTS — Furnished 2101 3 Bedroom concrete block home.
“*----*— One bedroom
Magnolia Ave.
Lot 123 x 75, by wooer. 33800. T—
—7
I 440 00 monthly. Two bedroom
^ e B s r jT jJ p h e n e a ^ M ^ ^ ^ ^
_____ monthly. Phone 1673,
!• MOO
A.PERFECT COMBINATION for
Egbert A. Williams._________
your dog . . . . PURINA DOG
CHOW iCIBBLED—MEAL. This
FURNISHED APT. Quiet, Shady
wholesome food combines kib­
for refined couple. 1304 W. 3rd
bled biscuit for palatablllty
SL
with maal for full nutrition
Builds vigor, stamina and toj
3 Bedroom furnished Garage
condition. Dogs lev* it. Gal
Apartment. 113H W. 18th SL Bag. 13.85 14x34 or 18x34
PURINA DOG CHOW hare.
Bevel Plate Glass
Cali 333-W after 5:30.
Bimpnon Farm Supply
Mirrors ...................... 10.50
Rag. 14 85 Double Door
114 w 2nd SL
Phone 1453
RlFELY furnished cottage. Free
Metal utility Cabinet 13.30
ae MKJf WANTED
- 1*
electricity and water. By month Reg. 24.95 54** Metal
or year ’round. R. J. Carrol,
Wal&lt; Cabinet . . . . . . . . 14JO SEWING MACHINE OPERATORS
Five Points Motel. A miles south Reg. 29.9$ Platform Rockers 19J0
—loth Exparleoced and Learn­
06 17-82. Phone I31-R-4D., after Reg. 49.50
Bex
49.80 Berkline
“ Ballat"
ers. Expemgttd preferred but
4 p. m. or week-ends.
Swtv ’ Chairs
Swivel
38JO
lesrntri will be trained In free
Rag. 98.50
88 50 Contour Chairs
vocational school. 40 Hour week,
EVERYTHING New) 3 Bedroom
with Nylon Cover and
pleasant
working conditions. In
Houst 2 Miles City Limits.
Foam Latex Filling
oa.so
modern pUnL Paid Vacation
Shady lawn. Raferenc* desired
and holiday, Free hospitaliza­
_ P |one 146-J _______________
tion insurance. Ajpply Brook­
343-84
E.
1*4
SL
127
3WANTED TO KENT
-I
field Mills, 206 N Elm. Sanford.

*V F

Seminole Realty

6

{

2

- 55353388 5
50th Anniversary
SPECIALS

Mather of Sanford

_____Unfurnished House
levy Couple with two ehild* atioc convenient to
Will sign long
calf 1473-W
number.

VENETIAN BUNDS

(Nationally Adv. • RoUa-Head)
Manufactured In 4 sated
V m tU m
Warn * « t L

M M

Oa

OCEAN FRONT A u i i

p a m M ULt
U REAL R ST A fl

lo w sll

tlonl

Qmltop Mattress A Box Spring,
Rag. 138.00.. Leaa -Trad# ttOOO
Guarantaed 10 Year*.
Royal Comfort Matfreaa A Box
jg IU9 oo -L a ss Trad* —
00. Guaranteed JO Yaara.
PB Spa

fC

Wn H T I

tsn n srtsrM

m. o s m

— FteM 1X88
■man and Florida

14-

gPICCiAL M M flC K

—14 1 4 -

BPKCUL R K R Y im

14- 2 5 - LAUNDRY BERWICK

CARPENTER WORK -REPAIRS • One
Wes* end Damp
• Csbmets Made To Ordv
Dry
Phone 1867-W —J E Robinson 6 One boor H
Wash and Dry
Fold
BULLDOZER Service — Land
w j wht i r r.m
cleannr and grading. Large • Finished Laundry
new Dorcr
free estimates. • Samtone Dry Oeanleg
1007 Seated Ave.
Phone 1*21
Bouthjdde
Laoadnmaat
Perry D. Gillyard, Ph. 213S-W.
8 Me Fewlmarl RIAL
184 fUM 2543 SL
ORLANDO Moratag SeattneL Or­ 14-R—
INSURANCE
—14-1
lando Evening Star. Call Ralph
Ray. 11334.
n FlAlbO 8RRVICR
-ST
USED PLUMBING

U

FIXTURES

l

FH A
F b u n e la c
Fer Remodeling and repair*.
------Down—Small Monthly
Payment*
C on crete Co.
Oat Wed 12th
Phene 2418

PLUMBING
Centract and renvir work. Free
estimates. R. L. Harvey. KM
Sanford Ave. Phene 1133.

”

Rate* to
Policyholder*
John wnUama Im .
417
34

\-O u G ”*TC fa Tl a : - ’

L

C !

’ .CE

r cl \&gt;

A 3-line ad, such as the Me above
la only 34c per day on our low 5
day earned rate economy plan. 45c
p r day (or a days end 54c t e

P. M. CAMPBELL

17- AirTOROaiLKS - TWABMEH
General Ceetracter
“ Homes of Distinction”
E-Way 17-81
PhaM 1441 It will pay YOU U i m US befnre
you buy. Open Eveniaga and
Sundays.
For Better Plum ing
EastsIde Trailer Sales,
See or Call
Palatka, Fla.
W. J. KIN G
« Sooth Park PhaM 14
CARS
BOUGHT SOLD TRADED
Dragline service, Lot errouts A
Key i r r i ’a Ui m Car*
ditching. Estimates given. Phone
Seated Ave. A 11th SL
Genev# 2464. Orlando 52504.
Sanford 2221.
BARGAIN! 36 Ft. Trailer. 2 bedrooms, cabana, dolly, fenced
It’s So Enay
Days, call 1920 rxt. 250. ask for
To Plgcs A Want Ad
W. M Foster. Evenings call 2105
fuit Call 1821 and ask for for Information. Easy terms.

th* Want Ad department
Sanford Herald

FLOOR sanding and finishing.
Cleaning, waxing. Serving Semi
Dole County since 1825. H. M
Gleason. Lake Mary.
LAWNMOWERS a n a r p e n e d
Bicycle A General Repair

Stanley's

Bike Shop

310 E. 4th SL TeL 3434
ENVELOPES, letterheads, state­
ments. invoices, band bills, and
p r o g r a m s , etc. Progressive
Printing Co., Phone 404 — 403
West libs SL

13-

How will you away*
How will vou Trade?
Your old Motor for •
Better grade — F.VINRUDE!

ROBSON

Sporting

Buy, Sell, Rent. (lire with want
ads. the busiest salesman In
town. Put one to work (or you
Phone 1*21. W* will bo glao to
charge 1L
Tbe ahov* 4-llne ad fan bo ran
5 full day* for only 12 40, 3 days
fer only 11.60 and one day t e T2r
■AMPLE 3 LINK AD
GET e r r s cash t e artlelae you
no looaer use. Place your ad to­
day. Phone 1*21.

For only &gt;3 on the above 5-line ad
la on u&gt;« Job tor you or 5 full
days.
Only 42.25 keeps It working
—II
for you tor 2 days. 1 day la only
80e.

KOATt . MOTORR

Good*

Evtarude Sales A Service

A Uttle spate like this wfD get
your message before our more
than in.000 readers. Tall 'em to
day I Pnona 1831.

w r.

The Want Ad Department Is
m - n m im u R R - r m a oewdam open from 1:30 a. m. until 5:30 p.
m. each business day except SatBuy your Furniture at Berry's ordsy afternoon. Deadline for
warehouse Turn.. Co., at 801 W. week-day Insertions is 2:00 p. m.
1st. St. All nationally adv. fur­ the day preceding publication.
Any aos coming In lstar than
niture at warehouse prices.
1.00 e. m. will be published under
&gt;2—KLE4NTICAL UTRVICKn—a Too Lat* To Classify.
Advertiser* are requested to no­
FRIGIDAIRE aMPaeeea. isle* tify the Want-Ad Department lm
and service. O. R High, Oviedo. mediately of any error* In theli
Fla. PhaM 4131 ar ~ *
ads, as The Sanford Herald will be
1343-W after 4 p m.
responsible tor only one incorrect
« ^ S y 5
ROU8PWRWT —a Insertion.

MAN — Not over 40 for perms
n*nt work. Apply 4-5_p. m. at FLOOR SANDWO a Finishing;
Oak floors furnished, laid A fin­
the Pur»^ |&amp;).. 804 W. 6th I
M
ished. la business Since 1830.
19A KELP WANTED (Female) 19A
E. V. Stevena; Route 2, Bex 227;
Call 716-B-4 bate* 7 a. a . or
LOCAL BUSINESS need* .
after 4 p. m.
Secretary. Business and _
experience desired. Must
RANDALL ELECTRIC CO.
Pleasant, Courteous and Intelli- Electrical Contracting and Reptlra HAYNES OBaa ReeRtee Oa,
geaL Excellent salary for right
TV SERVICE CENTER
lend)* and Croslay Appliances
112 Magnolia Ave.
Ph 11.1
nil! be treated confidential.
24— RKAUTT PARLORS -1 4
■bteg.
Rrevxy
Heatteg
IN LOCAL STORE - Typln
some Bookkeeping and wait u ,
M. G. H ODGES
For Lovelier Hair
Rada. None but those Interested
.S ^ o n ^ W .U r ^ m p e In anything but a permanent
GET PROFESSIONAL CARE I
Job need apply. State age and
Paate Road t e a Tbe
Era-Bans Beauty Shop
experience, If any. Enclose re­
Phaaa 541
cent photo and expectant start*
lag RAg*. Our employ*** know
Modem Air-Coed! tinoed Salon
Specialist In Personality Shaping,
O 1 d i- 1 m &lt;j l u m b e r
Styling and Waving. Cosmetics
for your skin cars. Gyro-Late
Stump
You?
method of reducini
HIGH SCHOOL BOY with Power
HARRIETTS
Mower waste mowing. Phone
TX4-M-4.
BEAUTY NOOK
Harnett. Ruth. D*wn
YARD work by white man. 13 Coma In ta d lat’a talk m ar Open g:to a. m. also Wad. p. a .
year* experience. 4 years In nurIll la. Oak Avo. Phaaa ‘ •71
aerv huiineas. W C. Wilburn.
your neada. IVhather it’s
3422 Willow Ave. Phone 2465-M.
TP TOOK AD W I U IN m
whit* pin* fo r bookshelves
WOULD ATTRACT
JR. HIGH school boy with pow- or /igneliag for that extra
ATTEJCTIOM AS
v mower wants mowing. Phana

PANELING
i»

WocdA'

“ r ip * Cm.

SSStV H f ^

FOR SALS -

Complete •

room, wall h d p you figur*
th* materials so there's no
waste. If you'd Ilka to look
ovar literstura or plana,
call 88 and lat us know.

3 Bedroom Home In IVynnawood. 2 Years Old.
This hom* hgj» Oak Floors,
Ceramic Til* Bath, Dining
Area, Large Living Room
and Kitchen Equipped with
G. E. Appliance*.
TtUohonr 111 after 4 P. M.
for eppelntsssiit to mo this
home.

M H

H ILL LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY CO .
SU W at M

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E ' S l l 4; Alhert
Summer T h e i t r .
10:00 j: » q p i r h i m
t«:l» .I n
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Lov* Of UN

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Bob. Q Lewie

Hom eperiy
Big P i y o t t
,eb Cro ih r
tighter D i r
^ecret S te rn
On Tour Account
Open Houae

im.HMHIO

11 80 Jack Parr

i
L t r d OJ Oura
Stovie Iti tm ae
1:00 Hi( S avof f
I 10 Carry Stoere Show
S 4S
Viewer* DlgoeS:00 Brighter O jv
S ta Secret Storm
1.10 On Your Aocousr

IS 10
11 IS

R a d io

8: 00

eeereh fer T T e w
Ouldlex Light
Kitchen Show
A fT M O O n a
IS SO OTetc. T'oere.

l.eo
1:10
oo
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100

lo to

Sign Off

T triO iT
N O R S IS r,
« SO T » tt P*t»»rn-o
r.oo Morr.lnr Show
a oo Shnppora O uld.
Silt Now i
f .40 A rt h u r. O ed froy
le-so Strike It Rich

21:0*
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4:00
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« 41
T 00

atTan—iShroian
tdno KILOCYCLES
MOVDAY
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Th* Bh yth n Hour
World *'. Six

E irm n

Twilight fan g*
Sport* Soak

.

v

ifuiira! P m

Drifting On A Cloud
e v e n i n g 11 ilia
.
For Xlualo
0 00 Night Edition
o 11 I N Starss SO It'a Dar.retlma
10 10
At H o n * With Xluele
18 SI New*
7 I!

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11:8,0
11 C« H ^ v r ^ r ™ ' T*
Tt r a n a r

a to n o ix o

*

Sign On
a m Laymao t Call T e P r a y * .
• :CI Damn Breaker*
■ D I D T V CU SX X E L •
8:10 New*
MnXDAY
ass Wei- ern Jamboree
arT cssons
New*
1:00 Adventure with Crete Walt 1:11
TOO Seven O'clock Club
4:10 Bamar Of the Jungle
T i l New a
« 0* Ke we-Weather-Sp'
I ae P » rt* At A Olaaea
2:11 Jehn Dely ,S'e*e
*:0t
Jockey** Ohete*
ISO Drew Peareee
1:10
Morning Devntlena
Sits Siueical Variettea
Sill Sta
“ er rin g Metodlan
T:e» Ducat Shew
» : 8»
We
'arid At Nine
T:ll Amee Brothere
S 11 Mu
uale Par Ladlag
t:|# V oic e c t Fireetone
1.10
.
ymn Tim*
Hy
s e e Thea# Whiting Otrte
8 41 Far Ladle* Only
S I S Ethel 4, Albert
10. 00
1480 Club
«:«* Damen B u ty e n Theatre
18 10 New*
Ford Theatre
1» II l i t * Clue
!0&gt;OO Stake The Cornnecttaa
11:10 __Bepeat Performance
e : l t Art Davie
1S:0« World At Noon
1:80 K e w e .W e * lh e r-8pertg
AFTERNOON
Ills
16:13 Badtn Perm Digeal
Sign
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11.18 Tueaday Matin**
110 New*
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hu h li c u a a a u
weight
animal
m aud nu
for gems . . IS. Boisijn y a a u u u a u
2 Wherr bull.,' t t,r Mj
fights are -• 6 rusvJT^
held
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3. Habitual
19'
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**.•»» drunkard f.
4 Man s
21 Epoch ‘ .j 33 Semblinee
nickname
Ci Eo,lles of •)r3(. Organs
3. Tolerable
es siitants i * ' : r o f
6 Location of
25 Food
' hearing ?w
a National
26 Part of
37. Pure
Cemetery
‘ to be”
vSV " ■n't
1
T. Narrow
27. Coin (Fr.) ^
simple
inlet (geol) 29 Part of
4F 46 Constel.
8 . Alight from
"to be”
Ution
a railroad
32 Extinct
41. Back
tram (Brit )
Indian of (he 42. Vein
9 Crowns
Bahamas
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Television
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T
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BARGAIN!

DOWN

1 Unit of

42 An indefinite IS Sum up
Arnoss
quantity
18 A
1. Baby's
41 Not bad
scolding
bedstead
(hy­
8 Diminutive 44. Observes
DOWN
phenof ''Cheater”
1. Alrlnn
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9 Circle of
cottage
13 Some
light
20. The
2. Sloping
19 Narrow
roadway
moon
rnadu-ay
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3. River
11 Strest
22 Rive
(Asia)
urchin
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A Japanese
23 Part of
12. Unit of
36 City
•to be”
holidey
capacity
(Alaska)
8 Embrace
26 A spsroid
I Egypt i
38. Now
(ood llth
6 Struck with
14 Lofty
(dial.
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27. Ventilating
a harpoon
mountain
variant)'
28 Metal
7. Finish
15. Viper
S3. Besst of
8 Eees*'*e
29 Topics
16. Toward
burden .,
30. Couch
11. Herds of
17. Personal
40 Sps'vn V
whales
32 Melted
pronoun
of fish 7
13. Foreman
together
II Immature
frog*
T T to 7 o
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21. A tress
of hair
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23. Belonging
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26. Sub­
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37. Make* a
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39. Fragrance
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W A N T AD
RATES

n m j Ra

11. Gains
knowl
edge
13 Cher. '

DAI L Y C R O S S W O R D

L
Rill—Planet Technician
Phone JIM. Rout. 1. Sanford

K35i

Bl d ^ at
1 egarmasa

46 Wind
Instrument

ehilccdony
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ROSA L. PAYTON
Paint .......................... 52.50 gal.
(Reg. Real Eitate Broker)
AH sires tarpoullns.
Annibell* Hendtrien. Associate
ARMY-NAVY SURPLUS
New Location — Hlgnway 17-92
310 Sanford Ave.
Phone 1321
at Hiawatha. Phone 2871.

RAYMOND M. BALL. BR01____
S. D. Huftleymaa. Aisociate
O M. Harrison, Associate
304 Soutn Park Ave.
Phone ‘

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Out West 13th SL
Phone 2439
Living room. Dining. Sun room.
Large modern kitchen . with
Stove and Refrigerator. Cera­
mic Tile Bath. Large eloieta.
On 3 lota with shade treat.
114,500

July 1*. 1955

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3. Marble Terrazzo Tile Floors
4. Beautiful Natural Finish Kitchen Cabinets
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5. Kitchen Exhaust Fan
6. Fully Landscaped Yards
7. Hotpolnt Stove and Refrigerator

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Weather

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d ear to partlv etocd? through
Wednesday with antlered after
noon thundershowers; Mattered
morning shower* southeast.

+

TUESDAY JULY 19. 1955

No. 135

Associated Press le a se d W ire

Co.tco.iisCommission Okays
Lerce y enfatjve Budget
Silence

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SID RICHARD LOOKS ON aa helper* alert to work on the well at 7:30 this morning. The safer will
Hew upward »o that it can he controlled. It will take at lecal two day* to fill the artificial lake In
Fort MoHon Park. (Photo by Jameaon)

Suspicion Aids
Lengthy Efforts
To Find Teller
CLEVELAND UP) — A wom­
an'a suspicion provided tha tip
which last night enabled the FBI
to cut abort a months-long effort
to find a young bank teller aeeuitd of embeasling 181.760 from
a Staten Itland, N. Y., bank lait
SapL 26.
The woman had aeen a picture
at the tellsr's wife ia a New York
newspaper, and last Saturday aha
feoughht ana saw her bring a pale
of men's trousera into a dry
tleaning shop in neighboring Lo­
rain County. She was right.
As a result, FBI agent* last
Bight arrested John C. Sterner, 24,
and his wife Henrietta,' 26, in
■out*. Amherst (pop. 1,000), 35
miles west of hare,
i The Bleatera ware lirins there

Dissolving Of Groups
Into One Is Suggested
Memo Submitted To Commissioners;
Resignation Of Johnson Revealed

Segni Presses Vole
For Confidence
Of Italian Senate
ROME UP)—Premier Antonio
Segni pimped today for a vote of
confidence from the Senate after
getting a 2D3-2G6 approval from
the Chamber of Deputies for his
coalition government.
Tha vote in tha Chamber last
eight, T above tha required ma­
jority of 280, wae Segul's first
parliamentary " lest. " The new
Premier, a left-of-ccnter Christian
Democrat and advocate of social
reform, formed
his coalition
July 0.
Hit support came from ths
Christian Democrats, the allied
Social Democrat*, Liberals and
Republicans.
Asking approval of hi* govern­
ment last week, Sognl told the
Chamber the political and econom­
ic unification of Europe “ remain*
an absolute necessity.”
"Our entire foreign policy," he
Said, “ remain* based on our ab­
solute support of Western Euro­
pean unity, and our corM tued loy­
alty to tha Atlantic P . '• as an in­
strument of defense."

Last month a 1955 memo was
'submitted to the City Commis­
sion from the City Manager's
office informing the commission
of F. H. Johnson's resignation, to
go into effect October I, 1955 He
is superintendent of the City Wa­
ter Department.
Parts of the memo stated, “ sug­
gestion was made to combine the
water and sewer departments into
a Utility Department under a new
Individual with engineering back­
ground and experience In water
and seurr work. It-Is helieved
that this perron should he 45 or
joungcr so that the city may have
his service over a period of year*.
The memo furthrr suggested
a department of Public Works
"This would combine .the streets,
refuse, shop, parka, swimming
pool, zoo, cemetery, maintenance,
engineering and street lights de­
partments Into one department
This would provide for esse, co­
ordination, and planning of work
and the utilization of personnel,
equipment and material," It was
staled.
“ If such a reorganization is
felt advisable the City Commis.
slon shall instruct the City at­
torney to prepare an ordinance
abolishing the above named de­
partment and Treating a utility
department and a public works
department. It is further sugges­
ted that the appointment of these
two department heads be left to
the City Manager but subject to
approval of the City Comission.’ ’
It went on to ssy thst "the City
Manager be instructed and pre­
sented a plan of the Internal or­
ganization of the two departments
to the 'City Commission for Its
approval, but not pirt of the
ordinance."
The memo ended with, “ the
City Commission la urged to un­
dertake this reorganization plan."

CARSON CITY, Nev. (JP-An
occasional catcall pierced the des­
ert silence throughout the night at
the Nevada State Prison as some*
223 convicts stubbornly carried on
a sitdown strike in the flood­
lighted prison yard.
The prisoners—less 136 trusties—
started their rebellion at 3:40 p.m.
yesterday when they began milling,
about the open yard' Instead of
lining up for dinner ai it custo­
mary.
They demanded an Interview
with Gov. Charles Russell and declsred they would not return to
their cell blocks until they talked
with him
Among the inmate* demands
were "more variety in food. . .dis­
charge of a prison doctor and cap­
tain of the guard . .twice yearly
personal appearances before the
State Parole Board . more work
for Inmates. . no reprisals be­
cause of the rebellion . . . lower
prices at the prison commissary"
"I'm not promising anything.
Most of the grievances are un­
founded," Warden Art Bernard
said.

Vaccine Provision
For Many Children
Is Voted By Senate
NEW YORK ( f t - The fenite
has voted to provide free Salk
polio vaccina for millions of chil­
dren under JO and expectant
molhert.
The next move Is up to the
House, whose Commerce Commit­
tee last week approved a some­
what different free vaccine bill.
Senate action yesterday came on
a voice vote. The only audible “ no"
vote waa cast by Sen. Morse (DOre). He objected that the megaure “ only scratches the surface*'
During debate Sen. Welker (RIdaho) look the Public Health
Service lo task for what he said
was a failure to aet against the
Cutter Laboratories of Berkeley,
Calif. Welker said Cutter vaccine
Is “ directly" responsible for 118
polio cases In Idaho, four of them
fatal.
Cutter officials have said in the
past they prepared the vaccine
according to “ rigid safety tests
exactly aa laid down by a com­
mittee of polio experts." They
have said they have furnished full
information to the government and
the ultimate determination must
come from tha government offlcials. No formal report has been
Both Morse and Welker charged
federal health officials with “ cover,
ups" in the vseeine program, but
the Idaho senator was not in the
chamber Ahen the vote waa Liken.

iHerndon
Commends
County
Bid Is Accepted
For Two Trucks

TIIK CITY'S LAST srw.-r contend
Second and Myrtle. Thin i* rnnlinct N
|60,00rt jolt. (Photo liy Jameson)

hole on
hardline

House To Be Asked Anierican Legion Post No. 53
To Sneed up Action Vofes To Up MembershiP Dues
On Controversy Senators Keeping
Fainl Hopes Alive
For Bill's Survival
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T The
h a AAmerican
m a p i r i a f pLegion
p i n n Pneft
Post No.
33 met last night for regular meet­
ing in the Legion Hill with Com­
mander (irorgs Maybury presid­
ing.
Alter the usual buxlneas the
post
had fnoniinriHjgiitin
recommendation »n
of the
n nsu
mr
maijoritx of the expeutira committec5 thi) the due* of tn« M ' b e '
Ised three to
raised
tn five
m e ‘ dollars j
year. This hax hern a controler«ial subject for several years and
action is Just now being takrn, it
was slated.
Last night at the meeting when
Die vote of the post wax taken
it was unanimous. Dues lor 1956
are payable now. Five dollars ia
the new rate.
Also (here were two major com­
mittee appointments made. The
first; marie up of J. I). Cordell,
.1. Q (Slim) Galloway and It. 7..
Johnson, will be a committee to
have charge of the floor of the
new fair building. Aa of now the
floor is not suitable for dancing or
extra activities and Ihe commit­
tee will see about having the
floor finished.
The second committee, having
R. Z. Johnson, W. C. Hires, Jim
Singletary, Karlyle Housholder
and Gordon Frederick on it, was
formed lo *0 ordinate the social
arlivities of the post 10 that It
will be more interesting for the
members and their families.
Guy Stafford, an old member
of the post who “ held it together
durirg World War I," was a visi­
tor. Hr Is now a member of Foil
33 m rensaeola.

TALLAHASSEE ID-The House
will he asksd today In spied action
oix the rarpportinnmcnt question
were their three children, aged 4,
byruttifry down recce* rime, end
6, and 1, Utey had been there
ing vote pairing and withholding j
elnce November, and Slemer was
the expense allowances of mem-1
working off and on eelling reel
WASHINGTON ijr - A
Demobrrs absent more than one day
Batata.
rralie-sponsorrd hill In broaden
tn a row.
H. O. Hawkins, Cleveland FBI
Both House and S»nate return social security benefits for women
chief, said 620,000 was found in a
tn work at 4 p. in. after an ex­ and disabled workers appeared to­
suitcase tucked away over eome
day to have run its course for
tended weekend recess.
rafters in the house. Previously at
when it passed the
Tim House will have lirfore it this K it
Blaster's home In New York, po­
its trio of speed-up resolutions plus House yesterday.
lice had recovered 66,500.
However, key senators were re­
a pending amendment to .1 reap­
portionment bill which would have luctant to pronounce dead for this
the effect of making the measure session a measure with obvious
virtually the same ax the one vr- political appeal. .
The House pushed Iho measure
loed by Gov. Collins lad week.
The Senate has nothing before it through yesterday 372-31 with only
unless it derides tn take final ac­ 8 Democrats and 23 Republicans
tion on a House reapporlionment voting “ no".
The bill would lower from 65 to
bill which has been dangling for
MIAMI, Fla. (At—A Miami eonsome day* now. The House meas­ 62 the age at which women may
pic with six children and another
ure, which was passed before all get social security benefits and
am the way were looking for an
attention became focused on the permit payments to disabled work­
apartment or h o u a e today—a*
bill which wound up with a veto, ers after age 50 instead of at 65
would give a senator each to Bay.
The increased benefits for wom­
They aaid they had tried 161
Monroe,' Manatee and Sarasota en and the disabled, estimated to
times to rent a place aiaee they
counties.
amount to about fioo million dol­
moved here from a t Louis la Jan­
lars in the first year, would be fiuary.
, •. •
a
nanced by adding 4 per rent earh
"You know these Ada in the
MOSCOW UP)— Twelve Amerf
to the payroll tax paid by the em­
paper Rut say children are web oan farmers heeded for the Soviet
Word has recently been received
ployer and employe.
eomoT” Robert AQen aaid. “ That’s hinterlands today to see how Rus­
in Sanford of tha death of T. D.
aksy eatU they see those six kids sia's farmers do it
Singletary, 66, oe July 8 In AtV* FIREMEN INJURED
The Sanford Civil Service Board
af ears, with another ea the way.
Ths visiting American farm da
lanta, Ga., where he made hit has railed an election to he held
ATLANTA CD — Fifty firemen
That kills It"
legation left last night on a 30homa.
In Cily Hall Thursday from 3:30 were injured yesterday in a fire
Alloa, 64. working aa a R H - day tour of the Ukraine, Central
’ HJs survivors Inelude Mrs. Mae U» 4:30 p.m. to elect, tu-o members that heavily damaged an envelope
weak typewriter repairman, has Asia and previously virgin* land*
Paekard, sister; Mrs. C. H. Moss, who will sarv* at reprssenlativcs manufacturing firm.
I hi* family lata throe email af Siberia now being cultivated.
nftet: Richard Paekard, nephew, for ths employes.
The firemen arrived at Grady
lered itaH N i by hie Tha Americans got their first
and Mrs. O. L. Parkburit, niece,
All permanent Civil Service Hospital tn drove* — six hours
hat the hoMtegs have b*
B -—i— soil in their shoes yeeter•11 of Sanford.
employes are requeued to vote. after tho four-alarm fire at the
day in a visit to Looch, a col­
A former resident of this city, There will'also l&gt;« a Civil Ser­ plant of the Jiistrife Envelope
A1 eight AOnt appeared before lective farm 20 miles west of
CORAL GABLES, ria. (ft—Mrs.
(he Miami Coswtemnatioe Board of Moscow.
Martha Blumenbach sipped a glass hs was burled ia Montgomery, vice mretlng Friday at 8 p.m. in Mfg Co. had been brought under
control.
ths City Hall.
r, sad wee a threeThey reported tha livestock of milk last night to and a three- Ala., on July 10,
delay ia teariM dowa tha looked fine but ths expenditure of day hunger strike the started in
SPOKANE, Wash. &lt; * -The story
labor would shock fanners et protest against ths military draft
of a near-tragedy involving a rud­
iawi.
derless B36 with 29 mrn aboard
The number of women at work
"M l have to take it easy on food
wax disclosed by Ihe Air Force
startled them too.
at tha beginning," she said, " but I
The first meeting of the San­ turs sreompiithed, vlx:—the selee-! the fact that.the bill for the con- yesterday.
“ We saw as many as 30 peopla hope to regain my health and my ford Rotary Club undar the ad tlon of s 37 msn committee to mlidstion of the tax agencies and
The bomber hut a big i*rtion of
in a hay field," Charles J. Haarst, strength aoon."
ministration of William Bush Jr, rsvii* the antiquated constitution the milk hill revixion failed to its tall as It headed for Denver
Chutes K. UtetoiM, aua*» ad af Cedar Falls, lows, reported. "U
She agreed to atart eating again for the year 1966-56 was high' and report harg to the 1967 leg­ pn»», he related, Tha coneolida- last week In fly over dedication
Mm fbodaart which was gabbed hack boose ia Iowa wo had three after her husband Earl railed in lighted by the appearance of the islature. He quoted many conflict- ;
tlon of the varioua tax collection rerrmonles at the new Air Force
Sunday eight, anatmirtd today
l* Working the earns hey field several frienda who talked with Seminole County Legislative De­ ing and Incunsiitrnt items and agrnriea would cave, it was ex- Academy. Tho plane was about 30
(hat MW (award ia bring offered
would bo a lot."
her.
legation at the Yacht Club ye£ stated there were over 200 gram­ timatrd, belwrrn two and a half mile* from Denver at the time,
ter definite taferauttoa leading to
She started the hunger strike at terday, although Bush was away matical error* In the pre»rni doc- and five million dollars. He did. and lot* of the 32-font-high rudder
the arrest and ceavkftea af any
3:30 p m. Friday after her dentist on s vacation, Past-presidsnt ument. He pointed with pride to us he called it, "A Drew Pearnon" section left the craft without ef
all parsons Involved la the rabbet
son Dr. Thomas Blumenbach, :
Georgs Touhy presided and after the fact that no new- general and predicted a tax Inrreasa in fective controls, tha Air Fores
Tbs terideat was discovered yes­
entered the U. 8. Public Health ths introduction of one visiting taxes were impoxed and regret­ 1957 either In the sale* tax or in said.
terday morning after tbs latraders
Service at Savannah, Ga.
Rotarian, Mort McDonald Jr., of ted that the ronxolldation hill to *ome other manner. He deplored
It made an emergency landing
pped a hois to tbs reef sad car­
The roreet appointment of the
He aaid ha volunteered when hla DeLand, and tho singing of a few eliminate duplicate taxing agen. the appiopiletinn of hundred* of with the help of ths aileron ran
away ths sate which wss later Sanford Motor Track Co., 1401 draft board told him ha would have songs led by Charlie Morrison elee failed tn pais as did the milk thoutandx of dollar* for county
trots on Its wings and a sister
BL A reported total af WJ66 Fiaaib Are, as tscluslvo dealer to eerve In the armed forces. Duty with Francis K. Roumillat Jr., at bill revision.
fair* and for hog cholera serum bomber that flew up alongside to
to rads aad checks was aaid to ha for fiaaferd and Seminole Coun­ with the Public Health Servlca is tho piano, tho mooting w u turn
Rep. Cleveland spoke briefly but not any increaie in the ap­ accompany It to Ellsworth AFB,
ty o f tha well known line of CMC considered equivalent to time in ed over to William C. Hutchison and added to the Senator's re­ propriation for mentally handi­ S. D„ for a safe landing. Tha lost
Tracks, was announced by the the armed forcei.
Jr., general program chairman for marks by stating that he thought capped ehildrnti.
rudder was found on the ground
GMO Truck aad Coach Division
ths year who Introduced in this two outstanding contributions
Roth he and his rolleagus, Rep. near Umon, Colo.
of flanstal Motors Corporation.
M I U M f MOO
KERFS FALSE TEETH
ordsr, Hon. Douglas Stenstrom, were ths abolithment of proxies Cleveland expressed dltpleaxure
p i t t a s m M Abate six warite
Deals! Lopes, tha owner end * DALLAS UP) - R. B. Hamilton Senator of tho 67th district; Hon. and the organization of commit­ with tha method of submitting
ACTRESS'S CONDITION
age Mrs. Mania Lyons
general teenager of ths lec«l or. (bund one of th« windows of hla Mack Clovetand Jr. aad linn. Voile tee meeting* with prartlcatly no vouchers on the date of June 30
TO BE DIAGNOSED
shivering, ssdhteg • wet i
ganiaaUoB, has bed a long _a#&gt;d
:kup truck broken, n act of A. William* Jr., local state re­ conflict in the attendance of the for payment Ju*t at the legisla­
DUARTE, Calif. tek-A diagnosis
verted sigsrisara ia trucks, edfechser-Jaw false teeth lying on Um presentatives.
member* of varlou* committee*. ture was supposed to adjourn of artrcaa Suian Ball’s condition
fhe teak I boat, gave It fits as, and buses. Bora ia Wood- seat, and a 21-year-old man alnen- Hutchison mentionsd the fact Approximately 3000 bill* war* In­ which precluded the actual check­ will be Issued sometime today by
beat af teed gad stodtetee, aad bride* M. i -. Lops* was, at one ing beside the track.
that Bern Stenstrom was voted by troduced and it will be some time ing of the vouchers. This will be doctors at City of Hope Medic (1
■e, general manager at the The stranger had no tower hla senatorial eollyguaa as the before the delegation will have remedied they stated with tha Center. She is suffering from a
S M W A T w S b Ear iddteaex Bug Co af that city.
teeth.
outstanding freshman Senator full knowledge of the actual work new interim auditing commlttaa recurrence of cancer.
Mi la nurrtad to ths former
Yesterday the grand jury rated and that Volte WiUiama was again of the sexilon, he stated.
functioning bafors tha naxt legis­
She has been hospital lied for
t^ t e ? s ! l f t l s . Lyons took bar Mias ftg g y Russell, of Passaic, the evidence of breaking and en­ voted by the press one ef the ten
Rap. William* told of the lature.
two weak*. Eighteen month* ago
't e / *
M. J , at ana Urn* a TWA Airline tering aa auto waa not enough aad itstoodfog Bepzeientativo*.
creation of the Wgiilativ* inThe three members of tha local surgeons amputated a lag ia which
bateau. With thsir tens children, fined the nun.
Sb his v w ii k i , fan. Etsiutroa tezia auditing committee aad delegation bald the attention of csocer hid bees detected aad it
Mstfiya gad Denial Jn, they ra­
AH right, said Hamilton,
.whs a f m m o f the pnrdralarty thst ail three voted against the their auditors past tha usual ad- w u believed Out the dread dited* * M U Fork Ara.
keep the teeth than. Aad he
tteBtetotet things that ths l*tela« tanpik* MIL Hs, too, regretted Journment time of the meeting.
***** Led been eoatroPed

Family Of Eight
Has House Problem

American Farmers
Tour Soviet Lands

T. D. Singletary
Dies In Atlanta

Civil Service Sets
Thursday Election

Dentist's Mother
Ends Hunger Strike

Near-Tragedy
Of Rudderless B36
Told By Air Force

Local Delegation Addresses Rotary

Foodroart Offering
Reward For Info

C

G M C Appointment
Told For Company

fWySRWHT

A tentative County budget for
the next fuc«! x*ar beginning
October t. 1953 « » » ere»p**d at
this momtrg's »»»»ion of ths
County Commission meeting.
The budgot consisting of .* tots!
of 6930,022.51 will come up again
Before, the commu-ioner* for
adoption at their meeting on
August 2. 1935.
The tentative budget included
$148,701.25 in the fine and for­
feiture fund; road and bridge
fund, *421.326.23. of nhirh 3296,.
796.63 wa* for erpr^priations,
$10,264.37 for reserve for contin­
gencies, and *£4,263.23 rexerx-n
for eaxb. balance tn he carried
forward.
Th* general fund
993 01 with total appropriation*
being *257.649.21. Reserve for
caxh balance tn he carried for«
ward I* *71.90900.
Seminole County Clerk, O. P,
Herndon complimented the Coun­
ty Comminlnner* stating that the
County was i« a healthy financial
condition.
The commission *ccepted the
bid of gtrickland-Morrison to
supply lh* County with two
truck* for *1,010.32 with allow,
anre on old equipment. Other*
submitting bid* were Seminole
County Motor* and Sanford Mo.
tor Truck Co.
John
5lcLaughlin of I^Va
Mary appeared before tbe com­
missioner* requesting that th*
county open a street into *ont*
ar*y ow which he wanted to.
H O a m Tbw-xfiommisslOncr*
refused, stating that if they open­
ed street for one dm eloper they,
would have to do the tame fort
other*.
John Fox, county right-of-way .
agent, appeared before the com .'
mixsionrn with a deed from th* j
Overstreet Land Co. that was ac­
cepted for future u*e.
The property that ws* affected
wa* 26 feet at the Big Trea
Crossing faring Henxous Arret
one half .mile from the Sanford
Orlando Highway.

Fallen Power Line
Blamed For Deaths
During Rainstorm
ALEXANDRIA. L«. (Jt-A power
line that Jell during * rainstorm
w u blamed for the death of four
persons and tha Injury of a fifth.
Killed last night were Y. E. Ttllman, .V. trurk-lm# operator; Wil­
liam Bmsette, 23, dairy truck
driver; William L. Voorhiee, 33,
supervisor of a fleet of dairy
trucks, and Voorhics' 6-)ear-old
daughter Linds Carolyn.
Voorhies 5-yeir-old son William
Jr «** treated for minor burn*.
Tolice said Ihe Voorhies family
had been visiting the Brosettei,
and derided to go home about th*
time a rainstorm was lotting up.
The Voorhics boy ran to open Ihe
rar door and was hnmed by the
current from a power line that wa»
lying in the flooded gutter parallel
lo Ihe rar.
The father ran out to help the
boy and was killed. Lind* Carotya
and Brosette then met a like fite.
A passing motorixt. Tillman,
•topped to help and also was (Icetrocuted.

Sergeant Pleading
To Lesser Charges
FT. BRAGO, N C. (Jft-Sft. Joh*
L. Tyler, J3. pleads today te
leaser charges of aiding the memy
while a prisoner of war In Korea. 1
MaJ. C. E. Noel), law officer, ;
yesterday upheld • defense motion .
thst certain charges wera “ not •
plain, not concise and indefinite.** j
The charges dropped Included one
that said Tyler told Chines* Com- j
munista fellow pnionera were
planning an escape.
The remaining charge# allage
tha Moundsvill*, W. Va., soldier
Informed on fellow prisoners,
wrote pro • Communist articles,
asked fellow prisoners to sign
peaee petitions aad attempted te
ooavert them te eaarauaitm.

i

IJju
'ilm

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ItII
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PHILLIPS
ANNOUNCES

&amp;

15 new homes in

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Loch Arbor

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CR YSTA L LAKE SECTION

it

VA AND
CONVENTIONAL
FINANCING
NO DOWN
P A Y M EN T
FOR VETERANS

3 and 4 bedrooms; 1 and 2 baths

FULL EQ UIPM EN T
Large Lots In The Best
O f N eighborhoods
homes also available at:

DREAMWOLD
WYNNEWOOD

2 left out of a total 22
only 2 left out of a total 86
only

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Inside
Editorial,
Society, P.
SporU, P.
Radio, P.

________________ * ______________________________ AN INDEPKNDKNT DAILY
F-ixUblinhed 190R

. ’VOLUME XI.VI

Young Couple Taken
For Passing Checks
Lived Here Briefly
j

*,
A young couple arrested by
Winter Park police yesterday on
bad check crirgca lived briefly In
Sanford following a June check*
cashing spree, authorities aaid.
Police identified them at Janie*
McGatha, 20. and hla wife, Delores, 27. They were picked up af­
ter an Orlando store rcfu«rd to
cash a check and gave police a
description o ' the couple and their
i047 black Hudson sedan.

The couple'a two small children
a seam-day-old son and a fouryear-old girl, were taken to the
Orange County parental home.
Orange County Chief Criminal
Deputy L. J. Swann said the MeGuthas appa'rntly left the Orlando
iren after cashing a number of
checks In June and had been living
uric fly in Rnnfoid.
They returned to Orlando yet*
terday, he aaid, and Mrs. McC.alha

patted a 125.95 check at the Closat
Shop, then decided to tarkla tha
China Marl. Both stores aic lo­
cated on Orange Avenue.
Swann said Mrs. McGatha en­
tered tha China Mart, her sevenday-old child In her arms, and at­
tempted to cash a check after se­
lecting several snisll Items. The
store operator refused the check
and notified police.
Swann aaid the couple ware
charged with victimising numerous
women's and children’s shops In
Orlando and Winter Park. They
also
are
wanted
on
similar
charges in Miami, St. Petersburg,
Daytona Reach and Palm Reach
as well as Dayton, Ohio, ha re­
potted.
Pictures of the couple have been
posted in police and sheriff’s o f­
fices for the past month and a
half.
Complaining
storekeepers,
in
each cash, reported a red dishblonde woman In her late 20’a, ob­
viously pregnant, would cash a
check whlla "buying" soma articles
o f clothing or children's toy.
Storekeepers said tha woman
was neatly dressed and seemingly
"very innoernt looking." She o f­
ten had the four-year-old child
with her, they said.

Committee Hopes
To Get Good Leads
On Red Activities
COUNTY SCHOOL'BL’ PKHINTKNDENT R, T. Milwaa inaperta tha
progreaa of work at the old Greyhound Bui Strtlon, which la being
eonvertad into administrative officea for county achool offirialt.
Work la expected to be finished and the building occupied about tha
fin t week in A ugust (Staff Thotol________________________________

Mayor To Help
:&gt;// Dixon-Yates
Want New Plant
MEMPHIS, Tcnn. iff&gt; — Mayor
Frank Tobey aays U Dixon-Yatex
■till want to build its power plant
at Wett Memphis, A r„ "w e will
a u lit in every way w« can."
Tobey's statement waa In an
awer to James Hale, a Wett Mem* phli lawyer who laid the only
•' reason .Vempbla decided to build
Its own plant wai to force can
cellation of tha Dison-Yatea con
tract.
City officials tay they decided
to build the plant because they
felt tlie Tennessee Valley Authority
would not be able to meet their
future power needs.
Hale made bis charge at a
"facta of life" conference yetter
day on the proposed Memphis
municipal steam plant, attended
by Memphis city officials, busi­
nessmen and representatives of
West Mamphls.
The West Memphis lawyer said,
"W e slaved off every effort you
made to slop Dixon-Yates. Then,
in desperation, you laid 100 million
dollars on the line up at Washington. That (topped us."

Bus Route Revealed
For Baptist Church
Vacation School

Tha First* Baptist Church will
sponsor a Vacation Bible School
at tha Elder Springs Baptist Cha­
pel from July 18 to July 29. Tha
School will begin rach day at 8:80
a. m. and cover a three hour per­
iod closing each day at 11:30 a.
m. All boys and girls in this com­
munity, age 3 through 10 years,
are Invited to' attend.
The Church bus will cover tha
following routa each day: Leaving
tha First Baptist Church it will go
out tha Orlando Highway to Five
Points arriving their about 7:35
a. m.; from Flva Points to Elder
Springs arriving about 7:45 a. m.;
Turning right at Elder Springs It
will cover Myrtla Ave. and arrlva
at Sanford Ave. Extension about
7:50 a. m.; Sanford Ava. exten­
sion north to Ginderville arriving
about 7:55 a. m.; Turning left at
Ginderville arriving at Baker’s
Dairy about 8 a. m.
It will continue along the Old
Orlando road and arrive at the
Elder Springs Baptist Chape!
about 8:16 a. m. Anyone wishing
to ride on tha bus to tha Vacation
Bible School should be along aide
tha road and Indicate their desire
to rids by,the uplift&lt;-ti right hand.
Bible Stories, Handwork, Mis­
sionary activities, Character Stor­
PARIS tit—“ I trust Bulganin. I ies, recreation and refreshments
don't have to sit at his elbow." are enjoyed.

WASHINGTON m — Chairman
Eastland (D-Mlsa) aaid today tha
Senate Internal Security subcom­
mittee hopes to get leads on "Com­
munist activity down to the pres­
ent time" from Its latest aeries of
hearings.
The subcommltce received yesn a scor of perso taoin hrdlu od
trrday an Inquiry In whleh more
than a score of persons were
named as having been Reds in
Uie late 1930‘i. Most of them ware
in newspaper work at tha tlma.
Eastland said the subcommittee
has had "wltncs.wa from most of
the profession.*" in Its sometimes
turbulent history. Ifa added in an
Interview:
"W e've gotten more cooperation
from newspapermen than any oth­
er group In the country."
He said of the subcommittee's
latest Inquiry that "tha hearings
have pointed out the way the Com­
munist conspiracy was entrenched
In this country, and we hope to
get leads from these hearings that
wUI show us Cnmnfuniit activity
down to the present tim e."

Trad ing Is Barrier
T o Bill's* Passage
O f Reserve Program

WASHINGTON (JR-Some legis­
lative horse trading between tha
Senate and House was the only
barrier today to passage in soma
form of President Elsenhower’s
ambitious national rsserva plan.
By a decisive 80-1 vote the Sen­
ate fast night approved Its own
version of the plan to train a
combat-ready reaerva of 8,900.000
in tha next four years, a four-fold
increase.
Sen. Russell (D-Ga&gt;. who piloted
the measure through the Senate,
■aid in an Interview:
"Thar* are a lot of differences
between the Senate and House but
That was Nikita Khrushchev’ s John L. Miller, Minister of Edu­ 1 think we’ll be able to gat a
comment a few weeka ago when cation for the First Baptist Church blU."

3 Khrushchev T e lls
T ru s t O f Bulganin
A t Sum m it Session

a repotter In Moscow asked him will be Principal of tha School.

3 if he planned to accompany Pre­ Other members of the faculty

mier Nikolai Bulganin to Geneva.
The fact that Khrushchev Is now
going with Bulganin—and Marshal
Georgi Zhukov too—was a topic
for lively discussion among diplo­
mats here today.
Questions naturally came up:
Didn't Khrushchev trust Bulganin
any more? Doesn't Defense Min­
ister Zhukov trust either oneT
But the prevailing view was that
1 the Soviet Union has shown Its
determination to present a dal*
nation at Geneva whose com­
petence cannot bp questioned.

.

■-

-

•

- - NNORB f i l f l INVITATION
TOKYO ( » - Paul Robeson, AmorWan Negro singer, has been In­
vited In the fifth youth and StnAmt Festival in Warsaw "as a

*

fflz ta ib

S fty e H a n f o r d

P4
TV, P. 7
5
County, P. 8
*
Churh, P. 2
8
Story, P. 8

will be announced later.

Reported Fin a n cia l
No Strong M easure In terest Studied
WASHINGTON CR — A reported
financial interest of Secretary of
Is Foreseen Soon

NEW DELHI (A*)—Unless Prime
Minister Nehru says no, strong
measures are due soon in the
campaign to oust Portugal from
the subcontinent of India.
Backers of tha campaign plan
to aand 100,000 demonstrstans
against tha polka and troops
guarding tha Portuguese colonies
Aug. 15, aaaJvuraary af ludiaa la*

the Ak Force Harold X. Talbott
in a New York efficiency engin­
eering firm la to be studied by
Uie Senate bveaifatiou subcom­
mittee.
Members af Re gran* eonflred
last nlgbt that it has voted to look
into Talbott's relations with the
firm beaded by Faul B. Mulligan.
One Member described the Arm
as "a compaay But Reals with
yanks which Rani with *•

Tha asaia aalaay brrclvad la
Gea, an wan little bigger than
A Republican member, Reclin­
Rhode Island, an tha wait coast af
India. Tha Portuguese have ing to be quoted by name, said
occupied It 400 yuan. St Frauds that "on the surface, H appeari
Xavier agrnad R * Ok
we will Cod nothing fee Mm R m edR af Mr, Talbott.

HANTORD, F U m iD A ,

Demos
Seek
Okay
WASHINGTON UP-Housa Demo­
crats drov* with new confidence
today for final Public Works Com­
mittee approval of billions in new
taxes to help pay for a giant naw
road construction program.
The committee late yestarday
tentatively approved tax hikes on
gasoline, trucks and huses, diesel
fuel, heavy tires and tubes and
all tire retreads, to raise abott
*11.800,000,000 over the next 14
years.
It defeated, by lopsi.trd votea,
a scries of efforts to kill or sharply
reduce the proposed revenue In.
creasrs. It didn't complete action
on the lax plan, however, and
more such moves were expected
today.
Rep. Burnside (D-WVa), who
put through an amendment to
exempt nonusers ot highways from
the tax increases, said he thought
thla would remove much of the
opposition to them.
The construction program calls
for 37 billions In federal spending
and 15‘ i billions from the states
over a 12-year period. The federal
government would put up 14 bil­
lion*, and the states 2lx billions,
to complete 40,000 miles of defense
superhighways.
In addition, Ihe program calls
for a 23-millinn.dollar increase
each year for IS yean In both
federal and state funds for pri­
mary, secondary and urban roadi.

Many Applicants
Come Pouring In
For Grandmothers
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.. &lt;JR- A
manufacturer who sought 25 cand
Idatrs for a "grandmothers as
sembly line" got 75 applicants in
two hours.
Tit* Futuronlcs Manufacturing
Co. had found (hat the eight orlgl
nal grandmother! among Its 350
employes did very well. Relieving
that industry should afford
portunltias to qualified older per­
sons, the company deckled to try
to let up one assembly line com
posed only of grandmothers.
A story about th« plan In the
St. Petersburg Evening Independ
ent brought quick results. The 25
grandmother* (elected for em­
ployment were chosen yesterday
on the basis of hesllh, eyesight
and other factors.
The compsny manufactures in­
tercommunication lets.

Rippy Gets Bite
He Can't Scratch
LOUISVILLE, Ky. OR-RIppy has
a bite he can’t scratch.
But he’s doing fine after tangling
twice with a rattlesnake this wrrk.
When (he black dog romarfd
the snske between two sheds Sjnday night, the snake struck and
mined. Then It disappeared down
a hole.
Wednesday night, the snake
didn't miaa, linking Hi fangs into
Hippy's Jaw.
After tha dog was hoipitatind,
his owner, Morrii Engnehl, de­
clared war on the viper .
"I'v e got ell aorta of sprays and
bombs," he laid, "We used to
havs 10 or 12 frogs In the garden
—and they've all gone. They say
where there are frogs therv'i no
danger of snakes. Apparently our
snake has eaten them.”
ACCIDENT INVESTIGATOR
GIVEN SUSPENSION
HOUSTON UR-Robert E. Schil­
ler!, accident Investigator for (he
Houston Police Department, was
given a three-day suspension yesterday. Police Chief Jack Heard
said the 33-year-old officer backed
a patrol car Into a picnic bench
while on accident call, stripped
the gears on another ear, drove
another to tha station with a boil­
ing radiator and bent e fender
on another.

N EW SPAPER

"l was

Parity rlmidy will*

Mer«? *h«w-

ara south***! raul »wd keys and
widely scattered
•Isew h*r«.

lhund»raho»et»

*

FRIDAY. JULY 15. 1955

A n n r ia N Prm*

W im

No. 251

Eisenhower Leaves
For Geneva Tonight
Informal
Address
Planned
Video Networks
To Carry Message

r im .
★

iik n k y

★

t'Ot.KK

★

JK.

★

Cdr, Henry Colee Jr. Executive
O f NAAS Replacing Cdr. F.More
Cdr. Henry Cole* Jr., USN, re­
ported aboard thu Sanford Natal
Auxiliary Air Station, this week
where ho relieved Cdr. Frank it.
More of his position a* the Air
Station's Kxrculiva Officer.
Cdr. Colev, is a native son of
Florida and is now very rlose to
h.s home town of New Smyrna
Only one week remain* for men llraeli. wht-te he stilt krc|»x the
to enlist jn time to attend summer official aidless of 3(11 Washing­
field-training exercise* with Co. ton Ave.
Following .hi* enlistment in the
1", 124th I n f, Sanford's own No
Uonal Guard unit at Fort Mr Navy in Ib.‘l7, hr served a year's
Clclland, Ala., Capt. Joseph l&gt; duty at Norfolk, Vs., followed hy
Bryant, commanding officer of no additional year nhonid the USS
New Ymk. In 1919, lie was ordered
the local unit said today.
With the conversion of llie San­ to Pensacola for flight training
ford unit to an Armored Infantry u* a Naval Aviation Cadet. Upon
Company slated for early full the completion of the flight program,
men who receive, live training at Cdt. Colee was commissioned an
(hi* year'* encampment will he the etnign nod designated a naval
leader* of the new unit, Capt. Bry­ ■viator.
At the start of AVW II, he was
ant added.
To join tha National Guard a serving with Patrol Squadron 73.
man must be between the are* of For his woik with that squadron
IB and 34, except young men 17 In its nnti-Hulimnrine campaign* in
may enlist with the permission of Ihe North Atlantic during Ihe
their parents. Young men who en­ years of IP4I-42, Cdr. Cole* was
list befora they become IH'1, arc awarded (lie Air Medal.
draft exempt as long as Ihey per­
Aft •r transfer
from
Patrol
form thair military duties in the Squadron “13" In 1941 he was
placed on the staff of thp ComGuard.
The local unit leave* for Fori loander Caribbean Sea Frontier
McClellan on Aug. 13 and return* where he served until 1940 when
to Sanford on Aug. 2* The Inst tin wax transfer led to Naval Air
day a man can enlist before the Missile Test Center at Point Mugu, Calif. II* received Instruction
unit leavea is Monday, July 25.
Co. " i " holds Its weekly two hour at Hit) Naval School, General Line,
training periods at the Sanford Newport, It. I. Upon graduation
National Guard Armory, 015 K. from tliis achool, he was transferr­
Firat St., every Monday night at ed to NAS Corpus Christi, Texa*,
I o ’clock. All jilting mm who are where he underwent additional
interested In investigating the flight (raining in Privateer Type
many opportunities offered by the Airrrnft. Thi* was followed hv
National Guard are invited to at- two year* of duly with Aircraft
tend any of lhr*a session*.
Development Squadron Four at
ihu Naval Air Station, Patuaent
River, Md.
For two years, 1950.62, ha was
assigned to the Offic* of tli*
Chief of Naval Operations in
LONG BEACH. Calif, lAV—A poll Washington, D. C., after which
of self-styled esperts—all men— ho rommarobd Air Transport
today called thi* year’* Mis* Uni­ Squadron 22 at Norfolk, Va. From
verse crop the mo»t heautilul yet. Norfolk, ha rame to NAAS San­
Newsmen, officials. Judges and ford.
others connected with Hie pageant
Cdr. Cole* I* married to the
ainca It* inception In 1932 were
former Miss Charlotte Lennarule
unanimous that girl* everywhere
of Sari Juari, Puerto Rico, and hits
ara prettier than ever.
five children.
Oacar Meinhan.lt, executive pro­
ducer of the Bliss Universe Pageant, said:
AGREEMENT SIGNED
" I usually avoid thru* opinion*,
TOKYO IR—lied Chin# and Bul­
but I've got to say this ia Hie garia have signed an agreement in
greatest congregation of beauty I Soflk to cooperate in curbing insect pesls and plant disrates.
have aver seen at one time ”

One Week Remains
To Enlist In Time
For Training Camp

Miss Universe Crop
Is Said 'Best Yet'

Tense Ordeal Ends In Safety
HAMILTON AIR FORCE BASE,
Calif. LR—For four ten**, !on|
houra last night Capt. Theodore
Roosevelt held his mind and
nerves ready to ditch a Globemaster and 87 men In the fogcovered Pacific.
Rot tha ordeal ended in a life
landing here with the big military
transport's two starboard engines
dead. Tiro right-Aand Urea blew
out la the landing but pilot Ro o m vtlL of Elyria, Ohio, held the
plank Mralght on the runway.
Whan It was an ortr, Roosevelt,
8 seventh cousin of both Teddy
and Franklin D. Roosevelt, quietIp told reporter*:
'Everybody w aa ostremely

Weather

to ditch. Those paretroopers felt,
I guess, they could cupe with what­
ever came up "
"Wa were about to minutes past
the point of equal time (midway
point! when the first engine went,”
said Lt. Richard E. Davidson, Al­
liance, Ohio, assistant navigator.
An hour later Ihe irrond star­
board engine failed. Roosevelt and
tnd Lt. Harry Simpson, Akron,
Ohio, copilot, were able to featticr
both propellers. The dead engines
did not drag or vibrate.
But for four hours Roosevelt and
hla flight engineer, M. Sgt. Her­
man Dupuis, Helena, Mont , had
to drive Ihe two port engine* at
noarly maximum power.
Dupuis, who made a wartime

iner. laid another engine might
have gone at any moment under
the strain. He said he aweated
every minute with the Ignition sys­
tem. He prayed it wouldn't fall.
Sgt. Arthur C. Crawford, Lagro,
Ind., a 187th tnan on hla way to
ace his wife and three children
at Ft. Bragg, said feathering the
first eng ne didn't bother much
Rut w lu-n the second stopped . . .
“ That'i when we realty got
seared. Ail Hie lime, Ihough, 1
waa just sure I wai going to see
my wife and kids, all right, even
if I had tn get a little wet."
Hie
hnmrbnund
paratrooper*
had lo throw ovrrboard all Ibotr
gear and smtvenJri . . . collected
over aa many aa Jive year* to
we'd have diuViag In g Navy Martin Mar­ Japaa.

7:30 Game Time
For Home Clashes;
DeBaryites Feted

Th* Sun ford Cardin*!* wilt
ihe Orlatnln Flyrm toniffht in
nut"l i*f taking ini'i the lo|» ip ol
WASHINGTON r President Ei­
in tin* tiifht **vitin1‘ half rm r. Till
senhower lake* off tonight fur
Clypm urn mil front hv * litlf
(ictifta aflrr lulling the nation
about hi* cautious hopes that the ^ ' T ,' n'1 V '1 " V " bv \hJ Cl&gt;r’
111nciI?■ Utmghi nouid put limit DU
IlilC Four rnnfomtrr may lead
tup.
fventuady to I'ndurmtt pram.
^
tl
,, , ,
Thu Sanfoid Ba**'hiill Club *nTire President plan* a 11-minute ..... ..
„ ,„.w
llllt time for
informal address dealing with , hp ,,.nuimmif
B, nlP, « hirh
world problem* to be di*cus.rd ,, 7 .:!„
fn
„ )M , ll(ll)|t, ,h,
at the summit meeting opening' fulls to gel home rrtlller,
Monday, and with hi*
his views
*icw* re
Tonight
............. .. . . „ |.H, rv NikM" with
garding step* toward their soln- ,,
flom lV |t«ry being ad*'&lt;&gt;n
milled fice of charge. The Club
AH four television networks wilt |ia, p*
out 509 passe* In nor
carry the extemporaneous talk Volusia County friends and a latg#
from Ihe White House st the lime crowd is expected.
of delivery, a* will ABC and CHS
The Sanford Hist! Club has he*n
radii}. The MBS and NBC radio going at a fast clip w-inniug 15 o f
networks will broadcast ivcordcd it* last 22 outings for a lusty .682
version* ialci.
! percentage.
Hie talk It scheduled for 7.13
Some of lh* local merrhanta
p in. EST.
have donated p r im to bn givers
One hour after Eisenhower con- way with a total of nine pritaa
eludes, he will take off from Na­ going to several fans i l tonight's
tional Airport aboard hi* personal hall gams.
plane Columbine III. His parly will
include Mr*. Eisenhower and their
son Mai. John Eisenhower, who
will serve aa an aide lo hta faIhcr.
Thr plana will make one refuel­
ing slop, it Krflavik Air Base,
Iceland. During a two-hour stop
over, he and Ilie First l^idy will
be lunrlieon gurvla of President
Assgeir Assgeirason of Iceland.
PARIS td—The Big Three fnn»
Eisenhower is due at Geneva
tomorrow evening.
ngn ministers began Until prepara­
Along the way, his plane will tion* today for Ihe historic Geneva
be slicphridrd by an unspecified summit conicrence with the Soviet
number of Air Force 1129s and Union.
SAto amphibious planes, anil by
U.s. Secretary nf Stale Dulles,
nine Navy weather ships stalionrd British Foreign Secretary Harolrl
Macmillan and French Foreign
at intervals of about too miles.
Minister Antoine Pinay met In tiro
French Foreign Ministry. They
had before them ■ detailed draft
of proposed plans for Hie confer­
ence. Thi* Included list of Ixsuea
Hie Wed will raise and propositi
on each, submitted lo them hv
experts id Ihrir Hire* governments
JOPLIN. Mo. id —Authorities to­ yesterday.
If tlie minister* approve the ex­
day awaited a fingerprint com­
parison before definitely labeling port*’ work ax expected, K wi'l
as a hoax Audrry IIran.It's story form Hie joint Western position
of abducting and raping a 2-year for Ihe iiegoliation* nevt week tw*.
tween President Elsenhower, Britold Sloox City Iowa, girl.
Brandt. 42-year-old farm laborerji*h Prime Minister EiTen. Trench
whose formal schooling ended In Premier Edgar Faure and Soviet
first grade, told officers W'edne* Premier Nikolai Bulganin.
day he was Ihe kidnaper of Donna
Sue Davis. Yesterday he said
Ills story was false.
Iln said
h* mad*' it up after hruring an
account of the rape-slaying over
an automobile radio while hitch­
hiking.
Officers were inrllnexl lo believe
ITAZUKE AIR BASE. Japan m
the farmhand's original story was —Tlie last huge plane in the great­
a hoax tint Ihey first wantrd to est ma*s troop airlitt in history
*ee result* of a check nf his finger­ was e»*1hound over lb* PaciLa
prints against those found in the Ocean today.
room from which Donna Sue was
When It reaches the United
taken Sunday night.
State* Sunday, two complete com­
bat ready regiments will have ex*
changed place* hallway around thn
world.
The Army said Operation Gyro­
scope has "proved to the wxirld
tha feasibly of transporting battlaST. PETERSBURG
- A land- ready men to any part of the world
lady last night waa rrrdited with in a minimum of lim e "
saving the life nf » tenant who
The last UI2I Glubcmaiter ranwas trapped in his apartment for ned ou men, complete with ir m i
a week.
and equipment, nf the lBTlh Angela
Grncr H Welches- became wor­ from Hell airborne regimental
ried after nut arcing her tenant, combat team toward their new
Ford iimbnn Walker, t.ij
borne at Ft. Bragg. N (’ .
When puller broke jn they found
Thirty-six other Globe masters
Walker lying face up in the bath­
preceded it.
room.
His left arm was booked ovrr
bis head ami eaught in a small
slool wedged between Hie bathtub
and wall. 1’olirc were unable In
determine
immediately how he
Srymour S. Graves. W. died
came to be trapped.
suddenly Hit* morning at Hie Fer*
Walk'T was treated for malnu­
lull! Laughton Memorial Hospi­
trition and was reported in "fa ir"
tal. Making his home at All Pal­
condition in a hospital.
metto Ave . he had lived in San*'
ford for the past 50 year*. Hu
was born In Big Cane, La., ou
Jan. 3t, 1886.
Retiring in 1945, he wax em­
ployed by Ihe Atlantic Coast Lin*
W A S H I N G T O N fAT-Sen. ax a trainman and conductor for
Georg* (D -G » , said today the 33 years. Mr Grave* wax a mem­
direction taken by the Geneva Big ber nf the Firat Method!*! Churth,
Four conferenca may determine thr Brotherhood of Railroad Train­
whether there is a new threat of men. and the OrdiT of Railway
Conductors.
hostilities in the Far Eaat.
Survivor* Include two listers,
George, chairman of the Renat#
D ouginForeign Relations Committee, said Mra. Edward Cowan,
progress mads by President P.l- ville, G*.; Mrs. Cecil Balei, San­
aenhower in conference* with tha ford: two brothers, F. C. and W,
Premiers of RriUln, France and T. of Baton Rouge, La., six uiuRussia toward lessening world cea and two nephews.
Funeral services will he eontensions ia bound to have a "heavy
imparl" ort the Asian aituatlon. ducted Sunday at 8 p. m. by fl»«
"I think Asiatic piobtrms should Rev. Milton Wyatt at Briaion
ba dealt with separately as Aaia- Funeral Home. Burial wUI
t k problems," George aaid to aa pl*M hi lh* OaUen Catnelary.

Foreign Ministers
Ready Final Plans
For Big Meeting

Authorities Await
Print Comparison

Last Airlift Plane
Heads Over Pacific

Landlady Honored
For Saving Life

Seymour S. Graves
Dies At Hospital

Much May Depend
On Big Four Meet

�County Personals
t i y -f l i c k

have occupied the Piper apart­
ment, have gone to Pensacola
where he has been transferred.
Mr. and Mra. Billy Beater have
moved to Sanford from the Pettenon cottage where they have
been for some time.
Mrs. Thomas O. Murray and
children, Tom. Mike, Kathy and
Pit*, left Wednesday for Alexan­
dria, Va., wh*ra they will join
Commander Murrey who was
transferred there lome time ago.
Cart Roland Driakell of At­
lanta, Ga. la visiting hia grand­
mother, Mn. J. L. Bullard.
Friend* of Mn. Arnold Bosschec will be glad to hear that
aha la recovering from a recent
heart attackMr. and Mn. Franklin Barry
and children are moving from the
Lamport house to Pelmitto Ave­
nue, Sanford.
Mias Joyce Paterson, daughter
of Rev. and Mn. L. A. Petonon,
I* attending the Youth Camp, hold
thla woek at the Church of tha
Mooting Grounds ntgr White
Springs.
Mn. L. W. Scott and Mn. W.
B. Evans ware in Orlando, Tues­
day, the official representatives
ef the Lake Mery Girl Scout or­
ganisation, at the Aroa Council
Meeting.
Cdr. and Mn. W. H. Swinaon
have moved into one of the
Evens' hooaea. He has been trans­
ferred to NAAS. Sanford from
Norfolk, Va.

S u m n er

tdnd a1 h—harts* fees far myself.
CHAPTER TWENTY
GZVXNO Rusty barely time to You a m been there?"
the shirt over hie head. Margie
T Just came from there," Kerry
them down a back stairway. Aa ■aid slowly.
they followed her, aha gave them
"Well, If you don't action to the
their explanation to swift words
stripped ad amcCcn.
the sentence to the air. Kerry
sensed that tha red-heed auepeeted
ha might have pressing reasons lor
back of tha Longhorn this mom- net wanting to go back, and fait
tog with two bullets to hie back. aura he’d never nek. A tot of things
Hia fetter's gone clean craay. Ha’s crowded tonethar to hia head—
brought hie whole crew into town, Sandy’s toUctteotter night, Rob’s
and they're rounding up all tha fees to their leal quarrel, Christie's
saloon bums and hard-eeaam to hair with the mm on It, Wayne
town, getting them drunk and Cameron's ice-grey eyes, • • •
working to am up to a lynching."
“ You ever try to ride away from
"But why ms?" Rutty pro- yourself. Rusty?"
tatted. "Just ’cause 1 had a run-in
"Can’t my I have. Dont sound
wttt him tost night—who hasn’t? right eenabto t’me."
They think Td shoot a man la tha
Kerry toughed. "Maybe you're
hack?"
right, partner. All right, Texas it
"They found your lucky medal
by hie body."
Rusty's aaad went to hto hreast
Joe Larrabee and hto family
pocket and came out aa empty a* were elttiag late over supper, tt
hto bewildered face. "It's not there. was one of tha days whan Molly
How the—T"
waa feeling a Uttie better, and ehe
Tlgure tt out," Margie mapped. had dragged herself to toe table,
Tatar. When you’re a long way ever Joa’a protests. But tt w u
rood, tike old times, to have her
from bars"
"An* do they figure Kerry hi aa toare. With the Bickering oil leap
rtufiuemg the pallor and hollowK, t o o f
T told you there were two bul­ rues of her cheeks, he could al­
lets—and be waa with you last most imagine her looking the way
aha used to look. Nothing could
Might."
They were to the allay how. Two disguise the tournees at her votes,
■eddied horses stood pawing the but. excited by too email adven­
dirt, and toe two men swung up ture et being out ef bed, she had
quickly. "Stick to back ways tfli laughed and made Jokea quite aa
you're out of town, and stay wide aha used to do. and attar the meal
of toe saloons. That’s where Whar­ was cleared away, aha had in­
ton's gang are. Let me hear from sisted on filling Joa’a pipe for him.
you aa toon aa you can. Rutty, Now hh aat Making with one of
and dent try to come hack tin I bar hands la hia, and Tim across
send you word that if* an right toe Labia.
A moment Hke tola was reward
Promise ?"
For just a moment the Ism ehe for the promise he’d made, and
turned up to him waa desolate; kept, eves tt too keeping hadn’t
thm she gave him her mule. Per been easy. Tha other neater* who
once Rusty seemed to have run out looked to him for leadership
ef words, aa ha bent from the sad­ oouldnt understand why ha hadn’t
dle and kissed her. The lest Kerry pressed hi* claim on Broken Spur.
sew of her, aha area smiling with He knew aoraa of them tohught
wet bright cyan tt waa a picture, Mallory had broken hia nerve, and
he fait that he arauld he seatng that eras tough for hia pride to
for a tong tone. Too noted ride a swallow. But to* hardest part had
pretty laug trail without finding
looked at hia son's Mack-browed
face, a little auilea aa tt moetty
waa them days, be had to preee
Maui's this hand hard to remind
himself that It waa aU for her.
Ties was tetter against Mallory;
that woe too trouble. Whan a
youag fallow had a gtrl hke Uts
Dawson in his bead, you oouldnt
'thought we'd moke it tola easy," aspect to Bad sense there, too; toe
Merry said.
two things didst go together. He
"Well, Kerry. 1 duano ’hoot yon, thought the B sk tt Spur boas waa
but rd baas bangin' ’m a d that bothsriag Lite against her wifi.
town tang enough far one stretch. Joa h a Us own shrewd doubts
Beguwto' to got mmultmoms “
shout that, which ha waa too wtee
"That’s one way of putting tt." to veto* to his sew. No an* eould
Kerry said drily. T hadn't bees open a man’s eyes about a woman
ammd that long, hot 1 get toe ha wanted, except toe women herIdea toe air ad Dodge Qty woiddat
agree wtth ■*. atvoe ma a kted «f
tight feeling around too nook."
Booty's grin w i t o t t "TaWB de
to take along, Kerry. What agy

K

Leg al N otice

fmfrntttkm mjjQP} Iff* no tPWQbk frflB

Mallory. Ba doesn’t want to fight
no snore nor we do, if well let him
alone."
"1 don’t believe ft," Tim scowled,
-ds's got somethin’ up hia sleeve.
1 don’t trust him no more's 2
would a rattlesnake."
"Hush now," Joa ordered stern­
ly. "Don’t be putting ideas to your
mi’s head.”
Tim obeyed, with a look that
showed plainly ha had been ad­
enoid, not convinced.
"Sure,” Molly laughed nedtly,
"Timmy’s got the bad humor on
him booties he’d sooner bo with
hia girt than with ue—an* who's
to Mama him for thai7 The time

Molly's wasted hand rested light­
ly on her sen’s tog arm. "you're a
good boy to bo stayin’ some with
your old ma. son. An* need we,"
she ilemsnrteil gaily, "be ttttia*
wound like tons narpem at a
Asks? Qtve us some music, Joe."
As Joe got up to get hie aid
banjo, Tim arristanad, "Did you
hear somethin’ ?"
"like whet?"
"A kind &amp; enmc-hln1 notes, hke
somebody aaaakte’ up round tha
1 heard nothing- But your ears
are sharper than mine, eon." Joa
added planaringly. T t might ba
enma ereature after tha chickens.
Maybe rd better go have a look."
"Sura, hs’a bearin' thing*," Mol­
ly protested, "you'd ba prowlin'
forever, lookln for somethin’ that's
not there at all—an* Pm In the
notion to hear a good tuna or two
before 1 go to bed."
"you’re tha boas, darttn'." Tim
moved to the wall where tha banjo
hung. Ha lifted tt down lovingly,
trying over tha strings with a calloused thumb, and started back
toward tha table. Hia hack waa
turned full to the square of black­
ness that waa the open window.
Orange fight streaked tha dark;
a crack of sound shocked the stillneae and rolled echoingiy Into the
empty night.
Joe pitched drunkeniy forward,
M f h lld

&gt;4frf

By VIRGINIA P. AN OdtSok
Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Knott* and
•on-in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Whteler Waynos. all If Ak­
ron, Ohio, art the guests of the
Rev. and Mra. J. C. Brannon. Mn.
Brannon and Mr. Knotts an bro­
ther and sister
The J. A. Pockhams enjoyed a
family reunion over the Fourth
of July. Mr. and Mra, Clarence
Fcekham and daughters of Tc*tpa
came up end Mr. and Mn. Stan­
ley Peckham and son, Bobby, flow
down from their home In Atlanta,
Ga.
Mr. and Mn. Eugene Seaman
and children, Karon, Joan and
David and nltea, Mias Uaa Lipplneott ef Plainfiald. N. J., enjoyed
the rddeo, hold to taka Balsa an
July 4th.
Friends of Mr. and Mn. E. C.
Thompson, will bo interested to
hear that ha la improving after a
liver* heart attack and they are
now at homo. In Albion, Pa. It will
be remembered that they spent
tha past winter in Mrs. J. M.
Hood's apartmant
George R. Patterson Jr. Is cur­
rently employed at an Instructor at
tha Herman Morris Ranch near
Osteen.
Friends of Mrs. Charles Hook,
former resident of Lake Mary, will
ba glad to know that aha la making
htr home with friend* in Ja*p«r,
Ark., sines her husband's sudden
death last spring.
Friends of Mrs. E. L. Humphrey
will be sorry to hear that eh* i*
confined to the Orange Memorial
By ADDIE P B E V A T f ^
Hospital in Orlando following re­
Mrs. Harry Geiger and family
cent surgery.
have as thair guests for a few
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Zimmerman days, Mrs. Geiger's ion and
■pent the weekend of tha Fourth in daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mn.
Atlanta, visiting her eon and Wayn* Geiger and daughter of
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mra. Miami.
Howard Boteltr- On their return,
Mr*. Willis Anders. Mrs. Harry
they enjoyed a fishing trip at Mel­ Galgar and Nadina Bostick spent
bourne for the remainder of tha Thursday in Ftnacaitla with tha
Rev. and Mra. Lyman Hall.
Friends of Mr*- J- H. Howell
Cadcr Hart left Friday for Miss­
will be sorry to hear of her death, issippi whore ha will Join Mrs.
at tha ago of 90, at b*r home in Hart to attend tha wadding of Mrs.
Atlanta, Ga, on July 4. Bha had Kart's neiee.
suffered a stroke some time pre­
Mrs. John Thomas is in Jackson­
vious end her son, Roy t* Howell, ville because of the Illness of her
with whom ah* spent many win­ brothtr.
ters In Lake Mary, waa with bar
Mrs. T. W. Prevatt and family
several days then.
hsd as thilr guest* Sunday, Jena
Mra. Dan Desmond ha* returned Griffs and Buddy Centos of Jack­
from visiting re1*tires in South sonville. Buddy ram lined for s
Carolina. She ha* boon gene sav­ short visit.
ers! weeks.
Mr, a a Mrs. Henry Kntser hid
Friends of LL L- R- Beckloy will
bo glad to hear that ha waa at
home, for the weekend, although
w m *
ha had to return Monday to thfi
Jacksonville Naval Hospital f «
additional treatment*.
Lewis Mitchell of Lebannsn,
Tenn., waa tha guest ef hi* bralhar-ln-Uw and alstor, Mr, and
Mra. Hugh Tillls, over the July
4th eroekend.
Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Castleberry
and two daughter* of Tampa visit­
ed hi* parent*. Mr. and Mr*.
W. V, Castleberry amral dnyn

as their guests for the weekend,
their son-in-law and daughtar, Mr.
and Mn. Kenneth Harrison and
children of Daytona Beach.
E. T. Summersill spent the week­
end in Jacksonville.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Markham
and family vlaitod Mr. and Mrs.
Fay Lae in KatoipriM Sunday.
Hughey Thomas has as his guest
for a few days, Joa Roberto of
North Carolina.
Richard Norton la spending the
summer in
. _____
- Vergini,
-----“V L, t with
his
grandparents, Mr. afid Mrt. Ed
Guyett*.
Mr. and Mrs. John Stone and
family have aa thair guest* for a
few deyi, Mr. Stones* brother and
lUter-to-law. Mr. and Mr*. Fr*d
Stone and daughter, Jean, of San­
ford, N. C.

Longwood
By MRS. BEVERLY e AWM
Tbs Town Council of Longwood
•t thair regular monthly meeting
were approached on tha subject
of paving Orange St. and Issuing
bond* to pave all streets in town.
Harold Willi* was spokesman for
a group of Orange residents as
was Muriea Rudolph, w h o also
spoke in favor of tha bond issu­
ing, Town Council reported that
at a previous data a referendum
was brought before tha town re­
sidents and was voted down 4-1.
However, the Council will make an
on-tho-icana survey of tha situa­
tion.
•
John Searcy asked that the town
aisiit financially tha Longwood
Cemstery Assn, to have tha
grounds surveyed and markers
reset This ground was donated by
Mr. Searcy’s father for use as a
cemetery several year* ago. Tha
Council voted to eentributo 4100.
Teem Clerk, Cherlae Morrison,
announced that John Fitepetriek
Sanford Accountant had been re­
tained as town auditor far one
year.

pmMont Mrs. R. C. Carlson as
Groat St lait TuOdsy evening.
Among events planned tor the
coming jrur Include, a card par*
♦y In February, a dinner, two food
aalea and a fashion ehow, datea
to ba announced later, Aa well aa
several minor events.
Committee membera Include,
Mra. John Carhart. Mra. Claude
Layo. Mra. John Reams, Mra.
Maurice Rudolph, Mra. Roaa Mob*
ley, Mra. WtllUm Yeung, Mr*. R.
Ritterhoff and Mra. Ellery Raddin.
Mrs. Bette Lockley and daughtar, Sandra, and Mi*a Irene Milla
left thla week to return to their
heme In Webster. S. Y » after
spending their vacation with Mra.
Lockley'a parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Claude Layo.
Charles Morrison, Town Clerk
of Longwood, has requested that
anyone calllnr the town offices
please note that the phone num­
ber has been chanced to W. P,
24-2212.
Mr. and Mrs. L. Hunt and child­
ren of Baltimore, Md.. have arriv­
ed in town for their vacation with
the former'a parents, Mr. and Mrs.
I- J. Hunt.
All former Lyman rraduatas
arlll meet at Sunnythada Park in
Longwood Friday for a gst-togethar. At preient aevarel eld graduates are visiting In town and
will enjoy getting together with
their former class-mates. AU
those attending are requested to
bring a picnic luneh.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hummintton of Newburg, N. V., who have
bean visiting here for several dsys
ci the guests of Mr. and Mrs.
James McGrath, left for thair
home on Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Bowles and
son, Gary, spent the weekend with
Mr*. Bowles mother, Mrs. E. D.
Land in Mayo.
Mr. and Mrs. “ Bob" Blankenship
and children of Starke spent tha
weekend with his father, Myrl
Blankenship and brothtr, “ Pat"
Blankanahlp and family, who are
her* from Pittsburg, Penn.
Myra*, Mika and Richard Serein

of Wajcresi, Ga., are spending
their vacation as guuta of Mr,
and Mrs. Roy Bowlts on East Lake
Street.
A

2BIRWT1I

s lu m BKOWDT

X&amp;fVhicxi/A
imslelat kavlagbeea

reu la the Clrtalt

far ■•mieal* County,

tannery, ja r Divorce,

CHOOSE &amp; USE
PAINTS V
In 1 3 2 2 C o l o n

T H E C O LO R Y O U W A N T
W H E N YO U W A N T IT
IN A L L F IN IS H E S .

S A N F O R D
PAINT
CO.
407 W . F IR S T S T .

FREE PARKING

RECORDS

Report of the vote east for the
election of two Supervisors for
the Seminole County Soil Dlst.
gives Ralph Hammond of Long­
wood—1M; thus electing him as
on* of the new supervisors. Thera
ware l l i votes cast in tho district
served by Lyman School polling
The Ways and Menni Commit*

ish SIS at Iks treat 4oar
■tmlnol* Count* Court
want i M k l l ? « •

111 . nubile i

S k W 1•"
iiu ’ u"’ •TW.’ff'iAl?
“
ieJ^e o P . * ^ a "r.^VTori*

‘ ■i. ." * 2iu S " 'A 3r 1iu

IfeH
B
S
Uvwusr.v/.ts
i

RACING!
E

POLAND

Court Beal)

turned from visiting her daught­
er* U Smith Georgia. Mr. Leviaar
expects to nuka hia future horns
with Mrs. Bullard to Lake Mary.

No woridor this great
'55 Pontiac is salting
all-time salat record

FAIRGROUNDS

SUNDAY

f .r

July 17

| ; Co v e r e d

n r

gran dstan d

■y
m

n

*
.
i i *"fli
H■ . B g
ii»H &gt; ■

If l

LI

a q s M

v

M to

M *

^

U NU VISITS LIBRARY
PASADENA, Calif. UB-Bura*’a||
Prime Minister U Nu visit* th o^
Huntington Library h«r* todiy a*
ha continue* a three-day tour el
southern California.
&gt;

ESCAPES INJURY
MANILA UP) - Brig. G*n. WUItem Lee, U. S. 13to Air Fores
chief, escaped Injury yesterday
when hie plana skidded off the
runway sad hit a wit* fence
while landing.

o. L « w i v m $ :

BIU4

party was held at tha home of Mr. 9
and Mra. Hixron Eldridgo of Wildmere St. last Sunday. Mr. and
Mra. Robert Hammond and tha
L'ldrldgt's celebrated their wad­
ding anniversaries while Mr. and
Mra.
Earl Cpdtrgreff ware the
ones bidding tha town farewell. Mr.
Updergraff has been stationed at
the Sinford Naval Baa* for tha
past two years and is now being
transferred to the Norfolk Naval ^
Baas. Mr. and Mra. Fred
_____Blanch* B
ard and Robert Carlaon also at­
tended the affair.
Mr. and Mrs. Linton Cox ef
Oxford St will entertain tha Longwood Volunteer Firemen pad thair
families at their home thla Sat­
urday at 2 p. m for a swimming
party and sausage r o u t

p r ic e /*

�j
T H E S A N F O R D T TE R A L D
Holy Communion I SO
Saturday — Sacrament of Pen­
ance — SB p. m.

CHURCH NEWS

UPRALA COMMUNITY
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

10 a. m on the da) before publica- ser.tw at
All ibu rcb Nuiir-es man oe pro- Uon
CKNTKAL BAPTIST 4HURCH Prayer and Bibla Study WedneiRev i W Parham, pavtur
day at 7:45 p. m.
Cor. Fourteenth St„ Oak Are.
•Join the happy, singing crowd.
Sunday School U 45 a. m.
Worship the Lord with us."
Morning Worship Servlet 11:00
FOSTER CHAPEL
«. m
METHODIST CHURCH
lYalnlng Union 6:30 p m. It'a a
Ovledt
family affair
Rev. George H. Carlton, Minister
Evening Worship 7:3h p. m.
8:45 a m. Sunday School.
"Come thou with ua ami we will
!!:n o a m. Worship Service.
£ do liice good."
1:00 p m. Worship Servlet.
th e c n u n a i o r god
UPSALA COMMUNITY
j
nl PROPHECY
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
::.03 Elm Ave.
Rev. C. C. White, Minister
Bishop A. W. Stover, Pastor
Mrs. C over M am . Pianist
B is a m Sunday School.
Alfred Erimoe
11 am . Morning Worship. Ser­ Saperintendeol of CTiareh Bebool
mon by A W Stover.
George Petold
7:45 p. m Evangelistic Hour.
Lesdrr of Mid Week Servlcte
7:45 p. m. Tuesday Evening SenChurch School 10 a m.
Worship II a.m.
Tier, Prayer Meeting
Young People 7 p.m.
7:15 p. in. Thru*day Young PeoEvening aerviru 1:30 p m.
T* pie meet.
Wednesday Evening 7:30 p.m.
Everyone welcome.
Everybody invited to attend til
T1IE CHRISTIAN AND MISSION our services.
ARY ALLIANCE CHURCH
GENEVA BAPTIST CHURCH
Tark Ave. at Fourteenth fil
Geneva
Pavinr. David S. Carnrfis
Rev. Ssmuei Stewart, Pastor
~ Sunday School and Morning
Sunday School 10:00 a. m.
Worship Combined Service 9:45 ■
Church Servica li:o o a. m.
m lo 11:30 a m. "Worship Period
Training Union 7:00 p. m.
begins at 10:40 a. m."
Evening Worship Servica 1:00
Alliance Youth Fellowship 6:3u
p. m.
p m.
Wednesday Prayer Servica 1:00
Evening Service 7:45 p. m.
Wednesday Mid-Week B i b l e
Study T:4J p. m.
THE FREE METHODIST
CHURCH
Morning Worship Service 11 i.ra
Cor. TT. Fourth SI. I.aurrl Ava. |(grm
nii hv that m i i "

Everyone Welcome
Rev. Cecil W. Shaffer

FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
1M7 Sanford Are,
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School 0:45 a. m.
Milton H. Wyatt
Pastor
Morning Worship Service 11:00 a. u!tS
Church School
Classes for all ages
C. W. F. * Cbl-Rho 8:00 p. m.
1I:M A. M.
Morning Worship
Evening Worship Service 7:30 p.
Sermon
Topic
"Tb»
Plus
Mark
of Christianity”.
7:00 P. M.
M. Y.
F.
7:45
Organ Vesper*
8:00 P. Jf.
Evening Worship
Sermon Topic "Temptation"
Rioadraat over W, T. R. R.
U:00 P. M.
Reel ration for
Young People
Air Conditioned Sanctuary.
SOUTH SIDE BAPTIST CHURCH
East 27th Street
Missionary and Promlllenial
Sunday School
10:00 A. M.
Morning Woiship
11:00 A.M.
Subject; "Jesus Vindicating
Himself"
Evening Worship g oo p, M.
"1 Wills’ of Salvation"
Prayer Meeting and Dibla Study
Wednesday 8 P. M.
Pastor:
R. R. Lunsford
Associate Pastor: W. L. Stephens
Sunday School Supt: Milton Higggnholham
*
WELCOME TO TUB CHURCH

rinnn a i m ,, m
Sunday St-h » i 9:45 a.

Evening” Worship "Service i.ao
m.
* rt.
» be “ “ wf-Sf*
Morning Worship )U:vn a. m.
Prayer Meeting Wednesday 1:30
Evening Worship 1:30 p m.
p.m.
Prayer Meeting Thunday 7:30

i

Music
“ Wr’vp Saved \ Plara For You"
Early Morning Worship 8:15 a. m.
Sermon
John L. .Miller
Sunday School
8:45 a. m.
“ Bring All The Family, We Pro­
vide For Every Member o f
The Family -Even the Baby.”
Morning Worship
11: a. m.
Morning Worship
11:00 a. m.
(Broadcast over WTRR)
Sermon
John L. Miller
Training Union
8:45 p. m,
“Training Union is A Family A f­
fair. Coma
with
Your
Family."
Evening Worship
8:00 p. in,
The Married Young People's Union
will present a program on
H.My Church, A Fellowship « f
Betlaver*”
Fellowship Hour after tha Even­
ing Service in the .Memorial
Educational Building. A Re.
ligioua Drama will he given
under the direction of Mra.
John L. l«ee.
Wednesday Evening Service T:30
p. m.
Nursery Open at All Sendee*.
Earphones for tha hard-of-hearing
WELCOME

LAKE MART BAPTIST
CHAPEL
Lake Mary, Fla.

bT. PAUL'S LUTHERAN
E t Luke's Lutheran— In Liavia
nen Oviedo) tha Rev Stephen
I. Tuby. pastor. Morning worship
t :30 a.m Radio Mission broadcast

Pailor — R»v. H. A. Frith Jr.
Sunday School 8:4fi a.m.
Morning Worship ti:00.
Training Union 6:30 p.m,
Kvaning Worship 7:30.
Prayer Meeting Wad. 7:30 p.a .

BILLCEEST BAPTIST CHURCH
Geneva
Cheater ft. Plank, Palter
Sunday morning services:
ID a.m. Sunday School.
11 a.m. Morning Worship.
Sunday evening iirvirea:
4:15 p.m. Training Union.
7:30 p.m. Evening Worship.

Wednesday f:M
mealing.

G O O D / ^ Y E A R

GALVANIZED

* Cen Anywhara.
Sawi Anything!
♦ Cult Weed...
Ptsitic

with
Built-In
M otor

• Sowt Straight
Unit or Curvitl

RUBBER L IN K

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Park Avenue at Siilh Street
W'. P. Rrooks, Jr,,
Pastor
Joka L Miller, jl i - . i M . , / U .

—.

p. m.

Sunday School 10:00 a. m.
Morning Worship U;0O ». m.
The evening services will be omitt­
ed.
Wednesday Prayer and Bible study
will ba observed in the home.
1h* Got pel of Mark w ill be itud-

p.m. Prayer

THE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
OP OVIEDO
Rev. Lents Day, Minister
t:45 a.m. Sunday School
SOUTH SIDE BAPTIST
CHURCH
Robert E. Lunsford
Pastor
William L. Stephen*
Associate
Milton Hlggenbotham
S. S Supt.
Sunday School
IP 00 a. m.
Morning Worship
11:00 a. m.
Evening Worship
8:00 p m
Prayer Meeting Wed.
8:00 p. m.

etiftinf HoM#
moWiufn, 99 t o o n * *tilal
tvHtnfl felodoi AvntlaSI* Immi
mnnufactufor «»t $ 1.50 tiitlt

Hug !„** a*y atandartf
110 115 veil AC.

DOOR M ATS

itlsi a hundred usas arounj
lh » home! Slurrty contlruo
lion, built for rugged service,
Slrong hml handle, llndy and
hollom of heavy.gauge tire).

and #&gt;• roll SAW k -.ady *•

»ut w w ) , plmha Mis, m - i. t a l »• th a ** ar ilia . , ,
i l ’ a igtil Itaat a i r v f . i l . . . fa,H L * i |« ,-n t* . a| pitta*
71” »W« — aav U *» ih. I l f 10" 1 10" le b l* ««H ta ll^ a a .
la i—d V lv v ir -irw lid mete,. M yeu va bate k a a k trta f fee
• pa—ar la w , k a ra t tha ana yaw aon I aKafd to p a n apt

EX TR A S P E C IA L

1h* la-MRn "Kg Soy" krallvr

OPeWee *

mackanlim * i* l i d , • ■ « !• • • &gt; ' grill,1

•vSSy" ehiwtwiw lacVia he*, i

p tia itv m W ii on ta a ii.-&gt; k l,i I- A®

padaen, m l v*l, a-d ipata &gt;e
haOaai tor Sea. td* leaf.

T e r iU fi* 'M y SrWe

caaMavaf ehn-vwra bays. 10 c i -

S xnnSi tor pittlt Mpi or rtefap*.

AMOrMIP

M tlA fU
vatui

.Wednesday:

Prayer Meeting 1:00 p. m.
'Thursday:
EBENEZER METHODIST
CHURCH

a i m HMghta
R*v. Eduard Hurfta, Paster

Sunday School 10 a. m.—Clif­
ford E. Johnson, .superintendent
Preaching Servica 11 a. m.
M Y F I p. m .

Prayer mating, Thursday. f:S0

p. m.

*

ASSEM BLY O F GOD CHURCH

12th St. and Laurel Ava.
Sunday School 8:45 a. m.
Morning Worship 1 1 a m .
4
Youth Service 8:46 p m .
Evangallstie Rally 7i4B p. m.

SA TU R D A Y ON LY

STARTING TIME Ti4*

4 .0 0 x 1A
plus ta* and
rvcappaMe Hrn

Hurry • T '. stocki ara limited and demand will b* terrific a^

this rock-hortnm price! It’s tha lira ralua you've been looking
for! Outstanding Marathon, famous for dependability and
Goodyear’s saw-tooth tread design which gives you mora
start and atop traction. . . added motoring safety! Act fast and
aavaon these brand aaw Goodyear Tiras at special salt prices!
,Y m nt p r a s M t t i n s n

y n f 4 # w n p iy M m t !.

MORE PEOPLE RIDE ON GOODYEAR PRES THAN ON ANY OTHER KINDI
’-1V-'

U S SOUTH PARK AVENUR

SANFORD, FLORIDA

GOODYEAR

S E R VIC E 'S TO R E

PHONES 222-223

I
L_____________—

■—

— 7

[(

i

T * #

�lb

Two K ind s

W onders O f July

O f Speakers

The opening o f the new British parlia­
ment «ho\ved one difference from our Con­
gressional practice. Here the Speaker of the
Houm la a party man, choacn by the ma­
jority, and making ruling* according to
party needa. He goea out when hla party
loaea control and ia aucceedcd by the leader
o f the opposite party.
In England the Speaker (a name going
back to centuriea ago when he waa the
Houae of Common*’ apokeaman in dealing
with tha kin*) la an impartial presiding of­
ficer who aerve* many year*, regardless of
which party control* Parliament. The pre­
sent Speaker, William S. Morrison, is a Conaervative, but had Labor won the election,
he would not hava been replaced. No Speak­
er has had opposition for rejection since
1885. If, however, the office becomes vacant
while Parliament is in session, the new
Speaker is chosen from the ranka of the
majority.
It Is not clear how the American system
cams to differ from the British. Each coun­
try finds Its chosen arrangement reasonably
satisfactory.

T h e Sanford Herald

The siUy season seem* to he starting a
little early this summer, but so are the heat
waves.
Y e t—maybe these things aren't so silly.
Who ran denv that those garden hoaea are
disappearing? The first one reported was in
Downey, Calif., but since then hoses have
been slipping into the ground in front yards
all over.,
- Each hose incident has had its witnesses
and theorists. A good many lawns have been
tom up by men who dug down to see for
themselves, then cut o ff the end o f the hose
and filled In the hole, still baffled.
A resourceful woman in Pacific Pali­
sade*. California, apparently choked o ff the
mysterious force pulling her hose by pouring
down a concoction of cleaning fluid and in­
secticide but this cure was a rare exception.
Experts are still saying it can’t happen.
A professor of engineering at the University
of Minnesota says there is no mechanical
force that could yank an object down into
the earth, though he allows that perhaps
some small animal might try.
Hugo Erickson, Minneapolis city engi­
neer, savs flatly to Minnesota hose loser*:
"There just is no such thing."
Well, it Is a fascinating change from sea
serpents, flying saucers little men, etc.
But have you checked your lawn aprinkler
lately?

Prelude T o Development

Friday, July 15, 1955
T O D A Y 'S

B IBLE

V ERSE

The fnqulty of the Amorltos ia not yet
full.—Gon. 16:18.— But oro long they passad from th« pagea of history. God ia very
tlent, but ho ia also just. Wicked nations
vo dominated the earth in hlatoricat time*,
but they art forgotten now and unmourned.

C

The vast tropical regions of Africa are
a fertile field for econom'c development. But
before such development can take place, aaya
the United Nations In a report on the Bel­
gian Congo and the British Gold Coast ter­
ritories, new agricultural technique* and new
incentives nrc needed.
At present, the people in these parts of
Africa devote most of their working hours
Just to producing for subsistence. The result
is a hand to mouth economy on a broad acaie.
But a shift to apecialited production for
market* would enlarge the money economy
and open new horizons for great numbers of
backward people.
Such a ahlft would also, incidentally,
open up a tremendous market for consumer
goods of all kind*. Thla kind of changeover,
not only In Africa but in ther under-develop­
ed part* of the world, Is one of the moat
practical and effective remedies to prevent
the snread of Communism. .

JAMES MARLOW

Genovs. Elsenhower yesterday told
• news conference no one In tha
American government had suggestad the Ruaaiana wanted to negoliato because they were weak.
-------------------- .
In 19U, U. 8. Pacific Coast
atotes Increased their population
bp I.T par cant or approximately
daubla tha national rata.
— ----■
—

Baby's Bedtime Antics
Kknsaehev, holding a highball
at a party at the U.S. Em­
b assy !* Moscow three daya ago,
■ado himself and his Kremlin
•Hands sound seif-conscious and
Broobled by a tooling at inferiority.

ethers go through various eontoruons before they drop off.
Mend benglng and crib rocking
are •templet. Apparently, these
acUoae give n bony some kind of
relief or satisfy aonso need. Bren
young babies, you know, react to

CAMUAGt T E A M

Many Superstitions Still Stick

PERHAPS I W AS
WELLOFF, A N D
DtOMT
K *O W

G A T L I N B U R G, Tcnn. tm Leavcs from a touring notebook:
Girls, if you want to b e ' sure
you'll get plenty of pork chops
all your life, marry a man with
hairy legs. Hairy-legged mrn make
the best hng raisers.
Mother, if your child is crying
with colic, ft can be relieved by
rubbing Its stomach with a bone
from a pig's foot.
So the mountain people here be­
lieved In the old days anyway—
and some still do.
BUI Postlewalle, young weekly
newspaper publisher here, makes
a hobby of collecting quaint rem­
edies and superstitions that have
been handed down for centuries
among the Southern llightanderi.
He has them posted In “ Homespun Valley," a living museum of

— v

IT ! f

HAL BOYLE

\

SAM DAWSON

ear.
For warts—"Warts may be re­
moved by rubbing each wart with
a bean spUt open, then burying
the bean halves under the drip of
the house for 7 days."
For chicken pox—"Have the person with the po* lie down on the
ground and run soma chickens
over him."
To keep away disease—"Wear a
strip of flannel around the body."
For alobbering children—"T o
stop a baby's slobbering, go to the
brook and get a minnow and let
the baby suck the minnow's tall."
(Of course, later, when he grows
up, he may go to Harvard and
swallow goldfish for fun.)
Poison day—"The ‘ most poison­
ous’ day of the year Is the 27th of
August. (Just why this particular
day has this odd distinction nu one
scorns to know.)
For rheumatism — “ T a k * the
bark ,of a cherry tree put It in
com whisky and drink it."
This ancient remedy Is still well
thought of. If, In an emergency,
the victim feels a twinge of rheu­
matism when no cherry tree is
near, he la said to be affordrd
some relief If he forces down the
whisky without the bark. He can
alwaya get the bark another day.

Manufactusers Have To Pay More
NEW YORK UR - Rising steal
prices and a strike-squeeted short­
age of copper are putting maay
manufacturers in tha middle to­
day in dealing with tltair custom­
ers.
It’i going to cost manufacturers
more to turn out many eonsumar
Kami. But tha public ia wall aware
that Ultra era plenty of such Items
around and that good deals can
be made with retailers In k highly
competitive market. H’a going to
bo bard to eonvlnco the publie 11

The res ion: An abundant sup­
ply of gasoline and keen rivalry
for buslneia among service statloai
has led lo widespread price wan
along tha Eastern Seaboard. Oil
compaalea have been giving dJteeunts to dealers, Now this ell
rempaay hopes to atrsightea out
tha meti, atop tha discounting, end
the price wan by cutting its own
wholesale price to service stations.
Makers of consume! goods using
steel and copper are now studying
what they can do In somawhnt
similar buyer's market. Hie basic
steel pries hai gone up about |TJI
■
Wage Kilos are being
boosted •«■•«- Tbe coat of making
lh* eouatieas Itaraa that contain
metal Is-going up.
But la s market where the eldretailers are already hauling

where auto dealers with large In al trade-in* and other conceiilom
ventoriea are Turing potential cua- it’s going to be hard to pan along
tomers away from rivals by liber lo the consumer all of the higher
cost of production.
The copper shortage la the most
troublesome of Immediate prob
lems fur many manufacturers. A
sliablq portion of this country's
SAN DIEGO, Calif. Of* -Press capper producing capacity fa shut­
Gragg, gp auto mechanic for 33 down by strikes. There was already
ytara, has taken a lot of bugi out a worldwide shortage of copper,
of cart, but never a tnakc-lbal which atarted last year-with strikes
here and abroad just as consumer
It until yesterday.
Harold Brown brought his car demand for goodi that us« copper
to Gragg "to get the anaka out." began to pick up notably.
Gragg tackled the job with a The new strike, atarting July l,
plate of milk end a heat lamp Is rapidly drying up tbe already
after other mechanics had pulled evaporating auppllea.

Snake Is Removed
By A uto M ech an ic

the teats out of tha ear without
tnartng the reptile.
Gragg grabbed the five-foot
gopher make with hla hands,
when It came out from behind
the dash board to alp the milk.
He dumped it into a cardboard
bo* to be returned to Brown.
“ It's Mr. Brown’s ear and Mr.
Browrn'a snake," he laid,

TO

FRIENDS

OF

General Insurance
H. JAMES GUT AGENCY

WATER CONSUMPTION
AT ALL-TIME HIGH
TOKYO is*—Hot dry weather It
booming Tokyo's water consume
tlon to an all-time high. Tbe Wa­
ter Bureau said the record was
s c yesterday—1,134,000 tons, high­
est since the bureau was atlabIIshed In IU7.

812 E A S T FIRST S T R E E T
PH ON E TS

a JAMES GUT

JAMES a GUT

l - '-

____f _ J

n - . - r n ' A ------ i n n _ 1 --------•

are seething to an infant Mow-

la people in Ike Wait to look dewa
their MM at tbo Russians, who
have the largest land army ia Use
•arid, have made astonishing progfeel with ton atom bomb and are
(ratably ahead ad tbe Uitted

Thefa wty R paw lo atweyv
aw n o mok. Quif Ho-Moat to

' -\

AND

Rev. Richard Knrunic of the College of Ih# Bible,
Lexington, Ky. will be the speaker Sunday morning
July 17 All members are-urgently requested to be In
attendance and our friends cordially Invited.

Khrushchov, considered by maay

*,•

MEMBERS

FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH

rhythm, an pwhnpe then* awUoM

i PC, LIVING ROOMGROUP

There If a legend in Africa that
old elephants, feeling death near,
travel to a secret burying ground
to die—and that anyone lucky
enough to stumble on this pachy- %
derm cemetery would find a king’s ~
ransom in valuable ivory.
The legend, ridiculed by natural­
ists, arose because the remains of
wild elephants who die natural
deaths In the jungle are rarely
found.
The tame thing la true of black
bears, which now .abound again in
Ihc Great Smoky M o u n t a i n s .
Where do the bears die?
"1 have never found the skeleton %
of a bear except one that was shot
or had been run over," remarked
Jack Huff, who has spent hit lift
in these mountains and perhaps
knows them as well as any min
alive.
"What happens to them? I hava
a theory that, when they get tick
and old they go into hibernation,
and simply don't last through the
winter. They die covered up in
their holes, and that ia why you •
never find them.
If fluffs theory It true, tha bear
Is more fortunate than most wild
creatures. Nature allots to few the
privilege of dying asleep, peace­
fully in bed.

tlwtptmGuft

m H B i m idmb b i bdiiiu

�1

SodaL
IowaHonoring
j 'Corn Opposer'
Paul Gregory
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD. UP — Thi* month
the great *talc of Inna I* honoring
Taul Gregory, nho oddly enough
hat made hla fame and fortune
by opposing com.
0
At a itage and non a film pro­
ducer, hr hat fought for the theory
that audiences In the itlck* and
elsewhere want high-clast enter­
tainment, not corn.
On July 2d Des Mninei will sa­
lute the 34) car-old producer nho
once was a barefoot farm boy at
nearby Waukee. He'll receive the
honors at the premiere of hit first
movie, "Night of the Hunter."
A
“ It's rather embarratting" he
• admit*, "but I'm alto v e r y
touched."
Gregory left Inwa at IS lo seek
hit fortune in Hollywood. There
wasn't much there. He dropped
hit own handle of Jason I^nhart
for his present one and did tome
bit roles in films, lie organised
a Gilbert and Sullivan touring
troupe, made $28 Ooo, dropped the
vrad in a real estair deal.
£
Altar A brief interlude at a soda
Jerk, he became an agent. In 1919,
he latched onto Charles Laughton
and tent the portly actor on a read­
ing tour that wat a irnsalion. Tbit
led to "Don Juan in Hell," "John
Brown'* Body," "Caine Mutiny
Court Martial" Ind "Three for To.
night." All toured throughout the
United Slatea and acored on Broad­
way.
^
lowant will find their boy amar• lngly handsome (he it often com­
pared to Gregory reck ), articulate
and earnest about producing worth­
while things for the public. He re­
mark* about "Night of The Hunt­
e r":
"The people In Hollywood who
have aeen It ao far either like It
or hate it. The picture ii a de­
parture from the usual methods
of Him making, Those who hate
A l t are those film makers who inw alst on following the tame patterns
that have been established."

Try This One
SUNDAY nrXNE
Here’s a quick and utterly deli
ciout recipe (or upsidedown pine­
apple cake.
Spring Leg of Lamb
Mint Jelly
Broward Potatoes
Celery, Carrot* and Peas
Green Salad
Bread Tray
Dutch Pineapple Cake
Beverage
DITCH PINEAPPLE CAKE
Ingredients: 1 can (1 pound and
t ouneca) pineapple tidbits, H cup
butter or margarine; Si c u p
firmly packed dark brown sugar,
tk box (1 ps und and I ounces) procreamed yellow cake mix.
Method: Drain pineapple thorough­
ly; save syrup (or some other us*.
Melt butter in round layer cake
pan (&gt; by li t Inches); add brown
sugar, mix with butter and pat
down evenly. Arrange drained
pineapple tidbits clotv together
circular fashion over brown sugar
in pan. Make up half the cake mix
(1 envelope-package) according to
dlrrclions on box; pour carefully
over pineapple. Bake In moderate
(350 degrees) oven 30 minute* or
until top of cake is golden brown
and center spring* back when
lightly touched. Invert cake on
serving plate. Serve warm. Makes
I servings.

You ean make your own tomalo
Juice cocktail this way. Open a
ean of tomato Juice; add salt,pep­
per, onion powder, celery seed
and chopped parsley. Let stand
s e v ca l hours to chill and blend
flavors. Strain and serve with
crackers and a cheess spread.
Ever magnate cooked baby
green lima beans In a wall-seatoned French dressing? When
ready to serva the beans, drain
them and mix In a little chopped
onion; serve with cold meat

Calendar

Lake Mary Scouts
Plan To Enter
New Area Council

title, Seiko TafcahasM la
■anted with a row boy hat ■
arrives hi Leo Angelas i
Tokyo. Mm wfll s^esaeet

country at Hm Mtee Un
eonteat la

"L-BOW ROOM” KITCHEN

MONDAT
The Vacation Bible School at
the Elder Springs Baptist Chapel
will be form 8:30 to 11:30 a. m. for
hoys and girls age 3 thru It) years.
The Dependable Class of the
First Methodist Church will meet
at the home of Mr*. Lowell tiller,
ltd N. Summerlin Ave at I p m
for Its regular business and so­
cial meeting.

Elder Springs Baptist Chapel
from 8:30 to 11:30 a, m.
The First Baptist Intermediate
Royal Ambassador* will maet at
7:00 p. m.
WEDNESDAY
The First Baptist Prayer Meet­
ing Service will begin at 7:10 p,
m.
The
First Baptist Training
Union Executive Committee will
meet In the Chapel following tha
Prayer Service.
Vacation Bible School at tha
Elder Springs Baptist Chapel will
he from 8:30 to 11:30 e. m.
THURSDAY
The Elder Spring* Baptist Cha­
pel Vacation School will be from
8:30 to 11:30 a. m.
The First Baptist Junior R. A.'a
will meet at tha church at 7:00
p. m.
The First Raptist Men’s Bro­
therhood (rill meet at tha ehureh
for their Supper and Program
meeting at 7:00 p. m.
The First Raptist Chapel Choir
rehearsal will begin at 7:80 w. m.
The Ladies Aid Society of tha
Lutheran Church of the Redeemer,
will hold ■ brief businesa meeting
followed by a social hour at 7:30
p. m. In the home of Mra. Ruth
Senkarik, 2412 Elm Ave.

A group made up of representa­
tives of (he people in Lake Mary
who h ive cooperated In making
Girl Scouting available to the com ­
munity met recently to consider
and decide matters pertaining to
the prnpused Girl Scout Council
with Arcs
Jurisdiction.
Those
present were .the two troop com­
mittees. leaders and appointed
members of ths two sponsoring
TUESDAY
groups, namely the Chamber of
Circle! of the First Methodist
Commerce and the Parent Tea­
Church will meet as follow* at
chers Association.
9:45 a. m.j Circle No. 1, Mr*.
It was decided that Laka Mary
C. E. Meek*, 2(93 Orange Ave;
would Join tha new Area Council
Circle No. !, Mr*. C. L. Echola,
which it now in tha formative
W. 20th St; Circlo No. 3, Mr*.
ataga.
Roy Wall, (08 Virginia Ave. for
a picnic end swimming party;
Mrs. L. W. Scott and Mra. W.
Circle No. ( with Mr*. Dlake
B. Evans were appointed as of­
Sawyer, 20(1 Elm Ava. with
ficial representatives of Lake
Mary, at meetings of the steer­
Mra. Adam Miller aa co-hostess;
and Circle No. 6 with Mra. J. S.
ing committee of the Girl Scout
Area Council.
Williamson 204 W. 18th Street.
Tuesday they attended a meet­
The Unity Claw will meet at
ing of the officially appointed re­ A BOARD OP RBPRK8RNTAT1VK8 win elected a: the re- rnt (T O Wives Club meeting. The duly o f
7:45 p. m. In the Valdei Hotel
presentatives of the cooperating the committee is to ettemnt to secure desirable m ■nihers for (he nrranitatinn. These voted on were with the Rev. Carolyn Pareoni aa
teacher. The public it Invited.
communities and Councils. This (left to right) Mrs. J. U. Russell. Mrs. II. B. G vent, Mrs. Russell A. Spencer, Mrs. Janie* C. Per­
son* and Mrs. R. Edge. Not shown are Mrs. J. W. Kastman and Mrs. A. J. Allen. (Photo bv Jameson)
group which was a Study Group
The First Baptist Intermediate
Royal Ambassiidor* will meet at
hai now becoma tha Steering
the church at 7 p. m.
Committee. Committees to take
care of tha necessary businesa
The Pilot Club will hav# a dinner
and promotion were formulated.
meeting at the home of Mr*. Al
At this meeting a film atrip called
Hunt, 2485 Palmetto AveH at
Friends of Mr*. P. H. Lansing
"Under the Green
Umbrella."
(1:30 p. m.
Jr. will be glad to learn that she
Ever try adding cream to t
was shown. It reveals the benefits
Is home from an Orlando Hospi­
The R, W A. (night group) cir­
The Gleaners Class of the First
tangy French dressing? Uie two.
which are accrued to Girl Scout­
tal and is gelling along fine.
cle
of
the
First
Christian
Churrh
Baptist Church held it* monthly
thirds cup oil and H cup vinegar
ing tinder Area Jurisdiction.
%
By DOROTHY ROB
business and social meeting Tues­ Women's fellowship will meet at
AP Womrn’a Editor
friends of Mrs. Morris Moses day evening al the home of Mrs. tha home of Mr*, lis te r Tharp on plus salt, pepper and garlic pow­
der to la*le for the dressing; then
NEW
____ YORK i f —A IMS verol«n will he sorry lo learn that she has M. C, llagnn witli Mrs. John Fox 1100 tink Ave., at 7:30 p.m.
The Gleaner* Class of the Flrit slowly beat In a third cup of
of tha hobble akirt, designed by undergone surgery In South Nassau as co-hostess.
Baptist Church will meet with light cream.
Cell Chapman and nameu too Community Hospital in Oceanside,
Mrs. Waydc Rucker vice pres I- Mrs. M, C. Hagan, 708 Park Ave.,
Castle Walk, Is ihe sensation nf Long Island, N. Y.
TH E S A N rO R D H E RA LD
dent, conducted Ihe meeting *n.f al 8 p. m. Mra. John Fox will be
New York'* current week of fall
F rl. Ju ly 1.1, 1955
Png* S
opened
with
prayer.
co-hostess.
fashion showing*.
Mr. and Mrs. R P. Goodsperd
Mrs. C. C. McManus presented
The Fidrlii Class of the First
HOLLYWOOD (JB-Lana Turner
The astute Cell, known for strict- relumed Wednesday ifle r visit­
la Just a* Indignant about tha case ly fabulous cocktail and evening ing her aister, Mrs. J, J. Jones (he devotional and opened by read­ Baptist Church will meet with
ing Psalms 121. She discussed Mrs. M. I). Bumgarner, 801 W.
of tha painted pantlaa aa Sen. Ke- gown* beloved by all female tclo- in Philadelphia, Pa.
briefly thoughts gleaned from Dr 20lh St. at 8 p m. with group
fauver is.
vliion atari, dramalites Ihli re­
Peale's book, "The Power of Posi­ Four. Mr*. George Steele, chair­
Recently the Tennessee Demo turn to tha model of World War
tive Thinking."
man, In charge.
crat waa hero lo investigate the I In apcctacular fuchsia, lemon,
II was reported lhal the class
The Vnculimi Bible School at
effect of movUs on juvenile delin­ mauva and gold lame satin* and
was to mike a contribution toward
quency. The hearings went far brocade*. The »klrt I* draped pegsending a young girl lo Ridgecrest.
afield and one 'day the matter of top faihlon about the hlpi, hug*
N O T IC E
Mrs. Rucker appointed a nominat­
movie ads waa brought up.
the ankles in hick and 1* silt to
ing committee with Mr*. Myron
Several exhibits were offered, tha kne# In front. Thi* make* It
Mr*. James Blsnkenshlp prr
Nnl Responsible For Anv Dehte
including ona featuring Lana's potiible In wslk or dance with aided oscr the regular meeting of Smith as chairman.
Contracted Other Than Mv Own.
During a most enjoyable social
frame in “ The Prodigal." A movie ease, and yet preserve* Ihe hobble the Anns Miller Circle Tuesday
JiMeph Kampf
period,
refreshment*
were
served
■d censor testified that he had skirt look.
night at Ihe Elks Club.
Hanford Florida
by
Mrs.
Hsgan
and
Mrs.
Fox
lo
the
ordered panta painted in an effort
Gasp* and applaui* greeted
Routine business was conducted
lo make the picture teem less these »an»atlonal *tyle» when they and it wa« voted to send an Anna following members;
Mrs. J. A. Strange. Mra. If. W.
racy.
were preienled In member* of the Milter pin lo Mrs. Morris Moses
"The picture waa much worse visiting fashion pren, plunging who lias recently undergone sur­ Rucker, Mr*. Fred Myers, Mrs
IL.B. Carter, Mrs. A J. Peterson.
afterward than K was before,” ex­ into a week of hectic fall show­ gery in New York.
LO CAL BUSINESS
Mr*. Alice McManus, Mr*. R. E
claimed Lana when the matter ing* by New York designer*.
Refreshment*
were
served
al
the
NEEDS
Peitrifoy,
Mrs.
M
N.
Cleveland
and
was brought up. "Thoaa pants
Similar but les* tpectarular Is
looked awful. Such a drab green Mra. Chapman's Juliet sllhouetti, conclusion of the session by .Ihe her aister, Mrs. John Vassar who
hoiteisei who wore Mr*. Prink was a guest.
P R IV A T E SE C R E TA R Y
color. Awful"
consisting of a curving pctal-likc
She defended the costume, which overskirt on a luih latln or lame Woodruff HI. Mrs. Merle David
B u sin e m Anri L egal Experience Desired. Must Be
and Mrs. Sam Carter. ,
Here's aluxurinna company dish:
appeared to expose her hlpi to a (heath—thi* itreel length.
rirtumnt. Courteous nnd Intelligent. Excellent Salary
Foasiin
Iteiivy
rrenm
with
g-irlle
Those
present
were
Mr*.
Blank­
remarkable degree. Actually she
In the mood of new formality,
For Right Person.
wore flesh colored covering under­ this designer also shows a group enship, Mrs. David, Mrs. Larry powder; ini* with cooked cleaned
neath tha beada.
of long, illnky sheath evening nrnnett. Mra. l/iwell Oiler, Mr*. shrimp, cooked rice and rooked
"I waa well concealed," she re­ gown*, aometlme* accompanied by Jark Kanner, Mrs. Frank Dutton, green peas. Add alicrd water
W rite B ox ABC c /o H erald
marked. "There was nothing por elegant fur . trimmed matching Mrs, Martha Lange, Mr*. Wesley ehralniila if you like. Heat in •
•
All Inquiries Will Be Treated Confidential
covered
skillet
end
sen
e
with
■
Flllmon,
Mrs
Elaine
Smith,
Mrs.
nographic about it at all. There coati.
crisp aalad end eruaty rolla.
wasn't even any cleavage. It was
But the gown* dedicated to Irene J. It. Hnolrhnn. Mrs. Harold Kastmild compered to some movie Casll* steal thi show, and are ner, Mrs. Henry Tamm Sr., Mrs.
ads.
ilatcd for wide distribution this Harry Kent.
Mra. W. J. Clarke, Mrs. H. C
"Tha roaaon R wat eritielitd fall. You'll be seeing the Castle
was becausa tha post had saver Walk hobble skirts all over the Disbrow, Mrs. Marie Stafford, Mrs.
bees done before. It waa flaw, so country thla fall, line* these were Irving Felnhsrg, Mrs. R. W. Caipeople thought It waa immoral.'
tha pet* of buyers who already aube, Mr*. R. E. Rngero, Mr*
Kefauver could find nothing to have placed thair orders, figuring Esther Barber, Mrs. Douglas Hus
complain about ifl Lana’* cot American women are yearning for kin, Mrs. Ralph Wight II, Mrs
tumes for
bar current epic a change from the multi-petticoat Harry Adair, and Mrs. Woodruff
"D iane." Whan viewed, she wat evening silhouette. It's doubtful If
In Casserole
ecvtrod from Beck to toie In a you wear any petticoat at all with
Place sliced canned tongue In
■cede riding drosa of old Prance, ths New Caalle Walk gowna.
Another alar of the opening day a greased rasarrnle and alter­
of showings was Claire McCardrll, nate with layers o f thinly sliced
who always can be depended upon potatoes. Pour a ean of onion
■oup over all and rook eovered
to make fashion headlines,
In direct contrail to the polished In y moderate oven for 45 minand aopbistlcated gowna shown by utaa to 1 hour.
Cell Chapman, tha casual (litre
outdo** aven herself In Immnrialiting tha fashionably carries* look
with a costume that might have
Juat tha perfect touch to dross up any bed­
been designed for spare travel and
room. We hnva just received a new shipment
certainly should provide insulation
at aubiero temperatures. In bulky
o f bedspreads. White background with large
NOW
black, belga and brown checkered
rose pattern and « ruffled flounce.
tweed, K consists of a loose fingcrtip-length coat lined in fur and
C olor# o f p in k , g re e n , w in e,
fastened with leather straps, plus
a matching Jumper dress. The coat
blue
and y e llo w .
Mr. and M n . Voile Williams ha* a huge cape collar which ran
Jr. ate the proud parents of a be worn aa a parka, and Ihe
DOUBLE OR TWIN SIZE
new daughter, Pattfe Lee born wbola should have wida appeal for
T b m d a y July T la (be Farnald wattasa girls and Eskimos,
Laughtoe Mtmarlal H o s p i t a l
Outckaand
■laa weighed • lb*, and
flood topping for e bakingand killtra
powder coffee cafe: Mix a Utird
wait for
ot brows sugar with a couple
Hr. M l Mra. V , L. Holcombe of tablespoons of flour and a
Tarxan
in
H
Jr. aMouace the Wrih ad a S lb. quarter cup of ooft butter. Add
o’ hlddon*
is ee. sc* b o n July U Is fee Per. • third ewp of chopped ewtmtnu
lunglol
M U Laugh tea M c a u d a l Hospt- •Mb aa poeen# or walnuts. IprinUL Tha young man waa aamad hie Hi# topping over better te he
William Lealia Ul a a l hla
' ‘ i# *e eight-inch square
la Ifea

/955s Version

Of Hobble Skirt
Starts Sensation

IP&amp;aao/ioIa

Gleaners Class
Has Monthly Meet
Business; Social

Picture Backed
By Pretty Lana

L I STEI N

to
The
Sanford Atlanth
National Bank
Speak
WTRR
9:15 A . M .

Anna Miller Circle
Discusses Business
At Club Session

Plisse Bedspreads
creation from

Vat Dyed Plisse

k

B I R T H S

4

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cep

95

OPS

T f lH X f l N&amp;
^lOOf.fc JUMCK
IRS
TANkSP TASTE.

• ( r s v f l p a u rra R M u ci

^^(8

5Ri#5tj8^^((A lever, ^ieii

•*

k

^

HerA—aBlkcrmtih. h'»DMwith IL._, .

ef tenw. Cash ewi
vefteekea ve«. A f m i vitality

I4 MMI

*»V.y- vs**- v» |HJpj

'Bon/en's

— A LSO —

4

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U .V

M I M C V I

n

HORSEBACK

And here's the Intext, a bedapread with
a double ruffle. Dainty rose bud flower­
ed designs on a white background, and
a bevy of beautiful colors to choose
from turquoise, blue, lavender, pink, and
yellow.

* Eaetly Laundered
a Does Not Require Ironing
* Glamourize Tour Bedroom
* Designed by VlU-R##4
V

DOUBLE OR TWIN SIZE

6

�*-

Orlando Tops
; |f
Fivers Here Tonite
T H E SA N F O R D H E R A L D
Pajje 6
Frl. July 15, 1955

Orlando
See.n.H
G e m -» » ill*

Co. "*4
Dayton* III

» 11

S II
&gt; IS

Lakeland

* nsVoi i.T s rr.sT r.R O A T
GrUndo ». A ll-s u r e »
liA M I.e TOIIAT
OrlenO.* at danlnrA
Gslnrevlllt' nl Daytona
Ml. relerelilire *1 I.eVrlnnn
% ATI IIA A I. MC AI44 H
HrD*Vl&gt;n
Milwaukee
i hi. re'.+ .

Ken
Ht nYork
il|g.
L'lneinnail
PtiildileU.lila

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4Ji

JJ
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I!

The Orlando Flysrs will travrl
to Sanford tonight for a game
with the Cardinal! at Memorial
Stadium. Game time la 7:30.
The Flyers overcame a five-run
deficit lo defeat the All Stan AS
last night In Orlando.
Rookie pilcher Sammy While,
who came In when the score wai
0-5 In the fourth, shut-out the AllStars on two hita through the
eighth and received credit for the
victory. Alex Gordey pitched the
last inning after rWhlle was lifted
for Manager Tommy O’Brien, a
pinch hitler, during a winning
eighth inning rally.
A crowd of 1.900 saw lha Flyers
score two runs in the fourth, add
another In the seventh and ire the
situation with three in the eighth.
O'Brien doubled In the tying run
and an error by Daytona Beach’s
Hill Fatriss on Dava Drapp’ a
grounder allowed the winning run
to come in.
Tony Gatch started lha rally wllh
his fourth straight hit, an Infield
single, off loser Orlando Pena of
Daytona Beach.
Eno Rodrlguei at Cocoa was the
big gun for the All Stars. His first
Inning homer scored Terry Terrell
of Sanford ahead of him and gave
his team a 3-0 edge.
The team* resuma their regular
srhedute tonight,

I’ lltei.nrel.
3«
■*»*
III.el I,T« 1 rsTI'.BIIAS
at. I.-.Ill* a, I l f o k l m 1
New Vollt S. Cl'lreeo S
AM.-STARS*
Clnrlnnell I*. I’tlUtiursh t
Milwaukee J. Philadelphia 1
0.1 MIA T o ll AV
Miller 3h
St. Lottie nl llrooklyn — Arroyo Wvi.li jn
Trrrrll
If
(lp .S ) ' « N.wi.unhe 114-11.
4-lilcnro at Nrw York — lle .k e r Krill. H&lt;
i iin.ia'i rf
(S -*l 4* llrern 4»- •S.
e e l t w e u k r e at
Philadelphia Mil I.Rltl I I
fBiahtiW— ilurdelte IT-41 va. Him- II C onk *1
tnnhe i V r .
rurnt*
f»
rinrlnnell al ritUhureh - h u t - Will Inn* e
Turner
e
hail lS-ei «» Daw i s - l i
e « i i :n i M &gt;
K
nrirpa p
(Yeelrn l.ij e name nol Ini ludeill relrr-nit p
w I.
rs
Merllhy
p
Kerr York
» l I#
*V, Tens p
Clevrlsnd
*0 II .■')* ».|i*IMonnt»
Tdiaie
Chicago
4" SI . t i l
Boitoti
4S 14 .* . 1 O R L A X n o
pelrott
it 40 A n4
K e n .ee Clip
SA IS
4So H kaeeht Sb
Wiaeningtnn
ST SI .IIS Drunn o

ab
s
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l
I

k • a
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j i e
a i d
S S II
4 1 1•
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}

Wilson-Maier Grip
On Second Place
Tightened By Win

i
•
I
By H. P. GORDIE
l a i d
S o l d
Wilson-Huier Furniture further
I 1 S 1
I. • d d
d • d 1 secured its hold on second place
d a d d
Wednesday night by
t d O d position
aa a s« a downing Burpee Seed Co. 7 to
ab b • a 2. Wilson-Maier picked-up six hits
I 1 t S
t n S 4 from Burpee pitcher Carl Witt,
rf
S l i d
3111(1In v.t e:i
SI . 3)1 Shirley
while Larry Chunat held the los­
h i *r i.Te rr .sT F .n n A Y
44 IIron II
S l i d
.
. .•
V*e
York I
turn* SI.
1 d I &gt;
K essbl.o rf
S o l d ing team to only three hits.
Detroit T -t. oBetna d-T.
v
&gt;_•!, ■ . . .. •hi nh ion 1-1
rfalrh Hi
4 4 14 d
r'nleman a
4 1 0 1 In the second game Hunt-Mc*
fi 4 *41:* T o ll AY
U aiM n aton si Chicaao — Srh- Snyder p
1 0 4 0 Roberta’ power-hitting and sharp
W hite p
I 0 0 S
•sin 14.H ve. Trurke «*•«&gt;,
l i e It IIn .. ree n l K a n t * * C l l v — X u h-nRrlea
i a a n fielding kept the Robson Sporting
Terlnk (d .l| ve. Rtiants ( l - l )
r.risirh
a a n f
Goods team In tha league's cellar.
n e a r
Iloelnr at Detroit — .Ninon (1-3) Gordey p
Talale
as a IT 14 A tripla bv Eugene Pennington, a
V* Harver 4T-SI
New Ynrk at Cleveland — Tar lay W—4lrnui&gt;ila4 nut far p*ns la tlh. triple by Carl Crews, and a homeb— Itoablrrf for W hile la llh .
411-Tl »«. lVjrnn (11-41.
run by Bill "Slugger" Fleming
added into Hunts' 7 to 1 victory.
Abe Fennell of Robson gave up
eight hits and Hunt pitcher C. 0 .
Jonea allowed five.
STANDINGS
W L
Hunt-MrRoberta
7 2
Wilson-Maier Fum. Co,
A .7
Atlee-Burpee Seed Co.
4 6
Robson Sporting Good*
1 B
*

GOLF ANI) GALLANTRY
DON'T MIX
MIAMI W )—Chivalry la nol
dead in Florida. But it did taka
a beating.
When a woman'* golf ball land­
ed In tha rough at tha Biltmore
Golf Course, Earl Dymond pulled
a Sir Walter Raleigh. Ha held
luck a bush eo aha could get a
good smack at the ball.
But Dymond get the amack In­
stead Her awing connected iquaraly with hia head.

N I G H T L Y a t 8:15
(except Sunday)

M A T IN E E S Wed. ft Sat at 2

r— Ran for O'Brien In 3th
A ll-aiars .......— ....
*«■ J**—•
orlaaSo .... — ..........
K— xnltr I, Drapp. Davla. l’atrlaa
R»— Miller t. Tarrell. Korlrlguaa
OHega, Davla, Kassahlan, Hmieaknerhi.. Match,
f.'olsman,
Marcia.
I1BI— W yatt i , Keith Rodrigues 3.
(iatrh *, Bhlrley. UBrlen F, IB —
Xllller. Iluueeknerht, I’atrlea, O Itrlen. 311— llnilrlguea. lilt— Hodrluai, HB— Terrell. Wliann. DP—
avia to llnuaeknecht to Oatrh.
n r — Keith, Bhlrley. Left— A ll Flora
a, Orlando I, BB— o r t*«a l. Rnydar 1. Pateraon 1. Bu— Ortaga I,
Peterson 3, llarllhy I, Gordey 1.
HO— O rta ia 3 In a tnnlnga; Snyder
t In a 3-1 tnninaa. Petsrani, I In
nnlnae. llarllhy I In t Innings;
lie t In 4 1-3 Inalniai Gordey a
In I Innlngsi Pena I In I Inning:
R 4 E R — Ortega « -# :
Snyder 3-3;
Pataraen 1-3; Htrllhy l-lg Pena 1-1
Snyder »-3t W hlta *-o : HOP —
Ortega (W’ llaon. Kassahlan). W P
— Snyder I . Paterann. PB — W l) .
Ilanta. W — W hite
Pena^ U— K e t-

6

Volusia County
KENNEL ELU B

H0 U H

it

Spend the weekend In Daytona Beach

W

Governor C la im s ^
IBC's Threat Based

Mayor League
Leaders

^
INGLEWOOD, Caltr. tP -Joc*ey
Yeutier's condition was unchanged
today at Centinela Hospital where
he was taken after being seriously
injured in a spill In yesterday's
second race at Hollywood Fark.
Last night the track phyileian.
Dr. Theodore Haltner, laid X-raya
showed that Yeutter, 29, suffered
a fracture of the second lumbar
vertebra and a badly bruised kid­
ney. He said the Jockey was in
satisfactory condition but ha hid
been “ badly hurt."
The Jockey's horse, Against
Time, fell in a Jam at the club­
house turn. One horse, Miss Celeste
raced over the fallen Against Time
and Yeutter. Against Time, unin­
jured, then regained his feet, start­
ed bucking and fell back on the
unconscious jockey.

S t ill brilliant white
years a fte r painting

Tennis Upsets
Missing In Play
ATLANTA Jh — There ware no
upseta—and only one close call—
as the four top seeded players
moved intn the semifinals of the
National Clay Courts toon is tourn « » —*
Dctemnng cnampion n r n a n r
Barticn of San Angelo, Tex., was
extended yesterday when young
Jerry Moss of Modesto, Calif., the
nation's No. 1 Junior player, de­
feated him aix games to four lo
win the second act. Barticn had
the first set stashed away 6-2 when
Jerry'a forcing game sent him into
an extra tel where he rtUicd 6-2.
6- 1.
Barticn la seeded No, 4 here.
Ahead of him, in order, ire Tony
Trabcrt of Cincinnati, the Wimble­
don champion: Ham Richardson of
Baton Rouge, La., and Eddie UuyIan of Trenton, N.J,
Women's quarter-finals and dou­
bles play featured today's pro­
gram. !|e m i f i n a l matches are
And yet, ere old Et it back booked for tomorrow.

again, like a man on a pogo stick
We'll be the last In contend that
he wai a wolf with a curly tail
against young Paul Andrews the
other night in Chicago. But he did
win over a very promising young
man, and the official who voted for
Andrews must have been looking
at another fight.
Ai a reward, the former cham­
pion haa been assigned the unen­
viable task of trying to cool off
Hurricana Jackson In Syracuse
next month. If he doea aeore a
decisive victory over the wild man
from Long Island, then what do
we haveT Why, nothing much ex­
cept • f e 1lo w named Ezurd
Charles slicking out aa tha moat
logical candidate to fight Marciano
yet again, providing the Rock beats
Arche Moore Sept. B&gt;.
. Before you icream foul, look
aver the lilt. Jackion tops the newcomers since he recently wiped
out an earlier derebt by Jimiqy
Slade, He'a a tireleia, rugged cus­
tomer, If atlghtly erratic in hta
thinking, and he promises to give
Ei a very hard evening. But aay
that the veteran does mutsr him,
who la around after that for Ka
to conquer?
.
Nino Valdes, beaten by Moore?
Holman, licked by Et in a return
go only a month ego? Floyd Fatt*rson only to and ITS pounds?

Trabcrt took out alxih • seeded
Sam Giammalva of Houston, Tex.,
6-2. Al, 610.
Richardson, against Jack FrOat,
filth seeded from Monterey, Calif.
Johann Kupferbergcr, the South
African Davis Cupper and second
seeded foreign entry, gave MoyIan a tussle in tha first set before
succumbing M . He dropped the fi­
nal two seta AO, AO.

Brook

HARRISBURG, ra .
- G ot .
George M. Leader says the Inter- g
national Boxing Club's threat to
stay out of Pennsylvania was
bated on an “ inaccurate" Interpre­
tation of the proposed new state
boxing rode.
The governor sent in explana­
tory telegram to Truman Gibson.
IBC secretary, last night after Gib­
son said in Chicago that the IBC
would not schedule any fu r th e r ^
fights In Pennsylvania.
Such a move would all but kill
the sport in the state.
Leader had told a news confer­
ence earlier that “ if we can’ t clean
up boxing" in Pennsylvania “ we'd
better he rid of it." He said he
would extend his 90*day ban on
boxing indefinitely, if needed.

je lr-tu*m »eliA O
H o u s e

p a

in

t

• v a iU b io

CALL THE LUMBER NUMBER

FO R 8U D D E N S E R V IC E

Fight Results
▼ M C M S D A T N IG H T 1* P IG MTS
. L O I ANMKLES Tommy Manaols,
l * * w . Chlragn. outpointed Fabala
Chavs*, i l l . Cos A n gelai, 10.
VKW
YORK — 11*11) Hackney,
lln , New York, outpointed Mic­
key Carter, lln . New Y o rk . I.
flKNO _llr&gt;warrl K ing, I II. R a is ,
oulpnlniak W illi* Baaa, lo t, Loa
Angelas. la.

w ova
M

l_

la u e

a**

a

hw bi

on

_____________
D U

P O N T

P A I N T S

fo r

E V E R Y

P U

R P O S E

YOU CAN PAY A LOT
MORE MONEY
AND STILL NOT GET*
ALL THESE CHEVROLET
, V A D V A N TA G E S ! .

FUN

• i*4*r try Haksr

l

Found in many at Ansa-'
• ica's costliest can - you
! tet R only in Chevrokt
• u tbs low-price Add.

Ban-Rues StnnHnp

^

Spscisl bill bcsriflgs Is
the steering gear redact
friction . . . males Mesas
iag a lot easier.

Mhra»ta«e of thla KoaomkaJ
tha f oDowtof repairs and wumj

i0h*prUsi ear# la Ut'aAatfe,

�1

WANT ADS
I f It** W orth A n y th ln t
It’s W orth A d v ertisin g 1b

CLASSIFIEDADS

ft—RKAI ear ATS BOR
-

'A N N O U N C IN G '

METAL ROOFTNO
I’m hippy to have Annabelle New te Stock. 9-V Crimp -1V4"
Henderjon associated with me
Corrugated— 2V*“ Corrugated.
in Real E»t»te.
Get all Your roofing naeda at
4 BEDROOM S

THE OLD HOME TOWN

By STANLEY

S H E M ^ E O A lV ’ B E - S O
I U P P I T Y 'B O U T H E R F O L K S . \

Skanruui C oacra l* PI pa Co.

.

"O N e s e n t b n c e t e l l s a l l " —
t h e o n e J u c v te Ho o k e © &lt;s a v e 'e m : / / /

Living room. Dining. Sun room. Out Wou 13th St
Phona 1439
Large modern kitchen with
Stove and Refrigerator. Cera­
A D t CONDITIONING
mic TUa Bath,'Large closeta.
Room or House
On 3 lob with shade trees.
B . 3 . POPE CO , IN C
114.500.
Park Ave. Phooo 144*

3 0

AN &amp; CO STS FOR
F I S H T I A K S -----------^

R O SA L . P A Y T O N

FoeUockars ........... Special 97.93.
(Reg Real Estate Broker)
Aansbello Henderson. Associate Paint ......................... - 9240 gaL
Naw Location — Hignway 17-92
“ “ • r e s ih
ARMY-NAVY
at Hiawatha. Phone 2971.
Pboae 1331
319 Sanford Ave.
Whethec buying or lalliiig, it will
Used furniture, appliances, toob,
ete. Bouxht.sotd. Larry's Mart.
“ / ’ F . 'M f f i . . SSALTOt
331 E ut lit SL Phona 1831.
W r K ? % . __. don't hava to see the credit
rnknsgrr
to save dollars legitii
O xltr . W alter R omos, lae. YS
mattly on our GIGANTIC ReGaaaral Centrarites
moval SALE.
• Commercial—Custom 4 Low

H 7L

R O B IN S O N

private hatha, m W. Tint K.
t jj
F or year « a » l

D f 4 » anew
N IX BEDDIN G M FG. COCullen s a d H trkwy, R ssltors 1381 Sanford Ave.
Phoaa 9*44.

Ati Km Agte.

iaa N. Park Ave. Pboae 3312.

&lt;” • _

FURNISHED Ayartaaat MO Park
A v e - _______
_

C A . W H ID D O N , SR.

Keg. leal Ratai# Broker
Ph- UP

111 &amp; Park

» ¥ S i5 5 L fa :^ u 3 % S lf

O P E N HOUSE
Highway IT-93. 3—bedroom
spacious homa on nice
corner lot situated near ichoo
and groctry. Homa ia open all
week for your Inspection. Sell­
er will redecorate interior with
Buyar’i choice of colors. See
it at 1401 Sanford Ava. See us
-FURNISHED ApC Pboaa i»-W .
for dsUtls. Good terms svelte
ble.
MV. Exeluslvs.
MUtWIl*.

"gffifflg .t S jSS

B to o n Apt 800 AvtcadftT

*ws%\js®Sl«ss
««.

C a

FIT FOR A QUEENFoam Rubber Mattressas. InnerS p r i n g Mattresses, Couches,
Baby Btdj, Renovating. Uphol­
stering and Slip Cover work.

BtfUwmy u « B aby B

t

M U S IC

______

Unfunlihad 2, • f f r007‘. *??“£■“
' with children. 13U Park Ava,
Pho:
oaa 3062.

S S t t i 2K,

Ar*.
“ •

t Rooms and Bath. US Elm.
Phona 2963-W.
______
COOL, Hooray 3 bedroom furnish­
ed Apartment with screened
porch tSA.monthly. 1703Vi Msg
nalia Ava. Pb. 1171.
CLEAN furnished Apt. One. Two
partooi. 135.00. i l l Park ave.
I BEDROOM ftinUihed G .r u .
Apartment 1300 MallaovlD*.
BEAUTIFUL 3 Bedroom lure*
ished Apt Call I85-M.________
All raodern. B ml. south oa 17&lt;U
Highway at SUodard Station.
Nice lhadr grassy loti, ccaeat
patloi. Ftne sBuff.iboard*. Recreation room, Immaculate tiled
ihoware. “ Really elaaa for
folka who care.". Adulta.
GARAGE APT. for couple. IN Vi
E. 11th St. Phoaa 0 8 4 .
NICE Bedroom, IVivat* entrance
and batb. Phoaa 3029-W.
APARTMENTS - Furnished 2101
Magnolia Ava. One bedroom
lio oo monthly. Two bedroom
Phona 1673,
1 135 00 monthly. P'
Hobart A. WUilami.
FURNISHED APT. Quiet Shady
for refined couple. UM W. 3rd
St

■iWJRS**
NICELY furnished cottage. Free
electricity and water. By month

Sem inole Realty
T. W. MEBO
W. DIETJU
3T ar 145
im i Park Ava.
3 bedroom bouse. 4H par cent
mortgage. 940 monthly. 1905
Summerlin.
NEW 3 Bedroom concrete block
homa. Weatinshouae Kitchen,
GI financed. Low Doom Pay­
ment Phone 430.
CHOICE BUILDING LOT —Cor
ner Maple Ave. end 30th St. 54
x 134’. inquire 411 Maple Ave.
after S p. m.
_____
LAKE MARY - 4 Bedroom house.
20 x 30 porch, 3 Car Garage.
913.000. Phone J. W. Dodson,
1735.
2 Bedroom FRAME House. 5 Lots
with 95 budded orange trees.
Complately furnished. P h o n e
1996-11.
NEW THREE BEDROOM -Lake
front home, u n f u r n i s h e d
918,000.00 Total. Large mort­
gage. Leaving country soon.
Inspection invited. J. J. Maney.
Altamonte. House on Prairie
Lake, South,, directly opposite
theater.
____

QUICK CASH for fumltuxe. bo* la.
motors. Buy ono place or com­
plain home. Thousands of arti­
cles for sale at the
Super Trading Post on 17-91
1 Mill South. Phona 23124t
Large Knotty Pina Hutch cup­
board. 910b. (new), Hollywood
Bed complete 145 (new). Maple
wash stand Jjn Beautiful small
dark 935.00. China cabinet 915,
Rocktn 95 00 up, good used
cribs, buggies and play pen.

THE . CURIOSITY SHOP
17-92 South

TWO — Chanel back chairs. Good
condition. Phona 13084.
Studio Plano — small Upright.
Finish and condition like naw.
Price 9163.00. Phono 1715-R.
WALNUT DESK — with Oak
drawers. Good condition. 102 W.
30th St.
20 GALLON Duo-Therm Hot Water Heater, like new- 940 cash.
Ready to go on Sanford Gas.
Phone R. L. Cox, 1345-J-l, En­
terprise.
Two wheel Utility Trailer. Phona
2229-R or 2339-M.
B aggcrty ApnlUnew

“ Your WaeUnghousa Dsolar'
WILL BE OPEN
Monday Evenings from 6 til
p m Refreshments! Knives for
the Ladlasl Balloons for tha
Kiddies
COME .ONE! COME ALL!
113 Mtgnah* Ava.
Pkawa i rn

* * m * ir »ray m

Klgbaat CASE. iWADE-XN price*
paid Inrnaad tornltura Call 989.
Wilson-Malar Furnltur* Oa. 311

li—

H ricom , I

FOR SALE — Complete equip­ CARPENTER WORK -REPAIRS
ecabmeu Midi To Ordar
ment for operating Fruit and
Phone 1M7-W —1. E. Robinson
Produce Stand. Phona 1291 or
2069.
,
BULLDOZER Service — Und
rlrannc and griding. Large
14— APKOAL
-4 4
nru Poser. Free estimstes. 9 4 - BEAUTY P A ltO M
Perry P. GUiyard. Ph. 215I W.
USED PLUMBING FIXTURES.
F o r L o v c Q e r H a ir
flam blag. Krwiy ■aaMng
GET PHOrESSIO.S'AI. t'AREt
M. G. H OD GES
E v i -B c m
B ea u ty S h op
Sarv'te on All Watar Pump*—
rb*aa 981
Wells Drilled — Pump*
j u p a u :» a r
P**t* Read Pkaas 7*S
10*T Sanford Ava.
rbooo 1U3
Modern Air-UnndlUnned Salon
W 9U IA W C R
— 14-K
14-1
Specialist in Porionality Shaping.
Ua*L OrORLANDO
Styitnr ami Waving. Cosmetics
Star. Call
^D lafsh
Undo I
for your skin cere. Gyro Latnr
Bay. in
method of reducinr
Ffadarrwd Rates to
FHA
n a a o b ii
H A R R IE TT S
Potieykoktota
Far Remadchag aad repair*.
B E A U T Y NOOK
John W M iaaa Im l
Nsteteg Down-Small Monthly
Harnett. Ruth. Pawn
811
Payments
Open 3:30 a. m. also Wed. p. m.
M
18* So. Oak Ave. Phone 171
Sherm an CoaicraU Co.
Out Weat 1M4
K - LAUWMIY SKBWKW - a

M

PLUMBING

Cm tract and repair
eatuaatee. R. L Harvey,
Sanford Ava.

• Ono hour • Wash oad Damp
Dry
• A m horn % • Wash oad Dry
Fold
• rialihod Laoodry
• Sonrtonn Dry Cloaafug

m

lag. is ts 18x54 or 18x34
Revel Plata Glass
Mirrors ....................
Reg. 18 95 Double Door
Metal utility Cabinet
Bag. 24.95 54" Metal
Walt Cabinet ...........
Reg. 29.95 Platform Rockara
Beg. 4940 Bcrkllne "Balter
Swivel Chair* ........
Rag. 96.50 Contour Chairs
with Nylon Cover and
Foam Latax rilling .

1I=JL
fl in aril Oawiraeaar
“ Momaa *f DUUnetioawit pay YOU to **e US b
Way it-N
Pimna IMI it you
buy. op «a Evaaiaga
Sundays,
Far Better rjusrrmg

PERFECT
doi
O W __
olesorae
triad

10.50
12.50

...

....

......

81 so

Sanford 223L
I t 's S o E a n y
T o P in e s A W n n t A d
l u s t C a l] 1 8 2 1 a n d n ak ( o r
th n W a n t A d d e p a r tm e n t

t B £ j e g B ____= ! !
WANTED: To sail orM ather o f Sanford AGENTS
dlnary Lift In
Insurance on a
S a n f o r d H e r a ld
9 9 3 4 9 R . 1*4 84.
Phone 1X7
quarterly
monthly
Lilly or quai
_ . premium
Flap.
Large
commUslona
paid,
VEN ETIAN B U N D S
no rata lncraata for pilots or
flfWMinT Adv. BoiMtaKd)
earaar military man. An oppor­
tunity for retired military offi­
cers to become active and build
■ £ ? Ok
an additional Income. If latar- LAWNMOWERS n n a r p e n e d
real 3rd « L
astad, write KUYKENDALL IN­
Bicycle 4 Central Eapalr.
SURANCE AGENCY. P. O. Box
EUatey'a BUta Shop
3711, OxUfKio. Fla.
910 E . 4th St. T *L 9434

S o u th d d o

‘ “ TBJBK **

w l'j^ K T N G
Park PI

with meal tor full nutrition.
Builds vigor, stamina and top
condition. Dogs love iL Get Dragila* sarvtea, Lnetronb A
PURINA DOG CHOW hare.
etching. Estimate* given. Phone
Simpson Farm Supply
Geneva 3484, OrUndo 91504.

14.50
1940 Ml W tad 84.
Phase I41S
14
Pigeons—
35c
each
for lot.
39.50
1989-X-M or 198*4

CARS
BOUGHT SOLD TRADED
Ray Red's Uaae Can
Sentord Ava. 4 Uth 8t
BARGAIN! 38 Ft. Trailer. 2 bedrooms, rabsna, dolly, fenced.
Da,v.&lt;. call 1020 ext. 250, ask for
W. M. Foster Evenings ciU 2105
^orlnfnrijjsnnn^JSsj^jir^
&gt;9-

BOATS

M OTORS

-1 9

Hew will j n swap?
Hew will vm Trader
Your old Motor for a
Batter grade - EVINBUDE!
ROBSON

S portin g

G*

Evtande Sales T le rv tca

5*4 r

u t st.

P N r te

w -m » m r o iir .

Butiy your Furuttur* at rterry's
SEWING MACHINE OPERATORS ENVELOPES, lattcrheadj. sUte­
Warehouse Furn.. Co . at Ml w.
or year ‘round. JL J. Cant)!,
—Both Experienced and Learn1st. St. All nationally adv. Gun
rnenb. invoices, hand bills, and
Five Foiots Hotel, a milai eouth
aitur* at warehouse pries*.
a, ate. Progressive
on 1743. PhonTlfal.fcw., altar
, Phone 40* — 40i
or wash
RU89M
vocational
school.
4*
Hour
weak,
IILOST AND FOUND -41
sit ifth St.
aL m .
pleasant working conditions, in
W M fflB T O
QulUop Mattress 4 Box^S^rUj,
2JU H L
modarn plant. Paid Vacation FLOOR SANDDIO a Finishing; LOST — White gold Longin*
Ladies watch. Tuesday a. m
Freo hoipitiUxaS Bedroom UnfumUhed Houie
Oak Goers furnished, laid 4 finYears.
between 601 Cvprais and Post
% Apply Breakby Navy Couple with two ehildlahed. la buiiMia since 1930.
Office and banks. Movement
N. Elm. Sanford.
ran. Location convenient to
E. F. stevaai: Rout* 3, Box 227;
re filter*
bat# desired Will aijna loaf
REWARD.
Pboae
Call T19 R-4 Mora T a. m. or
teed
10
Years.
MAN
Not
40
for
parma
843-W.
®8
jsWBfc.
Pin
terra
lease. Pltaaa
caUlirs-W
after • p. m.
44
p.
m.
at
M sad leave phono—numi
444 W. *th r
g v s v
BANDALL ELECTRIC CO. n -S U C T M O I .

l » r MWI toTHft* - a

SESTrA.*5
w«uniS*tt.S,JK I
a ftH n U U M fo i

iT l r T J IL »

V K 41, m n m m •**

cui &gt;yp|jsw5n»

Electrical Contracting and Repitrs

TV tE B V IC E C E N T E R
Bandlx

and C rotloy

A ppU arcet

111 M s g M l t e A v e

P h . 113

MS&amp;J5E ? j ISlft

•I

IN LOCAL
soma
trade. Nana but toot* Interested

sr
^
Sanford

*

w « sw vk ;

Marald.

• • *i

Slum p

I u fvi b p r

nr
f W
L L. Sill—Piano Toehnlrlsn
Pbooo 3184. Route U Sanford
CLAKSIFTED DUPLAY

M anager W a n t e d
Local man to operate a naint
and wallpsoer branch to be
opened in Sanford. Expertenco tn dirert contact ssllinr.
marchandlslnr and retail aellter ar# desirable. Aetiv* intereit in civie erranlsations and
wide local acquaintance would
bo valuable asset*. Our nlin
includes soeeial trainlnr in
paint butlneae. salary, profitsharing, and rotiroment. No
capital investment. Applicant*
will please contact P. J. Pate
bv letter or phone i

Sherwin - W illiam s
Com pany
130 Went B ay S treet
Phone E L G IN 3-9754
J A C K S O N V IL L E . F L A -

T I L E

C o m a in a n d l e t 's t a l k o v e r

F

PftM-

IT m S

1?

P in trm iot C u ll
1 -p rtr

your

M ad s.

W h eth er

i t 's

w h it e p in e ( o r b o o k s h e lv e s

12 J''

l ;!i
S ill

4.M

* l«
r ea
1 04
s oo
» 10

Pilm Far*
r t-0 * m # Wsrin I p
tie b sll dsrnt ot tea W tak

£

Vitwsrs Distil
i»(i
t
A rt D t*
cv cx ix
*Jl_
...n

Writ of ih t Fam ily
C totral Florida ak ow esi*
Arr.trits's U rtsta st Bands
T Ss V srlsty Hour
T b t Corepits
'/o u r PltyMma
L ift « ( F lit*
r s m to T k tslrs

to 04
!* 14
11 04 D o l l a r A a t o o n d
11: S4 riuriisht Thtaira
It IS Ptarll(kt T h t a i r a
1:0# w ttir ,r-.v tt i
tlOS e ig a -O ff

a to

e o#
e i«
ft; 0 0

ervoA T
A PTEBXOOX
a :*n -o a
Procrsm
•rti* R. t .s u a t
i w t -w i t t h t r
? bis 1* Tht Lift
Tk#
k* Ckristeihers
Ckristophs
F tld ltrj e f fosrtun*
r'
F * r t f k * VStl
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G E N E R A L T IL E C O N TR A C T O R
T E L . S1B8-W

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T otal at ID* T e w *
O.E. T b ssir *
A ppalaim tct with Advtnturt
B r is k Ilia P ink
M S ia iu srsd t party
Bcitnct FlrU«a T b ta lr*
*tsr sod Th» Starr

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w a s t e . I f y o u ’d I lk a t o lo o k
over

11:19 K i&gt; ‘t - « 't t i f t i r

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H ILL LUMBER &amp;
SU PPLY CO.
S IS M

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Basum*

Jack Ptrr
ts.*d of Our*
B tk trt « L tw is tk o w
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12

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11 o» Th» b i ( Top
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|n ufi The Vita
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CBS TV Kiwi

m in e r

O IL ftS D O

DICK MAPES

t h e m a t e r i a l s s o t h e r e 's n o

U C E N ftE D
.Practical N u r i a .
A v slia b le _ d a y a r
tig h t. |a&gt;

W D M TV CNAWKEL I

t : 04

r o o m , w a 'U h e l p y o u f i g u r e
m ow ing.

TELEVISION

II0
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: »4

F U R N IS H E D A N D IN S T A L L E D

To u *

o r p in e lln g ( o r th a t e x tr a

w ant*

1WO FOtMIt CONVICTS, 7Vunk J. Ellsworth (UM). 36, arxl Raymond
sWitton, 39, *m shown sfter they were arrested for touring the
•
rAilncM *n
Ve*AS, Ntv.( In ttloru in convert mart thta
9*6.000 in rrup naw 9100 hills tn wnsller hlUs and gsmbllnr ehlpe.
Tnar were booktd for invritjgitinn q! robbery afttr the m ociy m»ta
Tl? ' rBr ‘"vnedlstety brran comparing the serial
number* of th* saiird rurr*nry with thoso of hills stolen In some
rrrent large-scale hank holdiij*.
(International Soundphoeo)

S 00

treated

experience, gTany. Enclfse re­
cent photo and expectant atart-

ll^ U li
U U I g ’J U

ACROSS
41. A loan
in. Other- m iufe iitia u u u
U1»*
lobs l
Work
Utelt JllJfcm u l
42. Irate
21U L i l J I U l
Said
Ifl The
li:-5Ui-i; 110 UJidD
River
total
H
siiosa j u i - u i i
(Sn Am )
DOWN
amount
a U L 3 J .I J
On* ef the
1. Young
15. Beast of U I1J21
u u m ^ i .'i tu s
archangels
lady
burden U iiH uunn Liun
1 efth*
efth.
j * 2 An apology,, 19. Before LK 1U BLIU U U II17
y Jewiih
Jeunih
W , a* in
1 20 Give#
MUolDII LHIUIIM
r angetolegy
angelolery Y- oefenie
EIQUtJ UID.1J
the
13 Thoroughly
3 Bogies
rirtlci
rirtlcuY**ue4ay‘ i l a m r
wet
4 Revelry
tars of
14 Attltudl- * 5 A king
32 Sloping
22 Command
macs
6 Extremely
roadway*
trg
35 Kill
fine
33 Arabian,
23 Natl'* of
16 Peaceful
titanr)
chieftaiix
an island
IT Siberian
7. Distributed 21 Sheltered
34 Movable
gulf
propor­
barns; /
side
I t Subtle
tionally
35 Dash
28 Kettle
emanation
I River
36 Uka
21 Humor
J9 Pur#
•FT )
en eel
30 WideP Sharp
•MAihntia
a"akr
39 Reiert
21 " ’erk herd
25 Uprisings
i
• y T “ 4 •0
r
1
S8 ' ’try
deep
1
1
shade
of
4"
r
blue
%
Com­
&lt;!
fort
A il %
Walk.
't
&gt;1
a*
%
a
i4
u fIV 1
duck
P
29 Chirf
:!
31 Water go&lt;l
%
iBibsl »
A
ii1
32 To gilt
sgiin
f
iu JO
35 Se» rsgll
% P
%
%
(Eur I
i t jj 34
{ '/
ST Aitonuh
Y/t
35 To slip
ja
ST
easily
|
39 Bishop’s
•Ul
headdress
%
40 Body of
*81
*L
pmons
composing
~v.
i
• lury

*

J ot

«i vaeiens* Pana m a

21iJ2lU
L 'J .h .K e

i

P. M. CAM PBELL

S P E C I A L S

. DAI L Y C R O S S W O R D

Pag* 7

\

330 N. Ortng* Asa. Orlando. Fla.

gallasvsta A r t

THE SANFORD HERALD Fri. July 15. 1955

11 04

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T l.t i'ndtrourrenft
TV T h ta lrt
•Vt»s jl IV tsth tr

l i .i t

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10 04

10 14

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jl

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SATinttav
M O H M ftd

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Ind. On Ptrtdt
Rin Tin. Tin. .tr.
Orels F Rtnch
'Vlnkr DmW A Tou
J4 04 Ctrinnrj y „ r
10
Kiddit Mttint*
« •*9»i #. il sluaiftkl
li). j: rupittn
I-a *i r “To
1°or
op
i:n P
. 'e. To
’op
ble Top
li. 90 lu p tr circus
ft I t

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K.Oll
J 10

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f orris
12 O Ussy

Review

Dttn

Users Vs. Olsnts
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9 J0 Ktd P s r k s a
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Passport T » D ia f t r
M ist T o * Clock
b u t Tao Clack
An-.iru* s w r i i t i i t Beads
T r n For
ftloDty
l&gt;own Tou O *
rof. F sth tr
f
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ftu d lo IT
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BCXDAT
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c v cx tx o
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12:09
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2n

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4v!l# V i i r i f S k a k
Homo Fair
Million S Mnvla
‘ Rsnsior w *s la d lsertH ,
This I* T o t L it•
TOi C krlilophtrs
4:0ft C a plain O tU s s l
4 Jft C a ts Tako A Trip
soft T b * fun. Lucy Show
iii i You A r* Thtr*
• fto F o r i T k ta ir*
• jft P v I t * r t t t r y
TiOft T o ttr of Tow a
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MONDAY
T tat P attsra-a
s lo r s lt e fh a w
I k tp p trt Guide
S l t 'i
V tltaat L a i r
Lav* # f U f a
Starch far T r o w
Gutdiae Uekft

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Pape S
II/. VII K

TTIH 'tANTORP TTERAT.D

Frt. July 15, 1035

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SMART

t

TO «*:o w

Driftlvir Fm A
rt'4»i* For A L**1v
r»'A• **M • y n r M u m
.N'chf Edition
L'nittd Nation*
It * DincAllm*
At lloma W ith Must*

,\» v i»

1

f -

t v L M -&gt;0
At fill
Twilight E*n**
Sport* Book

on I .x 'm tr * Call To rxaycr
0 1 l* sign O ff
* Vt I lltM T
MCI It.MAG
I riA 51 f n Oft
* M L»ym er t Call Ta Prayer
« «» l#a»n Breaker!
,V«wi
i , \\ sitern J*m bor*«
t ,S»wi
• ?• fry O'clock Club
'■V V«&gt;u *
&gt; f*t&gt;fjrf b 4t i O tint.ft
,f'i Jockry'i Chnlr#
Morninc Hevottor*
'fern ing M^t^dit*
World At M r ft
Mnttc For Lxdlta
Ih mn Timft
1100 Ciul*
N&gt;* *
•
i mn riuh
'o i iiildrftn * CaiiAie Hour
TA ' a riftIJr*
IS Town A fe u n tr *

i

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l

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'A7J T tU .

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TVESE O f 'S
TO STEP to

STEP"TO-lnia

DOMT W W W ? 'M
TlX THEY CPOT
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T.IE BUS,

HO, BOV/
t ° i ‘H e !

1 --------- 1 EtCK THE

TH E Y tt- R

C

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World At Noon
Radio Farm Dlgftit
ftrooklyn Dodger*
N -w i

^

’s S b
c in j.

i4«o riuh

*t y* Rhythm Hour
V\ crid At ^it
i:v n n o
IS Tss-Jllght Sr-ng*
5port» Book
MytlcJil Pgffl
Drifting On A Tloijd
Nunday School l.r«*nfi
,l "l o H«.f Hat* Night
M r hi ladittofi
aluk* fi'ii rat* M 'ii"i
Vt If O'mft Ytith Mu fte
N* w n
U v m i n 'i Call To Prayer
l . o l «, feign Off
ft I M» VT
MOllM.AU
5 ’ rn fin
Al liftt* 4 1 PAfO
Hymn Time
Muftlcel rr m .
T i*i The Ootpel Hour
4."'0 Hiindav Morning Mutlcale
%Afi J K C o!•
5-00 World At .Vine
5 i;&gt; Symphonette
0 ?o Mjr.fiay Morning Musical#
1 . o &lt;loipel Strijgeri
♦1.4*5 « l.ur&lt; h aS#rvic#
\Z.00 hunday H^renadft

Af*r»:i«%n4i\

' 2 *5
i ho
l
-&gt;'i
* io

Rinokl^ n Dodges*
rfiiftat Editor
\1uRlual Lovers Pgm.
\ v ft Maria Hour
Forward Mi|rrN
i;\ *: m \ o
4 »A World At ara
j t s Fftffttjr I’gm
A
S» rnna»3* fn DL«
at 4t
tifnAttiftr*
7 .00 GiiPst Hlar
7, ! i
llf.ro&gt; To V #ti
7 *A i ,i»tinl!y Wft Hall
% rtfI r hiircli tfervtm
** no Mr ten O Connell
t! 1 » \ Look At A&gt;i‘
J* 30 I ’ at "M - For M
to 1 I At Homo With
l«; .TO ? !tdntffiit Minlfttn
r Mi*
1t f*0
11 •JI Lf Mgn Off
M O M ! %T
MO It .MAO
t. do Fiirn nn
l..n iitu a ra il To Pra&gt;#r
I * n Lrtakrr*

Non *

\' o i « r n Jembore#

\*rn ft

S « w1
Stw rt«

O'clock
At

Club

A Gtenc#

.1* kev'i Choice

.Morning Dftveilnng
Morning Melodit#
World At Nln#
Sluftiti For Lad it*
Ih m n Ttmft
For Ladle* Only
Mii»lc For Tou
IK’h Club

amuse

^ L L /zry r e o u &amp; ie /

hatcp a/o ic a pojsqhztd-

/c /z c c s 0 * « « e * « - cattzjt

C’ w A r &amp;0 /rf'\
\ /----~~~t—■—

WITH DEWITT ON THB DtCtTXHI’O
STACEY DOES TO US Of (TEH THE
---------------- 1 H O P G E S --j

/ awev a t w c a comcs or* A .
V eru rrr iwu./ jaw j/ad m s ay
/S ia op m ? H s s r /

F&lt; n

MILtvI.t

U /
Hill .U ■

B H A V g F U t , W A Y ) ■ ■ '■
T C C A G C TtA T M U S T T E K T O G i T

J

H 1 9 F 0 0 9 M --------T, / -----------------

- 1J
&lt; ? :)

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^

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&amp;

-

HOLLYWOOD &lt;T~ Suian Ball, a
resolute young actress who came
back to a film career and mar­
riage after losing her right leg to
cancer, is waging a fresh battle
against the disease today.
The City of Hope medical ren
ler al nearby Duarte disclosed that
the pretty brunette. 21. has b»?n
a patient there since July 5. Her
condition is serious.
Little more than two years ago
Susan fell on a dance floor. Sht
had just been signed to a mo\ ic
contract. Nobody (bought the in­
jury would keep her from work for
long. But she had trouble with
her leg. and doctors now think
she aggravated a dormant condi­
tion.
The following November she fell
again in the kitchen of her home.
This time the injury to the leg
did not respond to treatment. A
bone graft was tried, but without
po'itivc result.
Suzan learned soon afterward
that she would probably lose the
leg. But she never lost her cour­
age.
In 1953 she and actor Richarl
Long became engaged. Suian’ s ail­
ment however, interrupted her
marriage plans as well as her
career. On Jan. 13, 1934, her right
leg was removed.
She bounced back lo seeming
health—in a few weeks she was
planning her marriage again, and
the resumption of her film work.
In a few more weeks she was
learning to walk with an artificial
leg.
The postponed wedding toot,
place in Santa Barbara April 12
ID.Vi. And Sutan walked up the
aisle, just a^ she had said she
would.
"I'm going to show Ih# worltl
I can walk," she announced during
rehearsals for a TV play in which
her husband also appeared. During
much of the action she was shown
in a wheel chair. But at the play’s
end she walked.
Then she made a picture, "Chief
Craiy Horse.” Thereafter she and
Long settled into their domestic
roles.
"People have asked me how I
felt after coming through my ex­
perience with cancer," Suzan said
after the amputation. "I can only
say 1 was never afraid of it. I
always thought in terms of being
cured; that was my only consider#
tion. The grimmer aspects of can­
cer never occurred to me."
The City of Hope announcement
recently cam* as a shock to all
except Suzan's closest friends in
the movie colony. They knew she
hadn't been well.
"Mrs. Long’s general condition
Is considered serious." a hospital
spokesman said, "and she is be­
ing evaluated to determine a
course of therapy."
Another source, declining the use
of his name, said Suzan’s case is
not considered hopeless.

ymir

do TO A H O V It l

Ait CCxDlTlOMlD

R i t z T h e a tre

OPENS

STARTS

12:45

SUNDAY

COOl VACATIpNlAfUr #
?
mo**i u

A Girl Makes A
Momentous Decision!
Life-Inspired drama of glamorous Roth
Fltinc. who reached the hcicht of her
so lution, hut her admirers knew little
how the cot there or the price she
paid ir heart-break.

,The Man Who Gave Her Everything*
. . . but Couldn't Win Her Love!

AMES CAGNEY

G

n e m

a

S

c o

r

P Iz

CameronMitchellj

The

Sensational

U fe

Story of Beautiful Ruth

SIGN MEANS BUSINESS
II0BI1S, N.M. tiP—Thii notice
There ere 60,000 lakes in Fin­
has been posted on the vt&gt;U ol
Municipal Judce Robert L. Beni- land.
ins’s office at City Hall:
"While in this office, apeak in
low, aoothins tone and do not dis­
MASONIC PICNIC
agree with me in any manner.
‘ Picas* be informed that when
JULY 20
one has reached my age, noise
and nonconcurrcncc causo gastric
hyper-peristalsis,
hypersecretion
IF YOU HAVE NOT MADE
of hydrochloric acid and inflam
mation of the gastric mucosa, and
RESERVATION CONTACT
More than flv* million gallons
of paint are needed each year to
replace white linea on U. S. roads.

TO
! B

Nftft#

14(0 Club
firm i Of Melody
World At Noon
A FTF.IlAOOVf
Radio Farm Digest
Monday Matinee

Suzan Ball
Wages New Bailie
Against Disease

Biting!
Featuring 15 San? Hits,
15 of the -Mad and Gay
JiO’s. . .
Features
1:00 — 3:11
S122 — 7:33
5:39

F. L. MILLER

Go places w ith Studebaker ,
B ra d fo rd
-unty

STARKE

9t i

; H ANSBROUGH /lux!&lt;opt - - - &lt;Sttoce4i//d StUt+Up
________■

_____

Absolute
All Start it 2 P. M. on Date Below
MONDAY. JULY 1A
A-UNIT FLORAL MOTEL
I rampltlflr •&gt;iull'p«&lt;j npjirl

u i.lt. in « masonry c n n .u u tl,rt building.. 4 x r .ll.n l non*
rtjllor. Aim h a. i.rnoni own*

•rf ff,lrtfnr» and 3-car gar-

•g«- 3 t i I f n tronllnir on If.
it
ir» &gt; sni, juit 1 mllrk
North of Stark* rirpt of 331
( i n provirt.. ..tm iu to n for
additional unit,, trailer park.
reMauranl. »lr kiti in&gt; among
il.f many plr»», Floral Motel
la a plaaaant greeting to tn»
lourUt entering flo rid * » &gt; tr
one of It* moat heavily,
traveled highw ay.
MR * UiiS. U. A VOX.
Owner.

?

Unrt-wrvrd
Earh Open
TUESDAY. JULY 19

Hume, A pari m e n u . Rrnlala
l-a i g . l.i rt.Ui apart ground. In
a trilla n l location — 3 hike
Kaal U, p *til, at corner of
Cherry and »th St*., ntar
.chow uid heart of bualtlaaa
dlatrlct In llp .lo p condition,
blab occupancy ralo-ln.um a
producarai homa of 4 a r ia ,
each tilth own private bath,
hot water heater, eeparate
elirtrlc metera. private cn■rancre: |*alory bldr of a
rental unite complete,1 l i s t ,
include. all furnU h lng.; 3
building. can ba rought .a piratrly or altng.lher
Vllt A 11 UK F l i t O LEON.
IIA It ta. Ow ner..

MARION COUNTY — 37S.ACRE RANCH
FRIDAY. JULY 22 AT 12 NOON

Thla
Improved
Kanch-B-Farm.
torm erlf
known aa Smith No 2 place, bee 2nn arret
paiture of Pentacol* Bahia end P aneoU ;
11# ecraa flnaal peenuia: ample woodlend
lor ahelten fenced and rrore-fenrrd with
cuitlr-liua wire, barbed wire lop and bot&gt;
lam : In the heart of lb* outelandln* FtorU
d * ranch and faint ercllon. aurrounded by
rancher o f _______________________
lla* r ,e cattle compenlet. w«
pavad hichway fm n ta c* of on* and on *,
half mile*, tllunttd I mil** W eel ef IVala
on l n « h v i y 4#
. . tpar* around entire term,
pot farina highway,
p r _ „ . - . . . , ___
ichway. for fir* protection
and
drivew ay, fin* water fiom I Welle, large
finely conatructed concrete block barn, tht'iL
alorag* room, aim rat-proof mttal crib Hn.
ter property from k C f
&lt;o or from
V allo* ehlp Road
beau
•had* •pet lor
a bom*.

flM

Writ* for Daarrlplfv* Foldera
If you hava any Idle real aalat* or bu,l*
bear that you wrlah lo turn lato caeh
quickly, uao lb* IIANfBItOUUII AbrolUle
Auction Method, prove* elnc* IbM to be
ih# date-F eel-C ure-F air VTty ta Buy and
Sell A few data* open In Avigu.t Cop
fact ut at oner for latervU w aid lai
lien without obligation P h o n o -------uriaadw &gt;-3*31. Kite* | . * m .

1

for In*per Iinn after
10 A. M.

WEDNESDAY. JULY 20
I’hichurat Tourlat Court
111

health

lo n e a

completn

frfrlfenijt iiiw im r i lo t* , your
iew*l n 1 pro*perow*, op«r*Hnie

*rrt ffninf t&gt;u»tnc»» or
1 at I IntTda thr touih city
limit* on tiw y. ii)0 . .with
_____
frontuit*1
of. approx, 110 n.
7 (urnltihed cq
I U r m m«y !•«
coin
*r#n for tum i dlitanr* In
cither dlrr-ttlon; mailt hulldIfif I'oritAln* weil&gt;ealabll»hei|
L’ i . rerv tlnpludlnir fUturee,
p-.ulpmrnt, and itivcki: *rr%Uo hUtinn, iifthfr* apartment Ucpih of approx. l&lt;d
rie ha* I trailer apace*, c i*
pan*Ion a n i

MRS. ASVJL ALBRr.CHT
Owner

••UNIT MICKCLIFF AIT'S. — SANFORD
WEDNESDAY. JULY 27 AT 2 P. M.

T w o.etory, (.u n it modern apertment build*
Ing. located at g#f Park Ave.. II f&gt; lfwya.
IT and &gt;2. iual 0 block, from the heart of
ttanford. Lot Ta ft
fronting, mail, cliy
aireet. city aidiw alk. running 13 V ft
In
ilapllt: woll-abartart and landa. aped
lfach
epertnient newl) decorated, enure building
leruofed to 131,&gt; All unit, hate teptrala
from and rear entrance., arparale untlllty
mrlara, encloaed porch, plenty o f cloael*
and all room* are large and airy. Storage
area In attic; am plt parking epace 1 unit*
entirely furnlahed, Itn unit uaed aa preaent
o w n e r , of flea Open fo M n a a tcllo n atlcr 1#
A. U . on Auction day,
DH. and MRS J. C. BOYCE, Ownara

T E R N b i All l*rwp«rtlaa » % D e a l at A a c
d e a e i l a l e e m In t e d e a e w e e d .

SBR

£ u io e fty ff
• ♦ •Pv" S r i 7

FLORIDA
En»l. Writ
Centra!

aT. m i iiM ii itr.
M n M I -l l , J l LY 33 — 3 ALCTIOAS
1 20 P M — 430-66TH AVENUE, turnlaha,| 2*bedr om
tile bath home. living
room,
kit, h o .-dinette,
amnio
rlotete:
pavr.l driveway, garage. I ml. downtown,
, bike Tauipa Ray.
3 50 P M — n o t DARTMOUTH AVE.. r,.rnrr, ! bldge Modern 3-bedroom home
living room
Pullman kitchen, dinette
1 11. room Efficiency apl baa Urge llvtug-bedroom, kitchen, equlpi-icnl, bath,
Both turnlehed.
i n v t i w t T u n n r .t r i l
T t r a i i v v , j i i.t : « — i d * r . w.
*|.i KUPLANAUB— practically new &gt;-unli
apt bldg . on Peach, nverlooka tlulf. Very
well b . vied enmng nlber hlgh-claae rent,
al unite. Furniture and turnlahlnge m«1 tided,
D U T O U i n :t e n
T i l l Rail tV . Jt LY M
1 P. I I — Tromley'a Ocean View A p t*.,
3334 S Allantic A ve, 20# ft. from wairre
•dc* at high line. 3 veluubl* lm om* unite
for home. Income. Inveetment In bett
rental area
Larga corner lot, ampl*
for eapanalon.
TA# P. M — ••Von’* Chicken Hnuea” . &gt;04
N Ridgewood Ave lU. b 1) Una bldg ,
nutaiandlng retlauram , neweet equip,
m em ; m u i r i
and properly offered &gt;eparairlv or ullogetbcr. Ideal location for
hualneakea and offhee.
l U i m t CITY
P ttlD A Y , JULY 3b
t 3# V. M — 1 U rge lo ll on eait aid*
llwye. IT -tl. aurrounded by bualnetie*.
being only vacant bualneaa lot in ihla
area. A lio &gt; ihulr* home-bualnee* iota
weal tide highway.
r.&gt;a P M M AYFA IR RESTAURANT on
U. 8. llwye IT-32, at lilneon A t#., flneat
"eataurant bldg . fUturaa. Orlando-Lakeand. . Larga gtounda for eapanalon, park*
ngj
ri*. building
uui.u.o* la
.» con
lu nera
t r nt*i with
wrun pull-in
puii-in ap.
ep ­
ee! AI eo mc.ii rn 3 -bedroom homa (aom*
urniture) adjoining.
M ATCH UOIt A I CTIO\ DATU.B
A. C BI UDELL to-Acre Farm, t-bedroom,
3-balh home. * ml. K iel Ktaaltumea.
&gt; N E W m o d e r n HOMES In Harbor
oaka. juat o ff U. A I, many wall-abadad
b cm eiftea.
N E W APARTM ENT BUTLDINO. navar e e .
curled In heel locatloB in Daytona B firh
OU YST AND I NO
HOME.
1-flo o? “ pu „ ,

I
r;

c y t A i hrtus* In F t f Wi P i f k '(t!*ii« U &gt; « rrr)

... th e N um ber 1 q u a lity c a r !

Priced right down with the lowest!
LoflfMt whedbaae ear in (he lowest price field! Most awards for style
ef any car in the world! Most power per pound of any low price V-81
Tbs No. 1 economy car, proved in Mobilgas Run 1
is sow . See Studebaker'* emart, far*
ahead styling, inside and out. p rive a new
StiMkbaker, and diecover it* new, co-places per­
formance. Compare Use other really big values

Studebaker gives y o u . s . extra length. &gt; i l o r ,
road-hugging balance, superb quality crafts*
manahip. T r*, any way y o u mraaura value, the
smart car to buy is Studebaker!

STUMSAKIt DIVISION Oft STUMSAKI*-PACKARD CORPORATION...
ONI OP TNI 4 MAJOR PUU4JNI PROOUCCRS OP CARS AN0 TRUCKS

Studebaker...a* muck better mOe...wurth mere when you trade!

USED CAR—USED TRUCK RUVfREI

fw C irtiM ssaciRs ut resets

Sanford Motor Co., Inc

1001 SANFORD AVE.

PHONE 117*
kUt,11:V
iS tr r

i* ■
T‘

�1

■

ri

�Looking Over

Procttd At Your

All Florida

Own Risk
l y WOODSON T. A lU N

O iN rr. I am by long practice, if not by nature,
an observant person, I detect new trend* very
(Illicitly. I've noted a (trowing tendency «r |h-«pie of all eg*-* to move toward the outdoor* in
fa m ily life a* well a* in tbe entertainment of
friend*. Do you have amudge pot cooking in
your neighborhood, too?
Not only am I a keen obaerver; I am one
who like* to find the rcaaona why thirty* are
done a* they are. The open-air eating problem
occupied my intellectual machinery for Mime
time before I arrived at a conclusion which I
thought logical; that the kitchen ha* been *o
completely filled with labor-*avera, time-savtrs, and money-aavera that it i* no longer po*eihle for the housewife to find apace in it for
lieraelf. Though there ia much *olid ground for
thi* eaplanation, I am now convinced that the
ital truth i* that people I,IKK to eat outride.
Of the rimply dotena of invitation* we've
accepted lately, and even if we eaclude the
one* from people who were looking fyr notesigners, both of our recent invitation* were for
affair* which looked much like eviction partie*.
We find that we like thia free-awinging atyle,
and we are adopting it. Accordingly, we have
rearranged the homeetead ad that we may re­
taliate in kind. Until further notice, while the
winda are o f lee* than hurricane force, and bar­
ring hailetonaa larger than one inch in diameter,
all eocial blood-lettinga at Chateau Allen will
take piece beneath Florida'* magical skies.
It haa bean nacaaaary to maka aome c i ­
te naive rhangaa in the eatate to prepare ade­
quately for thia new, carefree way o f life. A
major problem wee "what ahal) we d o about
the garbage cam ?" Our firat thought, o f courae,
wa* merely to cover them with boards, and
uee them ee tables. We were not molly aetiebed with thia plea; it aaemed to lack that cartala polish which ia the breath o f life to tbe
true aesthete. We comldemd aa alternative—
i the pmvewder was to he la viably spread .
M hack yard, why not put the cam ia
the front yard? Careful immuring proved that
both a4 them could be pat them without onmooching too much upon the neighbor*' land,
aad an wa ordered a pair o f ru ffe d jackets

iaitthwn,af
t c b e m —wtuM when, la a

Thu seascape by Miami photographer Max Hu m needs little descrip­
tion to enhance He beauty. The feeling o f loneliness is increased when you
realise that this sunrise scene u&lt;os taken at Miami Beach's Lummus Park
beach, normally one o f the busiest, most crowded on Florida's east coast

____

Litter s

•

___

f O I HR

MlltRY BACRI

NOTI TO FROf. AUISON

My wife end I mod* quite e teur *f f l u ­
id* during the yeet eoverd weeks sad raa

Just a note to let you ke
ably iop n m d I am with your magariae.
I happwwd to hay aa *v*uiag paps* a i

"hackwood*" roads They put ua ka aalad
ad the intenodag article we eaw hi AD FWIda Maaaaiae entitled "Hew* The Read TO
MkamkeyT" (May Sf.)
We ere regular vieiter* to fluid* from
Datfok
umke our headquartw* ham at
Tavana. While mast visits** to ffarida
Spend their time gahing or awia
drive all over the eUle. Your i
which appeal* ia the Tav
helped u* find away prints of h
wo othwwtaawwuMhove no idea*
reur article aheut fr it
re drove up then after raadiag
l Wood It was wed wsrth the trip. *•
an hack home new, hut looking forward to
out Ftmida right teriwg trip agaia ant ymr.
JOHNat cavtv,

W* have mum good new* for
our younger reader* (and daddy,
too).
A writer in St. Augustine, one
Pat Griffin, ha* unearthed a
atory o f Davy Croc kett'* “ injun” fighting day* in Florida.
We didn't know Davy had "fit
the injuna" here, but be did.
Speaking of picture*, U npiM
be that our Florida men are a
little shy about having their
bent girls* pictures published.
Remember, we accepted a chal­
lenge from a Californian who
said that his state ha* the pret­
tiest women in the country? We
offered to publish picturea of
our beautiful Florida women,
and we have received a number
of th e m -b u t not enough. So
come on, boys, send that picture
of your beat gal to All Florida
Magaaina’a Picture Editor.
Just to give our Recipe Con­
test editor a hand, we thought
we might mention in this col­
umn a matter that ia causing
bar soma concern. We are re­
ceiving a bountiful supply of
recipes, but many o f them do
not feature strictly Florida
grown, or produced, ingredients.
That ia a "must" if your recipe
ia to be considered for one o f
the weekly prise*.

l to %sMyou that 11
jaa writ aa tartrwetive•ifi ieUy. ae it — mod to «.■-*• touriet ( n o
Maw York Stats

Your Issue that I nad iaiprneed me ia
haiag ae varied aad well done editorieMy. I
myself have hna a teacher and editor of a
omrilIjwper ia my native New York.

out

.■

T-A a

ALL r i f l B i n t
r iA fn i ifii

Ih ^ Im b S r ^ m b ^ iUtwrt' B."kl(woo.TT

WIULY MAGAZINE

i mighty pood. I think
»'• style end hie eWUly to fe­
m e le the burnt past an remarkable. The
past rritvea ia the reader'* iamgin*tieo after
n ediag author AUieoo'* wonderful drpk-

T

I

e

I

a

Th e eceae on Our Cover this
weak ia the entrance to Sugar
Mill Gardena at Port Orange,
near Daytona Beach. The anriant walla were built by Fran­
ciscan monks in 1802 and dur­
ing the English occupation af
Florida, from 1763 to 1783, the
aid miaeinn was converted into
a Britfeh auger mill. During the
Civil War, it was used as a sup­
ply depot for the Confederate
forces.

I will look forward to huytag your due
us long aa I am ia Florida, aad I
even subscribe to it when I return to
Verb.
Appreciatively;

i - , - • •- - .

a

C O V ift

�1

*

W.

V .

•r CHAIUS f JEAN

HETHKR you are a life-ion* resident o f Florida, a recent ar­
rival, or ju»t a summer visitor, you are probably well acquainted
with the more publicised attractions o f our state: endless
stretches o f sandy beaches, the 30,000 fish-packed lakes, and the
ever-guahin*, world famous springs.
Hut one o f Florida's nioat fascinating attractions is one o f
her least known—the Florida Caverns at Marianna, an under­
ground wonderland o f weird form ations and eerie silhouettes o f
such beauty it has been made a state park.
Geological processes started millions o f years ago have made
the caverns what they are today. Nature has decorated the
winding passages through a wide range of colors, with sea shells
em bedded in the walls and ceiling. Icicle-like stalactites hang
from the ceilings and heavier, odd-form ed stalagmites project
upward from the floors. W here the tw o form ations meet they
form a column that seems to support the ceiling.
T he physical beauty o f Florida Caverns is matched by the
role they have played in Florida history. The first written rec­
ord o f the caverns waa in the words o f Friar Harreda, who was
with the first overland expedition made by the Spaniards to
Pensacola Hay. H ^ w rote, "O n June 12 (1693) we continued
northwest and . . . we reached an abandoned village o f the C hoc­
taw tribe called San Nicholas, where I came to preach the Holy
Gospel in the year 1674.
"H ere we spent the night in the hollow o f such a beautiful
and unusual rock that I can state positively that more than 204)
men could be lodged moat com fortably in it. Inside, there is a
brook which gushes from the living rock."
There ia indication that Indians o f the section knew o f the
caverns long before the com ing o f the Spaniards. Small bits o f
broken Indian pottery, flint arrowheads, and ashes from fires
dead for many years, have been found.
Cathedral Room (above) it on#
o f (A# highljtartishc portions o f
Florida Caverns Viators tlrfti
visit their reflections in Afirror
f\&gt;oJ and (right) examine the col­
umn formed fry stalactites hang­
ing from the ceiling, joining sta­
lagmites projecting from floor.

Hortd* MagaPne-fAGf I

�• -

O u MMBRTIMK nnd m o to r b o a t*

injt That’ll the current program
in Florida.
If you are one of the minority
who do not own a boat of aome
kind, it probably "won’ t be
long,” for Floridians continue
and continue to join the motor*
boat brigade. So you might juat
aa well ait up and pay attention
to the timely warning! of the
U.S. Coast Guard for pleaaure
boat ownera and operators.

i

'-at r -I i

i 1

Pleaaure boata in large num*
bera—outboard*, cabin cruiaera,
yachta — are aldmmering acroea
lakes, baya, riven and other
waterwaya o f the atate, the
numbera increaaing, o f courae,
on weekenda and holidays.
With heavier water trafflo
and the eelf-aasurance of a man
with hia boat, there a n each
year many "one-way” pleaaure
tripe becauee o f either ignor*
anoa o f navigation lawa, or care*
leaaneaa In obeying them.
One o f the more im portant
miaaiona o f the U. 8. Coeat
Guard la to promote aafety on
the w aten, aalt and freah. In
the intenet o f making pleaaure
boating aafe, thia organisation
haa cited aome outstanding
causes o f diaaater, and la offer*
ing suggestions o f how they
may be pnvented, so that plea*
su n boating may be "pleasure."
In a recent newspaper ac­
count o f the rescue o f a couple
and their young son, there was
one Una which every owner o f
a pleasure boat would d o well
to poet'prominently: "T h ey all
wore Ufa preserven and ware
in no immediate danger." Sens­
ing the need for a small, light­
weight and more com fortable
life preserver, eerier to operate,
the Coast Guard last year de­
veloped the buoyant vest,
which is available in risen fo r

�1

SPARE THAT

s h ip

!"

The Coatt Guard urge* lift p r t•
servers for every boat, large or
•matt. This young tier iftart tht
new and more comfortable buoy­
ant iv*f, detigntd by the Coatt
Guard for every age and tite.

tion o f a craft, ao aa to prevent
a top-heavy condition.
Another important point con­
cern! n o ta b ility o f email craft
ia that weights other than paseengera, auch aa gear, toot kite
and fuel tanka which, not aacured, may fall or slide diaaatroualy to the low aide if the
boat takes a sudden Hat.
T oo many casualties esperienced by pleasure crafters reault
from fire or explosion. T o pre­
vent this useless waste o f life
and property, the Coast Guard
suggests three safe guards:
First, make aura that not a
drop o f gasoline is allowed t o '
get below the decks, sxcept into
^.tanks; second, let no spark or
flame, including oil lantema, be
allowed in the engine or fuel
compartments; third,'have the
engine and fuel compartments
ao ventilated (at least flve
minutes after refueling) that all
gasoline vapors are quickly re­
moved. Proper ventilation is
vital not alone for safety, but
also for the prevention o f dam­
age by dry rot.
Galley atoves should be prop­
erly secured and thoroughly inaulated and portable stoves and
g—
stovss and lamps have
t o place in the safety theme o f
a boat
Hasards o f electrostatic
cfeargaa are great, and it ia best
la fasting, that the filling, noule
he held tightly againat the
asetal fill pipe while fuel ia flowlag. to prevent espenaive and
(CeettMied te page It)

Smathed in bou- of the sturdily built
tteel cabin cruuer tabuvel wot retail of
head-on collision with a causeway be­
cause the operator became "rattled"
when engine throttle button was stuck,
while cruising in restricted watrrs.

A passenger dirtl trap/ied inside the
cabin of this top heavy outboard motor­
boat (left) when it capsited. The small
skiff was not designed to carry any
superstructure, much lets the high
cumbersome cabin with which it was
burdened
Alt

PAGE i

By-.

f*

�x:

.

ie Captain
mokes
A Fish
W1 *

I

I f IOIIRT TATIOI

Wh

' hii.r roaming the waters of the world an a aea captain,
W. H. KaKen often thought of the time when he would re*
tire to hin native Mate o f Florida. His thoughts took him
I ark to hin hoy hood dayn with hin family at the old home*
etead known an Hay Lodge, located in Vohmia County.
He alwayn recalled the many fine foods prepared hy
bin mother and enpecially the savory and tanteful smoked
.rneatn and finh from the family nmokehounv.
An he travelled around the world, visiting many dif*
ferent portn, he alwayn liked to vinit famous and unusual
eating places. He enjoyed studying the unusual methods o f
preparing sea foods in many different seaports.
Following World War H and .15 years at sea, Captain
Fagen retired and, with his wife, settled in Florida to live
l&gt;y the sea; to loaf, fish, absorb sunshine and enjoy life.
They purchased a good used 61 foot yacht, The Amanta,
and spent a year cruising in Southeastern Florida, explor*
ing the rivers, hays and harbors.
In 1946, Captain and Mrs. Fagen begnn thinking o f
something they could do that would permit them to live
hy the sea in Florida and at the same time devote some o f
their time to business and an income to supplement Cap*
tain Fagen'a pension.
They decided to start a small business at a location
where they could smoke, cure and season aea food and live
on their yacht nearby. They found just the spot they
wanted on the inlet to Fort Pierce Harbor, along the road
to the seashore. Here they could live on the Amanta, watch
the traffic on the inlet, and perhaps sell some amoked and
cured seafood to the many fishermen who visit the Fort
Fierce area each year.
Captain Fagen began applying ideas he had picked up
in hia travels. He soon discovered that he could prepare

j k / t t M nat e « - - . a - a * -------a----

CAPTAIN FAGtN rtftoim • %our.
swt'i MtMarUen m h* kMprdi • rark
d (l*h (Him ju*t puHrd (rota the

•awtw riumbrr. Th* Asunti. ( M n ) .
wh»t h li hetmr to th* captain and hi*
wife, it anchored in (hr inlrl to Fort
Picrc* Harbor, adiarrnl to th* ftah

amokrry.

unusual and tasty, Aavorful sea food s by using m eth od s h e
got from his b o y h o o d experiences, as well. Special refriger*
a tlon , stora g e, cu rin g and sm ok in g e q u ip m e n t, as well aa
a salesroom , he m aintains on th e sh ore a d jo in in g the slip
where his y a ch t ia d ock ed.
T h e m eth od d ev e lo p e d b y C a p ta in Fagbn con sists o f
a special pickling brine soaking period, sm oking and curing
in unique ch am bers th a t provid e sm ok e at various temper*
aturea aa d esired . T h e s m o k in g ia d o n e p rin c ip a lly w ith
a rom a tic b a y w ood , w h ich grow s loca lly .
F ollow in g th is, (h e fish is b asted w ith sp ecia l sau ces
m a de fro m oils and apices. T h o r o u g h ly co o k e d b y this
m ethod, it la not dried ou t. T h e m e a fia firm and palatable.
All kinds o f salt w a ter fish a n d sh rim p are p rep a red ,
b u t th e s p e cia lty ia sail fish w h ich are so p len tifu l in th e
area. A m b erja ck , also prepared b y th is m eth od , is c o m ­
p a ra b le t o th e finest stu rg eon . L a rg e salea b le fish are
am oked on "s h a r e s ."
S m all fish a re clea n ed and am oked w h ole, b u t th e
larger on ee are fileted b e fo re cu rin g. R efrig era ted stora g e
t o provid e fish fo r th e off-season is m aintained.
T h e fish erm an w h o w a n ts t o sen d som e o f " t h a t b ig
fish I c a u g h t " t o hia frien d s b a c k h o m e , ca n h a v e it p re ­
pared in th is m anner and m ailed. C a tch e s fro m all p oin ts
in F lorida co m e t o B a y w o o d fo r cu rin g and sm ok in g. S p e. d a l w rappin g and p ackin g m eth od s d ev elop ed b y C ap ta in
F agan, gu a ra n tee fresh d e liv e ry f o r five d a y s. MgU s h ip ­
m en ts h ave been m ade to all section s o f th e U nited S ta tes
a n d C an a da , a n d A ir M a ll sh ip m en ts h a v e been m a d e aa
fa r aa K orea.
O n e o f t h e fine featu res a b o u t th e p r o d u c t ia th e fa ct
th a t It ca n b e k ep t f o r t w o m o n th s u n d er o rd in a ry refrigi ha th a w ed d a d re-froae
r q u a lity o f t h e fish.

i

�1

w

, the Ganien o f Eden in Florid#?
Did man net his start a abort distance
from Tallahassee, on the banks o f the
A p alach icola river?
T hese are the (|tiestions you can hear
asked th ou san ds o f times all over the
nation today.
And th ey're being asked a[l because
o f the con v ictio n o f a graving, form er
m inister, unsuccessful ca n d id a te Tor
governor o f Florida on the Republican
ticket and piney w oods lawyer.
His name is Klvy E. C allaw ay, a 65year - old towering bundle of endless
energy who goes about the business of

putting some 10,000 acres of woodland
on the north hank of the river near
Bristol, into ahape for visitors.
He talks in a matter-of-fact tone about
how Adam and Eve lived and roamed
the woods near Bristol, where the
gopher tree grows, the tree which furn­
ished the wood for Noah's ark.
It was in 1946 that a friend remarkei
to Dr. Callaway that the gopher tree
grew in abundance only on the north
bank of the Apalachicola in Liberty
County.
New in the area at the time, Callow jy
had never seen a real gopher* ood t ree,
long prized, by the local farmers for its
tightness and aturdineaa for fencr posts
The son of a Baptist minister and or­
dained “ a kid preacher" at the age ot : 7,
Callawy remembered reference in Gene­
sis to the gopherwood from which Noah
built the ark.

So it started from there T h e n w *
Mr. Callaway studied the story of i r a ­
tion the more convinced he Iteeame th i*t
this might well be the spot where re*
got Ins start, where Adam and i • •
learned tile ways of life and where ( &lt;
killed Abel, where old Noah heeded t:- *
Lord's wanting and limit the stk
gopherwood
M ain geologists agree that the A ipalarhiaumountains, which once tower.-1
higher than the Rockies, are the old*-*'
known They have since eroded through
eons of time to build up the whale
coastal plain, which extends to the si- i
"T h e first dry land that appeared n
this planet," Mr. Callaway will tell ion ,
"w as rigid north o f here in Georgia, th*
Carolinas and Kentucky."
lie said that the Bible tells us t bi t
the Garden was watered lit a river thir
had four heads "P e o p le had searrhe.l
in vain lor such a river and had net *r
found it,'' said Mr. Callaway, "u n til th*
army engineer* cam e along and start *■!
to build the .Jim W oodruff dam at C h i f *
tah ooch ee."
When the (I S Arm y Engineers sue*
veyed the Apalarhirnla-Chattahooche-*Flint river system , Mr. C allaw ay s a , i
th ey found the river wi th fou r h ea d i
He says that the Chattahoochee is rea:t-/
the Pison river, m en tioned in G en et t
2:11. the Flint is the ihhlieal Gihon. Fu'i
Pond creek is the H iddekel o f old an t
Spring Creek is the Euphrates.
{C ontinued 10 p » f r ■t*

K in Callauay, one time eantttdatr for gm trnar o f flo r u it ami a /tirmrr mimtlrr. fuues with a tu ig if
gophrruooJ lUfti u hilt a pair o f youngtlrrt romantically g a tt up th* Apalachirola R n rr /ah &gt;cei fn m th*
,
tpol uAene. Mr. Callaway maintain), Atlam f m t mu thr light o f ilay.

AH flood* M*| I tin*-PAG i; l ,

%

�Thr f\rmt toItpt o f thr HkVi ifiuim Mr r r /irr^rntnl If lo r n S o lh 1)1 Thr lln g u r in lln lla m l
to thr tunr o f n o Hh /nrrr honii nf Dutch rrh o o l Nile
ty BOB lA iT M A N
Sul Iv Anlrey.
Fliinila C itru s
humped min King Leopold of Hel*
Kill in in t lie corridor nl h Zurich, Switrer*
liiml hotel, she wan a little nonplussed an to
what to tin or nay, Kspecially as the hour
was alter midnight anil Sally happened to
lie in pajamas, So, living royally herself and
he beinK only a deposed king, she grinned,
saluted and "aid, "H i". King Leopold, being
somewhat of a good guy himself and, we
presume, used to nocturnal manifestations
aucb as what he was confronted with, mere*
ly did what any kmglv personage would
do, returned the online, grinned and said
"H i"
Florida Citrua Queens have, no a matter
of counte for the paat few years, been given
a free trip to Kurope as a prire for winning
the coveted title Orange, Orapefruit and
Tangerine Queen all rolled into one This
Year's Queen Sally is mil only a beautiful
girt, but is also a talented dancer On the
way to and from Kurope, New York, T V.
and radio shows were a minimi These loo,
give domestic citrus sales a boost Four
davs m the big citv produced appearitucca
on the Oodfrey show -J a ck Farr’s Morning
show — (larrow ay's " T o d a y " and S ieve
Allen's "Tntiilo". Almost tweiitv four hours
a day Sally made the rounds selling citrus.
When (jus'll Sally began her tour o f
Kuropean centers, importers alerted to her
arrival had planned almost every conrriv*
able kind of promotion gimmick to boost
morale as well as sales From kissing babies,
the politician's usual chore, to awarding tro.
phiea to motorcycle racers, Sally c harmed
her way into more newspaper space than
Florida Citrus had seen in all the combined
postwar years
She water skied in Rotterdam, Holland
for 5,01 Mi cheering Dutchmen, nudging ice
(toes on every turn Air tem perature and
Sally a "b a re " 30 degrees She snow (kied
at thr Higi-Swisa mountain resort center,
and stunned audiences in som e o f the
swankiest niteriea with her interpretation
o f • modem dance, the talent that won her
the Citrus Queen title. Auction market fruit
tialea began to akyrocktt.
w

lin u tn n llriitgr i« m il fa llin g rlo a n . Sail* ia itnm linjl right on it n hilr th r lo o k &gt; out
t o u o n l t.oru lon 'l / u n tn u a Ton r f llriilgr

Q urrn Sally w o t m uch Im p rrtsn l, tlrrp itr thr ram . u ith Ihr ch a n g in g o f Ihr g u o n lr rrrrm a n y a l Ihr Toner o f Larulon K n ow n a t "H r r fr a lr r t." Ihr ll u a n lt h a i r hrrn follow in g
Ih r aa m t ritu a l fo r h u tu lm U o f y r a r t.

FAGI I-All Florida Msfsrbve

„

s'

�th r H ip i. n r a f I h» * ’ m

i i , if/i tfijatf

tu I * * i / " » t &lt; i f f f i i

r, o ' / i f * u »n '

** ■

Sails i» it lin tfr *tl I't/u it hut '"un .l siuai •tuit* i l.tr!. foui'ln ■ i ’ i.I m-**» i.; ,»

"A llttU h ip p y " Uai Sally i rom m rn t iiftuuf ihr IVnui Or Mila i la lu t in thr fa m n !
Lom r t in Farit. Thr Ftarula ijurrn *ahl I’rnw usmLI I'nmr in lari in a Harvlu
hrtiuls Miflfrit.

It lilt' lllkfll It'll M'HO "1
of I'**
prmnrlitlltg with tnrthodi til tr« iii*|&gt;t&gt;rtn•
timi. |&gt;ni kitk***K tint! intTi hniitiiKinK for Flor*
itlti Citrui to grt Koittk nliroiitl ThoM* 111011'
ii'ii vrara hint' lit t'n um i I In thf |ifu|ilf nf
Knropr to get hark tilt their li f t Irottt ah
tin lit t'Vfrv vifW|M*uit. V 1 Dm **aw h m n iv
for mitt ion begin Firnt, nimi Kitropeam art
nlKiut getting tht'ir nieani to inukf money —
thfir ahip Mirtli. mil hrndi. ih o p i mill in*
illlitruil |iiltflll ih)—lint k ill n it tit f 11I good
repair Nr*t, thfir Imaii fnmi supphrs —HO
tuition can work on nti rmptv »tonim)i.
Thi n, linin' ol thf lift fNiitifi ot lilt- t lothing, liutiM'H, htiiiifholtl good* mo-,1 n| which
in mint' p l u m hml Iti'fii *omplrtrly tit'*
strayed On tlifir nitfiitlii ol hi i oiiipliiliiiiftit
was their I'omrminn atmn i\itfiii* rotuli,
streets mill 1hf rolling Mm k nriraaitrv to
Irnnipiirt thfir goods liirtlu t mul further
from thf point of origin It hn* tnkfti these
ti n \fnri to hi 1 oiupliili put that Anil it *
noi lo n i p t f t f l&gt;\ tins nii'iin* Imt inni
HiiHiiih that If i f i f long Millfimn iintion*
m n titnt look for inriif of tin Iuvujl items
fifii't ofotf iffti nnl\ m imiga/tm 'oi* or in
tin- tifw ip n p fti rintt 1 wlifri f Im 111it ( 1
t rui i* 1oniing into tin- pn tun In Fill opr
t it m i proiiin i* im 1 In n iliftt II- liivins
Lti'tni. it titI 10 mi among tin l'i*t to t*egiu
to nppfiir on thf shelves of 1or net gtoiriv
stort'i mnl in iiiuif ol thf in*w iiip fi mm
ket* » hit'll ntf limit mm li as wf know
thrill That 11 w hrtf tfurrti **hIK \riln s
in n if in
No emissary Ironi the Sunshine S ta ir
rtet wiii more 1ordially m rived than Snltv.
Anti by t h f minif token. tin* tJtiH'lt witfi
hfr everready -mill ami 1harming inmnirr
won th f lifiirti ol 1hf Swedes, Dnti ti mui
Swim In Im I, her ethaiisting itinerary
mllfil lor vtiii 1h in •'openhngi0 Dfnniurk,
Stockholm, Sweden. Ilambur#, Frankfurt,
Wriahadrn am) Main/, (ii'tiiim u, / i i m h ,
Switzerland, I’ aria, France. t.omlon, Kng
land. IlrUHiwIn and Antwerp, liflgmlii, lint
Ifrdam Amsterdam Mini T h r Hague. Mol
land. All this in thr ihort iparr of
four weeks
iCcntinutd on p i p 10)

W ith ht f lit IjfhlH tuft hilt S nU\ W*j&lt;t . /a if uiUifltt *tf if li f a ir “ ft ft 14 fill Ml o f h Ifl^' / #
I h r h r a* tint*
rt f *«/&lt; th t /if/* f* &lt;r» ih u u tfh t in ulttrn i / t i* * tn ker/t i m t i t
'•1/1*1*
th* « tj*jfr»rri fiftnintn

I
&gt; i

From th*‘ 7%
»»urf f i r u t tf r , i f u e r n Sally lank* at the fam ed Tauer o f Iamt ha 1 u h r t e th e
i n&gt;un am t/fuels C&gt;/ unalher Queen are ke/it h iter, uhrn »he sau the cruun, Sath m«in
tam ed it u u i f a r Urn h e m ’ )t fa r h er

AH lUtfitl*

9

�Fct kernel I
to

• y JOHN B. HASH MAN

The Mayor of Zurich, Swiltertand, get* 4
double break, Florida eitrut Juice from three
Florida queens. Left to right are Sally, Mar­
Ian Kttie, Grapefruit Queen; and Joan Turbett, Tangerine Queen. Mies Turbett and Mitt
Kttie, actually, are ttudente at the Vnivertity .
of Geneva -ju tl helping Sally.

In Wolendam. Holland. Queen Sally itopped
off to do a little old fathionrd tpinntng The
folk* in the famoue old city retain their anci­
ent drttt and euttomi. Sally trn» a little dif­
ferent. 4he kept on her nylon ttochingl under
thr old wooden than

Sally had a lough time with
European plumbing (circle). It
u&gt;a« different in every country,
the *aid Here Sally gelt caught
unth a new one. "If I could Jut!
read hot and cold in eight Ian•
guaget I unuldn'l have alwayt
keen burned or freeting to
death," Sally claimed at the
p u tted her way through datent
of tube.

A tatemn moment in Sally't tour the-'
Inu I u a* when the walked patl the
tnmh of the Unknown Soldier under
the Are de Tnomphe in Parit. Flor■
Ida's ntrut queen laid the taw more
ifttfuM. tnmbt, paintingt and butldtngt
than the could have ordinarily •queried
into a lifetime.
.•pvWrv

IsS sv s

Florida Queen
(Continued Horn page 9)
On har return to New York by air from
Holland via K-L-M Royal Dutch Air Line*
Sally, in aumming up her whirlwind trip
flatly stated. “ It wae fun. I eaw every
atatua in Europe, avery public building,
mat a lot of inleroating people, but I never
want to tee another banana ripening room
or auction market as long as I live. And the
Venus da M ilo? 8 ha’s not so h o t—on the
husky aids I’d say!"
. *

N the fall of 1782, the people
of St. Augustine were convinced
that Britain would hang onto
EaM Florida aa a permanent
possession, now that the Span*
ish threat had been removed.
The population of the province
was growing by leaps and hounds
with the influi of evacuees from
Savannah and Charleston. By
the spring of 1783, the new ar­
rivals totalled over 13,000 — a

on the St. Marys River. The
population of St. Augustine
swelled to the bursting point,
and cabins thatched with pal­
metto became a common sight
all around the town. Even these
were welcome habitation* to
the new arrivals.
Many of the loyalist* were in
a pitiful condition, without food
Sally, made many TV appear•
or the mean* with which to buy
ancet all over Europe. In photo
it. To alleviate their miseries
ml top center, the quipt with an
MC before going into her dance. j
the British government furn­
one of the talents that won her
tremendous addition when it is ished food rations for some
title. In Europe there are no
considered that tha population time, and the East Florida pro­
commercials on TV, but Sqtly
of East Florida until that time vincial government provided
got l n » plug for Florida eitrut
had never numbered much over tools for new settlers, that they
anyway.
17,000.
might be able to cultivate the
All these newcomers war* tracts of virgin land given them.
Loyalists, people who had sided
Somehow the transplanted
with the British during tha colonists found'the courage to
Revolution for various reasons begin all over again at the busi­
After attending church teructi in tt'iilof their own. Naturally, thsy ness o f establishing homes in
endam, Sally potct with a Gulch fam ­
had become highly unpopular the wilds. Pioneering was noth­
ily, dretsed in Gulch tradition an i •
their Sunday bett. Although the foun t -Y. in the United States, especially ing new to most of them; they
in Georgia and tha Carolina*, had been among the pioneer*
the weather cold, Sally taid the Dutch
were a warm hearted and friendly pco ’ from whence moat o f them who settled Georgia and tha
pie —and they love Florida n tru tr came. Outrages committed dur­ Carolina*.
juiceo, too.
ing the war by unprincipled
For a while it began to look
British troops in that area had aa if East Florida might really
reused virulent hatred among be on the way to lasting pros­
the patriot populace o f any­ perity. One of the signs was tha
thing or anyone British.
establishment of a newspaper,
80 when the protecting the first ever published in
Britieh'troopa moved out, the Florida. The Eaat Florida Galoyaliets had to go also, and tha sett* enjoyed a brief but vigor­
nearest place available waa East ous life aa a weekly paper in 8t.
Florida. Taking what faw per­ Augustine—from February I,
sonal belongings they were able 1783, to March 22, 1784.
to carry abroad ship, the Loyal­
Then suddenly, right in tha
ists, or Tories aa the Americans midst o f all the optimistic plana
called them, were transported for tha future, tha death blow
to Be Augustine at tha tipenae fell. On April 21, 1783, Gover­
of tha British government. Mov­ nor T onyn issued a proclama­
ing waa aa new aiperience to tion, following instructions re­
many o f them, for they had al­ ceived from th* Britiah homa
ready m oved aovoral times government. Bast Florida had
along with tha Britiah troops been ceded back to Spain!
as tha tide o f war flowed and
Britain had relinquished all
ehhad.
claim s to Florida in order to
A building b oom began in keep that barren hunk o f rock
Beet Florida when the Loyalists •which aha an highly priied-G iarrived. Houses, m ostly o f a braltar. Tha preliminary treaty
quickly built fram e variety, k *4 been signed la January,
•prang tip a t S i. John s Bhaff ITU, and would be re tided by
and the tow n o f HiDobaroaghi f the nations concerned, in the fol-

lowing September. After that
thr people of East Florida hsd
eightrn month* to move out,
unless they chose to remain and
live under a Spanish govern­
ment—a horrible eventuality to
any true blue Briton.
There was a great uproar in
Sr. Augustine — weeping and
wailing, and appeals to the
Governor.
They could go free of charge
to any spot in thr British Em­
pire, including the West Indies,
Canada, or hack to the Britiah
lalea. Fortunately the Bahamas
had been returned to Britain,
and many made plans to go
there, feeling that these neigh­
boring islands would be much
like Florida, which they had
come to look upon a* home.
However, evacuation gut un­
der way very alowly. While he
waited for the final orders, the
Governor did not push it. He
wanted those who had planted
crops to have time to harvest
them.
.
Meanwhile disorder reigned.
The troops stationed in St.
Augustine were »o resentful
over the order to evacuate that
thay went into a state border­
ing on mutiny. Some of them
hatched a plot to take over the
fort and the town, arm the
Negroes, and hold the country
at all costa. But this mad plan
waa broken up in a riot one
night, in tha course of which
aeveral soldiers were killed.
Law enforcement hecame al­
most nil. Tha roads became in­
fested with armed robber*, and
it waa not long before these
grew bold enough to molest the
houses in town. Also St. Augus­
tine waa full o f vagrants, soma
of whom posed aa slave owner*
from Georgia or tbs Carolina*
searching for aaraptd or stolen
slave*. T h ey ware apt to claim
say Negro they a c t as cm* who
belonged to thorn.
Tha Bamiaola Indiana ware

enraged when they heard the
Spanish were coming Lack.
Band* of them, armed to the
teeth, stalked through St. Au­
gustine cursing the British King
“ What right has he to give
away our country?” they reded,
and they threatened to kill any
Spaniard who ahould set foot
outaide St. Augustine.

Early in May, 1784, Coveraor Tunyn received thr final
orders for evacuation, and the
migration really got under way
In June Spanish Governor Z»spedrs arrived. On the 14th of
July he formally proclaimed
that Eaat Florida had become
the property of Spain. It » »
farewell to tha British!

C A LLIN G !
CHAMBER
OMMERCE
Of MVttNGS TO
INCRIRSI THt JOfUlATION
S P O N S O R S

Fra* C uoron tM
TiHfl Policy
3 0 Doy M on ty
lo odde C
duorontoi
B
uoron tM
F fM E xch on p
Prhrilflgfls
Fra* W orron ty
HtOH, M r ,
O0OONO
IUVATJOM

40* TO JO*

im too
t i o Down, 82.10 per la* Maalkly

N« Imi H»a» 4, m mem l*aa I Is s ewihtttt

Reads a* Ivary Hamaslt*
Street Slaat a t Ivary Career
All Lata Mlsatas From Lake
t-H. mm JM* m I4 mimkinklp
ha Jaatri CkiM ii of Cw * n»

88.000 loot laamptlea an All Hamat
Na Flarida Faraaaal lacame Tea

•MtHMUNIMIIIMtlMUIMlimMIIIIMMIHf
COret ( w s i f lead Baraev, Ok .

1*1 MM
*0 Harida Magaibw-PAOf II

�A “ D. U. D. Pr e Y
~

ir rlp lio n l « n
htl« IN* »pot /(&gt;*■
In ila n llv

•

J a B V

Hotel

The House That Nobody Lives In

NASSAU IN 1 HE BAHAMAS

In ibe Heart «/ ibe City
. . . Ilf the F.J(t of lb* Sea

M*. CWwWi M.
•' CkrMlm *1 *»•«-

M n T o r v**rf I » / ;
frrrd trill. ■« Hr* «m
both irruti. S l « » »»I»P O.D.D. I Raff
not brrn ir o n b W "
,
...
Don't uitfrr lit* torment o( an llthInf akin or aralp ciu m l by aciama.
■II&lt; i r&gt;. ruabra. ringworm, or other
tlrlt liouhle*.
, .
No matter how many dUappointinrnta you've had—do ae tlmuaanrle ol
Ollier a do get U D D. PreecrlpUon and
act in.lant relief. It really work*. A
diKtor'a preecrtptlon, llrU graaealew,
atalrrleaa, anllaeptle liquid ltO|ra that
tlrlt eo you can work In peace and
aleep In comfort, flrat application
from a Uc trial bottle muat aatlafy or
your money hack. Dan t auffer. aak
drngglil for D 0 0 Prawrtptlaa today.

•

ly OilVI W. miMAN

« T

X w a n t e d to be different. I didn t
went to be In a rut!"
If ever a man hit the jackpot with
that ambition, it'a Conrad Bchuck, of
Bartow. The "moat wonderful home in
world" he aet out to build for hie family,
■tanda unfinlahed, never lived in. But for
over a quarter of a century he’a lived
and brought up hla family on what he
failed, to do.
Drovea of touriata each year apend a
couple of dimea apiece to look over the
unfinlahed houae. It'a Conrad Schuck
himeelf, tal^thin and very bright eyedbut stopping to reat a little these days—
who leada them in and out and up and
down to see and to wonder.

Plenty of money, building eiparianca,
a big family and a head full o f romantic
ideas, ha had when he started, this
dreamer in concrete. Plana on paper
would have hampered him. Plain enough
In hia head he could aee the square, gra­
cious, 12 room house, each room with
its porches front and back, raftered in
vine covered coocrete. And Just aa plain,
as he cleared the wild 14 acre tract he'd
chosen, he could eee the great swimming
pool, the lovely lily ponds he'd make
from the pita where ha was digging sand

G( I 1 0 0 1 HAP P Y

and gravel for hia operation.
Much o f it came true before disaster
hit. Plenty o f people faced ruin in the
late t wen Use, though Schuck'a preoccu­
pation with hie Wander House may have
played hob with his financial affair*. At
any rate, with 78 thousand dollars in
the place, the rent o f hia money dieappeared. But his ideas didn't vanish

compliahea the name purpose but from
deep in a bath tub on an upper floor.
Prenent day apartment* aet little "one­
way viewer*" in their outer doors. In­
deed, many of Schuck* idea* show up.
perfected, in current building. Hia beau­
tifully counterbalanced cellar door*,
rising at a finger'* touch, forecast our
current overhead garage door*. Hia
rotary dish cupboard, accessible from
both kitchen and dining room, i* carried
farther in modern homes, both in the
"pass-through” and the popular whirling
shelve* set in kitchen storage cabineta.

with the cash, and the drive to go on
became almost an obsession.
Schuck had nine children, five o f them
strong sons. Th ey worked with their
father, until army service took them,
one by one, while the fees left by viaitoa*
willing to pay to see what was going on,
let them all live and toll. He kept the
boys busy! Pour kinds o f wood soaks l
design in a curved coaster top, 81 kinds
o f wood inlay a built-in fireside seat
And literally thousands o f tiny bits of
colored atone, tile and glass be jewel the
concrete pillars, porch railings and
bridge supports.

You might almost wonder if some of
the wilder ideas weren’t conceived later,
as a com e-on for the cash customer*.
One o f them nearly backfired. An elabo­
rate eystem reflecting sun ray* down a
chimney into a darkened room, looked
in war time to edgy neighbor* like a
pretty good apy signalling aet •up. It
finally took the P. B .I. to restore
Schuck'a reputation.
The visitor* chuckle over his adapta­
tion o f what Philadelphia and Baltimore
dwellers call a “ b u sybody." There, a
mirrored contraption projects from an
upper window to let one see who'* at

One may not care for hi* art work, set
in reversible frames above doors, or
covering a whole ceiling. But now whole
seta oT reproduction* interchangeable in
one frame may be bought or paintings
rented one after another from a gallery.
On the piazzas, water sprays out at
the turn of each faucet from pipe*
through the great pillar*. So the blos­
som* in the concrete troughs, the fig
vine and the flowering creeper* grow
lush.
Conrtd Schuck i* 80 now. A man
needn't be ashamed when hia ideas, un­
finished, can bring a livelihood in a steady
stream of paying onlooker*. He sell* visi­
tor* hla little page of strange poem* aa
they leave. He'd be kind of glad now, if
aomebody'd buy hi* Wonder House,
hitch up the plumbing flitures, and live
in it. He'd like to work on some of hi*
different idea*. He'a a little afraid of
getting into a rut.

LO W SU M M ER RATES

AIR CONDinONID ROOMS
at Ne litre Cherge
TREE TRIP A AOMIIIIOS
TO TAMOUS PARADISE SUCH

N astau’t H urst Food
DININU ro o m and
'HAHIIOH DM k C.HII I
• III!
U«

M il

o n * HI *•

t i l AN T I B A t 11 A l . I N I

most unusual

The
Scenic

-----

SUB BOATS at

From Ihr front door of Ihr “unfinithed haute" it a beautiful ganlrn rula
and planted by Conrad and hit tont

all hamI mailr

BALSAM. N .C . Alt. M M ft.
a sm tt MR oat ur

km1km n * , ^ ' r r ^
C M , K rttlul, llom r-U ke

POODS THAT VOU Will AMJOV

All Florida
Magazine,
the magazine
edited In-Florida
for Floridian*.
It I* alive with
picture* and feature*
of intere«t to
every member
. of itf.100.000
Florida famllle*.
The perfect *pot
for Florida
advertlflngl

Special Kt t n Tt FamUltt

and ul li*i pi aetu

t men infant r &gt;RdR
nl..*e tanka liwka

r Used is her home. Ur*. Schoch mu way ahead of her
, way pantry thrlf which tumt from kitchen to d tm yroom

L

A

tr hatband intpect* the two-way viewer door he b a d l for hn
a n o th e r a n od em innovation from Conrad"t fertile mind

All f IckmJa M*g*un*

�•

-

■ 'T

RECIPE----CONTEST

Yellowed hy age, Ihn photograph taken in Ittfkl, th a w Count DrHary iwhite heard) tented an the pitch of hit
manmion with a group of retain er and hit wife tat right). A l Ihit time, DeBary had otdy five yeart to live
and had reached a law paint in health and uealth. Hr dirt! in hit mid-ninrlirt.

More and more of our readers are entering their favorite
Florida recipes in All Florida Msgaiine's Recipe Contest.
Each one accepted for publication of course, wins 91 for the
contributor, and one each week, 95.
Many people are not sending exact measurements and
directions for making and are not preparing their entries in
regular redpe form. These precautions, followed, make it
much easier for the recipe editor in judging the prize winner*.

Count DoBary In Florida
H.ORIOA SHRIMP PINWHIIIS

•r lAHTHg SOHO HtMt
^ )* L T • few miles northwest
of Sanford, on Route 92, la the
village of Do Bery, named for
Count Frederick da Bary, whose
home — De Bary Hall — built
there in 1870, ia etill an histori­
cal attraction.
A member of a noble Belgian
family, he came to New York
City In 1840, with only I &amp;0 in
hie pocket, and became the
agent, in all the Americas, for
Mum'a Champagne and ApolIinaria and Hunyadi Janos min­
eral wstera.
Hie New York home was neat
door to that of the Vanderbilts,
and hia friends ware the moat
prominent of the time.
Even before the Civil War.
the Count waa a winter visitor
to the St. Johns, and an early
patron of the Brock House at
Enterprise. Here, he enjoyed
the balmy climate and the fine
hunting and Aahlng the woods
and waters then provided.
In 1888, De Bary purchased
the Amett sugar plantation of
6,000 acres two miles from
Enterprise and fronting on Lake
Monroe. It waa there he erected

De Bary Hall. It ia eaid he dup­
licated in this, the summer home
he built the same year at Sum­
mit, N. J. The house wae placed
in an oak grove, on higher
ground, almost a mile from
Lake Monroe. An avenue waa
cut through eo passing steamers,
many of them belonging to the
De Bsry-Beya Merchants Line,
could be aeen.
There were eeven large bed­
rooms on the second floor. The
main floor wae devoted to enter­
taining. The wide two-story
veranda, the high ceilings, the
tall wlndowe, the flreplacee in
every room-even the ice house
with the same wide cornice of
the main house- — are all still
there.
The elevator needed by the
Count, whose years of good
food and fine wines had made
him corpulent and had given
him the gout, la etill useable.
The three ice bo A s in the back
kitchen are almost Urge enough
to be walked into.
Some of the out-buildinga still
stand. The greenhouses, which
were filled with rare plants, are

SI*#** u44 Mete Tea. N i l i | i and
la iiM fa s , M s a y . awl—I the odv rttss*

it

elh**wit* te—ISat. C.O.O. ******

• A ll POINT

ei« ae *s 4 e e tf w h s * m Meted. (Me*th a a d lie effw e d b e le w It te b ie tl &lt;e
e &lt;w*w*r - b e d geeteatas k r
eS»**a«e*.|

f
t.

Im o u n t

P IN ^ | 0 0
lai —lwl.S
• » . » ’» Maas

raw *w« eaS Su e Sat —iittr

a Ntitii

u V rr YaalMel freW r
—

O H M * -O H M . £ |

De Bary ia a monument to the
man whose fabulous 18 th cen­
tury hom o ia rich ia memoriae
a f oth er days.

Pw sMitetw.aiwK'Wr l i s t
FAOf 14—ARMerida Magarioa

—

— —

11

\

*

\

gone. So are the five fine orange
groves which were once the
Count’s pride. He refused 815,000 for ode crop, only to lose it
all in the ” big freeae" of 1894-5.
The fine furniture has been
dispersed and his guns are gone.
The old porch rockers are still
on the porch and the csblnet of
mounted game birds in one cor­
ner o f the banquet haU—rare
speci plena now, from Europe
and America - remal n.
De Bary’e eteamboat line
operated for 40 years, bringing*
the many visitors to the hotels
and resorts and carrying freight
along the river.
The Count entertained the
great and the near - great of
three contlnenta-among them
Presidents Grant and Cleveland,
the Aetora, Joseph Jefferson,
Gen. Henry Sanford, who pur­
chased a large tract and started
the present city of Sanford with
the thought It would become
the New York of Florida, and
all the notables of the tim esat De Bary Hall.
The Ashing and the hunting,
the food and the wine he pro­
vided were fabulous. Hia din­
ners lasted until dawn. He U
known to have barbecued 10
steera for a single party. His
barge, all red and white, hasn't
been forgotten, nor the crew
and the German baqd which
furnished music aa his guests
were carried across tha lake to
Sanford.
De Bary died in 1898, in hia
mid-nineties. His heirs, all des­
cendants of the daughter who
lived in Hamburg, Germany,
sold the estate—then consisting
of 7,000 acree-for a song, after
World War II. With it went the
•neat atand o f virgin pine in
Florida.
Today, the growing village of

H tup heavy white taut*
If cup chopped boiled
thnmp
2 tha. finely chopped parltey
IH Up. finely chopped onion

2 (5s. finely chopped h&gt;iile&lt;l
Florida celery
2 tap. tall
U tap. monntodtum glutenate
I Uf&gt;. Florida lemon juice

Bitcuit dough tufficient for h large biteuiU ,

Combine the above ingredients thoroughly and spread
on biscuit dough rolled to one-fourth inch thickness. Roll the
whole loosely and let chill. Cut into one-inch thick circles.
Brush on melted butter and bake at 426 degrees for about
12 minutes. Cover each pinwheel with a sauce made from une
cup sliced mushrooms and one-half cup finely diced lean salt
pork sauteed together, to which flour and water are added to
make gravy of medium consistency.
Top each pinwheel with a thin slice of lemon on which
a sprig of parsley and a whole boiled shrimp have been placed.
- M m . J ames A. P eterson , Panama City.
ORANOi HOWRY JULY
2*4 cvpt drained light adored
Florida honey
&lt;i cupt tlmineil Florida
orange juice
4 cup liquid fruit pectin

Blend the honey with the orange juice and bring to a full
rolling boil, then add the liquid pectin and heat to a full boil
again.
Remove from heat, skim, and pour into heated (las***.
- M m .' A. Firesinqer . Daytona Beach.
MANOO SAIAO
I

large or tuo m alt Florida

mangoes
/ tmall ra n tlteed pineapple
U head lettuce
U t up m nvon/iou* br French

denting

■
*
%
Dice the mangoes Cut the pineapple into bite sized
pieces. Chop the lettuce and mix all ingredient* with the
mayonnaise or French dressing.
M m . F-d w in H. H o l m e s , Jacksonville.
HRIIMMON COO K ill
I cup Florida peril-trim
pulp ,
/ Up » W i
I cup nut
I cup rat *iru

1 cup tugar
2 cupt enriched flour
14 cup idea or butter
•4 tip each cinnamon, nutmug
I egg

Grind nuu and raisin* and mix with rifted flour and
apices. Dissolve soda in persimmon pulp. Cream shortening
and sugar, add beaten egg, then persimmon pulp and stir iqto
flour mixture. Drop by teaspoon onto greased baking sheet
Bake in moderate oven. They have*a distinctive flavor.

-Mas. Cecil H. Smith, Now Smyrna Botch.
■

�1

SPARE THAT SHIP

C L A S S I F I E D

(Ccmlnocd frem page 5 )

ADVERTISING
C 6 c • *6 7 O*

1-FfRSONALI

* 4 —BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

109 - VACATION SPOTS

HIK M W FRIENDS, Jinn Sun&gt;h.ne Ui
m i I M i Send |l 00 In* quctlionnurt.
n&lt;mknhip l l 00 P O B»&gt;« 111!. St.
Itituhnp I, Fli

SEW BABY WEAR at home' High Proht
Wide: ADCO Mfg . New Anpntt Road.
B*atmf, La

VACATION tixtagc. Hot Spingt, V a .
Altitude l.WOft Attommodate right pciaont Now until anow fliet, JtV). includet
gat. wain, tlrttntity. firrwnxl II mmuiri
tu village, llixnrviead faxrl, tulphut poolt
Beautiful wuxlt, mountain itrram, gixxl
maih Referenaet eaihanged h -t &gt;117,
Deltay Hraih. Fla

» S -n M A U M U * WANT1 D “
C.1RLS TO MODE1. lot TV d m , faihi&lt;&lt;n •host Panina Storm Fintthing
NfaxJ. 117 t Fourth, Jfckttumllc
HOME SEWERS WANTED Earn o n .
t.th making tradi-cur tie, npencm* tanrxin u t ) No telling We inttrixt Firr
drtoh JUITSAN, 111 F. ICW. Dqx Fli,
( k xlin d I, Ohio
HOMEWORKERS tun o t r . money
T im h i 1116, Iklttjr Both, FI.
BIG PROFITS in ware time Wide: C
Vaiwick, 1619 College S t. J o . FI.
HOME WORKERS WANTED Srlf cmI kijmeix home job. lined |K&gt;|iO weekly
ptuM t. No eiwrimee netetuty MAX­
WELL, Deft. 17. Ctmland 14, Ohio

I7-H*U&gt; WANTED; MAU, nMAlJ ~
SECURE ORDERS fat in. tddieumg
Ftxt.lt
Commotion InunHiiom lie,
ttfantUde. BENNER. Trenton IB , N J

ailii^noM ~W A m ni~"
MATURE woman, unentumhrted, ripenented tdfxe intloding neiet.ri.1, oflxc
management, bonkkeetxng, .witchboafd,
tticrixmiH, paymil - limjti
imjtrd ihotih.nd
D M Thom.), Rl I, Boa i l l , Wintet
H orn. FI*

11111111"
KOREAN VETERANS he wtc to get
hemaixm
I 'l l M I HUM
tontcinuig
vrillljl IIW
the IWMIIIIJI
hatbenng ptnfrthekwe
u nI b
i t e fbeginning any kind of training
We pa) you while teaming. Faying poaiixmi aatuted. (jnntaet: florid* Bamrifng
CtJItge, Jnkion title

LEARN HOW TO MAKE MONEY at
home and get a FREE gift Ruth |l fat
book, "apatetime Profita" and yout Free
Gift Sunthint Mailett, But M l, Tallihitire, FliXula

SMAU MANUFACTURERS
Eapanl your ulet ptngtam, top notih mfg
Agent will apfixni laletmm and diilnbiiiixi ixi a tegHxial w national haul fix proareuiie fuma Ft* perwxial interview, write
F O h it 1916, JiikuMiville, Fla
FORTIINF.S Made tailing tiitket) and
fahwtxmt Winr ft* lire information.
Carte) Farm) 6, Plaint, Ga

7 4 -AM CONOtTKJhOhfO *•
AIR CONDITION tomfxetux unit, l ion,
thrtfi i i l South Palmeilo, Datum* heath.
Phone 17V)
M -M U JIC A l i[nstrumcnts _ ”
LOVELY SPINET PIANO - We will
a m hue in ynuf axinny a loicly Spinet
pano. late model T o icipm iiblr party,
will tell at fag reduttkm with imall down
pytneni and eiiy monthly irimi Write
imimrdiaif ly to Credit Manager. P O Boa
1611, Jatkuxuille 1, Flotilla, and you will
br adtued where initrumenl tan be wen

H^OOMCAlSmi
PUPS-Wallet Foa hound. - Pedigree on
requeat Top blixidlinci t T. KEEP.
Mclnunh, Fla

97-FOW.T1Y, B«t&gt;S * tUPPUIl
STARTED LEGHORN PULLETS, all
agra. Fkxida Stale llanhrtirt. Gainetiille,
Fhxida

rW^MiSJNEIS PIACII FORRINT__
SUNSHINE ARMATURE WORKS
114 E. Rich, Dr Land, FU
Au'txiuxiie, marine and dicael aenurxm
genctalntt and tlatim Quick aenke AU
matetial and laboe guatanteed

FOR RENT Srote and OfEict Spate in
lafge building lutated Sibling, Fla , one
kfatk ftom Pott Offxe Sebrmg it glowmg npdly due att large leal eieate de*elopmem Contact W. FT Hcatbetingion,
Highland. Ctwniy Newt, Scfaing. Fla

l i t - A C M A M TOR t A l l
T A X L A N D , (heap, Voluua. Seminole
Jaxig letm Inveument
St Johnt I'ountxi. la
Rl 1, Boa &lt;66, Holly
Nelion M Cook,
C
Hill. Fla
I 11 —INCOME 4 R LT ilN tIt PROPSRTV
FOR SA U
BEER HAR, Sandwxhet O ppxtunity
toupie nr trim retired, p u l fanineit. tfaxt
houn, fatal trade plut toutiui 111 It i St
Holly H ill. Fla
m ^ R I A l lS T A T I “ ~ “

I ""

POR A N Y IN FO R M A TIO N afavt pcoprny in Beautiful Central lltxida, write
MatKemie Rcaltue, But MW, O val. Fla

LARGE BUILDING
FOR SALE
Suitable lot office! ex itixet in Palmetto,
Florida Completely ttmtxfeled O pning
of the new Skyline Budge makei thn
p n p n y very alttactive Congai &gt; Chat lei
W yeki, J e , P O ho* 1190, W en Palm
Braih, Floetda
OCALA and Mamin (jxin ty offei wonder­
ful real mate buyt Smith A t ejxda Realty ,
Oval*. Da
POR SALE Large white Getxgian tolumal
aryle fawne, 1 full haiht, 1 irtratr lawn, 41
fruit Iten, in fant k i Ihxi of my, ( 19,710
Can be arrn by appointment Wine 767
G. Otala. Fla
FOR SALE. —Ariiattivr 1 bedroom home,
irleit neighfaxfaa&gt;i Okala, Florida Braunfully lindx and with Cttrua tier) Tilr bath,
eletux kittnrn ItO.iOO completely turn
iahtd Inquire W, A. Seeinet, 911 Hill St,
Ocala, Fla

U4^PUt*«TUI»l~_

^

SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
aprrir and Slip Covet matetial Buy
On Draprm
by the Bull
FURNITURE MANUFACTURERS
SAMPLE HOUSE
Gainravilk, Fla
New WtUiMon Road at Otala Hmay

DO YOU KNOWS
That one o f the natural odditiea near B rook sv ille ia a d ry
aink cov erin g a b o u t on e acre,
approxim ately GO lo 80 feet
deep, with aidea m&gt; steep and
straight that it ia almost impoaaibl# to climb them? T h a t som e­
one named this sink moat aptly
the D evil's Punch Bowl?
THRt it was in 1880, that Irv­
ing K. Henry acquired a h om e­
stead o f 130 acre# o f land in
what ia now Palm Beach7 T h a t
Mr. Henry Would probably have
been diaguated or soared a bit
in the clouds o f dream * had
eom eone predicted that those
acres would one day embrace all
p t the busineta section in th e
nationally know n city o f Palm

painful accidents due to static
spark , w ith the w arning that
sta tic e le c tr ic ity is in sidiou s,
and in v isib le—until the spark
ju m p s—anti then it may lx- ttxi
late.
Hazards introduced by c a r e ­
less smoking habits on l*&gt;ats arteven more serious I ban a s h o re .
B ecause o f th e w ood en stru c­
ture and close p r o u m ily o f
flammable liquid fuels, a small
veaael has less lire resistance,
and may, when started, become
a tinder h o i. B etter Ity far tu
take e itr a precau tion s o f safe
amoking habits titan risk being
in an inferno.
Installing a glass gage on a
gasolin e fuel •oil tank in any
apace aboard a pleasure craft
can la* asking for sudden death.
Owners and operators o f plea­
sure craft, fur their own safety,
sh ou ld rem ov e any tu bu lar
glass gsges now fitted to fuel
tanks. A sm all piece o f glass
re ce n tly ca u sed the loss o f s
fishing veaael. Another was the

direct rause o f the lies o f s
pleasure boat and death o f the
operator.
T h rottle trouble! Kvrr have
th at, especially while cruising
in restricted waters at high
fix e d ? Freezing with fright will
do no good, hut it might cause
a collision At first suspicion of
th rottle trouble, it is much
wiser to shut o ff th e ign ition
and allow the boat to drift to
a s lo p and then d rop an chor,
until the trou ble ran l e
remedied.
Yes, pleasure hosting can frn
a. "pleasure," whether your va*~
sel is the outboard motor tv pc,
the cabin cruiser, or a pnlsiiat
y a ch t. A nd it can be safe for
you and your p arly, as well ss
for other* you may encounter,
if y ou co m p ly with recom ­
mended practices and stand­
ards — Safe and enjoy able in
Florida'* many typea of v starways.
H appy boating and sm ooth
sailing!

BIRTHPLACE OF ADAM
(Ccnlmuec! ficm page 7 )

" T h e Bible tells ua that th e
Piaon conipaaaeth the w hole
land o f H avilah," aaid Mr. Callaw y, "w here there ia gold. A nd
the gold o f that land is good;
there le Bdellium and the o n y i
atone.” Havilah ia North Geor-*
gia—the C hattahoochee rises in
what wae one o f the world'e
greatest gold belta. Bdellium ie
gum rosin and o n y i atone ia
Georgia marble, according to
this interpreter.
Mr. Callaway points out that
the Gihnn (really the Flint) is
spoken o f as the one which
"com pasaeth the whole land o f
E th iop ia " and declared that is
n ot m od ern E th iop ia . If the
G a rd en had been in W estern
Asia, near what is now called
th e E u p h rates, w hy then the
G ih on —if it crtxuted E thiopia—
couldn't have watered the Gar­
den without flowing uphill and
through the Araliinn desert and
then across the Bed Sea.
T h e fact that Noah did land
th e ark on M ou n t Ararat, is
convincing proof, say* Mr. Cal­
laway, that the Garden was on
this and not the oth er side of
the world.
A ccord in g to the Genesis
story , N oah and his fam ily
spent 160 days afloat after the
rains had fallen. T h e y m ight
have well drifted “ due east" as
God made a wind pas* over the
ea rth th a t cou ld have caused
th e ark — a b ou t th e size o f a
m od ern o cea n freigh ter — to
d r ift fr o m F lorid a to M ou n t

Ararat

&gt;t it

He reasons that if it hnd Ix m
near Mount Ararat to l-egin
w ith, it w ould hardly have
wound up where Nonh mu! his
folks set sail originally. ,
Mr. Callaway, a brilliant con­
versationist, talks slxiut the sncient and mystical "Teleoia Kay
of In te rp re ta tio n " w h ich has
u n lock ed secrets for him sn d
o f th e Order o f the W ise Men
of M rlchizedek, and which, titsays, directed him In search for
e v id e n ce to p ro v e w h ere th e
Garden was loented and to help
restore man's faith
O f the 28 trees men tinned in
th e B ible, Mr. C allaw ay says
alm ost everyon e lint the olive
grow s in F lorid a 's G ard en of
Eden. Botanists say the largest
v a riety o f tree life a n y wh e r e
grows in the wotai* and swanqxt
o f the Ajialachicola Valley.
Meantime, Mr. Callaway gt*w
right ahead ru tting roads snd
setting up signs to mark « ft
where he says things related in
the B ible (a ctu a lly ) occu rred .
H e saya th a t th e m on ey d o ­
nated from visitors will I * - u m &lt; I
to build a chapel or shrine for
"people o f all faith" amt to pre­
serve the place that he says be
is "determ ined to prove to on*
and all is the Original C ardan
of E den ."______________________
DO YOU KNOW?
T h a t these leaflets. Interest­
ing and instructive alike to ih«
Floridian and visitor, ia an inespenaive and easy way lo m n e
the public?
AH Florida Magsilne-fAGf It

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■■

Royal Welcome Service”com es with a man-size smile
(you*!! like the friendly service, too)
One of the nicest things about stopping at a Pure Oil station
is the "Royal Welcome Service" you get there these days.
You see, your Pure Oil dealer is out to make a lot o f new
friends, He's doing it now by giving the beet service in town—
he calls it "Royal Welcome Service."
So stop in and see your local Pure Oil dealer soon. You’ll
get a real "Royal Welcome"!

l

Now, more than
ever, you can...

B e sure
w itfiJ \ v e
i

�/

Weather

Inside
Editoriil P. I
Sports P. 6
Radio -

O TIri?

Society P . 3
Story F. 2
T T . p. 7

E a U b lia h c d

VOl.UMK X 1A 1

1908

I

t

AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER
PANrOUD, FLOmDA, MONDAY, 1UI.V 18. 19.v.»

r

r

a

l

f

t

Ctesr to pertly cteady threurh
Tuesday vrith rather wldtir scat­
tered mostly afternoon thunder
showers.

Awnriairil I'm * I /w d Wire

Robbed;
First Degree Murder Group Fooc|mart
Foodmart
Inspects £* f &gt;
■
.
| A
Charges Are Placed Airliner bate Carried Away
Ladder
On A lbert Brenson
Is Used
v Pope Sentenced
On Five Counts
In Circuit Court
%

I

I.

m
w

In Circuit Court ertlon Friday
Emmett Pope entered a rtea o f
guilty and -,va* sentenced by Cir­
cuit Judge Viusa'r Carlton on five
counts o f forgery o f endorsement.
Each count draws onr year Im­
prisonment at Rnlford R u le Pen­
itentiary.
Pope, a Sanford Negro fruit
picker, was picked Up in Msy
when he confessed to passing
more than $200 in worthless
checks sml was identified hy
operator* in Seminole County
stores and gas stations, it was
reported.
Pope is said to have also cashed
at least one cheek In Volusia
County and may have cashed
others In Orange and Lake Coun­
ties. All the rheoks were drawn
on the Florida State Bank and
the Sanford Atlantic National
Bank.
An operator of a servien sta­
tion in DeBary reported cashing a
cheek of *29 after which Pope
and his wife, Effie, wera arrested. Effie Pope admitted she
wrote the checks passed hy her
husband, Constable J. Q. Gallo­
way reported.
Officers reiterated that Pope
posed as a sawmill worker in
cashing the checks. Other checks
ranged from $32.50 to $12.76.
Pleading guilty to charges of
breaking and entering on the
property o f Francis Meriwether
jnr whom he worked, Joseph
Alexander waa
sentenced
by
Judge Carlton for two years at
Ruiford. AH' additional two year*
•were added on a charge o f grand
larceny.

U. N. Delegates
Hopeful About Plan
Over Disarmament
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. CD
U. N. delegates and officials are
hopeful about tha French plan to
■ava on diaarmament and spend
on a better way of life—the plan
Premier Edgar Faure plans to put
« before the summit conference
■ opening today.
He has encouraged them to
believe thst the U N . soon can
move faster In promoting its
atated goal of “ higher standards
of living, full employment and
conditions of economic and social
progress."
The Premier has suggested that
the Big Four, "along with a pro­
gram of general disarmament,"
f
start putting part of their military
\ * budgets Into a special fund open
to all nations. This fund would be
devoted to "the development of
countries or regions of the world
which are Insufficiently developed,
end to the improvement of the
atandards of living of the most
unfortunite populations.

Funeral Tomorrow
^ For M rs. M . Leland
Mrs. Mary Katherine Leland,
IS, who had made her heme in
Sanford for the past ala years,
died Friday afternoon at 12:43
i. at an Orlando hospital fol­
ding a short illness.
Bom in Richmond, Va., April
Ik, 1303, she is i unrived by a
nephew, Letand C. Tinsley, Baitlmore, Md.; and a brother-in-* law, David L. Livingston o f

K

Longwood.

Funeral services will be con­
ducted tomorrow at 10 a.m. at
Brissoa Funeral Heme with the
Rev. Lewis Futch officiating. In­
terment will bo in Oaklawn Me­
morial Park.

Albert
Brenson,
Altamonte
Springs, 34 year old laborer It
being held in the County Jsil on
a charge of first degree murder
after the stabbing and killing
of Timothy Lee Jr., 19, Orlando
whose given addresses are 715
South Division and 437 South Di­
vision.
The act took place in Altamonte
Springs on the shore of a re­
creation lake where boat races
and fsm es were being hetd.
Sheriff J. L. Hobby and deputy
sheriff M. R. McClellan were “ al­
most eye witnesses” to the hap­
pening.
According to the report "A l­
bert Brenson tried to gel Shirley
Mae Francis, girl friend of
Timothy, to go for a boat ride.
When she refused he then tried to
get tier to go o ff with him.
Timothy camo up and told him to
leave the girl alone. Albert pulled
a knife and stabbed him once in
the hrart with a two-inch pocket
knife".
Hobby and McClellan arrived
cm the scene almost Instantane­
ously and immediately took Brenson Into custody. Lee was taken
to a hospital In Orlando but waa
pronounced dead on arrival.
Timothy Lee waa a former em­
ploye of the Orlando Sentinel
Star with tha last working date,
shown in hla wallet, as July 2
and also an employe o f tha Or­
ange Memorial Hospital,

UndercoverMen
Aid In Dragnet
For Bootleggers
ATLANTA t* — Two Negro tin
(terenver agent* front North Caro­
lina, (losing as protore ^ e * D a » ,
h ive helped spring a dragnet for
Atlanta bootleggers-in tha biggest
single raiding operation against
moonshine In Georgia's history.
State Revenue Commissioner T.
V. Williams said a pre-dawn
round-up yesterday by state, fed
aril, city and county officers
snsred more thsn ISO persons
half of them women,
Additional arrests which are
pending will bring the number to
230, Williams said. All are Ne
Williams, who led the raids
personally, said while most of
those arrested sre "hip pocket"
bootleggers, msny of them are
“ big boys who deal in wholesale
quantities."
The mass srrests culminated a
secret investigation started two
&lt;and a half months sgo after the
commissioner borrowed the two
Negro agents and put them on
Georgia's payroll as investigators.

House Lead ers M ap
Fo rced -D raft Slate
C a llin g For A ction
WASHINGTON tfi-D riv in f hard
for July 30 adjourns ment, House
leaders mapped a forced - draft
schedule calling for action thia
week on aoclal security, highway,
minimum wage and housing tegis
latton.
And, if that isn't enough tq keep
It bm y, sandwiched into the pub­
lished House program for the
week sre votes on airport and
atomic ship construction bills,
mineral rights, amendments to
tha Communications Act and half
a doren odda and ends.
While plans for adjournment
July 30 are far from official and
definite, Itemocratfc Leader Mc­
Cormack of Massachusetts said,
" I do not see any reason why we
einnot, but that is my owm per­
sonal opinion’*
Minority Leader Martin (R •
Mass) said he believes Congress
can ftnlah its work by July &gt;0,
but he's not betting on it

Patrolman Receives
Bounce From Stick

Work Is Started
On $60,000 Job

ST. PETERSBURG (IV- Patrol­
man Brie Waehtmuth has found
this Idea of killing two birds with
one stone cap be carried too far.
Patrolman George Cos too says

Tha Clty'a last tower contract
started last week on Second St.
end Myrtle Ave. It waa report­
ed by City Manager Warren
Knowles.
This is contract No. 10 and la
]oca tad in the downtown area.
Hubbard Construction Co. of Or-

1 Trying to sobdna a violent pri­
soner In a patrol ear, Wachsanth
swung hie aight stick against the
men's heed. The stick bounced
off the prisoner's head, rattled
agsigtt Costae's head, and sent
him to a hospital for t o ih w i tt

New Carrier Routes
To Begin Aug. 16
In Various Areas

Beginning August IS mounted
route carrier service will be start­
ed for an entirely new area nol
now being served, it was annnouneed by Postmaster Joel Field.
Proposed new mounted routes
will start in the area south of Ge­
neva Ave. between Sanford Ave.
and the Oviedo railroad tracks
south to Wyley Hold then west
through the new section both
north and south of 27th street In­
cluding the new school now un­
der construction.
The route will serve that area
of Seminole Boulevard south now
being served by Route 2 and also
the patrons in Drcamwotd on
those streets that art SO per rent
or more Improved. It will then
rontinuo west on Geneva Ave. to
provide mounted carrier service
to those that are qualified; west
to the old Lake Mary Road then
north to include that section of
Loch Arbor that is SO per cent or
more improved as soon as the re­
quirements are met; namely num­
bering tU houses and marking the
streets.
"Although the Loch Arbor area
is outside the city limit* of San­
ford this service will be provided
as soon as streets are marked."
Post Master Field staled.

People Over World
Pray For Big Four
BT THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Hopeful people around the world
pra&gt;ed this weekend that the
Geneva
conference
might
be
blessed with success in easing
world tensions and opening the
way to lasting peace.
In the United States the tide of
prayer began Saturday at Jewish
services and continued yesterday
in Christian churches of many
denominations. Ministers, priests
and rabbis In many parU of the
land reported attendance heavier
than usual.
Many churches planned to re­
new prayers for the four-power
talks at weekday services through­
out the coming week.
President Eisenhower, who had
asked tor the prayers of his coun­
trymen before leaving for th« con­
ference Friday, added his own
prayers to those of millions of
other worshippers yesterday.
BOA BITES ATTENDANT
ASHEVILLE, N. C. tet-Attendant
Kenneth Sexton was bitten three
limei yesterday by a boa con­
strictor he waa holding at Park­
way Zoo. He laid the nonpoUonout make, which uaually cruihei
iti victim*, waa angered when a
boy aquecied It* UU. The bitea
were not acrloui. -

CHICAGO tB—Engineers
are
examining each instrument and
part of a wrecked Braniff airliner
today to determine why it rrashed
in flames, killing 22 persons am)
injuring 21.
The twin-engine Convair, loaded
to capacity was coming tn low
for an instrument landing in the
early morning fog yesterday when
It clipped a gasoline station sign
at the edge of Midway Airport,
flipped over and plowed into Lb*
ground.
The plane, en route from Dallas
attempted the landing." said Cook
County Coroner Walter McCarron,
who is conducting an inquest.
At Dallas, Braniff headquarters
said they would nol comment on
his statement at this time because
"the investigation of the safety of
this operation now is In the hands
of investigators of the Civil Aero­
nautics Board.
The pane, rn route from Dallas
to Chicago, ticked the 15-foot-high
electric sign, crashed a fence and
spun onto its bark inside the
port, onr wing ripped off and
other aflame.
The wreckage skidded nearly
half a mile, to within a few hun­
dred yard* of the airport fire sta­
tion, Fast-acting crash crews put
out the sea of gasoline flames
within three minutes, saving many
of the 43 persons aboard. The
plane earned 40 passengers and a
crew of three.

Defense Secretary
Continuing Plans
Despite' Protests
QUANTICO, Va. (JP — Despite
protests from Gen. Matthew B.
Ridgeway and some congressmen,
Secretsry of Defense Wilson plans
continued emphasis on big atomic*
air power and smaller ground
forre*.
"Obviously T think the program
Is about right or I'd be advocating
a different one," he told a news
conference yesterday at the i n ­
clusion of the annual a ee re firW
conference.
He also said that Fretident Elsenhower had approved his !m
pounding of 4$ million dollars
which Congress added to Eisen­
hower's Marina Corps budget to
offset a planned cut in Marine
strength. WUnn disclosed Thursdsy he had ordered the money
held up "while we take another
look."

O nly Sanford Bears
Boast O f 'Privacy'
The Sanford Zoo seem* to he
making progress In hnlh direc­
tions as It waa announced (hat
the shower and baths in the new
hear rages have been completed
and a mother enon gas* birth to
four “ little ones’* and Is doing
nicely .
Sid RIChard, superintendent,
stated that “ thle Is the only h e a r
pen In the U. 8. that bat a pri­
n t * bath and ahowert".
Ha alto brought out that the
soo h*a acquired a honey hear
In exchange for a buck and a
hear. It will rereive two morn
animals, an albino deer and a
talking maynah bird.
Herb Thomas o f Stark* and
scout for the New York Giants
is starting a small aoo and need­
ed the animals.

For Entry
'Someone Nervy'
Atkinson Thinks
"Snniehodv sur* b it

•StlMK NKIIVK* **ya Churk Atkinson o f the person or person* who robbed the Foodmart last niclit.
The safe renortedlv was carried awav to a near h,- miner where its content* wete ransacked. At thn
rich t. one of the employes gives his version of ho.v the store w it entered thiouch the roof. (Photo
by Ja meson I

Western Powers Give Reds Series
Of Plans For European Security
GF.NEVA tev — lire summit ronference opened today with the Big
Three Western power* laying be­
fore Soviet Russia a scries of new
proposals for Europesn security,
built around a unified Germany.
In quick succession President
Elsenhower, French Premier Ed­
gar Faure and llrillsh Prime Min­
ister Eden advanced separate
ideas a* to how Russia could Im
safeguarded against a united and
rearmed Germany.
Edeft also (luT forward a pro
poial that the Big Four seek agre.*
incut on arms reilings for Ger­
many ami neighboring countries,
with lh« four powers joining in a
system of control to prevent vio­
lations.
*
Despite the appearance nf a rnoniinated prngra mby the West.
It was understood the leaders of
the U, S. delegation were ronrernrd about some of the pro­
posals in Fatirc's speech.
Those inilmli\l a proposal Dial
arms reductions lie controlled in
the national budgets and Faure’s
call for inclusion of Germany tn
a general European security or­
ganization,

City 'Beauty Spot'
Work Is Underway; t
Lake To Be Stocked
Today workmen of the Main­
tenance ami Street departments
of the City are at work on a new
’ beauty spot in Sanford".
The big “ hole" that ha* been a
sore spot tn the northern end of
Fort Mellon Park on the lakeside
is "being fixed up". Crews are
sre hard at work
piping the
well that Is on tha lower end of
the park to the lake so that it
will be used as go-between for
the reservoir and the park.
The well water will corns up
front the bottom o f the artificial
lake and w-ill be used as a reser­
voir and feed-back for irrigating
the eastern end of tho park.
“ The department* ate sloping
the edges today and taking awav
the exress dirt from the edge*’'
Sid RIChard stated.
Tomorrow at 7:30 am the fill­
ing will start and probably last
for at least two days since the
laka will he quite large.
"Eventually," Warren Knowles
City Manager stated, "it will be
a beauty spot with small walls,
shrubbery and other accessories.
The Seminole County Sportsman's
Assoelation has promised to stork
the lake with fish."
The water level ran be kept
either up or down and they ara
planning to use the lake, after It
is Well storked, for lh« Jayrec
Hah Rodeo hetd each yrar.

Penitentiary Back
To Normal Routine
RAWLINS, Wyo , tev—Operations
at the Wyoming State Penitentiary
were hark to normal today after a
15 hour riot which ended early yes
terrtay In a face-to-face meeting
with convict spokesmen, Gov. Mil
ward I.. Simpson pledged a fullseal* investigation of the instdution and promised no general re­
prisal.
He also said he would seek to
improve prison medical rare and
food, to increase recreation farililirs and time
v The riot hroke out Saturday
when approximately 7$ prisoners,
armed with butcher knives, seized
three guards as hostages.
The three hostage* were freed
early yesterday. They were iden­
tified as l^n Hartshorn, fit: Tom
Randall, M; and Ted Charters, 30.
All were unharmed.

Local Baseball Reps
To Be Lions Guests
The Lions Club, at iti regular
weekly meeting tomorrow at noon
in Ihe Yarhl Club, will have aa
Its guest* John Krider, president
of tha Florida State League, and
Mario “ Red" Muriello, manager
of the Sanford Cardinals baseball
club.
Their appearance at the elvie
meeting is in Die interest nf the
ioeat ritib’ s drive to maintain its
position at or near tha top in the
second half standing of the lea­
gue.

BABY VISITS GRANDMOTHER
NEWBURYPORT, Masa. tel Mr*. Francis O’Connor, 39, is one
grsndmothrr who got to sea her
first grandson in a hurry—she waa
at the delivery. Patricia O'Connor,
was visiting bar mother-in-law
• f recreation tmuripm in Ban/ard, dances at* held to.
•tdar t**nax«r*. A* effort 1* bellir made to atimu- ygslerdsr when her baby wae
arUch orovid* tor «a oee*l*r ad eajomaat. bore about to minutes before a

doctor and m s fat to tho

f
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P tiSTiXSci’-l

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.

* lot n|

o * r \ e ." O r at least t* a t '* w h a t
C h u rk A lk m so n m a n a g e r of lit*

New Safety Slogan
Is Adopted By FHP
For Month 0( July
TALLAHASSEE — "D rive to
arrive alive", K*Jhe safely slogan
nf tho Florida Highway Patrol
during the month of July.
"A n d," says the Patrol Cnmrir.
If. N. Kiikman, “ There's s lot
of good steady advice packed into
that slogan."
-"After all, when a driver &gt;Url*
nut on a motor trip, his goal Is to
get where he is going and get
there healthy and alive."
What kind of driving.
then,
should the mulurist he prepared
to do 7
"To begin with," declares Kirkman, “ He should be a courteous
driver for the courteous driver
goes relaxed, glirs other drivers
the breaks and is always prepared
to yield the right-of-way tn avoid
an arcidrnl."
This typo of driving Is law
abiding, too, stresses the Patrol
Commander. “ The intelligent dri­
ver knows that in order to staysafe he must stay with the law.
Hr familiarizes himself with the
lews of the area through which
hr intends to drive, so when he
drives through that area he obeys
the law ," Kirkman said.
“ The smart driver," said Kirk­
man, “ knows Dial if adverse con­
ditions happens to arise, one of
the belt lifevavrr* in traffic is
rule:
‘Slow
application of the
th
.tT1 * , U v* /
“ Our slogan for July Is a sim­
ple one," said Ihe patrol official
rnfortunalely, msny may think
they are ton inrert to obey these
simple
suggestion*. To
iheir
sorrow, however, they may arriv* in a battered condition — or
they may not get there at all."

Sergeant Is Faced
With Court-Martial

Foodmart grocery think&gt;
At s o'clock this morning s
«afe robbery of the vtnri* wav dis­
co vered h v .la r k
H irk.von
and
tv. R Cosgrove at tec grocery
located on 2 &gt;th St. and P a r k Ave.
“ The place wav entered hy us­
ing a vlcp ladder tn go up tn the
roof, the rcjmrt said. "A hole was
rut in tho roof and r they) went
in the store hy living a ladder
that «av in-ide. The &gt; afr was re­
moved hy living a hand car and
going out the rear door," tt in­
dicated.
tt went on to var that "the safe
was carried about 73 yard* down
to vonth Magnolia Ave.
across
25th Street where the safe was
prie/l open hy using » rrowbar.
There arc two safes in the store
which normally sit vide by side
and the manager altrrnatra put­
ting the money in them "
“ There were about (2,Jon and
all the inviiranrr papers in tt. A
combination lock wav removed
from lb* rear screen but was not
torn up. The rear doors were put
bark in order after being open­
ed "
Hie men said that they "check­
ed" Dm store at ? S3 a. m. and
rvery Dung was all right". When
they checked again at 4 &gt;i.1 a. ni.
the aafe wav gone.
No fingerprints were on tha
»afe since it was wet and hss a
rough edge.
Pollre Chief Roy William* said
that whoever did the robbery nm*t
havi watched Dm store for quits
a while to be sure the "coast
was clear........ rhero were mark­
ings where they had stood and
.-ninkrd several cigarettes while
waiting " he rnnrliidcd.

Man Leaves Letter
Stating He's Last
Survivor Of Squad
TAMPA Vfl —A Tampa min who
died Friday left v letter saying ha
w&lt;as Ihe tost survivor of an execu­
tion squad which shot down 11
Mafia members in a New Orleans
jail March II. lent.
He was George (J, Parke, )TT,
who had worked as a printer and
newspaperman aver much of the
country
Parke left a letter saving he hvd
never revealed hi- connection with
the execution be aus* of fesr of
retaliation from the .Mafia, an
Italian secret society.
Parke said Dm 11 Mafia men
had been indirled for the murder
of Police Chief [Vivid C. Hennas*ey o? New Orleans. When tha
leader was acquitted and the nthits got light sentences. 12 men
including I’.irke were selected secrrlly to execute Dm II prisoners.
Paike said he believed the »*.
lection v.is niade by a committee
of 30. appointed bv Dm city coun­
cil to fight the Slafia,

FT BRAGG, N. C.
- Sjt
John L. Tyler, 25. facev a general
court-martial today on charge* be
collaborated with the enemy while
a prisoner of war in Korea.
Tyler, of Moundsville, W. Va.
is rharged in right specifications
Maximum penalty on each count
could be death
He is charged with anting pro
Communlst anJ anti &gt; American
articles for tiu In prison esmp
publications with requesting M
low prisoners to sign peace prti
lions, with bring s member of a
volunteer stiidv group, with In­
forming on fellow prisoners, and
with in other ways aiding Ihe
enemy, contrary to the interest of
the United Slates.

Bringing additional honors to
Sanford and Seminole County,
Harry Weir has been elected at
secretary-treasurer of Die Central
Flor-da Hospital Council
which
encompasses
spprnximiteiy 43
hospitals in this section of Die
State.
The member, gathered fn Mel­
bourne Friday for the session.
Weir is administrator of the Me­
morial Hospital which is nesnng
Ihe finxt stages of its construc­
tion.

Blind Mosquitoes
'Invade' Fair City

Postmaster Attends
Meeting In Ocala

In answer to Ui* msny inquir­
ies concerning the little
hug*
that seem tn be everywhere late­
ly, Sid Richard says that they
are blind mosqultoea.
"Seems that at thia time nf
year they all come out of hiding,
and for what reason no one
knows. They aura ara ii nuisance
aa they hump into m y and every
object. Heat he toe rates:", he

Postmaster Joel Field and Mr*.
Field today attended the meeting
of Postmasters from lh* * sixth
district of the Atlanta Region
which is being held in Ocala.
Maurice Smith, region person­
nel manager, explained pubile
law no. M and Ita effects on each
individual Post Office employe.
The statlnii. which was scheduled
to run through the day, began at
t o'clock thw morning. ' .

Harry Weir Chosen
Council O fficial

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                    <text>ODHAM &amp; TUDOR, inc
I

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Will Have
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Ready for you
THIS M ONTH
Bel-Air—
TEN BEAUTIFUL THREE BEDROOM HOM ES
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’’Designed Especially {or Better Florida Living"’
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Spacious Glass Jalopsled Florida p^orn

2. Full Tiled Bathroom
3.

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porch coxfobti

(WITH VANITOKY AND AlUiliUK)

M arble Terrazzo Tile Floors

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4. Beautiful Delmar Kitchen C abinets
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5. Kitchen Exhaust Fan
6.

Fully Landscaped Lands

7.

Hot Point Stove a n d Refrigerator,

(GRASS FROM FRONT CURB TO ALLEY)]

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8. Venetian Blinds
9. Five Ply Built-up Roof W ith M arble Chips
10. Extra Large Closets A n d U tility Room
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STh* Hanford Ib r a lit
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Comment By Milwee
Touches Off Report
From Welfare Director
School days hava a meaning to
than just the pupil*, parent*, tea­
cher? and other* In the school ad­
ministration, County School Su­
perintendent R. T. Milwee aaid
today.
His comment w ii touched) off
h f . report from E. Lee McCubbln. dlrrctor of eommodlty dla-

tribution for tha Florida Depart­
ment of Public Welfare.
Milwee said Scminoit County
received federally-donnated com­
modities during the past school
year with a wholesale market va­
lue of $19,717.65. These were dis­
tributed by tha U. S. Department
of Agriculture through the State

Florida Banks
Leading Lenders,
Report Indicates

Soviet Committee
Says 5-Year Plan
Ahead Of Schedule

(florid* farmers met their credit
needs during 1064 chiefly by
losn* from their local banka, ac­
cording to R. J. Oauman, president
of the Sanford Atlantic National
Bank, who represent* the Florida
Bankers Association as Seminole
County advisory banker. Florida
banks remained the largest lend­
ers to the State'e fanners during
the year, providing far more fin­
ancial aid to our farmers than any
o £ rr lending agency, be noted.
Quoting from the fourteenth an­
nual form lending survey of tha
Agricultural Commission of the
American Bankers Association,
Bauman staled that on January 1,
1PS5, Florida banks had loans out­
standing to farmers totaling $38,872,000 including both production
and mortgage loans. This compare*
with a total of $16,603,000 by the
Production Credit Association, the
ulond largest lender to Florida
farmer*. In addition. Florida banka
held $1,607,000 in C. C. C. loans
under the Government’s pri re­
support program not Included in
ths above figures.
"Despite reduced net income and
continued high production ex­
penses on farms", Bauman aaid,
"repayment of loans la rapid, and
farm assets are at near-record
Itwels, indicating that these faetWs have not in any sense weak­
ened the financial soundness af
agriculture.
Bearing out Baumaa’e state­
ment regarding the uae of bank
loans to farmer* la the fact that
of the total, farm ‘debt outstand­
ing In banks In Florida on January
1, $20,407,000 was In non-raal
estate or production loans. This
Production Credit Association*
•jm parrs with $16,603,000 held by
d $7,068,000 held by the Fann­
ers Home Administration.

Recess Possibility
Seen In Message
TALLAHASSEE Ift-Tbe
Mlty of a long recess was
today as Gov. Collins eent the le g ­
islature a message In which be
vetoed the only respportionmeet
, bill It has been able to pass ta to
days of striving.
*
Collins’ veto of a bill giving sen­
ators to Bay and Monro* count!**
cam* less than half aa bow after
a 4-1 Supreme Court rullag that
be had the veto authority.
‘'House Bill No. 10-X doe* —
Jihleve for the people of Florida
the representative government the
Constitutional unequivocally as­
sure a to them," Collins aaid.
Rep. Turlington of Alachua &lt;
ty has ready for Introduction to­
day two resolutions which give the
legislator* thalr choice ef recessing
until Sept. U or until O et U.
Rep. Knight of Calhoun County
who introduced the bin vetoed by
t governor, said be expect* a
rce month recea*.

»

Crack-Down Starts
On Charity Rackets
CHICAGO (ik-$&gt;gtalatar*e In
ar more states cracked dew*
is year oo charity racket*, said
to be fleecing the public «f t» to
U 0 million dollars annually,
Income tax statistics she
an average America* family dole*
out about $ « a year to charities
ranging from lonely street
beggars te nationwide drive*.
An Associated F r e e * a*
shows that Mato*. Utah, New Mo*Am and Oklahoma either adapted
m * charity tow* or made existing
levs tighter Ibis year. At laeat
five state* already bad law* to
■ ■ lia r charity eaerettoas. f r a
lor

«

MOSCOW IT—The Central Com­
mittee of the Soviet Communist
party told tha Russian people to­
day they have reached the goals
of Russia’* fifth five-year plan
eight months ahead or schedule.
The plan, covering Ih* 1951-55
period, was fulfilled last May 1
lha committee said in a statement
published in ell Moscow news­
papers. As outlined before the last
all-Soviet party congress in 1951,
tha plan called for an immenm
buildup of S o v i e t economic
strength.
The committee statement accom­
panied a report by Premier Nikolai
Bulganin that tha Soviet Union hae
mad* great progreia to heavy in­
dustry development.
The party leaders said the ex­
perience of past yaara reaffirm*
"the eorrecteeaa of the general
line of our party—tha priority
development of heavy Industry."
Emphasis to the fifth flve-yaar
plan, as outlined in Its early stages,
waa on boosting tha output af
steel, coal and petroleum to ltoa
with the heavy industry buildup.

Investigators Blame
Red Tape, 48 Errors
WASHINGTON (ft — Tha »*aata
Investigations subeommltta* today
blamed 4t error* and Army rad
tape—but not subversion — for
the promotion and honorable dis­
charge ef MaJ. Irving Pares* after
b* refused la say whether be was
a Communist.
H said Secretary af the Army
Stevens, or porhep* some of hla
Pentagon bosses, did "a disserv­
ice" to the country by what tt
termed concealing facta about tha
caas of the New York dentist far
almost a year. It also accused
"the Department ef the Army" af
some deceptive practice* toward
Congresi.
But K mads no mention of sub­
version to a formal report saying
the case showed "individual error*
to Judgment, lack of proper co­
ordination, ineffective administra­
tion procedure*, toconalstant ap­
plies lions of investigating regula­
tions, and excessive delays."

Trip Is Postponed;
Waters Still Fatal

Welfare Department.
Commodities came to Florida
without cost through the federal
price support program and the
National School Lunch Program
and are used in school lunchrooms
to help make poisibla a more nu­
tritional meal at tha lowest price
possible.
During the fiscal year ending
Jun* 30, 1955, commodities with
a total wholeiale value of $2,468,353 were distributed throughout
tha state. The greater part went
to county school lunchrooms
while some commodities were
made available to charitable in­
stitutions, state Institutions and
other nor-profit programs.
This, to tarms of pounds of gro­
ceries, amounted to over eight
mlllioii pounds or 3M average
freight ears.
Among the items received were
canned green beans, dried •beans,
canned beef and gravy, butter,
cheese, cranberry sauce, canned
fig*, grapefruit sections, dried
milk, cottonseed oil and shorten­
ing, canned beans, orange juice
concentrate, peanut butter, rice,
canned tomatoes and t o m a t o
paste. Florida producers supplied
all canned beans, orange Juice
concentrate and grapefruit aeelion* which w n distributed to
eligible recipients to this state.
Mtlwae said the average num
ber of meals served daily In the
II comity schools totaled 1,171.

National Guild
Loses In Efforts
To Block Actions
WASHINGTON (ft-The National
Lawyers Guild lost to the U. 8.
Coart of Appeals today an effort
to block Atty. Gen. Brownell from
going ahead with a proceeding
aimed at listing ih* Guild as sub­
versive.
Ih* court's enanlmou* decisioai
held the Guild "must exhaust the
proffered edmtolstratira remedy."
Ib a i bm*m Betog th re e * with a
hearing which Brownell baa al­
tered.
Brownell proposes to pot tha
Guild on the attorney general's list
of subversive organisation*. The
list is used primarily to screening
government worker* end appli­
cant* for Jobe.
In this connection the court said:
“We cannot assume to advaneu
of a hearing that a responsible
executive official ef tha governmeat will fail to carry out hla
manifest duty.

Roy. C. C. Whitt
Attends Workshop
ATLANTA. O a , - The Rev.
Clarence C. White, Lake Mary, la
among 78 ministers attending the
Church and Community Workshop
at Emory University,
Nina major denominations are
represented to the enrollment for
the workshop, according to O.
R o m Freeman, director. Ministers
hava coma from 18 states and Can­
ada to attend cessions ef the Town
and Country School or the Ur­
ban and Industrial School af the
workshop.
The Church and Community
Workshop la staffed by eight
potent authorittoe hi rural
whan church work. Tha
and Country School is baa dad by
Dr. Earl D. C. Brewer, professor
of sociology and the rural church
at Emory- Or. Fred Shipper of
Drew Theological Seminary heads
the Ushaa and Industrial School.

DESTIN (ft - A Jackson. Miss.,
couple who called off a deep aaa
fishing trip because af bad weath­
er drowned in turbulent Gall af
Maxloa watara yoetorday trying to
resent thalr m l
They ware Mr. and Mr*. W. W.
Wright 11. Wright was general
sales mass gar ef lb* Mississippi
Products ‘Co., general wholesale
firm.
The bay, Georg*, 19, was
knockad off a raft by high wavoa, Houso Votes For
witness** stid. When hi* parent*
triad to halp him they were polled Survivors Payments
under by a atrang undertow and
WASHINGTON (*&gt;—The Hi
dr owned. Oeorga chug to tha aide voted yesterday for a broad over­
of tha raft end we* net hurt.
haul ef government payments to
Cynthia, absut g, to* couple’s the eurrivore of eervicemon.
waa on tho batch.
by voice vote eent tho
I measure to the Sen­
where It to uncertain whether
Search Continues ate,
it can be acted on before tho see■lea's end.
For Communists
D m US would do away with the
at |19AM ftwe tooaranea far
to natfena. pat atf aan
1stration
to their

A N IN D E P E N D E N T D A ILY N E W S P A P E R

HANFORD. rLOW IDA,

Vermont
Woman
Convicted
BRATTLEBORO. Tt. (ft-M rt.
Lucille 8. Miller, 45. stood convict­
ed today on II counts of advising
young men to evade military serv­
ice.
Federal Judge Ernest W. Gibson
ssid he will sentence her Aag. 8.
However, Mr*. Miller’s lawysrs
have announced they will appeal.
The jury returned its verdict
yesterday after deliberating a little
more than an hour, after a threeday trial.
Mrs. Miller, the only defense
witness, took the stand following
five unsuccessful attempts by her
counsel tor a dismissal of Iht in­
dictments.
A high point in Mrs Miller's
testimony came when she replied
to a question ssked her by U.S.
Atty. Louis G. Whitcomb. He asked
her if she "deliberately Intended"
to violate the law when she wrote
to the nine young men, advising
them to evade the draft. Her
answer was. "I certalnlg did."
Mrs. Miller and her husband
Manuel, 4T, a Justice of the peace
at Bethel, gained national attention
when they withstood efforts of a
U.S. marshal and police to serve
Mrs. Miller with a court order
committing ber to ■ menial hospi­
tal.
Her husband Is scheduled to go
on trial next Monday on charges
of resisting a U. S. marshall.

Military Program
Goes Before Senate
For Added Debate

MIAMI (ft — Defense attorneys
hoped to get a sanity hearing to­
day for Robert Brown, held sine*
Friday for Investigation to tha 1954
Judith Ann Roberta kidnap-alaytog.
'Attorney Georg* Nicholas ssid
he hoped to have Brown declared
sane "so police will have to quit
shoving him around."
"Thsy won’t file iny charges
■gainst him because they hava
no evidence against him,” Nichol­
as added.
The Miami Herald said It laarn#d that both a court-appointed
psychiatrist aad ana hired by
the defense will declare Brown
sane.
"Tha Iwo doctors visited with
Brown separately but et length
Wednesday," the Herald aaid.

W. S. BURNHAM
DIES Of MASSACHUSETTS
Sanford friends i f N n . V . S.
Ha declared ha had been d e­
Burnham, tha farmer Dorothy
dications that Atty.
Crabtree, a f Olanaaator, Mae*, will
aright hava charge
kt Berry to leant ad bar death ad toe
lad that
three aa July U .
H
M e a * '1” 1
S
health te r tha east year nad a
aad we will
half. Ska -bad vQtod hare many
ft."
Hare* a t the base* e f bar eeaeta,
R *******

- - - 1..

Nn. 2-12.

AnenrUteei P rs m le a s e d W ire

Many Are Missing
After Boat Sinks
i-

Commies O kay
Plan To Reduce
Personnel Rate
PANMUNJOM. Korn (ft-The
Communist* today screed to a
reduction of number and personnel of neutral nations inspection
teams stationed at ports of entry
to Korea.
Ths reduction was proposed by
the Swiss and Swedish delegations
of ths four-power neutral commis­
sion. Other members are Commu­
nist satellites Cseehoskivakia and
Poland.
The new plan cuts the number
of teams from 10 to • and halves
the personnel on each team. At
present the Neutral Nations Super­
visory Commission hss live teams
in North and live in South Korea.
Each team now has 10 to 12 mem­
bers.
A ropy of a statement of accept­
ance by Lt. Gen. Lee Sang Cho,
senior Communist delegals to the
Military Armistice Commission,
was handed by the Communists
to Allied newsmen dunng a com­
mission meeting.
The United Nations Command,
reserved judgment on tha proposal
and ssid tt would bring the matter
up again Saturday,

Pinecrest School
45 Pet. Completed
Die new Plneereet elementary
school Is 48 per rent completed
and ten rooms will be reedy for
use nest school term, County
School Superintendent R. T. Milwee said today.
Milwee said teachers wffl hold
a pre-school workship et the
school August 16. The school term
opens September 6.
Regarding work ea tha eld
Greyhound bus depot, whirh is be­
ing converted Into administrative
offices for county school officials,
Milwee said the project Is pro­
gressing satisfactorily. He said he
end his staff would probably move
Into tha building about the first
to August.

Committee To Keep Close Watch
On Settlement Of Dixon Yates
By JOE HAM,
WASHINGTON &lt;ft-»en. Ander­
son (D-NM) said today the SenstoHouas Atoasic Energy. Commit**
ha heads will keep close watch
ea bow the government goes about
saUltog the Dixea-Yetea contract.
D m commit!** (ailed to an ef­
fort to obUia from Atomic Energy
Commlssina officials yesterday
word as to Just bow tha cancel­
lation win he effected.
Nattog that eadsr tha law hla
immtttaa to ta ha kept Informed
af avarytktog ARC does, Aoder■aa aaid ARC to the govern meat
party to tha aaatract and

Partly rlowdy threoxh Friday »Ph
srettrtod mmntog •h«*#r» «»tilb•••4 rnatl and »ralt»r*d showers
»lt»« h»r*.

*

THURSDAY^ JU L Y 14. 19M

WASHINGTON Ml — A military
reserves bill shorn of compulsory Bankrupt Railway
training requirements for present
and former servicemen Spent* up Is Denied Request
for Renata debate today.
The Senate Armed 8erviea* To Relocate Yards
Committee, approving the mea­
JACKSONVILLE (ft-Judg* Bry­
sure yeeterdey, voted to require an Simpson has denied ■ request
future reserve training only of by the bankrupt Florida East
those men entering regular ser­ Coast Railway to move Its Miami
vice to days or more after the freight yards from the Buena
measure becomes law.
Vtita section to suburban Hialeah.
A* passed by the House, the bin "A t a hearing In Mareh, former
woe Id have permitted an almost Gov. John W. Martin af Jackson­
Immediate use of a form at com­ ville, bankruptcy trustee of the
pulsion, as asked by President FEC, said it had the necessary
Elsenhower to assure reserve I H million dollars to finance tho
farces he wants. The House voted move end predicted the railroad
to permit required training of all will make 4H million this year.
men who entered service after
Opposition came from the At
tha Korean armistlca, July 27, lantic Coast Line Railroad, whirh
1963.
lor eeverel years has tried to gain
The Senate committee voted 7-2 a merger with the FEC, end from
to reject thst idea, however, and first mortgage trustees and bond­
proposed Instead a scale of bo­ holders of ffle FEC.
nuses to veterans who voluntarily
John B. L'Engle, FEC attorney,
Join Army and Marine Corps ram- said the Buena Vista facilities art
bat reserve units during the next Inefficient and Inadequate. He pre­
two-yea n .
dicted continued operation from
there would piece the railroad in
of losing present patronage
Defense Attorneys danger
sod unable to take on more.

Hope For Hearing

Weather

tha contract. There have
some Indications the Dixon-Yates
group may seek several million
dollars.
ARC Chairman Lewis L. Strauss
told Anderson’s committee ho be­
lieves ABC should handle the can­
cellation. But he said this would
aat he settled until his agency gel*
a formal directive from the Budget
Bureau.
Strauss said soma steps on the
cancellation already hava been
taken, hut would aot disclose Uitm
publicly. William Mitchell. AEG
general counsel, said aa formal
notice had yet bees seat to DixonYota*.
Mitchell ran Into sharp criticism
a Democratic committee
after be gave his opln.un
tha contract to folly effective and
Madtog aa tha government.
Aadereoa has taken Um opposite
View, aoataadtog the government
a dollar hscausa tha
private utility group never pot
^
M
J
J - 8
M l / OB flMi MHi IM U
l u--------------rn

Storm-Tossed Gulf
Dulles To Prepare
Swallows Passenger
Finishing Touches
Vessel From Mexico On West's Slra'egy

JOPLIN. Mo. (ft — Officers
checked discrepancies today in a
farm laborer’s rambling account
of abducting 2-year-old Donna Sue
Davis from her crib and raping
and beating her.
The body of ths Sioux City, lows,
child was found Monday in a farm
field near South Sioux City, Neb.,
just across the Missouri River
from the lows town.
Detective John Showers said
Audrey Brandt. 42, of Iji Porte
City, lows, orally admllUd taking
the girl from her bed Sunday night,
raping her and hitting her scvsral
times.
llhowers ssid the farmhand
claimed, however, that hs did not
kill her.
He told officers he hitchhiked
here from Sioux City.
Officers questioned him 1st* Into
the night on his story, which they
described as incoherent to parts.
Detective F. E. Elchtlberger
■aid the FBI end Joplin police
were studying certain phases of
the story that "didn’t Jibe."

VERACRUZ, Mexico ( f t- . The
crowded coastal passenfer boat l-J
Flrrha tank last night in the
storm-tossed Gulf of Campeche 40
minutes after tailing from Veracrus. Twenty-nine perton* were
feared k»tl.
Twenly-six pertont wrere report­
ed mitting. Three bodiet—of an
adult passenger and two children
—were ifeoveted and 37 pertont
were reported rctcued.
All those thoard the 143-ton vetacl were believed to be Mexicans.
The l.a Klerha sinking wax the
treond marine disaster of the day
in the Caribbean area. Early yes­
terday a Liberian ore earner, the
Sun Prinresa. rammed and sank
the 6,153-ton British freighter Geo­
logist off Trinidad. Nineteen crew­
men of lha Geologist were m&gt;xi
ing and the body of another was
recovered.
The l.a Flecha wvnt down about
four mile* off Vcracrui. She was
bound across the gulf for Ih* port
of Progreso, on the Yucajsn Pen­
insula. Coast guard vessels and
fishing boat* searched throughout
the night for survivors.
A rescued crewman said the l.a
Flecha was carrying at least U
person*. Her sailing list showed
32 passengers and ■ crew of 14
■board, but many of those rescued
were not oo Ih* list.
The cause ef the sinking was not
immediately determined.
They
said the ship went down so rapidly
there was little time for launching
lifeboats.

Committee Okays
Construction Plan

Approval Assured
For Resolution
Affecting States

Police Check Story
Of Farm Laborer
In Child's Death

WASHINGTON (ft-Republicans
promised a strong effort In the
House Public Works Committee to.
day to compromise rival proposals
for financing a mammoth nsw
road-building program.
The committee yesterday ap­
proved the construction program
itself, calling for about 37 billions
In federal funds and to billions
from the state* over the next 12
yeers.
nut K defeated 19-14 President
Eisenhower’s proposal la finance
Ih* road-building expansion large­
ly through bonds to be issued by a
special government corporation.
The committee take* up today a
substitute Democratic plan to vay
for the nsw roads by immediate
Increase* in taxes nn gasoline,
trucks and buses, heavy Urea and
tubes, end diesel fuel.
Ac approved by a subcommittee,
these increase* would raise about
•M million dollm a year.

Mosquitoes Blamed
On Lack O f Water

WASHINGTON (ft-Overwhelminx approval wax assured (inlay
for a resolution expressing Sensle
hopes thst iiihlect state* "shall
■gain enjoy the right of selfdetermination."
The resolution, backed by Senate
leaders of both parties, doe* not
name the Soviet Union nr commu­
nism and makes nn reference In
the Big Four summit talks opening
at Geneva Monday.
President Eisenhower leaves for
Geneva tomorrow night, accom­
panied by the First Lady and a
party of advisers, after addressing
tha nation by radio and television
on his views of the summit talks.
Roth h* and Secretary of State
Duliei hava repeatedly Indicated
they will press Russia In ess* up
its grip on the European satellites.

Soil Conservation
Officials Elected
Ralph W. Hammond. Longwnnd,
waa re-elected and W. W. Lins,
Silver Lake, was sleclrd to tha
board of supervisors of the Semi­
nole County Soil Conservation Dis­
trict in Tuesday’s election. Results
war* announced today.
The (wo men will serve for four
years each. Hammond Is ■ citrus
grower and nurseryman, while
Lint, who is alto a citrus grower,
is president of the Seminole County
Farm Bureau.
The elections were held simul­
taneously in all Florida districts
Tuesday. A "very nice" turnout
was reported in the Longwood area.

TAMPA (ft—Mosquitoes ere had
again end n health official says
leek of water is to blame, ■■ well
ae the uiual trouble from too much
water.
Drought last winter dried up
many small creek* end ponds, kill­
ing fish and other creatures who
pray on the mosquito larva, said
Roy Tarham, assistant sanitary
rngmoer for lha Hillsborough Coun­
ty health department.
Now there’s too much water and
that’i providing plenty of breeding
places for tha skeeters. Abnor­ M iss Woodcock Has
mally high tides, which come ev­
ery four years, ere flooding marsh 40 Years Service
lands, Parham said.
Miss Ids Versa Woodcock com­
All over Florida mosquitoes are pleted 40 years of aervire with tha
reported worse this year than lest, Southern Bell Telephone Co. yester­
he added.
day. Bh* started as an operator
to Sanford to 1911 for tha San­
Telephone Co.
Annual Sales Tax *ford
Being vary active to Sanford
aha Is a member of the First
Report Is Released Methodist
Church, tha Daughters
Bey E. Green, State Comptroll­ of Waalay and Eastern Star. Her
er, has Just released hla annual re­ bom# Is on 100 Elm Ava.
port on salos tax collections which
E. V. Turner, manager, stated
reached e new high ef $74,058,- that “aha Is s fair loyal employe
429.81 for the fiscal year which end wo know that all will Join
tndod Juno 80. Thie amount Is with the Telephone Co. In con­
over eight million dollar* greeter gratulating har for her service."
than the total for the previous
year, end la almost double the
BATH .TKNNII CLUB
revenue realised during the first
PLANNING PARTY ’
twalve mon'hs after the Rales
Tax law became effective to Nov­
The Sasford Bath sad Tennis
ember of 1948.
Club la have * party Saturday
Seles Tax payments received night s t 7 p. sa. at ths pool. Any
during the year from dealers to member extracting 1* attend pleas*
Seminole Cewntg ansewtead to cell Betty Brawn 1T89-W ky 10
e’aiaak Saturday

PARIS (ft—Secretary of State
Dulles was due In Paris today to
help put the finishing touche* on
Western strategy (or the Rig four
summit conference.
Later today he will dine with
British Foreign Secretary Harold
Macmillan at the tt S. Embassy,
Dulles indicated »» he left Wash­
ington last night that agreement
among the Western Allies would
be easy to achieve. He said Ihcy
"see eye to rye" on mailers likely
lo conic up when President F.iscnhower, British Prime Minister
Eden and French Premier Edgar
Faure sit down In Geneva with
Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin.
"Tills Initial unity is a good boginning of our efforts to reirh
agreement wth the Soviet Union
on the slated purposes of the Gen­
eva conference," he said.
Ttie Big Three foreign ministers
also will outline their policies for
Geneva to Ihe other ministers of
Ih* North Atlantic Council at a
meeting Saturday.

Ike's Intent Told
To Disregard Part
Of New Money Bill
WASHINGTON 'ft — President
Kitciihower’x avowed intent to
disregard a provision of the nrw
■irfeuse money bill unless ‘ the
courts tell him to abide by tt
brought Republican praise and
Democratic denunciation u emi­
gres* today.
Sen. Mundt (R-SMi said the
President showed "courage and
integrity." Rep. Sikes (D-Kla) protested, ’’Thlx country Is nut under
martial law."
In s special message, Eitrnbower d I r * c t # d a broadside
against a provision giving either
Ih* Senate nr House appropria­
tion! coni milters veto power oxer
Defense Department decision* to
divest itself of any of Its Iiumiicsi
activities.
Describing the provision at a
violation nl Hie constitutional In­
junction that the branches of govefnment shill be independent, Ei­
senhower said It "will be regard­
ed os invalid by the executive
branch of the gov eminent . . . .
unless nlhrrwivr directed hy a
court of competent Jurisdiction."

Adjustment Board
Has Denied Appeal
For M iss J. Laing
The Board of Adjustment and
and Appeal* Iasi night denied
sn appeal bby bliss Jeanette I.aing in the condemnation of three
houses belonging to her nn Pin*
Avenue. The houses are Negro re­
sidences.
CPy Building Inspector John
Gillon said Mivs Using must nmv
either bring the houses up lo city
standard- nr tear them down The
houses are located at 404, 406 and
40* Pine Avenue.
bills Using and Gillon presented
their sides of the rase at last
nigh’’* meeting which was the
first held by the new board head­
ed by E. C. Harper Sr.
The houses wrere condemned hy
Gillon in his campaign against re­
sidences not meeting city sani­
tary requirements.

Pinecastle Airman
Cleared Of Charge
ORLANDO (ft—Airman Robert
H. Hail, 20, of Pinersitle AFB
was freed yesterday of a charge
of attempted rape brought by ■ 55yrar-otd grandmother.
The women, from Columbus,
Ga., aaid she and an U-yaar-old
grandson arrived at the Orlandu
bus station without money July 1
and she asked Hall for a dime to
the could phon# a daughter. Hall
offered Uiem a ride, then attempt­
ed to attack ber to the ear, ah*
aaid.
Hall declared the woman mis­
took hit intentions. He said the
door of the ear came open end she
became excited when be leaned
ever bar to elot* it.
D m charges were dropped. aJtar
attorney*.

�T ire SANFORD HERAT,P
Page 2 T h a n . July 1 4 ,19S5

Gore Comment
All Types On Cancellation
Are Seen Problems Involved
In Video
NEW YORK CP-ll this business
you get to see all lypei. In an
old TV movie the other night there
was a columnist with an assistant,
called a leg man because he did
all the teg werk while the eolumnlst just n t and thought up spark­
ling items.
Thla leg man waa named Sam
Swerv#, nr something ’similar. He
had no particular latent, but he
was eager. He w-rote like he talked.
In Incomplete, machine-gun sen­
tence!.
Thla columnist lacks the luxi'.y
ef a leg man. But It’s nice to d&gt;vam
of Sam, out doing the work and
bringing In hla report. Lika this:
As directed, cheeked into CBS.
There P.A. (press agent) gave run­
down on subject: Nila Talbot, Z4,
blonde, other vital atatlstlci lack­
ing. P.A. excited about her as com­
ing star. Subject has played many
big TV shows, currently playing
Bose Peterson in soaper Search
for Tomorrow. In came beautiful

Rabbinical Council
Seeks Permission
A number of delexates from
the Sanford congregation o% Je­
hovah's witnesses will attend an
assembly at Yankee Stadium,
New York City, July 20. through
14. R. K. Stafford, presiding min­
uter here, who will head the
delegation, announced today that
a total of 25 Is expected to at­
tend from Seminole County.
Mr. Stafford stated, “In 1053 we
had one international gathering of
ministers at Yankee Stadium in
New York that drew a peak at­
tendance of 165,820 from 07 lands.
This year we hope our combined
attendance will double that."
The eitlei in tha United States
and Canada named a* convention
sites are Chicago, Vancouver, B. C.
Lot Angeles, Dallas and Naw
York. Those in Europe are London,
Peril, Rome, Nuremberg, Stock­
holm and The Hague.
Arrangements are already under
way to tend over 4,500 delegatee
from tha United States and Can­
ada to the European assemblies.
DclegaUa lrom Latin America,
Africa, Australia and tha Far
East will also attend in Europe.

WASHINGTON
- Sen. Gore
(D-Tenn) said today any agree­
ment by the administration to pay
contract eeptelleUen feci to the
Dlxon-Yalei utility iroup would be
"subject to icirching inquiry" by
Congress.
He isid the Atomic Energy Com
minion could use only funds ap­
propriated by Congress to reim­
burse D 1 x o n-Yites for costs
rlalmed under the contract Presi­
dent Elsenhower has ordered can­
celed.
Atty. Gen. Brownell said Mon­
day a settlement would be ne­
gotiated with Dlxon-Yatei. But he
■aid he rould not estimate what
ranrellallon rosts might come to.
There have bern estimates DuonYstes might seek several millions
of dollars.
Meanwhile, a Senate Antitrust
subcommittee probing the contract
rilled tha entire Securities and
Exchange Commission In try to
find out if the White House Inter­
fered with the UmUif of hearlnfi
on Dixon-Yates financing plans.

Red Reunification
Proposal Offered
MOSCOW US—The Soviet Union
Tuesday proposed a step-by-step
reunification of Germany in an
all-European rolieetiva security
system. The Russians said the
holding of all-German elections to
reunite the World War n foe was
a "subordinate" problem whleh
could wait.
"The solution of tha German
question," the Soviets said, "is
indissolubly linked with ensuring
tha security of Europe as a
whole,"
The Russians wsrned against In­
volving West Germany, or a re­
united Germany, in any military
alliance. Such a policy, they said,
"leads to an increased threat of a
new war.”

$32,000 Is Kept
By Moderate Lady
NEW YORK ID-Mrs. Catherine
Kreitier took a cue from the Bible
and Tuesday declined to risk her
132,000 TV quit show winnings on
tha ehanea of doubting her money.
For a moment It appeared that
aha would take tha chance. She
(old Hal March, the master nf
ceremonies, thst she felt pretty
ronfident she could answer tha
final question. The studio audi­
ence burst Into excited applause.
When the applause died down,
however, she added that aha would
^ ^ l i e * network
heed the biblical quotaUo»-r-"{rit
natural gas
tinea are jour moderation ha known‘to all
I** transport
teanep°rt lines
composed of underground pipes men"—and would be satisfied with
crlaacroaaing th United S ta ti.
the 133,000.
TWO PLANES COt.UDE
KANSAS CITY Ut-A TransWorld Airlines training plan* and
a light siagls-engiM plana collided
yesterday, killing two men aboard
the smaller craft. The airlines'
plane, which also had two m u
aboard, landed safely.
Killed warn Thomas D. Jonas,
M, a flying service instructor, and
Samuel Hoyte Rempal Jr., M, a
TWA student co-pilot.

VJ-62 Bids Farewell To City
After Long Tour O f Duty Here
A part of Sanford ia moving
north.
This portion of the city Is
Photographic Squadron 62 which,
in the two years and nine months
of its life in Central Florida, has
become somewhat of a fixture to
tha Celery City.
Approximately one half of tha
squadron personnel departed from
the local scene on July 6. Yester­
day tha remainder of the unit fol­
lowed.
VJ-62 arrived at NAAS on Oct­
ober 13, 1052 with a complement
of approximately 400 men. They
set up headquarters In Bldg. No.
S aboard tha station and occupied
four barracks, one half of a largo
hangar and a small photo lab.
Sines that Urns tha squadron hat
commissioned a large, well equip­
ped laboratory with many modern
devices to aid in the speed and
quality of tho work so necessary
In tho atrial photography aecomI-llshad by VJ-62.
Tho PhotoRon 62 complement
haa been cut to almost half Its
original strength due to detachmente deployed overseas on photo­
graphic missions and other ltasar
operations. Tha squadron at de­
parture ^pewpled one barracks and
the aaifle.nangar apace.
'
Three commanding officer* have
been at.th a VJ-62 helm since its
arrival. In tha beginning CDB
Jefferson Kennedy Jr. waa in com­
mand followed by CDR Herbert
t*. Klenk from 1953 to '54 and
moat recently CDR John A. Good­
win.
Under thaao three guiding hands
tha squadron haa deployed eleven
detachments of personnel, air­
craft and equipment to tha Arctic,
Middle Eaat and Mediterranean
areas from Banford. Commenda­
tions from many high sources
have laudad the work accomplish­
ed by these group*.

On tho homo front ai well aa
overseas, VJ-62 has compiled a
record of which they ara proud
to claim. The men of tho squadron
have answered almost every rail
fo r a ssi static* whether by civi­
lian or military.
Tho VJ-62 Blood Bank in OrUndo, made up of donated blood
from the men, has doled nut 81
free pints of tha precious fluid to
those in need, the majority being
Central Florida rasidanta. The
remaining 65 pints on hand will bo
transferred to Norfolk with the
squadron where tho work will
continue.
More than 12,000 in cash has
been donated by tha squadron to
tha Mount Dora Orphanage for
items such as shoes, a washing
machine and presents for the an­
nual Christmas parties of '63 and
'54 sponsored by NAAS. Tho
valuo of used articles repaired by
tha men for tho orphan*# la bsyond estimation.
This year tho squadron contri­

rtf

Wedncsday as an "honorable position
President Eisenhower’s reported
assurance he will make no commit­
ments on Asia attbe Geneva con­
ference.
Humphrey, a Senate Foreign Re­
lations Committee member critical
of some administration Interna­
tional policies, said la aa Inter­
view:
"I don't want to see tho Soviet
Union built up into the position of
becoming a broker for Asian coun­
tries. Wa abould hold the Soviets
accountable for the viotaUooa of
the truces in Korea and Viet Nam,
which they participated ia makteg.

buted 1601 to the Red Cross drive.
An all time high for a slngla
unit baaed at Sanford.
Men of PhotoRon 62 feel that
Ihe friendliness and cooperation
displayed by the townspeople of
Sanford is, to a great extent, re­
sponsible for theta accomplish­
ments, for without the civilian
interest that haa been constant in
the city, the desire would not hava
been aa dominate.
Tha squadron wishes to extend
thanks and appreciation to tha
churches, merchants, professional
people and Chamber of Commerce
who have come through with
morale, business and peraonal as­
sistance.
To tho men and famlliea of tho
aeparting squadron, Sanford haa
proved to be one of the friendliest
Navy towns in tha nation.
Commanding Officer, CDR J . A.
Goodwin, states, "Wa all ro g n t
to laava Sanford, but there are
many contributing factors that
make thla move necessary and for
the betterment of the Naval atraUgio position "
Photographic Squadron 62 bide
the City of 8anford good-bye.
JUNE T DEATH
.BLAMED OK RABIES
HOUSTON tn -A June 7 death
orginally blamed on a heart condi­
tion actually was the result ef
rabies, laboratory teita showed
yesterday.
,
The death certificate for Frank
H. Lout, 48, ascribed death to a
heart condition. The attending
physician said yesterday an eteotocardiogram showed a heart dis­
turbance and there was no indica­
tion Lout had been bitten or other­
wise exposed to rabies.

Vufc AF .n.lt
SMi St.
•, .”&lt;rA.I

ft- t*it..hu:iffy. V ■*:

tv

*A (NfU

■ ■■

-

FALLSBURGH, N.Y. (It - Tho
Rabbinical Council of Amarlca, tho
nation'a major Orthodox rabbinic
organization, hat atkcd tha Soviet
Embassy In Washington for potmlision to tend a detention of
r«bbia to visit Jews in tha S o fft
union.
The president of the council.
Rabbi David B. Hollander, -an­
nounced tha move yesterday and
said the Soviet Embassy has asked
for full details of the proposed trip.
Addressing tha council’s 19th an­
nual convention which continues
throuxh tomorrow, ha indicated ha
thinks the Soviets may permit tha
trip.
. m
The word dandelion derives
from the French den t-de-lion
(Hon’a tooth) because of tha tooth
•like lobe* on the leaf of tha
plant

FRISCO
.PAINTS
"Making
Paint

•

Hi

SANFORD

Predicting that Michigan may
P A I N T C O.
Military Program
paaa Ohio in site of population
before tha end of tha eantury, the
WE
SPECIALIZE IN PAINTS
Gets New Revision stata health department says Mi­
FOB
THE PAINTERS
chigan-grew 7.5 per cent to 6451,.
WHOLESALE 4k RETAIL
000 white Ohio, tha sixth moat
Plan By Russell
407 W. FIRST ST.
populous state, grew only 6.7 per
WASHINGTON Wi-Sen. R un 111 cent to 8,482,000 between 1950
FREE PARKING
(D-Ga) proposed today a naw re­ and 1953.
vision of the military reserve plan
strongly urged by President Elaenhower and the Pentagon.
ECHOLS SPECIAL
As he outlined It in an Interview,
it would include a volunteer sys­
H O LLYW O O D BED ' $49.50
tem for teen-age reservists but
fe a r Guayutiee
Twin or
would omit authority for compul­
sory reserve drills for past and
rapring Mat tree#
Doabla
present service veterans. The
thing Box Spring
95 Delivara

Iboard — Choice

Easy Terms

Swivel Rockers

3 PC. L IV IN G RO O M GROUP
details of tha legislation aimed at
building up a combat-ready reEMPLOYES WEAR SHORTS
DURING HEAT WAVE
CHICAGO (4V-The preeideat
of a Chicago manufacturing plant
decided th at during the current
heat wave employes could wear
shorts to work. About 20 per cant
of tha Pentroaa Corp. 400 em­
ployes—both men and women—
came to werk yesterday in aborts.

a t borne, a t

Echols Day or N ight Sola (Sleeps One)
1—Platform Rocker
$ 9 9 00
n w lm
1—T. V. Chair
TE* * 8
Choice Covering (Decorator M aterials)

Corner
1
2nd and
1 s '
Magnolia
i C ^
Phono IB S

C

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(J
■]
V -IC K liJ

�■71
f THE SANFORD HERALD
Thors. Ju ly U , 1955 P ag e 3

P U R C E L L 'S

Helicopter Crashes
p i l e Taking Oil
From 17th Floor
KEW YORK
helicopter
crashed and burst Into flames yes­
terday while taking off from the
lTth-floor heliport of the Port of
New York Authority Building in
downtown Manhattan.
'4 The pilot and the only passenger
were injured as they tumbled out
of the burning craft seconds after
it crashed on the 16th floor. It
then dropped to a narrow setback
of the 15th floor.
Port Authority officials said the
pilot apparently forgot to unplug
a 30-toot “ booster" cable, often
used to energize the starter. As
the craft rose from the heliport,
■ cable became taunt and Jerked
e machine down over the side
of the building.
Debris and burning gasoline
tftow«r*| HIS tta fflC -Ja m m e d
itreet below, but fter* were no
Injuries there.
Port Authority employes and
firemen quickly quenched the
smoldering'skeleton of the craft
as it hung precariously on the narrow ledge above Blh Avenue near
flfith Street. The helicopter was
later hoisted to the 16th floor.
The pilot, Marcel 0. Chevalier
30, suffered a concussion and
scalp laceration. Ha was reported
in fair condition.
The;passenger, Arthur Truss, 33,
a Port Authority photographer,
suffered a concussion, fractures
and multiple abrasions. Ills con­
dition was listed as critical.
The heliport is a table-likc strucire 10 feet above the lfilh floor
f the building.

SANFORD — ORLANDO
FO LLO W

A L Batters Streak
Toward Possible
Home Run Record
NEW YORK lit — American
League betters streaking toward
• possible home run record, are
Rinding Kansas City's Municipal
Stadium the easiest park in which
to connect for Use circuit.
A total of 107 homers have been
hit la baseball's newest major
league park, figures compiled by
The Associated Press showed to­
day. The Kansas City stadium has
replaced Boston's Fenway Park as
the American League “ bandbox."
The Red Sox park, in which 139
dour-baggers were hit in 1931, has
® een'the scene of 109 this year.'
Cincinnati's Crosley Field re­
al line the hitters' paradise in the
National League with J2S homers.
Brooklyn Dodger fans have seen
106 walloped at EbbeU Field while
Busch Stadium (St.Louis) bai had
100 and the Palo Grounds (New
York) « .
The major league home run
ig u r* Is up to 1,36* with 717 in
rfhe National League and 333 in
wie American. At that 'd ip , the
existing records for both circuits
14*7 for tha NL and *73 far
AL— will go by the boards.

r

THE

CROW D

TO

P U R C E LL 'S

SALE STARTS
FRIDAY-JULY IS
LADIES'
SUITS
VALUES
TO

«

t

1 0 00

$39.95

Youths Come Out
With Some Advice
Concerning Parents
COLUMBUS, Ohio CfS—If you
want to know what causes juvenile
delinquency, just ask the kids.
They’ve got all the answers.
Only they esB It "parcntil de­
linquency.”
Some of the 3,300 youths attend­
ing the 43rd International Christian
Endeavor Conference here drew
up a list of charges on the delin­
quency problem Tuesday.
Here a n sample comments:
Larry Hock, 13, Portland, Ore.:
“There’s too much emphasis on
those child care books which tell
parents to let the kids do as they
ease, After a while, parent! get
the habit of not caring what
their chUdren are doing.”
Robert pean, 76, Columbus:
“Children respect the advico of
their parents. But some parents
don't bother with any advice. If
they don't teach what ii right,
then their kids may turn out
wrong."
John Breedveld, 16, Kalamazoo,
Mich.: “ Some parents' set bad ex­
amples. When a child grows up,
he has to talk over his problems
with someone. If be feels be can-

P A JA M A S
GOW NS

2 .9 9
3 .9 9

Load O f Vegetables
'Disturbing Peace'

Values lo
7.95

2 9 c ca-

R A Y O N S -C O T T O N S
GROUP

&lt;

Values to 9.95
Values to 12.95

SUNDAY]

Values to 16.95..........

July 17

Values to 18.95___

3:00 P.M.
NO DUST

NO DELAY

••H M iS a iM

rtm f,

iiu n m

c

i a

8.95 .

1.99
3.99
6.99
9.99
12.88

7.95 r.
6 QIC
*

*7 W

*-* • * * * • • » . * • • • . * • « • mm « &gt; . * • » •

LEE OVERALLS
ANVIL OVERALLS

1.00

c

Dress Shoes
A** ”&gt;IG. PRICK AND
L
\7 SAME P U C K

n

. m in t

FOR $2.00

—

A LL O T H E R S

2

&lt; h &gt;

HATS
Others V a

Pries

Men's Trunks
VALUES
TO 3.95

O
O Q
A e J
#

2

LEE DUNGAREES
2.99
OTHER DUNGAREES
1.98
MATCHED
TIES
W ORX
for Re*. Price
of ONE
CLOTHES

V A LU ES
TO 1.75

o

i.o o

iu » t

BELTS

4.49 t ut.......4.88
20% o ff

$2.00 SHOE
t i o

M E N 'S ST R A W

3.99
2.99

M E N 'S DRESS

*.***#**■#***#•*•■»»•

6.99
4.99
4.49
3.99
3.49

HALTERS

25.00
35.00
45.00

Rayons
.Woolens 100%

i•*••a-papw •

5.95 .

19.99

1.00

MEN’S SPORT SHIRTS
1 Shirt Re*. Price
Get Another
For 9|.00 More

S H IR T S

MEN’S

-LEE-

W O R K G LO V ES
pants

S 9 c
0It

Boy’s Tee Shirts

3.69
- 2.49

PANTS -

o

MEN &amp; BOYS*

'

i . •&amp;

10.95_______________

All M etis Famous "C U R L E E "

1

P«M«

&gt;.- - j^i -i^afa^fVr^i.

Now

H e r.

PANTIES
8 for 1.00
SO C K S
10c

Re*. 6.95
AU Others

i amt knd leng Ufa, result in true lom-mtumols s o

2 .9 9

—OTHERS—

One Lot

PANTS

Gmcnrir tooptroiti with four brakes. Tine quickly grab and firmly bold ta
Us fd tty textwa. Yon grt snifaraly Ugh skid i
• m i l s sad you ess maka faster, asoother, safer

a

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-O T H ER S—

T‘

e s n e n v

LADIES' SHOES

C H IL D R E N S

M E N 'S W O R K

Balk driving et sight, whas saddest frequency le highest, depends on yotaf
being afrte to eee fee ahaad tn d to stop aafely and quickly if neocesary. //yon
esn'f get, if ymtmn't Map, ymt mn't fa mjt.
rt
' oym. Its light color reflect# much more light
grainy aarfaoa diffueee light. Letting
(dhtanoafarwartL You see better—and farther—on oooenta.

i a s a

99c

Values to 39.95

CONCRETE COOPERATES
. • . with your eyes and your brakes

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1,19

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2.99

DRESSES

BATH C LO T H S

C O T T O N SLIPS

1.00
and

4 2 C
ca.
TOW ELS

not go to his parents, he Jolna
a gang and talks his problems
over with the wrong kind of
people."
Myma George, 19, Woodlike,
Calif.: “ Youngsters sometimes get
too much attention at home. Kids
want to do something for them­
selves once In a while.”

C

1.99

GIRDLES

P IL L O W C A S E S

DAYTON, Ohio lfi—A load of
vegetables got a ticket today for
disturbing the peace.
Residents near an outlying shop­
ping center complained to the
Montgomery County sheriffs of­
fice that noise from a parked re­
frigerator truck was disturbing
their slumber. Deputies couldn’t
locate the driver and were afraid
to turn off the refrigerator motor.
So they hung a ticket on the
truck charging the driver with dis­
turbing the peace.

4.00

G RO UP

LADIES' UNDERWEAR

BLANKETS

A MOTHHf and five of her ten children were killed and four others
injured critically when their automobile wee demolished by a train
as the car went over an unauthorized crossing at Darien, Wls. Mrs.
Harriet Smith, 33, and her children were driving to buy coffee when
their car was h it At top is a general view of the accident. At right
ere the wreckage of the ear and the farmhouse from which Mrs.
Smith's husband, Eddy, watched the tragedy. At bottom ta a closeup of the wrecked automobile.
n
(International Soundphoto)

LADIES'
HATS
GRO UP
2.00

SUITS

mm

SALE

- in v e n t o r y

pm

69c

-

S H IR T S -

4.99
3.49

Boy’s Boxer Shorts]a00
Children*!
Boxer Shorts

M EN S'
SO C K S

59c

39c

�•

-

CSV

I

V

l should return empty-handed, th e lure will
t o o * OUT
remain. Legendary treasures ean never be
The lure of legendary lost treeiuree destroyed a t long aa their legends live.
nheuld never be underrated. It h at driven
men to strange deeda, taken them to atrenge
pieces. It is hardly surprising, then, th at at Tha Ploy’i Tha Thing
A favorite indoor ap rrt among scholar!
long last an expedition is preparing to
search for the fabled treasures of the float Is trying to figure out who wrote William
city of SitUmis." This is not the island of S hakes {.care’s plays. The names of half a
Salamis off Greece in the Gulf of Aeginn, dozen Elizabethans, including . Christopher
but an ancient city n the island of Cyprus. Marlowe and Sir F ra n d i Bacon, are suggest­
Thin Shhmin was reduced to ruing by qn ed more or levs seriously.
The American critic Calvin Hoffman is
earthquake in WO A, D„ and then submerg­
ed by n huge tidal wave BOO years ago. Its in Britain just now to open an Old tomb
interest is chiefly archaeological. But off Its which he thinks will disclose evidence sup­
ahorse, according to antiquities experts, lie porting the Kit Marlow* claim. The Bacon
Society is insisting th at Sir Francis be given
treasure!.
Moat farnout is that carried by three screen credit in any movie based on a
■hips blown up when the Turks invaded Shakespeare play.
But o th tr scholars take up the cudgels
Cyprus in 1571. They were believed to be
ladon with loot from Nicosia, which accord­ ju st aa vigorouzly for the stuffy and unfash­
ing to legend wat the greatest haul alnee tha ionable notion that Shakespeare’s plays
seek of Constantinople. Moreover,- many were written by none other than tha Bard
treasures of lesser value warn believed of Avon himself.
In the vanguard of these is Dr. Leilie
thrown overboard in tha vicinity by atom*
Holson. H u new book, "The F irst Night of
stricken ships.
Tha expedition’s chief concern is trea­ Twelfth N ig h t', is an elaborate attem pt to
sure, but the archaeological aspects will not prove th a t only Shakespeare could have
be Ignored. The four Britons and one cam- written this pUy. Someone will doubtless
erawoman will attem pt to trace tho sunken write a book contradicting hia views.
All this is fun for the scholars. But to
harbors of Salamie, fish up some of the and en t pottery Mid to litter the sea-bed of tha tha general reader it doesn't much m atter SAM DAW SO N
area and gathar new information about tha whether Shakespeare or Marlowe or qvon
d ty . which dates back at least to the Trojan the first Queen Elizabeth herself wrote
wars and once was the home of 250,000 peo- "Twelfth Night" and "Hamlet” and tha re s t
It is aa true now as it was 400 yaara ago that
pie.
NEW YORK UR—President ElWhatever this expedition uncovers, It Is "The play’s the thing."
stnhower will be lemling from
certain to encounter adventures. And if it
Geneva.
economic strength

In Search O f Treasure

.
.
j
I

| U A L

W T L B

. . . . .

Home Rule For Cyprus

GATLTNIURQ, T«nn. OR — “ In
n y in i hill folk live with dimity,
I feel that I am not making a
aiiatatamant, for Indeed they do."
So aald a lady here of whom
I Inquired what peculiar virtual
mountain people have.
— Onft-evampla of mountain dlgnita
li Jack Huff, who alio luperbly
eaempllflea another eontlnulni vir­
tue or the original Scotch-lrlih
•ettlen In the Great Smoklei —
pride of family.
Would you earry . your own
mother on your pack up a mauntain merely to let her aee a tuniet
and a sunrise that you enjoyed
and, hi a ion, felt the* should
shire?
Jack Huff did once. It'i n good
story. Ernie Pyle told U in 1M0,
and I’d ilka to toll It again and
bring It up to now.
About 1M0 Jack’s fathor came
here with a pocketful of timber
money looking for more, and endad
up by building the pioneer Moun­
tain View Hotel. It Ilea hare In a
eup in the hills, now one of Amer­
ica’s lasding sumrnsr resorts.

f JAM ES M ARLO W

Jack loved the mouatalaa a*J
didn't want to lean on hla pappySo he decided he’d buUd a lodge
of hla own atop Lo Coate, one
of the higheit peaka la the areal
Smoklei, then reachable only by
footpath. Thii wai before the fed­
eral Government took over the area

Washington

He thought It wal a prirUegi
to do thii for hla mother, not •
hardship But it atill hai left him
a deep regret.' For the weathfi
turned bad. Hla mother ipenl
eeveral days on the peak and her
rbcumatiim finally forced her la
come down again, and ihe died la
tim e,'never having wen the ma
rise or let from the peak that Jack
loved, tt was aomathing ho he4
known the wanted to know, — too
*• and aha never did.
Her eon haa never forgotten.
Jack doesn't pack supplies up
the trail on hli back anymore. Kla
father died four yeers ago, and
now
he L has
to
run tha big pree■kA U . . .
.S .I
».
perous hotel here la town.
He worries about the service,
•ays its hard In find people any.
more who want to do a Job right
Juit because they feel that’s tha
way a Job ahouid be done.'
Jack takes hla eierclaa now golf,
log. HU doctor tails him hla heart
Isn't what it was so years ego.
But his spirit U, and now t'a
vsllay-bound. Ho makos plenty of
money, I would guest, hut Ml
eyes shine when ha talks abeut
the past, and they dull when he
talks about tho present.
He IS a tall, lean, big-eared,
eourteeui, -------friendly
WWWman
» * _hungry
.
low
h r yesterday, ■-—*
lonesoms for tho
youthful prime whan his mind was
free aid all h l i troubles were an
his baek. He misses' elimblng. go*
ing uphill, building In a new place.
Whan I naked hm about tha
mountain top, bn aald:
"Up thlre you navar find two
days the same. It changes. You
can Me far. Every moment la
different."

WASHINGTON—American dip­
lomats wire surprised that Sovitt
P o r a l g n M i n i s t e r V. M.
Molotov wai so vehement la hla
blast at tha United States during
tha United Nation! meeting in
.San Frwnclece, particularly with
th* Big Pour Hat-tha-aummlt”
meeting upcoming.
older and wealthlar la
They point out, however, that thaGrowing
town below, Jack Huff remem­
ohould the Big Pour eeselen fall, b e rs being heppier younger and
it will be pleln to moot of the k i . k ---—
world that impassible Soviet de­
mands were responsible.

Figures out this week show pro-

" If you can’t lick ’em, jine ’em," has long
been good advice. The British would not
have been a t or near the top of the heap so
long If they had not habitually acted on this
advice. They hung on to Egypt and India as
THKD P C S R I I I , M l t a t a a « P a k lltk tr
long aa they could, hut when possession
JACK I t m S U S A
M a a ta la a B J tta r
proved no longer possible , they yielded
SOeSUWIPTION RATES
gracefully.
Bf earrtar
ISa pa*
Oat B ttlk
HR
Tho same story la apparently about to
H o t Maatba
alt Haatba
eaa Tat#
itw
0A.TS
an ee
be repeated in Cyprua. This (eland, key to
All aMlaaav aawtaa, aarlt at tfeaaha. rtaalailaaa aal the Eastern Mediterranean, has been British
■ail-t af aatartaiamaat far iba aarrata af talaiaa
faatt *111 ba (karate far at raaalar af?arOtfBa raita since 1978. Its population la overwhelmingly Greek, and wants to be united to Greece.
IWIMWIII natitaallr kr Waaaral AfrtrtUlaa Only the Mohammedan minority feela safer
Sam at, law oat eaargla satfawa Saab ms*.
with British rule. Now It ta reported that
Auaala caaraia
Sir Anthony Eden’s government is going to
Iba Bm i M ta a ttaaikar af iba StaatfiitS Praaa
•blab tb aaffllaS attlaalttlr ta Iba aaa far rapabllta- give the Cypriotes home nil*. A tie with
tfaa a* ail ma la*al m n i prfafaS ta (kla aattapapar. the BritUh empire will continue, but for es­
sential purpoMs Cyprua will be independent.
Thursday, July 14,1958
Cyprua ipay etlll want to be Greek rather
than to rula Haelf. In the earn* way Texas,
TODAY’S BIHI.E VKRHK
Thsy hated knowledge.—Prov. 1:29.— when an independent state, gave up that
status willingly te Join tho United States.
iM ers are soma who pervert knowledge and
Watery to suit their ends, but tr u th ’ llNo m atter whieh way Cyprua moves In tha
fututa, a forward step haa now been taken.
mighty and will prevail a t la s t
Pgbiue*e Calif
SaiarSar aal lasCay
M« (M l rtn f SI.
■
■ - I—
■•lata! at tataa* tlaat aiatlar o-Uk-r ST, ISIS at
SSa Pact Offtra af eaatarS. Xlartia. aa ltr ISa *•«
.
at Caaaraaa af Marth S. ISTa

. . .

Mountain Folk Live W ith Djgmty

Production Reaching Record Highs

The Sanford Herald

f

MOUNTAIN

at tha outset of being mild.”
Employment Is up from Isst
yes r—around 1U million mors
persons are working than last
Summer. Wage and salary pay­
ments have climbed about I per
Action Is* Deferred cent
above last yesr*. Tho average
factory weekly paycheck la the
On 'Pants Burglar' fattest
In history.
JACKSONVILLE (A-Fort Lau­
derdale's "pants burglar" had a
deportation hearing at State Pris* his Broward County eonvlctlon In
on yesterday but action was de­ 1133 sad a second degree murder
ferred. He still has 13 years lo go conviction in California in 1I3T.
on his ssntenre.
Ha wai dubbed "pants burglar"
The U. 8. Immigration Service when accused of breaking into
said Alvin Charlts Davis, 3T, is Fort Lauderdals metals and stall­
subject to deportation lo his na­ ing tha trouMra of ileeplng guests.
tive Canada on two charges of
would run into a postwar deprci moral turpitude stemming from Tha pants were looted for money
and valuables, then thrown away.
sion, which would, give Ihe Com
tlon on th tM points and thare
munlsts a fertile field for subverwon’t be any concession! ef that
nature possible.
But this week the Department
Molotov's bristling demands
of Commerce, after taking a sec­
coupled
with sharp attasks ea the
ond look at the total production nf
United States east a shadow ea
goods and services In Ihe United
tha outlook for any firm results
States last year, reports that de*
from tha Big Four meatlng and,
spits the much talked about reualtsa tha Bovlit peaitlea changes,
cession, output slipped only 1 per
nothing much can be aayesteS.
cent below prosperous 1P33.
There ire several things which However, tha burden ef blame new
And this year the total output
M a be dona (a correct this. Sue- leans ea the Bed negotiator* and
hat been climbing steadily into
eaaaful treatment usually re­
net wn the Ipokemen of the free
new high ground. President Elsen­
quires a combination of reraetUea. world.
hower goes to Gsnsva with this
Mowarar, the earlier the treata u n t la begun, the better chance
nation’s economy stepping forth at
iMed—le a s e members
Mere la fer strin g the weak gya.
a record dip of nearly 380 bQlloh
have annually criticis­
When
your
ahUi
la
aid
aanugh
dollars a year.
ed tha Senate abeut this time ef
ta
talk,
ha
eon
wear
a
patch
over
The United Nations Bulletin of
the good eye ta force use ef the year fer delaying adjournment hut
Geneva. Me needs only the eppr- Statistics reports this weak that
weakened eye and strengthen its this year the shea te on the other
the world outside Ihe Soviet bloc
aval ef the men in the Kremlin.
vision, i t ’s usually a good Idas to foot.
But, since the Kremlin Commu­ atalta and tha mainland of China
H a u • a members themselves
wait until tha ehiltf can talk so
nist! work as ■ teem and he'e their
you can make a game out of the concede that this aeatleu, If there
treat men el Geneva, he will meretch idea: hut, even a younger la any delay, It will bo their rehr te a wear an age patch.
ly he their spokesman. So it can Financial Crisis
■ponstblllty rather than that «d the
he taken for (ranted any offers
customarily longer-winded Senatehe makea will have been thought Forecast For 1957
They take solace, however,
out and apprevod by the Kremlin TALLAHASSEE lA-A grave fl.
from the fact that Ike mala rea­
beforehand.
son for the fast paced Senate
nanclal crisis It forecast for Flor­
I regress stems frem the skillful
So, nlthoush Bulganin is net free ida whin the Legislature meets In
leadership ef Majority Lander
te nuke any proposals on hli awn IIST.
Lyndon Johnson (0 ), Tens, an
but only those which hive Krem­ The prediction was nude by a
alumnus ef the Rm m himselflin approval, he can aspect hit special Senate committee set up
One-House member eewnnentndi
government to carry through an te etudy stats revenue.
The.Boasts usually dews d m
eaythisi he says unless it serves "I know of no responsible offi­
the legislative machinery. This
the —Kremlin's
purpose te d u a ls cial who bellevaa we can main­
IS I —A
1 . 1 ----year, tvs different Two key pretain Uu services that are oieeMlal
blame -Aha military reserve hUI
In • growing, progressiva stats
without
making
some
ad
Just
merits
lag director of tha New York th Our 10k laws,” Committee ChsirBeard ef Bdueetten's child wel­
Shands of Gainesville said.
fare division: "The U ti of today msn
Ha aald the committee will held
ere wens now than ever."
throughout tile
One of Manhattea'i most vigor­ public tobearingi
get citlsons’ views an
ous dtisoas is a lawyer-press state
changes should bo m sdt In
agent • columnist • television later "whet
monk That means, If the p u t is
viewer named Blahsrd Boffmea, our tax structure to make it pro-

Jehnaen’s doing, maybe well be
heeding far heme la late July."
Atomic Cold War Triumph—

President Elsenhower’s memeatoua
"stems far peace" pregreta la em­
erging ea one ef America's aelid
dlplsmetta triumphs hi the eeid
war. Slace the Preeideat announc­
ed hie plea II moatks age la a
dramatic speech befere the UN
General Assembly, the Idea haa
caught the taugtasttme ef paopM
i. —

— i - -* -*■- *■*»

Least Authoritative W ill Be Hearel
Per that r u n s Bulganin does

My New York

Met M g u l i , Me’# la e dll

seeuatry,
S &amp;holding
i3 hie5 fMbf eeiil
edit Of democratic election*.
iSerifara bee te thiak ef the

B

Further, any far-reaching pro- Blvltrs, Fred— last name Bartael by Eisenhower, Eden or bere-loeke. more like an ambeeeider than, say, Eden or Lerd
Heiilfx. Incidentally, the elan, and it U pleasant te report the!
ef that drat Mil at the Panina he la energetically setting up e
ream, an April t, 1M4. were the Meal chapter of e aaUsual organigSUoo of bald-headed men who
a n leaden In their fields, such
ee former Postmaster General

say yardstick, tint wo eaa expect

y-a sg .iim

modestly, "kg
■ere eligible.

■ 1 S 5 6

iv&amp; ts.
m m a ,

r ' T -'

e

m n ' Y ' ' ' AT'

a

H

| .i i

1

r m

f W

I

�Clayton Beaulieu,
M iss Alice Andes
United In Marriage

v &amp; n iA .

Circle No. Ten of th* WSC5
of the First Methodist Church
Thurmond M o n d a y afternoon
met at the home of Mr*. J .P.
with Mr*. J. C. Davi* as co-host­
ess.
The meeting was presided over
Inv the chairman. Mrs, T. F. Me^Danicl who opened the meeting
with a silent meditation which
was closed with a prayer by Mrs.
Davis.
A pledge service was held and
Mrs Robert Easlerday was Intro­
duced a* th# new treasurer. Mr*
W. V. Bitting, telephone chairman,
reported on visit* to the shut-in*
and on the Dally Vacation Bible
School.
* It was announced that begin­
ning in September the WSCS will
sponsor prayer meetings. Each
circle will be in charge once each
qaurter.
Discussion of the forthcoming
bazar was held and it was voted
by the circle to start bringing
articles to each meeting for the
bazar.
Mrs. Albert Jarrell presented
the devotional after which Mra.
Ir.rady Herman gave the study
using as her subject "Lovea" ta­
ken from Drummond’* book "Tile
Greatest Thing In The World."
liellclou* refreshments were ser­
ved by the hostesses to Mr*. W. V.
Bitting. Mrs 1. J Poyelt, Mrs
J. C Davis, Mrs. N. Farmer. Mr*.
Grady Herman. Mr*. Albert Jar­
rell. Mrs. Jnhn Morgan. Mr*.
Robert Easterday, Mrs L. M.
Swam. Mrs T. F. McDaniel, and
(Mrs. J. P. Thurmond.

Serve this delectable dessert
after a roast.
Roast Loin of Pork
Potato Pancake*
Applesauce
Fresh Asparagua
Bread Tray
Chiffon Tudding Beverage
CHIFFON PUDDING
Ingredient*: 1 package coconut
cream pudding and pi* filling mix,
2 cup* milk, ti teaspoon vanilla,
3 egga (separated), *» cup light
cream or top milk, daah of salt, 6
tablespoon* sugar, »* cup *liver*d
blanred almond*.
Method: For thl* recipe, you
must use an 8- nr 9-lnrh square
baking pan that la 2 inches deep,
or one that is 10 by 6 by 2 inches.
Ktlr pudding mix and milk together
in a saucepan; cook and atir over
moderate heat until mixture comes
In a full boil; remove from heat.
Stir in vanilla. Measure out *,
eup cooked pudding and combine
will; slightly beaten egg yolks;
reserve. Mix cream with remaining
pudding; pour this sauce into bak­
ing pan. Beat egg whites and salt
until soft peaks are formed; beat
in sugar gradually; rontinua beat.
Ing until very stiff peak* are
formed. Fold meringue into re­
served pudding-egg yolk mixture;
General Business
carefully spread over sauc* in
pan. Sprinkle with alDiscussed By Group baking
mounds. Set In pan of hot wa'er
and baka in moderate &lt;375 de­
In Circle No. 4
grees) oven 45 to 80 minutes, or
Circle No, Four of the First until golden brown. Serv* warm;
Methodist Church met at the home saurs will be too thin If pudding
of Mrs. Blake Sawyer with Mr*. is served hot. Makes A servings.
wMam Miller aa eo-hoates*.
* Delicious refreshment* wera
New food produet: pineapple
•erved before th* meeting wa* filling cornea In a No. 2 can ready
called to order. Mr*. Marvin Led- to use in a pie or tart* or at a
dnn, chairman prealdrd.
rake filling. For pie use, tha fil­
The meeting wa* opened by ling it turned into an unbaked
tr.ttnher* praying the "Lord’* paiUy shell. Aa a filling for baked
Prayer". In the abaenre of Mr*. (art sheila or caka layer*, Uie
Jl. P. Good speed, Mr*. J. I* Wallis pfneapple mixture needi to ba
read the minutea of th* last meet­ simmered for eevrral minutes and
ing
cooled slightly before it Is used.
Thirteen member* responded to
ie roll eall which was followed
y ellent prayer. Treaaurer and Leddon, Mrs. W. W, Tyre, lfr*.
aunshina report* went also given. .Blake Sawyer, Mr*. Ted William*.
The general business meetings Mr*. C. L. Wallis, Mrs. Clark
will he held th# first Tuesday of Leonardy, Mr*. L. F. Brannon,
the month with the circle meeting* Mrs. Ortavla Rumbley, Mrs, John
on the second Tuesday. Circle Crawford, Mrs. R. F. Crenshaw,
FourTsIll present the program at Mra. Jot Jarrell, Mrs. Adam Mill­
er, and Mr*. Grady Herman
next month's general session.
Tlans wee* discussed for th* gueat.
b*i*r to be held Deceirjier 2. Au­
gust 9 the circle will meet with
Mr*. Brannon and Mrs. Rumblty.
v Mr*. Crawfard will taka eharga
of the article* for th* baxar. Mr*.
Rlaka Sawyer, decoration chair.
tn»n told about 'P rayer Partner*"
which will be carried out by th*
mrni Her* of th* WSCS.
Mr*. Grady* Herman g*v* an
inspirational talk on "Our Horn*”.
'Those present were Mr*. Marvin

«

MU* Alice Mean* Andec, doughter of Mr. and Mr*. John O. Ande*
end Clayton J. Beaulieu, eon of
Mr. and Mr*. Je**e Beaulieu,
were married recently at the
bride*' grandmother'* home, (W6
W. 20lh St., with the Rev. John
0. Ande* Jr., brother of th* brid*
of Wake For*»t, N. C., officiating
at th* double-ring ceremony.
Green pilm* formed a back­
ground for the arrangement of
white gladioli u*ed for decoration*.
Th* mantel above the fireplare
va* decorated with fin* green
fern and white aator* along with
lilllet-of-the-valley. White taper*
burned in silver candelabra.
Th* bride, given in marriage by
her father, was radiant in a bal­
lerina length gown of Imported
3win organdy. The off-the-ihould#r neckline wa* filled in with net
and'the short sleeve* were shirred.
The bouffant skirt «•* designed
with a scalloped hemline. She wore
short shirred organdy mitt* that
came to paints at the wrists. Her
elbow-length veil of Imported Illu­
sion was attached to a clip bon­
net of embroidered organdy and
pearls. She carried a whit* Bible
topped with a white purple throat­
ed orchid entwined with atreamer». Her only j*welry wa* a single
string of pearls a gift from the
groom and a diamond ring; her
grandmother*.
Mis* Or* R*y. her only attend­
ant, wa* gown in a ballerina
Irngth dre*» of pink embroidered
organdy featuring a long bodice,
v-ncckline and a very full aklrt.
Her accessories were pink also.
She wora a bandeau of pink
flower* and carried a bouquet of
pink rose buds.
Mike Browne of Bearon, N. Y.
acted as best man and thera wera
no usher*.
Mr*. Ande* rhoi* for her daugh­
ter'* wedding * pink glased cotton
dres* with onion skin accessories
and an orchid corsaga surrounded
ny pink roses.
A reception wa* held Immediate­
ly following the ceremony in the
dining room of the home. Th*
table wai overlaid with a maderla
cloth and wa* rrntered with a
tiered wedding caka surrounded
by |ilies-of-the-v*lley and green
fern. Whit* taper* burned in sil­
ver candelabra and tea, and rof.
fee were served from’ a silver
service along with Juice, mint* and
nula.
For a wedding trip to Daytona
Beach Mr*. Beaulieu wore a blue
and whit* summer suit with whit*
arceasories and tha orchid from
her bouquet.
The couple will reside at 2121
W. Second Street.
Out-of-town gunta • Included
Mis* MrLIn ftheddan.
The bride was born her* and at­
tended local schools. She graduat­
ed with tha claaa of 1055 and is
a member of tha First Preibyterfan Church.
Mr. Beaulieu attended school* in

TUKSDAT
Circles of the First Methodist
Church will meet as follow* at
9:45 a. m.: Circle No. 1, Mr*.
C. E. Meeks, 2493 Orsnge Ave;
Cirri* No. 2, Mr*. C. L. Echols,
W. 201h SI; Cirri* No. 3, Mrs.
Roy Wall, 408 Virginia Ave, for
a picnic and swimming party:
Circle No. 4 with Mra. Btaka

MISS CECILIA ANN FRANKLIN

★

★

★

★

„

★

★

Parents Announce Engagement
O f M iss Franklin , H. Kastner
Mr. and Mr*. Cedi Earl Frank­
lin of Donaltonville, Ga., announce
th* engagement of thetr daughter,
Mis* Cecilia Ann Frtnknn, u Sapold Kastner Jr., of Sanford, aon
of Mr*. David Hershberger, Titla-

Circle No. Seven
Conducts Meeting
Circle No. Seven of th# WSCS
met Monday afternoon with Mr*.
R. F. Col* at her home on W. 20th
Ft. In the absence of tha chairman,
Mr*. R, T. Warren, Mra. Cola pre­
sided ovrr th* busines* meeting
at which time routine reports were
made and business conducted.
Mr*. Nancy Brock was welcom­
ed a* a visitnr and Mr*. W. O,
Okerstmm was introduced aa a
new member. Mr*. Cole condurted
a combined devotional and study
on the subject of “Prayer".
Refreshment* were srrved by
tha hostess to the following memhere: Mrs. John Bridges, Mrs. L .P
Hagan, Mra. C. A. Ponder. Mra.
W E. Moye. Mra. Carrie Draper,
Mr*. Ruaarll Tench, Mra. W. B.
Moya, Mr*. Brock,-Mr*. Okeratrom
and Miss Bessie Zachary.

t&gt;urgh. Pa., and Harold Kastner,
Sanford.
The wedding will take place on
diet Churcn tn unnaisonvme. »»■.
MW* Franklin attended Hunting­
don College and received her AR
drgrre in Social Work from Flori­
da State University She wa* a
member of Phi Mu Social Sorority,
th* Social Work Club, Wesley
Foundation and Honor Court.
Mr. Kaatner attended th# Uni­
versity of North Carolina and rareived his B8 degree tn Eronomtr*
from the Florida State University.
Hr v i i a member of Alpha Tau
Omega Fraternity,

W ERE

FLORSHEIMS
JA R M A N S
FO RTUNES
A L L ST R A W H A T S
PRICE

Baby turkey may b* split and
broiled over coals. Brush the
turkey meat with a . mixture of
melted butter, lemon juice and
seasoning* a* it rooks.

; flnd SON

Pont stuff that chicken vnlil
you see ready tn mast It. If any
of the stuffing and chicken ere
left over refrigerate them »ep.
aralely.

Hartford, Conn., before entering
th* Navy in 1952. He (a preaently atatinned at th* Sanford Naval
Air Station and ia in tha VJ-A2
squadron.

Sue AwiV-f-r dt# “•bermr* summer y*t
• In th# leng-Uae “Merry Widow* half brti
i#MM t* who* cotton tad nylon short. A i*
,C«ep.*5.96,

t sm -e e t InV tw rw «*. y**U m*1
eref/v hue ihrt party lie* 1* W'tmrr's* pad-]
dad “Merry WldewP a light elitrit "A'Luz*.;
#1014, it whit*. A aid I tup*. 65.95s
9w «tl

lou’re a pretty cool customer with a
a

Warner's* Strapless Wardrobe
We6, you- tha gttf well-fttt*d

tor mnnmtr la

i who!* collection of

WarnerV atraplaia bra*. It** tha pluming "Million

sktrti M yht-ttlfdtd
rn &gt; ih ft at m tk m i iw fa lii

A T H L E T IC SH IRTS

Dollar Hold-Up;’ when cotton* uka t darv-devil dip. And tba,
("Merry Widow" long-1 lr&gt;* for abc*f fun undo? cummer abeerc-with'
nary

• tran* of ■midriff. For that party lift, it** W ahitrV

podded

"Merry W idow ^foi added a Hraction bo matter houjou i l »

SH O R T S
T-SH IRTS

» Otfiar W a r n Bma * GMIm from t i l l
• Accredited C hari* Account* Walcemad

ups!

Pajie 5

6:30 p. m.
The R. W A. (night group) cir­
cle of th* First Christian Church
Women's fellowship will meet *t
the home of Mrs. Lester Tharp on
tlOfl Oak Ave., at 7:30 p.m.
The Gleaners Class of tha First
Raptlst Church will meet with
Mr*. M. C. Hagan, 703 Tatk Ave.,
at 3 p. m. Mrs. John Fox will ba
co-hostess.

C L O S IN G O U T A L L S P O R T S H O E S
• TAN and WHITE
'
/
• VENTILATED
• NYLON MESH ^
JH ft

HORSEBACK

M E It f fe

T H * HAXFORT) HEP ALT)
Thaira. July 1 4 , 1955

SPORT SHOE
CLEARANCE-i

UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED

o n

Sawyer, 2©8 Xlm A**. wtth
Mr*. Adtm Mtll*r a* ro-haateas;
and Cirel* No. 8 with Mr*. J. 8.
Wiltiatn*nn 204 W. J8lh Street.
Th* Unity Clan wilt meet at
7:15 p. m. In th* Valdai Hotel
with th* Ker. Carolyn Parsoni a*
teacher. Th* public i* invited.
Th* First Baptiit Intermediate
Royal Ambassadors will meet at
the church at 7 p. m.
Th* Pilot Club will h^v* a dinner
meeting at the hom* of Mr*. Al
Hunt. 24B5 Palmetto Av*.. at

'iRtstCaot-Vari^rVMfTTl-fttVnir Hol*i
|Up”-tk# teftly eethlened wire brsiihrs eiih]
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Charles ,
Gets Split
Decision

.i

AirHangsHeavy
With Drawling
Of Deep Dixie
REDLANDS. Call! UP—Tfaa at*
mospher* la heavy with th* drawl*
ta« of deep Dixie ta the Los Aaid e a Rami' football camp, and to
data perbapi the moit commandtag accent*ln*actioa belongs to a
t i l • pound roosie from Georgia
Tech, Larry Morris.
Rig Charlie Toogood from Ne­
braska, dropping in to look over
the pro freshman crop, summed
R op with:
"This team sure Is feltin' a
southern twang. Southern fight
doesn’t burl, either."
Morris, his teammate Billy Teas
from the Ramblin' Wreck; Sid
Poorest from Louisiana Slate: Ed
Beatty from Mississippi; Don Wade
Vanderbilt; Corky Tharp from
Alabama, are Included emong the
strong youngsters trying to make
the flashy Ram tquad.
Henry Hair, another Georgia
Tach eligible. Isn't In camp. He's
headed for the armed service In
September.
Head Coach Sid Gill man already
has been Impressed with the rookie
trap in general and Morris, the
Decatur, Gi., giant who was mere­
ly the No. 1 draft choice by the
•tub.
'T m convinced," said Glllman.
ap well. He's the type of player
any coach looks for."
Bo Morris is listed as a linehacker and offensive center be­
hind regular Leon McLaughlin,
and be may back up Dan Towler
at fullback, a position hs played
ta high school.
Teas weighs ■ mere IN pounds
and at tha moment is rated with
Maryland’s Ron Waller, Norm
Jfygaard of San Diego Stale, end
Thsrp as the leading rookie half­
back candidates.

.

FAtMItS AM SHOWN UMOAMNB wheel to (he Street of Albany,
lo„ because of the freight ear shortage. Grain alevaton throughout
h* stale are filled and many fanners are unable to fled e place le
lore their wheat Therefor* the Missouri Farmer* Association ai
Albany made arrangements to store the wheat In the streets until
freight ear* become evaUabla._______(Uiem etto—i gowndphoia)

Sanford Rained Out
In Last Nite's Play
Orlando OF — Orlando, first
half champion of the Florida
State League's, will rely nn s cou­
ple of rookie pilrhcrs In the 13th
annual league all-star gamt to­
night
Manager Tommy O’Brien plans

Rivals Not Scared
Out Ot Saturday's
Robson Takes First $155,000 Classic
Game This Season
Rabaea Sporting Goode won their
Jlrwt game of the ooason last
night by deflating top-place Hunt

M(Robert* t-g. Abe Fennell, RobSOW pitcher, gave up five hit* to
the Hunt player* while the Rob­
es* team eolloctod seven hits from
Root pitcher Elmond Rohreri
In the second gem*. Wilson
Haler, behind the able pitching af
Red Hires, took ever lha second
pins* peelttow by dtaaatlng Bur­
pee lead Oe. fas a tee Inning con­
tact Hina gave np four hit* and
five cam, whila hie team-maUc
oaDacted tax kite and tax runs
f o e Burpee pitcher, Carl Witt
r . King ta Burpee picked up
fee stay triple end the only home
ren ta the evening.
STANDING*

CHICAGO UP—Nsihus gav* Eddie Arearo th# fastest five furlong
rid* et his life In a workout at
Arlington Perk yesterday but
failed to scire in* rival out Of
Saturday’s 5IN.N4* classic.
The Belatr Stud'a champion,
Making bis fifth 1100,000 payoff vic­
tory ta tho year, was timed to

•

t mow) said to let tha hors* roll,

Claveland Gets
Evan On Waivart
From Baltimore

saga.

Chariaa, outweighing Andrew*
IN pound* to IN, opened a gash
under his opponent's right eye ln&lt;
the fourth round and It kept bleedtog most of tke way. He battered

and 1 did. This horn la Improving
with every workout and dvtry
rac*.
••He's much belter new Asa he
was In the Kentucky Derby (when
ha lost to Swap**."
Despite Nssbw'a showing i t
least tax ethers are expected ta ap­
pose him Saturday.

BALTIMORE ( f f i - Hoot Evers,
Baltimore outfielder, went to
Clerelend today nn waivers ta exehonga far nenthpnw relief pitcher
W Wight whs dm Orietoa claim4d taf th* waiver lis t
Oriel* Gsnernl Manager Paul
■tabards, wh# nmunnced Urn deal,
t i dtentsl ha hoped Wight would
late Arch Ward.
Ward, who died Baturday at fea
age ta N, was buried earlier Tues­
day at All BalnU Cemetery aft­
er aervlccs at Our Lady ta Mouat
Carmel Roman Catholic Church.
Smith, who la N, joined the Trib­
une sports staff ta 1PN after •
tour teller specie c a r e e r el
DsPauw Peirenlty. Greencsstle,
tod., n ai tax yoert of prtanstteaal

L O L L A R ,
j|
W H fT G
s o r
1

C H /C A G O
c atc h er,

A

J

"Fighting le my business. I don't
have another Job. Besides, how
can you turn down money."
Charlel' next stop on ths comebach treadmill? Probably to Syra­
cuse Aug. S against Hurricane
Jackson.

EATnMo

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CAREER M/OMPf

HOME** AMPPO**PLy**.r*

Field Opens Fire g ju m .^ o .5
Ml
In Milwaukee Open * T C t n T . T M T U P tr

u s, catcher. Jim Turner, Lake­
land, .373, will relievo Williams
In the Orlando Uneup t ill he
Ed HousekneeM, * spread hate;
Davo Drapp, shortstop; Jim Starley. right field; Dyke Wilson, left
field; Russ Davis, third base:
Mike Ksssablsn, center field;
Tony Galrh, first has*: end ChaoCboo Coleman, catcher.
Last night Orlande took eaetesire possession ta Aral taare ta
th* second-half standings by beat­
ing Daytona Reach 4-g white
Gainesville's gema wttb l u t a f
was rained eta. Sanford had been
Had with Orlande.
Orlande's Joe Vatmas Mtaltod
the Islanders to six hits belma
4N Daytona Beaeh fans.
Wast Falm Beaeh w h i p p a d
Laktaand 44 on dand* Raymond's Kramer M ay Ltava
two-hitter. Some MM fans at
Wait Film Beaeh taw fen tray. SamMUtiffimant
Cocoa, playing before M np kVW lYORK (Jt-Jetk Kramer
home, won over last-flare ft. Mye he may coma ant ta aamiPeterebuig 1M ta M tamings. TV rodremsnt and f U j Teny Trabert
winning blow was Jim motor's an a pntoaaMaai tottala ewtag next
homer with pitch* Jo* Dresh
aboard.

SHERMAN

all th* finesse that once carried
him to the heavyweight title.
Aiked bluntly why he goes on,

»4a*k

»H

s i : r v . .i ; e a r s

Coosa I t It- Potorsbur* S (H
#0»«a£o* mt M tM tN lA r H ,
TODAY
OrliaO* ye. PWl. A ll-etsra,

her r * M s m._____

W L

Hamt-McRobcrte

to start Chuck Snyder or Sammy
White against th* top hitting tal­
ent. Snyder, from Aurora, 111., has
a record of on* victory, on# de­
feat in relief; While, from Lake­
land has an 0-1 record.
Either righthander Rolando Orlege of Gainesville or I-efty Jack
lm U !* ^ t Cocoa will atari lor th*
All-atari.
The All-Star*, managed by Day­
tona B e a c h ’s Johnny Vsnder
Meer, tha formar major leagua
pitcher ol double no-hit fame, alio
have oo Up Orlando Pena of Day­
tona Beaeh, Gasper Del Monte of
St. Petersburg, both righthand­
ers; and Pete Peteraoo, • B u ­
ford left-harder.
A heavy task Is ahead tar the
Orlando pitchers ns V a n d a r
Mcer’s lineup Includes six player*
with overages above .500.
Leadoff batter Is Jim MUler,
Cocoa second baseman who baa a
.90S average. Billy Wyatt, Gaines­
ville. Jtx. third base, and Terry
Terrell, Sanford, .531. left field,
will go next with Dan Keith, Daytone Beach, at .do? th* leagno'e
top hitter, ta the cleanup goto.

NEW YORK Ita—Lf Ike harried
minor Magneto f an ho)d on oaly
a little longer againat the tele*■leo menace, kelp ia an the way
from an unexpected source.
With each paaaing day the voice
which cornea along with the pic­
ture la driving more and more fa n
from living rooms and Kara into
the hleaaod sanctuary af the hall
parka where they can watch a
game ia peace and malm up their
own funny commentary if they tael
oo disposed. After what they've
been put through, they meetly just
ait and sight contentedly.
It isn't the commercials between
tunings. What has become almost
impossible for him to taka ta the
incessant boring chatter while pUy
Is to progress.
"Look, folks, we've get the cam­
era *a old Je* Gluts at first kaae.
H*’s got a'estrange habit that I
don't think I've ever aeen before
to my long ex peri ante. He always
leans tarward Just ea the ball la
delivered. There, did you see that!
Yea, sir, he lesaed, folks. New I
wait to tell you about e wire I
just got asking my opinion an
whether Ty Cobb eould have licked
Birdie Tibbetts, ha ha. There's a
foul coming up right over eur
microphone."
It's going t* be a tad day for
somebody when the sponsors teem
of the emergency measures bstog
token by-thls ia aa aatlmata—
millions of s*t owners who wish
to wateh a ball gam* and still
preserve their reason. They have
found It both simple and soothing
to switch off the voice of the
“personality" behldM th* picture
and flick on the radio broadcast
of the game—softly.
Yen might not believe It, but
there'a all the difference to th*
world, folks, to contrast to kis TV
counterpart, the radio onnouneer
la a simple child tf nature who
merely tolls kis listener* what la
taking plat* an tha field of play.
He aeldem sbouta, he permit* per­
iods at silence, and his tommerrials are lees drippy. At least, you
don’t have to watch him emeto
white he delivers the maiL

CHICAGO (ft — A slowed-down
Eitard Chariaa plodded to a ipiit
in-round declilon over young Paul
Andrewi laat night to beep grind­
ing away on the comeback tread­
mill.
He proved he itiU hat the heart
of t champion If little cite. He
waa decked by a abort right for
the eight count in the second
round.
But ha weathered Andrewa' ssvage left hooka and right uppercuU
and taught hack. He earned the
declaim from R e f e r e e rrank
I (kora, M-M. and Judge Frank Me*
Adams, MM . Judge James MeMeans gave K to lb* 15-year-old
ax-paraWeoper from Buffalo, N-Y.

Favorites Meeting
In Quarter-Finals
Ot Tennis Tourney
ATLANTA tft-Favorltes, ted by
top-seeded Tony Trabert ta Cin­
cinnati, mat today in the quarter­
finals ta the National Gay Courts
tennis tournament.
Of the seeded players, only BUI
QulllUn ta Beattie, rated No. T
haa fallen out ta line. He was
topped tn • marathon match
Wedcsdey w i t h second-seeded
foreign entry Johann Kupferberger
of South Africa 5-3, 5-10, 5-4.
Trabert had t rough time of it
tor a spell against 15-yeer-old
Mike Green ta Miami. He trimmed
Green 44 in the first set, but the
youngster broke his servie* and
took th* second **t 5-4. Tony, who
won his Wtmhlnden crown without
dropping a set. topped Green 4-g
for the third set end th* matchHam Richardson, seeded No. g,
found hlmeeH np against • tongbls
and -appeared to tire after kreesIng 5-1 ta the first sta against T ta
Com ta Washington, D C. He
dropped the second set 5-7 hut took
command again to score aa Im­
pressive #-l final set
Defending champion B a r n a r d
Bart sen ta Ban Angelo, Tire., seed­
ed No. 4, took Allanto'e 15-yearo(d Nad Neely in straight sets H
44 to gate the quarter-finals.
Ctoeest tad tor aa apant wee rtg-

Top Women Golfers
Challenging Lead

By BD WILKS . .
The Asaodated Frees
The major league pennant races
get back to action tonight with
two big questions to be answered: %
Can Cleveland and Chicago survive
the one-two invasion punch of New
York and Boston in the Ameri­
can? And Just bow secure ia
Brooklyn's lilt-game lead in the
National?
New York’s Yankees top (he AL
by fiva games as the All-Star
Game break cornea to an end,
while only one game separates
each of the other first-dlvlslaa £
turns — Cleveland, Chicago e n d *
Boston. That meins the runner-up
Indians, who had a half-game Mad
on the Yanks at this point in '44,
and the third-place White Box have
to worry about kicking off the
Red Sox as well as catching thn
Nsw Yorkers.
Manager A1 Lopes, naming Boh
Lemon (134) to face Tommy
Byres (T-l) and the Tanka tonight,
claims his pitching staff ia b a e k #
in shape. It better be. After facing
lha Yanka for two, the Tribe must
then take on the bustlin' Bostons,
who have lost only six of lhair
last M, for three game# Baturday
and Sunday.
The Yanka wiB have a Birew.
game "breather" against fifthplace Detroit over the weekend,
then (tart tha one-two punch all
over again at Chicago. They pt»y
the White Sox Tuesday, Wednea-v
day and Thursday with the Bed
Sox barging into Comakey park
Friday, Baturday and Sunday ta
a four-game aerie*.
The National presents a differ­
ent picture. It hardly seems pos­
sible, but the Brooklynt, a league
and a half ahead of tha pack, are
hurtln*. The only thing that'* kepi
them away out front la, oddly
enough, the avan-Stepben makeup m
at th* circuit.
®
There’s no panic y*t, hut a team
that loses 10 of Its tost II games
can't be sleeping too wan — even
with that lltt-gam e bulge.
Roy Campanelto insists he'e
ready to go back to work bshind
th* plate tonight when Urn Dodgers
take on th* 8(.Louis Cardinals at
Ebbets field, but Manager Walt
Alston indicates he haa other
plane.
m
That disturbing B-M record fol­
lowed Campy's knee Injury and
Alston doesn't want to start his
big guy before tha Mg Is healed
completely.

FORT WAYNE, Ind. W)-Some
af th* nation's top women golfers
started owt today to challenge th*
money-winning lead of Louisa
Suggs, Bern island, Ga., in th*
Ladle* Profetalonal Golf Assn.
National tournament.
Hack to try to repeat last year's
win her* la Marilyn 8mith, Wich­
ita, Ran, aa well as Fay Crocker,
winner of*the recent National
Open Tourney In Wichita, and
Mary Lana Faulk, Thomaaville,
Ga* who tied for runner-up ta tha
Open.
Mlsa Ruxr« leads the I.PGA'a Birmingham Host
"dollar darby" with winning! of
10,451.
To All-Star Team
Medal play openad today and By THE ASSOCIATED PRBfMT
will continue over 54 holes through
The Birmingham Borons, fourth fe
Saturday before the top two are place club In the ritilhig Soother*
paired for a fi-holo title match. Assn, flag ehase n month age, win
play host to the Class AA circuit's
Utered by Frank Willett bf Atlanta All-Star* Tuesday night
who Mm* within two points of Birmingham got nn waist from
ousting sixth seeded Sam Glam- th* Atlanta Creckon teat night
malva of Houston. Tex. TV final and backed Into the host role.
Little Rock's Ust-plsee Trsv* 'de­
•core was T-5. g-4. 7-5.
Bddi# Moytan ta Trenton, N.J., feated th* Barone 1 4 tn 1* ton­
Oarhld Moss of Modesto, Calif., ing* hut Atlanta knocked off
and Jack Frost ta Monterey. Calif., Memphia 10-1 and ended' the se­
an seeded players, completed the cond-place Chicks' chance* ta got* A
ting th* AIl-Btar eenteet Tito teem
quarter-finals lineup.
loading the league through games
fluaitor-Dn*! p l a y , originally of tonight le AU-fiter heat. Bir­
•taieduted foe tomorrow, w a s mingham ta twp gamaa s ta ia
mored up to today undsr threat ta front.
reta. to today's May Moylau faced New Orleans Inreed heck Weak.
Kupferberger; Richardson m e t ritte J-4 la teat night'* ether en­

M r

counter. Chottenaegn** eehadnled

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FOLLOW-

CHAPTER N m B X W

THROUGH

TAKES THE

PSEMlOe
0** HIS
'HFICLOCRS
BECAUSE
(ttSAUWAVI
IN GOOD
POSITION

to field

OR .
COvffR/

MAKEUP
rrs

t im e t o '

COOK MV &lt;
BREAKFAST]

,D0NT BE SILLY
QUEENS DON E
.
COOK
( BREAKFASTS

Z

Z

C A P T A IN fcAIO

TO CEASE FRlNG

&gt;

**

ATTfg making his w ay through a
crowd gathered at Gaevle, Sw e­
den, to greet King Gustav Adotf,
a youngster giving the name of
G o ra n a n u g g le e . th u m b in
mouth, beside the monarch. The
king, who w ai about to address
the throng, manages to retain
hit regal polset (International)

Immigration heads
To Receive Protest
CM, ElASH/ THAT T[ BUT ME CALLED
DRIVER/ IT 5EEMH7JUCi NAME FHf^THE WAS n t m t t A ALMOST AS A
f ) WARNINGt WHAT
S \ m O OF CRAZY
STUNT WAS THAT T

A lO N E tY ROAD A CAR
M A R S DOWN ON N A SH
AND DALE WITH THE HUM
OF MURDER M ITS WHEUS*

THEN, SUDDENLY...

IS A LITTLE

TAMPA UP — Tony Sola, opera­
tor ft a small Tampa restaurant,
says he will gn to U. S. Immigre
tton authorities end the Cuban
consul here with a protest against
detertlnn of hit wile by Cubyi
immigration officials.
Sols said hit wire was slopped
at they were about to board a
plane at Havana Sunday to re­
turn to Tampa alter a six-day
visit in Cuba,
He said his wife was told her
U. S visitor's permit, issued by
immigration ifffrlil* here, was
no good Tnp nrriclali ttld she
could nut leave Cuba on that per­
mit because she is a Cuban, Sola
related.
Sola is a naturalised U. S. 'cJUsen.

JENNINGS and Flint were mov­
ing in behind their boas. ’A brief
impulse at common Sanaa moved
Kerry to aey, “Coma an, Rusty,
let's cieor out of nere. No use
scrapping with him again."
“Tour card-sharper friend-* gtvtn* you good advice. Balnea. The
both &amp; you batter tuck in your
tails and crawl (or your holes
while you're etiU la shape to
crawl."
“I'm fust o-mlndtn* my own
buaineae," Rusty observed to tha
wrorld in general, “an* I aim to
keep right on doin' n till I'm ready
to quit. Anybody don't like my
company ain't obliged to hang
around"
He reload hla glass. Close aa tha
five of them even standing, no-one
could have said whether he'd done
it on purpoas, or whether on* of
the others had Jogged turn, but cer­
tain R waa that the liquor la the
glees, half-way to Rusty1* Up*, sud­
denly splashed upward, and Whar­
ton's face waa right th an to re­
ceive tL
Thera was a howl of pain aa the
raw liquor stung hts eye*, and
thta he dung himsell on Rusty,
the weight of hie clumsy nub car­
rying tha leaner and lighter man
back over a table. Rusty, Wharton
and the table went down together
with thunderous eraah of splin­
tering wood and breaking glasses
that quits drownqd out the thud
ot Kerry** dart against Jennings*
jaw, aa the latter moved tn to help
hi* Inend.
"Tour boat started this tttUe
ruckus all by hunacU.
1Auk

o u t1 ot the comer a*' me eye,
Kerry aaw a desk ef red apan
glad skirts as Margie edged ex­
pertly through the crowd to the
bartender's comer. Hts head turned
round to follow her nwlft progress,
and he paid for hla n wariness
with a Jab on the side at the head
from Flint.
"Awright now! Too boys had
your fun. Now out tt out ’fore
somebody gate hurt." Tha bar­
tender moved ta. a massive man
with cold eyes, a rock-like Jaw,
and a bunneae-llke buqg-startar
gripped in an Immense flat. Whar­
ton and Rusty were still thrash
tog aa Uu

b

p

i;

it

h a pw v S

neyi to draw up a suit to (
the town or to withdraw !!
aitata holding* from tho

There Is sn eiecirlc hoist to help
move him from bed to chslr.
EGGHEADS NEEDED
NORFOLK, Va. til - Kenneth
Harm , local artist, taya Norfolk
need' dreamers and eggheads
(Intellectuals). He described Tho.
mat Jefferaon aa a "real egg*
head,** "...
Harris-told tha Lions club that
civilisation* as we know It la bated
on the reveries of dreamers but
that In the last hundred yeara
"We have decided It la not safe
to place our truat in a band of
dreamers.*' Ha spoke of antllnlellectualiam aa a basic defect
in American society.
4H million.

BAH ANTONIO tM-BoW»y Dykot
tha aevonth ranking mlddlawolght
from,San Antonio awl Miami,- won
•i- 10-round split. ddfeialon over
Mo m s Ward of Detroit last night.
Dykes weighed If**, Ward W H .
There were no knockdowns In the
spirited bout la wklch Dykot, ofl to
a alow etart, piled up points from
tho fourth round on .with mUtt left

a V ’a r tp P ir j

&lt;TOKHDW
RROmtRSMAM) \UW| a ^
known

*

A s he gingerly opened his eyefi
a n t looked around, the events of
last night began to com* back,
Calder had brought them up heta
to hi* room over the Longhorn—
end then what T Ha coUId remembar Rusty, with his stained shirt
■tripped oil, sloshing cold water
over hla head, and Calder pouring
drinks lor both of them—and then
U w as all blank.
The knocking peril*ted. not very
loud, but with the sort of d u p eraia
urgency that bad wakened him. He
sent a look at Rusty sprawled in a
chair, hie shirt at ill off, sleeping
UK* the dead, and dragged him self
to Utt door on unwilling legs.
Margie pushed her way past him
and pulled tha door shut behind
her before he nad a chance to ask
what she was doing there.
"Where'* Rusty T* Her folta
was a nuiky whisper, h e . eyas
enormous and dark in a lac* that
was whlta to the Up*. She spotted
the aleaper in the chair nd flaw
to hint, began shaking him. fran­
tically. “Rusty, wake up! Vou've
got tot"
Tha shaking produced about as
much effect aa If lha had shakto
a heap of clothes. She swung her
bead around to Kerry. “Get earn*
water!"
Kerry discovered a pitcher,
“Here you are, Margie—butT'eure
didn't think he'd had that much
to drink."
The girl snapped. *Tv» seen men
Uke this before. He'e been doped."
Her eyes didn't tncourage quesUona. She dashed the pitcher of
tepid water into Rusty's (ace.- He
came to, c^tuttenwa' tnd
th ia, aw u a eyas lighted on Mar­
gie, be blinked and ainlled. “Why,
hello there, honey—"
"Rusty, you didn't do tt, did
youT Oh. 1 know you didn't!"
“Look, honey," Rusty pleaded.“It's too early tn the mornln’, an*
1 got too bad a head to be guestin'
riddle*. What didn't t— T"
"Tou haven't got tim e to ask
questions," Margie cut Aim off.
“Get up and get your shirt on.
Tou've both got to get out ef town
fast. I'Ve gut horses out tn back—
and don’t stand there gaping at
me!" ahe added, tn a ton* that al­
lowed a t no argument.
(To 0 * CoatMned/

A atw ir ar othar plaadinc. a t
nulrad br law. wlib tha Clarl
tba a for at a id Court «■ ar ba
July 111* Ib |l. and a*rva a ,
thtrtof upon (ha plaltillrTa' at
nay*, whoa* namaa and a«d

«oewv..*mi9TmotTj

IDTWf \v » u w

•

TAMPA in
Paralysed from
lh* shoulders down by polio, a
Tampa man la making a new
Mart In life and builneai at the
age of at.
Lraier Rosenblatt, who told In*
auranca befora being atricken
three yrara ago, haa opened hit
own insurants office In hit home,
apactally built to m ail hit needs.
Stripped Into a cheat rcapirator,
Rosenblatt alia In a specially
built chflr with atingi which sup­
port hit arms so he can use an
electrie typawriler. A talephona
with-a long art*niton cord la at
hand.
Ha aleepi In a rocking bed which

CHICAGO m — The package
ticked ominously and &gt;rang at
nerve-shatlering intervale,-so (ha
railroad mall clerk summoned a
post office inspector who sent for
the police bomb squad.
Sgti, Drew Brown and Frank
Grady Jr., opened the package
and found a harmless batterv-opcrated Intercommunication 'sys­
tem. They re wrapped it and tent

living ana, if avail, hi* unkimwn
•pot***. hurt, dvvlivvi, ivgatava,
■rart***, creditor*, or l-**l rapra■•nUtlvaa and all nartnna claimIn* by. thrn.jjh or undar l|iam
and aach e f tham: an* all ttr tU t
M v fn e n r elaimin* to h aw kny
rl*fit. till* or inlvraat in tb* real
prnrarty harvln daarrlbvd
TOU AM» r-tPH Or TOU AflB
IIUIIED V NOTIFIED that a aull to
M’llat till* to tha n v i of tb*
l.h*
Of tha
of
lha IW»t of a*Ltlon Si,. Township
t l t a i a l h Da Kata tA p-. . ,
a

•

A Inf pounding on the door
Jerked Kerry out of sleep. He sat
up and sank bach with a groan.
What was «e(ng on inside his
sJmllT It fait full of hot sand, and
■ore aa If a hone bad kicked him,
and th e n wan a brassy taste ta

Mm

Tampa Man Makes New Start In Life

DOWN/ .

Legal Notice

turned table, Wharton on top pinaing Rusty down with hi* greater
weight and hammering at him
with heavy data
"You near wrecked the place last
night," Um bartender declared.
T ook tho beet part o* the day to
clean up tha a n a Ain't figurin'
on doin' tt again."
Wharton mutlared. “1 c*n pay
tor any damage t do."
The bartender Upped Wharton
with the bung-atarter. “Tbu heard
me, Wharton. 1 mean business."
Jennings lunged at the big men.
The starter described a short, ewtlt
arc. and he sagged to tha door.
"Now, Wharton," tha bartender
went on Imperturbably, "you gum'
to get up an' behaveT"
Cursing, Wharton came to hla
(eat, and Rusty followed hla ex­
ample. Wharton didn't look too
good, hut Rusty's face was a mesa
that only Margla could lova.
New CaJdar epaka.
“If you’d like la clean up a
Utils," he eakl qultlly, 'you'fa both
welcome to come up to my room."
Kerry hesitated. Thera waa some­
thing about this scar-faced gam­
bler tie just didn't trust. And why
Uua sudden in Ur* it tn ».,n and
Rusty, when he hadn't lifted a
tnger U keep them from being
beaten up and thrown tn jail last
night T
T ’ve got abottl* upstairs," Calder added. “Lot better liquor than
you'd get here or any other saloon
to town."
Rusty’s grin widened. T h at'a
right friendly of you, Lon. We accep your kind invitation with
pleasure, don't we. Kerry T"
mm hash to my oUea,
K « ty ." Masgta n g i d T 5 mane
you co**»—you need It"
"Bun. honey. Tou lust wait here
while we wash our face* an' kmda
put oureelves together, an' we'll
see t o u heme."
Then glaring at Wharton, he
addjM, “and Til be eeeur you, later.

m

f f i w

s ? i?.y; 5 , / 2 ‘1

Clark •t*i£*°cireu lt C*
, Oaqilnoj* Cauaty. rlaru

Beside* hi* regular typing fob.
' *1 »Mll every word mentally,"
LAPSING, Mkht
Far the
"Wbeq my fingers Lore wow hie tho responsibility of
putting polish on other typists
peat li toot* Charles 0. Love Jr. don't sod up right. I know it."
Asa sat la a pitch d.r* room and Most of Us typing It sleangra­ trained In thah service* for the
phic transcription. from record­
ing macUnas. Some of it is done
la Braille. This is work connected
with th e ' welfare daportmont’a

l»vh supports Us wife and tore
chUdron on Us U til yearly nay
Ho la also a lay leader in Lao-

I

1. I

U,1

Matchco
Colors
XXOO
: n s r.

Am

�1

If It’s Worth Anythlac
It’s Worth Advertising la

THE O L D H O M E T O W N
METAL ROOFING
New to Stock. 6-V Crimp - 1 4 "
Corrugated— 2 4 " Corrugated.
Gat all Your roofing need* at

CLASSIFIED ADS

iF J U tn n n : now

"private bates. U4 W. r e s t SL

Hollaway aad Baby Bedo

■?. “ s s i s as,

Avalos Apia,
42$.
FURNISHED
Ave.

MO Park

City limlta Highway 17-92.
B Bedroom Home. *
from
Souths!de schooL Cali 254L
_

1

■EE Seatiaol* Baxlty for DexJj"
able Home* and Apia. Phone 77.
FURNISHED ApL Phone 433-W.
UNFURNISHED 4 Room House
with 3 Bedrooms. Phone 1326-J.
2 Room ApL 200 Avecedo.
FURNI5HED 3 Bedroom House.
Close in. ail West 1st SL Phone
________
•IS.
a Room Apartment- Completely
fimlthed. aU Palmetto Ave.
THREE, Apartments Furnlahed,
close in. Phone M6R-J.______
Unfurnished 1 Bedroom H o u » ju u h j.

FURNISHED Cottage. One Bed­
room. Extra nice. &lt;14 Elm Ave.

Phone
COOL, Roomy &lt; bedroom furnlab
ed Apartment with screened
porch.P&lt;U.monthly. 17034 Mag
nolU Ave. Ph. 1573.________

By STANLEY

©ff»e*

C ITS'YOUW BtariHEMWwi

TIlEaBANFOIU) IIE!tALD~Thunt. July U , 1955 Page 0

DAI LY C R O S S W O R D

-

Out West 13th SL

Phone !4M

- --------- ----^ Jjt

x\ V

AIR CONDITIONING
Room or House

H. a.

POPE CO, INC.

Park Are.

Phase ISM

z

Footiockera ............ Special $7.93.
Paint .......................... 92.50 gal.
All sites tarpoultni.
ARMY-NAVY SURPLUS
310 Sanford Ave.
Phone 1321

10
12
13.

Cullen and Harkey, Realtor* Used furniture, sppUtnees, tools,
111 N. Park Ave. Phoie S1U.

15

It

etc. Bought-sold. Larry’s Mart.
321 East 1st SL Phone 1831.
C A. W HIDDON. SR.
Reg. Real Rfeato * « * ar
YOU don't have to see the credit
ua s. Park
Ph. ur *
manager to save duller* legiti­
mately on our GIGANTIC Re­
OUTSTANDING VALUES
move' SALE.
Beautiful home In Mayfair area
ROBINSON MUSIC CO.
located on 3 lou. 3 bedrooms,
two tiled baths, Florida room, 226 N. Orange Ave. Orlaedo. Fla.
garage. $30,000.00.
FIT FOR A QUEENRubber Mattreises, InnerNew home, furnished, Block con­ Foam
S p r i n g Mattrcssrs, Couches.
struction, 2 bedrooms, four loti.
Baby Beds, Renovating, Uphol­
$8,300.00. Older home, dose in,
stering and Slip Cover work2 bedrooms, $6,000.00
Terms may be arranged on any NIX BEDDING MFG. CO1MI Stalerd Ave.
Pbeae 594-J.
of these homes. __
J. W. MAUw REALTOR
QUICK
CASH
for
fumllure,
boats,
Florida SU liB ank Building
motors. Buy one piece or com­
*Call Hall"
Phone iTS&lt;
plete home. Thoussnds of artF
eles for sale at the
OPEN HOUSE
Super Trading Post on 17-92
^-bedroom spacious home on nice
1 Mile Sooth. Phone 2212-R
corner lot situated near school
»rtd grocery. Home-ts-opcn all
week foe your Inspection. Sell­ Largo Knotty Pinr Hulch cup­
board. $100. (nrw), Hollywood
er will redecorate interior with
Bed complete $45. (new). Map!*
Buyer's choice of colors. See
wash stand $to.. Beautiful small
it at 1401 Sanford Ave. See us
desk $23.00, China cabinet $23..
for details. Good terms availa
Rockers $3.00 up, good used
,blr. Exclusive.
crib*, buegie* and nlay nen.

Seminole Realty

W. DIETRICHS
INI Park Ave.

T. W. MEMO
27 or 1U

THE CURIOSITY SHOP
17-92 South

TWO — Chanel back chairs. Good
2 bedroom house. 4 4 per rent
condition. Phone 1306-J.
mo'tgage. $40 monthly. 1903
Summerlin.
SOLID Ojk dinette table, 4 chalrs$15. Solid Oak O. R. Table -4
NEW 3 Bedroom concrete block
chairs, $33 Westinghouse lmnhome. Westinghouse Kitchen,
er $23. Electric Mixer $10.
GI financed, Low Down PayMaple Twin Beds with spring A
menL Phone 430.
mattress, chest of drawers $33.
Aptx portable dishwasher, $100.
CHOICE BUILDING LOT -C o r­
Phone $41-W.
ner Maple Ave. and 20th St. 34’
x 134!. Inquire 41$ Maple Ave. Studio Piano — Small UprighL
after 5 p. m.
Finish and condition like uaw.
Price $16100. Pheae 1725-R.
LAKE MARY - 3 Bedroom house.
20 x 20 porch, 2 Car Garage. WALNUT DESK - with Osk
112.000. Phone J. W. Dodson,
drawers. Good condition. 102 W.
1725.
20th St.
3-Bedroom FRAME House. 5 Lots
with 63 budded orange trees.
Completely furnished. P h o n e Highaet CASH. TRADE-IN price*
paid for ased furniture Call NO,
wilaon-Mater Furniture Co. SU
NEW THREE BEDROOM -L ak e
B .d P W .
front home," u n f u r n i s h e d
$14,000.00 Total. Large mort­
gage. Leaving country soon, 7—
inspection Invited. J, J. Maney, A PERFECT COMBINATION for
Altamonte. House on Train*
Lake, South,, directly opposite your dog . . . . . PURINA POO
CHOW iCIBBLED—MEAL. This
theater.
____
wholesome food combines kba - a .T w v a .^ u .K
_!
bled biscuit for palstabllily
with meal for full nulrition.
Builds vigor, stamina and lop
50th Anniversary
condition. Dogs love It. Get
PURINA DOG CHOW here.
SPECIALS

2 BEDROOM furnished Garage
Apartment HOP Melionvillc,
BEAUTIFUL I Bedroom funLhed Apt. CaU63Mf._______
FURNISHED One Gadroom Gar­
age Apartment. 1S14, Sanford
Ave. J . N. Axiarello, Phone Reg. 15*3 18x34 or 16x34
Bevel Plate Glaaa
Mirrors .....................
FURNISHED Duplex ApL 2206 Reg. 16.U
Double Door
Metal utility Cabinet
Reg. &gt;4.63 $4“ Metal
r trailer llvin
Wal' Cabinet ........
Trailer Park. 4
Reg. 26.91 Platform Rockers
Rag. 49.30 Berkltoe "Ballet"
Swivel Chairs . . . . . .
Rag. M J0 Contour Chairs

16
IT

II
SO

St
25

12JO
14.50
19JO
29JO

A m

t»» ki*»i r u m n

m t r « i » K -.

"7-15

«

FOR SALE — Complete equip­ rLOOR SANDMO • Ftelsktax;
Otk doors furnished, laid A fin
ment for operating Fruit and
Ishrd. In business since 1920.
Produce Stand. Phone I2S1 or
K. K. Stevens: Route 2, Box 227;
2M9.
_____
Call 716 lt-4 before 7 a. m. or
P M JU HARWICH —14 alter 6 p. m.

Jtoull/all

3kJ

:

40

I

7 * i* /

GET PROFESSIONAL CARE!
Eva-Bewn R eauly Shop
Phnne 543

m fc n n rF

and Croilcy

112 Magnolia Ave.
iiii

1667
ORLANDO M
Undo Eveotoc
Ray. U&lt;S4

Appliance'

HARRIETTS
BEAUTY NOOK

1'h. 11.1

llarncit. Ruth. Dawo
CARPENTER WORK -REPAIRS Open 8:30 a. m. also Wed. p. m.
• Cabinets Made To Order
HU So. Oak Ave. Phone Ml
Phone IM7-W —J. E. Robinson
LAUNDRY

FHA

Par Remmiellei sad repaln.

Natelag Puwe—Small Maatelp

Paymeata
B b atH M C a a t r t t a C l,
Owt Weal Ute

BULLDOZER
Service — U n d
rlrarimt and grading. Large
new Poser
Free estimate*.
Perry D. Gtllyard, Ph. 213A-W.

Pleahieg. Rreety fleaUag
M, jG. HODGES
Servte on All Water Pump*—
Well* Drilled — Pampa
Paela Read Pheae 7M

PLUMBING

Otttract sad rapur west. Free
eattaiatee. R. L Harvey. Ml
Saaferd Ave,

MWURAWCm

Aawthalda

PUttO R5IRWICH

L. S ill-n an o Techairlai
Pboee 2164. Route L Saafon

Year eld Meter for a
Better arade — KVINRUDE!

Sportlnr

Goods

m

- furniture - a

The above 4-Hne ad can be run
J full days for only ta w, I days
frr aaly St no and one day tor 72c

Manager Wanted
Loral man to ooerata a nalnt
end wallaaper branch to be
opened In Sanford. Expertsura in direct contort salllnr.
merchandlsinr and retail sellin* ara desirable. Active Inter­
est in clvie orrsnisations and
wide local arnuaintenre would
ha valuable asseta. Our nlan
include* special traininr in
paint business, salary, profit,
aharinr. and retiramanL No
capital Investment. Applicant*
will plaais contact P. J. Pata
bv letter or phone:

ISO Went Bajr Street
Phone ELGIN 3-9754
JACKSONVILLE, FLA.

H IL L LUM BER &amp;

TELEVISION

m *

I on
t IS
tin
ill

wnnn r s m i i , •
tim

lir ir M a r r&gt;a-

hecrat storm
On Y o u r Arcauol
TBA

cj.»s r r »
H a rry

M nnra
M nnra

Opto lion.*

n»nar

r \CMMl

I d
*.1»

H w i i l u n •"'IIS tr a e i *
c t n o o n carnival

W alt

R a d io

i &lt;i W».kl/ ,v»—» Rtviaw
t iia Tt., •",r-v.».*.S»i.
a is Jehu Dslr K*»i
i l l H u n t i n g a n d S’ l i h l n a
) it

lilts

Ills

a is
T.*i

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10:11
:« «i
in IS

I t on

11 IS
11;in
llltS

tt TNN—lAwrOHD
J *0*1 K i i . n r i c t . K S
TIMlimiAV

« i t h l&gt;&lt;'n
1^&gt;"» l l a n r . r

t n K m . On l u r . i t i
‘ J* rlimas
S M D jetern u t
, (U) U u t n i a n a Allan
SJft All t u r T h n atra
l a ea I t M f t i a * w i t h tha R a aalar,
nea N i« i.g p iiru .w „ (h a r
11:11 S i . r l l t h i T h a a t r a
sign orr

ra in ir
so a tiM i
llin -n n
p m rra m B ourn*
K aw s-W aathar
T ka M ernlr.a Chow
T aat P s t t a r n
flitn-on
rhC H iftA it n e s v M R
N * » , • t t &gt; H h» r
V i a w a r a Ulti.M
T a n n c t a a r l! ru la Dhow
Unv* nf 1,11a
haarch fnr T om orrow
V iaw ara ru a a a t

kvk Vino

1 1 1 1 N - —a • I V a a t h a r
12 "n J a c k P a r r
l i .in L a n d of O ur*
J ;nn S i m l a Malini
I t s V taw ara t ' l i o i
s i o Channal C ro ssro id a
S IS h a e r a t S t o r m
l : j n On Y o u r A cco u n t
« M P llm . K a r t * F a n c y
( IS Sir d H r .
t i t ! C artoon ( 'a r n l r a l
w MNN -TV
T H IN M Itr
M KMMI
»;•# O p an t f o u a a
SilO L u n a B a n a a r
• :on K aw a, SVffiar. Spta.
I I " CBS T V N aw a
t : t l J u l l u a l.aRnaa.
T no i V a t a r f r o n t
n o C lim ax
I K t s ia r F larba.
S:"0 Mr CIIMan
I K H a l i t Or l a y
lo:«a C a m T a l k a
lSilt D r a a m T lm o
10.10 f i t i l e a T it
111*10 S ew a h I V a a t h a r
11:11 L a t a S h o w
lSilt h a w s a k l i n o f t
rn iiiA T
MOMM hn
S:H T a i l P a l t a r n - o
T "0 M o r n l n x S h o w
■ e» M e r n l n * S h o w
*!«# S h o p p a r a O u t d o
S i l l N aw a
s:ia C a r r y Moo r*
lo .n o H a r r y Moo ro
l " : t l H a r r y M o o ia
t n : i a K trlk o It H leh
1 1 :0a V a l i a n t L a d y
L e v a Of L lt o
• a a r c h F a r T ^row
O uldlnf L lc h i
AFTBRNOOK
II:#* K ltrb an Show
t i l l s w ale. T"*ara
l .a* Rob Q t .a w l a
l i t“a H o --------uaaparty

J

SUPPLY Y A R D

t "it
I . IS

t:l»

O III.4 M M .

For only S3 aa the above 6-ilne ad
Is oa tha Job tor you or 3 full
days. Only 62J3 keep* it working
tor you tor &lt; day*. 1 day la only
Me.

Sherwin - Williams
Company

“Men who have learned to
uaa toola . . . build th in g s. .
make home repairs and im­
provements — are respect­
ed in this m e c h a n i c a l
"building” world of ouraB ast way to learn la to
make things with lumber.
L et's stop in a t 2I« W 3rd
8 t and pick up lumber for
a workbench.”

A U2ANIUM RNO, declared tn be the “second best assay yet found
In the world,” has been staked out near Bancroft, Canada, by Mrs-,
Dorothy Midlgan (renlerl, an Akron, Ohio, housewife, and twoj
frlenda with whom she la pictured. They are Mrs. Betty CIUT (left))
end Mrs. Ruth Wileman. The discovery was made rrrently Mrs.
Msdlgan said, in an abandoned feldspar mine. Hrr rnrt In the And,
the added, was a minor rme. Two men she has known fnr 30 years!
through varntlnninc In Canada actually located the uranium. Sho
has ru»/&lt; is claims In the atrtke area.
(International Soundphotof

Buy. Sell, Rent, Hire with want
ads, tha huaiest salesman in
tows. Put one to work for you
Phone 142L W# vUl bo glad to
charge IL

Hev will yoe ewepr
■ew will yea Trait?

LOST — While gold Longine
Ladles watch, Tuesday a. m,
between 601 Cypress and Post
Office and hanks. Movement
registered. REWARD. Phone

rk . M

On* hew M . Wate ai id Dtp
Paid
Flatshed 1-sundry
Saul tone Dry Qeantng

•
•

Damp

A 3-lias ad, raefc aa the one above
la aply Me per day &lt;m our low 6
day earned rate economy plan, 45e
p r day for I days and 64c for

ur your Furniture at Berry's
Warehouse Furn., Co., at &lt;01 W.
lit. St. All nationally adv. furnllure at warehouse prices.

experience desired. M uit&gt;e
Plceient, Courteous and latelUgent. Excellent salary for right
Mraoa. Write Box ABC* A t
lenfocd Herald. All toouirtoa
will be treated confidential.

•

Dry

W A N T AD
RATES

Evlnrede Ralee A Service
a&lt;4 e . m a t
Phew aaa

VEFD CASH?

One boor • Wax* and

L.

Geoeral Osedractsr
"Homes ef Dfettoctlon"
1-Way t T «
f i n e 1MI

hRRV V ICK

•

—14-B W -

P. M.CAMTBELL

II* W a t M M .

Styling and Waving. Cosmetics
fnr your skin care. Gyro-Lator
method of rciiucing.

TV SERVICE CENTER

Remit*

ROBSON

H i_’

%
%
%
%

Hair on a
man a lip

For Imvefter Hair

Electric*! Contracting and Itenairs

, Invoices, hand bills, and
r e m a , etc. progressive

ffwisTU.*
i " ' L'wtv^
:• j j
»-&gt; L4t&lt;* *

90

Modern Air-Condi tinned Salon
USED PLUMBING FIXTURES. RANIULL ELECTRIC CO. Specialist In Personality Shaping,

•ell cr­
n frn a a n p s m , y m am m It’s So Easy
diaary Life lasurancs on a
MM
To Place A Want Ad
monthly or quarterly, premium Juat Call 1621 and xak (or It wlE pay YOU u are US before
Mather of Sanford Plan.
Large commlaiiom paid,
you buy. Open Evealaga and
tha Want Ad department
no rate Inereate lor pUola or
Pittas 127
GARAGE APT. lor couple. POSH 263-69 K. 1M SL
Sundays.
career military men. An oppor­ •
Sanford Herald
E. llth 8t Phone 2M-J.
RaaUido Trailer Ralee.
tunity lor retired military offiPalate*. Fla.
ti«t«at&lt;if
carl to bacomt actlva and build
an aMUimal taeema. M lnt»CARS
estad, writa KUYKENDALL IN
.w p y
BOUGHT SOLD TRADED
SURANCE AGENCY, P. O. Box
Rey Rrel’a Usea Care
ail!, Orlando, Fla.
Saulord Ave. A llth SL
LAWNMOWERS n n a r p e n a d
SEWING MACHINE OPERATORS
Bicycle A General Repair.
—Both Experienced end Learnto BOATS • MgTOHA
S ta a le y 'a Hike shop
Furnlahed 2101
era.
Experienced
preferred
but
3U E. 40t SL TeL 2434
One bedroom

Less Trade

17

DOWN

U

U 25

JU

&gt;y%%

Far Better Plunramg
116 W Ted SL
Phi*# 1*56
See or Call
AKC Registered Boxer puppies.
W. J. KING
2 Months old- Outs tending pedi­
Park
gree. Phone 2325-J-3.
. __ aarvlca, Lakefroots A
24 Pigeons — 35c each for lot. Dragline
ditching Eatlmates given. Phoea
ditching.
^ h o ^ lggg-X-M nr H66-J.
Geneva 2464. Orlando 62394.
Sanford 2221.
■ K T P W A IT O

FURNISHED
tog refined

■1%
%
%y41
%
%
%

Gult-likr
«*9
'7
bird
Hoam
1
*
1
it'
Dilutes
Elevated
30
tram
SI Attacks ’
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Shermaa Concrete Pipe Col
RAYMOND ■- BALL. BROKER
S. D. Hixnleyman. Associate
O M. Harrison, Associate
m Sootn Park Ave.
Phone &lt;94
OWNER of 4 Bedroom House in
desirable location wishes to
trada for plaee In country.
WILL EXCHANGE eqaity tn
Modern 2 Bedroom Home for
Acreage.
For your Real Eatate neees:

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PAVEMENT BUCKLES.
CAR OVERTURNS
GALVESTON, Tex, Jv-A nti any
Paruo was driving down on* of
Galveston's p r i n c i p a l aeatida
streets when the pavement buckled
upward about three feet. He could
not atop his car in Ume and It
was flipped over Officers said all
they could figure was that tha
high a f t e r n o o n trm peratum
caused the pavement to expand
and buckle. Panno and hla wifa

suffered cuts aad bntisei.

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ANNOUNCES

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new homes in

Loch Arbor

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C R Y S T A L LAKE S E C T I O N

it

VA A N D
CONVENTIONAL
FINANCING
NO DOW N
PAYM ENT
FOR VETERANS

3 and 4 bedrooms; 1 and 2 baths

FULL E Q U IP M E N T
Large Lots In The Best
O f N e ig h b o rh o o d s
homes also available at:

DREAMWOLD
WYNNEWOOD

2 left out of a total 22
only 2 left out of a total 86
only

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■•

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Weather

Inside
Editorial,
Society, P.
SporU, P.
Radio, P.

P4
TV, P. 7
5
County, P. 8
*
Churh, P. 2
8
Story, P. 8

. ’VOLUME XI.VI

S fty e

H a n fo r d

______________* _________________________ AN INDEPKNDKNT DAILY NEWSPAPER
*
F-ixUblinhed 190R
HANTORD, F U m iD A ,
FRIDAY. JULY 15. 1955

Young Couple Taken
For Passing Checks
Lived Here Briefly
j

*,

A young couple arrested by
Winter Park police yesterday on
bad check crirgca lived briefly In
Sanford following a June check*
cashing spree, authorities aaid.
Police identified them at Janie*
McGatha, 20. and hla wife, Delores, 27. They were picked up af­
ter an Orlando store rcfu«rd to
cash a check and gave police a
description o' the couple and their
i047 black Hudson sedan.

The couple'a two small children
a seam-day-old son and a fouryear-old girl, were taken to the
Orange County parental home.
Orange County Chief Criminal
Deputy L. J. Swann said the MeGuthas appa'rntly left the Orlando
iren after cashing a number of
checks In June and had been living
uric fly in Rnnfoid.
They returned to Orlando yet*
terday, he aaid, and Mrs. McC.alha

patted a 125.95 check at the Closat
Shop, then decided to tarkla tha
China Marl. Both stores aic lo­
cated on Orange Avenue.
Swann said Mrs. McGatha en­
tered tha China Mart, her sevenday-old child In her arms, and at­
tempted to cash a check after se­
lecting several snisll Items. The
store operator refused the check
and notified police.
Swann aaid the couple ware
charged with victimising numerous
women's and children’s shops In
Orlando and Winter Park. They
also are wanted on similar
charges in Miami, St. Petersburg,
Daytona Reach and Palm Reach
as well as Dayton, Ohio, ha re­
potted.
Pictures of the couple have been
posted in police and sheriff’s of­
fices for the past month and a
half.
Complaining storekeepers, in
each cash, reported a red dishblonde woman In her late 20’a, ob­
viously pregnant, would cash a
check whlla "buying" soma articles
of clothing or children's toy.
Storekeepers said tha woman
was neatly dressed and seemingly
"very innoernt looking." She of­
ten had the four-year-old child
with her, they said.

Committee Hopes
To Get Good Leads
On Red Activities
COUNTY SCHOOL'BL’PKHINTKNDENT R, T. Milwaa inaperta tha
progreaa of work at the old Greyhound Bui Strtlon, which la being
eonvertad into administrative officea for county achool offirialt.
Work la expected to be finished and the building occupied about tha
fin t week in August (Staff Thotol___________________________

M ayor To Help
:&gt;// Dixon-Yates
Want New Plant
MEMPHIS, Tcnn. iff&gt; — Mayor
Frank Tobey aays U Dixon-Yatex
■till want to build its power plant
at Wett Memphis, Ar„ "we will
a u lit in every way w« can."
Tobey's statement waa In an
awer to James Hale, a Wett Mem* phli lawyer who laid the only
•' reason .Vempbla decided to build
Its own plant wai to force can
cellation of tha Dison-Yatea con
tract.
City officials tay they decided
to build the plant because they
felt tlie Tennessee Valley Authority
would not be able to meet their
future power needs.
Hale made bis charge at a
"facta of life" conference yetter
day on the proposed Memphis
municipal steam plant, attended
by Memphis city officials, busi­
nessmen and representatives of
West Mamphls.
The West Memphis lawyer said,
"We slaved off every effort you
made to slop Dixon-Yates. Then,
in desperation, you laid 100 million
dollars on the line up at Washington. That (topped us."

3 Khrushchev Tells
Trust O f Bulganin
A t Summit Session
PARIS tit—“ I trust Bulganin. I
don't have to sit at his elbow."
That was Nikita Khrushchev’s
comment a few weeka ago when
a repotter In Moscow asked him
3 if he planned to accompany Pre­
mier Nikolai Bulganin to Geneva.
The fact that Khrushchev Is now
going with Bulganin—and Marshal
Georgi Zhukov too—was a topic
for lively discussion among diplo­
mats here today.
Questions naturally came up:
Didn't Khrushchev trust Bulganin
any more? Doesn't Defense Min­
ister Zhukov trust either oneT
But the prevailing view was that
1 the Soviet Union has shown Its
determination to present a dal*
nation at Geneva whose com­
petence cannot bp questioned.
■-

.

-

•

Bus Route Revealed
For Baptist Church
Vacation School
Tha First* Baptist Church will
sponsor a Vacation Bible School
at tha Elder Springs Baptist Cha­
pel from July 18 to July 29. Tha
School will begin rach day at 8:80
a. m. and cover a three hour per­
iod closing each day at 11:30 a.
m. All boys and girls in this com­
munity, age 3 through 10 years,
are Invited to' attend.
The Church bus will cover tha
following routa each day: Leaving
tha First Baptist Church it will go
out tha Orlando Highway to Five
Points arriving their about 7:35
a. m.; from Flva Points to Elder
Springs arriving about 7:45 a. m.;
Turning right at Elder Springs It
will cover Myrtla Ave. and arrlva
at Sanford Ave. Extension about
7:50 a. m.; Sanford Ava. exten­
sion north to Ginderville arriving
about 7:55 a. m.; Turning left at
Ginderville arriving at Baker’s
Dairy about 8 a. m.
It will continue along the Old
Orlando road and arrive at the
Elder Springs Baptist Chape!
about 8:16 a. m. Anyone wishing
to ride on tha bus to tha Vacation
Bible School should be along aide
tha road and Indicate their desire
to rids by,the uplift&lt;-ti right hand.
Bible Stories, Handwork, Mis­
sionary activities, Character Stor­
ies, recreation and refreshments
are enjoyed.
John L. Miller, Minister of Edu­
cation for the First Baptist Church
will be Principal of tha School.
Other members of the faculty
will be announced later.

WASHINGTON m — Chairman
Eastland (D-Mlsa) aaid today tha
Senate Internal Security subcom­
mittee hopes to get leads on "Com­
munist activity down to the pres­
ent time" from Its latest aeries of
hearings.
The subcommltce received yesn a scor of perso taoin hrdlu od
trrday an Inquiry In whleh more
than a score of persons were
named as having been Reds in
Uie late 1930‘i. Most of them ware
in newspaper work at tha tlma.
Eastland said the subcommittee
has had "wltncs.wa from most of
the profession.*" in Its sometimes
turbulent history. Ifa added in an
Interview:
"We've gotten more cooperation
from newspapermen than any oth­
er group In the country."
He said of the subcommittee's
latest Inquiry that "tha hearings
have pointed out the way the Com­
munist conspiracy was entrenched
In this country, and we hope to
get leads from these hearings that
wUI show us Cnmnfuniit activity
down to the present time."

Trading Is Barrier
To Bill's* Passage
Of Reserve Program
WASHINGTON (JR-Some legis­
lative horse trading between tha
Senate and House was the only
barrier today to passage in soma
form of President Elsenhower’s
ambitious national rsserva plan.
By a decisive 80-1 vote the Sen­
ate fast night approved Its own
version of the plan to train a
combat-ready reaerva of 8,900.000
in tha next four years, a four-fold
increase.
Sen. Russell (D-Ga&gt;. who piloted
the measure through the Senate,
■aid in an Interview:
"Thar* are a lot of differences
between the Senate and House but
1 think we’ll be able to gat a
blU."

Reported Financial
No Strong Measure Interest Studied
WASHINGTON CR — A reported
financial interest of Secretary of
Is Foreseen Soon

NEW DELHI (A*)—Unless Prime
Minister Nehru says no, strong
measures are due soon in the
campaign to oust Portugal from
the subcontinent of India.
Backers of tha campaign plan
to aand 100,000 demonstrstans
against tha polka and troops
guarding tha Portuguese colonies
Aug. 15, aaaJvuraary af ludiaa la*

- - NNORB f i l f l INVITATION
Tha asaia aalaay brrclvad la
TOKYO ( » - Paul Robeson, Amor- Gea, an wan little bigger than

the Ak Force Harold X. Talbott
in a New York efficiency engin­
eering firm la to be studied by
Uie Senate bveaifatiou subcom­
mittee.
Members af Re gran* eonflred
last nlgbt that it has voted to look
into Talbott's relations with the
firm beaded by Faul B. Mulligan.
One Member described the Arm
as "a compaay But Reals with
yanks which Rani with * •

Wan Negro singer, has been In­ Rhode Island, an tha wait coast af
A Republican member, Reclin­
vited In the fifth youth and Stn- India. Tha Portuguese have ing to be quoted by name, said
Amt Festival in Warsaw "as a occupied It 400 yuan. S t Frauds that "on the surface, H appeari
Xavier agrnad R* Ok
we will Cod nothing fee Mm R m e-

dR af Mr, Talbott.

*

f f lz t a ib

Demos
Seek
Okay
WASHINGTON UP-Housa Demo­
crats drov* with new confidence
today for final Public Works Com­
mittee approval of billions in new
taxes to help pay for a giant naw
road construction program.
The committee late yestarday
tentatively approved tax hikes on
gasoline, trucks and huses, diesel
fuel, heavy tires and tubes and
all tire retreads, to raise abott
*11.800,000,000 over the next 14
years.
It defeated, by lopsi.trd votea,
a scries of efforts to kill or sharply
reduce the proposed revenue In.
creasrs. It didn't complete action
on the lax plan, however, and
more such moves were expected
today.
Rep. Burnside (D-WVa), who
put through an amendment to
exempt nonusers ot highways from
the tax increases, said he thought
thla would remove much of the
opposition to them.
The construction program calls
for 37 billions In federal spending
and 15‘i billions from the states
over a 12-year period. The federal
government would put up 14 bil­
lion*, and the states 2lx billions,
to complete 40,000 miles of defense
superhighways.
In addition, Ihe program calls
for a 23-millinn.dollar increase
each year for IS yean In both
federal and state funds for pri­
mary, secondary and urban roadi.

Many Applicants
Come Pouring In
For Grandmothers
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.. &lt;JR- A
manufacturer who sought 25 cand
Idatrs for a "grandmothers as
sembly line" got 75 applicants in
two hours.
Tit* Futuronlcs Manufacturing
Co. had found (hat the eight orlgl
nal grandmother! among Its 350
employes did very well. Relieving
that industry should afford
portunltias to qualified older per­
sons, the company deckled to try
to let up one assembly line com
posed only of grandmothers.
A story about th« plan In the
St. Petersburg Evening Independ
ent brought quick results. The 25
grandmother* (elected for em­
ployment were chosen yesterday
on the basis of hesllh, eyesight
and other factors.
The compsny manufactures in­
tercommunication lets.

Rippy Gets Bite
He C an 't Scratch
LOUISVILLE, Ky. OR-RIppy has
a bite he can’t scratch.
But he’s doing fine after tangling
twice with a rattlesnake this wrrk.
When (he black dog romarfd
the snske between two sheds Sjnday night, the snake struck and
mined. Then It disappeared down
a hole.
Wednesday night, the snake
didn't miaa, linking Hi fangs into
Hippy's Jaw.
After tha dog was hoipitatind,
his owner, Morrii Engnehl, de­
clared war on the viper .
"I've got ell aorta of sprays and
bombs," he laid, "We used to
havs 10 or 12 frogs In the garden
—and they've all gone. They say
where there are frogs therv'i no
danger of snakes. Apparently our
snake has eaten them.”
ACCIDENT INVESTIGATOR
GIVEN SUSPENSION
HOUSTON UR-Robert E. Schil­
ler!, accident Investigator for (he
Houston Police Department, was
given a three-day suspension yesterday. Police Chief Jack Heard
said the 33-year-old officer backed
a patrol car Into a picnic bench
while on accident call, stripped
the gears on another ear, drove
another to tha station with a boil­
ing radiator and bent e fender
on another.

A n n r i a N P rm *

" l was

Mer«? *h«w-

widely scattered
• Isew h*r«.

lhund»raho»et»

No. 251

W im

Eisenhower Leaves
For Geneva Tonight
Informal
Address
Planned
Video Networks
To Carry Message

7:30 Game Time
For Home Clashes;
DeBaryites Feted
Th* Sun ford Cardin*!* wilt
ihe Orlatnln Flyrm toniffht

in

nu t"l i*f taking in i'i the lo|» ip o l
President Ei­
in tin* tiifht **vitin1‘half rm r. T ill

WASHINGTON r
senhower lake* off tonight fur
(ictifta aflrr lulling the nation Clypm urn mil front hv * litlf
about hi* cautious hopes that the ^ ' T ,' n'1 V ' 1 " V " bv \ hJ Cl&gt;r’
IlilC Four rnnfom trr may lead 111 nciI?■ Utmghi nouid put limit DU
tup.
fventuady to I'ndurmtt pram.
^
tl
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Thu Sanfoid Ba**'hiill Club *n-

Tire President plan* a 11-minute .......

★

rim. iiknky t'Ot.KK JK.
★
★

★

Cdr, Henry Colee Jr. Executive
O f N A A S Replacing Cdr. F.More
Cdr. Henry Cole* Jr., USN, re­
ported aboard thu Sanford N atal
Auxiliary Air Station, this week
where ho relieved Cdr. Frank it.
More of his position a* the Air
Station's Kxrculiva Officer.
Cdr. Colev, is a native son of
Florida and is now very rlose to
h.s home town of New Smyrna
Only one week remain* for men llraeli. wht-te he stilt krc|»x the
to enlist jn time to attend summer official aidless of 3(11 Washing­
field-training exercise* with Co. ton Ave.
Following .hi* enlistment in the
1", 124th I nf , Sanford's own No
Uonal Guard unit at Fort Mr Navy in Ib.‘l7, hr served a year's
Clclland, Ala., Capt. Joseph l&gt; duty at Norfolk, Vs., followed hy
Bryant, commanding officer of no additional year nhonid the USS
New Ymk. In 1919, lie was ordered
the local unit said today.
With the conversion of llie San­ to Pensacola for flight training
ford unit to an Armored Infantry u* a Naval Aviation Cadet. Upon
Company slated for early full the completion of the flight program,
men who receive, live training at Cdt. Colee was commissioned an
(hi* year'* encampment will he the etnign nod designated a naval
leader* of the new unit, Capt. Bry­ ■viator.
At the start of AVW II, he was
ant added.
To join tha National Guard a serving with Patrol Squadron 73.
man must be between the are* of For his woik with that squadron
IB and 34, except young men 17 In its nnti-Hulimnrine campaign* in
may enlist with the permission of Ihe North Atlantic during Ihe
their parents. Young men who en­ years of IP4I-42, Cdr. Cole* was
list befora they become IH'1, arc awarded (lie Air Medal.
draft exempt as long as Ihey per­ Aft • r transfer from Patrol
form thair military duties in the Squadron “13" In 1941 he was
placed on the staff of thp ComGuard.
The local unit leave* for Fori loander Caribbean Sea Frontier
McClellan on Aug. 13 and return* where he served until 1940 when
to Sanford on Aug. 2* The Inst tin wax transfer led to Naval Air
day a man can enlist before the Missile Test Center at Point Muunit leavea is Monday, July 25. gu, Calif. II* received Instruction
Co. " i" holds Its weekly two hour at Hit) Naval School, General Line,
training periods at the Sanford Newport, It. I. Upon graduation
National Guard Armory, 015 K. from tliis achool, he was transferr­
Firat St., every Monday night at ed to NAS Corpus Christi, Texa*,
I o’clock. All jilting mm who are where he underwent additional
interested In investigating the flight (raining in Privateer Type
many opportunities offered by the Airrrnft. Thi* was followed hv
National Guard are invited to at- two year* of duly with Aircraft
tend any of lhr*a session*.
Development Squadron Four at
ihu Naval Air Station, Patuaent
River, Md.
For two years, 1950.62, ha was
assigned to the Offic* of tli*
Chief of Naval Operations in
LONG BEACH. Calif, lAV—A poll Washington, D. C., after which
of self-styled esperts—all men— ho rommarobd Air Transport
today called thi* year’* Mis* Uni­ Squadron 22 at Norfolk, Va. From
verse crop the mo»t heautilul yet. Norfolk, ha rame to NAAS San­
Newsmen, officials. Judges and ford.
others connected with Hie pageant Cdr. Cole* I* married to the
ainca It* inception In 1932 were former Miss Charlotte Lennarule
unanimous that girl* everywhere of Sari Juari, Puerto Rico, and hits
ara prettier than ever.
five children.

One Week Remains
To Enlist In Time
For Training Camp

M iss Universe Crop
Is Said 'Best Yet'

Oacar Meinhan.lt, executive pro­
ducer of the Bliss Universe Pageant, said:
AGREEMENT SIGNED
"I usually avoid thru* opinion*, TOKYO IR—lied Chin# and Bul­
but I've got to say this ia Hie garia have signed an agreement in
greatest congregation of beauty I Soflk to cooperate in curbing insect pesls and plant disrates.
have aver seen at one time ”

Tense Ordeal Ends In Safety
HAMILTON AIR FORCE BASE,
Calif. LR—For four ten**, !on|
houra last night Capt. Theodore
Roosevelt held his mind and
nerves ready to ditch a Globemaster and 87 men In the fogcovered Pacific.
Rot tha ordeal ended in a life
landing here with the big military
transport's two starboard engines
dead. Tiro right-Aand Urea blew
out la the landing but pilot RoomvtlL of Elyria, Ohio, held the
plank Mralght on the runway.
Whan It was an o rtr, Roosevelt,
8 seventh cousin of both Teddy
and Franklin D. Roosevelt, quietIp told reporter*:
'Everybody w a a ostremely

Parity rlmidy will*

ara south***! r a u l »wd keys and

to ditch. Those paretroopers felt,
I guess, they could cupe with what­
ever came up "
"Wa were about to minutes past
the point of equal time (midway
point! when the first engine went,”
said Lt. Richard E. Davidson, Al­
liance, Ohio, assistant navigator.
An hour later Ihe irrond star­
board engine failed. Roosevelt and
tnd Lt. Harry Simpson, Akron,
Ohio, copilot, were able to featticr
both propellers. The dead engines
did not drag or vibrate.
But for four hours Roosevelt and
hla flight engineer, M. Sgt. Her­
man Dupuis, Helena, Mont , had
to drive Ihe two port engine* at
noarly maximum power.
Dupuis, who made a wartime
we'd have diuViag In g Navy Martin Mar­

iner. laid another engine might
have gone at any moment under
the strain. He said he aweated
every minute with the Ignition sys­
tem. He prayed it wouldn't fall.
Sgt. Arthur C. Crawford, Lagro,
Ind., a 187th tnan on hla way to
ace his wife and three children
at Ft. Bragg, said feathering the
first eng ne didn't bother much
Rut wlu-n the second stopped . . .
“That'i when we realty got
seared. Ail Hie lime, Ihough, 1
waa just sure I wai going to see
my wife and kids, all right, even
if I had tn get a little wet."
Hie hnmrbnund paratrooper*
had lo throw ovrrboard all Ibotr
gear and smtvenJri . . . collected
over aa many aa Jive year* to
Japaa.

„ ,„.w

llllt time for

informal address dealing with , hp ,,.nuimmif
B, nlP, « hirh
world problem* to be di*cus.rd ,, 7 .:!„
fn
„ )M , ll(ll)|t, , h ,
at the summit meeting opening' ful ls t o g e l h o m e r r t l l l e r ,
Monday, and with hi*
his *icw*
Tonight
views re
............... .. ..„ |.H, rv Ni k M" with
garding step* toward their soln- ,,
flom lV |t«ry being ad*'&lt;&gt;n
milled fice of charge. The Club
AH four television networks wilt |ia, p*
out 509 passe* In nor
carry the extemporaneous talk Volusia County friends and a latg#
from Ihe White House st the lime crowd is expected.
of delivery, a* will ABC and CHS
The Sanford Hist! Club has he*n
radii}. The MBS and NBC radio going at a fast clip w-inniug 15 of
networks will broadcast ivcordcd it* last 22 outings for a lusty .682
version* ialci.
!percentage.
Hie talk It scheduled for 7.13
Some of lh* local merrhanta
p in. EST.
have donated p r i m to bn givers

One hour after Eisenhower coneludes, he will take off from Na­
tional Airport aboard hi* personal
plane Columbine III. His parly will
include Mr*. Eisenhower and their
son Mai. John Eisenhower, who
will serve aa an aide lo hta faIhcr.
Thr plana will make one refuel­
ing slop, it Krflavik Air Base,
Iceland. During a two-hour stop
over, he and Ilie First l^idy will
be lunrlieon gurvla of President
Assgeir Assgeirason of Iceland.
Eisenhower is due at Geneva
tomorrow evening.
Along the way, his plane will
be slicphridrd by an unspecified
number of Air Force 1129s and
SAto amphibious planes, anil by
nine Navy weather ships stalionrd
at intervals of about too miles.

way with a total of nine pritaa
going to several fans i l tonight's
hall gams.

Foreign Ministers
Ready Final Plans
For Big Meeting
PARIS td—The Big Three fnn»
ngn ministers began Until prepara­
tion* today for Ihe historic Geneva
summit conicrence with the Soviet

Union.
U.s. Secretary nf Stale Dulles,

British Foreign Secretary Harolrl
Macmillan and French Foreign
Minister Antoine Pinay met In tiro
French Foreign Ministry. They
had before them ■ detailed draft
of proposed plans for Hie confer­
ence. Thi* Included list of Ixsuea
Hie Wed will raise and propositi
on each, submitted lo them hv
experts id Ihrir Hire* governments
JOPLIN. Mo. id—Authorities to­ yesterday.
day awaited a fingerprint com­ If tlie minister* approve the ex­
parison before definitely labeling port*’ work ax expected, K wi'l
as a hoax Audrry IIran.It's story form Hie joint Western position
of abducting and raping a 2-year for Ihe iiegoliation* nevt week tw*.
tween President Elsenhower, Britold Sloox City Iowa, girl.
Brandt. 42-year-old farm laborerji*h Prime Minister EiTen. Trench
whose formal schooling ended In Premier Edgar Faure and Soviet
first grade, told officers W'edne* Premier Nikolai Bulganin.
day he was Ihe kidnaper of Donna
Sue Davis. Yesterday he said
Ills story was false. Iln said
h* mad*' it up after hruring an
account of the rape-slaying over
an automobile radio while hitch­
hiking.
Officers were inrllnexl lo believe
ITAZUKE AIR BASE. Japan m
the farmhand's original sto ry was —Tlie last huge plane in the great­
a hoax tint Ihey first wantrd to est ma*s troop airlitt in history
*ee result* of a check nf his finger­ was e»*1hound over lb* PaciLa
prints against those found in the Ocean today.
room from which Donna Sue was
When It reaches the United
taken Sunday night.
State* Sunday, two complete com­
bat ready regiments will have ex*
changed place* hallway around thn
Landlady Honored world.
The Army said Operation Gyro­
scope has "proved to the wxirld
For Saving Life
tha feasibly of transporting battlaST. PETERSBURG
-A land- ready men to any part of the world
lady last night waa rrrdited with in a minimum of lime"
saving the life nf » tenant who The last UI2I Glubcmaiter ranwas trapped in his apartment for ned ou men, complete with i r mi
a week.
and equipment, nf the lBTlh Angela
Grncr H Welches- became wor­ from Hell airborne regimental
ried after nut arcing her tenant, combat team toward their new
Ford iimbnn Walker, t.ij
borne at Ft. Bragg. N (’.
When puller broke jn they found
Thirty-six other Globe masters
Walker lying face up in the bath­ preceded it.
room.
His left arm was booked ovrr
bis head ami eaught in a small Seymour S. Graves
slool wedged between Hie bathtub
and wall. 1’olirc were unable In Dies At Hospital
determine immediately how he
Srymour S. Graves. W. died
came to be trapped.
suddenly
Hit* morning at Hie Fer*
Walk'T was treated for malnu­ lull! Laughton
Memorial Hospi­
trition and was reported in "fair" tal. Making his home at All Pal­
condition in a hospital.
metto Ave . he had lived in San*'
ford for the past 50 year*. Hu
was born In Big Cane, La., ou

Authorities Await
Print Comparison

Last Airlift Plane
Heads Over Pacific

Much M ay Depend
On Big Four Meet

W A S H I N G T O N fAT-Sen.
Georg* (D-G», said today the
direction taken by the Geneva Big
Four conferenca may determine
whether there is a new threat of
hostilities in the Far Eaat.
George, chairman of the Renat#
Foreign Relations Committee, said
progress mads by President P.laenhower in conference* with tha
Premiers of RriUln, France and
Russia toward lessening world
tensions ia bound to have a "heavy
imparl" ort the Asian aituatlon.
"I think Asiatic piobtrms should
ba dealt with separately as Aaiat k problems," George aaid to aa

Jan. 3t, 1886.

Retiring in 1945, he wax em­
ployed by Ihe Atlantic Coast Lin*
ax a trainman and conductor for
33 years. Mr Grave* wax a mem­
ber nf the Firat Method!*! Churth,
thr Brotherhood of Railroad Train­
men. and the OrdiT of Railway
Conductors.
Survivor* Include two listers,
Mra. Edward Cowan, Douginville, G*.; Mrs. Cecil Balei, San­
ford: two brothers, F. C. and W,
T. of Baton Rouge, La., six uiucea and two nephews.
Funeral services will he eonducted Sunday at 8 p. m. by fl»«
Rev. Milton Wyatt at Briaion
Funeral Home. Burial wUI
pl*M hi lh* OaUen Catnelary.

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ODHAM &amp; TUDOR

INC.

Will Have
Ready for you
THIS M O N TH
Bel-Air

"Designed Especially for Better. Florida Living*

EACH

HOME

HAS:
1. Spacious Glass Jalousled Florida. Room &lt;GmN“
2.

Full Tiled Bathroom (WITH VAN1TOBYAMOMiKKUB)

3.

M arble Terrazzo Tile Floors

4.

Beautiful Delmar Kitchen Cabinets

you otin poach compcti

5. Kitchen Exhaust Fan
6. Fully Landscaped Lands
7.

H o f P oin t S tove

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fbont

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and Refrigerator, am oem

8. Venetian Blinds
9.

to allto

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Five Ply Built-up Roof W ith M arble Chips
$

70.

Extra Large Closets And Utility Room

77.

Long Roof Eaves &lt;«&gt; you m n t hav*

to clou u?
youb windows sacs fan ix badcsx

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Weather

Inside
E d ito ria l

Society
Sport* __
— TV

Pate
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■

VOLUM E X L V I

fa u h lto fca d 1 9 M

2 Men Sit Silently
After Being Linked
.To July Fourth Death
OMAHA (A*)—Two men known i ga*— while police tried train to
for their retitenre on almost any |trace the trail of $87/100, much of
subject aat silently In Jail today— i it in 1100 bill*,
ene in Omaha and one in La* Ve* l Jailed were Frank Ellsworth, 38,

fi.on.eer Celebrates
85th Birthday Today
English Mother
jGoes To Gallows
For Easter Murder
LONDON or*-Ruth EUis, beauti­
ful blonde mother of two children,
« n banged today for the Easter
Sunday murdar of lha lover who
Jilted her,
0 The 28-yeir-old divorcee, a for­
mer model and night club ho*teai,
era* the 14th woman to be hanged
in Britain thla century and the
third alnce World War II. Her sen­
tencing revived a nationwide controveny over capital punishment
vrhlch continued unabated today.
A crowd of 1,000 pcrMi—14me
weeping, others laughing—stood in
^ ihe grimy north London street out­
r i d e the Ivy-covered, red-brick
Hollowly Prison as hangman Al­
bert Piarrepoint pulled the. death
trap.
Its slim resounded through the
building, touching off hysterical
arlei from the other Inmates,
Reporta from inside the prison
Bald the Icy calm Mrs. Ellis had
maintained during her trial in
June and aver alnce finally broke
£last night.

Giggling Annoys
Irritated Driver;
#Four Persons Shot
FLINT, Mich. UP)— A drinking
truck driver, Irritated by tha
"laughing and giggling" of fellow
patrons, shot two couplas In tha
head In s neighborhood tavern laat
night, atata police 'reported.
Two women and a man wei«
killed. Another man waa near
death today.
Kenneth Kuaner, 80, of Detroit
A v i a tatted In hla truck a short
time later near Pentiae, *5 miles
from tha scene. Police said ha
readily admitted the shooting end
could give ne explanation axeept
tha Irritation other patrons caused
him. They said ha had been drink­
ing but was not drunk.
KUtner told officers the four
victims warn “ total strangers,"
Stats police said Kuiner aat
A stalely at tha bar drinking a bear.
■ W h en he finished, they said, ha
went to a rest room, come out
and strode up to the two couples'
booth, spoke not a word and be­
gan firing point blank with 41
caliber automatic.

Senator Johnson
* Keeping In Touch

Today is July 13 and tha birth­
day of J. D- (Jack) Davison,
former mayor of Sanford, furnltura stora owner, baseball organ­
iser and early saltier.
Eighty-five yean old, ha la still
remembering "way back when" In
his modest home on West First
Street. Ill of health, hia mine la
still alert end the news of today
Is still his business.
Bom in East Haddon, Conn.,
he came to Florida about 53 yean
■go or so as a tourist but H1
got sand in my shoes and couldn't
go back".
My wifi and I cam# from Palatka en tha boat "DeBary" to
Sanford. We then went to Orlando
which wai about the same alia
(3,200 pop.)'
"I decided to stay so we came
back here and L worked in
furniture store, which waa then
located aerosa from tha post office
where Jacobson's la now, I bought
tha man out and opened a store
of my own end expanded to the
opposite comer because I knew
Sanford waa growing."
then. (8,200 pop.)
"W e had a city gounetl thaw
and I ran aa mayor. The mayor
sarved aa police Judge too. Ha gri
|25 a month. I served during
World War I and two terms afterwards. Boy Tlllli'a father w
police chief then and Roy worked
under me aa a policeman. (I see he
has come up considerably.)”
"During my administration a
bulkhead waa put in around the
shorn line of the lake end I sign­
ed all bond* made for the Femald
Laughton Memorial Hospital.
"Now the baseball situation
wai bad. We were considered
part of Orange County and we
decided to organize a baseball
team. When there waa basaball
In Sanford all tha stora eloaad. H.
R. Steven*, Arthur Yowell and
myself along with a I n othara
started a baseball association.
After we started beating Orlando
so bad tha story got around that
we had the fence on rollers so
when our players eame to bat
wa pushed it up to make easier
to hit homo runs. I think It waa
In 1913 that tha counties started
dividing bee suss of tha baseball
feelings.
"When I first earn# Tha San­
ford Herald was ctiled tha San­
ford Chronicle and owned by ■
Mr. Baker. Bob Holly came along
and bought it out and ebaagad
the naraa to Herald."

V a ccin e Released
For Inoculations
WASHINGTON IR-Th*
meat baa released enough Salk
vaccine for another 00,000 antipolio shots.
The Public Health Service ae
tion yesterday brought the clear­
ance of vaeciM supplies la leta
than a week to over cm million
cubic eatlmetora. Laat Friday,
tha government freed 300,000 Halts
One e.e. of vaccina ia used la a
single antipolio shot.
But even with the release of (he
710,000 e.e.'a of vaccine made bp
EU Lilly k Co., ladlaaapolla, the
total falls far abort of Urn ala mil­
lion shots the National Foundation
for Infant!!* Paralysis said on Juno
04 It would need to comp
raUttan at first
children.

WASHINGTON ifs-Sea. Lyndmi
B. Johnson, a heart atUek only
II daya behind him, la again beajnainf to keep la close touch
with developments In the icaatc,
where ha normally serves as Dem­
ocratic leader.
N in a Fren ch H eads
Johnean la atlO confined to bad
at the Naval Medical e n te r in Fired B yG ra n d v a l
suburban Bethseda, Md. Whatever
RABAT, Morocco IF — Moving
activity be undertake! Is-under swiftly only all days altar taking
the careful eye el dorian treating ever hla new Jeb aa French reaf
k in for a heart attack they have tent general In Menace. Gilbert
OroWval yeatordey fifed nine
im- Poangk ndmtolfltrsUse sffieial*.
and
i»|ksl, * w i ! i a i * ' , t ^
the aoriatod with tan aM galley ia

t

and Ray Wilson, S3, both of whom
are free on ball on robbery charges
in other title*. Ellsworth is from
Omaha. Wilson gives Tulsa, Okla.,
as hla home town.
The new warrants charge mur­
der in the strangulation death of
Mrs. Luluhel Hsgar Rosinian in
a Philadelphia hotel on the Fourth
of July.
The story centers around 1100
bills.
A spending spree in Lai Vegas
gambling establishment* by Ells­
worth and Wilson brought onto
the gambling tables 3 number of
$100 bills that excited the sus­
picions of croupiers and police
alike.
Ellsworth and Wilson went Into
the Lai Vegaa jail on suspicion of
robbery charges.
But police from New York and
olher cities were unable to link
up the 5100 bills and the rest of
the 587,000 the two had with any
robbery they knew of. Ellaworth
got out of the Las Vegaa jail first
and got tha money back. He left
for Omaha while Wilson wa* still
in Jail.
While this wa* going on, Phil­
adelphia authorities ware inter­
esting themselves In the flOO bill*.
Last night they amid their In­
vestigation had shown that the
Ellsworth and Wilson bill* ap­
proximated the serial numbers of
1100 bills found in Mr*. Rossman’a
safely deposit box.
That, they decided, was enough
to act on. Warrant* were obtained
and Ellaworth and WJlaon aoon
were both In JaU.

Russian Reporter
Is Main Attraction
During Dedication
STRATFORD. Conn. ID — With
pomp and spangles, show bus!
ness dedicated a new shrine last
night to p l a y w r i g h t William
Shakespean, but the main center
of excitement wai a somewhat baf­
fled, bothared Journalist named
Eugene Lltoshko.
Utoshko, a correspondent of
Moscow's newspaper Pravda, got
a special okay from the State De­
partment to travel hens from New
York after the Bridgeport Sunday
Herald suggested tha visit as a
symbol of cultural exchange be­
tween this country and Russia.
Tha slim, graying. 40-year-old
writer, doggedly smiling at sud­
denly being "a celebrity," opined
that the opening play, “ Julius
Caesar," was “ good, very good.'
Than he hastily added: “ But no
more festivals—not this year any
how."
For many of tha 1,500 spectators
the visitor's verdict waa generous­
ly kind.

O ffic ia ls A ccu sed
O f Own D ecision
MEMPHIS. Twin. (fl-Ctty offi
rials wars accused last night of
deciding to build n municipal pow­
er plant because they couldn't
"dlrtete" to TVA,
The accusation was made by
four Arkansas rivie leaders who
appeared on. a TV program spon­
sored by representative* from 50
•aat Arkansas cities.
Program moderator Jim Halt,
aa attorney el Weal Memphis,
Ark., said Memphis city officials
“ wanted to dictate to TVA where
to get its power, and they wanted
to have full aay about how much
they could charge Memphians for
their power.

Seam an G a t s T r ia f
Behind C lo sed Door
PORTSMOUTH, England tP-A
In Britain's submarine
ant an trial behind dseod
today, cherped with revealIg secret mJermattea.
Ordering the room cleared of
spectators far the court • martial
a senior naval affttcr said, “Car­
les a security cl* sc­
are baa been aa to
a M p gocornre revrevwe
The defendant to AM* Eeaaua
Michael Ranald Andrews. Ha is

- wttk.taitaw to bead a

^ ^ ^ S o»«M *a a &gt; V P n eb

In an eftori to and tke

m to him to
to to. d ttto ."*

AN

IN D E P E N D E N T

D A IL Y

S A N F O R D , F L O R ID A .

BRATTLEBORO. VI. Lit — The
defense was set to hive its day
in court today m the federal trial
of Mrs. Lucille S -Miller. 44.
charged with advising nine young
men to evade military service.
The prosecution rested yester­
day slier U.S. Ally. Louis G. Whitcomb called the nme men to tes­
tify against the mother of three
children.
Each testified he had received
a letter from Mrs. Miller coun­
seling how to avoid military draft.
One of the letters siibmiiled In
evidence was written Miy 28, 1344,
and said in part:
"If you really don't want to go
into the Army, you can just re­
fuse and alt they can do is arrest
you, but you ran make them tike
a note on any property you have
for bail even if it Isn't very much.
They can \eep your property tied
up but they have to let you go
free.
“ I am going to fight a scries
of these draft cases and will be
glad lo fight yours for you (free of
charge) but If you don'l want me
to fight, why don'l you Just fight
It yourself?"
A letter to each of the nine
young men was read by U.S. Alty.
Whitcomb. Attached to each let­
ter was a mimeographed sheet
which had the letterhead Green
Mountain Rifleman.
Mra. Miller published the Rifle­
man at intervals and mailed copies
to friends In various parti of the
country.

Riotous Welcome
Greets Minister
Upon Return Home
NEW DELHI, India lH-Prime
Minister Nehru returned home to­
day to a riotoua welcome which
faced diplomats who came to toe
airport to greet him.
A crowd of about 1.008 persona
broke through police barriers with
what appeared to be prearranged
ease to surround Nehru, tost.ng
flowers and garlanda wildly In his
direction.
The crowd pushed aside most
diplomats who had gone to the air­
field to welcome (he Prime Min­
ister back from his 37-day visit
to Russia and other European
countries, gw rat-drenched In 100
degree waather, many left with­
out shaking Nehru's hand.
*
Nehru, briefly angered at (he
crowds, also appeared dared as
he rode away to an open car.

WASHINGTON (JR-A Vermont
television man who has acknowl­
edged brief membership in Ihe
Communist party was among wit­
nesses called today by the Senate
Internal Security subcommittee.
He is Charles Lewis, public af­
fairs director of WCAX-TV In Burlington, VI., who has and hr
Joined Iho Communist parly ifi
1837 and “ quit twn or three months
later becaude I had my nose full."
After hla name was mentioned
to previous testimony, Lewis vol­
unteered to appear before Ihe sub­
committee and said “ l‘Ll tell
everything I know."
Other scheduled witnesses at a
public hearing of the subcommittee
include two New York Times
newsmen, a New York Daily News
reporter, and the aviation editor
of toe New York Herald-Tribune.

ib r c t f t
*

A n fltia lrd P ress le a s e d W ira

W E D N E S D A Y , J U L Y 13, 10.YS

Defense
Is Set
For Day

Vermont Television
Director Witness
Called By Probers

NEW SPAPER

K

Welfare
Secretary
Regretful
Personal Reasons
Given For Action

) vflka in Geneva, S wttareIwwt.
where praaldewt Elsenhower and bis top afctea will stay dunng Ihe
historic Dig Fowr "summit'* conference*. Newsmen, making their
Artt visit to tha "Littla White llotse” were tnld that police boata
will patrol the lake while aototan cover the grounds, (fetemaclnaal)

Local Theatre Guild
Hears Sound Advice
Woman Is Killed
After Small Girl
Steps On Gas Pedal
SAVANNAH, G*. LR-A * yearold girl, lelt alone yciterday to a
car which was parked wilh it*
engine running, stepped on the ac­
celerator and killed a woman who
was preparing to lake her for a
ride.
a closa frirnd of lha child'* para rlose fried of Ihe child's par­
ent!, was knocked down and
dragged 30 feet. She died to a
hospital two hours later.
Sirs, Beal hid placed Pauline
Mane Galley in her car and had
gone Into the child's home to gel
her a pair of socks. Shs was re­
turning to the ear and was to front
of It when the accident occurred.
TTm car wa* equipped with an
automatic transmission, and po­
lice said it apparently had been
left to gear.
The child's parents, Mr. snd
Mrs. Homer 8. Galley, witnessed
(be accident. The child was not
hurt.
FRETTY GOOD FUTURE
ANN ARBOR, M lch..t*-J. Paul
Burkley, chief engineer for the
Automotive Safely Foundation's
highway division, says Iheaa are
among tha things motorists can
«xpact for the future:
Separate highway lanes for spe­
cific speeds, helicopter removal of
disabled cars, bridges across
huge lakes, l i g h t e d highways
eliminating headlights and pave­
ments that melt snow and sleet.

torney and In addition wae elected
a* aialetani supervisor of regis­
tration as well at a member of the
House of Representatives.
Tha girls received Instruction*
In the Uta of voting machine* and
were taken on a tour of the State
building*. A reception waa given
by Dr. and Mrs. Doak 8. Campboll and greeting* from tha Gov­
ernor were given in the House
Chambers.
Mlaa Aahley, who was nominated
ns chaplain for tha FaderalUt
Party, told of tha political ralllsa
preceding (he general election and
of their visit to tha legislative
session* where the various officers
were sworn tn following tha
elections. 6b* was on* of 18 honor­
ary Colon*!* appointed by tha Gov­
erns* of Girls Slat*.
On* of tha highlights was tha
tour of tha governor's office whara
tha cabinet was in session and a
tour of tha Supram* Court buildtag. They were mot there by Mr*.
Collins whs waa “ very gracious"
aha laughingly related. Mist and were aat-ved refreshments.

m ehaeee n e d lrih

Nr*. 2 3 L

Mrs. Oveta Hobby
Resigns From Post

Sanfnrd Theatre Guild member*
urra told ways of publicizing lha
"littla theatre" at laat night's
worshop meeting in tha City Hall
auditorium.
Hill Vegan, aisisiant manager
of tha Lag* bond ('layer* of l-'lat
Rock, N. C., a professional troupe,
urged tha organization lo put on
•kits for rivie rUihs and lo assist
rhurrhei in religious plays.
Vegan, who led a discussion on
"Other Forms of
Presenting
Drama," praised lha Theatre Guild
and commented on tha talent dis­
played in ita performances. Vagan
i* in charge of tha action) of tl
theatre associated with lha Vaga­
bond i'layrn.
Ha read part* of Oscar Wilde's
CTh* Importance of Being Earn
rat," a perennial favorite with
littla theatre groups, arid Genrgi
Bernard S h a w 's "I’ gymalion,1
Thratre Guild members read por­
tions of "Harvey",
Tha meeting was the second in a
serlaa of workshop meeting! de
signed (o foster inlerrst in ama­
teur theatre by providing enter
lainment and inalrurtion in all
phase* of Ihe work, I.ait night's
program was under the direction
of Misa Dilon Baker, aasis|ad by
Georg* Dabbs.
Tha next workshop will ba held
August 18 wilh Franrit Koumillat
Jr. and Bill Herschell in charge.
Out-of-town guests las) flight
war* Miss Mary Andrea, Orlando;
Mra. Walter Patton, Ml. Dorm,
and Mrs. Lillian Lyatrr, DeLand.
PASSENGER RECORD CLAIMED
FORT WORTH. Tex. trt-The Air
Force claimed a new passengercarrying record today tor land
based planes. Tha XC98 transport
landed at Convair'a plant here yratrrday wilh 212 persons on a flight
from Ran Antonio.

Pilots Hear Girl State Reports
Miai Mery Tanner, Pilot Club
repreaentetlve to Girls Btato in
Tallahassee In June and Misa
Faye Ashley, representative of the
American Legion Auxiliary, ware
guti la of tha Pilot Club at a pic­
nic meeting held at tha home of
Mra. A1 F. Hunt en Palmetto Av*.
last night.
Mlaa Tanner related cxperiencec
o f the first four days In TaUahatae*. The first erent was attend­
ing the graduation of Jtoy* State
which was followed by e dance.
Tha next day waa taken up with
Instruction In city and county gov­
ernment after which candidates
lto on behalf of their candidary.
group wae divided Into the
Nationalist and Federalist Partis*
with Mlaa Tanner becoming a
number nf tha Nationalist* and
Mlaa Ashley, the Fadarnlista.
Tha Nationalists cheat for thetr
slogan, said Mlaa Tanner, “ United
Wa Stead, Divided We Fall",
tha mtf MattonaUet to

Partly dtmdv throe gh Thursdsy
with scattered thwart* and a lew
thundershowers southeast tou t.

over the business meeting aa Mra.
Esther Ridg* wai welcomed into
tha club aa a new member and
announcement wa* made that hire.
B. E. Chapman would hold a
school of instruction for naw mambars In tha near future.
The group decided to held a
plasticware party on July 26 at
8:00 p. m. at the Yacht Club. All
members were asked to bring two
or more guezle. Worn iheets, to ba
used for bandages in an African
hospital were solicited by lha Intarnatlonal relation* chairman.
Hr*. Rwamon announced that
there air now aevrn members ef
the Pilot Club who belong to
the recently organlted Woman’s
A'uiliary to the Seminole Memor­
ial Hospital.
Th# next meeting, n plrnle, will
be held at lha horns of Mrs. Car­
ter on Grandviaw A*a. en Aug.
18 at which tlma Mra. Bit* Steven­
son, delegate to tha pilot Inter­
national Convention in Lee An­
geles July 3740, will give bar »**«ti
»
,

WASHINGTON
- Mr*. Dicta
Culp Hobby today resigned *s sec­
retary of welfare effective Aug 1.
President
Eisenhower picked
Marion R. Folsom, now undersec­
retary of the treasury, to succeed
her.
The President railed a special
new* ronfrrenrr to make the an­
nouncement, snd. in an emotionparked seene, paid warm tribute
to Mrs. Hobby as she aat by his
side in Ihe conference room.
On her part, Ihe retiring Cabinet
officer tol.l Eisenhowrr that as he
prepare* to go to Ihe Big Four
rnnfrrrnrc at Geneva "everyone
of us will be praying" Ihe sessions
will lead to a "truly universal
peace."
Mrs. Hobby's resignation had
long been expected. Without ever
formally announcing her resigna­
tion. Eisenhower turned to Mra.
Hobby and remarked solemnly:
"flvela, Ihia Is a very sad day."
"Personal reasons of a high
order compel me to lake leave of
my post as secretary of health,
education and welfare," Mrs. Hob­
by wrola.
While she did not specify Ihose
reasons, friends said Mrs. Hobby
Is leaving beeause of lha illness of
her husband, former Gov. William
P. Hubby of Texas.
•
"Only such reasons could per­
suade me to leave your administra­
tion or Ihe responsibilities of the
department, and If agrteablc, 1
would like to make Aug. 1 Ihe ef
frrtive dale of my resignation,"
she mole.

Young Hungry Man
Is Too Consistent
WORCESTER, Mata. (T-Richard P. Ctncotta, 31, was arrested
early today tor breaking into the
same apartment wilh monotonous
regularity.
'
Police laid h* admitted entering
an unlocked apartment on Pleaiinl
Street on July 8 and taking a
watch valued at 350. He said he
sold It lor 50 cents to get sating
money.
Ila relumed thi next Hay, he
wai quoted aa saying, and itole
a pair of dungarees, leaving his
old* pants behind.
He re-enlered tha nm e apart­
ment yeztcrday and said he stoic
a 375 camera. He said hn sold It
tor 33 but received only 31.50 ei
a down payment. Cincolta waa
quoted ai saying ha needed (lie
money In pay tor a mail.
Ila was arrcitcd in a restaurant.

Unemployed Driver
Admits Slayings
Of Two Victims
JAMESTOWN. N.Y. (31—An un­
employed taxi driver h*s admitted
the rape slaying* of his sister-inlaw and her IB-month-old daughter,
police lay.
Jmeph Read*. &gt;6, who dcicribcd
himself as a "xxax maniac," wa*
to be arraigned in cily court today
on two counti of first-degree mur­
der.
Th* alocky, sandy-haired Reade
signed a alatemenl, police laid
last night, admitting he strangled
and beat to death Mrs. Beverly
Reade, 38, and her daughter Cheryl
Lynn early yeatarday.
"Inwardly I feel lhat I want In
fee the beat Chriitian in Lha world
and o u t w a r d l y I'm a xxxx
maniac," ho told police. “ I can’t
control Ihe outward part and 1
don'l know why."
n
Police laid th* prisoner, a native
of Corry, Pa., waa married and
the fathar of one child but wai
separated from hla wife.
PRISON RIOT QUELLED
PRINCE ALBERT, Saik. 'At­
Guard* at Saskatchewan Peniten­
tiary forced 800 prisoner* back into
their colli laat night after a twohour riot* to the prison yard. A
guard and a prisoner war* In­
jured.
The eonvieta set lira In 18 budd­
ing*. burning tha *table*, flour
shed and cement abed to tha
grand. They grabbed six guard*
a* hostages but relisted than aftar n Mm*

Senate Republicans
Criticize Action
By House In Cut
WASHINGTON T—Three .Vntts
Republican* today rntirirod * 628rr.illlon-dollar rut by the Home in
President Eisenhower's (nreirn aid
program and urged at least par­
tial restoration by th* Senate.
Die Senate GOP Policy Com­
mittee arranged to discus* the
$2,658,111 ,J5o money bill behind
closed door« todav amid indication*
tl would informally suggest an in­
crease.
Sen. If. Alexander Smith (R-NJ)
said Ihe House artinn "is almo«t
a vote of lack of confidence in
Pre*(dent Elscnhouvr znd Secre­
tary of Stale Dulles just as they
arc selling out for one n( the mn&gt;t
important diplomatic conferences
in 10 years '—the summit talk* at
Geneva.
Sen. Dirksen (R 111* wairl "Ihe
Hutise nicked this bill too much''
and said he would icck some res­
toration hy Ihe Scnala Appropria­
tion* Committee, on which he
irrvci.

Title Search Now
Holding Up Work
On Highway 17-92
The title search It lha o r if
thine now holding up w-nrk on U.
S. Highway 17-82, county zoning
agent John Foi and Counly Coinui*ii0fiteuJ)abO Mritrh told Cham­
ber of Commcrro director* at
Iheir monlhlv macling last night
at Cily Half.
In leading a dimisrinn and re­
porting on road activities, the
two men pointed out lhat (lie coun­
ty aiming board will h»ld a meet­
ing this month to adopt regula­
tions
Earl Higginbotham announced
that plans are nearing completion
tor a barberua Saturday night,
July 30, at the Country Club lo
welcome Capl. .I*ck*nn, the nmv
commandin' at the Naval Auxil­
iary Air Slatton.
Georg* Tkiuliy reported on Iho
plan tor operation of an excursion
Itoal from the cily pier. The Cily
Comnmzion, at it* meeting Montteg;-nlghl—awarded an cxciu-li*
friHemsa'ftrthe excursion boat to
W. R. Kemp and Richard Sodero,
Orlando and Winter Park husincs1men. Touhy said Ihe operation will
be similar to that at Ft. Lauder­
dale whera such a boat ha* been
running for year*.
Touhy also pointed out that tha
lekefront development plan ad­
vanced hy Kemp and Sodero i* not
a dead Issue. He aai.l Ihe mrn are
presently a w a I ti n g architect's
plan*.
The director* voted to contribute
the chamber'* service* and postage
for mailing out ticket* at it* part
of the effort lo revitoluu the local
baseball organization. TIte action
followed a report hy Florida Stale
League president John tender.

Government Sale
Told By AEC Group
SCHENECTADY. N.Y '.S' -T h *
Atomic Energy CnmmUzinn today
announced plans for the first gov­
ernment talr of alomic-produced
electric energy and said it would
be introduced into Ihe NiagaraMohawk Tower Corp.'s public util­
ity ayiteni "in the near future."
The commission said It his set
a price of 1 mill* a kilowatt-hour
after studying recommendation* nf
interested public power organiza­
tions and alter consulting with th*
Federal Power Commission.
A* (he AEC explained it. siesta
from a prototype submarine re­
actor at West Milton, N.Y. will
bn channeled Into a 10.000-kilowitt
turbine generator to produce pow­
er which will be told by Ihe AEC
(o Niagara-Mohawk.
The generator wa* installed and
will ba oparaled by the General
Electric Co. at no cost to the gov­
ernment, Ihe AEC said.
RESIDENT'S BISTER DIEB
Mr. and Mrs. Carl H. Harrta
have Just received not toe of tha
death ef her litter. Hr*. W. J.
Plummet] of ChiUicotht, Ohio.
Mn. Plummal) passed her 33tR
M M « • June A

J
■

k

�m*

■

THE SANFOTTO HEHAT.T*
W ed. July 13, 1955
Page 2

M a d g e
H as

L egal

N o tic e

&gt; otice o r A rrticA Tiojr r o e
TAX HEED
NOTICE
1ft MKKEBY GIVEN.
TM« J It Ortnt th* holdrr rf th*
foilnwlnd e*rllftr*t* h*« ftUd
ctrtKIrat* for t*» Aw\ to ti» !■sutd th*r»on. Th* e.rtlfleat* numb*r »n1 &gt;*»r of lnuittr*. th* d*»cription of th* prop*rty. »t&gt;d th*
atm* Ip »hith It «* » e»»*i«*d
•r* at follow a:
Cartlflrato No lit T*»r of la•uanr* Juno It. A. D. 1»*Z
m.-aritirTinx o r rn ow in T ti
K aid ft Of hri II ft of Chuluoia
Hoad &lt;C*«a Hat* ltd I
a fi !,*•» Firit Addition To
Ovl.do rial Book 1 rt»a 111
Nama la which ilitiin l D. D
Danlal
' All 'of aald prnparir t&gt;*tnd In
th* County of atmltiol*. &gt;1*1* of
Florida. L'nlaaa
.m -M *uth
p,,ii r*rilflcaio
.
*hall ha
PH r»drrm*d
irnrimru arrnrdlna
11
\to
Jnw th*' proptriy iftifflbM In •uch
crn
iiK .ii" will
w in rhii eold
w'liu tri th* hlhfe*
ftlfir.ll*
rat blddar at tha front door of ttio
Haidlaoio" County Court Ifou** at
Blisford. riviiBHi
Florida, un
on «*•
tha *firit
pinitiiBi
■* _v Mon.v .l
(lay In ih» month of Anrun. I 'll,
wrhlc.b Ic tha l*t day of AudUlt,
IIIS.
pal*d thli :)ih day of Junt,
lltl.
O r Ilarrdon
Clark Circuit Court, Bamlnnla County, Florida
•Official Clark! ftMlI
J 'n T I f k

or

A F F L IC A T ID X

FO B

TAX DEED
NOTICE IB lir.n F.B T atVEN.
That J ft Grant tha ho|d*r of th*
follow in* corllflrata haa filed aald
e*rlllleata for U i dead tn ba l»auad tharaon. Th* rerUflcat* nurah*r and -a r of itiuane*, tha daicrlptton of tha prnparty, and tha
nama In w-hlrh It waa aaaaatad
ara a* follow*Cartlflrala No 2n| Ttar of I c
•uanre Jnoa IS, !*S1
iir a c n ir r io h o r rn n rK S T n
Lota II «» si II II 4 IS Cprlnf
Hammock Flat Book 1
S
to 1
Nam* In which aiMtaad Bank
of Mulbtrrr,
All of aald prnparty htlnr In tha
County of Gtmlnnlr, fttata of Flo
rlda. l.’til*aa aurh rertlflcala ahall
ba radatm*d accordlnt to law tha
prnparty dfierlhM in auch eartltl
eat* will ba aold to tha hlahaal
bidd*r at th* front door, of tho
ftamlnela County Court Hout* at
fanfnrd. Florida, on tha flrat
Monday In th* month of Auduil,
n il, which la tha lat day of Aui
’ ual, l ll l
Hated thin 2!lh daw of Junt, till
O. r. Hendon
Clark Clrrult Court, Senti­
nel* County, Florida.
(Officii! Clrrk'a H*all
BRTICF. n r APPLICATION FOB
TAE HERD
h
NOTICK IB HEBERT OlVEN,
That Itn*a G. Bayta th* holdtr o
tha follow Ind c*rtlljr*l* haa filed
•aid rarttflcata fir t n t ri*»d to -r
taiuad lharaom—T%a hartlflcanumb*r and yaaf ol lituanra, tha
daaeriptlon of tha prnparty. ant
tha nam* In which It waa aiaaaaad
•ra aa fnllowai
Cartlflrata No 1ST Trar of It
■uanra Jim* 27, A. D. 1!&gt;2
IlKat.niPTln.N n r MtorERTTl
Lota mi ins 4 ms mark Hammock according to Plata th*r*nt
racord»d In Plat Book 1 I’ataa
II. Aa lit * r u t Book 1 raaaa
To. lit 4 111
Nama Tn which aaaaaaad Black
Hammock Corp.
All of aald proptrlr balpd In lha
County of Bemluol*. juai* of Flori­
da. rm»»» aurh rartlfloata ahall ba
r*datmad arenrdlnv to law
__ lha
.
prnparty daacri.
rlb*d
-.. in aurh rartl
oata will ha aold to tho hyihaat
hlddtr at tha front door of tha
Bamlnnta County Court Knuto at
Baorerd. Florida, an tha flrat Monday In
‘ tha month of Atisuit m i ,
Whl
which
la tha Ul day of Auauat,
HIS.
U batad
{
thla Slth day of Juno,
111II.
O, P. Herndon
Clark Circuit Court, ■•mlnala Cauntr, Florida
(Official ciarlca Baal)
IN COt NT n r TH* COI'ftTT
J t lH ik ,
0EN IftlH .il
t « t . f t TV,
•TATI1 o r rL D H lU A i IN p s o ,

IN
# *HE
• THE EOTATB OF
ANOREW FILkO
Oacaaiad.
CO ALL WHOM IT AIAV CONCERNi
Notice It haraby glvan that Boban V. Htaamlllar, Adminlairater
w.w.t. filed bla final rapert
apor aa
dmlnlatratnr w.w.a, lof. tha . .
tho
...&gt;U
. of
— Androw FI
___
I iof
f AAkron,
L ___
Ohio, Summit County, dicaaiadi
hi*. haSumi
that
fllad hit-----------------petition for final
that
ha flitand that ha will apply
dlacharat,

m o r*

M e r e d ith

H u bby,

B aby,

C a r e e r In A c t i n g
t lMutklM
Mk
H y - flic k S u m n e r
HOLLYWOOD (,P—Today Midi*
to La. 7,
!*eredith h n slmoit everythlni
ih« could want—a husband, a
the crew—making Ha noisy way hard work, his shoulder* bowed,
CHATTICn EIGHTEEN
baby, her acting career and peace
WHARTON and hia two aide- straight toward him. And there but not hia spirit. If necessary,
of mind.
Iclcka weren’t In the Longhorn, but wasn’t any dodging a meeting, for he'd lay down what was left him ot
The only thing lacking Is a par­ Colder waa, lounging against the Bandy had already aeen him, and Ufa. as matter-of-Urtly aa he’d
don for a crime which she jurats bar, hit green eyca taking tn the wss bearing down on him. He mut­ throw away a asnnhad cigars t, tor
she didn’t commit.
room without aeemtng to watch tered an excuse to Rusty aad Col­ tha man who paid him his wages.
der, and came forward to greet the Tbs sight of him made Kerry feel
Miss Meredith served two snd anything. Ha amlled at them.
rotted up and uncomfortable inside.
•Well, aee you're loose again. old man.
a half years in prison after being
He want over to tha bar, want­
“ Well, Kerry. Gied tn aeo you,
convicted of conspiring to kidnip Payi to have the right Mends."
boy. How you been makla’ out?" ing company and note* to keep
"Bure
does,"
Rusty
agreed
ami­
and beat up her former manager.
him from *N*"irt«g
But bla
"Can’t complain."
ably. "And apeakin' o' payin', Ker­
Nick Glanacilt. Former Gov. Earl ry an* me tgura we got aotne
"Bit down an' have a drink with thoughts ware as panM ent as lllea.
Warren commuted the 10-year len- poker winnin’a cornin' to us."
me." From tho tone of tha invita­ Brush them aeray, and they kept
trncr in J9S1, calling her case "one
"Bure." Calder pulled out a wal­ tion Kerry knew be wasn't going coming back.
of Che moil bizarro I’ve p e r let and counted out a handful of to be asked questions, or re­
Ha downed another drink, as
awn."
crisp notes to each of them. "That proached for hia desertion of Rob Wharton and tha two Margie had
and Broken Spur, as he’d more called his wateh-dogs p u s h e d
After the trial, flawi were found right?"
through the’door.
"Seems no to me. Tan ml lifted, than naif expected.
In Gianaclu’ tratimony. Later his
Bandy's Barca loyalty.
Then weren’t nay twn weye
petition for citizenship was hlorketf Kerry?"
about Wharton. Ba was tn ax ugly
But if Bandy wasn’t
Kerry nodded and stuffed tha
by an immigration officer who said
formation, he wasn’t volunteering mood. Ha bore straight doers on
the manager was "so devoid of thick roll ot greenbacks |Dto hia any. Kerry Anally had to oak, Rusty. Kerry began edging hia way
good moral charactrr that He pocket, reflecting that he wouldn't "Well, bow's — everybody back through the crowd toward hia
need to worry about a Job for
would willingly commit another to ewhile.
home?"
friend.
prison through (also testimony.”
Bandy wasn’t to ba easily drawn.
Wharton swung his heavy head
Aa Rusty put hi# money away,
Saya Miss Meredith: "Goodwin aomethlng felt from hia pocket Ha mentioned Jared ToLaatd’a poor around to glare at hha. "So you’re
Knight said in his campaign and landed on tha floor with a health, commended Christie's man­ out. tool"
"Taah, Tm out. Any objections?"
agement of tha Slash T, observed
speeches for governor tint one of amall clatter. Calder laughed.
*1 might not have—an' then
"Still carrying your l u c k y that she waa "purty as ever,"
his first acta would be to pardon
spake non-com mil tally of bar in­ again 1 might!"
me. 'Qiil was two years ago. and pleceV
“ they made you tha law tn torn
"Bun am." Rusty displayed to creasing friendship with Cameron,
he h an ’t done anything about It
worked around at last to the
since. I was hoping it would hap­ Kerry on the palm-of -hla hand, the and
trouble with the nasUra. Ha told
n mu
pen before my baby was born, hut abject he had picked up, a crudely tt tersely, without comment, and
to get
aiiver medal of the kind
it didn't. I am very disappointed." carved
pious Mexicans sometimes wore again it wss Kerry who waa
In Santa Monica, the governor around Uielr neck*. "Mexican forced to ask, "Bow's Rob taking
mighty smart,
denird Ik ever promised Miss wrangler for aa outfit 1 used t* ItT"
Wharton growled.
Meredith a pardon. And ha added rlda for give it a a Bald long aa
"Lika you'd expect. He's flgktln*
no," Rusty debe won’t give her one now. He l carried It, Td never tie drowned. mad. o’ course, but he's not really
to turn tha
aaid hr had considered her esse Ah’ you eee J never have. 'Oouree,” worried f i t everything tn tha
la hia mind.
I ain’t aa
many times, but . . .
he grinned, "1 ain't been near no county's gone by hia aay-«0 so -On
"She has nol aeen fit In follow water deep enough t‘ drown tn. But long, 1 reckon ha figures nothin* dumb
proper procedure for applying for tt might come In handy some day, can happen Teoa bo M o tt.* Low­ tlon."
ering his vutoo, ns tt bo
a certificate of rehabilitation" . . . r never can telL"
taring a traaersiebt
Kerry's
attention
had
bean
sud­
you
The Appellate Court found tha trial
denly drawn away by tha eight of Bandy added, "There's auch a thing two-bf.
record remarkably free of errnr a dosen or to men pushing through as havin' it all your way too long
"Why, nobody, tar aa Z recol­
and ruled there was no miscar­ tha batwing doors. Dusty, un­ —you get too dang* aura &amp; your­ lect." Rusty appealed to the byriage of Justice, and . . .
shaven, vociferous, with the un­ self I Ha misses you, son," Handy Blenders, "Anybody baar me mea­
tier any names?" Hia mild eyas
"Her attempt to in|cct politics mistakable stamp of men Just tn added soberly.
"Did he Bay noT*
turned back to tho catUsman's ton.
is ample evidence of her unre- off the trail, they shouted and
"He don't need to m y to nee. X “•peekin' &amp; nama asllla', X don't
laughed and shoved thslr way ovsr
habilitated itatui."
with him a long Urns." Ba particular care for your brand aft
Two years ago, the actress waa to tha bar, a sight too common
married to Dr. Charles L. Corley. here te Dodge for anyone but Ker­ pushed back from the table. T n language, Wharton."
"Ton dent, e b f" Wharton moved
She gave birth to a daughter May ry to pay any particular attention gettln' too old to make a Mg night
of tt after tidin' ail day. h e goto* la closer, menacingly, UQ hia face
11, -Except for tha lack of a par­ to It.
How far, he’d asked htmself last back to tho hotel an* get acme wee inches from Rusty's That's
don, which denies her Ihe right to night,
did a man have to rids to sleep—lat these raanlae taka tho too bad. What you figure an M s ’
vote or be a guardian, her life is get away from the past? Farther town apart If they want to."
'boutttr”
complete. She ads in occaslonil than Dodge, that was clear. BoKerry watched him out tha door
"X figure bo fielab my drififc—tt
TV dramas and films, her latest cause there was Broken Spur—or - a lean, bent, stubborn old figure, you'll kindly mom your heed outa
being "The Ten Commandments.” a good part of it, aa repreaentad nil tha fat burned and sweated off the way."
him by nearly a half pantury ad
She looks back on her prison by Bandy Weaver sod over
(T e » a
years without any bittcrneis.
“ Oh, I fell very discouraged and broke. After watching the trial, I pressed by h ia that I figured
TRUST IN GOD
sorry for myself for about three
BALTIMORE (R — Catholic War
months, But f couldn’t fee) that win convinced you were being there mu|t be aomethlng to his
Veterans, crusading for more re­
way for tong, not when t had peo­ wronged. Now 1 wanl to undo the religion.
ple on the'outside pulling for me.” damage I helped eauie.”
T siked for lnilruetioni ai a cognition of God In American Ufa,
She added that if the hadn’t gone
“ They believed In mo and kept Catholic, and he gave them to me. are encouraging Marylander* to
aing the last stanza of th« Na­
tn prison the would not have known working for me,” Mill Meredith
But1 ha wouldn't baptize me. He tional Anthem.
"aueh wonderful friends." Like
zald I would have to wait until
Zasu rifts who appeared at tho aaid. ” 1 couldn't Iom hope.* *
In that stanza are the words
She added that she found faith I got outside. When I was released, "in God is eur trust*'
county jtll and burst Inin tears
I
became
a
Catholic.”
saying, "I don’t know If you know In priion.
Dan Ogleiand, flrat vie* com­
who 1 am, but I think you’re Inno­
“ Thera wai a Catholic priest
mander ot tilt CWV Department
cant and I want to help you.”
there, a Baaqua," she arid. ” 1 had
of Maryland, aald specially-cut
WANTS NAME CHANGED
Or Joe Ledlio, a newspaperman heen ratted In another faith, but
DETROIT OB—Eleflharoii Ka- U RPM records of th* ’ ’Star Spanwho visited her at Tehachapt pris­ it had never meant loo much la vouniditj ’W; asked Pribale CouA glad Banner will be distributed
on end aald: "I wrote tome dam­ me. Thli prieit was concerned yesterday to change hia nam* to to all posts. Soma posts to pre­
aging headlines about you during with all th* girls—Catholic, Prot­ Larry Andrews, "Even my wife sent the records, by tho Boy’s
tha first three days your cate estant and Jewish, I was so Im­ can’t spell my name,” he said.
Town Choir, to schools, ha aald.

Y O U

G E T

M O R E !

_______ ^ ' t h !
ft1T'ma ftCKBv *no. ri 3 i
°OEUDIE,
Plaintiff,

POTATOES 2

11-01.
Coni

33c

4

10'A-ox.
Com

37c

M b SHARP CHEDDAR WEDGE

CHEESE

% -lb.
Cut

29c

DAILY I RAND— two diets

DOG FOOD 2

1.1b.
Con*

15c

I -•«.
r -n»

35c

DAILY HAND

CAT FOOD 6
AGARS SPICED

LUNCH MEAT

12-ax.
Can

29c

SA IL

WHITE HOUSE— Safe Pur* Sterile

EVAP.MILK 3
Eig h t O 'C lo c k ,S * S

Tall
Cans

35c

CANNON HAND f t

BEER

or

v r a p v

A le

iiM iy

cask

ft*01

MARVKIOUS "S U P flM tlO H T "

MEAT BUYS

9 3 .0

''SUPER-RIGHT* WESTERN BONELESS

Y

/ i t

H LC Orange Ad«
fln iw n tte a

fC -

CARTON 89c

A LE

Gtont
47-ox.
7kg.

71c

UmoBrats
a wait* * " I 3 C
Ubbys SwMt Pra 2^ 37c
TOCCD r

DETERGENT

ca m

23*

ROUND STEAK lb. 69c
Porterhouse STEAK lb. 95c

"SUPER-RIGHT* WESTERN

»toum tin

ic

I c i y i l l l l l l roeuna lUMt

ckxo Shortening 3 Lbs. 73c

Nutioy Morgorino '&lt;£ 19c

h

"SUPER-BIGHT* WESTERN

Chuck ROAST

lb. 39c

RIB ROAST

lb. 69c
0

"SUPER-BIGHT* WESTERN
ENGLISH CUT BONELESS

lb. 59c
lb. 59c
lb. 33c
lb,39c

BONELESS EXTRA LEAN

Y O U

W . OCDDITa

P A Y

‘ ‘SUPER-RIGHT”

L E S S !

la bet, you can jmy a much as $500 m m lor modluavprioo cot that ara mn/l§r that tha w afrifil
Plymouth! Model for model, medium-price cu t coot much mere then Plymouth—check price tap
md am how much more ear Plymouth fto e you for pour (U u l Drtte * big m e R i m k ttdefl

ALL

ru n m u

BEANS

you ara
ora
;k, &lt;Ht*,fllad.
(tjeaa flUa Bfalnit
agataat you, and
ant rou
„

SOUP

AAP FANCY SWEET

"SUPER-RIGHT" EXTRA LEAN

caatad

«

TO M ATO

15c

Shoulder ROAST
BEEF STEW
SHORT RIBS
-2 9 c
W A TER M ELO N S
FRANKS n w a
H A LF33c
. W H O LE59cI

Moat Birr o ! any low-price car, for a truly blg-car rid* , , , moat aiA inr with beautiful, all-aew Forward
com roar in tho roomiest interior* in Plymouth's field . . . matt tx rx T r and
acoNQMT features. , , two top tftctwm the ^cylinder Powerflow 117 or tho 167-bp Hy-Fire V-8.

Admlnblrator, w.w.a. nr
: u u or i s u r t w

DAVJD

4-ex.
Con

GRAPES
**■ 2 9 c

f1u s

8#

ANN PAGE

PEEDLEBS

Look styling . . • moat

i

sure sign
savings

"SUPER-BIGHT* WESTERN SHORTCUT

B

“ j

items

lowprices
m e n days of the week are a

Hjuina
10 IfJSlA
*«nr* 4SSPL
cop/ Acl* -rour
your
V-\u
i rA&lt;1or
ftiwtr
PlM dlir
to Mb* C*m'

JANE PAfiKB

FRESH TLA,

t e a s !

.. sj.V
*!&lt;«
/iW t u $5',

C h iffo n

U. a. NO. X W U T B

POTATOES

10 LB.
■AG

Cake~49(

UOUNlFf
I v W *
£W K u«.

JA M PAJUC*

A -J e x C te e e e e r Ie **»23c

Chcny
«7,a1

■on

ir m
B M fl U

Vel

i s 3Ue T ?

72e

Fo b

r

30c r

72c

e r iw #

£

33c a

1 7c •

H t t K jS T S ;
“ft

— “ •13c

U pB af

1% LB.

'.

••ta#|p.i;-.«;..*k5’..&gt; 4* ;«r'

m l

Kc

&gt; *•' •'

'

'

'

■

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27c

.* M » M &gt; *

‘ ■’

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♦
MOM

mm

'

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19C

.

.

mmm i

Ml

*

�Q u a l i t y K lg U a '

OPEN ALL D A Y
WEDNESDAY

419 E. 1st. St.
300 E. 3rd. St.
SANFORD, FLA.

Air-Conditioned
For Your Comfort

HERSHEY’S
GRANULATED

No. 2*/£ Can*
SHORTENING

ELBA QUEEN RED TART CHERRIES

BAKERITE

K. P. LUNCHEON MEAT
DUTCH WINDMILL COOKIES

3 LBcan 59c

Unit On* With
Other Food Order1

BUTTER FLAVORED COOKIES
CRACKIN’ GOOD RAISIN COOKIES

DETERGENT
Unit Om With
O t e Food Order I

LARGE
PKG.

19&lt;
19&lt;

CRACKIN’ GOOD OATMEAL COOKIES
19
CRACKIN’ GOOD FIG BARS »
« *• » » 39&lt;

Limit Two With
Other Food OrderI

KS, PRODUCE
U. S. Ha. 1 WHITE

POTATOES ~ Q U A L I T Y M E A T S
SUNNYLAND SMOKED

Pounds
fan cy

WHOLE or
FULL HALF
8-12 LBS.
AVG. WT.

o a u n sw o t

C O R N

"EAT-RITE' Veal

'TAT-Rinr*

JUICY LIMES
if L

u -c-S S e

m

.| 7

c

ORANgI JUICE 10 &lt;- 99*
FROZEN SHRIMP
». 49*
FRUIT PIES
4 — 99*
JESS HWILL

PICNICS
STEAKS
SHRIMP
SQUARES

Green

Sliced Spiced

12-oz Pkg

“EAT-RITir SUced

Lb

KRAFTS Olive, Olive-Plmlento or Pineapple

CLOVERBLOOM

37*
BUTTER
Margarine ^ 19*

opt

Cheese Spreads 2»•- 45*

*•— IS-

SUPERBRAND Log* Grade "A"

SUPERBRAMD

WCGS

■ i

11 ! * &gt; &gt; » . * . ■

Lb

Vi-Lb Potties

CAMAY
lZ T tte

SUGAR CREEK Pure Pork Bmaldaal Link

Bed Salmon Pith

Slacktye Pen
Oran Bean^b:

DPI
MCGS

W IEN ER S ---39*
SAUSAGE &gt; 49*
Lunch Meat * 39*
BOLOGNA - 39*

4-Lbs Not

DOOANA

u u H c u .J i o

^

BOUTHDUf STAB Conned Cooked

CHICKEN PIES — .
8REEN PEAS
SPINACH ? £ ,
BROCCOLI “ ■*

LB

•YST-MTE"

FROZEN FOODS

U»SOe aw 72c
CRISCO

LB

t

TAT-RITr*

2 * 25*

SHOW

LB

'TAT-RITEi

2 - 25*

'»■* 5Sc

JM CP

CHUCK or SH’LDR ROAST
VEAL SHOULDER CHOPS
VEA L CU BE ST EA K S
V E A L LOIN C H O P S
V E A L R IB C H O P S

AVOCADOS

WESSON OIL

LB.

Shipped Eggs

WOODBURY

D I A L

D I A L

Y rtslS eep

Totet I m s

Toilet loop

2—

23c

2

25c

2 —

33o

D U 2
30c Oi-72c

53‘
IVORY
SOAP FLAKES

_ » .3 0 o

�eeaa o f that system depends on the realiza­
tion by those who make It work, labor and
manng»ment both, that they sre dependent
upon on* another and must pull together.
Theca .ire &lt;igns that that realization is
coming to pass.

Gains Without Strikes
Ajrreement* recently reached between
labor end management in two of our moat
basic Ir.duMrlei, automobile* and aterl, give
assurance to observer* of our national econmlc health.
Ga!u« made by worker* In both Indus­
trie* were jrreat. The automobile worker*
won a atnrt at e. guaranteed annual wag* at
well as wage Increases and the ateel worker*
were granted generous boost* in their hourly
rates. Perhaps what I* moat encouraging
about a'l this I* the fact that it came to
pass at the bargaining table. While atrlkes
were still held a* a possible weapon by the
union* in neither cate did a major walkout
of any length taka place.
Not «o many ycara ago labor and manage­
ment negotiated in angry faahlon, each de­
termined to give ground only when forced
to do so. Negotlatr* for both sides today are
no less anxious to win their points hut some
o f the hlttomesi ha* disappeared, noth, al­
though neither admits it in so many words,
are no longer an convinced as they once were
that right I* al' on one side.
Our syalcm of private enterprise ha* re­
sulted in the highest living and working
Standard* In the world. The continued euc-

Visitor* to Congress frequently criticize
whnt *«*ms to be absenteeism on the part
of the law maker*. At time* only n small
percentage of the members are on the floors
of the respective Houses. It Is hard to under­
stand how Congrass can get any work done
If Its members are not at the place where
they are eupposed to work.
There are thing* about members of Congrsss which Justify criticism. The comment
about absenteeism, however, Is not entirely
justified. Congress I* a large body with
many different kind* of jobs to do. To make
it* work m&gt;re efficient It work* through
commiitee*. Thus, when it appears that a
member of Congress Is neglecting his duty
by being away from the Senate or the House
he may actually be hard at work on com­
mittee business.
As in any job there are member* of
Congress who do stay away from their work
without sufficient reason But for the most
part thev work long, hard hours. It is
however, to accuse Congress of loafing.

The Sanford Herald

e r a s m im o x ratrb
U r a -r week
o a a Maalk
Rf.aa
a ll Mealha
Aaa Tear
liM
rr.tr
ait sa
aetlree, earRe at tkaaka, raaalallaae aaa
**f e a te rta la a ra ) far tke aararee ml ralrtaa
ka ekaraea tar at reaalar aRrertlelaa ratal

■ t Carrier
T k ir e Mnalha

p a fla a a llr
kr tiraaral
Ml
tlrarala karlaa*
Stlaata a rrra le

ABtertlrlaa
Re ah
R ita

ta a Meatkar a f tka AaaartalM Praia
Ilia* a ir la a lr r lf ta tka aaa far raaakllra*
ail tka laaal « ■ &gt; rrlaiak la tbto aaw *M *ra.

Wednesday, July 18, 1055
RIBI.E VERSE
Cursed lie he that taketh reward to slay
gn Innocent person.— Deut. 27:25.—Some
lawyers will take p case that Is fraudulent In
Intent and result. (lo-.sip mid slander hnve
the same end. It I* nn unprofitable practice
In the end.

Boll Club Investment
Tha baseball club owner* are wise to
look to the future of their trams. Today’s
player* must constantly be replaced by
others i* good or better, If the attendance
Is to hold up. And no source of talent Is
more important than the saudlot*. Some of
th# moat autcexsful player* have come dir­
ectly from them to the ntHjor leagues. Others
worked their way up from them through
tha minors, and some came from colleges.
But the great majority used to play with
scrub team* on vacant lots. If the gnme died
nut at tha gras* rootl, the baseball parks
would soon ha empty.
Recognising this, tha Cleveland Indians
and the Cincinnati Redtega, representing the
two leagues, play annually, the receipt.^
all golrr to th* amateur organization*. Well
over 1100,000 ha* been realized for this
purpose In Ihe last few years.
Baseball magnates sometimes give cause
for chance* o f shortsightedness. This Is one
case where they aee clearly.

SAM DAWSON

Great Housing Boom Shaping Up
NEW YORK IF— You’re piylng
e bigger price far your new home
these day* but toms builder* clsim
you're gelling m en for your
money,
Regardless of that claim, •the
of building materials, labor
land 1* going up. Bo then'i
pressure for price boosts although
game builder* may ebiorb higher
eeiti to tell more homei.
Hie nation U In the mtdat of one
gf IU great*it bousing booai. Nsv-

B U IC K
i

Tra d e -In s

•rtheUia, competition la homebuilding la getting keener and the
builders’ margin U being squatted,
according to the Housing Inilitute,
economic adviser* to Business.
Builder* } wlll have lo uae all
their production ingenuity to keep
isle* priceiJn 11m deaplle th* coil
bMiU, lays Nalhan H. Hogg, economlit for the National Ana. ef
Horn# Builders (NAHB).
The l i u heme buyer ii much
smarter than the buyer ef els er
seven years age. He's ehoosier,
has more definite ideas of what a
house should be.
Ae Interesting roundup on hew
big builders from coast to c m i I
have improved their product to
please this present day buyer has
just been published by th* ffAHB.
Homes are bigger, coiilier, mere
livable than the houses produced
by the same builders In IMg er

'IS—but a number of builders say
lha price per square fool It either
leas now than II used to be or
about the same.
For saimple, Earl W. (Flat
Top) Smith, of El Cerrito, Calif.,
president of the NAHB, who pio­
neered contemporary design and
Rat roof house* In the Shi Fran­
cisco Bay area, compare! hit 1949
house with the type he's building
now.
HU 1949 house colt IS,100 while
the 1933 house ii gio.ioo. They're
both on a lot of 3,000 square fret
hut th* 1949 lot was valued al only
1100 compared with gt,t00 for the
1933 lot.
Disregarding this hlk* In tha
price ef land, Smith aaya th* 1949
customer paid M per square fool
for 1.100 square fMt ef house while
the 1993 customer pays only tf.fiO
a square foot for 1,*00.

CleaiUnce B k le#
c a r e ala* • a S a ■
rtoaa , • * * *
£

Basra

MARYVILLE. Tenn
- Thar* tern of social and economic life town In all my days?
ii • naw kind of “ hillbilly.”
In the area.
“ The country's the best plac*.
Hare in lha Great Smokiri — Th* mountain men, marvelously
haart of old hillbilly land — the quick to team new akilli, now It'a a better place to raise kids.
mountain people have found a new come down into th* valley* to They learn how to save—and they
way or life that enable* them to work In the factories — but most don't get Into so much trouble. My
keep their ancient freedom while still cling stubbornly to their homes children have no desire to Uve id
town."
eiciplns the poverty of the pari. in Ihe hull.
While revenue agents are certain
The fictional hillbilly ha* be­
Some drive up to SO miles to
come part of American folklore. their Jobs. Whan tha quitting there is nil] a great amount of
He la a ahiftleai figure in overalls whistle blows, they climb Into their bootlegging in the Tennessee hills,
who run* through lha hilla bare­ car* and drive back to the moun Clark saya the grow lit of factory
footed. a guitar slung over hi* tains, and till their hillside patches jobs has cut it down.
ahoulder, an old hog rifle In one They like Ihe factory money, but
“ When f was a boy you could
hand, a jug of moonshine in the they don't want lo come down and count seven stills from where 1
other.
live In Ihe cities. They don't like lived." he said. "Now there las’!
But your real mountaineer Isn't city air.
one.
that kind of man at all. The popu
"The liquor now Is being mad*
Typical
of
these
mountaineer*
ii
lii idea of a hillbilly tickles his
deep in the mountains where User*
sense of humor. Sometimes he does Robert Clark, a 43-year-old black- are no Jobs. Many of the men wh*
not mind playing up to this role sin' *i in the Alcoa Aluminum plant made moonshine In the old days
bit for the tourists, hut he does here. Each day he drives 10 miles never touched it themselves. They
not relish having a “ flalland fur- to work from his 10-arre mountain did it only to earn money for the
riner” call him a “ hillbilly." He farm where he lives with his wife family."
prefer* to he known a* a Southern and six children.
Clark who, like most mountain
Clark raises much of his own
highlander, a hillsman or mountain
food. He can afford the comforts of men, la deeply religious, neither
man/
The Industrialization of the Ten- the city man, but he wouldn't wil­ smokes nor drinks.
“ 1 never bought a bottle of beer
neaste Valley hai brought rapid lingly'move to Ihe city if you gave
changes Into (he traditional pat him a house with five balhroomi. In my life," be laid, “ and I’m not
“ Good times are changing the about to." „
He feel* hels pretty lucky. If*
mountains fast," he said. "Very
few- people live in log bouses any­ has retained Ihe rugged Indepen­
dence and Indivlduatiim of his an­
more.
“ The mountain people no longer cestors, be has achieved an econ­
have the deaire to live in (own, omic security they never knew~
hecause they ran now have every­ and ha can still enjoy the sunshine
end perhaps more realistic, to ai&lt; thing In town they need. They have and s h a d o w and frec-btowlnf
sum* ihe Russians are talking electric atovei, television and ra­ winds of the mountains.
Hillbilly? Clark wouldn't trad#
peace—provided they're at all aln* dio.
cere—from quite other motives:
“ W« have food schools In the places with any citybtUy ta the
A realization that their tough country now, loo. There’s an tto.- land. He has life made.
tactics have solidified the Western 000 school going up in my neigh­
•
allies while toft talk may split borhood.
Rainbow Natural Bridge In Uthem, since all are eager for
‘rWhy should I want to live in tah arches across a 271-foot spaa
peace; a realization that in a hy­ town? You know', I've never had a at a height of 309 feet and could
drogen war. which gels closer haircut, a shave or a ahoeahlne In straddle lha U. 8. Capitol.
every time the Ruaslana get tough­
er, no one can win; and perhaps
hope that a shift in tactics will
keep Grrmay disarmed, a result
they failed ta attain by auagger
Yea! DMdandi from 18-85% on
and bluster.
Fire-Wind Homeowner* Iniuranc*
The real question, whose answer
won't he known until after lha Ge­
neva confrrece. at least, Is this:
are the Russians sincere at all in
wanting peace?
TOUR
MUTUAL INSURANCE FRIEND
Butter consumption in tho Uni­
BINCR I9U
ted .States is 9 pounds per person

JA M E S M A RLO W

W hy Do Reds Sound Reasonable?
WASHINGTON !W—Unless Dlls
rountry has a spy In the Kremlin,
President Eisenhower will prob­
ably go into the meeting a puzzled
ftian when he sits down In Geneva
a'wefk from Inday with the Brit­
ish, French and Russians.
lie'll be well coached on Ihe de­
tails n( any proposal* he nukes lo
the Russians, or any they are like­
ly to throw at him. But what js
apt to mystify him, unless he has
extraordinary inside Information,
la vshy Russia has sounded reason­
able lately.
Every time something happen*
in the Kremlin—a death, a shift In
power. a purge—there's a spurt of
wishful thinking In this country
that now there'll he an explosion
and an end In cnmintilsm.
There'* been another spurt In
recent months because the Rus­
sians talked of wanting In end the
cold war. Various wishful reasons
have hern offered: that Miry need­
ed peace, due to a critical food
shortage, and so on.
For people aupposedly that wob­
bly, the Russians have made amaz­
ing irlenliflc and Industrial prog­
ress alnre the war. In the past
year some Russian leaders have
made statement! critical of their
own agriculture and industry.

True, that might he a frank ac
knowledgenicnt of serious Internal
tro Mile. Rut Ihe very frankneaa
ran also he interpreted a* showing
marked strength and confidence on
(he part of the Kremli leaden.
If they were in bad trouble, would
they want to acknowledge it la
their own people and outsiders?
llsrjily, if they were in real dan­
ger.
Last week Eisenhower said he
knew of no one in Ihe government
ulm wav suggesting Ihe Russia*
were seeking peace because of
weakness. By coincidence, the next
dsy a congressional committee re­
tailed the record of a hearing,
held a month ago, at which Secre­
tary of Stale Dulles said the Rus­
sian economy was collapsing.
The White House lost no time
soft pedaling that the next day.
"Collapse" ia a colorful word
which, when u*«-J about Russia,
could not help hut please members romparad to 17 pounds
World War 11.
of Congress. Dulles is sometimes
given to colorful words.
But many of th* men around
Dullei are reported to feel that
while Russia may have some eofl
spots, they are not necessarily nf
the kind that would force her to
seek peace.
It would be Just aa reasonable,

new

SAVING IN COST

BOYD-WALLACE

before

114 S. Paltofttto Arc.

Sanford, Fla.

O a t In th a a w l m —o o o l o ff w ith

ROYAL CROWN COLA

YOU'RE TELLING ME!
— T V ....................

tyWKUAMMW-

Central FraaaWriter

THE PRESIDENT had his pietur* taken wtariny fishing boot*
and wielding rod and net That,
says Orsndpappy Jenkins, should
settle th* quMUon of whether he
will run for re-election.

I ! f

cow, the Borteta tetrad a 19court* dinner for th# U. ft. pawn
pusher*. A kingly repeat, Indeed
—and probably Mrved ta Um
quean’s test*.
I I I
Onnfen hoars are disappearing
Inf* Ike ground et Downey, Call/.
Badah Dumkop/ wtahra ike Mine
would happen lo hie lawn n i w r.

Jiefly* volcano, Ifennf Nine,
must be pro-American, ft staged
• SMfNl/lr*Nt Arework* diaaley on
I I I
Ike Fourth e / July.’
Aboard ■ Bum Mlttn* from
I t t
Instead, Sara siewnwnye hid In iho
Austroflaw ewta 410 •yetees In funnel#. Wander who M w m who
•a hear..news Item, hi Jvtyf Or, ameked ’em eutt
mnrbe, Down Under they swell the
I I I
CoM wind* and rslna sweep a t
I I I
Andrew* during play ad the Brit*
Th* Russians were so overjoyed leh Ope" golf meet However, we
St fitting sway to n commanding understand t h a t , waatherwla*
lead in their tinea tournament that’s par tor the eU BceUIdh
with nn American
in Mew-

Try and Stop Mo
-B y S I N N I T T CRRF-

$11*

so1

New W ay Of Life Found In Hills

Congress Works Hard

m b it***# Sail? esrapf SaiarSar aa# SaaSar
M « V a i n r a t at.
S t t t t H •• a t t t a t rlat* aaaH»r Ortaferr IT. IBIS at
t*a Cart Otftea at Seata,#. B'lrrfia. aaSrr Ika Aal
a f C ra r r m at Marrk S. ISTS
StlKO SRRNISS. R illr r l i t Rabtttkrr
J U M SBTM RItl.Aklt
Maaaalaa RAItar

mz

T f/IL L IA M EWART GLADSTONE—doughty Prime Minister
V* ef Britain In tha latter half nf th* nineteenth century and
hate Mir of Disraeli—oarar would have entered tha political
•rent at all if his fathtr had
not exerted relentless pros*
sura, according to his latMt
biographer, Sir Philip Mag­
nus. What Oladateiw roally
wanted te be waa a clergy-

G en eral Insurance
H.

JAMES

GUT

AGENCY

812 EAST FIRST STREET
PHONE fS

E JAMES GUT

iA im a

gut

IBM,

Furthermore, claims tir&lt;
Philip, Gladstone pot only
had nethihf te da with tha
OUdateM hag. hut probably
never heard of it. Ka did.
hewtvar, lavw t Um pMUl
card.

• o o

Than M i M d Arterites
worrier* to this eeuatry, tod ft apetoal prim to ftastetefy tto h g to tho
at Twafttlllh ~

MIMEOGRAPH PRINTING — TYPING
CREDIT INVESTIGATIONS M ADE
AN YW H ERE IN UNITED STATES OR
FOREIGN COUNTRIES

CREDIT BUREAU OF SANFORD
IN m i tm

N O O T H M C O L A IS

K i 'V . W ,

so low in calories

CHOOSE &amp; USE

icholson
/

\

'

R &lt; • ••Cttinf cool u toft be with
kft-cold SC. HMeetly, there’ * aathiaf m m i j , m
aparklin|, ao completely coolifif as ■ froaty Royal Crawa
GoU. No ether epU te so lew ia calorie* yet Mate* aa
Rood. No a that cola ia aa b risfa l * f aaurt teteteter
ill Gat SC— Iota a f RC— todjyi

3&amp; k4k

�n
U I U I .il III.H JM

Baptist Circle Meeting*

S o cia l £vfwtiu
'(p c A A n n a h

Circle No. Six
Methodist Church,
Has Regular Meet

“ The day* and nights arc so
much cooler than at home" claim
the recent Bursts of Mrs. W. P.
Cirrte No tf of the WSCS of
Yesley. Mrs. Georgia Clemmens th« First Methodist Church met
and her niece Carol Boyd of Kan- Monday afternoon at the home of
sa* City, Mo They have returned Mrs, L. T. Doss, 1501 East Second
to their home after a weeks visit St.
in Sanford.
Mrs. Randall Priest led the def Mrs. W. T. Brooks, 417 Second •ntional opening with prayer ami
Street returned from Savannah, * reading of the scripture from
(7a. after a five weeks visit with Matthew (5, Mark II and Luke 11.
Mrs. J. E. Terwilleger Jr. con­
her daughter, Mrs. R. F. Curry.
ducted the study which was based
Mrs. Sam N. Knight and child, on “ Prayer". Mrs. T. A. Rutner,
ren. Sammy, Shell and Stephen of chairman, piesided over the busi­
lUllglade, were gnrst* last week ness session while routine reports
of her mother, Mrs. Hertleson- v c re given and it was decided that
Smith and Mr. Knight's mother, the circle should have a market
Sirs. W. A. Knight Sr. and other ba*kct sale at the August meeting.
It was also decided to take bas­
relatives.
kets of fruit to the circle shut-ins.
Mr. and Mrs. Ram Murphy, Mrs. Mrs. Rutner urgrd members to
Henrietta Murphy, and Mr. and stlend the general meeting at the
Julian Murphy, are spending this rhurch on the first Tuesday nf
every mouth.
week at New Smyrna Reach,
Refreshment* were served to the
Indies:
Mrs. Mabel
Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Walker and following
family have as their guest Mr. Eluunt. Mrs. T. A. Rutner, Mrs.
Walker's mother, Mrs. Alma I*. Alice llnyne, Mrs. J. R. Houk,
Walker, Tallahassee, who will he Mrs. R. M. Mason, Mr*. C. F.
Mims, Mrs. Randall Priest, Mrs.
visiting them for a week.
K. R. Smith. Mrs. R. W. Sturdi­
|| Mrs. Sam Knight and children vant, Mrs. .1 E. Terwilleger Jr.,
and Mrs. Rertlrson-Smlth spent Mrs. Olive Wells, Mrs. J. P. Her­
Friday in Palatka visiting various ring, Mrs. L. T. Doss and Miss
Aline Chapman.
relatives.
Mrs. Frank O. Hall Is in Pnnn- thrr Me* Geneva fnlies have re.
tuirurti nnm a rnp to Cleveland,
and pleasure trip.
Ohio, where they visited with
friends and relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Smith and
Mr. ami Mr*. I! T. Humphrey
family have returned home aflrr
vacationing fnr several days in enjoyed the weekend in Braden­
ton Reach where they Usiled their
g^Dayluna Rtach.
daughter nm. family, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Knight E. M. I.ayfietd. and went on a deep
o f Avon Park were rerent guests sea fishing trip aboard “ The Ad­
o f Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Uutnrr miral", The boat is riptained by
Jim Rage, cousin of Mrs. Zcb
and other relatives.
Ratliff.
Mr. and Mrs. Genrge Eirk and
Mr. and Mrs. John Bukttr and
Sandra, left Monday to spend sev­
Mr. and Mrs. Joe YanieK will leave
eral months in New York.
tomorrow for their home in Cleve­
Lt. Paul F. Hudgins is home land, Ohio, after enjoying a two
{ffo r a short visit with his parents. v.'crks vne.ition in Sanford with
Mr. and Mrs. I.. R. llodgins at the former's brother and family,
Mr. and Sirs. Peter Rukur, While
£018 Talmetto Ave.
hrre they visited many placet o f
Mrs. Albert Fitts ami her mo* interest throughout the state.

i

The WML' of the First Baptist
Church me* Monday at 10:45 a.
nt. for its regular circle meeting.
A covered dish lunch was served
at noon and the ptoctant was
presented at one o'clock.
Mrs. John L. Miller was leader
in charge and Mrs. Volic Williams
gave the devotional and led in
prayer, praying for the Baptist
World Alliance meeting being held
in London.
(iucst speaker was Mrs. W. A.
Hickman, missionary to Paraguay
v ho gave an interesting talk of
the work being done there.
Meeting wjs dismissed in pray­
er.
CIRCLE ONE
Circle No. One met with Mrs,
II. C. Mnotr, chairman, presiding
over the meeting which was open­
ed with a prayer for guidance by
Mrs. Martha Marshall, Mrs. A. J.
Peterson presented tho devotional
on “ Walking With God'*.
Mrs. Marshal] gave the ste­
wardship talk stressing the im­
portance of Christlikn lives, being
careful not to be stumbling blocks
to others.
Mrs. Fred Myers, mission study
chairman, spoke on the Baptist
World Alliance which meets in
llondon, England this month. Mrs.
J. F. Lewis chairman of the
children's home reported many
coupons turned in for the home.
Mrs. Myers closed the meeting
with a prayer for tho home.
Those present were Mrs. Fred
Myers, Mrs. A. J. Peterson, Sirs,
Mack Cleveland. Mrs. W. C. Buie,
Mrs. F. L. Woodruff. Mrs. R. C.
Moore, Mrs. J. F. Lewis, Mrs.
Martha Marshall, Mrs J. L Lee,
Mr*. \V. E. Giles. Mrs. W. I^Stounrm uirr alia Sits* A i m o i i wee.

CIRCLE TWO .
Circle No. Two met in the Edu­
cational Hall with Mrs. Terry
Illtd presiding over the business
meeting opened by tho Lord's
Prayer. Mrs. Grace Bishop read
th'&gt; Watchword, “ I-ahorer* Togeth­
er With God". I Cor. 3:3.
Mrs. John Miller gave the de­
votional,
“ Spiritual
Freedom".
Mrs. Yolia Williams, community
rhairmnn, reported Mr*. Bird,
Mis. Reiman and Mrs. Williams
went to the County Home and
rerved refreshments.
Mrs. Myron Smith gave the rnMl»tnient report and the meeting
closed with prayer by Mrs. F. E.
Bolz.
Tho«e present were Mrs. Terry
Rird, Mrs. 11. H. Martin, Mra. My­

ron SmPh, Mr*. John Miller, Mrs.
Voile W'tlllanis, Mr*. E. M. Carroll,
Mr*. C. L. llewson. Mr*. Grace
Bishop, Mr*. F. E. Rots and Mrs.
H. B. Carter
CIRCLES It AND I
Circles No. 3 and 4 of the WMU
met with Sirs. Roy Britt presiding
in the absence of the chairman.
The session was opened with a
prayer, followed hy a talk on the
“ The la rg er Stewardship" by
Mrs. W. H. Murray.
Reports were given on the var­
ious projects of the circles.
Those present were. Circle No.
3, Mrs. W. 11. Murry. Mr*. Hal
Colbert and Mr*. W. L. Stoudrnmlre and for Cirrle No. 4, Mr*.
Alice McManus, Mrs. J. Roy Britt
and Mrs. Ed Cowan.
CIRCLE FIVE
Circle 5 met in the Gleaner*
Clav* room for the July meeting
with Mrs. G. II. Sykes rrading the
minutes from the June meeting.
Buelnese was attended to and
Circle No. 5 and B combined their
devotions. Scripture for the sub­
jects was taken from Ramant
1:14-18 and was given by Mr*.
Muirhead. Several of tha Junior
GA'a sang their song and the
Intermediate G. A.'e gave a talk
on their work.
Those present were Mr*. G. It.
Sykes, Mr*. Ralph Betts, Mr*. B.
R. Berk, Mrs. W. D. Gardiner,
Mrs. R. T. Thomas, and Mrs.
Charles Park.
CIRCLE SEVEN
Circle No. 7 met Monday in the
TEL classroom. The meeting was
opened with “ Watchwordn of the
Year", led by Mrs. W. A. Krai
fert chairman. Prayer was given

try

I*1T»* altmr)

AT*fmn»Trw

Juanita Wynne brought the de­
votional using John 2:1-11.
Mrs, John Abrahams read a
letter from Helen Masters, mis­
sionary in Nigeria and Miss Hilda
Ergle told o f the work In Ihc
Intermediate G. A.'».
Mra. J. M. Moya gave the Ste­
wardship lesson from tha book
“ The Calvary Hoad". The meeting
was closed with prayer.
Mrmbera present were Mrs. W.
A. Kratzert. Mr*. A. R. ImveJny, Mr*. S. A. B. Wilkinson. Mr*.
Turner Lodgr, Mr* J. M, Moye,
Mr*. M. Cummings, Mrs. F. P.
Rlnes, Mr*. John Abraham*. Mr*.
O. G. Roller, Mrs. M. C. Hagan,
Mr*. II. E. Turner, and guests,
Miss Juanita Wynne and Mis* Hil­
da Ergle.
Tanbroil Slowly
For finest results in cooking
thin lender beef straks, place
them In a frying-pan without
additional fat. Let them cook
and pour o ff any excess fat that
accuniulatra In Ut* pan. When
richly browned on both side*,
*caion and *erv* immediately.
•

a

■ ■

Career'* Aid
Help your carver; Cook th*
m ail to just th* right degree
o f doneness, neither underdone
nor overdone. Allow the roast to
“ set” in a warm spot for 20 min­
ute* before dinner time in order
In make carving all th* aaeier for
him.

Tv™f j q u t u y
*
if*--

AT THE 1*1*0 Wives meeting held last night on the Air Rnen officers for the organization were
elected, They are (left to rightl Mrs, Howard W olfe, (Occident; Mrs, William A. Johnson, vice nresi.
sir nt: Mr*. IV. Mr.lirrnw ski. secretary; Mra. Davtd Newbury, treasurer; and Mrs. Jnnir* A. Corbitt,
publicity. I Photo bv Jameson)

Mrs. Howard Wolfe
Elected President
At CPO Wives Meet
Mr*. Howard Wolfe was elected
president of the CPO Wives club
at a meeting held Inst night at
* °VI"&lt;k in the_CPO Club aboard
the Navnt Air Station.
Permanent officers were elected
after the charter and by-laws, vot**t *nt Hi iftm ff)fcvnt(|(
»__ __
Other effu-ers srs Mrs.
A. Johnson, vice-president; Mr*.
W. Malinowski, secretary; and
1 Mr*. David Newbury, trensuicr.
Mrs. James A. Corbitt had pre.
viously been elected at publicity
chairman.
Also settled wrre lh* Board nf
Representatives which is , . “ two
girls from each activity aboard
the NAAS" . . The duty of this
committee is to attempt to secure
members for the oi gnnizalinn.
Those elected were Mr*. .1. A.
Russell, Mrs, Harold It. Giiens,
Mr*. Russel A. Rpenrrr, Mr*.
Jnmes C. Pat sons, Mr*. R. Edge,
Mr*. J. W. Eastman and Mis.
A. J. Allen.
Mrs, W. T. Eijnl was circled
chairman of the welcoming com­
mittee which was organized “ to
wrlcom* new personnel to the
City and to help them make
friends anil gel situated." Mrs.
I’m bit l and Mis. Russell are also
members.
One member stated, In regard to
the rental lists that they have
started, that “ we ate getting calls
from the boys but all the apart­
ments we hail lislrd have been
rented by those ehead of them. We
would like the townspeople to rail
Mrs. Neil Trudrn at 4M-II or Mis.
Wolfe at 270-R if they have an
available apartment or house and
wish to have navy personnel in
them. They will lie greatly ap­
preciated."
The meeting adjourned after du*
business was attended In.

NEEDS

PRIVATE SECRETARY
Hunlness and Legal Experience Denlred. Mil*t fie
PleaMnt, Courteous and Intelligent. Excellent Salary
F or R ight Person.

Your boiled frosting too stiff to
•pread? Boat tn boiling water, a
very little at a time, until the
froiting I* toft enough to top a
cake nicely.

Write Box ABC c/o Herald

'

OF

BATES DISCIPLINED FABRICS
IN PRINTS AND M ATCH IN G SOLIDS
•
•

I

* All laquirlei Witt tU Trotted Confidential

NEW SHIPMENT

NOTICE
All Calendar
Listings And
Society News
Are Requested
By 5 p. m. The
Day Preceding
Publication

•
LAST TIME TONIGHT

•

HTAITINO TIMS TlM

•

■ •
•
•
•

Releases Creases
Stays Clean Longer
Washes Easily
N eeds N o Starch.
Dries Fast And Smooth
Little Or N o Ironing
Color Fast
Shrinkage Controlled
Advantages Permanent
1 6 " W IDK

FIGURED
S O L ID S

f «M — U l_
CABTOO*

*

* 7 ,4 9

per

YD

* 7 .2 9

PER YD
. •______________ ,

T ir e s a n t o n n tr e n A L n
W ed. July IT, 1355
Page 1

L--

Mrs. W. Hickman
Foreign Missionary
Guest Of Circle

LOCAL BUSINESS

MEMHKItK OF THK RAN FOB II Pilot Cluh honored at a nlcnle held last night a l lh* home o f Mra,
j Al F. Hunt at her home nn Palmetto Ave. Miss Mary Tanner, representative o f th* Pilot club at Girt*
' State in Tatlahanee in Juna and M in Faya A*hlty, American Legion Auxiliary representative. Shown
serving them 1* Mra. Harvey Swanson, club president. (Staff Photo) •

■I'llIH H y iB I H iW H I
. r-.r-; ■" *■ '

Miss S. Hayes
Reveals Rians
Final plans for the marriage of
Miss Sylvia Dalene Hayes, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. William Marshall
Mussclwhitr, Sr., to Robert Rus­
sell Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Donald O. Brown of Ann Arbor,
Mich., have been revealed today
bv

lira brute e le c t'*

lu re n is .

The uvdJtna will lake nlaee Julvl
I.S at 8 p, m. at the First Baptist
Church, with Dr. W. P. Brooks, Jr.,
officiating.
Miss Norma Kaye Harvey will
be soloist with Mrs Evans McCoy
rendering nuptial music im the or­
gan.
Serving 5lis* Hayes as maid nf
honor will lie Mlvs Ada Adams and
bridesmaids will he Miss Gad Bitt­
ing ami Miss Patty Haligan, San­
ford, and Miss Janice Iteel, Tampa.
Miss Pat Smith will serve as junior
bridesmaid.
Serving his brother as bc«! man
will be James II. Brown of Ann
Arbor and ushers will be Ronald
Rolila, Ann Arbor, Tommy Speer
and Terry Cordell. William A. Mus.
srlwhiU Jr., brother of Ihe bridccleel, will serve as junior usher.
Immediately following Die cere­
mony a reception will he held in
Hie Kdnrational building of Ihr
church. All friends nf the couple
are invited to attend the wedding
and reception.
Add a little grated onion and
sumo mange I lint to rreamstylo
cottage clin ic. Serve with sliced
orange, melon balls, bJurhcrijra
or black berries, sliced liiuuum,
salad greens. Makes a good lunrlienn
salad.
Accompany
with
French diessing or mayonnaise.

Roy Tillis Home
Scene Of Session
For Circle No. 8
Circle No. 8 of the First Mrtho.
Hist Church met at the home of
Mr*. Roy Tillis. “ 218 Magnolia
Ave., Monday afternoon with Mr*.
Claude Herndon as ro-hostes*.
The nteepng was railed to order
by the rirrle chairman, Mr*. Al-

Mrs. W. A. Hickman, missionary to Paraguay, spoke to mem­
bers of the Elsie Knight Circle ol
the First Baptist Church at their
meeting held in the Educational
Building on Monday evening with
.Mrs. R. K. Peurifoy presiding.
Mr*. Hickman described the liv­
ing condition* of the country
where she e.nd her husband hnvn
served as Baptist missionaries foe
tbo pn*t four year*. She said their
leisurely way of life compared
somewhat to the Southerner’s way
of life and that their courtesy it
unmatched. While their living con­
dition* are rather primitive, th1y
are gradually coming to know a
new ami bolter existence through
the efforts of the missionary
work ami especially the hospital
which has been a great help in
winning them to Christ, stated
Mr*. Hickman. The peopln of
Paraguay make beautiful laces and
linens and Mrs. Hickman dis­
placed several pieces of gossamer
thin loco a* well as a lovely hand
woven and hand made table cloth
with delicate laeo in-etl*. S’! «
aim displayed pictures that de­
puted their crude mode of living.
Mrs. Irving Pryor, who ha* been
a personal friend of Mrs. Hickman
for many years, introduced her to
the group. The devotional was pre­
sented by Mrs. Estelle Glisson
and Mrs. R. T. Hunt gave tha
names of those on the remem­
brance list to bo visited by tha
circle this month.
eail.'n ing the talk by Mr*,
j
man retrrsMiicnr* wer* served by
Mrs. Roy Reel, hostess, assisted
by Mis* l.orrne Franklin.
Those present were M u. Hick­
man, Mrs. Peurifoy, Mrs, Lillian
Vickery, Mrs. V. C. Messenger,
Mr*. Glisson, Mrs. Pryor, Mrs.
Reel, Mr*. V. G. Hasty and *i*tcr,
Mrs. Ray Mooro and her daughter
Marcia, of Chicago,.Ill,, Mrs. Hunt,
Mrs. N. C. Slavvter and grand­
daughter, Miss Marcia Phillip*
of Winter Garden, Mr*. J. R. A-hley. Miss F'aye Ashley and Ml»»
l.oiene Franklin.

p m jrr. nhr arso reait two poems
"(1 Pebble In the Water" and
'Simple Gratitude".
Reports were glvrn bv the sec­
ret ary, Mrs Zeli Ratliff and the
treasurer. Mrs, W. It. Kirby. Mrs.
Claude Herndon, rourtesy chair­
man, also made her reports, She
stated that birthday cards were
twing sent and visit* to shut-ins
made. Various business matters
mere dismissed and it was decided
to bold a market basket sale next
month.
Mrs. J. E. Courier eondueled
the devotional portion of the meet­
ing. Two new member*. Mr*. Ruth
Hawthorne and Mrs. Effie Mielkr
were welcomed into the rirrle.
Mr*. W. P. Chapman invited Ihr
cirrle to meet with her in August.
Delicious refreshment* of enkr
ami linte frnppe were served by
Hie hnites-r* In tbs following
members: Mr*. Ella Bolton. Mr*.
Rose Mnile Carlton, Mrs. G. II.
Cm lion, Mr*. W. P. Chapman,
Mr*. Tale Chapman, Mrs, J, E. |
Courier, Mi*. Dor* Gueiry, Mrs,
Albert Hickson, Mrs, Clniido Hein- 1
don, Mrs. U Hughey, Mr*. W. II,
Kirby, Mrs. Zcb Ratliff, Mr*.
Roy Tillis, Mi*. C. R Tate, Mr*.
Ruth Hawthorne, Mra, Effie Miell.e. and two guests, Mrs. It. Z.
Bolton and Mis. Milton Wyatt,

Happy Birthday
51 r

Today
O. It. Lapdress. Sr.

L I S T E N
t o
The
S a n fo r d

A t la n t ic

N a t io n a l

Bank

Speak
W
9 :1 5

T R

R

A . M .

P en n ey ’s
CLEARANCE
AL WAY S

FI RST

QUALITY!

CLOSE OUT

DRESSES
AND

• NYLONS, RAYONS AND SHEERS
• A L L FROM OUR REGULAR STO CK
• DRESSES T O WEAR NOW — YOU SAVE
• DRASTIC REDUCTIONS- YOUR S IZ E IS HERE

SHOP PENNEY'S-YOU LL SAVE

•u

�#

-

Stan 'The Man' New
Darling Of Baseball
In 6-5 Nat Victory
MILWAUKEE iff - Stan (T V
Man) Muiial, toast of the National
By Alan Mover
STILL IN CHARGE - - League for the past 14 years, I*
the new darling of baseball-mad
Milwaukee today even If he doesn't
wear a Braves uniform.
O F TH E G fA N T S ,
Th« majority of the rapacity
W H O SE
crowd of 41,314 paying customers,
M A1WA(
N A G E R IA L
not to mention the countless tele­
FU TU RE
.
vision viewers who saw the great
H A* BEEAf
St. Louis Cardinal star smash a
TH E S U B J E C T
llth-lnnlng home run yesterday to
O F EO MUCH
give the National League an up­
fPECULAT/Q Tf
hill 6-3 victory over the American
FcCEH TCI r
Jt
In the 22n.1 annual All-Star spec­
tacle, were convinced he's the
graateat.
The storybook finish was a fit­
ting climax to a wonderful djy
B U T r r 't
‘A IN
for Milwaukeeans, who were treat­
t h a t CO M B*
ed to perfect weather for tnelr
J U L y / 2 , /H
first All-Star home game In their
m
il w a u m e b , h e l l
three years In the N a t * o n a I
B E B A R K /N O
League. Not only did they &lt;ce their
TH E O R P E R S FO R
heroes overcome what at one time
T H E Z fA T/O N A L
seemed an Inrirmountabie vo
LEA G U ER S rrf
deficit, but a trio of ther own
T H E 2 * o ANNUAL
Braves had key roles in tile thrill­
ALL-STAR &lt;FAMe&gt;
ing eomeback drive.
It was Johnny Logan, Milwau­
OKA/
kee shortstop, whoslnglod In the
*/*k
first National League run in the
seventh. It was Henry Aaron. Mil­
waukee right fielder, who tingled
In the run that made It 3-4 In
the eighth and set the stage for
A1 Rosen's error that permitted
the tying run to cross the plate.
And it was Milwaukee pitcher
I f H/U BE UP TOLEO TO
Gene Conley's spectacular feat In
G ET THE HAT/oHAL*
striking out Al Kallne. Mickey
BACH Of! THE N/HHiHO
Vernon and Al Rosen In the top
BEA M - THE O L P B R m
of the llth that preceded Muslal's
C IR C U IT WON O H l/ 9
Mi
game-winning blow.
O F rH e F IR S T 1/
G A M E* B U T -HAVE.
-------,
There were other N a t i o n a l
IMPROVER 9/HcS -H A P
League heroes too. Willie Mays of
A 4-STP A IG H T W/N
the New York Giants contributed
s t r e a m fHAPPfP &gt;H1954
greatly with two rally-igniting sin­
gles and a leaping back-to-theIf i t f f tm m
fence catrh of a towering drive
by Ted Williams that had the
home run label lorn off It at the TUB SANFORD UKIIA 1,1)
rags €
Wed. July 13, 1935
last Instant.
There was St. Louis' Harvey
Itaddix, who pitched a fine three
innings after the American League
gluggers had blasted Into an early
4-0 lead at the expense of Robin
Roberts, Philadelphia's great right­
hander. There was Ted Klusicwakl, Cincinnati's slugging first
baseman, who bad • doable and
BROOKLYN Iff - Tha “ slump"
tingle and contributed a fielding
may be over for the Brooklyn
gem on a alsder by Yogi Berra
Dodgers, who lead tha National
that resulted in a rally-killing dou
League by only lilt games. Roy
hie play.
Campanella says he's fit again.
By GAYLS TALBOT
Last but not least was the gritty
Club physlelans gave tha freedutch pitching of young Joe NuxNEW YORK (ff-Not to give swinging catcher the okay to play
ball, the Redleg southpaw, who
away
any
sterelt,
but
the
fierce
again yesterday after examining
fanned five In S 1-3 Innings of runbaa pitching after relieving Chi­ competition to decide whether Aus­ the Injured knee which has kept
cago’s Sam Jones. Nuxhall struck tralia or the man in the moon him sidelined since June 33.
•ut Whitcy Ford with two out and la to fare our tennis players In the
Campy, beaming altar bearing
Davis Cup Challenge Round Aug.
the bases fuU In the eighth.
(he report, said ba plana to be be­
38-31 broils Into action Friday In
hind the plate when tha Brooks re­
There were heroes on the losing Chicago.
sume their pennant chase tomor­
side too. Billy Pierce was brilliant
The
antagonists
will
be
Australia
row night against tha St. Louis
in his opening three-inning stint.
Tbs little Chcago White Sox left­ and Mexico, and tie winner of the Cardinal*.
hander faced only nine as he three-day struggle will be cell
The elub doctors fitted CamStruck out three, did not give up upon to fight it out either with panslla with a special foam rubber
Cuba
or
Brasil
next
week
at
« run and allowed only a leadoff
Inset for his shin guard to protect
Louisville. And so It will go wall the Injured area.
•ingle to Red Schoendienst.
on Into August, ons titanic tussle
Mickey M a n t l e Itrock the after the other, until tha Issue baa
"Now I can stoop down for tha
ms's longest blow, a tremendous
first time alnce I got Injured (in
dsddad.
i-foot home run over the center
St. Louia, June III and It doesn't
Held fence into the distant trees Under tbs Davis Cup setup, there
Is
no
way
this
preliminary
slaugh­
with two men on base In the first
ter can be avoided. Every country mattsr how high the mercury
Inning.
soars. Any who show up for ■
Karly Wynn. Cleveland right­ In the world, sub, la entitled to toumamant so attired will be dis­
hander. picked up where Pierce its chance at the gleaming urn, qualified osi the spot, laid an of­
left off, bolding the Nationals even though It might poasesa only ficial of the association, aa quoted
scoreless with two harmless hlta three tennis player* who serv« by the Detroit Tlmoat
In tha middle three Innags, lull- overhand.
"Wo'r# for cool, aonalble cloth­
Tho odda are tbs Ausslss will not
Ivan, the tall Boston right-hander,
•lao did well, hurling S 14 score- lose an individual match an routs ing, especially la thli beat. But
tees relief innings until fcat fatal to the final tail si Forest Hills. acaaty costumes doe't Improve
If they drop even a set before they eoyono'e goU. If they did the wornMow by Mualal.
But tt was the 14-year-otd Mo­ tsekls tbs European sons winner •* pro* would play la Rlkialadal, the oldest National League at Philadelphia Aug. It-14 It wiU be but they don't."
"1 don’t say I wouldn't like te
MSjrer In the game, who received surprising. But the proprieties will
see JaqueUae Puny, the 136-pound
(be biggest ovation and who was hsve been observed.
Hawaiian; chunkjt Patty Berg; and
asarly hugged to death by bla joyThe Women's Metropolitan Golf
MS Utm mites when ha lit Into A*an. of Detroit baa laid down Uie several ethers playing golf in Bi­
VYink Sullivan's first pitch to law that its member* may not play kinis, bet that would be just e«ee,
for kicks, not te enjoy their golf."
boats ap lbs second extra-inning In skimpy skirts and halters,
-------la All-Star Watery. The first
In IMS whan Scboen- ■•red la the llth to give the Ni-

Lto DUROCHER

Sports
Roundup

Brooklyn 'Slump'
May Now Be Over;
Campanula Is Fit

Cardinals Shade
Gainesville, 2-1
GAINESVILLE - IP — Lefty
Pete Peteradh act Gainesville
down on live hits list nights *
Sanford defeated (he G-Men I t
before 702 Florida 8lala League
fans.
Sanford, which was mired In the
second division all through tha first
half of (he Florida Stala League
season, is on top now.
Second half standing* compiled
today ahow tha cards tied with
Orlando, the first half champion,
for flrit place.
Another new face In (ha first
division Is Gainesville, in third
place. Missing from the rank* of
the elite are Daytona Beach which
skidded from third to fifth; and
Wait Palm Baach, from fourth to
seventh.
There's been no change at the
bottom. It'a St. Petersburg.
The new standings were Intro­
duced because of a naw spilt season arrsngament adopted by the
league. Under It, th« first and second half champlona will meet In
a playoff for th« pennant. The
winner will then go against the
survivor of a aerie* between the
two teams with the next be t full
•eason percentage* for the playoff
title.
If Orlando wins both halves It
will compete in the playoff* with
tha three teams with the next best
percentages for tha full season.
Last night, Orlando went down
to defeat 7-2 at the hands of Day­
tona Reach. Lakeland whipped
Weit Palm Beach 8-3 and Cocoa
eonquared St. Petersburg 1-7.
Daytona Reach blended s hit
with a walk, an error and a hit
batsman for four runs In the fourth
ss 837 partisans looked on. OrIsndo Pena yielded nine hits, struck
out nine and walktd two In pick­
ing up hla llth victory against S
losses. For Alex Gordey, who was
dipped for six hits and flva runs
In six innings, It was the 3lh tost
against 17 triumphs.
(term Nlehaus and Jack Ferrell
paced Lakeland's 13 hit attack on
Hires West Palm pltchara with a
double end two ilngle* each but
Harold' SmelUley's trlpla and a
sacrifice by Randy Randle won
the game in the eighth. A West
Palm crowd of 344 was on hand.
Cocoa, playing before 483 at
horns, had a dote call In the
ninth when St. Petersburg scored
five runa. Tommy Garvin cam* on
to stop the rally. Jerry CllM had
a three-run homir for Cocos and
Jim Mlllsr bad ens solo,
tssroa u
M'rlclln *
l'r«&gt; lb
Ttrrali If
Sillier lb
Harder
Muller Tt
t). Conk Ik
Hrhmltt rf * psttr-nn ■
Tetate

a iis u iiL L n
Hrnwn

fe sV
hurt." laid Campanalla. ''That'* ■
gralsl feeling."
Brooklyn club officials should be
feeling great too. Since a spur on
Campy'a knee was aggravated by
a foul
the Dodgers have bad
* i f tip,
.............................................
only a 3-10 record,
l Other Injuries contributed to the
atump, but with Roy’a league lead­
ing batting avtrage (.333) on lha
shelf and hla home run output (13)
at a standstill. Campanalla's ab­
sence waa a big factor.

If Sun Shines
Tennis Tourney
Will Continue

» r m SOM, the former model and TV actreal who turned bull­
fighter, give* an enraged bull the slip as the sword and muleta paw
over Rla horn* at Juarez. Mexico. Making her twenty-first profes­
sional appearance aa a torera. Delta waa acclaimed by a huge
crowd when ahe fought and killed two bullSL
(International)

Charles Hoping
For Title Bout;
Favored Tonite
CHICAGO Iff—Eazard Charles,
34-yesr-old former heavyweight
boxing champion with hopes for
another title match, was a 3 1 fa­
vorite over young Faul Andrews
In their scheduled 10-round bout
at Chicago Stadium tonight.
The bout will be televised na­
tionally at • p.m., EST.
It’ ll be a must bout for both
the fading Charles and the 23-yearold Andrews.
Charles cannot well affo.d to
lose if he expect* to continue as
a drawing card and maintain or
improva his No. 4 ranking among
heavywalghts.
Andrews, wlnnar of M of his
33 bouts, needs a victory to estab­
lish hlmsalf among the heavy­
weights.
Charles has won three of hla
last four bouts after losing twice to
Rocky Marciano. Hla loss was to
John H o l m a n , Chicago heavy­
weight. Charles later avenged tht*
defeat with a one-sided decision.
Charles, who has an over-all rec­
ord of 10 triumphs, 13 lasses and
1 draw, la hoping to get another
crack at Marciano's crown.
• •
I *
1 1*
0 to
n •
« S
n 1
a n
» »
a *t

Plsarrn r f
(1'diiKI Sb

lie.

Ward lb
b -lliifh ra a
M *nd*i ef

U'dw'Mh

a -rn rd
Halirba a
Talala
l — rnait out for lllnndworlh In Sth
b— Pllad out fo r Ward In »lh.
S a n ford

_______

a

M .tlM lUA STATIC I.HAMUC
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oaalard al l,ala»av)lla
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D aktlant at Wool Palm IJoath
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O AM ka T o o AT
INn ( a m i , achadulod)

Legal Notice
XOTICK o r
KRIIAI.IBATIOX U IIK TISa
N olle* la htrohy (Ivon that tha
Board o f County
Commlaalnntri
o f the County o l Btmlnola. F lori­
da, w ill meal In Ragular Adjournad Haaalon al I o'clock V II
July SI. ISIS, In tha County Commlaalnnar'a floum al
tha Court
tlnuai In Hanford, lha uoual place
o f m oollna o f aald Hoard, fo r Iho
purpoaoo o f
haortnff
eomplalnta

MILWAUKEE Iff — I-abron Ha*
ris. a wrestler turned cosch and
teacher, fired a four-under-par 88
yesterday to pace the 47 non-ex­
empt players who will shoot for
prises in the 72-hole, 135,000 Mil*
waukce Open Golf Tournament. ^
Harris, golf coach and teaching
faculty member at Oklahoma
AAM college at Stillwater, Okla.,
took two strokes off par on each
of the nines. He finished with
33-33-68, over the par 70, pitmarked Blue Mound Country Club
course.
The 48-year-old pro took up golf
In 1930 after quitting wrestling
and tenfili. He joined the pro
ranki in 1940. His booming d riven
and sparkling Iron shots ca rried
him to six birdies yesterday. The
birds were offset somewhat by two
bogies.
In second place out of the field
of 113 non-exempt players, those
who must qualify for tha meet,
was Gardner Dickinson Jr., of
St.Andrews, 111. He hid a pair of
34'a, Including fiva bird!**, fur a
Third-place honors were taker*
by Gene Webb, Sl.Louli pro, wltir
a 83 collected on rounds of 34 and
33.
The 47 successful non-exempt
players will join the field of 103
exempt players In the first round
of medal play Thursday. The meet
ends Sunday. The exempt players,
thosa with stout records on th«
tournament trails, were not re­
quired to qualify for tha mecL

Fight Results
■v

t h is

a s s o c ia t e d

SACRAMENTO. Calif. —Joay Dopoo. 1S&lt;U.
Saoram tnto.
•topiiod
fiavay Uallardo, 111, Los Angalta,
SUPERIOR. Wla. — Al A n * r a w a £
111, St. Paul.' otoppad Irlak D ob
Jonoo. 111. Detroit. S.
BAN ANTONIO T*z. — Rahy Vaa.
qua*. 114. M ails* City, oatpalntaC
O sora* Baltina, US, Naw Tork
RICHMOND. Catlf — Dan Bry
Brys
ant. 1(4, O aklanC C?allf. outpoint
tu Hilly Lansa, 111, Aacrawante
antaa
•T||' " - t 'c i p (-nun. — WIMIa
Pap. 1I*M , H artford, sutpalatad

oi

...orlubta.

Mlpo.
l*o. **
I*-

D E T R O IT

—

la

Orlando

T E L E V IS IO N E L E C T R O N IC S
Fund, In c
* K A M I TO

•9

•lit

StC

n i iv r a a c t

iilh ,

0 on*

Puarte

U n s e n lt,

tSTH, Pontlaa. Mich, qnlpolntad
Oana Pow lar, 11114, Chicago. S. ,
MIAMI REACH. &gt; t a . — TCanny1
■y#
bans . 11144, M nan agon, Mick aut
jinlntad
lad Jimm y r * r d , 141, Miami)
Miami

an* reoelvtng taattmony aa ts tkt
value at any property, real or
poroenal, aa file d by the Ceuntv
Aeeeoeor a t T a ste aa tha t i l l
T as Aaaaaamant Mott, an* a f par
(acting,
review ing
lag lha nsoaonnont.
O P. Herndon
Clark o f aal4 Board

Mmiacf m

ra ta l

OCEAN PAM K, Calif. — Kenny
Davit. IS*H. Olondala, Calif, out
aimed
Al N iv a rti, i l l 'A , J u a n a ,
£1*1100,
vaim, aw
1*..
HOUSTON. Tax. — Paul Jargon tan. IIS. Houaton, ou tp o in t* ! Pa
u&gt; dau lt, I II. Spartanburg,

C

_____

hairy M 'C luikay.
N. H o u tp oin ts!
II*. Naw Tork,

E n g in e \ fe a r R e d u c e d
(thi

Comstock

W
"
Ida &amp; Co

and
Results

Harris
Leading
In Play

40%

w ith D ra p A rtic M o to r O i l

Stan

E stablished SO y u n

MW •*&gt; (WO— S

Maurlaltr, Poltroon, Plssarn llrow n.
a i l M t i l l i o __
.... ton la* OOO— I
It— W yatt, Hnydor, Mulior, H—
Harder, l u l l — Ita P. Cook, l it —
Ita. H— Knlahl. Hrhmltt UP— T orroll and U aurlollo; ilMlor lunaaaltod). 1.0ft— Stanford a.
(la in * -Villa *.. BO-by— I’ otoronn I. Illoodw orth I, HO— Illood *u rlli I In I
tnalnga;
llohra I In I
Inning.
laningit
t. - l i Blnndwnrth
E j v R - 4Poltroon
.. ^
I -it Habra a-*, r n — Mauri olio, w —
Poltroon CIS-Ill. I-— lllnodw orlh
I4-*|. II— aallaahor-Sialon ay, T—
;**. A —7*1.

Standings

ATLANTA iff — Barring more
rain, the feature attraction of the
National Clay Court* Tennle Tour­
nament will continue today — Tony
Trabert of Cincinnati, the Wimble­
don champion, versus Bitty Grant
of Atlanta.
A late afternoon shower Inter­
rupted the match yesterday just
as Trabert won the flrit game of
the second set after taking the
first sat 4-3.
Trabert, fresh from his triumph
In England, was playing Ilka a
champion. But he waa playing a
man who won the firat of three
national clay court titles the year
Trabart was born.
Greying Bitsy Grant, now 41,
one of the game's great retrievers
in his prime, carried Trabert to
deuce four times in eight games.
In the seventh game he broke
Tony'i service and won without
losing a point.
Trabert advanced to the third
round with a bye and an easy
8-0, 6-0 victory over Willis Irvin
of Augusta, Ga.
Bernard B a r i s e n , defending
champion from San Angelo, Tex.,
advanced to the fourth round with
little trouble, together 'with six
other seeded players. Bartsen
fared 14-year-old N«»d Neely of
Atlanta In the fourth round.
Ham Richardson of Raton Rouge,
La„ seeded second behind Tra­
bert, with a bye and a default,
whipped Barry McCay of Akron,
Ohio, 8-3, 6-2. Ho will meet the
winner of the Tim Cosa-Calhoun
Dickson match.
Third-seeded Eddie Moylan of
Trenton, N.J., got by Jimmy Shaffer of SI.Petersburg. Fla., and
Barry Wallraven by the same 6-1,
62 scores. He will meet Robin
Willner of Los Angeles In a fourthround match.
Jack Frost of Monterey, Calif.,
and Sam Glammalva of Houiton,
Tax., seeded fifth and sixth re­
spectively, also Advanced to the
fourth round.
First and second-seeded foreign
entries, Alejandro Olmedo o I
Lima, Peru, and Johann Kupferberger of South Africa, got paat
opponents Into the fourth round.
Barbara Brelt of North Holly­
wood, Calif., this year's favorite
In the battle for the women's
crown, and Dorothy Head Knoda
of AJameda, Calif., seeded eecond,
had eaiy times of It.
Seventeen-year-old Barbara, No.
• among tha present crop of
women's stars, dropped June Pag*
of Atlanta 61, 80 In the first
round. Mn. Knode, Wimbledon
quarter-flnallat, drew a bye for
htr first round, then ousted Pinky
,Hagtr of Atlanta 8-0, 8-1.

n

W. B. —Co.
IS. Dartmouth,

r.

Immy

gklnnar.

�I

W ed. July 13, 1953

THE SANFORD T1ERALD

Tage 7

FORT LEE, Va.—Pvt. Th.»ma«
P. Hoag, whoae wifa, Zada, live*
on Route 2. .Sanford recently waa
graduated from the supply record*
couna at tha Quartarmaatar
."chool, Kot! Lee, Va.
Thr eight-weak eoun* included
adminiitratlv* procedures itudy
of the Army aupply syatem, unit
•upply, nation aupply, commla» ’.ry operation*, depot oparationt,
and itorage oparationa.
Private Hoar, ion ef Thom**
W. Hoag, .106 E. Sharpnack St.,
Philadelphia, entered thi Army
lait February and completed bailc
training at Camp Gordon, Ga.
The 24-yvar-old loldter ii a
1054 graduate of Centra College

■ U IK P 1 I ■

rr||m|Mj|tnnm|iuii]ii)iiinM

NOTHING UKB AN AFTERNOON
COFFEE BREAK TO PEP
A FELLOW UP
FOR MORE

boost of 19 cents Th» minimum
wage now is 155 a week.
Employes of the companies art
represented by the AFL Street,
MIAMI (gv—Employe* of the Mi­ Electric Railway and Motor Coach
ami amt Miami Beach bin lines Union.
voted last night to accept a con­
Pittsburgh is one of the fo^ d
tract which will give 700 workers
an additional 6155.000 * year In eat places on the North Americui.
continent.
wages and other benefits, starting
Oct. 1.
The agreement, which calls for
added wage Increases In 1357 and
1958, Is conditioned upon action by
the Miami City Commission.
Howard C, Ixmg
If the commission approves the
companies' request, employes will
Phone 3S8
receive across the board wage in­
creases of 10 cents the first year,
207
E. Commercial
five cents the second year, and
four cents the third year for a total

Bus Ltne Employes
Vote For Contract

News O f Men In Service
in Danullc, Ky„ and a member of
Alpha Epsilon fraternity,

Sig m a

9

9

•

•

GREAT LAKES. III. (FHTNC)
•—Airman third clan*, Howard E.
I.loyd, USAK, aon of Mr. and
Mri. Ellin K. I.loyd of lake Mary
Boulevard, Lake Mary, I* sche­
duled to graduate July 22 from
the Engincman School at the
Naval Train'ug Center here.
The achool la one of 10 har*
which give apeclallmt training to
thouiand* of U. S, Navy men and
atudent* of allied navln yearly.

W ELL D R ILLIN G

A aea elephant, a kind of aaal,
may grow to be 20 feet long end
weigh 3 ton*.

SUGAR

/
LBS.

LIMIT 5 L IS . WITH 17.00 OR MORE ORDER

QUALITY
MEATS

FRYERS
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J ’AO^CfL J'ODdjL.
0 OZ. CANS
SEALED SWEET

~W

99&lt;

L IM E A D E
MRS. PAUL'S

PKfi.

SW EET T R E A T

Lewis 'Poppa' Hall To Assist Coaching Gainesville Sports
OAINESVILLK UR — J. Lawia
(Poppa) Hall of TaUahatiee, for*
mar Florida football and track itar,
w ll coma back to the univeriity
ttila fall and will aaalit In coaching
the two aporta.
A IBM graduate. Hal] will be
ralaaied from tha Army this aummar and will aaak an additional
law degree.
*

Bob Woodruff, athlatle director,
■aid Hall alio will help roach foot
ball frcihmen and will aid Track
Coach Percy Beard.
Hall'i greateit fame li In the
high jump where ha aeven tfmaa
h n been a national champion and
member of tha All-America track
team.
Ha alao wai a itandout football

CEN TRAL FLORIDA QUICK FREEZE
AN D STORAGE CO.

CASH DEAL
MILES CITY, Mont. US — Juttie* of tha Peace Herbert Abel
was sympathetic with John Swan­
son, 68. Ha waa shabby and thera
were holes In bis tennis shoes.
Abel Fined Swanson 135 after
Swanson pleaded guilty to steal­
ing a 83-cent package of figs.
Swanson reached Into Ms shabby
jeans, pulled out MW, paid tha
|25 fine and went on his way.

player. At the icaion'i end In 1953
he waa Florida'a leading ground
gainer with 67.' yards net ruihing,
averaging 5.8 ycedi a carry.
In addition to the i. ven national
collegiate high jump champlonihlpi
Hall la tha record holder of the
Southeaitern Conference, Southern
Conference Indoor, Southern Belayi, and Florida Relayi.
Ha wai tha 1H0 National AAV
junior champion, 1951 National champion, 1953 and law National
AAU and National Collegiate cham­ AAU Indoor champion and 1M5 Na­
pion, IN ) National Collegiate co- tional indoor co-champion.

D EV ILED CRAB o oz.
FISH S T IC K S - « oz.
FISH F ILL E T S - «oz,

PINEAPPLE
riD-BITS

FLUFF0

THRIF-T-PAK

SHORTENING

CORN
BRUSSEL SPROUTS
C A U LIFLO W ER

LB.
CAN

LOCKER
PLANT
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
401 Waat TU rU rath 8 treat

Pkoaa t i l l

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DIRECT FROM LOCAL FARMS

* * * * * *

LARGE

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EGGS 59c

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I PORK CHOPS
|
Lb. 69c

WRSTBRN V. A CHOICE BONED

CHUCK R O A ST“ 59 c
LEAN CHOICE ALL MEAT

BEEF STEW

"• 49t
GROUND BEEF&gt;*37c
LEAN FUSE

OUR VWM
OWE TENDERIZED
HICKORY SMOKRD
tw u tl

W OH W HOLE
1014 L B R

HAMS

w o

| ? /h

AGBD O f OUR PLART

: : i :h :b

SHARP CHEESE
L &amp; fte

e t

PT8. 19c

CL0R0X
Gal.

PINTS

OUR OWN CURE—HICKORY SMOKRD

BR. BACON
Lb. 55c

It’s the all purpose
4-whee! drive truck!
Here'# a nigged, all-porpoee (ruck dealgned wot anty lor highway
Dave], but with tha extra iaw nacr of 4-wheat drive lor difimR
terrain or i
- the W
Thick!
It ablfte eeaily from 2-wbeel
&lt;
«el drive
lor highway or afreet Into 4-wheel
drive when extra traction la needed to carry ke payload o! over a
ton through mad, eanfi, anew or aoft earth where ordinary trucha
can't go. Equipped with power take-off, it aappliaa mobile power
lor many type* of machinery for hualnaw or larm. Tha'Jeep* D w k
i with power hrakaa.

H i m HIT!

Jeep

KLEENEX

BUSH’S BEST N o. 2 CAN

400’s
LIBBY’ S

44 m . CAN

TOMATO
j u ic e

C

I PALMOLIVE

GREEN
BEANS

Soap 25c

WOW

CUT RITE

HORSEM EAT

WAXED
PAPER

T tIC f

UMAS*"“ 39&lt;

H U H

ACM

PEAK— «T t

A*k larat

C O R D E L L S

REPAIR

SHOP

PARK A Y E . AT 25th ST.

REG.

SIZE

3 REG. SIZE

FARMS—RXTRA BPECIALI

BABY

PKG,

125 FT.

K0TEX
12’s

�TH E SANFORD H ERALD
77WHb C C + iw f

1TAZUKE A i n BASE, Japan OH the drop, the Army aaid.
—The big turn-around began Tucv
The 187th is the famous "Angels
day in history's longest and big­ from Hell" Combit Teem of
gest single airlift operation.
World W«r II end Korean War
Operation Gyroscope 'still bring­ fame. They have been In the Far
ing in approximately 90 troops of
the 50tlth Regimental Combat
Team from Ft. Campbell. Ky.,
every two hour* In giant C124
Globcmasteg Transport*, b e g a n
lifting the same number of re­
GAINESVILLE (JB — Dr. J.
lieved troopi on the homeward Wayne Belli, president of the
hop.
University of Florida, said Hon
The departing outfit Is Ihe 187th day that it ia the university's re­
Airborne Regimental C o m b a t sponsibility lo trafn young people
Team, which began lraving Tues­ to live a good life as well ai to
day morning from this southern earn a living.
Japan base for Ft. Rragg. N. C.
Jutl to train Individuals In sub­
Emphasiring the ipeed at which ject mailer and neglecl spiritual
large numbers of (roups move and moral development is to neg­
about the world these days, the lect education, he said.
ISTth Is scheduled lo take part in
BeiL was thhe principal speaker
a practice parachute jump at Ft. at the opening session of the 3tst
Rragg only M hours after de­ annual late Home Demonstration
parture here. The men will trans­ Short Course and Council meetfer to a CI19 Flying Iloxcar for

UofF President
Addresses Group

MOWOY. wtGE
GUYSl c r e a

jL iiii

To Man Living In Spacious Home

LAKE r/n*n tn -A Chicago fi­
nancier who ownr more than 80
per rent of this liny southeast
Florida (own has invited ID 873
resident* lo join him in seeking to
dissolve the municipality.
Jnhn D. MaoArthur, whu la one
nf Ihe state's largest real ealate
operators, contended that he paid
$35,000 in taxes last year but re­
ceived no services.
He instructed his attorneys to
draw up a anil lo dissolve the
town or withdraw hia real estate
holdings from Ihe (own limila.
In a letter to Lake Park officials,
he said "Perhaps when you gentle­
men realize that Ihe only direct
benefits you are nnw receiving are
your satarica and pcrhapl other
minor considerations, you will also
join men In disposing of the little
play house known as Ihe city of
Lake Park."
H* ordered Ihe town lo vacate
the municipal buildings which he
owni, when the lease expires July

CLEVELAND UB-Tha tease the
government gave Alexander J.
Brady in 1MB proved a colossal
bargain. Toe tnlaaaaL Ike z nv*« •
■wot I l f , .
The government leased Brady a
three-story, eight-bedroom, fourfireplace mansion for a total rental
of t l—until auch time as the prop­
erty was needed for a Veterans
Administration hospital.
The VA long since canceled plana
to build Ihe hospital and Brady
figures the leaee entitles him to
continue living rent-free in the
house with Ilk balha, aun room,
library, maid's auile, living room,
dining room, kitchen, breakfast
room, pantry, refrigerator room,
basement recreation room, laun­
dry, storerooms and two furnaces.
Tha government brought suit
M o n d a y to evict Brady, contend­
ing the lease "does not eipraae
the true Intent of Ihe parties aa to
Ha legal effect,H and that tha VA
officer who approved it “ exceeded
his authority."
The lease give* Brady "the right
end privilege to occupy ill of the
said premises until Jan. 1, 18S0,

and thereafter on a mnnthtomonth basis until auch time as
yj,ia premises are. In Ihe opinion
* e w ’ i w m Oistet *f Am».—
or any agency inrivm, anudUy
needed for the purpose for which
purchased. . . ." The purpose was
the hospital. |t also said fl "shall
be In full payment of all rental
during the term of occupancy."
The government had purchased
the house from Brady, a rctlrrd
Erie Railroad Co. official, for
about 131,000. It was one of M
large houses purchased for Ihe
hospital aile. Only Brady’s cuntract contained the lease clause.
The others are rented to the high­
est bidder.
The house, on a Bl-by-27n.frmt
lot, hat been appraises! at $07,837.
In Its suit the government said
It "has requested that the prem­
ise* be vacated but baa been re­
fused."
Brady, who has been living in
the house with hia wife and daugh­
ter, left a few weeks ago for a
vacation at Ocean Grove, N.J,

Growers Expected
To Produce Same
Amount Ot Tobacco
~^srrm nTW » m . . - j. V : .
Florida and Alabama growers are
expected lo produce about the
same amount of Buc-cured tobacco
this year aa last but the govern­
ment support price will be nearly
a half cent higher.
The Department of Agriculture
announced Tuesday that a tentative
support average of 43.3 cents a
pound has been definitely estab­
lished. It compares with 41.9 last
season.
The general flue.cured support
average Is 48.3 hut the figure la
3 cents lower In the Genrgla-Florida belt where tobacco ia sold un­
tied.
The support Is baaed on H per
cent of parity, a formula for meas­
uring price* farmers receive for
Ihoir products in relation to what
Ihpy have to pay for what they buy.
The department Monday eitL
mated the Georgia-Florlda fluecured production at 130,828,000

Tha annual Inert**# In the pop.
.. NafArthur said a itudy ha made emment. Palm Beaeh county la ulatlon of the United State* has
diacloicd there waa no useful pur­ authorised by law to perform every exceeded 2H million for the .past
port be ing served by the city gov* function you pretend to perform.** •Ight year*.

2804 PARK A V E .-Q U A N IT Y RIGHTS RESERVED

We

S p e c ia liz e In Q u a lity M ea ts

SM ALL LE A N TRU -FLAVO R

27.733.000 poundi, waa calculated
lo be off more than It per cent.
This year's total waa put at 24,720.000 poundi.
Another big jump wai forecast
in the Alabama turnout, which la
sold on Georgia and Florida mar­
kets. This year's yield waa figured
at H8.000 pounds, up nearly 40 per
cent from last year'* 422,000.

M . MARTIN D. KAMM, a visiting
research aianclate in biochemis­
try at the University of Cali­
fornia in Berkeley, was granted
a passport after an eight-year
battle with the State Depart­
ment. He declared that the lag of
Communism was leveled against
him as a result of a “wartima
rhubarb.1* lte dented charges
that once linked him with Com­
munism. Ills repeated failure to
obtain a passport led lo a law­
suit. He won. f internal tonal &gt;

W l I vast s w s i i i w m j
NEW YORK UB—Hemlines make
news in Paulinp Trigore's brilliant
collection nf fall fashions, as she
inlroduccs intermission length for
dinner and theater wear.
Shown principally in straight asa-dagger sheath d r e s s e s with
matching jackets, the intermission
costumes end just above the ankle,
often .will) a border of fur at Ihe
hemline. One striking example Is
a blaring red sheath and jacket
with a discreet mink collar.
Trlgere feature* a group nf coats
with set-in sleeves, some nf which
are even slightly puffed above the
shoulder, giving a strictly new
look. One auch is a caiual loose
tweed coat In black and white dom­
ino checks.
High colors alternate with sober
blacks and browns in this group
of sophisticated fashions. A favor­
ite of the season la » blaring
orange called Desert Flower.
Harvey Bertn and hia designer
Karen Stark have fun this season
using lush fabrics such as velvet
and satin in austerely simple
sheath dreasci aa demur* a a school
uniforms.
A group of black velvet dresses
have while satin collars and tics.
And there la a dramatic new look
to sheath dresses of the new while
wine velvet, a soft ivory lone,
shown in understated cocktail
dreaaea.
Berin alia uses a bell silhouette
effectively in a group of dresses
and costumes In featherweight
French tweeds and worsteds, care­
fully ahaped and beautifully fitted,
the bell-ahaped skirt f l a r i n g
smoothly toward the hemline.

GA. GRADE A
DRESSED &amp; DRAWN

FRESH GROUND

FIRST C U T

PORK
CHOPS

TAST-RITE ROUND
OR t-BO N E

LE A N , M EATY SPARE

EXCELLEN T
FOR BAR-B-Q

n'
m,k* *&amp;• industry

" ’‘ •ni'fT
w e r bm iM u.
raitinf (hi SiW info M* m m
hands,** ho said. 'There's no pollTh* TTntted ttataa printed
ttea Involved j don’t oven know 1T4AMAM three cent stamp*
tho fwttemae "
1U4.

CREAM STYLE

corn 2 a 2 7 *

Davy Crockett

M ORRELL PRIDE

SNACK * - j 13*
SEVEN BORE
SELF-RISIN G

* 0 jJ b t L

*
,

FLOUR

8 9

‘

J
OIL * 4
‘
M
PORK &amp;BEANS J
*
WESSON

T I D E Washing Powder Giant Siaa

Japan produced a record 931,»
010,000 pounds of cotton yarn la

BUTTER KERN EL GOLDEN

annaared
vulnerabli
h? to llS
,nC* W tn td tW,« Pr» t lc a «
and^oavetHt
eontrola on Installment credit
*OOP llavor Joxeoh w* LMd#r«i ™ a m t , i»voring governn
*. id * H ^ n .w h M e
AFC iild dealers who c

S1JNNYLAND

The Incoming troops of tha 508th
RCT are landing at Aahiya Air
Base 32 miles northwest of here,
loading into steam trains end
moving to their new quarters near
Beppu. the famous Hot Springs
resort town on the inland aea
coast of this southern Island.
As Ihe 30th giant plane landed
at Ashiya only one minor hitch had
marred the clock like precision on
which the big airlift has been opera,
ting. One C124 had to turn back to
Wake Island when an engine failed.
Two others halted at Wake to await
new engines.

Hemlines In News
In Brilliant Array

WON O f TROUBLE
i(^ l . . ^ « B.nra“ rom n.n lV .1
SOUTH CHARLESTON, W. Va.
dealer, aa.ln.t t
ifi - O n c e r John Ray, a Republl- * ” %
hi
ean ,wa* peeved with the cily’i fn ,dh*
d
d d rt

f o s s ihti?
l , '.k
in*fnnt

East five years.
Assuming command of the ltTlfc
at midnight Tueaday, midway be­
tween Wake Island and Honolulu*
was Col. Curlii J. Herrick of Alton.

OLD GLORY

NO. IK

BLEACH

9
9

1&amp;

STOCKTON TOMATO

�*&gt;•

W

A

N

T

a

d

s
THE SANFORD HERALD Wed. July t.1, 1955

I f I f k W orth A n yth in *
I t 's W orth A d rcrtia ln g In

CLASSIFIED ADS

worn i n t
WELa KA APARTMENTS:
Strata hatha. m w. r a n «■

RoIUwmy and Baby Body
Bay, Week or month-TeL HM----------- IK West lin t

H 7km
UL
FURNISHED
Avo.

MO Pork

PuraUhed' KltCMBett* apta. Air
rnaitltWrnfl SlumberUnd Court.
South City limits Highway 17-02.
S Bedroom Home. « Block to m
Soulhslde aefcooL Loll k5*1-

VBJBSSrJflSJ&amp;Sft.
FURNISHED Apt. Phooo 433-W.
UNFURNISHED 4 Hoorn Hou»o
with 9 Bedrooms. Phooo 1330-J.
a Room A pt MO Avscsdo.
FURNISHED 3 Bedroom Hdu»e.
cloio la. 11* Writ lit St. Phono
etc.
____________ _
a Room Apartment. Completely
^funiuhad. 3U Palmetto Avo.
rtmoaU. Furnlshod,
Unfurnished 7 Bedroom House—
fen

, g f f f E M U ? '* ™ ™ .’

9—REAL ESTATE TOR M U M
O d e r - W eller Hmasa, Inc.
General Cwetraettax
• Commercial—Custom 4 Low
Cost Homes
UM Medeavfllo Ave. Phene m i

f-

TH E O L D H O M E T O W N

ACROSS

l.Touash

RAYMOND M. BALL, BROKER FooUockera ............ Special &gt;TJ&amp;.
Paint ........................... U.M) gaL
S. D. Hilhleymaa, Associate
All sixes tarpoulins.
O M. Harrison, Associate
ARMY-NAVY SURPLUS
IM Soma Park Ave.
Phone Mi
310 Sanford Are.
Phone 1311
OWNER nf 4 Bedroom House In
Used
furniture,
appliances,
roots,
desirable location wishes to
etc. Bought-sold. Larry's Mart.
tfade far place tn country.
321 E astlst S t Phone 1931.
WILL EXCHANGE equity In
Modern 3 Bedroom Homo for YOU don’t have to see the credit
Acreage.
manager to save dollars legiti­
For your Real Estato a re a :
mately on our GIGANTIC Re­
Cullen and Harkejr. Realtors
move* SALE.
IM N. Park Ave. Pkoae Z31X
ROBINSON MUSIC CO.
320 N. Orange Ave. Orlando. Fla.
C. A - W H IDDON i SR*
FtT FOR A QUEENRe#. Real # ■»# » Srekar
l it S. Park
Ph. IMS Foam Rubber Mattresses. InnerS p r i n g Mattresses, Couches,
Baby Beds, Renovating. Uphol­
OUTSTANDING VALUES
stering and Slip Cover work.
Beautiful home in Mayfair area
N IX BEDDING MFG. COlocated on 3 lots. 3 bedrooms,
two tiled baths. Florida room, 1391 StaterS Are.
gsrafe. #30,000.00.
QUICK CASH for furniture, boats,
motors. Buy one piece or comNew home, furnished, Blork con­
pleto home. Thouiands of arti­
struction, 2 bedrooms, four lots.
cles for sale at the
13,300.00. Older home, dosa in.
Soper Trading Post on 17-91
3 bedrooms, &gt;3,000.00.
1 Mile South. Phone 2211-R
Terms may be arranfed on any
of these homes.
THE
CURIOSITY SHOP
J. W. HALL, REALTOR
Florida stata Bank Boildta*
Lota of Plant*
‘ Call HalT
Phono IT * BARGAINS- Begonia. Bougain­
villea and others—10c, 23c, 30c
and &gt;1.00. also unfinished chest
OPEN HOUSE
of drivers, Magnolia— &gt;19.93.
3—bedroom spacious home on nice
Old drop-leaf table-88.00, Used
corner lot situated near school
chests—&gt;10.00 up, New pisiform
and grocery. Home is open all
rockers, pi as tic-424.95. Used—
week for your inspection. Sell&gt;10.00, taking orders for Lawn
rr will redecorate interior wi|£
Furniture, chairs—&gt;2.93, Swings
Buyer’s choice of colon. Boa
&gt;9.93 delivered. 17-92 South.
it at 1401 Sanford Ava. Sae us
for details. Good tarmi availa­ Power Mowar, 13 young laying
ble, Exclusive.
hens, 1940 Studebaker Cham­
pion. Reasonable. Phone 430-R.

Seminole Realty

T. W. HERO TWO — Chanel back chain. Good
condition. Phone 1309-J.
27 or 145
SOLID Oak dinette table, 4 chairsbedroom bouse. 4tt per cent
&gt;13. Solid Oak D. R. Table -4
mortgage. &gt;40 monthly. 1903
chair*. &gt;35. Weslinghnuse IronSummerlin.
er, &gt;23 Electric Mixer &gt;10.
Maple Twin Beds with spring A
NEW 3 Bedroom concrete block
mattress, cheat of drawers &gt;33.
home. Westlnghouse Kitchen,
Apex portable dishwasher, &gt;100.
GI financed. Low Down Pay­
Phone44l*W.
ment Phone 430.
Studio Piano — Small Upright.
CHOICE BUILDING LOT -C o r ­
Finish and condition like new.
ner Maple Ave. and 20th St. 34*
Price &gt;165.00. Phone 1733-R
x 134*. Inquire 413 Maple Ave.
after 3 p. m.
SARTBCLHS WAffTRB - 9
W. METRIC
INI Park Ava.

T &amp; U R /A IC R E L A T I V E S
[“ T H F O V E ^ A J I G K T

G U E S T S W H O STU CK v
A (B O O N D | F O U R

14-1

tt= -

Pheae HI

and repair week,
tee. R. L Harvey.
Saaterd Avo.

N o ra a,
maa. 13

Tall ua what you want In
building materials or lum­
bar and we'll ace that you
gat it promptly . . . when
you want It and where you
want ft If you haven't or­
dered lumber or materials
from ua lately, why not
call on your next order. Re­
member 88 la where you're
the boas.

dog
4 Strike

3. Elevated
train
uhorlencd)

6. Frighten
7. Varnish

ingredient
8 Covered
w ith ink
9 Rod

b SU PPLY YA RD

(atilt.)

n a t iv e

to
Phil If
'
26 First man
i Bib t
2S, Knave

10 Observes
it Not wild
16. Famous
Eng It ili

(Cards)

»t.i!e.iman
19. God of war
19 Mother,
of-pearl

39 An aquatic

A

5

vertebrate

•i

to

3
%

36 Arabian]
tetter
35 Jewish
month
40 F rm rn ]

water

41 Poem _

32 Receptacles
for flowers

II

r

42 Femalefulj
44 E xcla-''

mation x

o

IQ

*A

y/ /
,j

IS
/to

%
20

%

iO

2l

25

%
2S

Jo

%
yo

ii
Jl
/
i4

j -.

Jo

37

%

#
y*

«

%
51
j;

so
I
-4i.

%
4l

40
%
*14.

45
i

4^

4u
t

v4

Harriett. Ruth. Dawn
Open 8:30 a. m. alto Wed. p. ra.
193 So, Oak Ave. Pboae 971
1 7 - AUTOM

33— LAUNDRY BERWICK

It wiR pay YOU te aew US before
you buy. Open Evenings
Sundays.
EsstaMe Trailer Satan,
Palatka, Fin.

• One hear • Wax* u f
Dry

Damp

•

“ »

• Finished Landry
• Si nitona Dry

CARS
BOUGHT SOU) TRADED
to y

Keel’s D M

Cars

Sanford Ave. A tub KL

n -

FOR SALE — M’ Stewart Trailer. L* L. fUli—Pl«;
2 bedrooms, bath, kitchen, dining
Phoae 2194.
room, double walled aluminum
glassed jalousied Cabana. # x 20
with 4 4 ' Porch, Dolly and Fenc­
ed. &gt;2,900. nacrlfire. Located
Park Ave. Trailer Court. Terms.
W. M. Foster.

Techalcdaa
L Saaterd

W A N T AD
RATES

ITANIIV 9IITH, 10. flntls It rather dilRriilt to hide hts sympathy pains
A 3-Une ad, n e t
the aoe above
n* Dr. J, 1). Cozii-iis rrsrta llie fractured leg of a two-week old fawn
la only Me par day oa our low 5
found by the boy’s lather on roadilde near Illg Dear, Calif. Tba
1 4 Horse SEA KING,
•ay earn d rate M on aiy plan, 43c
yearling sustained a compound fracture when hit by a car. Stanley
Nice egg beiter ........... &gt;32 30 p r day ter 9 days aad Me tor
and his slitrr, Betty, 17, received Ihe game warden’s permission to
3.6 Horse SCOTT-ATWATER 69.30
keep the fawn until September, and tticngEtease It. Game laws for- j
3 Horn, SEA BEK ........... 69.50
7 4 Horse FIRESTONE .. 129.30
,hid the keeping nf yearlings as pels.
ffnlewialional -S’oundpholo)
Boy.
Sail,
Rent,
Hire
with
wait
10 Horse 8COTT-ATWATER. 99.93
ade,
the
busiest
salesman
in
12 Horse ELTO .................. 89 30
11:45 G u td ln r t.lg h t
town. Put ana to work ter yoo.
23 Horse JOHNSON
A F 11 II ND O .f
Plume U2L We will be glad to
12 50 W#|p. T %(*r*,
(Good Shape) ............... 299 00
charge
IL
1
&lt;
H
i
liohffft
Q. L«wk«
Complete Stack of F.vlnrude
J 30 JltM|»r|»Jirf v
How will you away?
2
no
Illg
1nx.fr
1
w u v m « : t i 4 % *ie t« •
Tor oaly &gt;3 m the above 6-ilne ad
How will you Trade?
:
Roll r»n*|.v
«»1I L 4 !S|M I
3
llflgh ltr |Mr
is on the Job for you er 3 full
Year eld Motor for a
3 1* b«cf«t Storm
n n iM ;« iM T
daya. Only t i l l kern* tt wortiox
Better p a d s - EVINtUOEt
2 20 «&gt;r Your Account
A F T E H \ I 1I&gt;K
i on T P A
ROBSON Sporting Goode fnr you ter I days, i day la only l : M 4 dv#niurte W it h U D e U W i l t
90c.
4 15 G l r r y Moofte
Evtande Sale* A Sendee
I ill 6 up«rm a n
4 IS
H a r r y 51onr#
394 R. tat SL
Phene 999
4.12 O p tll Ifn uat.
KMy|.W»8l||9f H|inrl|
Tb# ..above 4-tina ad can be run I M Jrth
B P a ly .NVVA 9
full day* tor ealy 92.40, a days *
99 - FURNITURE a’hW O oeiem
An DA%i»
*
r aaly it J* aad esa day tor 72c 7. oil Arthur !t9 d ff« r A I’ lUnd*
A All f 7i|f}#&gt; in rid
Buy your Furniture at fterry’a
*» n»» V,&gt;dn*»&lt;lgv M g h t l ig h t*
DUPLAY
Warehouse Fum., Co., at 901 W.
ft: 4 At Hock&gt; » C n r n t f
10.
T h # M ilU o n a irt
l i t SL All nationally adv. fuiv
|0:3o
I v* Hot A
nJture at warehouse prices.
w T ftn — m n i a n
11:o 0 N * * a- Hipo Ft*•W r a l It•f
lifts iMiarItghI TliiBtiit
lion k i i .i i c i ( i.iit
It— von AND FOUND
1S;U Hlgn-otf
Manager Wanted
U C U M IM IIV

1»-

BOAT! - M T O U

TELEVISION

L

n sT

*While
VhTIc
—

gold
gnlrl

Iionginc
U

Ladies watch, Tuesday a. m.
between Ml Cypress and Post
Office and banks. Movement
registered. REWARD. Phone
•43-W.

o -g u tc T tK A i a u n c ia -a
BED.

O

i

■

R a d io

Local man In nneralr a naint
and wallosDcr branch, to ht
opened in Sanford. Experi­
ence In direct ronlact sellinir.
merrhandltlmr and rrtall sett­
lor aro desirable, Active Inter­
est in civic orranixationa and
wide local acquaintance would
be valuable assets. Our nlan
Includes special training in
paint business, salary, profit•harlnx. and retirement. No
capital InvestmanL Applicants
will plans* contact P. J, Pats
bv letter or phone:

Sherwin • Williams
Company
1.10 W eal Bay Street
Phone ELGIN 3-9754

JACKSONVILLE* FLA.

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4.42 Cartoon r *m Ival

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Til* A r t h u r O n d f r iy
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1:1* l'va QM A S—-f.t
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la, no O i r i n l M t r i h i l l
1*:U U s v t a g T h . t l i .
1ft:lQ P .t ty r * t *
1*:4S S ir H u ll i
11:00 hiws a Winhir
Mill Lila Show
12:46 N.ni A aian Oft
1:0 0

1:30

TH P M sn A V

a o ix ia o

H IL L LU M B ER

fied
rerson
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Me­
n a t ja a n a u n n
dieval
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typ*
idIT
of
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short
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tale
ana
21 Definite
vty
article
TeilrHiy'l
23 Malay­
31. Mscawj
an
people
33. T isjuc

HARRIETTS
BEAUTY NOOK

P. M. CAMPBELL

yater_Ptimpa -

20 Sancti­

.2. Plain
or
clear
3. Prt
name
i for a

1

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Modern Air-Conditioned Salon
Specialist in Personality Shaping,
Styling and Waving. Cosmetics
for your skin rare. Gyro-Lator
method of redurins.

PLUM BDIG

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YARD w orthy white

—24

Eva-Bena Beauty Shop

HIGH SCHOOL BOY with
*0»tes« Phone
U AM __________________
Practical

BEAUTY FARLPM

For Leveher H air

ECHULa^BEDDINGCO.

LICENIED

24-

GET PROFESSIONAL CAREt

&amp; v v jsssfir-® J

Sauteed Herald.

6 Slide*
11 Spring
month
12. Light boat
13. Point
nf land
14 equipment
for fishing
IS. Hew ing
loot
,18 Equal
117. Affirmative
reply
18. Argent
i sym-t
19. City in
France
21. Tell
23. Whi-ilen
(lour (India)
27 Make into
a statute
28 Mohamme­
dan religious
war
29 Mix
30. Unit of dry
measure
&lt; (Sp.)
31. Put out
33. Partof
•'tn he'*
31 Lurnn
native
37 Question
3S Mans
nickname
30. A pickle
since
41. Smelt
43 The little
girl tn
Wonderland
44. Maxim
43. Vaults for
valuables
46. Harrowtike battle
formation
DOWN
A het
x
(Roulette)

I’agr 0

H za z jB

DAILY C R O S S W O R D

C O N D ITIO N IN G
Room or House
!L a. P O P S C O , I N C
Park Ave. Phase l t «

SPECIALS

real t a t t

By STA N LEY

A D

! with children. 13U Pork Avo.
Phono 3 0 9 2 . ________ . LAKE MARY —3 Bedroom house. Highest CASH, TRADE-IN price*
"Rome* af Distinction*
30 x 20 porch, 2 Car Garage.
1-Way 17-91
paid far need furniture Call 969,
FURNISHED C0tu#e. One Bed­
112.000. Phone J. W. Dodson,
Wilton-Malar Furniture Co. 3U
room. Extra nice. #14 Elm Avo.
1735.
E. 1*1 SL
For Better Ptunmmg
See or Cali
JL Rooms
Room and Both. IK Elm. 3 Bedroom FRAME House. 3 Lota T— g m U vwHab Haa a lw —7
W. J. KING
with 63 budded orange trees.
tfPhoao 9993-W
Completely furnished. P h o n e DOGS NEED A QUALITY FEED.
Park Phaaa
Help keep your dogs In top
COOL, Roomy 3 bedroom furnish­
ed Apartment jwMh ooeoened
condition with PURINA DOG Dragline
service, Lakafroots A
porch.'lAS.monthly. 1781H MagCHOW. A tasty food dogs go for. &gt;ragt
I t t a B B - j Come
dlteking. Estimates given. Phone
In today.
noils Ave. Ph. 1673.
______
----Orlando 32304
Geneva 3164,
50th Anniversary
Simpson Farm Supply
Sanford 3331.
CLEAN furnished Apt. One, Two
111 W 2nd 84.
Phone 1439
persons. &gt;35.80. t i l Park sve.
It'* So Ehuy
AKC Registered Boxer puppies,
T o PUtce A W ant A d
S BEDROOM furnished Carafe Reg. 13 93 19x34 or 11x34
2
Months
old.
Outstanding
pedi­
Bevel Plate Glass
Mellanvllle.
Apartment
gree. Phone 33334-3.
Juat Call 1821 nnd u k fo r
Mirrors ..................... 10.30
tit* W ant Ad departm ent
Reg.
14
93 Double Door
34 Plgeoni — 33c each for lot.
BEAUTIFUL 1 Bedroom funsMetal uUlity Cabinet 13J0
Sanford Herald
Phone 1969-X-M or 1M9-J
•Sshed A pt CiU 835-M.
Reg. 24.9* 34” Metal
--------------------------------------E S -------------------------------Wsl&gt;
Cabinet
............
14.30
H
P
WANTED
Furnished 3 bedroom garage
FLOOR aaadiag and finishing
ant. Paola, V . Hanson. Phone Reg. 30.93 Platform Rockers 1930
Cleaning, waxing. Serving Semi
AGENTS
WANTED:
To
acll
o
r
Reg.
49.30
Berkline
“
Ballet"
note County since 1X33. IL M
1S51-J-3.
dinary Life Insurance on a
_
Swivel Chairs .......... 39.30
GUaaoe, Lake Mary.
monthly or. quarterly premium
MODERN « Room FurnUhad Reg, 99 30 Contour Chairs
Plan. Large commluions paid.
with Nylon Cover and
no rale increase for pUota or LAWNMOWERS S D i r p s u d
Foam Latex rilling . M.5Q
Bicycle A General Repair.
ill]
cateer military
men. An oppor­
Mather o f Sanford
8taaley,a Bike Shop
FURNISHED One Gedroom Gar
tunity
offi, for retired military ___
E. 1st 84.
Phene u ?
319 E. 4th SL TeL 3434
cera to become active and build
a#a Apartment 3314 Sanford
an additional income. If inter­
. AVt. 5. N. AxxareUo, Phone
VEN ETIAN B U N D S
ested. writ# KUYKENDALL IN­ ENVELOPES, letterheads, state­
1174.
(Nationally Adv. Ralta-Read)
SURANCE AGENCY. P. O. Box
ments. invoices, hand bills, and
3711, Orlando. Fla.
Maaufaetnred In laatord
p r o g r a m s , ete. Progressive
Printing Co., Phoae 409 — 403
8 « M i r a n k s R M O h SEWING MACHINE OPERATORS
West 13th SL
SM WMI 3rd SL
For better trailer living ai
—Both Experienced and Leamanlando Trailer Park.
‘r. 4 Star
era. Experienced preferred but
learners will be trained In free FLOOR SANDtm A Finishing,
Oak floors furnished, laid u fu
vocational school. 40 Hour week,
Ished. In butinee* liar* li*V
pleasant working conditions, la
E. F. Stevens: Route 3, B n 237:
Re-’ US
raodaro i Plant. Paid Vacation
Call 719-R-4 before T a. aa. or
and holiday, Fret hospitaliser
a
m
TRACTORS
after 6 p. m.
"S
•ten. insurance. Apply Brookfolks w&amp;o care,". Adults.
Held Mills
N. Elm. Sanford.
RA N D A LL ELECTRIC CO.
^URAGE A P T .ter rowple. BUM
WA WELT WANTED (Female! HA Electrical Contracting and IlriiaUs
Uth R t Phoae Mtef.
WILL YOU ACCEPT 340. TRADE
TV SERVICE CENTER
IN ALLOWANCE FOR YOUR LOCAL BUSINESS aeeda Private
LARGE Cool Redroom with priOLD MATTRESS A SPRINGS? Secretary. Business and Legal Bendix and Croslay AjjPhances
gaMeaa of make or coadtexperience desired. ■ Must Tie 112 Magnolia Ava.
113
Pleasant, Courteous and Intelli.
1T3B-R or 1130.
gent. Escellent salary for right CARPENTER WORK -REPAIRS
paraon. Write,Box ABC* The
NICE Bedroom. Private entrance
•Cabinets Made To Order
op
Mattreaa
A
Box
Spring,
“ •"lord Herald. All Inquirlei . Phone 1967-W —J. E. Robinson
and bath. Pncne 30M-W.
JUg. 139.00., Less Trade 3S9.00
will be treated confidential.
Guaranteed U Yura.
(ENTS — Finished 3101
BULLDOZER Service — Land
lie Ave. One bedroom Royal Comfort M attou A Box
SMlag
&gt;119.00 -L a ss Trade clearing and grading,
_
Large
monthly. Two bedroom
new _Doier.
Free
estir
___
__ estimates.
a. None but those Interested
«U ,fy. Pbooe 1173, _ JfAM ., Guaranteed W Yeara.
Perry D. Gillyarrf, Ph. 3I39-W.
mythlog but a permanent
- .- n e e d apply. Enclose recent
photo and expectant starting

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4:25 W i i t o r n J i m b o n o
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7:00 h - v i n O 'c lo c k C lu b
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23:00 W o rld A t Noon
A ir illM lO X
12:11 K s d lo F o r m 1' i i t t l
1320 H m o k ly n t i o d f i r i
4 10 ,N - w •
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11:20

SERMON UNHEEDED
MYRTLE BEACH, S. C. uB —
Thhe Rev. Ben C. Fischer, pubUs
relations officer at the SouthheasL
ern Baptist Seminary, Wake Forcut, N. C , had a camera, dectrio
raor, watch and suit rase white
he was tilling the pulpit of the
absent pastor of thhe M&gt;t Ub
Beach Baptist church.
The American Bible Society
has distributed more than 430 mil­
lion Bibl** and pirta of Blbtea

in 139 y u r t , --------- -----

J

* * -ftr

T-*J

�ODHAM &amp; TUDOR, inc
I

*

Will Have
i

Ready for you
THIS M O N TH
Bel-Air—
TEN BEAUTIFUL THREE BEDROOM HOM ES
«

’’Designed Especially {or Better Florida Living"’
i

/.

Spacious Glass Jalopsled Florida p^orn

2. Full Tiled Bathroom
3.

(GiviNa YOU open porch coxfobti

(WITH VANITOKY AND AlUiliUK)

Marble Terrazzo Tile Floors

t

4. Beautiful Delmar Kitchen Cabinets
\

5. Kitchen Exhaust Fan
6.

Fully Landscaped Lands

7.

Hot Point Stove and Refrigerator,

(GRASS FROM FRONT CURB TO A LLE Y)]

icwponau:

8. Venetian Blinds
9. Five Ply Built-up Roof With Marble Chips
10. Extra Large Closets And Utility Room
•
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■ ,* •

11. Long Roof Eaves

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Society
Sport*
Radio — TV

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STh* Hanford Ib r a lit
•

bU U U nJ J M

Comment By Milwee
Touches Off Report
From Welfare Director
School days hava a meaning to
than just the pupil*, parent*, tea­
cher? and other* In the school ad­
ministration, County School Su­
perintendent R. T. Milwee aaid
today.
His comment w ii touched) off
h f . report from E. Lee McCubbln. dlrrctor of eommodlty dla-

tribution for tha Florida Depart­
ment of Public Welfare.
Milwee said Scminoit County
received federally-donnated com­
modities during the past school
year with a wholesale market va­
lue of $19,717.65. These were dis­
tributed by tha U. S. Department
of Agriculture through the State

Florida Banks
Leading Lenders,
Report Indicates

Soviet Committee
Says 5-Year Plan
Ahead Of Schedule

(florid* farmers met their credit
needs during 1064 chiefly by
losn* from their local banka, ac­
cording to R. J. Oauman, president
of the Sanford Atlantic National
Bank, who represent* the Florida
Bankers Association as Seminole
County advisory banker. Florida
banks remained the largest lend­
ers to the State'e fanners during
the year, providing far more fin­
ancial aid to our farmers than any
o £ r r lending agency, be noted.
Quoting from the fourteenth an­
nual form lending survey of tha
Agricultural Commission of the
American Bankers Association,
Bauman staled that on January 1,
1PS5, Florida banks had loans out­
standing to farmers totaling $38,872,000 including both production
and mortgage loans. This compare*
with a total of $16,603,000 by the
Production Credit Association, the
ulond largest lender to Florida
farmer*. In addition. Florida banka
held $1,607,000 in C. C. C. loans
under the Government’ s pri re­
support program not Included in
ths above figures.
"Despite reduced net income and
continued high production ex­
penses on farms", Bauman aaid,
"repayment of loans la rapid, and
farm assets are at near-record
Itwels, indicating that these faetWs have not in any sense weak­
ened the financial soundness af
agriculture.
Bearing out Baumaa’e state­
ment regarding the uae of bank
loans to farmer* la the fact that
of the total, farm‘ debt outstand­
ing In banks In Florida on January
1, $20,407,000 was In non-raal
estate or production loans. This
Production Credit Association*
•jmparrs with $16,603,000 held by
d $7,068,000 held by the Fann­
ers Home Administration.

Recess Possibility
Seen In Message
TALLAHASSEE Ift-Tbe
Mlty of a long recess was
today as Gov. Collins eent the leg­
islature a message In which be
vetoed the only respportionmeet
, bill It has been able to pass ta to
days of striving.
*
Collins’ veto of a bill giving sen­
ators to Bay and Monro* count!**
cam* less than half aa bow after
a 4-1 Supreme Court rullag that
be had the veto authority.
‘'House Bill No. 10-X doe* —
Jihleve for the people of Florida
the representative government the
Constitutional unequivocally as­
surea to them," Collins aaid.
Rep. Turlington of Alachua &lt;
ty has ready for Introduction to­
day two resolutions which give the
legislator* thalr choice ef recessing
until Sept. U or until Oet U.
Rep. Knight of Calhoun County
who introduced the bin vetoed by
t governor, said be expect* a
rce month recea*.

»

Crack-Down Starts
On Charity Rackets
CHICAGO (ik-$&gt;gtalatar*e In
ar more states cracked dew*
is year oo charity racket*, said
to be fleecing the public «f t» to
U0 million dollars annually,
Income tax statistics she
an average America* family dole*
out about $ « a year to charities
ranging from lonely street
beggars te nationwide drive*.
An Associated F r e e * a*
shows that Mato*. Utah, New Mo*Am and Oklahoma either adapted
m * charity tow* or made existing
levs tighter Ibis year. At laeat
five state* already bad law* to
■ ■ lia r charity eaerettoas. fr a
lor

«

Welfare Department.
Commodities came to Florida
without cost through the federal
price support program and the
National School Lunch Program
and are used in school lunchrooms
to help make poisibla a more nu­
tritional meal at tha lowest price
possible.
During the fiscal year ending
Jun* 30, 1955, commodities with
a total wholeiale value of $2,468,353 were distributed throughout
tha state. The greater part went
to county school lunchrooms
while some commodities were
made available to charitable in­
stitutions, state Institutions and
other nor-profit programs.
This, to tarms of pounds of gro­
ceries, amounted to over eight
mlllioii pounds or 3M average
freight ears.
Among the items received were
canned green beans, dried •beans,
canned beef and gravy, butter,
cheese, cranberry sauce, canned
fig*, grapefruit sections, dried
milk, cottonseed oil and shorten­
ing, canned beans, orange juice
concentrate, peanut butter, rice,
canned tomatoes and t o m a t o
paste. Florida producers supplied
all canned beans, orange Juice
concentrate and grapefruit aeelion* which w n distributed to
eligible recipients to this state.
Mtlwae said the average num
ber of meals served daily In the
II comity schools totaled 1,171.

MOSCOW IT—The Central Com­
mittee of the Soviet Communist
party told tha Russian people to­
day they have reached the goals
of Russia’ * fifth five-year plan
eight months ahead or schedule.
The plan, covering Ih* 1951-55
period, was fulfilled last May 1
lha committee said in a statement
published in ell Moscow news­
papers. As outlined before the last
all-Soviet party congress in 1951,
tha plan called for an immenm
buildup of S o v i e t economic
strength.
The committee statement accom­
panied a report by Premier Nikolai
Bulganin that tha Soviet Union hae
mad* great progreia to heavy in­
dustry development.
The party leaders said the ex­
N atio n al G uild
perience of past yaara reaffirm*
"the eorrecteeaa of the general
line of our party—tha priority Loses In Effo rts
development of heavy Industry."
To Block A ctio n s
Emphasis to the fifth flve-yaar
WASHINGTON (ft-The National
plan, as outlined in Its early stages,
waa on boosting tha output af Lawyers Guild lost to the U. 8.
steel, coal and petroleum to ltoa Coart of Appeals today an effort
with the heavy industry buildup. to block Atty. Gen. Brownell from
going ahead with a proceeding
aimed at listing ih* Guild as sub­
versive.
Ih* court's enanlmou* decisioai
held the Guild "must exhaust the
proffered edmtolstratira remedy."
Ibai bm*m Betog three* with a
hearing which Brownell baa al­
tered.
WASHINGTON (ft — Tha »*aata
Brownell proposes to pot tha
Investigations subeommltta* today
Guild
on the attorney general's list
blamed 4t error* and Army rad
tape—but not subversion — for of subversive organisation*. The
the promotion and honorable dis­ list is used primarily to screening
government worker* end appli­
charge ef MaJ. Irving Pares* after cant* for Jobe.
b* refused la say whether be was
In this connection the court said:
a Communist.
“ We cannot assume to advaneu
H said Secretary af the Army of a hearing that a responsible
Stevens, or porhep* some of hla executive official ef tha governPentagon bosses, did "a disserv­ meat will fail to carry out hla
ice" to the country by what tt manifest duty.
termed concealing facta about tha
caas of the New York dentist far
almost a year. It also accused
oy C . C . W h itt
"the Department ef the Army" af
some deceptive practice* toward A ttend s W orkshop
Congresi.
ATLANTA. O a ,- The Rev.
But K mads no mention of sub­ Clarence C. White, Lake Mary, la
version to a formal report saying among 78 ministers attending the
the case showed "individual error* Church and Community Workshop
to Judgment, lack of proper co­ at Emory University,
ordination, ineffective administra­
Nina major denominations are
tion procedure*, toconalstant ap­ represented to the enrollment for
plies lions of investigating regula­ the workshop, according to O.
tions, and excessive delays."
R o m Freeman, director. Ministers
hava coma from 18 states and Can­
to attend cessions ef the Town
T rip Is Postponed; ada
and Country School or the Ur­
and Industrial School af the
W aters S till F a ta l ban
workshop.
DESTIN (ft - A Jackson. Miss.,
The Church and Community
couple who called off a deep aaa Workshop la staffed by eight
fishing trip because af bad weath­
potent authorittoe hi rural
er drowned in turbulent Gall af whan church work. Tha
Maxloa watara yoetorday trying to
and Country School is baadad by
resent thalr ml
Dr. Earl D. C. Brewer, professor
They ware Mr. and Mr*. W. W. of sociology and the rural church
Wright 11. Wright was general at Emory- Or. Fred Shipper of
sales massgar ef lb* Mississippi Drew Theological Seminary heads
Products ‘Co., general wholesale the Ushaa and Industrial School.
firm.
The bay, Georg*, 19, was
knockad off a raft by high wavoa, Houso V o tes For
witness** stid. When hi* parent*
triad to halp him they were polled Survivors Paym ents
under by a atrang undertow and
WASHINGTON (*&gt;—The Hi
drowned. Oeorga chug to tha aide voted yesterday for a broad over­
of tha raft end we* net hurt.
haul ef government payments to
Cynthia, absut g, to* couple’s the eurrivore o f eervicemon.
waa on tho batch.
by voice vote eent tho
I measure to the Sen­
ate, where It to uncertain whether
Search C o n tin u es
it can be acted on before tho see■lea's end.
Fo r Com m unists
D m US would do away with the
at |19AM ftwe tooaranea far
to natfena. pat atf aan

Investigators Blame
Red Tape, 48 Errors

R .

1stration
to their

A N IN DEPEN DENT D A IL Y N EW SPAPER

Vermont
Woman
Convicted
BRATTLEBORO. Tt. (ft-M rt.
Lucille 8. Miller, 45. stood convict­
ed today on II counts of advising
young men to evade military serv­
ice.
Federal Judge Ernest W. Gibson
ssid he will sentence her Aag. 8.
However, Mr*. Miller’s lawysrs
have announced they will appeal.
The jury returned its verdict
yesterday after deliberating a little
more than an hour, after a threeday trial.
Mrs. Miller, the only defense
witness, took the stand following
five unsuccessful attempts by her
counsel tor a dismissal of Iht in­
dictments.
A high point in Mrs Miller's
testimony came when she replied
to a question ssked her by U.S.
Atty. Louis G. Whitcomb. He asked
her if she "deliberately Intended"
to violate the law when she wrote
to the nine young men, advising
them to evade the draft. Her
answer was. "I certalnlg did."
Mrs. Miller and her husband
Manuel, 4T, a Justice of the peace
at Bethel, gained national attention
when they withstood efforts of a
U.S. marshal and police to serve
Mrs. Miller with a court order
committing ber to ■ menial hospi­
tal.
Her husband Is scheduled to go
on trial next Monday on charges
of resisting a U. S. marshall.

Military Program
Goes Before Senate
For Added Debate
WASHINGTON Ml — A military
reserves bill shorn of compulsory
training requirements for present
and former servicemen Spent* up
for Renata debate today.
The Senate Armed 8erviea*
Committee, approving the mea­
sure yeeterdey, voted to require
future reserve training only of
those men entering regular ser­
vice to days or more after the
measure becomes law.
A* passed by the House, the
woe Id have permitted an almost
Immediate use of a form at com­
pulsion, as asked by President
Elsenhower to assure reserve
farces he wants. The House voted
to permit required training of all
men who entered service after
tha Korean armistlca, July 27,
1963.
The Senate committee voted 7-2
to reject thst idea, however, and
proposed Instead a scale of bo­
nuses to veterans who voluntarily
Join Army and Marine Corps rambat reserve units during the next
two-yea n .

bin

D efense A ttorneys
Hope For H earing
MIAMI (ft — Defense attorneys
hoped to get a sanity hearing to­
day for Robert Brown, held sine*
Friday for Investigation to tha 1954
Judith Ann Roberta kidnap-alaytog.
'Attorney Georg* Nicholas ssid
he hoped to have Brown declared
sane "so police will have to quit
shoving him around."
"Thsy won’t file iny charges
■gainst him because they hava
no evidence against him,” Nichol­
as added.
The Miami Herald said It laarn#d that both a court-appointed
psychiatrist aad ana hired by
the defense will declare Brown
sane.
"Tha Iwo doctors visited with
Brown separately but et length
Wednesday," the Herald aaid.

W. S. BURNHAM
DIES Of MASSACHUSETTS
Sanford frie n d s i f N n . V . S.
Ha declared ha had been de­
Burnham, tha fa rm e r Dorothy
dications that Atty.
Crabtree, af Olanaaator, Mae*, will
aright hava charge
k t B erry to leant ad bar death ad toe
lad that
three aa July U .
H
M e a * '1” 1
S
health ter tha east year nad a
aad we will
half. Ska -bad vQtod hare many
ft."
Hare* at the base* ef bar eeaeta,
R *******

- - - 1..

Nn. 2-12.

AnenrUteei P rs m le a s e d W ire

Many Are Missing
After Boat Sinks
i-

Commies Okay
Plan To Reduce
Personnel Rate
PANMUNJOM. Korn (ft-The
Communist* today screed to a
reduction of number and personnel of neutral nations inspection
teams stationed at ports of entry
to Korea.
Ths reduction was proposed by
the Swiss and Swedish delegations
of ths four-power neutral commis­
sion. Other members are Commu­
nist satellites Cseehoskivakia and
Poland.
The new plan cuts the number
of teams from 10 to • and halves
the personnel on each team. At
present the Neutral Nations Super­
visory Commission hss live teams
in North and live in South Korea.
Each team now has 10 to 12 mem­
bers.
A ropy of a statement of accept­
ance by Lt. Gen. Lee Sang Cho,
senior Communist delegals to the
Military Armistice Commission,
was handed by the Communists
to Allied newsmen dunng a com­
mission meeting.
The United Nations Command,
reserved judgment on tha proposal
and ssid tt would bring the matter
up again Saturday,

Bankrupt Railway
Is Denied Request
To Relocate Yards
JACKSONVILLE (ft-Judg* Bry­
an Simpson has denied ■ request
by the bankrupt Florida East
Coast Railway to move Its Miami
freight yards from the Buena
Vtita section to suburban Hialeah.
"A t a hearing In Mareh, former
Gov. John W. Martin af Jackson­
ville, bankruptcy trustee of the
FEC, said it had the necessary
I H million dollars to finance tho
move end predicted the railroad
will make 4H million this year.
Opposition came from the At
lantic Coast Line Railroad, whirh
lor eeverel years has tried to gain
a merger with the FEC, end from
first mortgage trustees and bond­
holders of ffle FEC.
John B. L'Engle, FEC attorney,
said the Buena Vista facilities art
Inefficient and Inadequate. He pre­
dicted continued operation from
there would piece the railroad in
danger of losing present patronage
sod unable to take on more.

Pinecrest School
45 Pet. Completed
Die new Plneereet elementary
school Is 48 per rent completed
and ten rooms will be reedy for
use nest school term, County
School Superintendent R. T. Milwee said today.
Milwee said teachers wffl hold
a pre-school workship et the
school August 16. The school term
opens September 6.
Regarding work ea tha eld
Greyhound bus depot, whirh is be­
ing converted Into administrative
offices for county school officials,
Milwee said the project Is pro­
gressing satisfactorily. He said he
end his staff would probably move
Into tha building about the first
to August.

Committee To Keep Close W atch
On Settlement O f Dixon Yates
By JOE HAM,
WASHINGTON &lt;ft-»en. Ander­
son (D-NM) said today the SenstoHouas Atoasic Energy. Commit**
ha heads will keep close watch
ea bow the government goes about
saUltog the Dixea-Yetea contract.
D m commit!** (ailed to an ef­
fort to obUia from Atomic Energy
Commlssina officials yesterday
word as to Just bow tha cancel­
lation win he effected.
Nattog that eadsr tha law hla
immtttaa to ta ha kept Informed
af avarytktog ARC does, Aoder■aa aaid ARC to the governmeat
party to tha aaatract and

Partly rlowdy threoxh Friday »Ph
srettrtod mmntog •h«*#r» «»tilb•••4 rnatl and »ralt»r*d showers
»lt»« h»r*.

*

THURSDAY^ JULY 14. 19M

HANFORD. rLOW IDA,

Weather

tha contract. There have
some Indications the Dixon-Yates
group may seek several million
dollars.
ARC Chairman Lewis L. Strauss
told Anderson’s committee ho be­
lieves ABC should handle the can­
cellation. But he said this would
aat he settled until his agency gel*
a formal directive from the Budget
Bureau.
Strauss said soma steps on the
cancellation already hava been
taken, hut would aot disclose Uitm
publicly. William Mitchell. AEG
general counsel, said aa formal
notice had yet bees seat to DixonYota*.
Mitchell ran Into sharp criticism
a Democratic committee
after be gave his opln.un
tha contract to folly effective and
Madtog aa tha government.
Aadereoa has taken Um opposite
View, aoataadtog the government
a dollar hscausa tha
private utility group never pot
^
M J Mi
J- 8 -------M l / OB flMi H IM U
l u rn

Storm-Tossed Gulf
Dulles To Prepare
Swallows Passenger
Finishing Touches
Vessel From Mexico On West's Slra'egy

JOPLIN. Mo. (ft — Officers
checked discrepancies today in a
farm laborer’s rambling account
of abducting 2-year-old Donna Sue
Davis from her crib and raping
and beating her.
The body of ths Sioux City, lows,
child was found Monday in a farm
field near South Sioux City, Neb.,
just across the Missouri River
from the lows town.
Detective John Showers said
Audrey Brandt. 42, of Iji Porte
City, lows, orally admllUd taking
the girl from her bed Sunday night,
raping her and hitting her scvsral
times.
llhowers ssid the farmhand
claimed, however, that hs did not
kill her.
He told officers he hitchhiked
here from Sioux City.
Officers questioned him 1st* Into
the night on his story, which they
described as incoherent to parts.
Detective F. E. Elchtlberger
■aid the FBI end Joplin police
were studying certain phases of
the story that "didn’t Jibe."

VERACRUZ, Mexico ( f t - . The
crowded coastal passenfer boat l-J
Flrrha tank last night in the
storm-tossed Gulf of Campeche 40
minutes after tailing from Veracrus. Twenty-nine perton* were
feared k»tl.
Twenly-six pertont wrere report­
ed mitting. Three bodiet—of an
adult passenger and two children
—were ifeoveted and 37 pertont
were reported rctcued.
All those thoard the 143-ton vetacl were believed to be Mexicans.
The l.a Klerha sinking wax the
treond marine disaster of the day
in the Caribbean area. Early yes­
terday a Liberian ore earner, the
Sun Prinresa. rammed and sank
the 6,153-ton British freighter Geo­
logist off Trinidad. Nineteen crew­
men of lha Geologist were m&gt;xi
ing and the body of another was
recovered.
The l.a Flecha wvnt down about
four mile* off Vcracrui. She was
bound across the gulf for Ih* port
of Progreso, on the Yucajsn Pen­
insula. Coast guard vessels and
fishing boat* searched throughout
the night for survivors.
A rescued crewman said the l.a
Flecha was carrying at least U
person*. Her sailing list showed
32 passengers and ■ crew of 14
■board, but many of those rescued
were not oo Ih* list.
The cause ef the sinking was not
immediately determined.
They
said the ship went down so rapidly
there was little time for launching
lifeboats.

Committee Okays
Construction Plan

Approval Assured
For Resolution
Affecting States

Police Check Story
Of Farm Laborer
In Child's Death

WASHINGTON (ft-Republicans
promised a strong effort In the
House Public Works Committee to.
day to compromise rival proposals
for financing a mammoth nsw
road-building program.
The committee yesterday ap­
proved the construction program
itself, calling for about 37 billions
In federal funds and to billions
from the state* over the next 12
yeers.
nut K defeated 19-14 President
Eisenhower’s proposal la finance
Ih* road-building expansion large­
ly through bonds to be issued by a
special government corporation.
The committee take* up today a
substitute Democratic plan to vay
for the nsw roads by immediate
Increase* in taxes nn gasoline,
trucks and buses, heavy Urea and
tubes, end diesel fuel.
Ac approved by a subcommittee,
these increase* would raise about
•M million d ollm a year.

Mosquitoes Blamed
On Lack Of Water

WASHINGTON (ft-Overwhelminx approval wax assured (inlay
for a resolution expressing Sensle
hopes thst iiihlect state* "shall
■gain enjoy the right of selfdetermination."
The resolution, backed by Senate
leaders of both parties, doe* not
name the Soviet Union nr commu­
nism and makes nn reference In
the Big Four summit talks opening
at Geneva Monday.
President Eisenhower leaves for
Geneva tomorrow night, accom­
panied by the First Lady and a
party of advisers, after addressing
tha nation by radio and television
on his views of the summit talks.
Roth h* and Secretary of State
Duliei hava repeatedly Indicated
they will press Russia In ess* up
its grip on the European satellites.

Soil Conservation
Officials Elected
Ralph W. Hammond. Longwnnd,
waa re-elected and W. W. Lins,
Silver Lake, was sleclrd to tha
board of supervisors of the Semi­
nole County Soil Conservation Dis­
trict in Tuesday’s election. Results
war* announced today.
The (wo men will serve for four
years each. Hammond Is ■ citrus
grower and nurseryman, while
Lint, who is alto a citrus grower,
is president of the Seminole County
Farm Bureau.
The elections were held simul­
taneously in all Florida districts
Tuesday. A "very nice" turnout
was reported in the Longwood area.

TAMPA (ft—Mosquitoes ere had
again end n health official says
leek of water is to blame, ■■ well
ae the uiual trouble from too much
water.
Drought last winter dried up
many small creek* end ponds, kill­
ing fish and other creatures who
pray on the mosquito larva, said
Roy Tarham, assistant sanitary
rngmoer for lha Hillsborough Coun­
ty health department.
Now there’s too much water and
that’ i providing plenty of breeding
places for tha skeeters. Abnor­
mally high tides, which come ev­
ery four years, ere flooding marsh
lands, Parham said.
Miss Ids Versa Woodcock com­
All over Florida mosquitoes are pleted 40 years of aervire with tha
reported worse this year than lest, Southern Bell Telephone Co. yester­
he added.
day. Bh* started as an operator
to Sanford to 1911 for tha San­
ford Telephone Co.
* Being vary active to Sanford
aha Is a member of the First
Methodist Church, tha Daughters
Bey E. Green, State Comptroll­ of Waalay and Eastern Star. Her
er, has Just released hla annual re­ bom# Is on 100 Elm Ava.
port on salos tax collections which
E. V. Turner, manager, stated
reached e new high ef $74,058,- that “ aha Is s fair loyal employe
429.81 for the fiscal year which end wo know that all will Join
tndod Juno 80. Thie amount Is with the Telephone Co. In con­
over eight million dollar* greeter gratulating har for her service."
than the total for the previous
year, end la almost double the
BATH .TKNNII CLUB
revenue realised during the first
PLANNING PARTY ’
twalve mon'hs after the Rales
Tax law became effective to Nov­
The Sasford Bath sad Tennis
ember o f 1948.
Club la have * party Saturday
Seles Tax payments received night st 7 p. sa. at ths pool. Any
during the year from dealers to member extracting 1* attend pleas*
Seminole Cewntg ansewtead to cell Betty Brawn 1T89-W ky 10
e’aiaak Saturday

Miss Woodcock Has
40 Years Service

Annual Sales Tax
Report Is Released

PARIS (ft—Secretary of State
Dulles was due In Paris today to
help put the finishing touche* on
Western strategy (or the Rig four
summit conference.
Later today he will dine with
British Foreign Secretary Harold
Macmillan at the tt S. Embassy,
Dulles indicated »» he left Wash­
ington last night that agreement
among the Western Allies would
be easy to achieve. He said Ihcy
"see eye to rye" on mailers likely
lo conic up when President F.iscnhower, British Prime Minister
Eden and French Premier Edgar
Faure sit down In Geneva with
Soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin.
"Tills Initial unity is a good boginning of our efforts to reirh
agreement wth the Soviet Union
on the slated purposes of the Gen­
eva conference," he said.
Ttie Big Three foreign ministers
also will outline their policies for
Geneva to Ihe other ministers of
Ih* North Atlantic Council at a
meeting Saturday.

Ike's Intent Told
To Disregard Part
Of New Money Bill
WASHINGTON 'ft — President
Kitciihower’ x avowed intent to
disregard a provision of the nrw
■irfeuse money bill unless ‘ the
courts tell him to abide by tt
brought Republican praise and
Democratic denunciation u emi­
gres* today.
Sen. Mundt (R-SMi said the
President showed "courage and
integrity." Rep. Sikes (D-Kla) protested, ’ ’Thlx country Is nut under
martial law."
In s special message, Eitrnbower d I r * c t # d a broadside
against a provision giving either
Ih* Senate nr House appropria­
tion! coni milters veto power oxer
Defense Department decision* to
divest itself of any of Its Iiumiicsi
activities.
Describing the provision at a
violation nl Hie constitutional In­
junction that the branches of govefnment shill be independent, Ei­
senhower said It "will be regard­
ed os invalid by the executive
branch of the gov eminent . . . .
unless nlhrrwivr directed hy a
court of competent Jurisdiction."

Adjustment Board
Has Denied Appeal
For Miss J. Laing
The Board of Adjustment and
and Appeal* Iasi night denied
sn appeal bby bliss Jeanette I.aing in the condemnation of three
houses belonging to her nn Pin*
Avenue. The houses are Negro re­
sidences.
CPy Building Inspector John
Gillon said Mivs Using must nmv
either bring the houses up lo city
standard- nr tear them down The
houses are located at 404, 406 and
40* Pine Avenue.
bills Using and Gillon presented
their sides of the rase at last
nigh’ ’* meeting which was the
first held by the new board head­
ed by E. C. Harper Sr.
The houses wrere condemned hy
Gillon in his campaign against re­
sidences not meeting city sani­
tary requirements.

Pinecastle Airman
Cleared Of Charge
ORLANDO (ft—Airman Robert
H. Hail, 20, of Pinersitle AFB
was freed yesterday of a charge
of attempted rape brought by ■ 55yrar-otd grandmother.
The women, from Columbus,
Ga., aaid she and an U-yaar-old
grandson arrived at the Orlandu
bus station without money July 1
and she asked Hall for a dime to
the could phon# a daughter. Hall
offered Uiem a ride, then attempt­
ed to attack ber to the ear, ah*
aaid.
Hall declared the woman mis­
took hit intentions. He said the
door of the ear came open end she
became excited when be leaned
ever bar to elot* it.
D m charges were dropped. aJtar
attorney*.

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                    <text>n -

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COLDCUTS/

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AND IT SMELLED LIKE CHICKEN
■J HOW COULD IT COME OUT COLD-CUTS? &gt; - - /

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shown here if you can buy any new car.

•l-ifear.lpam floar Buick SltCU M m . Modol 4 *
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end loco! *o*oa oddlionol Pricoo msy very y,0Htfy
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Sadia for juet about the price o f the m a ile r
c a n —even for lau than tom e models o f the
three moot widely known smaller oars. T h e

STRICKLANDMORRISON, INC.

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roomy S u m , or the eustem.built
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AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER
M
Page 2
Tuw. July 12. 1955
SANFORD. FLORIDA.

MIAMI (/P)— The Miami Herald said today that Robert
Brown. 31, held for Investigation in the Judith Ann Roberts
jkldnap-slaying a year ago. was given injections of “ truth
• gerum" during psychiatric examination.
The Herald said the injections were given Saturday

Strolling
In Sanford

N o. 2.10.

Sanford M em oria
Action Postponed
B y Commissioners

Brown Is Held
An Questioning
Of Miami Case
— ------------------- ---------------------------- ami that o f Jackson Memorial Hoipital confirmed that fact.
I’olico liavr not announced re­
sults of rktenaive psychiatric teata
cn Broun since he xvas picked up
at Judith Ann's crave in Mount
hicbo Cemetery Friday.
Broun denied the crime and aaid
ho never harmed or bothered any
body.
The prisoner was placed in a
psychopathic ward yesterday for
Director* of the Chamber of Cheater KIdredge and Detectives
Commerce wll hold their regular Charles Sapp and Paul Nichols.
monthly meeting at 8 o'clock to­ While being taken from his cell
night at City Hall. Subject* for irt the Dade County Jail to be
discussion Include plans for wel­ fingerprinted.
Brown
faced
a
coming new Naval official* to swarm of police and newsmen. He
Sanford.
fmched at flashlight bulbs.
•
_ . * * * '
_ .. .
... I “ Why do I have to suffer like
• -^ e Sanford theatre Guild will tM, r &gt; the un. h, ven, barefooted
rie s o f ^
„ bbf&lt;, . . , . ve illffere(1
'hold ah.
the second IIn. aa se
aeries
workshop meetings tonight In the I was 4 months old. They all think
City Hall auditorium. The meet­ I'm guilty but I'm not."
ing will begin at 8 o’clock. Bill
Judith Ann was taken from the
Vegan, assistant manager o f the home o f her grandfather, Harry
Vagabond Players, Flat Hock, N. Boscnberg, in the llosenberg, auto­
Cn will be tha guest speaker.
mobile and her body was found
• • • •
several hours later. The car was
A young man and a lady (we
found abandoned near' the spot
don't know where ahe hail* from)
where the body was found.
' happened to be walking from ops p o i l t * direction* in the park, each
W wrlth a canine on the leaih Aa
the dog* met, they rubbed note*
•(fictionally. “ Ah, me,” aald the
young man, "that la what I’d like
to do.” "Wall, go ahaad” aald
the girl, il'a your dog.”
PITTSBURGH un-nival CIO and

A sso cia te d Prw w I-cayed W ire

Pertly rtnndv *Msv sed WadnMday with srstierM evening thun­
dershower*.

Collins Is Next
To Take Action
In Controversy
THREE FORMER American soldiers, who chance d their minds about living In Red China, smiln
happily after reaching Hong Kong. The ex-Gls. who refused repatriation after the Korean war. were
released at the border of the British crown rolonv bv Chinese Communist officials and immediately
turned over to the U. 8. Conciliate who had arranged for their quick return home on the “ President
Cleveland.” They ere (I. to r.&gt;: William A. Cowart, of Dalton, Ga.j Otho (i. Bril. Olvmnia, Wash,
and I.ewic W. liriggs, Jacksonville. Tex. During an interview they denounced C&lt; mmuntsm as a force
that kill* men’s souls, and said they were rradv to fare any charges against them. (Internationall

Structure
Beginning
Discussed

Evidence Is Heard
For Mother 013
In Federal Case

TALLAHASSEE J v -T h . next
BRATTLERORO Vt .C -V iurr
move in Hie long snd bitter battle
of
seven women ami five men
over reapportioning the Senate was
today began bearing evidence in
up to Gov. Collirts today.
Ihe federal ra-r again-t
Lu­
A bill he rriticired ax unfair
City Conimis.-iioi), in n busy cille Miller. 41 mother of threo
cleared ihc Legislature yesterday
with 17 to 9 Senate passage, and session last n igh t, p ostp on ed Who is Charged with advising nino
m evade military draft
a resolution was bring prepared a ction on th e p rop osed lien -1 &gt;&lt;"'"£
ratling for immediate adjourn­ eral S a n fo rd M em orial l.ib - c4,,s.
ment
rc.ry nnd Museum and voted
' M„r\ l t Ucr \
1 Manuel. 47 Bethel civil leader,
Collins declined In eommrnt on to again take up at the next
i
held off authorities with a nfl*’ for
the possibility he will ask Ihe Flor­ meeting a p in for an im­
12 hour* when they tried lo take
id Supreme Court (or an advisory mediate start on part of the
his wife away for commitment to
opinion as to his authority lo veto
structure.
a mental Institution He Is under
the measure.
Tabling of the appeal high- indictment for resisting a l 8.
"I
am
sick
about
It,"
he
said.
CLEVELAND (/V)— A three-judge Appellate Court to­
"They have faded io perform a lighted a meeting which saw marshal.
day refused Dr. Suniuol 11. Sheppard, 31, a new trial on the duty
' The Millers surtvndorH only
wlilrh the Constitution makes the Commission approve an r\
after tear gas was fired into their
LAKE BUTLER UD-Rsymond Basis of error in the 10-tveek trial which ended Dec. 21 so clear. I will announce my next eursion boat franrhise, hire Rohome. .Mrs. Miller w.xs committed
and Ruth Staffa were sentenced with his conviction fur second degree murder in the bludgeon move by the time the messenger lert Kelly as a sewer foreman
gels down here with the bill."
ga^d
*° assume the cost of to St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Wash­
yesterday to 70 years for smuggl­ death of his wife, Mnrilyn, July 4, 1954.
"The defendant in this case has been afforded a fair
ing a pistol to desperado George .
Collin* has said previously he isunec^tof sewer line* from the ington, D.C. She was released ns
mentally competent Ian month.
A. Heroux In stato prison. Heroux' 'Vial by an Impartial jury, and In
would veto a bill which didn't do csty limit* tn tho South I’inecrext
Mr*. Mtlh’ r is accused in HI
shot and killed Asst. Supt. J. C. this court’* opinion substantial jus­
a real Job of reapportioning Ihc Heights subdivision. The city will
rminli ot knowingly rounvcIiPR
Godwin and wounded two guards tice Has been done," the Appellate
Senate, Some legislatnrs, however, pay for tha line* vxtth revenue
nine young men to refiivo service
have contended rcapportinnment they bring in.
April 4.
Court ruling said.
in the armed forces and to (tint
was a legislative matter under the
The couple—she’ s Heroux' for­
The action ruled groundless a
Tha subdivision, whrto
123 over In her. in violation of law,
mer wife—pleaded for leniency and contention by tho osteopath’* at­
Constitution and the gnwrnor home* will be elected, is being
their registration certificates or
couldn't lawfully veto a reappor­ developed by Brailey Odhsni, who
showed surprise when Circuit Judge torney* there were 37 aseigmenta
draft clrds.
tionment bill.
George T. Patten pronounced sen­ of error In hi* long trial.
Mid he has let a $116,000 contence. They said thry had been
The three judges, I-ee E. Sheet,
frait for streets, sewers snd wa­
AFL unions have teamed up In model prisoners, had testified Julius M. Kovarhy end Joy Seth
iter lines there.
precedent-selling joint bargaining against Heroux, and already had Hurd, indicated they would not
Th* Commission swarded *n
strategy aimed at winning a pay spent 3 lim onlhi in jail.
rule until next week on a second
exclusive franchise to opereto nn
boost for some 25,000 employes of
WASHINGTON UW-Key House
Judge Patten order* dthat the motion by Sheppard for a new
pvcursioti host from tho rily pier
*I
the Alumlum Co. of America.
members said today they expert
sentence begin upon their delivery trial.
t&lt;» W. It. Kemp end Rirliatd 8oThe CIO United Steelworkers tp state prison in Ralford. officers
the
Eisenhower
administration
In
The second motion is bused on
dero, Orlando end Winter Park
scheduled ita first bargaining ics- immediately took them thrrr.
defense claims o f “ newly dlscov- ■crept, as aerond choice, a proSIOUX CITY, lows un - A chub­ businessmen. Speaking on behalf
sion today.
. - M o . Staffa. 23.. testified at trad evidence" which centers on -penal1 to raise gasoline and like by 2-year-old girl plucked from nf the promoters w *«. Forrest
to*
•
. w .
n * . • .*
The AFL aluminum workers will Heroux* trial that he tried to get testimony by Dr. Paul L. Kirk, taxes almost a billion dollar* a her erib by an apparent sex de­ llreckenrldge, manager o f the
start wage talks Thursday.
her to slip three .43 automatics to professor of criminalistics at the year to help pay tor a huge road generate. was found raped and Chamber ef Commerce.
The USW and tho aluminum him for a break and that she University of California, Berke­ building program.
slain in a farm field yesterday.
Ilreckenridxe, who said Sodern
WASHINGTON 'h - T w Dixonworkers have been working out smuggled In a .25 Kalian auto­
Police said they were without I* now in New Yoik looking over Yates rontrart wsx virtually x
A Houm Public Worlfs subeoin
Calif.
WICHITA rALLS, Tex. 0f» - joint strategy for some time, matic as a sign of her "good ley,
Should the Court of Appeals rnittre has proposed increases in clues in Hip ahdurtion-slaying of l«&gt;et* for sale, said III* men plan dead letter today. But triumphant
Sheppard Air Fore* Baa* ordered apokesmen revealed yesterday.
faith." She said she was afraid hold against Sheppard on his se­ taxes on gas, diesel fuel, trucks rurly haired Donna Sue Davis, to use a boat capable of carrying
a • p.m. curfew for the 18,000
The move la regarded as signlfl- Heroux' friends on the outside cond and final motion, ho would and tires as a meant of financing described by neiglilMirs a* "Ihc 400 passengers. Convention crowds foes in Congress indicated they
planned to keep tho is ie alive —
airmen and officers at the base can in labor circles. Ih c CIO and might harm her if she didn't help. he rrmoved from Cuyahoga Coun­
President Eisenhower's proposed darling of Ihe neighborhood."
vvuuld be brought l,y box from into the 1956 pixrsidenlal cam ­
after gang fight* and near-flghta AFL are scheduled to vote on a
ty Jail to Ohio Penitentiary to be­ 33-billion-dntlar plan to modernize
Tho pajsma-rlad daughter of Orlando for excursions down Hie paign, if possible.
P broke out during the weekend be­ merger proposal at separate con­
gin serving a life term to which the nation's highways—particular Mr and Mr*. James Davis wax St. Johns River.
President Elsenhower order® I
tween civilian teen-agen and m ilk ventions In New York next De­
ho was sentenced. Since lsst July ly the interstate network—over the lifted from her rn b within min
Kemp and Sodern recently fi­ the contract canceled yesterday
tary man.
cember.
30 he lias been in tha County Jail, next 13 years.
utes after her mother h*d tucker! gured in * proposal to build an after Mayor Frank Toliey nt Mem­
It was not clear what the fight
David J. McDonald, president of
and the time served has not count­
open-air amusement center on phis convinced him in a eonh'ienro
Committee members said they her in for ihe night Sunday,
lag wat about.
the steelworkers, has been a strong
ed toward the life sentence.
neighbors re Lake Monro* in the vicinity of the that th’* ^rlty intends to build its
understand this la the admlnlstra About this time
Only ana casualty, haa resulted advocate of a CIO AFL merger.
ported seeing a young man prowl­ liandshell and the new boat basin. own power plant.
lion's position:
j^ en airman was alaahed and beatTh® President still prefers his ing about the Davis' nimlest du­ This iiba is still being studied.
Coining out nf that merlin?,
an at a etty park a week ago.
The two men have also gone Ally. Gen. BrowtHI announce!
original proposal In finance ths plex home.
But tbt Wichita Falls Record
LONDON UW-Ruth Ellis wailed
Tho
crumpled
body,
aavegely
Into thtf harness hors* training the government “ will immediately
program by creating a special
New* said ao aingle incident act
calm and resigned in death row
corporation which would sell long­ beaten about the bead, was found Lusinese *1 Casselberry. They take steps to ternunato' t h* pri­
off the tension, which began buildat Holloway Jail today, apparently
term bonds. These would not be alongside a ditch at the edge of based the Aisle* Driving Park vate power cnnliart.
- l a g up about 10 days ago.
WASHINGTON W7 Rebuffed unconcerned with last-minute ef­
subject to th* national debt limit. a cornfield on Ihe Ernest Deh- Iasi week for a 35.)r*r period
lint Sen. Kcfaiiver (D IVnn),
W Authorities said Uwy were tipped despite a special appeal to the forts to save her from the gallows.
Irrklng farm near Snulh Sioux ami announced plans lo opeiats who heads an antitrust sulu-ointhat both airmen end civilian teen- House, administration l e a d e r s
The blonde, 28-year-oM divorcee
DENVER &lt;21 — The U. S Air Such bonds would ha repaid by
City,
Nrh.,
Just
across
the
Mis­
millre which has tarn investigat­
nn a year-round bans.
,agera began carrying weapons, in­ day to restore daep cuts in foreign U scheduled to be hanged tomor­ Force Academy opened its doors road tolls.
souri River from her*.
K*lly, th* aewer foreman, was ing negotiations which led to tho
cluding pistols, Sunday.
row for the Eaiter Sunday slaying to the first class of 306 cadets yesaid appropriations.
formerly an inspector for Angus ronlrsrt. announced tho cancella­
Cot. Melvin S. Hoilidg*, deputy
But their hopes were non* too of a lover who had spurned her. terday amid aalutei from roaring
k Associates, which carried out tion "will have no effect on ouf
-base commander, aald the latest bright. Some Influential senators , Opponents of the death penalty jet bomber*, the snap of martial
hearings."
tn* city **wer project.
incident occurred Sunday night be­ already have demanded additional were expected to raise the issue music and inspirational words of
"\V* expert In gel to the hotfoot
hind a baseball park and SO air­ cuts In tha 82.638,741.750 voted by in the House of Commons tonight Air Force leader*.
of this entire nutter," ho said.
men were “ apprehended."
Secretary of the Air Fore* Har­
the House yesterday to finance in hopes that a vot« might be
LAKELAND &lt;2*—Judging by us­
ST. PETERSBURG o rs -lfs a
Authorities say they discovered the aid program for the current obtained urging clemency.
old E. Talholt told the cadets and age reports and the July estimate
long way from directing traffic in
Met another gang fight was act bookkeeping year which ends next
Only a direct command from 3,000 Invited guest* at Lowry Air of the U. 8. Department of Agri­
St. Petersburg to directing a linn
^ m r next Friday.
Queen Elisabeth II could bait the Base that "it Is to the human ele­
June 30.
culture, Florida has lest than a hunting expedition in Africa but a
TALLAHASSEE un — Gov. Colexecution. The monarch tradi­ ment that the Air Force Aeadmy million boxes of oranges and less
The
House
acted
251-121
only
a
former policeman Is all set to mike lint and a group nf Irading busi­
*
few hours after e Whit* House tionally acta In auch cases only is dedicated, and especially, to than half a million of grapefruit the big Jump.
'
, nessmen are scheduled lo leave
plea that tha cuts—totaling $627.- on the recommendation of the the leadership we must have If left from the 1954-53 crop.
He la Richard Rohrbaugh, 28, a July 23 for a week's good will
800,000 below . President Eisenhow­ home a*creUry—Gwilym IJoyd our country la to aurvive."'
The USDA now’ estimates the former Marin* combat sergeant. lour of Ihe East
er'* requests — would "serously George—who yesterday rejected
orange crop at 88,600,000 boxes and Rohrbaugh read about a safari to
Mcmbrri of tha party will ” *xclemency appeals and petlUons
TAMPA (.is —A m in paroled
hamper” the program.
grapefruit at 34,800,000 boxea. That Africa about a year ago and the press Florida’s appreciation for
HOUSHOLDER OPENS
containing more than 23,000 signs
June 30 will tux returned to .Stats
Is
a
cut
of
200,000
boxes
in
each
idea
of
heading
ona
himself
kept
TWO-WEEK TERM
the confidence shown by investors Prison at Raiford as mentally do.
lures.
rropping up in his thoughts. Finally in our itala's future,”
County Judge Ernest Houshol- case from the June estimate.
Collins ranged and dangerous, tulhuritins
Through July I usage was re­ he resigned from the police force said.
der today opened a two-week term
HAMU8SURG, Pa. 0P&gt;-Mrt.
said today.
of court. Approximately 27 rases, ported at tT,565.ono boxes of or- July 1 to go Into it.
He win be arrnm pinM by
Catharine Kreltser beaded for
W n. Wilcox, county psr"le isangea
and
34,100,000
boats
of
In
the
venture
with
him
It
Rob
most
of
them
Involving
traffic
members
nf
the
.Stale
Develop,
w York with her. Bible today,
prrviior, said he is Willie B.
WASHINGTON III- Sen. Russel]
grapefruit
and
Mveral
hundred
Dillon,
30,
a
former
military
pilot
ment Comntlssioner-newly crea­ Anderson, so. convicted In 1043 nf
and liquor violations, are sche­
mOUQ keeping mum about bar mon(DGe) said today “ the very high
duled to b« heard. No jury had thousand boxes have been used and salesman. They hop* to enlist ted lo coordinate Florida's ef­ second degree murder hi the death
Op plane.
b ra n ” baa not convinced him be
since then.
about 10 persons for the expedition. fort* to promote itself arid at­
LAKE ALFRED lit — The state been selected this morning.
And big money It la too. The is wrong in opposing the Pent­
of Deputy Sheriff lia&gt;giH»d ElUey
tract new industries—and by re­ at Otter Creek and sentenced lo
plant board la ready to begin giv­
M-year-eld grandmother f r o m
agon’s compulsory military re­ ing direct help to cltrui growers
presentatives of (he State Coun­ life imprisonment.
nearby Camp HUl, P a , has won
tearful of the disease called
cil fur Industry and Commerce.
Itt/MM oa a CBS talavision pro* serve program.
Anderson was paroled lo an un­
“ I haven't beard anything bare spreading decline.
Lunrheon and dinners in Bos­ cle in Tamps but Hie uncle (old
ton,
Philadelphia
and
New
York
;*[r£islgbt. shall tell viewer* yet to cause me to change my
Charles Poucher, a special In­
Co. T, 134th Inf. Florida Na­ •••porting units, Th* other tank nf. Regt. will mark the close of will be attended by the group Wilcox Hmt Anderson waa unablo
A e th e r ska'll keep her 038/100 or mind,” Russell told reporters after spector for the board, said applltha
Senate
Armed
Services
Com­
tional
Guard, Sanford’* own vFiit a *) Infantry battalion* will come another chapter in the glorious which alto will appear on tele­ to work and was sent to a hospi­
tpr for Tbe 0M.OOO Question which
catiaoa are now being accepted
tal
mittee he beads bad wound up from growers who want their will leave for aummor-field train­ rum Georgia units, according to history of Florida's oldest military vision programs
pi the M M of the program.
A doctor indicated Anderson l»
Col. Albert Durrell, division ad­ rganiaatlon.
hearings
on
a
new
reserve
pro­
ing oxerclaes at Fort McClellan,
Tha Jackpot qecetloe. aa hare
groves Inspected and treated.
"so we are vending him back to
ministrative wasistant
It was In 1884 that In th* grow­
Grower* receiving this help Ala., Aug. 13th It waa annoured
k” pll other questions answered by gram etrongly urged by President
dangerouriy insane. Wilcox said,
Conversion of th* 48lh will b« ing state of Florida an Infantry
mutt agree to the removal of all by CapL Joseph D. Bryant, com­
the woman on the program, will Elstnhowxsr.
Raiford end will lot them takis
the fourth euch change In a year Battalion was formed.
He added he will continue to trees considered necessary by the
manding officer o f tho local unit.
ho based ao the Bible.
care of him from there''
and
brings
to
six
th*
number
of
push
his
substitute
plan
to
offer
a
• “ I have alwaya turned to it for
The man of this unit were to
Inspecting crew In order to atop
Sanford’a unit along with other
Anderson apparently seas alt
Uka part in the Bpanlsh-American
guidance,” Mr*. Kreltser aald . And 1400 cash bonus to any veteran tha disease. Not only the diseased elementa of tho 48th Inf. Division Guard armored division*.
right when he wax examined by
who enlists in tha Army or Marina
Th* change-over continue* th* IVar, th* HH6 border incident, and
TAMPA
f-'Pl-H.
B.
Van
Ne.a,
tree
but
those
adjacent
In
every
Ohe’U do the same tonight, aha
will apend two weeks at th* north
Ccrps ready reserves.
«f
reshuffling
t h # a* the redesignated 124th Inf. Re- Tampa real estate dealer sought prison physicians before leaving
direction, must be removed. Tbeo Alabama military installation un­ program
•aid, when Mm must auks the big
Guard’*
divisional
structure
to g iy 'n t, to fight in both world during an Investigation of his f|. on parols, said Franrls Bridges,
treated
daaialiM. She aaid she won't make
dergoing the annual fiald-tralning
nanrial transactions, Is in Evans­ parole commission chairman.
Poucher said 11,700.000 in atatc tnat, combined with th* other bring It In I'n* with modern wsr- walV
that dacisleo u t i l ah* step* out
fare's requirements for speed and
ton, 111.
and
federal
funds
la
available
for
• UM W
_____________
It waa In the fierond World War
training received at th* local mobility.
Ills attorney Has advised auththe program.
hat th* 134th distinguished Itself
armory and on weekend* In th*
oritl** her# that Van N’es* was
field,
makes
the
National
Guard
HlruMvilhL n'c « 0**wHI ^ront'inu#' as
***• battle* for Now Guinea, called to Illinois by illness in his
Senate
WASHINGTON llt-Tb* Sens
the nation’s best trained mobllixa- division commander and Brig.
*&gt;»«■&lt;’ » r w iip p iu . ,» d m , : family.
has completed
action
d congressional
congresait
tion day fore*.
oa a bill authorising 82,380,530,300
Con. M axw ell C. Snyder o f Jarkj danoa.
MIAMI i.W— A legal battle loom­
William C. McLean Jr., assistant
Tho commanding officer o f the rounty solicitor who Is heading an ed today over a circuit judge's or­
This will mark tha last year aonvilla will continue aa assistant
military construction at U. S.
2 8th la Col. Robert B. Harkneci, investigation Into complaints from der that the AFL llolrl Employe*
that Co. I will train aa a rifle division commander.
beats around the world.
Approval o f tha measure, au_ m m n jd iS
TALLAHASSEE tlt-An Interim company In th* 124th Inf. The
Tho division headquarters will o f L a k e C i t y , n National a score o f Van Ness clients, sail Union refrain from referring tn a
Guardsman for 36 year*, Com­ th* ess* Is highly complex.
half af the Byukyu tboriilog the hundreds o f projects, committee of the Georgia House of 124th, with a history of over 70 (•main In Macon, Ga.
striki at th* San Marino Hotel ia
ml spend tha mighty c u m yesterday- U m * goes to Representatives came here today years will be disbanded following Organisational’’ studies are atlU manding the third battalion com­
No criminal chart* haa b**n pre­ any publications "either in this
th« While House.
to study Florid*'a statewide pro­ tho encampment and by Nov. 1 being made and it la not known at posed o f units tn Ranforxt, Or- ferred but several persons hav* jurisdiction or elsewhere."
will be converted to armored thla tlma what type armored unit lindo, Eustis, Daytona Beach, and filed civil suits to recover down
Mooey to carry out tha project* bation system.
Judge William A Hetin signed
to ll h m to ho approved la u
The group, headed by Rep. Jack units.
will b* located In Sanford, al­ DcLand Is Li. Col. Thomas K. nayzntpta they Mid they mad* on tha order yesterday when he call­
O. Tarytoy of Union County,
hOL
homes net built. Mere than $15/700 ed an eltctum of San Marino em­
either be MeClano Jr., e f Winter Park.
In plae* o f tha 114th Inf. JU- though it la axpeetad
. _________ taotoda:
planned conferences during the day rimant in Florida will be on* tank ^ modern tank company or tn
Future training aarereUee for ;a involved in suits (ll*d h*ro and ploye* to detarmtne tt tha union
Auxiliary sly atatloa, Caotord, with Gov. Collin* and with the battalion and two armored Infan- rmored infantry company.
th* motorised unit will be conduct- other complaints have terns regia- represent* a majority of eligible
- ta Ukatoltd.
f-ABPlOJMtqr battoltong totfc tha wriwa
to th * U M k t o to Casa# B m i k Georgia.

Excursion Boat
Franchise Okayed

Couple Sentenced Sheppard Is Denied
For Smuggling Gun First Trial Appeal
To George Heroux

Key House Groups
Expect Government
To Accept Proposal Chubby

C IO , A F L Unions
Join Up Forces
A t Winning Boost

Conlracl Virtually
Dead Letter Issue;
Spark Of Life Seen

Donna Sue
Alongside Ditch;
Killer Still Sought

9 P. M. Curfew
‘ Ordered For Men
At Sheppard Base

Blonde Scheduled
To Hang Tomorrow

Confidence Is Put
In Senate's Action

A ir Force Academy
Has Opened Doors
For First Class

Estimates Reveal
Little Citrus Left

Former Policeman
Ready For Safari

Governor Slates
Good Will Tour

Woman Must Make
$64,000 Decision 'Very High Brass'

Is Not Convincing

Wilcox To Return
To Raiford Prison

Board Is Prepared
To Help Growers

Co. I Leaving For Alabama Camp

Real Estate Dealer
Journeys To Illinois

Sanford Included
In Appropriations

"Typhoon Spores
Linowo Station

State Probation
System Is Studied

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Legal Battle Looms
Over Judge's Order

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Pag* 2

A-Bomb Invented Ten Years Ago
nr elto n

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FAY

AT Military Affair* Reporter

with doubt about building up be
yond that rangsT
That is forgotten iovr. Nuclear
fission explosions ranging from a
single kiloton to inn kiloton* have
been detonated at the Nevada
Proving Ground. In the remote
I’ artfie proving ground at KniweInk, tests ■running up tr half a
million kilntons presumably have
been carried out.

Ten years sen 'this* werk man
terrified him»r|f by wlnnlni a
monumental scientific yielory.
He produced an atomic weapon.
Now he hair lived with It for a
nervous decade, watching it*
mounting power and numbers itnmlnate political deciatone, remake
the art of war and threaten him
each day with extinction.
The United States made the weapon first becau»« it won a rare
with Nail scientist*. For five years
the weapon belonged exclusively
to the United States. No one ex­
pected. it would remain forever
exclusive but Russia learned Its
secrets far fasler than was forc­
es*!.
Today atomic weapons exist by
the thousands, a family so diversi­
Bv I.OU PANGS
fied that one member ran he u»ed
RALTIMORF, oPu-Using an Inmerely to blow out an enemy air­
geninus new blood-siving tool,
field nr another to vaporise the
•urgenns at University of Mary­
biggest city.
land )ln*pital here have relieved
Their blasts ran wipeout great a man of a deadly rnndition in
masses of humanity in an Instant which the body's main artery
and threaten countless others with balloons near the heart like a de­
lingering death from radioactivity, fective inner lube.
spreading out over thousands of
Dr. R. Adams Cowley, who per­
square miles. They can unleash
formed the rare operation, report­
heat greater than that of the sun1
ed today the patient was dis­
Itself.
charged from the hospital exactly
The atomic weapon age opened I two weeks later.
at Alamagordo, N. M., on July 16,
A laborer from Cambridge, Md.t
lots.
he is one of the extremely few
It was a blast for which there persons known to have undergone
were no precedents. Until that hour successful surgery fnr aneurysm,
in tha desert, all mtn-msda ex­ or infected swelling of the ascend­
plosions had traced from tha an­ ing aorta.
cient feat of (he Chinese in pro­
The new Instrument, u*ed In
ducing detonation by molecular re­
this operation for the first time,
arrangement.
was developed by Cowley and Dr.
Although the scientists foresaw John M. Allen, working with him
the fall-out peril and other char* as a fellow In the Cardio-Pulaeterlstirs of the explosion, they mnnsry Department ha heads.
appear lo have been deeply conIt Is a clamp which enables
aervative In (heir estimates of the blood to continue flowing through
energy to he released. Their speci­ tha aorta even while doctor! arc
fications called originally for an removing the damaged ecctlon.
explosion equivalent to about 1,000
In its first use during (he sixtons of TNT. The physlciiti scaled
this up a littla in (heir computa­ hour operation, It helped keep the
tions. Rut they apparently did not patlent'a blood loss down lo three
reach the 20,000-ton figure which pints, rompared with a usual lost
of about 12 pints In four aimilar
the bomb actually attained.
operations Cowley performed pre­
Not for another nine years were viously. The loss In one of the
the weaponeers to err so widely only other two known ca iei of this
In computing explosive power. The lype was 30 pints.
IBM test explosion of a thermo­
Medical records show doctors
nuclear device at Bikini Atoll was have aought 1.800 years for a suereported to have been about double cesiful method of treiting aneu­
the power expected by the design­ rysm of the major blood vessels.
ers.
The aorta, sweeping up out of the
Por several years after Alao- heart and toward the left shoulder
jtordo'a test, the use of two bombs before It arches and runs down
on Japanese targeti and the IMS roughly parallel to the spine, it the
tests against naval ships at Bikini biggest vessel of all.
to be JO,000-ton (20 kiloton) energy,
In liter life, after four or five
decides of feeding tons of blood
to the smaller vessels throughout
the body, it may develop weak
NOTICM TO D lir K S D
spots through Infection or iheer
T i- JsKerson Di t Ii J.p.l Fairrtwih, e/o Darrell Falrrfoih, Q»n. wear and tear.
, era! l&gt;a|lrarr, •‘AnSrawa, AaNow raliUvely rare, anturysms
fo p
o . o i are expected to occur with greater
Fairrlrth, Drfenaaet &gt;Or thla salt. frequency is antiblotlra and other
• r» h-r-hy
that auit In
Olferre feaa hertl Instituted acalnal medical discoveries lengthen the
on hr ynur Vita, tha Plaintiff, life epin of men.
lerhara Kalrelclh lull la begun
A IBM study of aneurysms
n tha Circuit fnurt. Ninth Cir­
cuit. Seminole couatr, Pierian, showed that more than M per cent
situate In Banter., Florida. Tou
era required lo file rear platdln* of the victims died within on*
month after being admitted to a
hospital.
ef upon !.*»ter Harris. _ittoroar
_■■
for the Plaintiff, _al. hla offlcaa Early attempts to treat the con­
eitueta at SIS n. Main m, OriItl l do,
J_
_ . ^P|erlda,
lorlda, on nr hafaro _
I dition by operative meane pro­
ulr
H, .1111 or • darrra pro renfasso duced fatal iboek, gangrene or
wilt bo antatad asatn-t you end
hemorrhage In aa appalling num­
the^raa*
at parte.
raao will proroad
proraad ox
parto.
Ilnaea mr hand and seal thla ber of eases.
(ffeth'Vdar of Jena, tilt, aa rtarh.
rircitlt
tit Court, aemleelq County.
Florida
mllh I yard body, and I- t i l )
O. P Jtrrnitaa
Chevrolet (our No. 31), with I
Circuit Court Clark.
(••all.
»% fd.b^ l ba apsnad at a regular
to ba h*ld July tlth till.
FLORIDA TO rneeitne
Dido to bs Identified “Bids on
■o. ■sci.i.MAN Trucks'*
„ _____ nonoi
and rsfsr lu this ortvorAO. 1. ST ATT.
KMT
HOTEL, tlssmsnl. Ths Hoard rassrvss tbe
T its:v rn .v s r w IKMSKVi
H*iH
••
reject
nn* and all bids.
A sworn Complaint far divarra
John W, xislsch, Cbalr-

Blood-Saving Tool
Used By Surgeons
Has Relieved Man

Legal Notice

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ten 'DIsomi herrln on or hafaro
tha Sard
sard day
dsv af
of iJuly. A. n. —
»*U.
•r aiharwlsa • Decree Fra Conte*,
aa will ba entered aaslnst yau.
Tha haafard Herat* la deal*,
listedd aa • nawapaaar at general
elrcu;ilatle* I* whlrh tbit citation
shall•I.ha
wash
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ppublished
n v ia a p e w
nansa
aiv e
aearh
a - n
w e e *
fa [..four ranaaeullra weeks.
WlTKIMft my hand and official
saal ef tha clsrtt of tha Circuit
Jourt, on
(be *»tk day a!
eamlaale County,
Mask N CTavtland, Jr.

Atlssti f?.*1!* Msrndnn, Clsrk
AOTIt'M HMD K B FICTITIOLS
HAMM f Aml*
TO WIIOSI IT MAT CONCRMfi
Nollcs It hsrsby ilvsn that the
undertliinrd, puituaul In tha Fic­
titious Nans Ijiw will rsflatar
with lbs Clark of lbs circuit
Court la and (ar iomlnot# County.

puhVlrfbsn’ Yr K t f&amp; t T L W e * 1^ !
ildous Aiama CssssJharry Aurtlen
dsllsrr under which i am eatM te
In business st sale yroprlstsr.
J ofiy^ATLAIIfAN
U
Jl
colmt
p a g g o r rbomiDA. n m b *
Court
It*: THE EflTATR OF
Florida IN
1N0A MATAUH OUNN
TO AM- WHOM IT M A TR O N C*UHNi ’

s a rM n S sr

7.

These, of course, are the. mere,
conventional fission explosions—
little things when measured against
the H-bomh.
The H-bomb is miscalled. Actual­
ly, hydrogen is only one of Ihe
elements that appear In Ihe pro­
duction of atomic fusion, thermo­
nuclear explosions.
The atomic weapons—fission ind
fusion—which exist or are close to
perfection today . fall Into two
classes:
1. Tactical bombs, missiles, rock­
ets and cannon projectiles, for use
against troops on the battlefield,
ships at sea, enemy plane forma­
tions nr specific military targets
such as supply dumps, transpor­
tation centers or naval nr air base*.
2. The weapons of strategic de­
struction, capable of wiping out
vast areas.
There is no practical limit to the
power of a thermonuclear bomb
except the dimensions of ils casing
and ils transportability.
HDtl IS AM Alt VMW o f the alert at the USS-oDe Raman*.
bF W lQ lea A.
Fall-out is a byproduct of Ihe
yacht race from Be* Pedro, Cal If., to Heoolulu, Pomeroy,
la tha S5major mission of atomic explosion,
foot
ketch,
S
t*
Querns.
Hawaii. Fifty-thi** boats a n taktnc pert is tha
aad captained by
blast effect.
world's longest tegularlj-ecbedulad yacht mea. Fred T. Harris. Los
fha race la called
Tha largest contender 2a tha 109-foot schooner, on ■ handicap harts.
(InUmstUmtiJ
Rut the major alomie nations
have adapted radioarlivity as a
separate weapon, %ppllen directly
and without the aid of atomic de­
tonation.
Radiological warfare Is now a
division in itself, akin lo rhrmlcal
He teed law books and began on his side, recommending dismis­
BELTON, Tex. UH-Eugene Pad­
ad germ warfare and capable of
delivery in somewhat Ihe same gett, who confessed a murder he writing appeals in longhand to the sal o f the murder indictment
now siys he didn't commit and Stata Court of Criminal Appeals. Among other things, Thornton
manner.
pointed out that Sanderford'a sur­
then bad a herd time getting out He explained he didn’t really kill vivors believe Padgett Innocent
Ssnderford.
from behind bars, hie won his
Whn did kill Ssnderford? On
He also brought up a m ilter nf that night 24 yeari ago there was
freedom.
law, that you can't waive a jury
That leaves unanswered * 24- trial In Texas when there is a a thunderstorm. Someona pried a
window open at Sanderford'a itore.
year-old mystary:
possibility of capital punishment. There had been a series of neigh­
Who, then, did beat Will Sender- The judges said they couldn't act
borhood b u r g l a r i e s . Senderford to death with a tire tool dur­ until he finished his 20-year bur­ ford was sleeping in his store, a
ing a burglary in February 1931 glary sentence—the one he was in shotgun at his side.
for originally.
at Little nivcr, Tex.?
But the burglar with Uie lire tool
Last May tha burglary sentence got in hla licka before Ssnderford
Fadgelt walked free last week
COMANCHE. Tex. or-Jesse F. after persuading authorities be bad ran out and tbe appeals court got hold of hla shotgun. And the
neeie Is taking greenback* out an ulterior motive—didn't really heard Padgett's murder appeal. rain outside amootbed away all
of some vary poor uranium dirt mein it—when he "confessed" in Dlst. Attv. naymond Thorton, was tracks.
these days. At first he was reluc­ 1940.
tant, but now he’i gotten rid of
radgett then was serving a 20hi* dairy hard to make room for year burglary sentence in Texts
the old folks.
State Penitentiary. And the reason
11a charges people 22 for the he confessed killing Ssnderford, he
privilege of sitting in his uranium explained repeatedly lo (he state
dirt for two hours. About 130 a parole board, was that he had a
d\v pay for room to sit. It once "plan."
AKRON, Ohio ( * - " I t 's ■ pipe assayi have been found In the
tohk Reese a considerable amount
His plan: He would be taken
of milking to get that sort of from state prison to a small-town dream,” John Madlgan told his Belgian Congo In A frica," Reyn­
money from hla cowl,
jail while being triad for Sander wife. "T oo good to be true." olds added.
But Mri. Dorothy Madlgan, 41,
Reese discovered uranium nn ford's murder. And a small-town
Mrs. Madlgan, mother o f two
his farm two yeari ago, but not jail, he figured, would be much of nearby Silver Lake, bad pros­ eons, had never dona any prospect­
pector's blood In her veins. So ing. She said she received a call
in commercial quantities. He for­ easier lo get out of.
•he bought a Geiger counter and
got the matter.
It didn't work. When Padgett ■at out for Canada. Thursday Mrs. last month from two friends In
Sharbot Lake, Ont. Tbe two, Har­
Last Septembar a stranger aiked was brought to Belton for tbe mur­
Reese if he could sit In his ditch. der hearing, officers kept him at Madlgan said aha had struck It vey Adams and Dr. C. J. Waytock,
rich—« uranium Andtold her they had come across
Seems he’d been taking radiation night at the county Jell in Austin.
Atomic E n e r g y Commission what they believed was uranium
treatments for pains for rheum­ Thai's a good jail.
spokesmen told her it wai tha ore In an abandoned min* north­
atism and thought ha could gat
Padgett, who bad pleadad guilty
some help from the ditch while to murder and waviod a jury trial "second best uranium assay they east of Bancroft, Onthave found In the world so far,"
visiting Comanche relatives.
Mrs. Madlgan, with a Geiger
got a 99-year eentenea and was
ah* aald.
coenter ttf check the'find, set off
Recie told him to go shtad. The returned to state prison.
The AEC In Washington said it for Bancroft with Mrs. Betty Cliff
word spread. Soon alttera ware
could not immediately check the and Mra. Ruth Wileman, both of
trampling hla fielda and leaving
assay's standing, in comparison Akron.
gales open,
with other uranium finds.
neeie thought he'd stop that
The Gelgtr e o u n t a r proved
But WUUam H. (Bud) Bsynolds.
bother. He declared anyone eould
Adama and Wbytock right.
deputy manager of the AEC plant
■It In his dirt for 22 for 2 hours.
They tiled claim to an area three
DALLAS ITS—Three years In an at Pikcton, Ohio, told The Asso­
He built ■ shed big enough for six Iron lung ended In death yester­
ciated Press: "ApparcnUy she has miles in radius from the strike
iwrtoni to sit on benches. On Ihe day for pretty Marjorie Joanna
Madlgan hai 18
me pllchblend ore of very center. Mrs.
lloori and behind sbeetrock walls M a m .
Kh assay, about 15 per cent claims, Mrs. Cliff g, and Adama
be piled dirt.
U-909, a uranium chtmlcal com­and Whytoek and some Whytock
She was 18, ihapcly and plan­
That didn't stop them. By June
relatives brought the total num­
pound."
ning
to
marry
soon
when
she
was
of this ya»r people were standing
Reynolds said he told Mrs. Madl­ ber filed to about 40.
stricken
In
June
1932
with
both
In line. He expanded tbe shed to
The AEC in Washington, Mrs.
gan the assay was the second best
10 times Its original siie. He's sold spinal and bulbar polio. She was
yet discovered. However, he said Madlgan aald, told bar It w ai in­
Utile
more
tha
skin
and
bones—
his dairy- herd and will convert
he could not verify definitely the terested but dealings would have
Ita barn to sitting. So ba and bis and completely paralysed—when
to be through tha Canadian gov­
taeay'i standing.
wife can gat some rest, be’a death earn*.
" I know to per cent uranium ernment
In
the
polio
ward
In
Parkland
planning a • p.m. curfew.
Reese makes no claims and Hospital, attendants especially re­
never has. He has each litter sign membered the tongs which she,
a printed pledge n y ln g be visited Paul Alexander and Mary Sides
•ang.
tbe farm voluntarily.
Paul, T, couldn't speak baeausa
II GALLON HAT
of a hole In bis throat. Mary, 16,
U MAKING STAND
waa deaf and nearly m ute-hut a
ALL THE LATEST HITS!
CALGARY, Alta. GTV— Looks like Up reader. Paul and Mary merely
Uie JO-gallon Western bat la gab moved their Ups while Jeanne did
ting to be the trademark of tbe the ftwgtwg
new look" la Soviet diplomacy.
Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov
SPECTACULAR MOW
acquired tbe first one during his
LONG BEACH, Calif. ID-Blua
June sightseeing trip across the and red flames suddenly flashed
United States to Uw lOUt U.N. from many TV seta In West Long
nmt p. a
.
anniversary celebration.
Beach last night It was ■ good
1 1 ■ B1 1
show until viewera discovered
Puppets are usually operated by their eels had Mews out, along
pUeing them over the hand like with all their fusee. A short elr
• glove while martooetlea are op cult la twe 11,009-volt power llee
cm ltd th# electrical fireworks.
an ted by etriags.

24-Year-Old M ystery Still Hangs

People Are Paying
1 Dollar Per Hour
To Si! In Ditch

Wife's Premonition
Proves Prosperous

Taw. July 12,1955

THE SANFOKP — KALP

News Of Men In Service
This installation furnished train*
signal technicians to army u*it
all over the world.
ft

Private VIrgU M. Picklealmer,
son of Mrs. Nina E. Castle, 218
Elm Ave, Sanford, has been as­
signed to the Marine Corps Becruit Depot at Parris Island, S. C.,
to undergo recruit training.
Pickleslmer, a student at Semi
note High, Is a member of the
Organised Marine Corps Reserve
unit in Orlando. Following com
platlon of his recruit training,
which Includes such military
"m usts" as drill, physleil fitness,
discipline, and field tactics, he
will return tn Sanford to complete
his high school education. The
training period wll end about
September 1.
CAMP GORDON, Ga. — Pvt.
Michael M. Rotundo of Sanford
will graduate this week from the
teletype equipment and mainten­
ance course, one of the many
courtes offered at the Southeast­
ern Signtl School. Camp Gordon.
He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. M.
B. Rotundo, Geneva.
The teletype equipment and
maintenance course, which is II
months in length, trains enlisted
personnel to repair any maintain
all types of teletype, equipment
During his training, P v t Ro­
tundo received a technical educa­
tion worth thousands o f dollars.
He will now be reassigned to an
actlvo unit of the United States
Army.
The Southeastern Signal School,
a component of the Signal Corps,
la located near Augusta, Ga.

FORT KUST1S, VA. — PFC
James Washington, son of Mr
and Mrs. James Washington
Route 2. Sanford, is taking par
In Project 3T2, an Army technical
services operation designed to sup­
ply Air Force radar coaitrudloc
projects In the Arctic.
Washington's unit, the
Utth
Quartermaster Petroleum supply
Company, Is combining with o^K
er Army technical services in the
Project, assigned to the Trans­
portation Corps.
He entered the Army in Jannary 1933 and completed basje
training at Fort Jackson, S. C.

Children's Group I
Elects Chairman ^
ST. PETERSBURG bR-Tbe PlalT
Ida Childrens Commission has
elected Mrs. H. J. McRoberts of
Pensacola chairman.
She succeeds Jere L. Strainbsugh of Auburndale.
Arthur Dorter, superintendent ef
the Industrial School for Boys at
Marianna, was elected vice chair­
man. Mrs. L. J. McCaffrey of Mi­
ami was chosen secretary.
The members aald there shoutf,
be better planning for expansldft
of facilities for mentally retarded
adults and children. They said the
Florida Farm Colony at Gainesville
soon will be filled and anothar
auch facility should be built else­
where.

PENITENTIARY FARM
BOGS WELL FED

1

MCNEIL ISLAND, Wash. ( * Tbe bogs at tha MeNeQ Is la n ^
Federat Penitentiary farm art, aa
the saying goes, eating pretty high
on the hog these days .
A recant load o f foodstuff waa
seized by Food and Drug Adminis­
tration a g e n t s ae Improperly
marked or not up to standard.
Sent to the prison farm for hog
food were:
Canned mushrooms, MS pounds;
tom ito pasta, IT4 eaas; tomatNP
sauce, 45 cases; popcorn, 1,910
pounds.

Pretty Marjorie
Dies From Polio

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THE SANFORD HERALD

i

Bulganin W ill Be Fighting Desperate Battle
but it can mean there Is hope for overnight, nor was It going to be
changed without sacrificing some
real and lasting peace.
The silent ally of the West In all of Stalin's concentration on "pro­
this Is the ordinary, everyday duction of the means of produc­
tion." meaning all for heavy in­
Ivan, the John Smith of Russia.
Bulganin, strictly a political gen­ dustry. But the Soviet public ac­
eral, personifies the dilemma of cepted the promises with enthusi­
the general staff of communism. asm. I was there at the time, and
At Geneva. Bulganin cannot attack in various parts of the country
without solidifying the free world’s heard the statement:
"Watch us. We have a new gov­
resistance to the Soviet Union. l!e
cannot retreat without the danger ernment, now.”
But the situation posed a dil­
ot hastening communism's decay
emma. With less tension, Soviet
as a global conspiracy.
Bulganin will not be 'his own rulers could tend theso home Com­
master. Nikita S. Khrushchev, the munism, a dynamic movement,
Soviet Communist boss, will be could stagnate in an atmosphere
looking over one shoulder, repre­ of peace.
The Malenkov regime walked a
senting the fears and ambitions ot
world communism. Looking over tightrope, trying to keep the heavy
the other will be Ivan, the man Industry sector intact while push­
largely responsible for bringing ing the consumer program.
The tightrope broke. Malenkov
about this summit meeting.
Communism is in a pickle. The tumbled from the premiership.
U.S.S.R. is its ideological anchor, Khrushchev took charge. The lead­
its Mecca, Its nerve center. It may ers rccognixed that the program
lose that anchor as one of the of broad concessions to the con­
long range results of the Geneva sumer had to be modified, or the
conference. The bloodless revolu heavy industry side would suffer.
tion under way In the Soviet Union Suddenly and sharply the Soviet
can spell the beginning o f It* en Union—and after it all the satel­
as a monolithic world political lites—veered back to Stalin-like
By CHARLES MERCER
program of all for heavy industry.
NEW YORK LB Climax! force.
The reversal, however, was far
The United State* seems to be
(WCBS-TV), which often offers
superior entertainment, raised an proceeding on the assumption the from complete. There can be no
interesting question last Thursday Russians' recent moves are forced, turning back to total Stalinism. To­
evening in presenting "Wild Stal­ and that they are truly anxious to day internal Soviet propaganda
lion," a drama based on a William talk about arms reduction. That is has the sound of pleading rather
Faulkner story called "Knight's a good guesi, and Ivan seems to than ordering, apologizing rather
than condemning. Admissions of
Gambit." The question: on what be behind it.
official
failure are frequent, like the
Khrushchev
seems
indignant
at
basis are some stories selected for
translation into the medium of tele­ the Idea Moscow moves sprang words of politicians promising to
from sheer necessity. But Ivan, reform. ’
vision?
The background theme is con­
"Wild Stallion" concerned i along with a rising generation ot
fortune-hunting heel (Paul Hen Impatient young \ Soviet techno­ stant: The U.S.S.R. is not wesk.
reid) who Is engaged to a rich girl crats, had much to do with forcing but strong; its moves spring not
(Kathleen Crowley) while dallying Khrushchev'a hand. Ivan la a from fear but a will for peace.
with a poor girl (Evelyn Keyes) patriot, but he has little In com'
The Communist press compares
who is engaged to tht fiancee's bro­ mon with revolutionary Bolshev Malenkov's errors in supporting
ther (Richard Long). Then he ism and little memory of it. The light industry to the sins of Stalin's
learns his fiancee's widowed moth­ old Bolsheviks are dying out. Be­ enemies—but Malenkov remains
er (Mary Astor) really controls the fore long Ivan and bis generation near the helm. Whatever else Mal­
money, so he drops both girls and will be ruling the U.S.S.R.
enkov might have done, in the first
This Russian common man has months after Stalin's death he
makes a play for the receptive
mother. (These summaries always the biggest stake of all in the made himself a symbol ot Ivan's
Geneva conference. H there Is to hopes for a fuller life.
ere rough, but let's press on.)
The son, enraged by the carry be any attention to his particular
It is Malenkov's position which
ing on of both his girl and his problems, there must be relief reflects a delicate balance between
mbther, buys a killer stallion and from the awful waste of a military two forces in Soviet politics, and
puts him in the stable so that he’ll and totally regimented economy
it seems to be this balance that
The course of Soviet policy in makes the Soviet military rise
ettaek the heel at the climactic
■ moment. When the stallion is about two post-Stalin yaars has reflected
to kick the heel to death, the poor growing concern with what Ivan
girl rushes in and saves his life. has been thinking and dreaming.
The heel Is so touched by this At last, in an iron dictatorship,
gesture that he vows to turn over Ivan'* voice Is becoming powerful
a new leaf and clinches with the To understand thdt It is necessary
MIAMI, Fla. UT-Advlcs to traf­
poor girl. Fadeout. Switch to the to review events of the last two
fic policemen:
rich widow's household where all years:
"Don't writ* women's age* on
Stalin, who could push all butis gloom and the widow says, "it's
torn at once and control every traffic tickets. Just put down
been a mistake."
Well, yes, it wss. But what made aspect of Soviet life, died March •over 2 1 .'"
This comes from Circuit Judge
this drama—at least to one viewer S, 1943. Nobody wae big enough
to succeed him. By common con Floyd, whose wife was fagged for
—a mistake?
Faulkner, with his strong sense sent, In • form of self protection, • traffic violation In South Miami
at atmosphere and complexity of hie beiri formed a "collective
Floyd made his suggestion in a
themes, almost defies translation leadership." Times were uneasy letter yesterday. He enclosed a
from p r o s e
into television. A sharp atruggla for power wai a check for tha fine .
"Knight’s Gambit” Is far from be­ certainty. Those who ruled had to
He noted that the patrolman
ing one of his beat stories; one woo the widest support.
didn't ask Mrs. Floyd her a g e The collective under Premier just subtracted the birth year
could name a half-dosen that are
superior. Yet, in thinking them Georgl Malenkov promised many from her driver’* license and
over, one can see their themes in things. Within two or threo years, called it 33. She won’t be 33 until
volve matters which TV shuns: it told Ivan, there would bo ao Dec. 24.
Edltor’t Note—Will the Soviet
Union deal tram atrength or weaknets at Geneva? The world wond o n today at the eummit confer­
ence neari. William L. Ryan. AP
foreign new* analyst, has made a
thorough study ot the factors that
will weigh upon Premier Bulganin.
;. By WILLIAM L. RYAN
-•• AP Foreign Newt Analyst
•At Geneva Marsnal Nikolai Alex­
androvich Bulganin will be fight­
ing a desperate and perhaps de­
cisive battle to save world com­
munism from decay and ruin.
The Western world, led by the
United States, is within reach of
an historic victory. It may be slow
and unspectacular In developing,

'Climax!' Raises
Interesting Query
With Last Program

Traffic Policemen
Are Given Advice

various forms of decadence; emo­
tional conflict between Negro and
white; Internal turmoil difficult to
dramatise. . .
The high reputation of an origi­
nal writer does not necessarily
make a good television drama. The
anther's reputation is no basis for
eboosing a story. The story must
play wen when it comes before
the samaras.

ample tupply of good things for
the people—refrigerator*, vacuum
cleaners, good rsdlo and televl
sioa sets, good clothing and shoes,
no more food shortages.
For the first tlms the Soviet
leadership took a frank look at its
economy. Even by Soviet accounts
it was sadly laggard in a modern
world.
This was not going to be changed

greatly in influence. The Army
very’ much in evidence at the So­
viet summit now. and its leaders
strike me as highly conservative,
unwilling to take long frisks with
the Soviet economy, unwilliqg to
be reduced into a conflict that
might be lost. The Soviet military
is mighty, but its lines are long,
its borders far flung, and it exudes
caution.
Shrewd, able and realistic though
it may be, the new collective—
with the generals at its elbow—
seems to feci itself responsible to
somebody. There is no indication
it has disavowed the over-all alms
of world communism, but it keeps
a wary eye on Ivan’s social de­
velopment. It is increasingly clear
from the Soviet press that Ivan
has tasted victory over the Krem­
lin. His yearning for the amenities
of life and his weariness with regi­
mentation can force the collective
into even more concessions to the
West.

PRISIDINT Elsenhower, ending
his participation in "Operation
Alert 1933," appeals for Congres­
sional approval of his atomicage military reserve program as
he broadcasts from a secret un­
derground hideaway. He said tha
nationwide civil defense test has
shown the necessity for mor#
trained reserves, (international)

of their "welfare siale brings a
rigid, rigid, rigorous caste system
in which individuals arc bound to
permanent, monotonous conditions
of servitude."
"Under the surface of the ap­
parently serene tranquillity of the
ant colony, the most savage and
pitiless events are taking place;
murder, regicide, pillage, and for­
ays against other colonies in which
the adults are killed and the larvae
and pupae are carried off to slav­
ery."
He describes the honeybee as
"a most pathetic little creature.
Restricted during development to
surh an inadequate diet that her
reproductive organs remain nidimenlary, without hope of romance
or progeny, she hums herself out
and dies exhausted after a few
weeks of feverish activity."
With the losses there is "a com ­
pensatory increase in reproductive
capacity. Luxurious idleness with
abundant nourishment supports an
active metabolism that finds ex­
pression in enormously increased
reproductive activity."
One kind of parasitic worm pro­
duces about 200,000 eggs daily.
Despite this outpouring ot off.
spring, few survive to live out a
life eyrie.
"In a balanced rendition of na­
ture, the reproductive capacity of
any species just equals the losses
occasioned by death. But tho para­
site is not concerned with the wel­
fare of the offspring. It lives as
entirely selfish existence, and In
the welfare state the comfort and
security of the existing generation
Is ofirn maintained and enhanced
by mortgaging the future of suc­
ceeding generations," he says.

H

o

w

HtlDY McCOV, shown here at her
recent fourth birthday party,
must wait until a new court deci­
sion determine* her future. Her
Jewish foster-parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Melvin B. Kills, of Brook­
line, Mass., wiio have raised
lllldy since site was 10 days old,
have been temporarily saved
from arrest by a Massachusetts
Supreme Court ruling after go­
ing Into hiding with the child.
Since lllldy's natural mother is a
Catholle, a state taw regulating
Interfalth adoptions Is Involved.

Farm Inplom ents

to dinner every sight, oad o
* hide." mm shrugged
"Oaa yarn am Ruety b o
Bbo tbot I "
heck wtUlbadrUko

nr IMeklncaa 1TTI

C«pyri*hl lis ts

It

* _ _
J T M i,
Many
! f ■*
«

the Uogbora?”
haitaa." Margie oRTU*s awful sore about lost
Ibaro woo talk dowatowa
tbir bd was swearing to get even
out *
srttb you
T fo

to OSO

you otoyysR T b S * _
" | ososo gravely. T st bain
b M js O jujyJRJW li

*1 i t o t

cms

■

®

Any husband and father wishes the beet education posstblol
for hia children, n livcahlo income for hi* family, money to
pay off the mortgage-if he’s not around-and income to
provide for his retirement
Just wishing won’t make such thing* come true, but witli\
Gulf Life’* many plant to bring family protection within
tha reach of moat every husband and father, there’s tittle
excuse any more to bo a wisher instead of an owner.
The improved preferred risk plan, as ono example, combined)
low rates and substantial values—both guaranteed—
to provide extremely low costa.
Agk your Gulf Life man about theoe many new plana. A*0
him; also, to tell you how your present insurance can be
adapted to meet tha changing conditions of yourself and you*l
family. Don’t bo a wiahar-b* an owner. Call him, today!,

of every dollar \
behind vour
*
Gulf Life policy !
is invested in ■

O il Hnntl)

•

iMMun aura or iuosk

MAMVMCUIMI'f OtlCIIIU (010ISI
*» M • toi
it o to M to k iH v iiiw m .
Wsots'i Ism hsetSBSSt IsibsI to

■Ql—OllSSStoW—1 « —Q*«s»"»

trtfStll tslsrt »t*S Ov •*• Ssllswls*

WpMuW MMfechlBtll

Mas** M mm to a asaal wkHo

k a e s s t get* o t y T b e * l * »

•

*Q**tattnn

w on't m a k e

oas tolk tT Merits seawmnsil to
*a s tbaa 8ar bar «e get to work.
Hasty se e s sOsssfUjr to kte *—L
-A m fries* * ■
Twt s gw assay.aeed hailing eat
"W hy deart yea Mey bare aad
I W I g a y a e , --------.
lobe to easy? You must botk be
a plA Ruety always Rasa. I
Used Oder la * algbt, aad F e warn
the esaey b a s jewel
Kerry’s heed aorta."
eaa stay hare K be
-M e. I
got bwReeae to u s * to. I got to
*O oss to flay ptoae." Margie am Lee Colder. That loag, stick
argot T am eeak you a better ■sa to s gun ew e me asoaey.T U eelleet 8sr you,” Margie
aleeb t e a j f i r t g a to s e iw

&gt; b etnooow loot out to bsvo &gt;
RulsA, ooetoMo good Omm,
the Mbs olwoyo boo r

f-

Cor. tat A H ilis lt s
rRKSrHIITION
CIIEM18TB

WISHIN’

rtgtoC Your 8Mse*e b e e paM. Yea
they reeled open ■ very asaoll wta- am eftser oota my jolL Aar 8er
Row, • berred srtodsm, aad bo soan Lores aake, t a t y , try * *u y eat
vooUoad tbat ho sews to o prtl ooB.
"WsR,” bo rsbertsd, "Sob a t
ways ooM tbot the bwMt ot o Jed
aoiftb psb atone mem as a y book,"

Sf"’

TO UCH TO N
DRUG C O .

Ju st

U ku Now

a o 'b M M ^ M

CAMDEN, N.J. LB—"That kind
of work Is enough lo kill a man,”
commented a passerhy at he
watched William Whalen, 43, a
plumber, trying to dislodge an ob­
struction in a sewer.
For another 10 minutes Whalen
banged away at Hie object with a
lon^ Iron bar. He finally loosened
it ai J hauled it to Hie surface.
That's when he really began per­
spiring.
He discovered ha hid been ham­
mering on a 75mm. shell weigh­
ing 11 pounds, 10 Inches long and
3 inches In diameter.
Authorities later determined the
shell was live. But they couldn’t
figure out how U gut into Hie
sewer.

You Cm RoaRy Keep

W chapter
1 WHEN Kerry

%

Pounding On Shell
Not Exactly Safe

continuously, ''lenrn", about
new discoveries. Wo study
the Medical and Pharma­
ceutical Journals wo re­
ceive, and every important
Pharmaceutical firm mails
us reports of proRress.
That is why Physicians
know wo can compound
prescriptions for any medi­
cine they may prescribe.
Wo wctcomo prescriptions
for new, unusual, or rare
medicines.

-

By-flick Sumter,

*■"!■■

'Florida Beautiful'
Committee Set Up
By Gov. Collins

WONT RIDE IN CARS

IK

}

By NICK ELI.ENA
Yukovich was the 46th fatality at |the straightaways and turns with
NEW YORK. July 9 tB-Death the speedway, one for each year of virtually nothing between them and
took no holiday in the first half of its existence.
the roaring racers. Retaining walls
1955—the bloodiest six months of
Italy lost two top drivers, twooften
arc not enough. The impact
automobile racing history—and of­ time world champion Alberto Asficials arc scurrying for some so­ carl at Monza and Mario Alborghct- of a car traveling 130 m.p.h. can
send metal pieces whizzing through
lution to reduec the toil
U at Milan.
the air like shrapnel.
Ninety-one persons were killed
Many blame the inadequacy of
Immediately after the catastro­
and 106 injured from Jan. 1 to track layouts in coping with the
phe at Le Mans, France suspended
June 30.
speeds of modern racing cars.
all automobile racing until new
The sport had its most tragic) Juan Fangio, champion Argen regulations insuring public safety
day June 12 in the Lc Mans, francc |tine driver who narrowly averted could be adopted.
21-hour road race.
rare. Following a crashing into Lcvegh's Mercedes
The Daimlct-Bcnz auto works at
crash on the track, parts of a at Le Mans, summed it up this
Stuttgart, Germany, maker of tho
Mercedes car hurtled through the way:
Mercedes, announced It was quitcrowd leaving 79 dead and 80 In
"Organization of tiic race must ting international grand prix racing
:ured. Among the dead was Pierre bo changed It no longer corres- at die emj 0f
yeJr&lt; n le fjrm
Lcvcgh, driver of the car.
pounds to the current speed of has recommended a 295-foot safety
Some of the racing's best drivers motor racing."
zone on each side of the stands.
drove their last race in 1955, in
This apparently applies to other
The Spanish Grand Prix. sched­
eluding veteran Mike Nazaruk of tracks as well.
uled for Barcelona in October, also
Belmore, N. Y., who died during a
3iany tracks and road layouts was suspended because of insuf­
30-mile sprint race at Langhorne, provide little or no protection for ficient security to spectators. Tho
I’ a.. May 2.
spectators. Hordes of people line Italian Automobile Club temporariManuel Ayulo of Burbank. Calif.,
I) suspended all races involving
was injured fatally during a prac­
cars of more than 220 cc* until
tice run at the Indianapolis Speed­
improvements are made on tracks
way May 16.
and roads.
Wild Bill Vuknvick of Fresno,
Enio Ferrari, builder of the fa­
Calif., also was killed at Indiana­
mous Italian racer, suggested a
polis trying for an unprecedented
limited entry list and widened
third straight 500-mile title May 30.
TALLAHASSEE lB — A new tracks plus physical examinations
"Florida Beautiful'' committee ha* of drivers. Giuseppe Farina, for­
been set up by Gov. Collins to mer work! champion, endorses a
wage war on roadside litter and no man's land between the track
destruction of natural resources. and the stand*'
"The volume of littvr along road­
Another Italian driver, Gigi Vilsides, parks and hearhes ,1s a lorcsl. suggested limiting the speed
■* ears.
source of great concern to all per­ of
sons who take pride In the appear­
ance of their communities," the j
“ I AM STILL
governor said.
He named Mrs. Eugene A. Smith j
L E A R N IN G ”
of Miami, a representative of the'
Florida Federation of Garden Clubs 1 ----■•Uiltooro aaoig fcolow) —
comtnilloe chairman. The 35 oilier
Most of llie prescriptions
members represent’ the tourist in­
dustry, youth groups, civic organi­ wo compound, in this won­
zations, the press and state agen­ derful irc , contain medi­
cies.
cines that were unknown
The committee's first meeting
10 years ago. OporntitiR a
will lie called soon. Its progress
modern prescription Phar­
and recommendation* will go twice
macy means that wo must
a year to Hie governor.

JACKSONVILLE, Fie. (JB-G. W.

Wilkinson Is 80 and wants no part
of automobllei.
The operator of a truckers hotel
saye "none of those thlnge for me.
Don't feel safe."
When Wilkinson wants to get out
he rides his motorcycle—just as
bo baa been doing for 31 years.

w m u n o o a i oasvim a. sots,
m inim mm n m csss. ouvn.
oioosaaous iiouni. catissiius.

b ta V T

G

«8 K tM o r
M ^ b o m t i m * . *io e ^ p ooa*

iS T w S T y w S e e or S

SANFORD
F a in t c o .
4t7 w . r a n s t .

FREE PARKING

Pag* 9

Death Works Overtime As W e Rest

Trading Freedom For Security
Makes Living Things Degenerate
By ALTON I - BLAKESLP.E
NEW YOBK IB— T r a d i n g
freedom for security makes many
living things degenerate and go
downhill in evolution, says a prom­
inent biologist.
And there may be a lesson for
humans In what happens to such
forms of life as oysters, barnacles,
bees, ants, and parasites, adds
Dr. Horace W. Stunkapd, New
York University professor of biol­
ogy.
He takes this biological look at
"Freedom. Bondage and the Wel­
fare State" in an article in Sci­
ence, magazine of the American
Assn, for the Advancement ot Sci­
ence.
"Independence, with freedom to
explbre new vislas, has been the
essential condition of progress
whereas the surrender of freedom
in an attempt to attain security
has led to bondage, regression and
degeneracy," he declare*.
Ail animals havt basic needs
for food, shelter and the opportu
nity lo reproduce, he sayi, and
all these "a rc sometimes Included
In the term security."
Seeking security, many animals
give up certain of their freedoms
and become dependent. But Dr.
Stunkard sees dangers and some­
times disasters in such action:
"The welfare state—security with
contingent subjection and depend­
ency—offers an easy way of life
but It la a slippery path which by
a slow, gradual process leads to
loss of Integrity, greater bondage,
and eventual degradation."
Tho clam has lost its head; the
oyster has lost its head and foot;
fleas and lice their wlngi ,ha say*
Ants may appear lo be "a busy,
efficient, happy fam ily" but look
closer and you find that evolution

Tue*. July 13, 1955

u

l f

L i f e

tinm m Cmfwuf

"A Southom Institution Sinoo 1911* * Homo Offiro JaekatmvilU, Florida
P. H. COLBERT, J. P. WILSON. Superintendents, Palmetto Bldg.
AGENTS P. H. Rudd, C. L. Powsll, BUI Gaaaaugs, G. W. Morgan, H. K i’attoa, W. H. Felds,
J. W. Hardee.
/

• R O U P

/

W E EK LY

P R E M IU M

7

M o ip IT A L I M A T ld K

�* -

J

Three-Day Holidays

When the Fourth of July fall on Monday,
permitting a three-day weekend, It waa Immenrely populat. Why doea thla not happen
rogularly Inataad of every alx yeara? And
why should It not happen with other holi­
day* ?
Congresamar John H.. Ray of New York
neea no reneon He ha* Introduced a bill to
have every major Holiday except Christmaa
fall automatically on Monday. Easter Mon­
day. IntWIy a working day in m*ny localit­
ies. might he restored to holiday atntug with
great acclaim.
Traditlonaliata may object, but the Idea
will have wide support from travel organisa­
tions and tha unorganised public. Congress­
men In doubt a» to how to vote might do
well to fake Informal polls of their consti­
tuent!. They might he surprised at the
popularity of Rny’a Idea.

The Sanford Herald
W ie itik -e 4 * ii * • * -• * ! • m r i i r

te« w ,.» rirtl it.

t r e a r e t r r i n s a * r r .»
l &gt; CarrUr
U t fir n rrt
f l u mvatk
at.ee
Tkrte M m ik i
Cli w eelk*
* « • Tea*
ea.ee
a*.?*
a n ae
A ll afclfeerr eettfee. *eri&gt; . f (keek*. r**elalleea aa*
* a ilr « *-f »al»r«alata»e« Itr tke f i r M i i * t ralala*
faeCe will fce r k i i a t l (er
raralar aS»#rH»laa ratee
■ apraaaata*
H eileeall*
k*
Raaaral
•errlre. lee. eat
n »«r *la
l a .l a a e
a tlaete « e -r « l a

lir ir ita le i
Reek
Rl*a-

T k * ■arete ti e atemker e f &lt;ke Saaariata* Prtaa
wktrk la • ■ titl-4 # i* la f lt * l* la tk* aaa (ar rreafcltrat l -a aa all Ike laral arirt a r la lr ! la Ikla ■ # —•*****.

Tuesday, July 12,1955
BIBLE

Congraii haa before tt ao many haad
line-making hill* that it Is hard for a noncontroversial proposal to get Ita attention.
One lueh which would t)e of great use hut
after aeveral yaara has yet to get on the
Senate calendar, la the Library Services bill
Introduced by Senator Lister Hill of Ala­
bama.
The hill la Inspired by the shocking die
eovery that miliiona of Americana hava no*
access to puhlie libraries, and for reading
hava nothing but what they buy themselvea.
It alma to encouragt states to extend library
servlet to small towns, by matching Federal
funds for whatever the state may raise for
such a purpose. The turn of 17.500,000 would
be appropriate for five years, by which time
the situation should be much better, or if not
can be more clearly understood.
The hill deserves a better lot than has
bafallen it In tha past.

VERSE

Behold I stand at tha door and knock.—
Rev. 3:20.—Job waa in a quandary, he did
hot know where to find God. All the time
the Infinite waa knocking at the door of hia
heart A child can say come In.

Too Many Bars

Tea Industry Is Winning Battle
NEW YORK UB-Tha Amarlean rsperts mere iced tea Is drunk
habit of raacbini lor a glass of thin hot tss.
ktd-tas whan tha weather'* hot ia
But consumption t i hot tas Is
helping tha tea Industry achieva on the upswing, too. The T il Coun­
• loni'KHjght goal: a mure lm&gt;st place at tha Amarlean cil ol (ha U.I.A. lac., sat up hr
India, Coyloa and Indonsila and
Tha induitry haa been fighUns tha tea trade In the United States,
lor yaara (or a larger ahare ol says one Important reason Is pries,
tha market In thla naUon of cotta* Tss Is one el ths most economi­

driakari. Tha figures Indicate tha
kattla la being won. Import! of
tea laat year eamo to nearly 111
million pouada — n gain ol lotne
r million pounda alnea the and
ad World War U.
'

Clearance Sale

.ArLINlURG. Tenn '* -* • • * »
are having trouble with people
here In the heert of the Greet
Smokv mountain*.
To begin with, th* number of
hear* and tourlata h»» Inereeied
enormously in the la»t eentury.
fifty y*»r* ago no on# knew (or
lure how meny black hears there
were In thl* area. In tho*# dlitant
timet even the fugitive tourlit we*
» matter of guen.
But row they do know about the
tauriit* They fiaure 2H million
will come here thl* leaton, folk*
huntry for niture.
And a man who ha* tpenl hla life
In th# hllla eatlmitea there will
1 1 200 bear* her* who could aiy
••Hello'."
Th* cold truth, naturally, la that
meny of th*ae 1.200 bear* have
no desire to aiaoclat* with the
vialtora. and of courae the feeling
could be mutual.
However, a park ranger find*
thla hard to believe. He worrlea
that every visitor wlU find a baar
and get hlmaelf In trouble.
Aa ef last week the Smoky Na

......

A lunch-counter owner In a large city
applied for a carry-out beer and win* permit
Hia nlaca waa Anly 370 feet away from i
ehureh, whieh naturally protaated.
In tha hearing, which adjourned with­
out a decision, tha Inspector in charge of
that pollct district testified that It already
had 833 ovar-tha-countei drinking places
and 265 earry-ut«. It would seem aa If thesa
wars enough.
The prohibition Issue la not involved in
the opinion that this district and perhaps
tha whole city are over-serviced In drinking
spots. Additional ones are apt to get permits
without much trouble in spite of protests,
ss the licensing authorities often have a
soft spot In their heart* for would-be liquor
dealers.
Tho liquor Industry might fjnd It good
policy to restrain aome of th* aagar beavers
who wart to start new outlets in over-aervlced areas.

SAM DAWSON

It &lt;A good part of thla ineraaaa may
‘ I t attributed to lead tea. Reatauthat salaa'af lead too have aoarad
' MO par oont In tha laat five yaara,
i and tha nation'! total lead tea eonaumpllan baa rlaan to aoma 10
killlnn glaiaai a year.

Bears Having Trouble With People

•■&lt; « • • * • »

r.*i*r*e ••
M*ti*r a»t-a»r at, teia it
th* p—« erru - -y
n -rta*. -•«•» *»• a*t
-y c d m t m i -t a m * a. i*»a
rnr.D wr.RMiwa. r.ait-r •-* r-m u m r
jack
srvfir.N t.asn
cait-r

TODAY'S

f t A t. B O Y lc

Library Servfces

cal beverages *n ths mirkst.
Part el the growing U.S. tss
hsbit, It's luggtttod, may be due
to World War II and tha Korean
War. Tea li the aatlonal drink of
rngland, Japan and Korea, all
places of familiar memory to
millions of aa-iirvicimin. So it
Is likely that many servicemen
became tea drinkers eviriu a.

T ry an d Stop M i
- l y IIN N IT T C IS *HE SIOORAPHER ef • living notable, point! out Harold
Nleolaon, muat bn nbln In nxpoaa aaid notabla'a faulta with­
out provoking n libel ault, or possibly ovtn n bullet In a tender
•pot Noeteat trlek. ho thinks,
la to rnvonl tha delect by hotJ
ly denying Ita nppoalte.
&amp; r
‘Tor Instance," he aayt,
&gt;T
"when Sir Sidney Lae tackled
e* /k ,
____ —y t
tho biography of hla patron
fti
and friend. King Edward VII,
/yy
ha had to nonvey tha feet
//JNl
that hla majaaty waa a vornS/SM&amp;*
doun eater, with a tendency
to pounce and gobble at the
flU
dlahee planed before him.
J frjQ f
Sir Sidney couldn't juat any
that a king wolfed hla vieV V
tuala. What he wrote waa,
{J j If J ]/
'Edward had a aplendid ap'
' • 'V "
petite at aU hours of tha day. and nevar toyed with hla food.1"

T

a a a
Tka Manta M e gaming enatne to epMntod by a family named
•lane. You have to kaew that to appreciate tha gtoemy comment
•f a chronic loner there: ••Rouge (rad) wine occasionally! No(r tbtoah)
wtaa aacMlaatUy. .but Btoaa alwapa wtna la the end!-

Oldsters Need Vitamins

1AMES MARLOW

Spectacular Red Move Is Awaited
WASHINGTON UT—Soma rtf tha
beat informed men in th* govern­
ment believe the Russians—when
they meet President Elsenhower
In Geneva 10 day* from now—will
make their mott spectacular move
on tha laau* of disarmament.
Tha Russians, they think, wUl
either otter new coneewlon* or try
In force the United Slates to do
so. They have yielded more In the
peat tew months than to the peat
10 years.
And Eisenhower, Judging from
hla remarks at hla
eaneaday
news conference, may ha eonaid
erlng concession*. Whet ha salt
sounded to a way Ilka an echo of
what tha Russians said last May
about Inspection procedure*.
Thla la a quick history of tha
world disarmament problem la tha
past 10 yaara, talaacoplng tha
views ef th* Rusalini on on* aide
end th* Western Allies—the United
States, Britain, and France—on the
other.
Th* Ruailani* position until last
May:
1. Thera muat ha an Immediate
end to making alomle weapons
those now stored up muat be de
strojed. Thla waa all to th* advaa'
tag* of tha Russians whan they
had no atomic bomba and the
Unltad States had planty.
I. Tha nations should reduce
Uietr armed forces on a percan
Uga basil. Stow tha Russian^ had
the largest armed force, a per­
centage reduction would bantilt
them.
I. There could b* ao Interaction,
al Inspection team*—such as the
Wait proposed—aUowed In any
country to see that it waa not
cheating on making atomle weap­
onsThis has been tha Allied poll
tioa:
1. No sudden disarmament, but
f i n a l l y atomle weapons ware
scrapped. The reason: To teat the
disarmament machinery and tha
sincerity of every country to Uvag
up to the agreement.
I. Armed forces reduced through
a fixed limit on their alie, not oe
a percentage basis aa tha Buaalaaa
wanted.
I. International inspection team*
stationed la every big country with
full fraadom to check everywhere
to see there waa no cheating.
Tha two ildaa stuck to thoi* poiltlona for years. Suddenly on May
U tha Russians mad* a puhlie an­
nouncement whieh itortled th*
West: They ware willing to agree
to some of the Waat'a demands,
ia part anyway:
I. They agreed to tha idea ef

gradual disarmament, which th*
West wanted.
2. They accepted the West's Idas
ot a fixed limit on armed forces.
They agreed, almost unchanged,
to the very figures proposed by
th* West: A limit of it* million
men each for the United States,
Russia and Red China; and 650,000
men etch for Britain and France.
S. They agreed, for th* first time,
to 1st an International Inspection
teem be stationed to Russia, but
to a limited way. For example:
Th* t*am would be restricted to
airports, docks and rail centers.
4. They demanded th* Unittd
Stale* give up Its ovtratai air
base* which, because they ring
Russia, ar* to a position to plaster
her If she gets aggressive. This Is
something thla country eould hard­
ly agree to until world disarma­
ment wee near ita last stages.
Two days liter. May 13. the
United States, Britain and Franca
laid Ui*y war* still for unlimited
right of International Inspection
tea mi to go where they wished and
look at anything they wished to a
country wbtra they ware sta­
tioned.
In explaining May 11 why they
were against unlimltad freedom
for than tsami, the Russians
said: "In th* existing situation,
when many statu display legiti­
mate concern for their security,
It is.difficult to expect (hat that*
states would fruitfully give ether
state* aecasi to thalr Industrial

tionsl bears had been accused of
muscling 14 tourist* art far this
year.
Th* disturbing thought to those
of us with reflective minds is.
"Why should these bears Itak
out tourists and tnney them?"
Why ar* these been unhappy?
Basically, I think they boll down
to two types:
A. The bad bear. Ha aland* at
the picnic site, and U lonely and
hungry. H* leers and demands hie
helping; and generally gits It, too.
B. The confuted bear. H* trie*
to be helpful. He stands at road­
side during th* height ef the tour­
ist season and tries to direct thorn
to th* wild life they ere soaking.
T'm* gets him mixed up.
But tourists do hold s peculiar
fascination for bears. Hera in this
great national park thla rather
bothers tha fortil rangeri.
They feel a responsibility toward
both hears and people. They know
that people are also fascinated by

Woman Hangs Self
With Knotted Sheet
HARRISON, N.J., IB-Arrested
by her police lieutenant husband
on hi* disorderly person complaint,
Mrs. Edna O'Connor hanged her
self In a tail cell Sunday.
Authoritiea aald the 41-year-old
woman, wife of Lt. Pater A.
O'Connor and mother of two chil
dren, was found hinging from I
bed sheet knotted on a window
erank to th* cell.
A police surgeon's efforts to re­
vive her were futile.
Police laid Mrs. O'Connor was
lodged to tbs detention room early
Sunday morning after her hua
band filed a disorderly complaint
against her btcaus* of a noisy
quarrel he said "caused lights to
pop on all ever th* neighborhood."

and othtr resources which ar* of
vital importance for their secu­
rity."
On Wednesday—two months aftai tha Russians opposed complete
Inspection and th* United States
demanded it—Elsenhower said the
more on* thought over disarma­
ment th* more* he finds himself to
a sort of squirrel eaga.
Hi wandered out loud jnst how
much Inspection th* United States
would permit to this country. He
said; Are w* going to open up
•very on* of our factories, ovary going on (hat could he Inimical to
plica whara something might ha tho interests of somebody else?

YOU'RE TELLING MEI
■ ■■

» »

If MOTT I0NB—

Centre! Free* Ifrffar
1 Y 1H0, the American Home court autament In y a m to tame
Economic# association convention —'"Judge, ha got up from tho
waa told, about a third of our tabla and hit mo with tha pass
food will com* out of tha freaur. and broke my arm."
Imagine coming home to th* tit­
•I l f
tle woman and asking, ••What *
Thera ora eamplef# ilnntr»-tn»
thawin'I" „
* -can on tht market, loo. It
t t t
teems. Tha /aad. Induitry la re­
Maybe the'U reply, "Dinner’s • dactor tha aperodan to eng
lifff* flow tonight, deer. The aptulMg.
masked pat aloes won't gal hot."
f t t

I I I

Mausewlvot abetting obovt the
R«l|hh*rh«*d will soy to oath
•thor, "Wall, I muat ho going. My
dtoeefllmhiiwt malSad."- ■*»

•0.-.-J*- 1- |
C u t yen Juat aaa a divorce

Mar*.
.nd they know on* thing more:
"A boar la a wild anlfamean’t bt securely bribed — I* atitl
a reatlesa, adventurous and ex­
ploring creator*."
So many tourists don't ralUto
this. Bocius* they ar* in a nation­
al park and perhaps hava seen a
btar In a too at homo they think
a baar to the wood* la a potential
buddy.
Ha isn't. A bear .a a baar la a
baar is an animal that even bar*
ean go up to 600 pounds and
manly by patting you goedby
keep you in stitch**.
So far ns tourist haa beta
killed by 4 baar In this tremendous
park that spreads from North Csb
olina into Tennessee, but many
hava bean cruelly mauled. It Is
almost without exception th* re­
sult of violating a perk rul* against
feeding th* bears.
The trouble with feeding a beef
It that after you giv* him ell th*
food you have — or ail yau feel
you ean apir! — he may eat b*
satisfied.
Then hi may keep earning right
after you.
"Actually a bear doesn’t mean
any personal harm whan ha pawl
you over," aald a mountain man
drily. "Ho may moroly be marchin* you to be sura you areal
holding out a sandwich os him .",

Thirteen Involved
In 2-Car Collision
JANESVILLE. Wii. LB-Slx peh
sons were killed and seven ether*
ware Injured Sunday to a twocar collision five mils* wait of
bora.
Tha victims ware Mr. and Mrs.
Jamas B. Talt and Mrs. Edward
LIU*, all of Janasvllla; Mra. Vl&gt;
gl Lounsbury, 22, of Tiffany, Wla.,
and bar two daughters, Cordis, S,
and Joanns, S month*.
Tha Injured, takan to a Jan**villa Hospital, art: Edward Utta,
husband ef ona vleUm: Virgil
Luunabury, husband of ' Mr*.
Lounsbury; and fivt othar Lotus*
bury children.
Conditions of the survivor* were
not available.

gAR
|a
(AniinLl
aV
J
V
B sW
wwNHf w

grevy leeve* ea lump Ig
le tthe three*.
' t t I
And what ia th* atov* Industry
doing absut thla trend f Pretty
aaan nobody will want uytfctoff
hut the front human

G e t? * *

L_ I
G

e t# *

M IN
s

&amp;

k s s h e

ar Ita equivalent Boise ef thla
may bo m m la tha form M

O U D S M O B IL K
M i M la w

!
4V *.
*

• i.

*

�1
S o c ia l
Knee Currently Appears
!Forerunner O f Summer; Hats Out
are short with little pots in front."
AP Staff Writer
A Boston men's store owner
Time was when summer'* har­ called the Bermuda shorts a blow
binger was the sudden return of: for freedom from heat and dis­
•the straw kaly to the head of man1
comfort.
(ler three seasons of fedoras and
“ But what baffles me as an in­
umbergs.
*
dividual," he added, "is why men.
• Today, no matter how one feels after centuries of wearing the
on the subject, the harbinger is wrong things in summer, have cor­
the audden, shocking #gllmpsc of rected the error—and then fouled
•bare male knees on the golf course, up the whole businrss hy wearing
in the backyard and—steady there, thick stockings to the knee.”
fellows—on Fifth Avenue.
Probably the nation's most cele­
Leading haberdashers, custom brated Bermuda shorts devotee is
. tailors, fashion-plates and rugged television performer Garry Moore.
f individualists inform us that from Moore climbs into Ids short pants
Au;tc in we can expect In see more around July 1 and wears them on
Tmd more business and profession­ TV and off.
al men looking for all the world
“ It isn’t fair," he complained.
I like fugitive Boy Scouts.
"While women sit around com­
At thia moment, one of the most fortably, a man is a lout if he
.exclusive, expensive and fashion­ even takes his coat off. It's ridicu­
able men’ s shops In New York is lous, because New York in sum­
celling as many pairs of bobbed- mer Is a tropical inferno."
legged pants (called variously
He views Ucrtnuda shorts as the
Bermuda shnrta, walking shorts
first shot in a rebellion.
or walk shorts* as slacks. More
"I know that knees don’t get
alarming, one of the biggest men's
that hot, but ’we've got to start
Nothing chains of the city is sett­
somewhere."
ing one pair of long shorts to every
Louis Renault, a commercial art­
three pairs of trousers.
ists' representative, started a
Last yesr some brave or exhibi­
small riot two years ago when he
tionist males started wearing walk
started wearing shorts to work. A
ahorts on the city’ s asphalt. They
New York commuter from Stam­
drew stares, comment and assort­
ford, Conn., he just doesn't like
ed whistles. This year the volume the tics!.
of attention is reducti­
Even after two year* nt wearing
on a countrywide basis, Ber­
muda shorts are catching on as shorts in town, Renault still at­
comfortable male sports clothe*, tracts some attention.
“ Girls walk right up and con­
ip ic of Los Angeles’ most conserv­
ative golf clubs, which bun shorts gratulate me or tell me how silly
fer men and slacks, pedal pushers 1 look." lie said. "And if I dcm'l
and shorts for women, currently is want to get catcalls, 1 lake a taxi
studying a proposal to relax its ban up Third Avenue."
to permit long shorts.
"I predict," said a buyer for a
On the basia of a nationwide very high style men’s store, "that
[ survey, the vogue has caught on in five years walk shorts will be
best among high school students as dead as knickerbockers, or
and college boy*. However, when they'll be regulation summer wear
a group of 25 male students fc&gt; all men. I'm Inclined to think
I showed up at Central High School it will be Iho latter.”
L # Little Bock. Ark., nattily garbed
I in knee length cotton socka, Bcr[tnuria ahorti and the rest nt the
I trimmings, tltey were confronted
I by the school principal.
I " I hope you boys have a nice
[trip hom e," the principal said as
HOLLYWOOD
Having madp
|hc turned them out of the building.
An Oklahoma Cily high achool hi* name in the hlg city, Steve
principal banned Bermuda shorts Alien is back in Hollywood to col­
during final examination time nn lect his rewards.
ke grounds they constituted a disFive years ago, the bespectacled
Irblng Influence. He didn't say to wit was operating a midnight ra
din show here. It attracted a large
shorn.
In Dallas, a dairy put its driver* following among the night nwls,
on the
grtfhnds but was not what show business
..o Bermuda shorn ------ ---------Into
comfort. After initial wisecracks, people rail the Big Time.
It -was the accepted uniform.
He also dabbled In the movies,
Boise, Idaho, clothing salesmen but on a small scale. He played a
Confessed most of their shorts sales disc jockey in a June llavcr-Glorla
sere to men.
DcHavcn musicat, “ I'll Get B y."
, “ Wives,"
one ■'salesman ex And he starred in an amalgama­
nlained, “ are afraid to buy them tion of clips from old Mack Srnnctt
fo r their husbands,
films called “ Down Memory Lane."
Jin - Raleigh, N.C., tha young act —“ It's playing a lot on TV now,
jias latched onto the vogue so unfortunately," he says.
firmly that nne hoy, who had trou­
At that time Allen wanted to try
ble persuading his mother to id
his hand at network TV. But the
him attend a party In shorts, re
coaxial cable hadn't yet wormed
ported borne that only one young
ater attended in long pants—and its way to California. So he headed
for New York. After a slow start
sent home In embarrassment.
Women have conflicting opinions in the new medium, he made his
shout the vogue. Most of them mark ai a bright panelist and as
roncede the traditional summer the sly, deadpan proprietor of
dress of American males is sheer NBC'a late-hour Tonight show.
Allen returned to California for
i hure“ I think mrn should be allowed one of the prize film roles of the
He's playing the king of
to be a* comfortable ai women in year
hot weather," aaid one young ma­ Swing in Universal-lntcmatloal’s
tron. “ 1 think walk ahorts are sen­ “ Tha Beny Coalman Story."
sible, cool and practical. But I
He paused between rehearals
don't want my husband parading for a spectacular and tests fnr the
around hia office and the street in movie to discuss his multiple ca
'hem.'*
reer. Besides the film and all his
"Men," laid a chubby lady in a TV work, h« writes songs, plays
•unback dress, "have knobby piano and sings on records, writes
ea and hairy legs. They should short stories and articles and may
flaunt their moat unattractive even do atomic research, for ail
■features."
anyone knows.
? “ They're all right for the eounDocs he worry about spreading
Jtry and suburbs," said a* house- blmseU too thin?
I wife in blue Jeans, “ but it seems
"N o, that doesn't concern me.
I to me the only men who wear them
When I was starting out. people
told ma 1 shouldn't wasta time
writing songs; I should concen­
trate on a few things. Rut 1 like
writing songs. 1 Ilka doing a van
ety of things.
"And it's easy to get by when
you've made your name in another

By CV.VmiA VOWRY

«

Steve Makes Good
In .Dazzling C ity;
Back In Hollywood

.••

FRISCO
PAINTS

w ith

QUALIFIED CARE!

MIN DEN, Ncv. or—Hark Gable.
54-year-old screen veteran, and
Kay Wdlisms Spreckels. 37. ac­
tress and former wife of California
sugar heir Adolph Spreckels II,
were married yesterday In a sur­
prise double-ring ceremony.
It was Gable's fifth marriage,
Miss Williams' third.
The ceremony in the home of
Justice of the Peace G. Waller
Fisher claimed an on-again, offagain romance that has linked
their names in gossip colums for
about 10 years. They were at­
tended by Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Mrnaseo. of St. Helena, Calif., and
Mrs. Elizabeth N'cssar, of Los An­
geles.
Gab’ c, appearing very formal in
a dark blue suit, and his bride,
wearing a chic Ian suit, were un­
communicative before and after
the ceremony. Fisher said the ac­
tor said only “ I via" and both
wrre unusually quid.
"Afterward*. Mr. Gable took her
in his arms and kissed her," he
said. “ I don't know for how long,
but pretty long. Maybe two or
three seconds. A good kiss."
Tlirrc was speculation that the
couple might have gone fnr their
honeymoon to Glcnbrook, a small
resort community on Lake Tahoe
where Gable has a cottage.
Gable was first nfarrled in 1921
to Josephine Dillon, a Hollywood
drama coach. They were divorced
aflcr six years. By that time Gable
was a box office hit.
His next wife was Ria Langham,
It years his senior. They were
divorced in 1939. Shortly thereafter
Hr ami movjr arfrr** Carol" Lorn*
b ;rd were wed. T h '*? y ?*'*
she was killed in a plane crash
while returning home from a war
bond selling campaign.
In 1919. he married Lady Sylvia
Ashley, widow nf movie slar Doug­
las Fairbanks Sr. She divorced him
April 21, 1932. afier a number of
legal maneuvers.
,
In World War It, Gable enlisted
a* a private. When he was placed
on inactive status in 1944 he ‘was
a major, and had hern a photo­
graphic officer on Flying Fortress
raids.
Mis* Williams first was wed to
Martin de Alzaga Unzu'c. She ril
vo.ced him and married Spreckels
in 19(5. She divorced the San Fran­
cisco sugar heir in 1953, after sc
cosing him of beating her with
her own slipper — a charge for
which he served a Jail term.
She has two c h i l d r e n hy
Spreckels, Adolph .111, 6, and
Joan, 4.

r•
TUESDAY
Cirrtcs o f tha First Methodist
Church will meet as follows at
9:45 a. m.: Circle No. 1, Mr*.
C. E. Meeks, 2193 Orange Avc;
Circle No. 2, Mrs. C. L. Echols.
W. 20lh St; Circle No. 3. Mrs.
Roy Wall, 408 Virginia Ave. for
a picnic and awimming parly;
Circle No. 4 with Mr*. Hlake
Sawyer, 200 Elm Avr. with
Mr*. Adam Miller as ro-hostess;
and Circla No. G with Mr*. J. 8.
Williamson 204 W. 18th 8treet
Tha Unity Class wilt meet at
7:45 p. m. in the Valdes Hotel
with the Hev. Carolyn Parson* as
teacher. The public is invited.
The Firat Baptist Intermediate
Royal Ambassadors will meet at
the church at 7 p. m.
The Pilot Club will have a dinner
meeting at the home of Mr*. AI
Hunt, 2485 Palmetto Ave., at
6:30 p. m.
The R. W A. (night group) cir­
cle of the First Christian Church
Women'* fellowship will meet at
the horn* o f Mrs. Lester Tharp on
1100 Oak Ave., at 7:30 p.m.
The Gleaner* Class of tha First
Baptist Church will meet with
Mrs. 51. C. Hagan, 708 Park Are.,
at 8 p. m. Mrs. John Fox will be
co-hoatcss.

WEDNESDAY
Tha First Baptist Prayer Meet­
ing service will begin at 7:30 p.
m. In tha Memorial Educational
Building.
field. For Instance, Stilton Berle
doesn't have to write tho greatest
song In the world, the way a be­
ginner would hava to. Lately I’ ve
been doing some singing. I don't
have to do a great singing Job, as
aa unknown would hava to."

Fall Fashions
Television's Power,
Being Unveiled Says Groucho Marx
HOLLYWOOD lf» — “ You can't
underestimate the power of tele­
In New York
vision," says Groucho Marx, and

MRS. GHOUGH BENJAMIN B1IINARKRCKR
(I'holn hy (V O

r \ ! \M /A

A mj

^

AA mm C

\mSLY'f1X / n U L U J I U * m

*•
i • u ilU I L U h y A e lM X a l

United In Impressive Ceremony
Miss Olvve .‘ line Adams nf Atlanta, Ga., daughter nf Mr. and
Mrj. William Anderson Adams, and George Benjamin Shinaherger,
Atlanta, son of Mr. and Mr*. Howard Lewis Shinaherger. nf McAllister,
nkla., were united in holy matrimony Saturday at 6:30 n. m. in the
Peace Chapel of Holy C'nss Episcopal Church with Ihc Kcv. II. Lvttlelon Zimmerman officiating at the double-ring ceremony.
The chapel was Vautifully decorated for the riles with white
rladinli
and
chrysanthemums
against a harkgiouml of poltrd
Mrs. Shinaherger rhose for her
palms and candelabra holding
going-away-outfit for a trip down
burning white tapers.
the roast, a chocolate three pirco
Mrs. It. Walthour, organist, summer ensemble and while ac­
played the traditional wedding cessories. She wore the white orliiusir and Miss Joyce llctzel, solo- hid from her hiidnl bouquet.
Lt, rendered "The 1-orda Prayer".
A flcr July 15, the rouple will
The Bride
lies at home at 2080 N. Decatur
The bride, given In marriage by Rd. NE, Cottage one, Atlanta,
her father, waa lovely in the tra­ Gn. where Mr. Shhmbergrr will
ditional wedding gown of white attend th&lt;&gt; Emory University Den­
alencon lace over satin fashioned tal School.
with a sweetheart neckline and a
Guests included Mrs. R. A. New­
filled bodice with long tapering
sleeves. A lace apron effect over man. Mr. and 3!ra. It. A. Newman
a full walls-length nylon tulla Jr., Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Hill. Mr.
►kirt was accented by her nylon slid Mrs. Howard Lewis Shinsillusion veil which f\'l shoulder- berger, McAllister, Okl*.; Mr. and
length from a late bandeau, Mrs. James Grappa and Ann and
matching her gown and trimmed Bill; Mr. amt Mrs. Gena Adams
with ated pearls. Around her neck and Candis; Mr. and Mr*. Virgil
shit wore a single strand of pearls, Smith, Mr. and Mr*. Kelly Smith
a gift from tha bridegroom. 81m and Patty; Mis. Floyd Cooper,
c«rriod a while prayer hook Mis* Nixie Kirchhnff ami Mi-s
which was carried hy her great­ Helen Grahnin, Atlanta, Ga.; Ly­
grandmother, Mr*. A. E. Hill, on man Smith, Atlanta; Mr. and Mr*.
her wedding day. Tha honk was Bob McGinnis, Orlando; Mr. and
topped with a whits orchid and .Mrs, Robert Jones, Jacksonville;
Miss Carol Skinner; J r n y Sam­
lily-of-the-vailoy streamers.
mons, Tampa; Mr. and Mrs.
Wedding Parly
Miss Ada Adams, maid of George Bauman, Orlando; Mr. ami
honor and aiater o f tha bride, was Mr*. George Carry, Jacksonville;
gowned In a dresa of whita em- and Morris Wimhish, Homestead.
Th* hrlda is a graduate of the
b'oldered nylon over pink nylon net
and carried a nosegay nf pink jEniory Univcisity School o f Nurs­
lose*. A coronet o f pink net was ing where sho received her llarhilor nf Scienca degree In nursing.
worn In her hair.
Howard Lewis Shinaherger, Mc­ Sha Is now a metnlicr nf the fac­
Allister, Okla., tha groom’s father, ulty at tha Georgia Baptist Hos­
served as best man while Gene pital arhool nf Nursing.
Mr. Shinabarger attended North
I.eGette and Thomaa Algeion
Georgia College and Emory Uni
Epeer were usher*.
Mrs. Adams ehosa for her vanity. Ha is a member nf tha
daughter’s wedding a slata blue Phi Kappa Alpha Social fraternity
fallla two-piece drasa with match­ end a member of Pal Phi Profes­
fraternity.
ing accessories. On her left sional
— i.
A -------------shoulder was pinnad a corsage of
sweetheart roses.
Mr*. Bhinaberger w-nre a mslza
taea street-length dress and an
aqua hat. Sha had a corsaga of
Talisman rosea.
A smalt reception was held at
the Adams home, 2101 Lily Court,
fnr relatives and Intimate friends
nf thn bride. Mrs. R. A . Newmen
and Mre, W. C. Hill asilsted. A
three tiered wedding rake was
cut by tha eouple. The rooms
were tastefully decorated with
white gladioli and chrysanthe­
mums.

By DOROTHY ROE
N EW YORK
(JO— F a i t
f-shinns fit to a " T " —the tunic,
the tube and the torso.
New York designers, preparing
to unveil fall collections to the na­
tion's fashion presrnext week, have
a bag of new tricks up their col­
lective sleeve.
There's plenty nf silhouette news
no doubt inspired by tha hoopla
in Paris last spring. Rut Ameri­
can designers, as usual, have suc­
ceeded in modifying mid adapting
fashion shockers into wearable,
flattering clothes that will glorify
the famous American figure,
Thoiigh hip belts are standard
in every collection, waistlines have
not been forgotten. The slim, fluid
look of the new silhouette is more
flattering to most women than the
nipped-in look of last year. Bustlines are with us, also—not unduly
exaggerated as sometimes was
true of yore but subtly curved and
definitely feminineSlim lines are almost universal
for ilaylimn with thr costume of
shcalh dress and coordinated jack­
et, or full-length coat, the one
most important outfit of the new
season.
Jackets go to sit lengths, from
the briefest boleros to long tubular
coats, over slim matching skirts
or dresses. The tunic silhouette
al»o is prominent in all Important
rollertions in both suits anil dress­
es. The flared tunic jacket looks
—— - - J
t
- * ****** r-r;
iNuuiuua
nuuil'lis,
UllCfl
HIT
trimmed.
Hemlines also make news In the
new collections. Daytime skirt
lengths are about the same or
slightly shorter—nbd-catf Is con­
sidered right for most women But
for afier five wear, hemlines are
up to new frieks. Pauline Trigcr’s
"intermission length" for theater
and dinner wear is about three
inches above the ankle, shown In
sheath dresses or rustoms, ollm
fur-bordered, th.il have a new and
dranulie look. They also make
sense since they don't drag the
sidewalk.,
Ceil Chapman, famous for for­
mal fashions, show* a 1955 version
of the hobble skirt which she calls
the “ castle walk." This is a pegtop, draped sheath hugging the
ankles in hack, slit to the knee in
front, and the newest looking thing
in town for evening wear. She docs
it in fabulous fabrics such as
heavy slipper satin artj gold and
silver lames. It seems to call for
ostrich leathers and dangling ear­
rings.
Fur trimmings are Important In
every type of rnstumc, from furlined casual jarkets to tha dressi­
est COCkl.Ill SUllS.

mini! ANNOUNCEMENT
Mr. amt Mr*. J. f . Hoiton Jr.
announce the birth o f a son, James
Laurence lit, weighing 7 lbs. 1•»
«&gt;z. horn on Sunday morning 8:10
«*. the Femnld Laughton Memorial
Hospital.

a d r ic lu for you units* pro*
wribod aoacifleally fo r tout
M od*. Hot your doctor firat;
brine hi* . araacriptioa U a*I

he's got the potato salad to prove
Mrs. Henry McI-otTgtfTTh return­
it.
ed Saturday from Highland, N. C.
Recently Groucho happened to and Mnenn, Ga. where sha spent
remark on his NBC quii show several weeks.
that you can't hardly get good
old-fashioned German potato salad
Friends of Mr. and Mr* H. B.
any more.
Owen* will regret to learn that
“ f got over three thousand they have been called to Headland,
pieces of mail about it," he re­ Ala., because of the death of her
marked. "I'v e been flooded with brother-in-law, L. T. Crews Jr.
cook books and recipes and so
many cans and jars of potato salad
Mr*. Blanche Stringer entered
that 1 had to send mo-* of It to the Orange Memorial Hospital la 't
orphanages and hospitals. Three week mid underwent surgery Wed­
people even came to my house nesday. Sho Is Improving nicely
in Cadillacs and delivered the and her room is 431.
salad."
Mrs. Robert E. Herndon returned
This avalanche of potato salad
has served fo impress Groucho Sunday from Atlanta, Ga. nfter
anew with not only tho power but visiting her son, Robert Herndon
nnd family. Mr. Herndon is min­
the responsibility of TV.
“ It's an amazing Ihing." he re­ ister of education in the First
flected. "People react quickly to Presbyterian Church in Atlanta.
even Ihc most casual remark.
Mr. and Mm. John T.. Deneff
Perhaps it’s because you’ re com­
ing into their homes and they are danced with a group o f squara
very sensitise to sshat is said dancer* on Ihc Art Davis Televi­
sion Show last Saturday afternoon
there."
over WDHO They enjoyed it very
He recalled a rerent guesting much nnd said "it was a lot of
with Horace llridt. He asked about
fun."
the duties of the talent searcher,
who compared his work to that
Meat I'laller "Dressing*"
of a baseball scout.
Provide n variety of dressing
"Now supposing the Yankees for your cold meat platter. Start
needed some players," Heidt sug­ with mayonnaise, then add a
gested.
touch of horseradish for nnn
"The Yankees don't nco.t any sauce, chive* for another, sliced
players." G r o u c h o countered. ripe olive*, parsley and chopped
"Now if you said the Boston Red hard-cooked egg.
Sox, that would make sense.”
Marx received * derm ol Dro­ TI1N R A N F O l!’ *
ves* num flortomsmV— ; '•■T “2, 1955
! ’«(;**• Such incident* make Groucho es­
pecially sensitive to public opinion.
" I f there's any doubt about of­
fending someone, 1 don't take a
chance," he said. " I never pick
on people who are poor or under­
privileged. Rut when I have a!
chief of police nr an admiral, l!
ran have fun with them. Tlie pub­
lic likes to see dignity deflated."
End adv for P.MS Sat July t

N OT ICE
All Calendar
Listings And
Society News
Arc Requested
By 5 p. m. The
Day Preceding
Publication

Flowering Tree
Now In Bloom
A
ningnificicnt specimen of
I'ellophorutn I* now displaying its I
upright tentacle* of coliirn yellow 1
bloom* nrnr tint Mt. Plymouth
Hotel, 20 miles fioin Sanford®
This hue* oh) evergreen tree
ran he seen on the light from
Ihs roail leading into and just
lieforo you reach thn hotel. Often
spoken of as Ilia yellow jaearnnds
or golden royal poinsctlia it is
irnlly sn entirely different Ire4
with yellow flowers.
Vary
prepared
Itollnndnise
sauce hy adding finely rhopped
parsley and turragon (fresh nr
dried). Wonderful on steal,! If
you can't gel the prepared sauce
in your ncighliorhood you
can
make your own m enisling to
standard cookbook directions.

H

i*

LAST TIMH TONIGHT
0

Curk Susam
Gabu Hayward
Q n m u Gcop E . raw *. muni

r op

Fo rtu n e

STARTS TO.MOItUOW

ON YOUR V A C A TIO N
GO R IG H T - - GO L IG H T
AMERICA TRAVELS A NEW W AT...
■ltd IIEO'S

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to
The
Sanford /It/anr/c
National Bank
Speak
WTRR
9:15 A. AT.

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WHOLESALE * RETAIL

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^TAITH DOMEROUC
HEX REASON

i\ $ r .

n i U n i Exmrkmem Dn M . Mast B*
Contimom u 4 u UJUvmU. Eicrikat Salary

Rich! Ptraaa.

W rite B o* ABO.

Herald

M EN'S" W EA R
EAgFORD,

Met

Mr. ar.d Mrs. Richard Dass and
son Barry, have moved to their
new home in Ormand. ., .

SANFORD

Pk. 103

►Jut

(pcAAonaU

‘•Making
Paint History”

Tfca wonder drug* won't work

Store

Don't Underrate

Stor C lark Gable,
Kay W. Spreckels
Married Yesterday

—

_______________ _____

.

.

-

r S O g E lU H

FEATURES 1
1:00
8:07
StlT
&gt;,
7:27
0iS7

&lt;
J

�• -

Lakeland.

Victory Main Goal
In Annual Conflict
W ith Major Leagues

Defeats
Cardinals

v r c M 'J
p/*APPo/nr/tio
P o o * * yfA *.

•p am
x£\
w n * //t I
OHLY 3Q
pdMt, Birr

j
MILWAUKEE (TP)—'To win la the thin* . . . no mat­
THE SANFORD HERALD ter whose feelings are hurt.
"I'd like to get everybody into the game.” added Leo
age 8
Tucm. July 12. 19S5
Durochcr, the National League's manager in today's 22nd
annunl All-Star clash, "but If- .it'll
my team, I won’t
1. I.weaken
ts
do It."

Standings

Duroehar'a sentiments w a r e
echoed by Al Lop*i although ths
American League pilot did not ut­
ter them *o emphatically.
“ I'll play ths best man I'v* got
and substltut* only when I think
it will help u* win," ha said.
Neither pilot would venture any
prediction on th* outcome although
each declared hi* squad represent­
ed “ the greatest collection of (tars
BLORIDA *T A T B I KAtll* ^
any manager ha* *ver been blessII « .*o»
Orlando
DALLAS, in— In the golden
ed with."
Bastard
.......
14 1 .••T
,«nii
twenties
of
iport
—
the
hey­
flalnrsvlll*
'* * .47*
Durocher, who earlier had by­
Coco*
_
*
III day of Ilabe Ruth, Jack Dempsey,
laytime B»*ch
* *•
passed Philadelphia's Richie AshAkrUbd
.• '
.tin Dobby Junes and Rill Tildcn— burn, then th* National League’s
W.
W, IPalm
■ii»i Bcaih
eifw* •»
. * 11
..
•113 tlirre
came Art (What-a-man) leading hitler, "because I need
Bu ' T s m i M . y k s t i i n u a v
Shires to capture the fancy of the more right • handed h i t t i n g
Si. P alrn h u rs I.
..V4* . 1
W Palm llaai'h T. tfelnsavlUo S
crowds and the newspaper head­ strength," surprisingly aald h*
l.abslas* *. aaatard I
lines.
may not even ui* Willie Maya, hia
CJAMf.a TOHAT
Orlando at Daytons llratb
lie was the boastful Texan who own center field ace.
Si. prlarabur* at
mad* his fame with a booming
atard al Oolararllla
“ Remember what they called
baseball bat, ready fista and a flair Joe McCarthy7” h* asked. “ A
fr l fur showmanship. Ha was a star push button manager, wasn’t It T
,IS« in the major leagues but made Well that's what I'll b*—a push.11* most of bis money out of the by­ button manager. Can you Imagine,
I7lilr«*i,
Nsw Vorh
4*
4TT. products — boxing, wrestling and lending out your first team and
SI. I-ouls
**
.4 0 vaudeville.
jthrn looking dnwn and seeing two
rinclnnull
.440
’hlladtlplila
*•
piwerhouse* Ilk* .Stan Muslal and
f ll l l,t MtfilJldTg TK0TMMUAV .14 4 The brash blond landed the Mays
on the bench?
punch heard over lh* nation In
(No sa m e , .rhrilulrdl
1029 when he poked Lena Mack“ I'll get Muslal In there a* *oon
. IIIM K I TOItAY
Amarlcan-Nallonal All-Hlsr
Bam* burne, manager of the White Sox, s i the rule* permit me after threa
ANMMICAK M iami K
PH in the eye. Shirrs was playing first Ipiilnga," Leo said. “ I'll hava him
r.i ;i ,•31 base for the Sox and he disagreed in left field. But I may not use
Nsw Turk
ill
10
fis t stand
.i ll with Hlackburna over some of his Willi* at all if I don't hava to.
17
f M ' aso
in
i
|1&lt;i.too
1 don't know. It all dependa on
.in* policies.
47
{•stroll
11
.« »
Several times Art the Great wai how the game goes."
K a n .a . n tjr
.133
i;
*Ya&gt;Illusion
Durocher reflected for a mo­
.113 fined and suspended for his she­
31
Baltlmnru
R liB lI.TB T K k T r illlA T
nanigans and Commissioner Kcne- ment and apparently reconsider­
(No sam»&gt; urhftdiilsfll
saw Mountain laindis finally hand­ ed: “ If I Ho put Willie In, It will
U 1 N R I T im A T
Amarlean-Nallonai All-Hlar fam a ed down an edict prohibiting base­ La Ip center and move Duka Sni­
ball players from boxing. At the der to right. If not, I'll send
V
'
time Art bad 10 contracts aa III, Henry Aaron to right. I won't lose
a thing because that kid I* on*
000 apiece for boxing bouta.
Shires played with Chicago two of the best hitter* In the league."
Although he profes*ed an utter
scasoni ami part nf anothrr, fin
ifhed out that season with Wash dgdaln for sentiment, Durocher
inglon and wound up his major *•• swayed by sentiment atona
league career In Boston In the whan h* nominated Robin (13-7)
Nationil League- A shattered knee, Roberts, Philadelphia'* are right­
hander, a* hi* opening pitcher. HI*
NEW YORK in - Golfer* who suffered In a collision at first base, original eholea wai Don Newforced him to quit baseball. Tbe
Want le play In the 1933 National
comb*, Brooklyn’s 14-1 right*
I c A iv e s him trouble to this day.
hinder, but b* switched to R obot*
Amateur Championship at RlehArt now operate! a cafe In Dallas when h* was Informed that it
fiond, Vs., Sept. I I 17, will have
that specialises in steaks and would b* Roberts' fifth start, ty­
Is atudy up on a new handicaplni
system aa well ai practice their shrimp. It is very popular with ing him with Lefty Gomes for the
All-Star record.
golf ahota. For ths first Urns this the select clientele.
Shirr* broke Into professional
I.opes, too, exercised the lastyear, handicap* of the entrant*
mu*t bs computed under the new baseball with Waco, In the Tcxaa minute switch privilege when ha
V , I . Golf Asm. handicap system League.
decided to open up with Billy
The first game Art played In Piryc*i Chicago'* fin* left-hander,
for men.
Its explained on the entry blanks the big leagues found him getting after first deciding upon Early
sent out today by the U5GA. En­ four hlhs In five tlmea at bat. He 411-41 Wynn, hi* own right-hand­
tries art limited to amateurs with said “ So this Is th* great Ameri­ ed ace.
“ I know that Pltrct's record
handicaps not greater than 4, com­ can League we heard ao much
about down In Texas. “ Ill hit .400." (K-fl) does not look good on pa­
puted under this system.
Newspapermen heard th« remark per," Lopei *ald, “ but It'a ml*The big difference between the
•ew system and Uta old la that and went to press. Shlrea picked leading. Three of hla defeat* wera
each course must be rated by a up a paper the next day to find by 1-0 scores, two by Cleveland.
committee according to its diffl his picture aplashcd all over a We beat him hy that acore last
culty and ths golftr'a scores are •ports page with hli quotes. “ This Friday but be looked great In dacompared with the course rating to Is a good thing,'* Shires mused. So fpat,"
The odds still favored the Na­
establish a handicap differential. be played it to the hilt.
A golfer may use either a Hbaslc"
While (till In the majors Shlrea tional Loaguers who havo won but
or a “ current' 'handicap for his became a glamor boy. Ha built a eight of tha previous 31 games,
tournament entry.
reputation tor being the best despite fo ur o f the last five, .
dressed
man in baseball. “ Why, I
Tbe qualifying aectlona for Uia
Rwadtn has one twa • wheeled
change
my motor vehicle for every |4 Inhab­
•Mb AmaUur bava bean reduced would sometime*
to It—ala fewer than last year, clothes three times a day,4' ha itant* and believes that no ether
the USGA revealed. But juit about recalled.
aa many courses will bt used. In
six of the sections qualifying play
trill be over two courses.
The M-hole sectional rounds are
scheduled for Aug. M at Seattle
and Aug. M at the other sections.
One new qualifying sHa this year
la Montgomery, Alt., where the
Beauvoir and Montgomery coun­
try dubs will be aacd. Those ell.
■luted were Unoola, Neb., Al­
buquerque, N. Mh Albany, N. Y.,

Shires
Captured
Headlines

and
Results

J

K
firstiv..

Study Necessary
On New System
In Amateur Play

Stock Car Race
Set For Sunday

SSS?
■•&amp;.A7(.

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P/DH’T

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TH E

A T H IM T / C S ,

HAHHS A &lt;fR EAr

M

W J YEAR H e *
P e M ALLOWAP
co d eeH rp a re
M t r o h pl ay/h o

r i $ r

V

PASS, H&amp;

Fight Results

Pos/r/oH,
AHP HE’*

* * * po h pbp p y
* bW A
ymproy/Ho * o
t/ Y i
m uch A r r e t
(y 0 -"
Plate H e* p e tti up
f P j f i f l t TtitPArr/Ho L tA P fP S .

SOPHOMORE YEAR

Suggestion Of Limit
Seems To Be Doomed
DeMarco Bellows
For Another Bout
With Ralph Dupas
NEW ORLEANS (JB-Btoodled
Brooklyn blllygoat Paddy DeMar­
co today bellowtd for a rematch
with top-ranked Ralph Dupas, of
New Orleans, and claimed ha was
the victim of a “ mother's deci­
sion."
The former lightweight cham­
pion wai ruled Uia loser In a un­
animous 10-round decision lest
night.
"What do I think of hlrnT” De
Marco rumed In hla dressing room,
“ 1 think he’s nothing, that's what
I think. Ha mine* a Jab and th*
crowd goea era ay, Wbat kind of a
shake la that?"
“ Talk about your hometown de­
cisions, this was a mother's deci­
sion. I beat him tasler than 1 did
tail time," tha stubby battler said,
referring to hla 10-round decision
over Dupas In January 1934.
DeMarco bald a slight advantaga going Into ths seventh round,
mainly by pinning Dupaa against
ths ropes and chopping with an
affective right hand.
But from tha seventh round on,
Dupas, No. 1 contender for Bud
Smith's lightweight crown, began
to score repeatedly at long range.
He cut DeMarco’s right eyebrow,
which spurted blood until the end
of the fight and aeemed to hamper
the Brooklyn battler.

Dupaa weighed U3H, DeMaree

Stock car racinx starts with a bang at 8 p. m. Sunday,

Lakeland whipped the Sanford July 17, at the fairxround* in DeLand, Lee Morgan, prent)
Cardinals, 6-1, last night In a dent of the newlyformed Motor Racing Assn, announced to­
Florida State League game played day.
at Lakeland. Three Sanford error*
Limited strictly to amateur competition, the racing
contributed to the defeat.
to sa flying
season
will get o ff
n le
Sanford’s long run came on a
start with * lineup of well-known Daytona Beach; Nat Hall, 1940
triple by Don Pray and a sacrifice
local drivers, all hot on tha trail Ford Fordar, of Naw Smyrna; Bob
by Bud Miller fa the first.
of the 3600 guaranteed puree.
Lakeland tied It in the second
Plank, 1041 Ford Fordor, o f Day­
on Randy Randle's single
and Morgan reported that applications tona Beach; Ray L. Couch, 1940
have been pouring In since th*
Arthur Buexowskl's double.
Daytona
Florida State League leading firet announcement* of the new Plymouth Coupe, o f
Orlando bee second place Cocoa’s organisation, and a larga field Is Baach; Johnny Bryant, 1943 P I * }
number. Tbe teams have met IS expected to be on hand for th* mouth Coupe, of*Daytona Beach;
tim er this season—and 11 times starting gun.
The fairground* track hae bean Jim Hardee, 1037 Ford Coupe, of
the Flyers have been victorious.
thoroughly
reconditioned and tha St. Auguebne; Tommy Glieeon,
Last night Orlando won 3-2, in­
creasing Its lead to 10W games, covered grandstand will be ready 1939 Ford Coupe, o f St. Augus­
when Andy Schreiber put the In­ for the capacity crowd expected tine; Wild Bill Welle, 1988 Ford
Sunday, aald Morgan. Duet, which
dians down on a four bitter.
Coupe, of S t Augustine; Lester
nae always been a problem on
An Orlando crowd of 490 saw
this track, hae been licked with Register, 1934 Ford Coupe, o f 8L
the Flyers score two runs in the
applications of calcium to tha sur­ Augustine; and Halsted Mancey,
fleet on four hits and combine a
1084 Ford Coup*, of 8t. Augus­
face.
walk, Mika Kaasabian's doublt and
tine.
(J
“
These
are
going
to
be
real
lo­
Juan Garcia's sacrifice fly for the
winning tally in the fourth. Cocoa's cal races,'' said Morgan. “ Tha boyi
(wo runt came on Jerry Cline's doing tha driving will be partly
well known speedsters Ilka Jim
third Inning homer.
West Palm regained fourth place Hard**, president of the racing
x o v u a t N ioH ra ^ in iiJ ii
'club In St. Augustine, and Johnny
L ie
by beating Gainesville 74 and Bryant of Daytona Baach, and
a t ths:
NEW
OllLEANH— lUlph Dupas,
St. Petersburg whipped Daytona partly the eager young unknowns 1 1 1 4 . N»w
Orltans.
cutpolnisd
Beach 3-1.
In Marco, 14V. Brooklyn, o.
that wa want to see develop into Paddy
N E W Y o liK — Tony fu ie o . t i l ' s .
St. Petersburg ealled on Dave the big name* of tomorrow.
Brooklyn outpolnud Libby M anso. 114. New York. IE
Band, a 20-year-old product of
“ MRA ha* its ey l on the fu­
Bln p.'K t o n . Mast. — W alter
Daytona Baach sandloti, to whip ture," he went on, "Our big need art. I4S Boston, outpoints* W lllla
hit homa town club. He allowed in Central Florida he* been for IMntapplu attVsnson, 14*. W e s t o ^
four scattered singles but had to an outfit that would give young *■ AL'BCItN. Mlrh. — Dick lU ln n have relief In the ninth when he drivers the chance to develop. ■sttl. 111. Dsiroll, stopped M e k /
filled the sacks by a balk, walk This I* auto racing country, and Harris, 111, Clsvslnnd, 4.
and a hit batsman. The Saints, It always has been. The woods are
playing before 371 at home,clubbed full o f cat* and drivers Just
11 singles.
praying for a chance to do their
Yvan Dubolt singled In Jim stuff.’*
NEW YORK W4—Tab Tony Puleo
Fjdgley with the winning run in the
This Is only th* beginning of
eighth Inning of the game at Wait Mg things in local racing, accord­ as ona of tha better young light­
weight prospect! around today.
Palm Beach. Gainesville's Nor­ ing to Morgan:
man Hughes yielded only on* hit
Th# rangy *2-yaar-o1d Brooklyri“ We'va gut th* driven and tha
the first six Innings. The attend­ public has hern ready for a long Ite, a pro only 13 months, w h ack ed
ance at Weal Palm was 343.
time. We’ll run every Sunday at out a decisive 10-round victory
a A.&gt; s o l i u
Dsl^nd through September any- over Libby Manso of New York
ab
Pr»y lb
vay, and w-.'r# going to expand In a television fight at SL Nicks
a
ll'rlsllo ft
4
Arena last night.
to other local track*.’4
Tsrrsll If
t
Tony Impressed both by hla win­
sillier Sii
Some of tha early entries which
I
Hnydsr &gt;•
I
hava already been processed by ning margin and by tha smart
llutlar r|
t
Cook Sb
MRA Indicate the kind o f driving manner In which he whipped a
4
Hrhmlll rf
a
talent that will be on tha track more experienced rival.
Jl'nfrnll *
a
Firet, the ts-year-old Manxo, who
Francis *
on July 17. They include:
i
TftiaU
as
recently lost a split decision to
Chria
Holiday,
1340
Ford
Coupe,
LASOwLAMS
of South Daytono; Carl JSurrsncy, former lightweight ehamploa Pedw
ab
Perrtll af .
a
1941 Ford Coupe, of Opmond dy DeMarco, punled Puleo w ttP
Imalda
Sb
4
^lahaua lb
John Boyta, 1933 Ford Coups, o f hla bobbing and clutching stylo.
a
Sm'tsly Sb
«
Haadle rf
a
A'drrton aa
a
l-lddrtjr If
4
tlucsWahl •
4 l * I
K. Turnar a
1
Tfttale M
ai a1 tr* fa

Puleo Is Prospect
Who Stands Chance

MILWAUKEE IT -M ajor league
hawball players want to clamp
down on bonus babiei, but their
suggestion of a limit of two to a
club appears doomed.
The player representative! of tha
American and National leagues
huddled yesterday and agreed that
a pair of bonua players, carried
beyond the usual 23-player limit,
was the way to solve a perplexing
big league problem.
But although club owners eon
cede th* bonus policy la something
of a bear they hava caught by
tha tall, the sentiment la against
eucb a restriction aa advanced by
the players.
Tbs present rule requires any
bonus player—on* signed for more
than $4,00 yaarl ysalary—to re­
main with the parent club for two
years before minor league asslgamenL
Baseball authorities agree gen­
erally that compelling a bonus
youngsters to ride a major league
bench for two years with Uttla
chance of competition la unfair
both to the player and to the club.
Robin R o b e r t s , Philadelphia
Phils pltchar, expressed toa view
aa National League player repre­
sentative that the bonus system
also waa unfair to veteran players.
“ The playtrs feel that the bonus
setup ia shoving too many vateraa players out of Jobs without
actually replacing them,44 said
Roberts, who yesterday waa re­
elected to a two-year tarm as his
loop's player representative.
However, National League Pres­
ident Warren Giles and Frank
Lena, White Sox general manager,
said i n ' rebuttal that tha player
proposal took the teeth out of the
present bonua restriction.
“ Tho Idea k to discourage
promiscuous signing of bonua playera, u d putting even lam la tha

l.lddr a,

in­

■JleuL
eowakl Rm eluly, K. fu rner I, Pcay. a B— Cook. Butler,
imi
Hcbmftt,
J.T5dr. H—
H— K.
N. Turn
Turner, A n d arson. DP — Miller. Cook
Coo
and
L ofl— Hnnford.
Hanford,
Lakeland
I'rny. r.*fi—
Lahnlnnd 7.
HP— Pray, B ll-o ff— Mnnfradl S. K.
Turner « a o -b y — K. Turner I, Man­
fred! ».
rredl
T. Pranole J,
I. »IO—
Il(&gt;— Maafredl
Manfredl
T In f t&gt;t Innlnan 4 run*. Francis I
in !•
1-1
* Inalnge a
0 rune. flA E R — K
T
am er ( I - * ) , Man
Turner
Manfredl &lt;«•(). fra n *
cla
( * ;.*4»,.. to p — Manfredl. PB —
c
a
(*
Maurlello, W — K. Turner. L f-M a a fredt U— Maloney and aaliaaber
T— t i l l .

aami category aa returning serv­
icemen beyond the 33-player limit
defeat* the purpose of tho bonus
rule,44 said Lane.
Bob Feller, veteran Cleveland
Indians pitcher, waa named th*
American League player repre­
sentative lor two yean .

use
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•a usual, the number at quallfl
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Aug, U.

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When Work On Ford Producti
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Ploying Trobert
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Today America Does Much Better
S

W

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£

w

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•
•
•

W A S H I N G T O * i n - Less vide some type of life, health or
than 25 years ago. legion* of other insurance paid for either
Americana wart walking In * the wholly or in part by the employer.
valley o ( despair through the great Paid vacations and holidays are
depraaalon. Millions were jobless. being increased. Emphasis baa
Today, tha United States Is pros­ grown on htallh and welfare pro­
pering. Wages are good. The de­ grams.
How far can this security, par­
spair *o( the M's is only a bad
memory. And forces now are ticularly in the field of jobless pay,
pressing hard to shape a future be extended?
Henry Ford n touched on this
which will guarantee economic se­
curity for workers in their Jobs point recently when he said "We
don’ t want to reach th* point where
and In their old age.
a fellow would be just as happy to
This aurga from financial chaos
loaf and draw unemployment com­
toward a planned security for
pensation as he would to work. It
workers has been little less than
could wind up the right way or
a social revolution during the last
the wrong way. That la one thing
quarter of a century—a revolution
we have to w atch"
which had its beginning in private
To economists, the answer to
Industry, was pushed forward by
continued progress toward security
the New Deal of Franklin D. lies largely in whether or not InRoosevelt and then expanded by
big labor unions.
Behind the move la the old yearn­
ing of peopla for security from
hunger and want. Behind it. too.
la a growing acceptance of the
Idas that buiinaaa and government
have a moral obligation as well as
a financial stake tn the workers'
welfare—a responsibility that goes
beyond the actual wages paid for
SAN' SALVADOR. El Salvador,
work done.
(*— Some S a l v a d o r e a n s de­
Some question whether the sys­ cided some Ume ego that there
tem can provide workers and their were many places In their country
families with high and higher which should be mad* Into recrea­
wages, shorter work hours, health tion areas and, coincidentally, fine
and welfare benefits, paid vaca attractions for visitors.
tioni, higher unemployment com
An ambitious program of public
penaatlon, and old age pensions works was begun and through de­
without an eventual collapse and sign, and some accident, today Elreturn to chaofSalvador la In a growing position
Tha question apparently no long to entice and please tourlats.
•r la whether this is the road the
If a single word can describe
nation will follow but how far down
the sights to be seen here, It's
thia road It will go.
This faet was heavily underlined poetic. This is natural since the
when Ford and General Motors guiding light behind the program
agreed to pay thtlr workers In is a poet, Raul Contrarea, presi­
creased unemployment compensa dent of the National Tourist Board
To give you soma Met o f Contion In addition to vested pension
trares’ approach to things, at tha
rights and other benefits.
In effect, the two companies ae national giark at Atecozol there is
eepted the principle that they have what la claimed to be the only
• continuing financial respontibility statue of a toad. When the question
to their employes when those work of monuments came up during the
era, through no fault of their own, construction, Contrarea laid there
ar* laid off and are Idle In alack were enough atatuea of dletiea.
What then? he wai asked.
production periods.
The agreement call* for the com­
"Why not the toad?" ho said.
panies to guarantee unemployed "The toad who lings to the moon
workers from 80 to *5 per cent of at night."
their take home pay up to 26 weeks
And so there la a huge atone
aach year beginning June 1, 1958 toad, looking across a pool.
11m Department of Labor's Bu
From San Salvador, you ean
r*au of I^bor Statistics has found
reach any apol In tha country in a
that alnca 1BD0 more than 340 plana
single day’s trip.
have been adopted which guaran­
In San Salvador, under urging
teed wages for three months or
longer—and more than 190 of them by the Tourist Board, a new and
still Ware operating In 1946. But modam hotel la going to be con­
th*sa plans were tn ralatlvaly structed. The top hotel now la the
Hotel Astoria. It operates on the
•man companies.
Twenty years ago there were American plan, f i t a day. Service
only about all million workera who la good.
Thera la little night life In the
could look forward to old aga pen
siona and moat of these were pro­ capital, especially la terms of night
tected only because their employ- dubs, but there are • number of
era voluntarily gava them this se­ spots near the center of the city,
curity.
4* 4.4*' *&gt;4W «•' •■ n * -t r o u b le la 8|at If y«u visit
Today about M million workers enough o f them, you can never re­
or roughly M per cent of the na­ member the names- But the taxi
tion's work force can look forward drivers ean steer you la th* right
to' federal, state or private retire­ direction. Cab fares are ehsap.. .
ment payments, or a combination roughly a dollar to go anywnera
o f payments. AH tha 48 itatea co­ in town.
operate with the federal govern­
For getting Into and out of El
ment hi the unemployment com- Salvador, you need a viia and
penaatlon program. Somewhere an exit permit. You alio register
■ear 100 million peopla have some with the police. All this will be
protection under voluntary health dispensed with under a new pro­
and hospitalisation program!.
gram of Issuing tourist cards, good
In addition, moat companies pro­ for SO days.

Visitors Enjoy
Always Popular
Recreation Area

dustry continues to grow and pros­
per.
Actually, the percentage of the
gross national product paid in
wages baa remained fairly con­
stant over the years despite labor's
successful drive for higher wages
in recent times. The percentage
has run about TS per cent.
But even though the percentage
paid in wages has remained steady,
the workers' income hat Increased
because the groai national product
hat climbed tn the past 23 ysari
from 194 billion dollars to more
than 383 billion dollars. Some econ­
omists predict that In another 10
years it will climb above the 300
billion mark.
Din 23 years, prices have risen
steadily but average personal Incomoa alto have climbed—from
$700 a person to about $1800. Tha
nation’s work force has increased
In this period from 51 millions to
more than 63 millions.
Even with work hours eut by 10
per cent on a man-hour basis, the
man hour production increase hat
averaged more than I per cent a
year.

Elderly Mart, 77,
Acknowledges
Existence O f TV

R U N MINffTTR JAWANARLM NtHRO o f Tndte. em jernmnted by President Tito 0 eft) of Yugoslavia,
aaluta* as he reviews the honor unit of the guards on hie arrival at the Zrmum Airport In Belgradeu
■ehna earn* to Yugoslavia to return tha rae w t eW t paid Mat by Paaaktont Tito.
f faleraiitliwutj

Crafty Righthander
Repair Man Dies
Peden Isn't Going
In Good Position As
Roller Coaster
To Win Run Title Comes Speeding By Anywhere Now
NEW YORK UP - Sandy Consuegra, tha craftly righthander
from Cuba, Is In a good position
to become the first relief pitcher
ever to win the American League's
earned run title.
Figures compiled by The Assocl
ated Press revealed t o d a y that
Coniuegra, a Chicago White Sox
mainstay, leads the American
League in the earned run compel!
tion with a brilliant 1.95 mark. He
has given up only 18 earned run*
in 83 lnninga while winning 3
gamei and losing 4.
Lula Arroyo of tha St. Louis
Cards, another Latin, is tha Na
tlonal League's pace-tetter with a
2.43 earned run average. The little
lefty from Puerto Rico hat given
up M untainted talllea In 111 In
nlnga. He hat won 10 games and
lost three.
‘ Billy Pierce, alto of tha Whlta
Sox, la aecod to Consuegra In the
American League. He hat per­
mitted 22 earned runt In 94 innlhga for a 2.11 ERA. Plerea la
followed by teammate Dick Donov in with 2.29, Jim Wilson of
Baltimore with 2.31 and Whltey
Ford of the Yankees with 2.69.
Bob Ruth of tho Chicago Cuba
la runner-up to Arroyo In the Na
tlonal. He hat an unimpressive M
won-lost record, but hai given up
only 41 earned runs In 1M frames
for an earned run mark of 2.94.
Robin Roberts of Philadelphia, a
13-game winner, la third with t.98
Tha durable righthander baa al­
lowed &gt;4 earned runs In 189 Innlnga. Roberta hai worked tha
most Innings and has pitched the
moat complete garnet, 15.
Don Newcomb* oil Brooklyn,
who boaata a fins 14-1 record, is
fourth with 1.92. Then eome War­
ren Haeker of Chicago with 3.02
it Magile of the New York
with 3.Ql.

NEW YORK Ub—For 23 yean
Edward C. Santo, 43, had been a
roller coaster repair maA at
Coney Island, nimbly slapping
from the trarka to the safety of
a catwalk when tha thrill-ride cars
approached.
Yesterday he apparently failed
to hear a thrca-car train coming.
It struck him as he was examining
tracks about 33 feet above ground
and knocked him 10 feet over to
the catwalk.
At the end of the ride horrorstricken passengers reported the
accident to Santo’s ton Edward
Jr., 17, who was handling fares
and sending dut the trains at tha
roller coaster entrance.
Young Santo rushed to hit fa­
ther, who died a short time later
at Coney Island Hospital.

DEbTlSON, Te*. Ub-l-ea Peden,
who aaya he will quit baseball be­
fore he'll play for the Chicago Cubs
again. Isn't going anywhere right
now anyway. He's recovering from
sn api&gt;cndectomy in a Denison
hospital.
When the Cubs wantnl to trans­
fer him from Des Moines to Ma­
con, with Pepper Martin replaeIng him at Des Moines. !&lt;es hit out
for Fort Worth whore he hai a
new home.
Rut he suffered an attack and
had to stop oft bera for an opera­
tion.
"Not much T eould do at Ma­
con," said Peden of the lowly Sally
League club. "Another good year
at Des Moines and I was headed
for Los Angeles as player-man­
ager. Macon wouldn't help me.”
Th* United But*# sold
300
He has received wires from va­
million dollars worth o f threa cent rious clubs over the country, In­
cluding Claas AAA St. Paul, want­
stamps in 1954.
ing him to play for them. Rut the
About 7S Americana go blind Chicago front office squelched that
each day.
when they Informed Mra. Peden

$500,000 Is Lost
For Sleeping Late
NEW YORK ir - T o y merchant
Frederick G. Osborne Jr., 40, says
he lost $500,000 because he over­
slept one day last Mav and he
blames It all on the Waldorf-Attorla lintel.
In a suit filed against the world
famous hotel, the Milwaukee bus­
inessman said he had stayed at
the hotel and left specific Instruc­
tions with the desk clerk on May 6
to ba called at 9 a.m. the next
day.
The hotel failed to wakrn him,
he claimed, and' he therefore
missed a buslnesa meeting "and
wai caused to suffer a loss In the
sum of $500,000."
Tlie hotel has filed a motion to
require Osborne to give more de­
tails.
by telephone that they would not
declare her husband a free agent.
Peden said he had hoped to stay
In th* Southwest, possibly at Fort
Worth or Dallas for the remaind­
er of the season but that It would
be another month before he could
play again anyway.

BALTIMORE l* - H . L. Mencken,
at 77, will acknowledge now the ex­
istence of television but he hastens
to add "1 never watch It when I can
avoid It."
Ha will alto concede Uiat Holly­
wood occasionally produces a good
movie.
A cerebral hemorrhage reduced
his powers of speech and dimmed
hit vision about seven years ago.
He hasn't been abla to read or
writ* since.
These
restrictions have cut
sharply Into the activities of a com­
bative and fertile mind that gave
birth to icores of books and thou­
sands of essays on an enormous
range of aubjects.
Comfortably established in the
garden to the rear of hit home
with a cool drink in his hand,
Mencken may still he moved to
remark on the "hideous" things
modern brewers do to beer.
He excepts, however, the Ca­
nadian beer he receives each
month aa gratuity for film rights
to an essay written long ag»
Hit Information now cornea ex­
clusively from conversations and
from the radio. Mencken doesn't
care to have anyone read to him
because the rate of absorption is
too slow. In better days, he read
an average of a book a day.
He rises early each day in the
house he hai occupied for nearly
72 years and la ready for work
when a secretary reports at 9 a m.
At present, the famed author,
critic and newspaperman Is, with
the help of his secretary, sorting
a prodigious correspondence ac­
cumulated during his lifetime.

THE SANFOKT) nERAf.D
July 12, 1955
Pnue 7

T uck

SCULPTOR WEDS SECRETARY
LONDON UP—Sir Jacob Ep«'76-year-old U.S.-born sculptor,
Mrs. Kathless Garman. 50. h'*
retary and the model for r
of his most famous statues, v
aecretly married here last W ecl.
the London Daily Mail said today.
Epstein's first wife Margaret Gilmour Dunlop died in 1917. He came
to Britain 50 years ago and ho­
me a British cltltcn. He wai
knighted by Queen Elisabeth 11
last year for hia services to art.
In 1898, two Americans, George
Harbo ami Frank Samuelson, row­
ed an 18-foot boat across th* A t­
lantic using neither sails nor mo­
tor.
It's a bulky mass, for Mencken
has an Ingrained horror of throw­
ing such matter away. .Even a
label on a can of tomatoes, ha
maintains. Is somebody's brain­
child. And it interests Mencken.
Much of the correspondence will
eventually be published. On soma
documents there are restriction*,
such at the death of a principal.
Mencken takes his lunch down­
stairs with hit brother, Auguit, 85,
a retired engineer and hit con­
stant companion. Emma V. Ball,
who has been with the family for
20.years, runs the house and pre­
pares the food.
About once a week, the brothers
venture out to a neighborhood
movie theater. Frequently, they
become bored and remain only a
few minutes. Nevertheless, Menck­
en maintains there has been some
Improvement in the quality of mo­
tion pictures. He feels that "about
five per cent" of them now have
some merit as mass entertainment.
Television hasn't been turned on
In the home for nearly a year.

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EACH FRIDAY - 8 TO 12
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Batteries available at all tlmea.

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111 FLA. NAT. BANK BI.DO.

PHONE 2-351*

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SORRY SI S

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0 A 6 0 V .W H T W ! CANT STOP NOW
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LABORATORY...

S uddenly, a s the

USTENER LEANS
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FLASH/J
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"

PROWLER'

HE'S GONE/ \ WHAT WAS HE LOOKING
SKIPPED OFF ) FO R? ALL OF MV SECRET
IN THE DARK
WORK IS BEING DONE
tte ■____ OVER AT PROJECT X / .

Meanwhile
N TOWN

an rat n r worn

CKAY, CAW
O S jN N B D VUH D O W N !
rr v v o e o b v ' « y t ia a s !

Pravda Is Invited
To Send Reporter

Dulles' Comment Raises New View
WASHINGTON Utv-Sreretary of casion recently to comment that
Stale Dulles’ June 10 comment lhe Western nations would be dis­
that the Russian economic system appointed if they believed Russia
“ is on the point of collapsing” was going to the Dig Four meeting
raised new questions today of So­ in weakness. Such an attitude, he
viet aims and strrngth at the July said, might foredoom the confer­
ence.
—
18 summit conference.
Dulles expressed his view- in
Asked about (he Khrushchev
1 tesnmony msne ramie JFr7Trr4*Fi sorrrment. r rv.i
Eiscnhom—,
by the House Appropriations com ­ said at hit news eonicrence
mittee. He said the Soviets arc Wednesday that "so far as 1 know
“ over-expanded, unable to meet there is no Individual in this gov­
their commitments," and are seek­ ernment that has ever said that
ing "some respite against strains” lhe Russians, lhe Soviets, are com­
of Irying to keep pace with Lhe ing to any conference weak
West.
"O f course, we recognize their
Release of his Irjljmmiy. given great military strength in the
In connection with foreign aid ap­ world."
propriations. brought up again the
The Slale Department declined
question whether the Russians will (o comment last night when asked
ba negotiating from atrength or how the Dulles and Eisrnower
weakness at the Geneva confer­ eommenls rould be reconciled.
ence of President Eiscnhowrr and
Dulles expressed his views In
the Prime Ministers of Russia, contending that to abandon this
Britain and France.
country’s foreign aid program now
The lestimony which was re­ "would be a Ircmendotis disaster."
leased did not show Dulles giving
He said the Kremlin ii "dis­
any details about possible Russian turbed'' by the fact that the United
collapse.
Slates can meet heavy commit­
Nikila Khrushchev, R u s s i a n ments abroad "and we ean still
Communist Parly leader, took oc­ maintain a very high degrea

prosperity—indeed, mounting pros­
perity."
"They are only sble to do It,"
he continued, "as they do it at
the expense of the livelihood of
their people; the denial to them
of things which we regard as ele­
mental for everybody."

Civil Defense Head
Tells Possibilities
WASHINGTON f/T)—Civil -Drfence Administrator Val Peterson
says it’s "entirely possible" that
some American cities, once sub­
jected to nuclear attack, could
never be entered again.
In testimony released Sunday
by a House Appropriations sub­
committee, Peterson cited New
Orleans as one city that might
literally disappear if attacked from
the air.
Because New Orleans is "built
on only two or three feet of dirt
resting on water." Peterson said,
th. crater caused by a nuclear
transform

STRATFORD, Conn. (M -P rivda
has been invited to-send a rnrrespondent to cover the opening of
the American Shakespeare FestU
val Theater.
Rut because Stratford Is offlimits to Russian nationals tha
U.S. State . Department may fcav«
to decide wbethor Lb* LmiUtiua
ese ba ut*L.
Trie invitation was made last
week by the Bridgeport Sunday
Herald, a Connectieut weekly
newspaper, which said it was
nude as a gesture of good will.
The paper said Sunday that
It had n k fh e d a reply from
Deputy Editor-in-Chief Zhukov say­
ing that the invitation arrived too
late for the paper to send a writer
irnm Mnsrnw but that it had
Instructed Its New York represen­
tative, Eseenii Lltoshko, to attend.
TIME BOMB DISCOVERED
SAIGON, South Viet Nam UB-A
time bomb was discovered Sunday
night In the U.S. Information
Agency building and destroyed.
Experts said it could have bjown
up a larga part of the three-story
building.

---------------------------- K THEY WAAIT TO FREE-

I HEAR YOUS DATCSX LAMCE/TMC/ SAf/THCOES
OONTWANTTO G O . 1 SAFETY N MUMPERS. ^

DONT
g

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worry
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aboot
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staffing in bet-w«U«sr
wee&lt;Mrtr«l»ei
trafSq
no need to
ta worry cbootbelky,
about balky, hat
bat-somae
startinglIJust BU
All oy
up
eayne eUftina
at your Gulf statkw
statipo with Naw
New Super-ke&amp;wdOulfNO-NOX—
Super-Kcfined OuIfNO-NOX—

I
2
■

the gasoline that's madMrhh eveporetioa control to prevent

w ith f r a t t iM W

t POWRLPACMB Vt
V M tN K -l « U f Grtslsst engine choice ta
CSavroWt track history!

Only m w Cliim lsl r*ek*
Fbtcb trucks bring yss «M
Hies* truly medera fsstwees.
If yM dsn't §cit tbem bribe
truck yws buy, yuu'ru Betting
Ttgy-Lfl:
. . ____

deliver full pewar perfccaiia tu
odlesOcrarile - uaisggijbunu rtsan.
That1* why H pays to always tat
MW NO-NOX. Gulf NCVNOX it th«

fee) fbr thi uMinili In writing ocuu pertanarw.ilwayt u» GulfI .
wpewBnkgss-oiltMin-NewGulI NoNwGialtneind

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If It's Worth Anythinc
It's Worth Advertlslnc la

CLASSIFIED ADS

&gt;~PFM

FOR SAJLB

fW H I* -*

- 4

RED-l-MIX CONKRETE

O iler • W elter Home*, Inc.
General CeetracUng
• Commercial—Custom A Low
Cost Homes
ISM Mellonville Ave. Phew* IMt

THE OLD HOME TOWN

Mlieele Concrete Co.
• Elm Ave.
PhoM 1225

CONCRETE

i:

vA/rru v4-»i t a~r —
n i a—

ACROSS
1. Rrtigtous

tNitsM i r

Louise dr
la —

13. Thm tin
plate
It iron*
curtain
. council
15 Tablet
16. Retail
salesmen

METAL ROOFING
Seles Office on corner Osceola Dr New tn Stock. 5-V Crimp - 1 \L~
Camgated— 114“ Corrugated.
ttd Mohawk Ave la Dreamwold.
Oat all Your roofing needs at

•

Seminole Realty

1 ,1

noils Ave.

Ph. 1613.

» W .I»

Phone 24**

AIR CONDITIONING
Room nr House

H. 7L POPE CO, INC.

Phene 14M

Footiockcra ............ Special I7.*5.
Pstnl ........................... 32 50 gal.
All sires tarpoulinx.
ARMY-NAVY SURPLUS
Phone 1321
310 Sanford Ave.

DREAMWOLD

____ ____________

Used furniture, appliances, mots,
etc. Bougbt-sold. Larry's Mart.
321 East 1st St. Phone 1131.

______ _
T H E J A I L B I R P PICKED* U P A T T H E S C E N E O F T H E S A F E B L O W /N G J O B R E F U S E S T O ^ S I N C ^ F O P T H E LOCAL.

YOU don't have tn ace the credit
manager to save dollars legiti­
mately on our GIGANTIC &amp;*•
mnvaf SALE.

P O L IC E -.

___

QUICK CASH for furniture, boats,
motors. Buy one piece or com­ USED PLUMBING
plete home. Thousands of arti­
cles for sale at the
(taper Trad lag Post oa 17-M
1 Mile South. Phene 2212 R

FIXTURES

JU M

THE CURIOSITY SHOP
Lots of Plants
BARGAINS- Begonia, Bougain­
villea and others—10c, 25c, 50c
and 31-00, also unfinished chest

Ave.

1007

Phono lsl3

»4 B -

ih s tn u w c i

-

h i

Fiutewnd Rate* to
Policyholders
John W BIianu I m l
417

V » iZ

24—

WANT!

l a tm

■=»

BKAUTV PAEIORM

BUto

Shop

210 E. 4U» SL TeL 2434 *
ENVELOPES, letterheads, statemeats, lavoleoa, head bills, and
frintfn'r * Co.,
5 *’ phono
-* tC- 4MF —
* 1**'.!
403
West llth SL*
FUME SANDBBO dk Finishing;
trotahad, laid A fin
lalnqgs aiae* 1330.

AGENTS WANTED: To sell or­
dinary Lift Insurance on a
monthly or quarterly premium
Ftea. L a w commissions paid.
. aq rate teerhue for pilots or
«4M*» military men. An opporMatty for retired military offi­
cers te become active and build
diUoMlteeomr. If inter.

J

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17- A U T O m o*"”

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It wiT. pay YOU U i n US before
you buy. Opon Evoaings and
Sundays.
Easlslde Trailer Bates,
ralatha, Fla.
CARS
BOUGHT SOLI) TRADED
Key a eel's Used Car*
Sanford Av*. A llth SL

Modern Alr-Condlllotird Salon

SprcIshM in Personality Shaping,
Styling and Waving. Cosmetics
for your skin care. Gyro-Lator
method of rrdurlnr.

HARRIETTS
BEAUTY NOOK

Harnett. Hulh. Dawn
Open 4:30 a. m. also Wed. p. m.
ISS No. Oak Ave. Phone *71
15- l-ADNPRT MEnWICK
*

One hour • Warn sad Damp
FOIl SALE —Model “ A" Ford.
Dry
Very Cheap. Ml Rosalia
e One hour U • Wash aad Dry
Fold
Finished La ondry
FOR SALE — 34' Stewart Trailer. *e Banltoo*
Dry acaataf
3 bedrooms, bath, kitchen, dining
ftouthdde room, double walled aluminum
glassed jalousled Cabana. 8 x 20
itiith
linrnk Dolly
Hnllu and
and FencFnttr.
IM Baa* M4h BL
with A
4 4 ’ Porch,
ed. 32,900. Sacrifice. 1/iralrd
Park Ave. Trailer Court. Terms. n rtAivO BBRYICB
W. M. Foster
HSKW I* L. Bill—Plane Technician
—41 Pboee 1144. Route I. fsnford
IB—
BOATS • MOTOR*

ROBSON

Sporting

Goods

Eviarndo Sale* A Service
3*4 E. 1st SL

BARGAIN!
S Bedroom Home in Wywnewood. 2 Years Old.

G. E. AppliancesTalepkaw* 111 after 4 P . M .
far appotetasawS t o mm

MRS. IONA IOWIZ (loft). Long Rcarh. Calif., and her slstrr. Mrs.
Frances S. llcra, Ixxs Angelos, wore announroil winners ot the 2.B00tnile ninth annual Powder-Puff air drrby from l,nng Roach, Calif.,
to Sprlngnrld, Mass. They will sliaro the $B00 flist price. Mrs. Dora
won U10 rare in 1953, hut not with hrr sister.
tInternational)

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130 West Bay Street
Phone ELGIN 3-9754
JACKSONVILLE, FLA.

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Sheppar* Uul4*
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Arthur e]o4fr*g.
f tr lk * It filth
Valiant Lady
l A i a of M f*
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riuldin* i.tsht
Xttehan Show
W ale. T v a r ,
Bob. Q. Law la
Hnuatparl*
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linn k ll .l l C H L U S
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Shcrwin - Williams
Company

A i i r n t l u r * a t l t i I ’ ncln
H i f r t y Klrel
U r«l||rt NuvaP-SptB.
J o h n 11 4 t v ,s &gt; t» »
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ft1ti»lrnl V a r i e t i e s
I .l l i e r a c e
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Hi" Ihail-t T h e n t r n
H 'i i m n r r T l t e a l r e
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H la tU i*
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eith er
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II«rt«of(

12:1ft

Manager Wanted

Ixrral man In operate « naint
and wallnaDFr branch to be
opened in Sanford. Exotriene* in direct contact aellinr.
merchandisinr and retail sailinr are desirable. Active Inter­
est In civic organisations and
wide local acquaintance would
be valuable asaati. Our plan
Include* special trainlnr In
paint business, salary, profitsharing, and r*tir*menl. No
capital InvastmanL Applicants
will pluaa contact P. J. Pat*
bv latter or chona:

2
On T o t i r A c c o u n t
4 oil t h \
4 t a tj.it f y M n n r i
4.1ft l» 4»en Ifniibn

TELEVISION

!sits
'?

..

1

11

u

&gt;

For Ixivellrr flair

Tkla home hia Oak Floor*,
Ceramie Til# Bath, Dinlnc
Area, I-arge Living Room
■ad Kitchen Equipped with

Chack over the repairs and
Improvement* you want to
nudee, then &gt;top (n and ac«
how little it coils for the
l u m b e r and materials.
We're waiting to help you
in every way we can . . ao
why wait? Call 83 or come
in and lat'a talk it over

w

T“ 3

—24

t ’,4 Morse SKA KING,
5—__ A R 7K L M r O l l A i d T I l
Niro egg beater ........... 332 50
To Plica A Want Ad
3.5 Horse SCOTT-ATWATER 64.50 Studio Tiann — Small Upright.
Just Call 1821 knd ask for 3 Horse 8EA BEE ........... 41.50 Finish and condition like new.
7H Horse FJRF.STONE . . 129 50
Price 9165.00. rhone 1725-R.
tho Want Ad department
10 Horse SCOTT-ATWATF.R. *9*5
Sanford Herald
13 Horse KI.TO .................. 99.50
IF YOU* AD WEBB IN TUB
Horse JOHNSON
SPACE IT WOULD ATTRACT
FLOOR saading and (bushing. 33ffiood
Shane) *.....
2*9 00
EVERYONE'S ATTENTION AS
Cleaauig. waxing. Serving SemiComplete Slack of Etinrude
TfVA HAS ATTRACTED YOU I
note County since IMS. B- M
Hew will yeu swap?
Gteaeoe. Late Mary.
Raw will v m Trader
Year
eld Meter ter a
LAWNMOWERS a t s r p s s a d
Better grade - KVINRUDE!
Bicycle It General Repair.

• R. BL

—

1

1

Thun* 543

wwW HW

.

."Sfck

Eva-IteiM Beauty Shop

3 Pc. Bedroom suite, 1 pr. twin
beds. 1 single twin bed, 3 blonde
PLUMBING
chests. 1 davenport and slip­
tract sod reuur work. Free
cover, 1 pr. table lamps, 0 x 12 Coo
estimate*. R. L Harvey. 204
grey wool broadloom rug and
Sanford Ave. “
pad, solid cherry antique din­
ing room table, 3 antique din­
ing chairs, pin-up lamps. Phone
P. M. CAMPBELL
General CantracUr
“ Homes ef DisUncUon"
Power Mower, 13 young laying
1-Way 17-M
Phene 1441
hens, 1040 Studcbaker Cham­
pion. Reasonable. Phone 450-R.
Ptamblag. Brersy fleatlng
M. G. HODGES
TWO.— Chanel back chairs. Good
Server on All Water Pumps—
condition. Phone 1300-J.
Wells Drilled — Pump*
SOLID Oak dinette (able, 4 chairsPaola Read Phone IN
315. Solid Oak D. R. Table -4
chairs. 335. Westinghouse IronFor Belter Plunromg
er. 325. Electric Mixer 310.
See or Call
ring A
It
Maple Twin Beds with spring
W. J. KING
mallress,
—
It---- chest* of* drawers
‘
ra 135.
Part Phene M
Aptx portable dishwasher,. 3100.
Phone 341-W.
Dragline service, Lakeffonts A
One MONARCH Super Vacuum
ditching Estimates given. Phone
cleaner with all attachments 1
Geneva 2444, Orlando 52504.
just won. Value 1149.50. Will
Sanford 2221.
sell for 3100. As I am leaving
town. Phone 547-W.
It;«8o Easy, ,

* = ____ m

,hc

GET PROFESSIONAL CARE!

ORLANDO
laodo B v t_
Ray. I1B 4.

Stanley**

e&gt;e

HAYNES Offlc* RacAlM Oa,
Typewriters, adding macMaes,
Sales-RanUls, 314 MsgnoUa. Ph
44

3d

PH A
Per Remodetmg and repatra.
Nofhteg Down—Small Monthly
Payments

15. Jail lUnt:
spell )
19. Masking
22 Newt
25. Mistake
26 Unbind
25 Question
29. Opposed to
windward •
31 Narrow
inlets
tgeol.l
32 Cast by
smith
isbbrt
33 Not rareful
36. Excla.
mat ion
35 American
Indian
39. Discharge
a gun
41. East Indian
pepper plant
42 City in Italy
4 3. Shabby
.41 Top J .
o ta
wave

OFFICE KOtJlPmtWl - a

Oot Went 12lh

°Stt3 iTA'SHT: " *

chieftain
9 Search for
10 Places
14. Scrutinize
17. Pari of

31 Fencing
swor.l
35. ComradOJ
36 At a
distance)
37 Employ
40 Consumo
forxt
42. Petty cashil
tabbr I

FRIGIDAIHB apoDancea, sales
and aervtce. G. II. High. Oviedo,
Fla. Pboaa 4131 er Bufcrd
1642-W after • 0 m

B h era u C—tret# Co.

o r a . aSsFufe*. ‘

ITty RajHj/fg ^ K S H m

»*nwm — ■»»■»

oproB n m m riE B 12 It— KPICrXAl. ESZESL
FIT FOR A QUEENFoam Rubber Mattresses. InnerS p r i n g Mattresses, Couches, FOR SALE — Complete equip­ ItA N D A L L E L E C T R IC CO. Buy your Furniture at Tern’'*
ment for operating Fruit and Electrical Contracting anil ttenairs
Warehouse Futv., Co., at Ml W.
Baby Beds, Renovating. Uphol­
Produce Stand. Phone 1221 or
1st. St. All nauonally adv. fur
stering and Slip Cover work.
T V SE R V IC E C E N T E R
niiiire al warehouse p rim
NIX BEDDING MFG. COBrndi* and Crosley Annllances
IMI Ssafer* Ave.
Phene IM-J. 14g r t n a t a e iv t o c
—1&lt; 112 MnRnolin Ave.
I*h. 11.1 22—KI.KCTCICAL (taEVICa*—TZ

SP EC IA LS

BBAf, KFTATM

w

ROBINSON MUSIC CO.

Furnished I bedroom garage NEW 3 Bedroom concrete block
home. Westinghouse Kitchen,
apt. Paola, M. Hanson. Pboaa
GI financed, Low Down Pay­
1S51-J-3.
ment. Phone 430.
MODERN S Room Furnished CHOICE BUILDING LOT —Cor­
House. West 20th St. Inquire
ner Maple Ave. and 20th St. 54'
203 Holly Ave. Phone 150S-W.
x 134'. Inquire 411 Maple Ave.
lifter 5 p. m.
BURNISHED One Gadroom Gar­
age Apartment. 3514 Sanford LAKE MARY - 3 Bedroom house.
Ave. J. N. Axxarello, Phone
20 x 20 porch, 2 Car Garage.
1474.
112.000.- Phone J. W. Dodson,
1725.
FURNISHED Duplex Apt.
Park Ave. Phone 701-W.
A R T O O rO B R A L B
-I
trailer living see
For bOtta
50th Anniversary
SanJt&amp;do Trailer Park. 4Btars.
Igheet CAUL TRADE-IN prices
All ladder*. • ml. south oa 17-02
paid ter wed furniture CaU M l.
Highway at Standard Station.
wiliow-Mater Furniture Co. I ll
Nice shady grassy lota, cement Reg. 13 03 14x34 nr 14x34
patios Fine shuffleboarda, Re­
Bevel Plate Glass
creation room. Immaculaia tiled
Mirrors .....................
DOGS NEED A QUALITY FEED.
Rag. IS os Double Door
Help keep your does la top
Metal utility Cabinet 12JO
condition with PURINA DOG
MOUSE — g
kitchen Reg. 34-35 34“ Metal
CHOW. A tasty food dogs go for.
Wal&lt; Cabinet ............ 14.50
equipped, chuSrcn 'welcome I
Come In today.
Reg. 20.05 Platform Rockers ISJO
j p . loot fummcrlin.
Reg. 40JO Btrkline “ B ailer
Stepson Fan* Supply
Swivel Chair* ........ 33.50 110 W 2nd SL
Phone 1411
M so Contoi* Chairs
AXC Registered Boxar puppies.
LABOR Cool Bedroom with pri­
2 Months old. Outstanding pedi­
vate bath. 4 blocks Bom Post
gree Phone 2325-J-3.
Mather o f Sanford
OtQc*. 410 Palmetto. Pho
K.-, 1*4 SL * Phene 127

IF IT a

&lt;w« urn d m r»&gt;nwa* w a r m IM. w

____

321 N. Orange Ave. Orlande, FU.

■ » - —r

CLEAN furnished Apt. One. Two 3 BEDROOM Home for gracious
persona. $35.00. I l l Park ave.
living, on 3 beautifully land­
scaped lots. Living room with
| BEDROOM furnished Oarage
hesulator fireplace. Electric
Apartment 2300 Mellonvllle.
kitchen with ventilating fan.
Jalousled breezeway, enclosed
GARAGE APT. Furnished, hot
Garage.
Excellent buy at
and cold water. Adults.
1M2
113,000. Shown by appointment
French Ave.
only. Call Guy Alien —772.
BEAUTIFUL 2 Bedroom furn­
ished A pt' Call SSS-M.
-------------------UNFURNISHED 3 B e d r o o m 5 room bungalow completely re­
decorated. Close In. Reasonable.
House. 1225 E. 24th Street.
•Phone 200B-W.
(Wynnewood)_________________

KO.

le ittrd iy 't A i i . n ,

Northwest
1 abbr. 1
Comfort
Put food
through
a ricer
S3 Heaters
used in
mixing
mortar

6 A ra ln an

17. A b o v e

sham an Concrete Pip* Co.

Park Am.

drunkard
2 Loose,
cuter
garments
3 Melody
4. Obey
5 Part of
"to be'*
6 Introduc.
tcry
speeches
7. Fray

i : 'Oulds*:

Builder

Out West llth SL

DOWN
1. H a b i t u a l

tcschcr
1 Hindu)
Smoothf
with
*n Iron
11 , A powder
used in
sachets

Pboee ISM

W IL a KA APARTMENTS: room ,
OWNER of 4 Bedroom House in
private baths. U4 W. Pint Sc
desirable location wishes to
trade for place In country!
R oll* way aad Baby Boda
« — ^ tjl i m WILL EXCHANGE rqiilty In
Modern 2 Bedroom Home for
Acreage.
Avalos Afta.
For yonr Real E iute neees:
425.
Cullen and Harkey, Realtors
1M N. Park Ave. Pkoee 2313.
FURNISHED Apart*rat. 100 Park
Av*.
_________
C. A. WHIDDON, SR.
Furnished Kitchenette apU. Air
Reg. Real Rotate Broker
CaodlUonad. Cumberland Court.
113 S. Park
Pk. i m
South City limits Highway 17-41.
OUTSTANDING VALUES
S Bedroom Home. K Block from Beautiful home in Mayfair area
located on 3 lots, 3 bedrooms,
SoulMJde school. Call 2S4L
two tiled balhs. Florida room,
H E Semlnolo Realty for Deslrgarage. 330.000.p0. .
able Homes and Apts. Phone 27.
New home, furnished, Block con­
FURNISHED Apt Phone 432-W.
struction, 2 bedrooms, four lots.
M,500.oo. Older home, close In.
UNFURNISHED 4 Room House
2 bedrooms, $4,000.00.
with 2 Bedrooms. Phono 1326-J. Terms may be arranged on any
of these homes.
S Room Apt 200 Avaeado.
i . W. MALL, REALTOR
Florida Stale Bank Building
FURNISHED 3 Bedroom House.
Phono 17M
Close In. IIS West 1st S t Phone ‘ Call HalT
____ .
SIS.
OPEN HOUSE
g Room Apartment Completely
3—bedroom spacious home on nice
furnished. 313 Palmetto Ave.
corner lot situated near school
THREE Apartments. Furnished,
and grocery. Home it open all
week for youur inspection. Sell­
close In. Phone 346S-J._______
er will redecorate interior with
Unfurnished 2 Bedroom House—
Buyer's choice of color*. See
Kitchen equipped; Large fenit at 1401 Sanford Ave. See ua
I can In yard. Prefer couple
for detalla. Good terms availa­
I with children. 2511 Park Ave.
ble. Exclusive.
Phone 3082.___________________
FURNISHED Cottage. One BedT. W. MERO
room. Extra nice. SI4 Elm Ave, W. DIETRICHS
INI Park Ave. Phase 27 or 141
t Room* and Bath. 112 Elm.
Phone 2983-W.
________ _ 2 bedroom bouse. 414, per cent
mortgage. 340 monthly. 1101
COOL, Roomy 2 bedroom furnishSummerlin.

Page 0

DAILY C R O S S W O R D

S O T H A T S T O O L . P IG BOM
^
W O A /T T A L K * ! ! '© •‘ TH PO W H IM
/AI THE" C A M -- P U T '/H CW
&lt;
c r a c k e r s ancj w a t e r - ,
C U T O U T /C=1TH' x&gt; v.C f?A C K E I?S »

WHO W E R E T H F
S A F E C IP A C K E re S

Ready Mixed Concrete. Concrete
RAYMOND M. BALL. BROKER
Block, Sand. Gravel. Cement
S. D. Humleyman, Associate
Concrete Pipo to Meet All Quali­
O M. Harrison. Associate
fications.
204 Souto Park Ave.
Phone MO
Phono 2Ut
Since 19ta We Have Built in San­ Sherman Concrete Pip* Co.
Ont West 13th SL
ford Homes for over 1.000 peo­
ple! We have the home for you
— Factory to You —
—In Wynnewood — or Dreamwold
Aluminum
—Loch Arbor, 3 and 4 bedrooms.
1 A 7 tilths. Large Lots, Full
Venetian Blind*
Tile Balhs —Large Kitchens — Enclosed head. Sag-proof bottom
Screened porches — Gat sen or
rati with piaetic ends. PlasUc or
Carports. Best Possible ilnanrayon Upas. Cotton or agio*
cine No Down Payment Closcords.
in* Costs Only.
Seokarik Gtaaa and Paint Co.
Wellborn C. Phillip* Jr,
112-114 West 2nd SV
Phone 221

THE SANFORD HERALD Tucs. July V2, 1955

By STANLEY

trt^tvw u i n»*w.t ore*

Al*

Pirn On

ra il T o I'rarrr
l i i x n Ureakara
,V,&lt;4 a
M tatarn Jam bora#
h*wa
Savaiv O’tlo tk Club

5r«l

l&lt;l&gt;nria At A O U n to
J»rWay‘ a Chnlrn
Slnrnln* T&gt;*votlona
klnrnlnir J i - l f l l * ,
W orld At Nina
M'jaln Kor Ladlaa
Hymn Tima
Knr lAillta O ctr
linn Club

» Ik
».Z*
»:lk
tn nn
in.In S» » l
ini'. Him Club
1 1 an linma of
t:.os W orld at

Noon

A r T r .n v o o V
M ill
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tllk
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Stas
Sit*
4.1 s

Ttadlo Farm D lfaat
Wadnaaday Statinaa
Nawa
tu r Nona Panrlk
World a* Thraa
1'niiad Nailuna
linn Club
;a »a
t»u Club

r

FIRST UTTERANCE?
SEOUL iw—South Korea's Fo^
eign Minuter Y. T. Pyun railed
upon President EDenhower to tell
Soviet Prcmitr Nikolai Bulganin
at Geneva:
“ You Communists, let go your
victims.”
Thia “ logically, should be tho
first American utterance'' at th*
Big Four chiefs of slits meeting
next w*ek, Pyun told a news con­
ference.

Your heart best* about thra*
billion tima* la * 70-yaar Utetlmik

h

I

4

�ODHAM &amp; TUDOR,
W ill Have
Ready for you
THIS M O N TH
Bel-Air

"Designed Especially for Better. Florida liv in g

EACH

HOME HAS:
1. Spacious Glass

JalousiedFlorida. P^am ccrmo you own m ic e ooM rarj

Full Tiled Bathroom &lt;whh vamtobv and uumom

2.

3 . Marble Terrazzo Tile Floors

e

4. Beautiful Delmar Kitchen Cabinets
5. Kitchen Exhaust Fan
6. Fully Landscaped Lands «jbam m

wont

rams to u u q

Hot Point Stove and Refrigerator. amu*m

7.

8. Venetian Blinds

►

•

•

•

9. Five Ply Built-up Roof With M arble Chips0

t \

10. Extra Large Closets And Utility Hoorn
11. Long Roof Eaves

&lt;so

you d o n t hav* to

you*

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Weather

Inside
Editorial
Society

Sport*
Radio — TV

Pate
Pet*
Pat*
Page

4
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VOLUM E X L V 1

OTfp? ^ a n f e j r
•
Established 1909

AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER
S A N F O R D . F L O R ID A .
WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1955

2 Men Sit Silently
A fte r Being Linked
.To July Fourth Death
OMAHA (A*)—Two men known. ga*— while police tried again to
fo r their reticence on almost any |tract the trail of $87,000, much of
subject aat ailently In jail today— i it in 1100 bill*,
one in Omaha and one in La* Va- I Jailed were Frank Ellaworth, 36,

pioneer Celebrates
85th Birthday Today
Today is July 13 and th* birth­
day of J. D- (Jack) Deviaon,
former mayor o f Sanford, furni­
ture ator* owner, baseball organ­
iser and early tattler.
Eighty-five years old, ha la still
remembering "way back when" in
hi* modeat home on West Flrel
Street. Ill o f health, hi* mine I*
atill alert and the newe of today
ia atill hit buainesa.
Bom in Eaat Haddon, Conn.,
LONDON OT-Ruth Ellis, beauti­ he cam* to Florida about 63 years
ful blonde mother of two children, ego or to e* * touriat but
was hanged today for the E nter got tend in my ahoea and couldn't
go back".
Sunday murder of the lover who
My wifa and I came from PalJilted her.
atke on th* boat “ DeBary" to
0 The 28-y ear-old divorcee, a for­ Sanford. We then went to Orlando
m er model and night elub hostess, which was about the same else
was the 14th woman to be hanged (3.200 pop.)'
“ I decided to stay bo we earn*
in Britain this century and the
third ainca World War II. Her sen­ back here and L worked in
furniture store, which wee then
tencing revived a nationwide con­ located scrota from the poet office
troversy over capital punishment whera Jacobson’* Is now. I bought
Which continued unsbated today.
th* man out and opened a (tore
A crowd of 1,000 persos—tome of my own end expended to the
weeping, others laughing—stood in opposite comer because 1 knew
^ Ih e grimy north London street out­ Sanford was growing."
r id e
the ivy-covered, red-brick then. (3,200 pop.)
Holloway Prison as hangman Al­
"Wa bad a city gouneH thaw
bert P iem polnt pulled the. death and 1 ran as mayor. The mayor
trap.
served aa police Judge too. Ha art
Its slam m ounded through the 326 a month. 1 served daring
building, touching off hysterical World War 1 end two terms after­
wards. Boy Tillis'a father wa*
cries from the other inmates.

English Mother
jGoesTo Gallows
For Easter Murder

Reports from Inside the prison
aald the icy calm Mr*. Ellis had
maintained during her trial in
June and ever since finally broke
Q}ast night.

Giggling Annoys
Irritated Driver;
#Four Persons Shot
PUNT. Mich. W&gt;— A drinking
truck driver, Irritated by the
"laughing and giggling" of fellow
patrons, shot two eouptea In the
head In a neighborhood tavern last
night, state police 'reported.
Two women and a man wer«
killed. Another man was near
death today.
Kenneth Kusner, 80, ef Detroit
wa&gt; seised In his track a short
time later near Peatiae, 85 miles
from the acene. Police said he
readily admitted the shooting and
eonld give no explanation except
the irritation other patrons caused
kirn. They aald ha had been drink*
Ing but was not drunk.
Kusner laid officer* the four
victims ware "total strangers,”
State police said Kusner sat
atolely at the bar drinking a boor.
'When he finished, they said, he
went to a rest room, ram* out
and etrodt up to the two couple*'
booth, spoke not a word and be­
gan firing point blank with -34
caliber automatic.

Senator Johnson
"Keeping In Touch

police chief then and Roy worked
under m* aa a policeman. (I »•* b#
has come up considerably.)"
"During my administration a
bulkhead was put in around the
shore line of th* lake end 1 sign­
ed all bond* made for th* Faniaid
Laughton Memorial Hospital.
"Now the baseball situation
was bad. We were considered
part of Orange County and we
decided to organise a basaball
team. When then waa basaball
In Sanford all the store dosed. H.
R. Stevens, Arthur Yowell and
myself along with a few othen
started a baseball association
After we started beating Orlando
so bad the story got around that
wa had the fence on rollers so
when our players earn* to bat
wa pushed it up to make easier
to hit home runs. I think It was
in 1913 that the counties started
dividing becausa of the baseball
feelings.
“ When I first earns The San­
ford Herald waa called the San­
ford Cbroolcla and owned by a
Mr. Baker. Bob Holly came along
and bought U out and changed
the name to Herald."

Vaccine Released
For Inoculations
WASHINGTON Ut-The
meet has released enough Salk
vaccine for another M A M salt
polio shots.
The Public Health Service aetion yesterday brought ths dearance of vaccina supplies to less
than a week to over one million
cubic cetimsters. Last Friday,
the government freed 991,606 units
One c.c. ef vaccine Is used to a
single antipolio shot.
But avan with th* release ef the
720,000 c.e.'s of vaccine made by
Eli Lilly A Co.. Indianapolis, the
total falls far short of tea six mfllioa abuts the National Foundation
for tofantlla Paralysis said on June
&gt;4 K would uaad to complete tea
(roe two-ehot inoculation af first
children.

WASHINGTON tr-Sea. Lyndon
B. Johnson, a heart atUck only
SI days behind him. Is again be­
ginning to keep la close touch
with developments in the Senate,
wb*r» ha normally nerves as Dam•critic leader.
Johanna la atiB confined to bad
at the Naval Medical Center la
aububaa Batfcesda. Md. Whatever
RABAT, Morocco (B — Moving
activity be undertakes Is - under swiftly only six days after taking
the careful aye ef doctor* treating aver Ms new Jab aa French rest
kirn for a heart attack they has*

•

e f Us imPut through
mediate family, a
awn or two Renat* coOoagnca
haw permitted to visit him,

Nint French Heads
Fired By Grondval

Md policy

S f^ ra U i

and Ray Wilson, S3, both of whom
are free en bail on robbery charge*
in other citi**. Ellsworth is from
Omaha. Wilson gives Tulsa, Okla.,
as his horn* town.
Th* new warrants eharg* mur­
der in the strangulation death of
Mrs. Luluhel Hagar Rnssman in
a Philadelphia hot*! on the Fourth
o f July.
The story centers around |100
bills.
A spending spree in Lai Vega*
gambling establishment* by Ellaworth and Wilson brought onto
the gambling tables 3 number of
$100 bills that excited the sus­
picions o f croupiers and police
alike.
Ellaworth and Wilaon went into
th* Laa Vegas jail on suspicion of
robbery charges.
But police from New York and
other cities were unable to link
up th* $100 bills end the rest of
the $87,000 the two had with any
robbery they knew of. Ellsworth
got out o f the La* Vegas jail first
and got th* money back. He left
for Omaha while Wilaon waa atill
in jail.
While this waa going on, Phil­
adelphia authoritlea were inter,
estlng themselves In th* $100 bill*.

Last night they said their In­
vestigation had shown that the
Ellsworth and Wilson bills ap­
proximated the eerie! numbers of
$100 bill* found in Mr*. Roaeman’i
safety deposit box.
That, they decided, wa* enough
to act on. Warrant* were obtained
and Ellaworth and Wilson soon
were both to JalL

Russian Reporter
Is Main Attraction
During Dedication
STRATFORD, Conn. If) — With
pomp and spangles, show buti
ness dedicated a new shrine last
night to p l a y w r i g h t William
Shakespeara, but tha main center
of excitement was a somewhat baf­
fled. bothered Journalist named
Eugene Litoshko.
Litoshko, a correspondent of
Moscow’s newspaper Pravda, got
a special okay from tha State De­
partment to travel her* from New
York after tha Bridgeport Sunday
Herald suggested Ute visit as
symbol of cultural exchange be­
tween this country and Russia.
Tha slim, graying, 40-year-old
writer, doggedly smiling at suddtnly being "a celebrity," opined
that tea opening play, "Julius
Caesar," was "good, vary good.'
Than ha hastily added: "But no
more festivals—not this year any
how."
For many of tee 1,600 spectator!
tee visitor's verdict waa generous­
ly kind. *

Officials Accused
Of Own Decision

BRATTLEBORO. Vt. Lit — The
defense was set to hav* its day
in court today in th* federal trial
of Mr*. Lucille S ‘ Miller. 44.
charged with advising nine ynung
men to evade military service.
The prosecution ru led yester­
day slier U.S. Atty. Louis G. Whit­
comb called the nine men to tes­
tify against the mother of three
children.
Each testified he had received
a letter from Mrs. Miller coun­
seling how to avoid military draft.
One of the letters submitted in
evidence was written May 28, 1944,
and said in part:
"I f you really don't want to go
Into the Army, you can juit re­
fuse and all they ran do Is arrest
you, but you ran make them take
a note on any property you have
for bail even if it Isn't very mueh.
They ean l^eep your proparty tied
up but they have to let you go
free.
"1 am going to fight a series
of these draft cases and will be
glad to fight youra for you (free of
charge) but if you don't want me
to fight, why don't you Just fight
it yourself?"
A letter to each of the nine
young men was read by U.S. Atty.
Whitcomb. Attarhcd to each let­
ter was a mimeographed sheet
which had the letterhead Green
Mountain Rifleman.
Mrs. Miller publishrd the Rifle­
man at intervals and mailed copies
to frienda in vanoui parts o! the
country.

Personal Reasons
Given For Action

IM B b lM iW I w Iik r t * i In Geneva, S wharf tend,
where prwaldcot Elsenhower and hia top atdrs will stay during tha
historic Dig Foar “ aummil* conference*. Newsmen, making their
first visit to tha "IJttla While llnaw* were told (hat police boat*
wilt patrol tbs lake white soldiers c o m the ground*. (faterwatiuaat)

Local Theatre Guild
Hears Sound Advice

NEW DELHI, India lA -P rlm e
Minister Nehru returned home to­
day to a riotous welcome which
faced diplomats who cam s to tea
airport to greet him.
A crowd of about $.000 persona
broke through police barriera with
what appeared to be prearranged
ease to surround Nehru, toas.ng
flower* and garlands wildly in hit
direction.
The crowd pushed aside most
diplomat* who had gone to the air­
field to wclcoma tea Prime Min­
ister bark from hla 37-day visit
to Russia and other European
countries. Sweat-drenched to 100
degree weather, many left with­
out shaking Nehru's hand.
•
Nehru, briefly angered at the
crowds, also appeared dared as
ha rode away to an open car.

MEMPHIS. Tmn. UR-CHy offi
rials wars accused last night of
deciding to build a municipal nower plant because they couldn't
"dJeUto" to TVA.
.The accusation waa made by
four Arkansas civic leaders who
appeared an a TV program spoo­
red by representatives from $0
seat Arkansas cities.
Program moderator Jim Hals,
aa attorney af Watt Memphis,
Aik., said Memphis city officials
Mias Mary Tanner, Pilot Club
wanted to dictate to TVA where
representative to Girls State in
to gat Its power, and they wanted
Taliahaeeao la June and Miss
to have full say about how much
they could charge Memphians for Fay* Ashlay, representative of th*
American Legion Auxiliary, were
guest* of th* Pilot Club at a pic­
nic meeting held at tha home of
Mrs. A1 F. Hunt aa Palmetto Av*.
last night
Mlaa Tanner related experience*
e f th* first four days to Tallahaa*##. Tha first event wa* attend­
to Britain’s submarine ing tha graduation of Aoyi Slat*
m trial
dated which wa* followed by a dance.
with reveal- Tha next day was taken up with
Instruction In city and county govtee mom cleared ef eminent after which candidates
spectators far the court • martial snake en behalf of their candidary.
• senior naval afftcar said, "Car- Tha group was divided into the
Nationalist and Federalist Parties
with Mlaa Tanner becoming n
■abac o f the Nationalist* and
|_ a
a., , a
W ■ T S I twV .
Miss Ashley, tha Federalist*.
The dafsMint la Able
Tha Nationalists chose far their
t*
slogan, aald Mias Tanner, "United
Wa Btoad. Divided Wa Fall",
••ear tha aaty Nationalist to
win la tha rti arirea was tha gov', aha laughingly related. Mlaa

Woman Is Killed
After Small Girl
Steps On Gas Pedal
SAVANNAH, Ga. tP -A 2-yearold girl, ltd alone yesterday to a
car which was parked with its
engine running, itepped on the ac­
celerator and killed a woman who
was preparing to lake her for a
rid*.
a rlusa friend of th* rhild'a pura close fried of the child's par­
ents, was knocked down and
dragged 30 feet. She died in a
hospital two hours later.
Mr*. Beal had plarrd Paulin**
Man* Galley in her car and had
gon* Into the child'i home to get
her a pair of socks. She waa re­
turning to the ear and was In front
of it when the accident occurred.
The ear was equipped with an
automatic transmission, and po­
lice said It apparently had been
left to gear.
Th* child's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Homer 8. Galley, witnessed
th* accident. Tha child was not
hurt.
FRETTY GOOD FUTURE
ANN ARBOR, Mich.. (JB-J. Paul
Buckley, chief engineer for the
Automotlva Safety Foundation's
highway division, says these are
among tha things motorists can
aspect for the future:
Separate highway lanes for sparifle speeds, helicopter removal of
disabled cars, bridge* across
huge lakes, l i g h t e d highways
eliminating headlights and pave­
ments that melt snow and steel.

Sanford Theatre Guild member*
were told ways of publicizing th*
“ little theatre" at last night’a
worxhop meeting in the City llall
auditorium.
Bill Vegan, assistant manager
of th* \agabond Players of Flat
Rock, N. C., a professional troupe,
urged the organization to put on
skits for rivle clubs and to assist
rhurchc* in religious play*.
Frgan, who led n discussion on
"Other
Forms
of
Presenting
Drama," praised th* Theatre Guild
and commented on th* talent dla
played in ita performance*. Frgan
is in charge o f the school o f til
Iheat i e associated with Ih* Vaga­
bond Players.
He read parts of Oscar Wilde’ s
(‘Th* Impoitanre o f Being Earn
eat," a perennial favorite with
little theatre groups, and George
Bernard R h a w 'a "Pgymallnn."
Theatre Guild members read por­
tions of "H a n e y ".
Th* meeting was the serond in a
aeries o f workshop meetings de­
signed to foster interest in ama­
teur theatre by providing enter­
tainment and instrurtion in all
phases of the work. 1-aat night's
program was undrr the direction
of 3tiss Dilnn Baker, aisiated by
Georg* Dabbs.
The next workshop will It* held
August in with Francis Koumillat
Jr. and Bill Herarhell in charge.
Out-of-tow’n guest* las) pight
were Miss Mary Andrea, Orlando;
Mr*. Walter Patton, Ml. Dora,
and Mrs. Lillian Lyatrr, DcLand.
PASSENGER RECORD CLAIMED
FORT WORTH. Tex. tfi-T h * Air
Force claimed a new passengercarrying record today for landbased planes. Th* XC90 transport
landed at Convair's plant here yes­
terday with 212 person* on a flight
from San Antonio.

Pilots Hear Girl State Reports

Stomon G ilt Triof
Behind Closed Door
PORTVMOUm

STMrtfcrt*to"aSTtead i d

•haaaa M i h t f ti&gt;
J T - z a r t i --i - o iaj.

No, 23L

AssntialH Press leased Wire

W e lf a r e
Secretary
Regretful

Riotous Welcome
Greets Minister
Upon Return Home

WASHINGTON (Jt-A Vermont
television man who has acknowl­
edged brief membership in the
Communist party was among wit­
nesses called today by tha Senate
Internal Security subcommittee.
Ha la Charles Lawia, public af­
fairs director of WCAK-TV In Bur­
lington, VL, who has and hr
Joined Iho Communist party to
1957 and "quit two or three month*
latar becaude I had my nose full."
After his name was mentioned
In previoua testimony, Lewis vol­
unteered to appear before the nibcommittee and said "I'll tell
everything ! know."
Other scheduled witnesses at a
public hearing of the subcommittee
include two New York Times
newsmen, a New York Daily News
reporter, and the aviation editor
of the New York Herald-Tribune.

*

Mrs. Oveta Hobby
Resigns From Post

Defense
Is Set
For Day

Vermont Television
Director Witness
Called By Probers

Partly doody through Thursday
with scattered tfcower* and t
thundershowers southeast coait.

torney and In addition waa elected
as aeeistant supervisor of regis­
tration as well a* a member of th*
llouee of Representatives.
The girl* received instructions
In the use of voting machine* and
were taken on a tour of th* 8tata
building*. A recaption was given
by Dr. and Mrs. Doak 8. Campball and greetings from th* Gov­
ernor ware given in tha House
Chambers.
Mias Ashley, who waa nominated
aa chaplain for tha Federalist
Party, told of the political ralllaa
preceding tha general election and
af their visit to the legislative
•eealona whera the various officers
war* sworn In following th*
elections. Eh* was ana of 18 honor­
ary Colonels appointed by the Gov­
ernor of Girls Btnt*.
On* af tha highlight* was tha
tour e f th* governor's office whera
th* cabinet was in session and a
tour af tha Supreme Court buildtog. A a y war* mat there by Mrs.
Collins whs was "vary gracious"
and war* served refreshments.

over th* buainesa meeting ae Mre.
Esther Ridge wea welcomed into
th* club aa ■ new member and
announcement waa made that Mrs.
B. E. Chapman would hold a
school o f instruction for naw mem­
bers ia the near future.
Th* group decided to hold n
plait lew are party on July 26 at
8:00 p. m. at the Yacht Club. All
members were asked to bring two
or more guest*. Worn sheets, to b*
used for bandages in an African
hospital were solicited by the in­
ternational relations chairman.
Mr*. Rwanson announced that
Ihera are now seven member a of
th* Pilot Club who belong to
th* recently organised Woman'*
Auxiliary to th* Semtool* Memor­
ial HoepiteL
The next meeting, a plrnle, will
be held at tha homa of Mre. Car­

ter on Grandview Av*. en Aug.
18 at which time Mr*. Sue Stevenson, delegate to tha Pilot International Convention to Los An­
gelas July 3740, will girt bar ra-

WASHINGTON OP - Mrs. Oveta
Culp Hobby today resigned as sec­
retary of welfare effective Aug t.
President
Eisenhower
picked
Marion R. Folsom, now undersec­
retary of the treasury, to succeed
her.
The President railed a special
news conference to make the an­
nouncement. and. in an emotionpacked scene, paid warm tribute
to Mrs. Hobby as she sat by hii
side in the conference room.
tin her part, the retiring Cabinet
officer told Eisenhower that as he
prepares to go to the Rig Four
conference at Geneva "everyone
of us will be praying" Ihe sessions
will lead to a "truly univcrial
peace."
Mrs. Hobby's resignation had
long been expected. Without ever
formally announcing her resigna­
tion, Eisenhower turned to Mrs.
Hobby and remarked solemnly:
"Oveta, Ihia Is a very sid day."
"Personal reasons of a high
order compel me to lake leave of
my post at secretary of health,
education and welfare," Mrs. Hob­
by wrote.
While the did not specify Ihose
reasons, friends said Mrs. Hobby
la leaving because of Ihe illness of
her husband, former Gov. William
P. Hobby of Texas.
•
"Only such reasons could per­
suade mr to leave your administra­
tion or Iho responsibilities of the
department, and If agreeable, I
would like to make Aug. 1 the ef
ferlive date of my resignation."
she wrote.

Young Hungry Man
Is Too Consistent
WORCESTER. M an. (Jx-Richard P. Cincolla, 21, waa arretted
early today for breaking into Ihe
same apartment with monotonous
regularity.
•
Police aald he admitted entering
an unlocked apartment on Pleaiant
Street on July 8 end taking a
watch valued at $60. He zaid he
sold it for 60 cents to get eating
money.
He relumed tha next day, he
was quoted at saying, and itole
a pair of dungarees, leaving hii
olds pants behind.
He re-entered tha same apart­
ment yeiterday and laid he Hole
a $76 camera. He n id hn sold it
for $6 but received only 1160 as
a down payment. Cincotta was
quoted at laying he needed the
money to pay for a meal.
He writ arretted in a reitaurant.

Unemployed Driver
Admits Slayings
O f Two Victims
JAMESTOWN. N.Y. (* -A n unemployed taxi driver has aJmitted
Ihe rape slayings of hii sister-inlaw and her 19-month-old daughter,
police say.
Joseph Read*, 26, who described
himself as a "xxxx maniac,'' was
to be arraigned in city court today
on two counts of first-degree mur­
der.
The atocky, sandy-haired Readr
signed a statement, police said
last night, admitting he strangled
and beat to death Mrs. Beverly
Read*, 26. and her daughter Cheryl
Lynn early yesterday.
“ Inwardly 1 feel that I want to
fce the beat Christian in the world
and o u t w a r d l y I'm a xxxx
maniac," ha told polie*. " I can't
control th* outward part and I
don't know why."
n
Police said th* prisoner, a native
of Corry, Pa., wai married and
tha father of on* child but waa
taparated from hit wifa.

PRISON RIOT QUELLED
PRINCE ALBERT, Saak. &lt; * Guards at Saakatchawan Peniten­
tiary forced 600 prisoner! back Into
Utalr calls last night after a twohour riot* to tha prison yard. A
guard and a prisoner war* In­
jured.
Tha convicts aat fir* tn 16 buildtoga. burning tha ateblaa, flour
Iliad sad cement (bad to tha
ground. They grabbed six guards
at hoatafas but ralsaaad than afl-

Senate Republicans
Criticize Action
By House In Cul
WASHINGTON A*—'Three Send*
Re publicans today critinred a 623million-dollar rut by the House in
President Ei‘ cnhourr'» foreign aid
program and urged at lu s t par­
tial restoration by the Senate.
Tlie Senate GOP Policy Com­
mittee arranged to discuss the
$2,638.70 .;.Vt money bill behind
closed door* lodav amid indication*
it would informaUy suggest an in­
crease.
Sen. If. Alexander Smith (R-NJ)
laid the. House action "lx almo«t
a vote of lack of confidence in
President Eisenhower and Srrretary of State Diillex just *» the;'
are setting out for one of the m od
important diplomatic conference!
in 10 years"—the iummit talks at
Geneva.
Sen. Dirksen fR-lID said "Ih*
Hons* nicked this bill too much"
and said he would seek some res­
toration by Ihe Senate Appropria­
tion* Committee, on which ha
lervcs.

Title Search Now
Holding Up Work
On Highway 17-92
The tllfe search li the o r l f
thing now holding up work en V,
S. Highway 17-92, county toning
agent John Fox and County CoinfgUUgHt, / / yftq Mrlsch Inlrt Cham­
ber of Commerce directors at
their monthly meeting last night
at Cfty Hall,
In leading a discussion and re.
porting on road activities, tha
two men pointed out that the enunty inning board will bold a meet­
ing this month to adopt regula­
tions
Eari Higginbotham announced
that plans are nearing completion
for a barbecue Saturday night,
July 30, at the Country Club to
wclcoma Capt. Jaekxon, the new
commander at Ihe Naval Auxiillary Air Station.
Georg* T\&gt;uliy reported on thn
plan for operation of an excursion
irnal from tlie city pier. The City
Commission, at its meeting Monnight—awarded an cxrlu*l\#
fraWenlsa'ftrHie excursion boat to
W. R. Kemp ami Richard Sodero,
Orlando and Winter Park busincs*men. Toithy said the operation will
be similar to that it Ft. Lauder­
dale whera such a boat has been
running for )r a n .
Touhv also pointed out that tha
takefront dexelnpmrnt plan ad.
vanced hy Kemp and Sodero it not
a dead issue. He said the mrn ara
presently a w a 1 ti n g architect’*
plant.
The directors voted to contribute
th* chamber's services and postage
for mailing out ticket* as its part
of th* effort to rrvilaliiu the local
baseball organiralhm. Die action
followed a report by Florid* State
League president John Kridcr.

Government Sale
Told By AEC Group
SCHENECTADY. N.Y. '* -T h a
Atomic Energy Commission today
announced plans for the first gov­
ernment sale of atomic-produced
electric energy and said it would
be introduced into the Niagara.
Mohawk Power Corp.'s public util­
ity system "in the near future.”
The commission said It has sel
a price of 1 mills a kilowatt-hour
after studying recommendations of
interested public power organiza­
tions and after consulting with tha
Federal Power Commission.
Ai (he AEC explained it. steam
from a prototype submarine re­
actor at West Milton, N.Y , will
bn channeled into a lo.ono kilowatt
turbine generator to produce pow­
er which will be sold by Ihe AEG
to Niagara-Mohawk.
Die generator was installed and
wtU b* operated by th* General
Electric Co. at no cost to the gov­
ernment, tha AEC aald.

RESIDENTS SISTER DIES
Mr. and Mrs. Carl H Harria
have &gt;ut received aotio* of tha
death ef bar sister, Mrs. W. J.
Plummell af ChiUieotha. Ohio.
Mra. Plum mall paistd her 86th
lJ U M A

J

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                    <text>P»p *

T H E g A N T O B in iC T X tfj (

FrT. July *, 1W»S

Unofficial Report **
-Tells O f -PrisonerfServing With Reds

derail! offlr* by

10 a. m on th» d o
A ll i im rco N o tio et m u ff a# p r* non

ASSEMBLY OF C.OD CHURCH ! FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
1607 Sanford A»e.
12th SC and I aurel Ate.
Sunday School
9:45 a. m.
Sunday Sch&lt;«l 9:45 a m.
Morning Worahip Service 11:00 aMorning Worahip II a m.
m.
Youth Service 6:45 p m.
Evangeliatie Rally 7:45 p. m.
Player and Bibla Study WedneaC. Y. F. A Chl-Rho
6:00 p. m.
day at 7:45 p. m.
'Join tha happy, ainging crowd. Evening Worahip Servica 7:U0 p.
I ™.
Worahip tha Lord with ua."
p irt
f-OUTH FIDE BAPTIST CHURCH
FOSTER CHAPEL
sion
Eatt
2Tth
Street
METHODIST CHURCH
Mltaionary and Premi)i*niai
Oviedo
Rev. George II. Carlton, Minister Sunday School
J0:00 a. m.
9:45 a.m Sunday School.
Morning Worahip
11:00 “Lifo’a
11:00 a m. Worihlp Service.
Turning".
1:00 p m. Worabm Seme*.
Evening Worship
S.00 p. m.
"Mark of a* Gen'd Baptitt".
UPS ALA COMMUMTT
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
wnrro r v r i n v s i L a
Prayer Meeting and Bible Study
nn tw o * *
----Rev. C. C White, Mlnialer
W ednesday 8:00 p. m.
» Hill*v
lira. Clover M am , Planlal
Pastor:
R.
B._
Lunsford
trtc
R
v
o
o
.v
Alfred Erlraon
adv*eiur* With Unci* Watt
Superintendent of Churek School Associate Fa»tor: ^\W. L. Stephens 4I "V
ir Wild full Hlcknk
Sunday School Supl. Milton HigGeorge Petold
r.itu v Q
4iS« V
port*
genbotham
leader al Mid Week Rerrtcaa
a
i
l
i
l
l
___
_ N*W»
Jrihn
Daly
Church School 10 a.m.
Welcome To The Chureh
a 1* M u ln l Vtrlatles
Worahip II a m.
a. it Stu»*c»l V*r&lt;«ti»»
T ftn rtn lo m ln * Q uia
Young Fenole I p m.
THE LITTLE BROWN CHURCH
7 VI 1 upper
Evening nervico 1.30 p m.
ON
THE
HILL
Wedneiday Eveniag 1:30 p m
(Congregational)
Everybody tavitad to attend all
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
I Corner Park Avenue and 241ft RL Park
aur tarvlcec
Avenue at Sixth Street
J. Bernard Root,
Mini tier W. P. Brooks, Jr.
Pastor
GENEVA BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday
School
9:10
John L. Milter, Minister of Ed­
p m
Geneva
Morning
Worship
11:00
Evening Servlco 1:43 p m.
Rev. Samuel Stewart. Paatof
ucation
Sermon:
"Paradis* Regained'.’: Ruth E. Archer,
Wednesday Mid-Week B i b l e
Sunday School 10:00 a. m.
Director of
Study 1-43 p m
Church Service 11:00 a m.
Music
HOLY
CROSS
CHURCH
Training Union 1:00 p m.
“Wa’v# Raved A Place For Y'ou’*
THE FREE METHODIST
(Episcopal)
Evening Worahlp Service 1:00
Early Morning Worahlp 8:45 a.m.
CHURCH
Rev.
II.
Lyllleton
Zimmerman,
Cor. W. Fourth SC l-aurel Are. p. m.
Sermon
Chaplain F. W. KcmpB. D.. Hector
Wedneiday Prayer Sendee 1:00
G. Eldon Wine, Mini*ter
*on, Guest Treacher
Fifth
Sunday
after
Trinity
p.
m.
Sunday School 9:43 a m
9:45 a- m.
8.0(1 a. m.
Holy Eucharist Sunday School
klormng Worahlp 10 43 a. m.
CHULUOTA BAPTIST CHURCH 9:15
"Come
With
Your
Family
to Sun­
Choral
Eucharist
and
Evening Warship 1.30 p m.
Matter A. Routh Jr., Paator
day School. WeProvide
For
Address
Prayer Meeting Thuraday 1:30
6unday School 10 a.m.
Every* Member of The Family—
Morning
Worahip
Sendee
U
a
m
Services
through
the
week
» »•
Even the Bif.y."
Sermon by tha patlor.
Monday through Thursday and Morning Worship
ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN
11.00 a. m.
Evening
Worahip
Sendee
1:90
Saturday — Holy Communion — Sermon Chaplain F. W. KempSC Luke'* Lutheran—in Lla via
m.
Sermon
by
the
paator.
7:30 a. m.
nair Oviedo) Lh* Rav BLsfieo
*on, Guest Preacher
Prayer Ueating Wedneiday t:l Friday
I. Tuhy bailor Homing worahlp
— Holy Communion — 9:30 Training Union
p.m.
6:46 p. m.
8:30 am Radio Mission broad coat
a. m.
Unions for Each Age Group. Com*
i t 9:30 a m over WORZ (140 kei:
LAKE MART BAPTIST
Saturday
—
Sacrament
of
Pen­
with your family.
Sunday School for all aga groupa,
CHAPEL
ance — 5*6 p. m.
9:10 a m Chnattan Uay BcIsoaI
Lake Alary. Fla.
Evening Worship
8.00 p. m.
IAU vlvmenury gradaa and kinderPaator — Rev. n . A- Frith Jr.
Chaplain F. W. KempFIRST METHODIST CnURClI Sermon
r e ru n i. Monday through Friday
son. Guest Preacher
Sunday School 9:43 a m.
Mllion H. Wyatt
Pastor
1:80 a.m Children a pror—m. ”8C
Morning Worahip 11:00.
Luke’s Chapel," Saturday 10:19
9:45
Church School Fellowship hour after the Evening
Servica in th* Memorial Educa­
Training Union 9;S0 p.m.
I I . over IVTRR, 11400 ke.).
Classes for all age*
tional Building.
Evening Worahlp 1:30.
11:00 a. m.
Morning Worahlp
I.UTHERAN CHURCH
Prayar kl eating Wad. 1:90 p.m.
Sermon Topic:
" It being Wednesday Evening Servica 7:30
OP THE REDEEMER
p. m.
la v . Poiliip M-nirairaae. H ia M r BILLCIEST BAPTIST CHURUi
Religious Having Religion7"
Senlraa at The Yacht d a b
Nursery open at all sendee*
Geneva
_ 7:00
M. Y. F. Meetings
Bundav School 9:13 a m .
Earphone* for the hard-of-heanng
7:45
Organ
Veipera
Cheeiar
W.
Plank.
Fester
Church fcrrlea 10:19 a m.
WELCOME
Sunday morning aemcaa:
8:00
Evening
Worship
CHURCH OP GOD
til a m. Sunday School.
Sermon Topic; "Jacob’s Lad 11 a.m. Morning Worahlp.
IT S ALA COMM UNITY
French Ava. and 22nd 9L
der."
Sunday evening acndcaa:
Rev. U. W. H n tiT M . Paakar
PKESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Broadcast over W. T. R. R.
9:13
pm
.
Training
Union.
Sunday School 1:43 a. nc
Sunday School
10:00 a. m.
1:90 p m Evening Worahip.
Morning Worship
11:00 a. m.
SANFORD
SEVENTH-DAY
Wedneaday
1:90
p.m.
Prayer
’ Evangelistic Service 1:90 p. m
Th* evening services will be
meeting.
ADVENTIST
CHURCH
Mid-Week Service Tueiday 1:19
omitted.
TOO Elm Avenue
THE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
. 9 ®OP OVIEDO
Young People Service Thar*
W. J. Oatmin
Pastor Wednesday Prayer and Bible
•*udy will be obacned In the
■ tv. Louie Day. Mlalalar
day l:so p. m.
Sabbath School (Saturday) 9:30 home.
1:41 a m . Sunder School
a. m.
;
CHURCH OP CHRIST
in* Gospel of Mark wiU be
. SOUTH SIDE BAPTIST
Worship Hour
11:00 a. m.
Rewind SC and Elm Ava.
studied.
CHURCH
Topic,
"Summons
at
Midnight"
Ralph Brewer J r , Mlalalar
PAOLA WESLEY AN
Wednesday — 7:45 p. m. Midweek
Robert E. l/iaiford
Pad*
Sunday i
METHODIST CHURCH
Devotions
Topic,
"Th#
Angel
With
WUllara L. Stephana
Ataodate
Bible School 10 l m.
9 Miles West on Rt. 49
Tha Open Book."
Milton HiggenboUum S S Supt
1 Worahlp 11:00 a. as.
Sunday School
Sunday
School
10
00
a.
m.
Worahlp 1:10 p. ra.
Morning Worship
Morning Worahip
11:00 a. m. "Themfora be ye also ready;
R'edntaday:
Wesleyan Youth
for
In
such
an
hour
a*
ye
think
not
Evening
Worahip
1:00
p
m
Prayer Meeting 9:00 p aa.
Evening Worahip
Prayer Meeting Wed. 9:00 p. m. the Son of man comyth."—Matt. Wednesday I'raj crmeeUng
Thursday i
24:44
ELDER SPRINGS BAPTIST
'
CSENEZER METHODIST
A cardial welcome la extended Friday Cottaga Meeting 7:30 a t
CHAPEL
the horn* of Mr*. B. Co*grave
CHURCH
to ait to join us in our Warship
Saturday Central College Quartet
Otnt* Ralghta
Elder Springe
and
share
in
tha
fellowship
of
this
Bar. Edward Martin, Paa*ar
7:30
by Flret BepUat Ckertk hour.
Sunday School 10 a. m —d llEveryone Welcome
Sanford, Fla.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
lard E. Johnson, auperinlandasl
Rev. Cecil W. Shaffer
Sunday School
10:00 a. m.
CHURCH
Preaching Service U a. ac
W. O. StanaaU,
Superintendent
Oak Avenue and Third Street
M Y F I p m.
Preaching
11:00 a. m. Rev. A. G. Mclnnis.
Minister
Prayer meeting, Thuraday. 7:10
. H. Martin.
Preacher 9:46 a. m.
SundaySchool
9 m
10-50
a.
m.
Tha
Session
meets
■
m
n
«
DWtitrl
*«.
e
caaiur a*, taiar
n r re v n iT io v •&gt;
for Prayer In the &amp;*a«on Room
11:00 n. m.
Morning Worahlp
LAST TIME TONIGHT
Anthems — "Lead Me, Lord "—
AT
STARTS 7:U
II
Edmundson
"Hymn of Freedom" — Thiman
, n « n ° e W ,S k Va . ° r F U S 1 H 5 2 % W .
*S*ETn
Chancel Choir
Cata. baianrt* mm *ie*r Make. I**iu4iag iw ijt*
farm cm
Mr. Metimla1
Ml*nr*. *»4 &lt;‘»»)| 11*1"* la praf»#4 *f r*tlMllO»
J*}-ffJf'
11*11.4 »t*t*» tint •rnm*m *1 UgOM***. * lr« -i•»* «uar*M**d
Church Nursery
10:45 • 12:00
&lt;&gt;au*til-nt «f 4-tlt* ana p"ln«*t tukOltlalMU-------— — ’
*11111 !i Each
Sunday Morning for chU*n*«r b-n** »«i«» *n4
.. .. . . —
*4.4*4 44
Carpnai* u m i i viaciueiae li*.**# 4* *t*ck r t r*a«rei R»drra up to five years of age.
*, r **
"h*
. .
------------T:PO p. nvPioneer Fellowship
ant
tin&gt; *Citraaki*
ii»clu4M«g
N*** ev»rlr»t»•»*-—
- - ■— l . T l i i m t l
ak ur*iai*** n,a*4 iH.41C.ll. fumliur# aak tUtur**
Senior High Fellow­
a c t at 7:00 p. m.
i n :»t ta
■■—--- ----- r ----------------------- t r t.tl*
•« ship
ki«l «a*al* **n»a *lk*r tk*e bank i&gt;r*ml»«* —
( t a u t I .-00 p. ra.
Diaar atm *
©i
Evening Worahlp
IMI.I11M
Anthem — *1 Think When 1
total a m i -to
Read That Sweet Story" —Gif gx»*aa
*1 i*«lvU«aW.Apari&gt;a*r&gt;ikl»a. l» (
t.tlt.ita it ford
l.M
M
tl
*«
In«l«l4u*l*.' eartakrthlr*. »*4 cer
Pioneer Choir
pkentlii *r C'ali*4 flat** Oeveremeai,------ — ----Sermon
H r. Melania
D*m'*lta *1 evai»* aa* Mlturel auk4i«l*i*ii» ...----CL.NTBAL BAPTIST &lt;HUH CD
Hf« i w Pirb«ra, parlor
Onr. Fourteenth EL, Oak A te
Sunday b*-h««ol a 45 a m
Morning Worship Service 11:00
B. rn.
Training Union 0:30 p. m. It’a a
family eii-Hox
Earning WoNblp 1:30 p, m.
"Coma thou «iU&gt; ua and « a will
do then good."
THE r i m u 'H OP GOD
I
at PROPUECT
2303 Elm A«a
•
Ritbop A. W. Slaver, Panter
1:43 a m fueday Sr bool
1 U a m Mornmi Worahlp. Eer• Boa by A. W Slnvcx.
7:49 p. m Evangallrtif Hour.
T:4I p. m. Tuesday Evening Sar‘ tW .- P ra y v t-M c c lire ----7:43 p m. Thruaday Young Pao, fl* m**t.
Everynna welcome.
THE CHRISTIAN AM) MISSION
• ARY ALLIANCE CHURCH
Park Aie. at Fourteenth SC
Parlor, David 6. Carnrlli
Sunday School and Doming
Worship Combined Service 9.43 «
tn to 11:30 a ra "Worship Period
. begina at 10:40 a. m ”
Allunce Youth Fellowship 9:90

I

TELEVISION

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Central Florida ghowea**
Amarlca'* Or*at*ss Banda
Th* Variety Hour
Th* Cnmpas*
Tour Playtime
Lit* •( Riiay
Loretta Toung Skew
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11:4* •:gn&gt;oa
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22:94 Kowa-Woathar
11:** Jark Parr
13:3* I^nd of Ours
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1: 3* Poh Crosby Fhow
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4:14 h*rr*t Storm
3.4* Viewers Digest
1:41 Movie Matinee

Sign.on
Progrsm Reeurag
N * w * .w » a t h e r
Thle ta Tha Life
Th* ChTtstephtr*
Feldltra of Fortune
P u b lic H t a r i n g
Let'* Take a Trig
Pocket Fouad
Waterfront
k re n re o
Paepl* Are Funny
Private tecratary
Toast of the Town
(1 K Theatre
APFOIntmant with A4vei
pr*ak th* Bank
What's My Line

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western Theatre
EVE HI no
Hewn, wther. Spta.
CBg TV News
Julius LaRosa
Ptntomlna Quia
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My Llttl* Margie
Our Silas Brooks
Play ha of Stars
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TV Thaatra
Newt a Waather
Lata Show
Haws * tilgn Oft
■ATtHOAt

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T:41 T*tt Pattern
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11:44 IBig
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a f t e r awow

12:4* |P»yta Review
11:44 Dlasy Doan
11:14 Dodgers V*. (Hants

TAIPEI, Formoio ID—A wholly
unconfirmed report by a Nationallit Chinese news agency Wednes­
day said about 50 U.N. prioonen of
war captured in Kot«a—including
U.S. and Canadian officer*—are
being forced 'to aerve is the Chi­
nese Communist army.
The story came from (he Tateo
agency, operated by th* Nationallit Interior Ministry. Tateo dalm i
to bare underground- sources on
the Red mainland.
The Defense Ministry said tt had
no such information.
The itory was trailed with
ilderabla reserve.
The agency said th* pri&gt;en*n
arrived at Shanghai Jun* a from
Manchuria and tbe next day ware
taken to Hangchow. They are re­
ported attached to artillery units
in Fukien province, nppealta for­
mal a.
4 ;** TBA
4 :2 0 t u r.d ay B ch . L e a se s
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Amarlra'e Or*at*et _
Two For Th* Iteaoy
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Daman Rnayon Thaalrn
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Patll Pagn
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Raws * a Ign OCf
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Teat Pattern
South aid* Fr
t»rtan Church
Rtar *howeaae
Wild BUI Hlckak
Home Fair
Million | Movie
"Miracle *r th* BeUet
Thi* la Th* ur*
Th* Chrldaphara
Captain Onflant
Let s Take A Trie
Th* Sun. Lucy Skew
ou Are Thar*
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2:40 0.1
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F r e e ' T V

Sought By M en
For Politicians
By CHARLE4 MERCER
NEW YORK ID-Net long ago
Frank Stanton,. president ef th*
Columbia Broadcasting lyitam ,
laid CBS would be hippy to pro­
vide free television time for a ter*
tea ef "Ltaeoto-Douglai" type d*&gt;
bates between th* two major p rea-.
identlal'candidates in 1999. Rut in
ordsr for CBS t* d* this, Stanton
pointed w t, tha present communir
cationa law must b* amended.
Following up Stanton’s outgae*
tion, t*p. Harris (D-Ark) baa in*
traduced a Reuse bill that would
relieve tbe networks ef the re­
quirement of giving equal appeiranoe time ta candidates. It wpuld,
Harris says, "give leeway .(*
broadcasters and networks. , , .*
Leeway is Just what talsviiion
ind radio want H 1999 whan they
hope for tha btggcit political cov­
erage tha m e d i u m kls yet
achieved. Aa th* law new stu d s,
CIA—end other net works—cannot
give tees time te major partiae
without giving equal time tn minor
partial. That may sound fair until
you remember that fa 1M there
ware l i parties and 19 pretiianflal
candidates.
•The reality ad the alluatten is
that we’re a two-party country,’*
Stanton said the other day. discus­
sing tha problem in an tatarriew.
•‘Sometime*, el course, important
third partita emarga. If there cam*
a iituition like 1919 (when Thao*
dor* Roosevelt formed th* BuQ
Moot* party) naturally we’d cover
a third party. It would he m w i .h
Basically, television minds like
Stanton’s teak the type ef freedom
newtpapers enjoy in com ing pot
itlci. Stanton belie res television la
a natural medium far fresh ap­
proach** ouch u debate* between
principal presidential candidates.

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Shop and Save
In Sanford

W a n te d f e r a lii

•

AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER

RAN FORD. FLORIDA,

E w U h liah ri 19M

County Judge
Tells Purpose
For Juveniles

MONDAY. JU L Y 11. 195R

lopen tha club’s aafe. Uoldonado denied any robbery motive. He said
*ha defended M meU when Kesaka attacked him with a hammerafter

to

at dsak whlla tha auditor went out lor awhile.

Girl Is Apparently
Kidnaped From Crib
Parents Know O f No Reason For A ct
Taking Place In Two-Story Duplex

S t r o llin g
In Sanford
Final | l u i t m welcoming new
Naval officials to Sanford will
ba discussed'At the H cu ttf mon­
thly meeting of Chamber of Com­
merce directors Tuesday nlfht
a t City Hall. Tha meeting will
begin at S o’clock.

e • • •

SIOUX CITY, Iowa, UP- A I
year-old girl apparefly was kid
naped from her crib last night
while her psreois watched televi­
sion In another room, police said
today.
Mr. and Mrs. James Davis re­
ported their daughter, Donna Sue,
missing to police about 30 min
utes after they had put her to bed
at 9:30 p.m. The father said a
screen had been removed from a
window.
Davli, a clerk for the Chicago
k North Western Railroad, and
hit faroUy live on the first floor
of a two-story duplex in a modest
Sioux City neighborhood.
Police Capt. John Rlipoljc said
he hia learned no motive for a
kidnaping. He said there appar­
ently has been no family trouble
and the pirenls knew of no one
who would want to take the child.
The Davises have two other chil­
dren. Mary Clair, II, and Timmy,
T, who were asleep in another
bedroom.
Several neighbors reported
ing a man come up to the duplex
and go to tha back when tha
bedroom la located.
Although tha end of tha crib

Roy Holler vouchee for the au­
thenticity of thia on#:—While out
on tha West Side he stopped to
.w atch a farmer who wea plow*ing with one mule. He hoard the
farmer yoU. “ Git Fate! Glddap,
Varney 1 Git, Johnny I Get goln’,
Tom!” Roy aaked the farmer,
“ How many namea doea that
.•gnulc have? to which tha fanner
replied, “Only one. Hia name la
Fata baft ho don’t know hia own
strength, so I puts blinders on
*im, yell a lot of namea at 1m
and ha thinks threo other mules was near the window, polka bej. are helping him.1*
liovc the person mutt have en­
tered the bedroom. Tha window
sill la about four feet from the
Mr. and Mrs. Davis said they
beard, no noise In the bedroom.

Assurance Sought
For Cily To Build
Own Power Plant

Congressmen Told
No Plans Slated
To Scatter Posts

*■

WASHINGTON Uh-AdmlnUlraJtim officials studying possible
T iir d lir h t of the Dlxon-Yatca
contract opparoatiy eought iron*
clad a sacra ace today that the city
of Memphis will build Its own
power pleat.
They am ngod a conference with
Memphis Mayor Frank Tobay and
Maj. Tbom u H. Allen, president
4 : of the city's light, gas and water
division.
Tobey and AOes w en called
Sort to moot with Atty. G«n.
Srowuell, Budget Director Row­
land R. Hughes and Chairman
Vogel of the lbnaeasoo Valley
Authority.
1 The throe w en designated by
Friildmrt Kiaonbowtr to rcstudy
the whole matter of the controvenial- private power coetract
’/ after Memphis announced plana
i to build Ua own plant rather then
buy DUoshYataa power through
| Urn TVA.____________

WASHINGTON UP- The Army
has told sharply critical coagrassmen it has no plans to scatter its
posts more widely in this country
as a precaution against. atomic
warfare.
Rep. Riley (DSC- said thia
might invite a “ major disaster.’’
This was disclosed today with
the release of testimony given
secretly June SObefore a House Ap­
propriation! subcommittee whieh
is considering this year's two-billion-dollar mlitery public works
budget.
Under questioning, retiring Sec.
ratary of tha Army Robert T. Ste­
ve na said tha Army’s “plsan lug
for the modern stomic ago takoe
tha form” of naw dispersal tactics
la combat, “rather than any major
change hi the installations thornselvael”

Morrow Take* Over
M anagerial Post

ATLANTA, G«. UP—Two 1
victs who struck and fatally in
jurad two parsons while driving a
stolen prison station wagon In a
futile escape attempt Satarday
khva been charged with euspfdan
of meider.
The convicts, Luther J. Masters,
V . and Harry L. Nelson, IT. set
off a wild chase fluangh Atlanta’s
by taking tha sta tin
fleeing while on n
at tha Dekalb Goaty

WASRDfOTON ( F » - S v e r s t t
oooffwwf ■ pgpV f nvfiQ

t u p menagerie!

poet

la

. off Mao today. Ho la the first of
kia^moo m hoM n Jab of that

,1 J a T J a L u S S n atfieeT'"sc* the

-z f f

pS;

Convicts Charged
With Suspicion

1st Degree Murder
Charge Faces Wife

Bush Takes Over
As Rotary Leader

The weekly meeting of the San­
ford Rotary Club bald at the
Yacht Club thia noon was featur­
ed by several reports and tha In­
duction into the office of preel*
dent for tha yaar 19BW« of WllKara Boah, Jr. by outgoing preeldent Jaraea F. HcltaeUw.
'A fter an tatereating report on
the setivttiea of the Rotary Baseball League by Roy Holler, who
exprasaed hia appreciation to all
who helped toward the aucceatful

K E S V i .i' s J r s n T s r

u r y s J:&lt;".

,or

v ,U r,“*'

“•&gt;-

W ar It Declared
On Short 'F la .!

• and Uawty.”

To Be Discussed

PMHOtHT &gt;*ao Tae-hmg (VP), of Communist China, and President
llo Chi Minh, of North Vietnam, chal at ■ reception given for Ho on
hi* arrival In Peiping lo confer with Ihe Chinese lender, llo wpe
scheduled la visit Moscow after bis visit. (Iniemotional Ka.tiot*holn)

P ublic h e a rin g s on a S tan d a r cl M tli;ii\isiutt o rd in a n re
and ;m I 'f f - s lr c d p ark inn
antpm im ffnt lo th e zon in g
tm liim nce will h ig h lig h t to ­
n ig h t's reg n lap m ee tin g o f
th e C ity Com m tealon. T he
n te e lin g will g e l tm tler w ay
at H o'clock.
T h e ftiilulivtsiott n rtlin n n re
fixe* specific requirements for
subdivisions and i* the typo in
n»o in other ritiei, City Clerk 11.
N. Buyer »aid.
.
.
.
_
In other
b u sin e ss, the to m m ission

Manager Of Players
Wilt Address Guild
9

*

Bill FVimn, n n slsln n l m n n n u c r o f Mio V njraliond I’ln y rrs ,
pm fosaionnl i-om im nv u f E la t Buck, N. t'., will apeak a t it
m eetin g o f th e tia n fo id T lio n tru (iu ild tu in o rrm v n i^ lit in
th e C ity lla l l a u d ito riu m . T h a im :o lin ^ will h eg iu n t 8
o’clock.

Fcgitn, who has been a.inociated with amateur ami pro­

Mrs. Sybil Routh
A t Wisconsin Meet

new midwest Audubon Camp In
Wisconsin. The camp la similar in
program to three other# operated
by the National Audubon Uoclrty
In Main*, Connecticut, and Cali­
fornia. but its canteal location has
attracted a near-capacity group
of Uachara, nthrr youth leader#
and thosa with a professional nr
hobby interest in nature and con­
servation education.
The course of instruction em­
phasis## teaching and leadership,
techniques. It 1* designed to equip
the student to plan and ronduct
programs furthering nature ap­
preciation and conservation of na­
tural resources. The camp is not
limited to members of the Na­
tional Audubon Society. Anyone
eighteen year* of age or over it
eligible to attend.

^
» — ■-

^

'At

-----

Tidwell la serving a life sentence
for murder.
The other three members ef the
quartet stopped briefly near Bearcy. Ark., earlier yeaterday, still
driving the prlton station wagon
la which they escaped. Police said
they apparently had left the itate
by the time their trails were picked
OrriDe Gray, IT. who had re­
fused a parole e year ago lo stay
with the quartet, visited a father
and aa unde at thalr homes at
OriflUhville. Ark.
A cafe Operator reported Gray
aa hda two eampaalou, lo o b y

wilt dU rusa:

1. Vacating of the south end
of Washington Court and tha
west end of Wynnewood Drive.
2. Regulations for the operation
of Ihe municipal cemetery.
3. Hrorganuation of the public
works departments.
4. Hiring a sewer foreman.

^

IIIU, FEGAN

Overnight Guards
Called Ai Churches
ATLANTIC CITY. N J. WV-FcarIng a firebug may be on the loose,
authoritire ordered an overnight
pnliro guard at 23 Negro churchr*
after mystery blare* desiroyed
onn and damaged another.
Officials of tho big resort city,
working on the possibility the
tw» fire* were dclther*tidy set,
questioned five Negroes yesterday,
but later released them.
A $300,000 fire leveled tho Ne­
gro Baptist temple Into Saturday
night and a second, smaller blate
damaged the interior of the Ne­
gro Second Baptist rhurrh eight
hour* later. Acting police chief,
commenting on the church fires,
aald, “this looks like more than
coincidence."
No one was In the rhurclies
when tha fires broke out.
UNUHUAI. BIRTHPLACE
CHICAGO in-M r*. John Purvis
and her Iwoday-old eon, James
William,' are doing fine today,
Done-the-worse for Jam es’ birth un
a sidewalk in front of their North
Side home Saturday night.
The Purvii* timing wai off, and
they barely reached the street on
the way to Ihe hospital when Sir*.
Purvis murmured, “ Ttil* is* it."

Singing Convict Greeted By FBI

MCMFHIB, Teas. uru-The birf.
tone member of aa a scaped Ala*
barns p r i m quartet called hia
Birmingham wife from Memphis
last might and stepped from tho
telephone booth into tho arma of
FBL agents.
He waa Walter Tidwell. 10. 4
scribed by Kilby prison officials aa
the “tough « y " ef the hymn-sing.
o n ted probably the leader of last
Friday’a escape.
They struck IT-rear-old Johnny
At Biretiagbam, Ala., Tidwell’s
H ew u, whs was riding a
Ftorida
many wiia raid he called to say he wee
tekbu “ the next bus to Birming­
erejk awaaTSa Ind^etwafctee ham to eeo wee, ead (bass I want
flock sack year you to ^o to KQby with mo to tu n

JACKSONVILLE U*-A cem mit­
ten to epeO not Florida '• e i
cUred war aa “Fla."
It wants people la forago tha
ahWwvlatloa and spall ia full tha
name af this atata an tetters, signs,
or anywhtte they write h.
Chairman HaOa Cehtn. TrckaanUa dapartmmt atetn mu^nthw,
ryiatetd tha Idas:
“ITal lm t daaaat n*t&lt;i aay

No. 2:9.

Off-Street Church-State Truce
Parking
Jarred Yesterday
Is Issue
By Demonstration
Other Business

«&gt;■»■-*• "•••*•• ” ,
i ~
r lh’ i)#.
Mr*. Sybil Routh of Hanford It
m csiyrr a^sngcdto^ hesr the
cna of a group of adulta from all
[*n *
• ^ u fi" h, . of testimony over tha United 8tat*a Uking
»
‘ j g j * * ...UUnT .c&gt; p art In tha pioneer session of the

tory
iry to
so hia
m. hearer*.
n™ .
fr0m
At
Pentagon.
f ill this,
»***•' part
|N H» of
«4 tha program,
«’»»'■■■•**(
________________________
HolUelaw| turned tha gavel ef ■*
p .L . * C ___r
authority over to tho now preal- KCV, l\O D © I T O p c Q i
dent and presented Buah with the ,
Aa a —
r . m n
president’# pin. After thanking IS A t t e n d i n g L -O IT Ip
__
nia predecessor
p iriK lu o r, ha railed on —
. . «Rev, Robert
Tha'
Robert Snear
Spear Jr.,
Jr.
past _president Brack Farida* .Tr paator, and sia mambera of the
for tha presentation
U Jlra Holrv Church
rhurth of
^ ^tha Natarene
Natarene left
left tma
thia
piW
w u w w snrdftlfidTlt'l
iJIj- I
__*_to _*.*_
_ a *the
l. a
...__
theo maal
p a it president a C
pin.
attend
Suwannee
The Rev,r. Locian Scott, new i • R|vtr Youth Camp at the Stephen
icaat-at-arrai.
arau , _lave_ a short Ulk FolU r UcmoH.I, near Whito
■Atmmlmil ■
k m lllli.
1 «*__i_
_ m
.. m
i__________
an tha RaUrian
nugssina.
Spring!.
Tha
liva-day
camp__
openGeorge Touhy offered the in- ed todif*
vocation at tho beginning of tho
The Rav. Mr. Spear will be a
mooting! vial tore were Introduced teacher. Accompanying him wtrn
by the Rev. Scott and tha singing Betty and Helen Pittard, Alan,
was led by Charlie Morrison with Kay and Batty Sandifsr end Mar­
tha piano.
Harry
garet Jonas.

83-M, low tonight. 73-7k.

Public Hearing Set
For City Hall M eet

fessional thestr# for aaven years,
will lead a discussion on “Other
Forms of Presenting Drama.’’ He
will discuss chiefly threatre-lnthe-round and the growing favor­
ite, the reading theatra.
Illustrations of techniques end
eeenaa from piaya will highlight
hia program.
A graduate of Juniata College
in Pennsylvania, Fegan haa work­
ed a i actor, director and produrrr
in more than 100 production!. He
is in charge of tha school of the
theatra associated with tha Vaga­
bond Players.
As a feature of the evening,
Regan will lead a reading of a
contemporary play, using mem­
bers of the audience in the rest.
Thli will be tha second of a
series of workshop meetings be­
ing held by the Hanford Iheatrn
Guild throughout tha aumnirr
months. The purpose ia to foster
interest In amateur theatra by
providing entertainment and inatruetion In acting, makeup, lightIng, Directing. Publicity, set eonitruetion, and other phases of
work.
Pentagon Carries
Interested parson* are invited lo
attend. Tha program is under the
Fight To Senate
diracllon of Miss Diton Baker,
WASHINGTON t P - Pentagon of­ assisted by Georg* Dabbs.
ficials earrled to the Senate today

V
mill’
a « lr fi|hi '° T n •,?Mr*P " rnpulTojy

with u n tlfrn l

and thundersho* er«; high todar

AsfOK-latcd Prww I .rawed W ir*

Police Report Auto
Is Out 01 Control
As II Crashes Tree

IttU T U « t * w R ugght auditor of the Metropolitan d u b In New
W o rk , la attandrl for knifo wound at Roosevelt HoapllaL At right la
Ian ambulance attendant Kexaks charged that watchman Arturo
JHoldonado, who gave hlmaeU up, stabbed him when be ref'wed to

Fartly rlnurfy In rlnude Ihrnuch
T u n d if

9

County Judge Ernest Housholder emphasized today
th at It ia his purpose to “not only give Seminole County
the outstanding juvenile ctmrL.buL to eliminate juvenile de­
linquency and rreate juvenile obedience.’’
He quoted from a letter he submitted earlier this month
-------------------------------------- to- tha
Courty
—*
__ ______
, Commission
—........
and
expressed tne opinion that the
Commission wilt give the Juven­
ile program “the most careful
consideration.”
In the letter, h* asked tha Com­
mission tor a 11,500 appropria­
for detention home, parental
* tion
and general care of Juvenile de­
linquents and dependents. This la
&lt;n addition to tha court's $8.M&gt;0
budget for the fiscal )ear.
Damage estimated a t $230 was
The budget was broken down
reported to a 1947 Mercury sedan in this manner: compensation of
which pollca aald went out of con­ tha County Judge, $200 a month!
trol a t an interiectlon, Jumped compensation of juvenile counselor
the curb end h it a tree early to­ ta rry Jones, $1,800 plus a $300
day.
expensa account; compensation of
The driver. Lola Katherine the secretary and office steno­
Johnson, 19, Welaka Apts., was grapher, $1,800; and mtaccllascharged with cerelet# and negli­ eoua expensri, $200.
Judge Housholder, who has
gent driving and driving without
a license. Police maid the ownar been appointed to tha State Juven­
of tha car, Henry T. Johnson, ile Court committee by the presi­
1319 Celery A rt., was charged dent of the State Bar Associa­
with allowing an unauthorised tion, told the Commissioners in
person to drive hie automobile.
hia lettar:
The accident occurred a t 12:30
“You doubtless know that this
a.m, a t tha intersection of First court has developed into the most
SL and Mellonvilla Ave.
aetive and exacting court In the
Investigating officer* were Pa­ county and it requires much of
trolman Joa Hickson and W. D. my timo and consideration during
Coagrave.
active office hours and I am
giving much of my out-of-offlee
lima to the study and work of
juvenile problems, welfare and
education.
“ By the elimination end preven­
tion of juvenile dellnquicy we will
have aeved many of our ehlldren
from tha usual pitfall* of youth
and at tha aame time aave the
CEDAR CITY, Utah UP-A wom­ county the expcndituie of thou
an whose husband died of poison­ ■and! of dollars.
ing faced a charge of first degree
“It 1* my puros# beginning
murder today. Her aliter Is aerv- early thia fall to carry a genaral
Ing a life aentence after being con­ welfare juvenile pi ogam through­
victed of poisoning her own hus­ out tha entile county. Thi* will
band.
Involve Innumerable meetings and
The t o m p l a i n t v ia lodged ■peaking engagement# with tha
■gainst Mr*. Raymond Aihdown, children In every eehool, all FT A • /
33. Her 1liter, Mra. Elisabeth women’# clubs, civic clubs and
Lacey Aihdown, wa» convicted of churches and church organisations,
murder In 1949 after her husband, white and colored.
Vivian, died of poisoning. Vivian “ During the short period of in
wai Raymond's brother end the months as Juvenila Judga, we
Mrs. Ashdowns are sisters.
have established a court that will
Sheriff Arthur Nelson of Iron stand most favorable comparl-on
County said the Cedar City woman with any other juvenila court pre­
told of putting “five or six grains sided over by a county judge, or
of strychnine in a glass of lemon • S a matter of fact, with any of
Juice.’’
the eeparate and Independent
Her husband, the father of seven, juvenila courte, aven though our
died Tuesday. Hia brother died aft­ facllltlea have been limited.’
er strychnine waa put In his hamJudga Housholder said the office
burgar during e party at Home- In the court house formerly oc­
dale.
cupied by the Farm Home Admin­
istration will ba used by him
for hia chamber* and for Juvenila
Court purpoeea aa aoon aa *ork
Is completed on it. The office ia
directly acrosa from tha present
County Judge’s office.

Weather

Tidwell, B, and Bnbby Cottrell, 22
of Roanoke, Va., had eaten breakfait at hli cafe at Keniett, Ark.
Sheriff Jack Price said at Searcy
that Gray'* father, Jpsi Gray, and
tha uncle, Louis MacDonald, tried
to talk the fleeing convict, who
had only six months to servo on a
10-ycar robbery lenlepce, into sur­
rendering. Both quoted him ai an­
swering:
“i ’ll lake rare of that later."
The convicts overpoweied a
guard Friday night while en route
to tho prison at Montgomery, Ala.,
after e singing appearance at LinBen, "

Rodeo Performers
Are Fatally Shot;
Husband Queried
WACO, Tex. (A—Two rodro performer* wrr* *!iot fat ally yester­
day in a Waco motel.
A few hour* later Ilia r*tranged
hu*l&gt;.ind of one of the victims
cam* lo the Dallas County Sher­
iff’s oflice with hi* sttornry snil
was questioned until the early
morning hours,
Buhby Roy re Darby, 24, was
killed tnrtanlly with two shots in
the head from a im all-riliher
weapon. Mrs. Polly McGowan, 28,
died several hours later from one
gunshot wound in Ihe head.
She rccn tly had separated from
her husband, Raymond F. Mc­
Gowan, 49, and moved from Dal­
las to Warn.
Friends said Mrs. McGowan, a
trirk ruling m .trurlor, stopped at
tha mold shout 10 a m. lo pick up
Darby, one of her students.

Manager Admits
He Escaped Gang;
Is Back At Work

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina r_ .
Argentina'! uneasy church-state
truce n i l jarred yesterday a« po­
lice and firemen routed Catholio
rioters .(asm s llinr -croud antiPcron dcmon.lration in 21 hour*.
The riot landed l.t policeman and
firemen in hospital* and brought
condemnation o( the dcmotvdratnr*
from Santiago Cardinal Cuprite,
ailing archbishop of Bueno* tire*
who ha- urged a peaceful fours®
in the dispute.
Sixty prr*on* were arre-ted but
many were released after que*tioning,
In Ih e firs t tio le n e e ag ain»t tha

1 r*rc**i(f**nt Ju a n I ’ c ro n . m ore Uian
! 5oo d e m n n .-trato rj m ille d thivm gh
the I ’ la r a del M ay o n e a r Ih e M rln *p d itn n C a th e slra l. I ’ id ir e try in g t»
d i‘ per&gt;i- the cro w d w e re stoned .

Defying church appeal* for pears
and I’eron's own rail for "pacifica.
linn,” the ilenuinstratnr! Jeered p ’«
lice’ and shouted "he must go'' lt\
an apparent reference lo the Presi­
dent,
One woman acreamcd at police:
"Why didn't y«u come when Ihry
were burning the ehurrhrs?"

New York Editor
Claims Publicity
Has Ruined Scheme
SALT LAKE CITY un-Ncw York
editor Howard Runlimarc, com­
plaining that publicity gicrn a tup
he wanted In he arcrct ha. mad®
hi* sources "clam up" flew back
to Chicago today.
It’s liko "working in a gold fi-H
bowl," he said.
Ru.vhmnre, a fi S SW.pmindrr
I. editor of Confidential, a himnnthlv natmnnt magazine, popped up
in Unite, Mont., under an airomrd
name .Saturday, lie said he wax
.earchlug for a man lie described
as a top Communiti leader,
liol by (Jien publicity abmd hi#
being missing from Chtragn had
raiigld up with him, and he fir v
to Nall Lake Cily looking for an­
other man.
He aald Hie report! about hli lin­
ing mi*.ing were "all a big mulake." They arn»c when lie fall* I
lo keep an appointment Friday
with a Chicago detective.
He denied hi* diaappraianc# was
a publicity stunt.

LOS ANGELES Ufl — Frank M.
nw crly. who »ay* he'll fight
extradition lo Alabama where he
esr*|icd from a prison road gang
in 1917, haa gone hack In work as
manager ot a Suuvet Strip rest­
aurant.
He was working yr*terd*y, twm
days after admitting to police that ff*
t
A • I W\ o I ■
he wa» really 0«car Fred Twildali'12066767
snd hsd served lw« years of
five-year !enlrnc#. He rlaimed he
was ronvicted nn a false charge
of emhctilliig $200.
Police said the Alabama State
flnaid of Correction! has indicalH it will move this week fa ex­ WASHINGTON UP-A f?,KU,7lf,.
7.V) foreign aid money bill headed
tradite lleverly.
Meanwhile, Bsverly is free on into a cnm fire from budgeta bond returnable Thursday. If* culter* and budget-boonloii today
Is staunchly supported by hi* wife, in tha House.
Afrosdy trim mo l $r,;7.!Kx),ooi|
Eunice, 3rt, whom he married
here, ami hia employer, Sam below Pi evident Eisenhow er's re­
quest* by the Appropriation! ( nSptegelman.
miltec, the bill would finance fug
Ihe current fines! year the pro­
Old Texas Ranger gram of military and economist
aid to non-Communist nations.
Dies From Attack
It would supplement an entim.ifAUSTIN, Urt—Frank Hanirr, long ed WJI7, Rid,000 in unexpended *
lime Texas Ranger captain who balances from previous appropria­
took part in the 1934 ambush that tion*.
Some members dAn't think Ihe
left outlaw! Clyde Harrow' and
Ronnie Parker riddled with bul­ Appropriations Committee hacked
let* nn a lonely Louisiana road, the bill deeply enough, white
others contend it ha! been eut loq
died last night.
A heart attack killed tha 71- deeply.
The budget cutters went Into the
year-old lawman described by
friends as •‘blunt, atubbnrn and fray without the services of thriF
fearless." Ills sfooM'A frame bad usual leader, Rep. John Taber ol
New York.
been wounded 14 limrs.
lie reportedly served as a Ran­
ger longer than any other man—
about 33 years.
Permanent Power
Hamer had lived here sines re­
tiring about ID years ago.
O f 578,000 Is Told

Goes For Crossfire

FA. TURNPIKE UNED
FOR LANDING FIELD
BEDFORD, Pa. Uiv-Alr Fore#
Maj. Leo Carboncau, lost and out
of fuel in bli FMD Jet plane, bad
ly needed a place to land yestrr
day and picked the Pennsylvania
Turnpike.

WASHINGTON UP-Congrev* hag
been told the Army is planning
on a permanent strength of 371,004
men in the indefinite future.
Retiring Secretary of the Army
Robert T. Steven* told a House
Appropriations subcommittee in
testimony released today that thia
la the maximum total for which
tha Army now Intends to ark Con­
gress to flnanos permanent con*
struction.

Luckily ho landed at a time
when there wai a lull In tha usual
heavy Sunday traffic, Tho major
got hia ship down In an eaatbound
lanr near tha Sideling Hill Tunnel
in Fulton County about M
Under Frrildent Eisenhower's
oait of boro.
disputed cutback program, tha
He was unhurt and tho plane Army ia scheduled to be down to
waa «uy ttcghtly tatnaftsd.
hy aoXUKt.

�•

*

W h' it Said Becoming
Economic Prisoner'
tiy-flick Sumner
CHAPTER BLXTKKN
THERE waa a sudden tu n in g of
(heads tn the direction of the bet­
wing doors The girl Margie, with
• joyful cry, "Rusty!" darted
-through the crowd to throw her
arm s around a tall, red-haired
man and pull hia bead down to
ihers A tat of other heads tuned
-the same way, most of there wear­
ing expressions of »ympathetic. If
envious, good-humor. But when
K erry's eyes happened to light on
Calder, ho was startled. The gam­
bler's features were too well
trained to betray emotion, but he
couldn't control the draining away
of color, made all the more con­
spicuous by tha sear that stood out
tn ugly relief against his suddenly
Iwhite cheek.---------------------------So she's none of your business,
Kerry thought, with a flash of
sympathy. But you sure wish she
was, don’t you? It must be tough
for a man to have bis face marked
up ao he'd know no woman would
look at him. except for the sake
of what waa tn hia pockets.
Margie and the redhead were
Isnaking their way baek through
i the room, hailed by everyone they
passed, w i t h friendliness, and
something else that mildly punted

meat notions t o u t me." Rusty
—
to K e r r y . "Anybody
knows m ail tall you I’m a peace­
able kino of fetter—friendly aa a
bound pup—but to hear 'em talk,
you'd think 1 waa pure hell on
wheels! Think t just went found
lookin' for trouble," be added in n
mildly aggrieved tone.
“Tou dont have to look, honey,"
Margie chuckled. "Tou just attract
trouble, the wey a lightaln'-rod at­
tracts llgbtiun'. Things can be Just
as quiet and peaceful aa a Sundayschool house an a week day, and
then this bean-pole Just shows that
red head of hia, and trouble nat­
urally starts happening all around
him!"
Now tack seemed to have shifted
Kerry's way. The handful of chips
in front dt him grew steadily.
Wharton's luck wasn't Improving,
and neither waa hia temper. Us
was drinking steadily aa ha played,
and every Urns he slapped down
money for n new stack of chips,
hia red face grew darker end hia
expression uglier.

-Too must live right. Wharton.
A n'm * with a full house."
"Sorry, Wharton.** Slowly, Ker­
ry vpread his hand.
Jennings' eyes bugged. **A royal
flush!"
"1 ntver seen one &amp; them things
but once." Rusty remarked dream­
ily. *That waa when n feller wan
ah owin' us how you co jld steels
Um ctrdi."
Kerry reached for hie pet. "Just
a minute!" Whartoo'a voice lathed
out. "I got a bunch maybe thin
makee twice Rusty's bean ahown
bo w you can stack the cards"
"Now looks here. Wharton!"
Rusty protested. "I wasn't hintin'."
"Maybe you wasn't," Wharton
grated. "I ami None eg us ever
seen this ham bra before 'eeptin*
CaJder here- " -----------------------"Mr. Rtardante n stranger to
m i* The gambier'e vetoe waa cool
and unruffled.
"Bo you eay," Wharton retorted
with heavy irony. "Too rang him
into the game—«a* yon an* hint
have had all the took. X d e n t aka
strangers tons are too tacky.”
“Maybe." Kerry suggested soft­
ly, "you Just don’t lik e anybody
that's tacky—asoept you. Funny
thing—I d o n t like rotten losers."
Wharton aurgod to hia feat with
n bull-bellow of rage, amoving the

; e n d t u n ant.

They paused by ad d er's UN*,
and the gambler Introduced the
-redhead to Kerry aa Rusty Balsas.
An ordinary-looking cowpoke, la
&lt;Ms late twenties, seemingly, long
i and lanky tn rethar shabby, traildusty cloth-a, with a lean brown
back, stumbled over a chair, and
went sprawling, but aa he fell, one
boot-heel lashed out and caught
Wharton on tha thin. Tho Mg man
doubled ever with a howl of pain.
t u n y diMOtABflid fetaMlf from
the chair and scrambled to hia feet.
Something landed an hte back, and
he fait hte arms grabbed from be­
hind. Twisting furiously, ka got a
glimpse of the man who waa hold­
ing him—Jennings. Aa Kerry
struggled to wrench himself tree,
n sledge-hammer flat landed on hte
temple. Through the black mist be­
fore hte eyes, he could Jurt make
out Wharton’s face, and hte flat
drawn hack to aCrtka again.
"T* know,” a eoft voice drawled,
"X d o n t Uke to eee a man hit white
another man’s boldin' hia anna,"
and a lean red-haired shadow
moved tn between him and Whar­
ton.
A ltar that. It waa att eoafuntaa.
He managed to Jam aa alhew lata

at tha United States, Canada or
Auitralla.
These Importing countries are
afraid to lean loo heavily on out*ide sources, even though tha lat­
ter offer grain cheaper than do
maitic grower* can produce It,
They recall past periods of emer­
gency, principally wan, when im-

maintenance of producer prleei at
lavsla higher than would pravail If
the government* did not Intervene.
Operating collectively, Umm pelld e l have btlped create suiyluses of
Kboat la rasjor exporting natiaea
that now bedevil both grower* In
those countries and their govern­
ments. Particularly 1* Uta latter
true In the United Statei. It ka*
accumulated a record surplus of
wheat that ha* forced a to per cent
eutbirk in planting* uadtr a rigid
control program.
Many countries which depend
upon imports- for a part of their
wheel requirements seek to stimu­
late home production partly becausa of a daslra for a greater
dagrsa of sail sufficiency and part­
ly bacausa of inability to finance
purchases of supplemental supplies
from abroad as a result of foiitign

Hubby CutsHair
To Hurt Feelings
O f Proud Spouse
HOUSTON, Tkr. (F-J«m ae Milton Waters, M, mentioned to hia
wife that he planned to move to
Oklahoma City and ska, of coursa,
should come along.
No. said Mrs. Water*, she wasn't
going.
Then, according to Mrs. Waters’
testimony yesterday la court:
Waters grabbed her and started
wbaekiag at her hair with a
butchsr knife.
She, petite and 22. waa proud of
her hair. It was rad and waistlength. (It's sort of crew-cut now).
Tho butcher knife was dull end
Waters switched to a rapor blade,
•aid Mrs- Waters. "He cut U a
curl at a time and dropped It on
the floor."
Waters, a tile-setter, admitted
he cut bar hair but said, " I Just
wanted to butt to r toolings." Ha

levels.
In reporting on the world wide
whist support activities, tbs dcpartmaat said tha result is higher
price* tn consumer* than otherwise
would exist

Reds Applaud Nehru,
But Ignore His Recipe
MOSCOW (F-Tb* FuiiUni miy
applaud Indian Prime Minister
Nehru but they haven’t cotten
around to practicing his recipe for
eating international lenaion.
“ Write kind and friendly thing!
about other nation* and people."
Nehru edviitd a Soviet newiman
here recently.
But there hat been no letup In
anti-American or snti-Weitern crit­
icism la the Fuiilan pren.
The latest issue of Krokodil,

satirical weekly, has its usual
complement of four antMJJ. car
loons picturing Americans as
arms profiteers. H-bomb wavers
and FBI fingerprtnters of peaceful
citisens.

The attacks continued even as
the Communist party chief, Nikita
Khrushchev, told diplomats and
correspondents at a U S Embassy
Fourth of July party that Fustia
and the United States should be
friends. An article in the govern*
Dr, Harry 8. Warner, Columbus, ment newspaper Isvestle next day
accused the United States of seek­
ing to bribe Asians with what it
termed “so-called aid.”
The current issue of the bi­
monthly English-language News
also charged the United States was
using West Germany and most of
Western Europe as an atom base
to attack the Soviet Union. News
also contended Secretary of State
Dulles was trying to sabotage the
Geneva summit conference In ad­
vance and put the blame on the
Soviet Union.
One of the most consistent
sources of criticism is the great
Soviet Encyclopedia, which has
published its 32nd volume and is
roaring through the P ’s. Under the
heading of “political parties" and
D i v is io n .
"parliaments," the encyclopedia
Working with the universities la denounces
the British, French and
UJI. governmental organa as rate-

,L VTXOU IT

LA JARA, Colo. IF—County' au- Armijo or "when Armijo shot himthorltles said Conner Walter S. toll."
Lowe concealed evidence and with- „
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Yea site meesyiM knew

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BAN FRANCISCO &lt;F- Orossr
Charles Siacotoi gave two robbers
t hard time.

SUeotoi. M, grabbed • gun from
one a t they warn marching Urn
to a baek room.
"I bold tho gun to hia itomaeW
and pulled tha trigger, but nothing
happsnad," SJacotos said. "So I
boat him with U."
T h e gun b ro k e , tha b a n d its s t a r t .

#d throwing tin cans, S la ce to s
fired baek with empty bottles and
more eanned goods. Tha men fled.
A parking lot owner captured ona
suspaet. Tha other ascapad. _
Leprosy patients often contact
tuberculosis. •

ATLANTA - The week-long
National d a y Courts tennis cham­
pionship opened today without
Tony Trabert and Ham Richard•on — top seeded antriaa la the
men’a divisionTrabert, Wimbledon champ from
Cincinnati and tha nation’s No. 2
amateur, and Richardson, Rhodes
scholar from Baton Rouge, La.,
and third • ranked nationally, era
scheduled to arrive In time for
ttolr matches tomorrow. Both racoivod first round byes.
Richardson is flying In from
Sweden, where he won Urn Swedish
International Tournament ytstor-

Cm m UYI Vscstiia
H sn sin i S ffrk o —

tin t n r Tnn c g t m
Hu ecwixoiiK r o i m ,
n n r rb o n s o a . in n o -

California Grocer
Is Tough Cookie

Tournament Opens
Without Top Stars

Authorities Claim Coroner Held
Back Evidence In Fatal Shooting

Legal Notice

aetioaary, chauvinist, it
elements of financial ea|

YOU'RE TELLING ME!

&gt;»*.

b&gt;r ,
»•» unavailable for commant. Ha
* t^0** l* fraa on 11,500 bond.
The British railways operate n
number of firefighting trains.

Rown yeatterdiy filed a charge
of accessory after the fact against
Lowa in the June IS shooting of
Mrs. Virginia Armijo. 33.
Rown said: "It Is my own per­
sonal opinion to (Lowe) thought
bn ooum cover the tbieg up,"
Mrs. Armijo was struck nasr tor
right eye by not of • voliey of
.32 caliber bullata fired as she and
to r husband re turned to theif
home from a dance.
Aralio told authorities Im­
mediately e fu r tha atootlng that
bU Wife was bit by a bullet (trad

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WASHINGTON UT—V n . Ruuell
(D C .) moved today to prevent
eompulaory reserve trainini for
veterans. He proposed instead a
MOO "bonus" for any veteran who
volunteers for three years of se­
ll i reserve training with "com­
bat unite of the Army or Marine
Corps."
Russell, chairman of the Senate
Armed Services Committee, thus
U proposed a drastic change in Tres™ ideat Eisenhower’s program to
strengthen military reserves. The
program Is aimed at building the
present 700,000-man force to 2,900,CDR. R. F.
000 by 1M0.
★
★
★
Under present law. a servirr
man la supposed to serve eight
years of activa and reserve duty,
but reserve training hasm ot born
enforced. The Houso-passed bill
would eut the total to six years,
f
Russell contends that 100,000
World War II veterans were re­
called In the Korean War while Commander R. P. Compton, E x­
many young men with no prior ecutive Officer of Composite
military service escaped duty al- Squadron Nine for the pa»l 15
months, leaves Tuesday to attend
tosether.
..nnouneing his plan, Russell said the Naval War College at New­
be also would propoi- that train­ port, R. I., for a year.
ees under the new reserve pro­ Succeeding him will Im Comm­
gram could "be assigned to nation­ ander W. R. Haxlett, who i» now
romplating the plane commander’s
al guard units."
This could raise a new fight over course at Heavy Attack Ttaining
Unit, Norfolk, Va.
• segregation.
Cdr. Compton reported
for
duty with the Squadron in July,
Postal Clerk Tells 955, and first serves! as its Oper­
ations Officer before becoming the
O f Taking Money second in command.
MIAMI M*i—A postal clerk who
A native of Atchison, Kans., he
told authorities he "is a good entered the Navy in November,
Catholic" has admitted taking 1!&gt;10, *s an Aviation Cadet. He re­
money from letter! addressed to ceived hi* commission and Naval
a mail order firm specialising in Aviator Wings at Pensacola, in
^ religious trinket*.
August, J94I.
9
Georg# L. DeMott Jr. said he
During World War II, he served
Intercepted 129 letters addressed in the Pacific aboard the C.S.S.
to Mar* Kram, one of three bro­ Quincy with Scouting Squadrons
ther* who mall ta Catholics unor- 47 and 70. In November, 1914, he
d*red plastie crucifixes and soil­ came to the Air Station hero at
ed contributions In retim.
Sanford for three months of train­
Inspector E. M. Campbell said ing before reporting for doty ssith
DeMott told him he was “a good Fighter-Bomber Squadron One
Catholic and hated to see the Fifty-two,
Xrama taking money from Catho­
When later stationed almaiM the
lic* without giving them anything C.S.S. Monday, an escort aircraft,
9 In return."
Cdr, Compton served a* Air Of­
ficer, Executive Officer and finalDebris from atomic explosions ly Commanding Offirrr l&gt;efore the
b*a bnmi a help to weather men ship was put in the "mothball"
by giving them worldwide tests fleet. Other post-war duty stations
fo r their atudloa of air move­ included Wrlghl-Patterson Air
ment*.
Force lUae, Dayton, Oldo, the

Mnn. July 11, 1955

Patjc u

o o n iio n

f ASP THE Tore ft NU 51 ( WCLl, NCHVTHAT Wt CAN USTTN TO
.WHICH BOCATO X X I
.. TVAT'S ABOUT
IT. ja o s c v &lt; nut
AM) A IL HIS
AUiS'CAt WCACCSY

'OS YTl.T USE A. jO

WERE LD.DOE BV

THIS EREA*. S H E ll1

AT JAVXOVS

9

RETREAT...

a m . tv. n. i i a z i .k i t

COMPTON

★

*

★

★

★

★

Cc/r. Compton Leaving Sanford
As Cdr. Hazlett Heads VC-9 •
Burra of Aeronautics, Washington, sent asHgnmcnt.
D. C., and General Line School,
Ill* wife ami two children are k i t * x r r r
Newport, It. I. Prior to rntriing jnow making their home at 2112
the Navy's Heavy Attack progtarn, DeCottes Ave. in Sanford.
he was stationed with the Naval
Air Reserve Training at Glenview,
Hi.
Commander Compton has re ­ 1955 Law Eefect
sided at 2110 Stephen* AVO., S a n ­
fo rd , with his w ife and five child­ Rapped By Gray
TALLAHASSEE rv-Seerrtarv of
ren, Hi* family will move with
him to Newport.
State Gray says he'll seek a ruling
Commander Haxirtt as ill take on a defect in a 1955 law requiring
over as the rquadrun’* new execu­ state agencies lo file notices of
tive officer later this month. A thrir administrative regulations
native of Smickshurg, 1'a, he is with hi* oiiice.
the recipient of the Distinguisrd
The defect involves funds for ad­
Flying Cross, the Air Medal with ministering the act.
six Ition* Stars, and a President­
A section of the law appropriated
ial Unit Citation with a Iliouxe I Stli.ooo a year "for the biennium
Star.
1957-59."
Entering the Navy in 1911, he I Gray-said last week the Legisla­
received his flight training at t u r e evidently intended the approJacksonville. During War II, h&lt;* ! priation for the 1955 57 biennium
served with 1’atrnl .Squadron* 12 and he would take tip the m attrr
and It, Fleet Air Wing 14 and with the Budget Commission which
VPR-1U8.
has authority to release funds.
in 19|ft. Cdr. Haxlett attended
General Line School at Newport,
I UtDRIOl S THEFT
R-l. Upon completion of the school,
DETROIT (d’l—Biirglan broke
lie was assigned to the Special
Device* Center at Port Washing­ Into the Borin Transit Mixed Con
rrele Co to get a heavy safe
ton, N.Y., for two yrai*.
From 1049 until 1952, ho served Thev dragged It through an office,
with VR-R which operated out of across a &gt;ard. into a garage, and
llickam Air Korea Base, Honolulu. hoisted it into a company truck
After undergoing test pilot train­ with a company rrane. They used
ing a t Patuxent, Mil., in 1952. lie gale ami drove olf. That took at
About 2'4 tons of diamonds a re ' t '. S, rout production wn* 592' I'mind* ha* brought reindeer I To fly with flapping wings, »
served there a* Operations Officer n crowbar to pry a rliain off a
for Electronic* Tc*l until his pm- least half the night. In the safe mined annually, almut 90 per rent million ton* in 1951 which un« .IS lierdrra from (.upland to teach I DM).pound mnn would need mu**
was an old, nutdulrd deed to a nf which are aent to the United per rent lower than the peak pro- nomadic Eskimo# how to take cam cle* on his chest about four feel
house. That was all.
State*.
durtion in 1947.
of thrir itrer.
1thick.

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S U Y O U R E L E C T R IC D IA L E R ?

The whitt gat with the
W rm m um r P r « M y

•ay *
A M od.rn H .tlr it F r .t x t r
SAVES moony, shopping lu n ^
fo«d, woik, l.f lc v .rv

*41

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r-h i , k 'JU S ?:
. &gt;v

F L O S I D A ^ P O W E R i &amp;xvr L
I G H T
( t a a M l I a Ai s

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1' ■V I 111 19Jr
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C O M P A N Y

^
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‘.I*
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____

&lt;&gt;r • ,

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-

v

Geneva Jig-Saw

M alaya Faces Peace
The government of Mnlnys has been
fighting n skirmishing war against Malayan
Communista for acven year*. In the mid­
dle of June the Communista auddenly tend­
ered t proposal to negotiate for peace.
Some observers believe this is part of
the Communist peace offensive, since Mala?
ya is the only place an active hot war against
Communism is going on.
Others judge that the Communists have
nuffored such defeat that they are willing to
talk |&gt;cace.
The British have brusquely refused the
bid on the ground that the communista will
eontlmir to try to subvert any government
in Malays not their own. The strong Allinnce
party of Malava, however, ia not so sure
th a t peace Is not what the people want. The
government lost 4,120 men in April this
year while Communist losses were placed at
6,689. These figures are but a small testi­
mony of the seven years of hardship the
H alavant have faced.
Whether the Communists sre proposing
arbitration ss t desperate answer to their
own defeat, or whether the Malayans will
fight on, this word from the Communists
is th* first Indlcatln In seven years that the
end may be in sight. Seven years of lonely
jungle warfare seem to Indicate that the peo­
ple know their political problems and real­
ize that the development of their island
cannot be solved by Communism.

The Sanford Herald
Pabllebad i a d r **r*a» a a l a r d a r *»d B a ad a r
SM W eal Viral Bt.

Watered a* earaad elaea n a tte r Ortehar *t, t* t* at
M e Peat orrir* e t Baa lard, riartda. aadrr tha Set
a t Caper#** of Marrb *. 1ST*
PWISD PKIIKINS, r a d a r aad Pahllahra
SACK SLTIir.lt I. A*l&gt; W eaeala* KOItae
• n w a r w t m n ia

w atrs

■ r C arrier
**e ear a r t *
n e t aaaalh
SI.a*
T h re e tta a tb e
Bit W aalhe
tte e le a *

SA.ee
*A.rt
e i l AS
All ahttaerv antic##. ear** at fhaeha. raaalallaaa
Matlra af e a ter ta la n ea t far the r t r t - a , af ra leles
ffaade w ill ha rharaed foe a t ea«alar adrrrtlataa ralaa
Wallaaallr hr Naaeral
**l Searcta Barlows
A llaata e e t r t la

advert Maw

Tha Warald la a nataher af Iha Aaaerl alad P«
erhlrh la aatitled a e rla a ltelr ta Iha aad far repabllreWea aa all tha k r r l e a r n prlaled la Ik la aowepapee.

fa n 4

Monday Ju ly 11, 1066

TODAY’S BIRl.B VERSE
The recompenaa of a man’s hands shall
ba rendered unto him.—Prov. 21:14.— In
Christian democracies this happy result ia
more nearly realized than anywhere else on
earth.

President Kisenhower ha* announced his
intention nf staying at the Geneva confer­
ence for six days. Most people througllout
the countries represented expect those six
davs t be of momentous importance. Despite
administration attempts to curb excessive
enthusiasm, the excitement grows.
Politicians, statesmen, news analysts and
amateurs have all tried their hands at piec­
ing together the jig-saw of international re­
lations. But everyone knowa th at some of
the piwes are missing. The picture will not
become Hear until Russia opens her fist to
show what pieces she hold* in her hand. The
pieces that are missing are known. It ia the
shape of them that fa atill not clear.
One pier* Is the massive Communist
peace offensive. It is welcome, Indeed, and
hopeful In the face of the disarmament
plans the western nations are earnestly trying to make practical. It is welcome—or is
Kussinn peace simply pre-conference bally­
hoo, a piece the.t refuses to fit a picture of

JAMES MARVDW

" D 5 1 N ~ M W IN f t f

Attack Like Letter Of Withdrawal

itxr ton

WASHINGTON (A-For a man
with presidential ambition* a heart
attack ia like a letter of with­
drawal. A maa who baa had on*
may lira tor year*, but not aa
strenuously, If ho want* to continue
living.
Although the preaidency Itself
ean be one of tha most strenuous
jobs on earth, Just leaking may
be even tougher: an exhausting
convention, day* and night* and
the pbyilce! nightmare of a cam­
paign laiting for months.
Sen, Lyndon B. Johnson, tha
Democrat*’ Senile leader, who
suffered an attack recently, ba*
never laid he wanted to be in the
White Route. But he has been men­
tioned as a possibility, if not in
1916, then later.
This heart bttack Just about
eliminates the 46-&gt;*ir-old Texan
from consideration as a presiden­
tial candidata although, when he
recovers, he may hive ■ long and
useful life at a senator.
Even tha demands on the endur­
ance of a senator are enormous:
working on committees, attending

ah

amvuiv* a id
SAltTOUTMlJ
boat?

an c

# rertrwtinn of AGsIHa w*8 gratify
in*.
ed German re-unification?
And what are the shapes of the pieces
known aa Asia, aa China, as Formosa?
In putting together a gigantic jig-saw HAL BOYLE
puzzle with pieces missing and lost and aome
not yet made, with aha;&gt;es th a t twist, flat­
ten and some that never change, no one can
afford o be to confident, nor can anyone afMARYVILLE Teno. (JR - Hog so th* brother hein’t won the pub­ tog, ha aaya you ean get the best
frd to be pessimistic. But all can afford to
calling isn’t nearly as difficult as lie lam* that Clerk himself hat. teiuit* with this cry:
be patient.
it sounds. "Piggy. piggy. piggy, o-o-o-oh-

Hog-Calling Isn't So Difficult

The Second Man
President Kisenhower lays down#Jt doc­
trine that parties have often disregarded.
The vice-president should, in his opinion,
lie chosen because he sympathizes with ad­
ministration policies, and therefore would
be apt to carry them out If he unexpectedly
succeeded to the presidency.
This idea, though sensible, is not always
followed. Often the second man on the tic­
ket is chosen because ha belongs to a differ­
ent party faction from the first, and his
nomination la thought likely to conciliate tha
disgruntled. Thus In 1928, when the Demo­
crats named for president Gov, A! Smith of
New York. A wet, and disapproved by the
South, hla running mate wa* a dry Southern­
er, Senator Joe T. Robinson of Arkansas.
Precedent would Indicate that a eecond
Kisenhower nomination would find him yok­
ed with a vice-presidential nominee from the
conservative wing of the party rather than
from the group holding hla own attitude*
and opinions.
____

SAM DAWSON

| U. S. Buys Shoes At Record Clip
NEW TORE id—Americans art millions—a trend-setter tor sumbuying eboea at a record dip. mer wear. The uppers arc of vinyl
Footwear production la IPS! will plastic In paslel colors (the favor­
ite la pink) and the heels are
emaih all records.
Tbat’a the lateit word from Boafan, SC Louie and other big menulecturing center*. U manufact­ Petroleum Truck,
ory re* fuoaiea are correct, you'll
at ride along la atria thli year. Hit By Bullets,
The nation's fatal shoo bill In IMS
la enpected to add up to &gt;14 billion Explodes On Rood
dollar*—an all-time high.
KISSIMMEE (*—An empty pe­
That'* awoet muale in the eara troleum truck owned by Redwing
of manufacturers who saw aalea Carriers of Tampa exploded near
elide la *84.
here Thursday when hit by two
Figures for the Brat all months rifle bullets
at IMS show which way the wind The driver, Frank White, was
le blowing now: U.S. factor!** wnhurt.
famed out ■ record M million He saM be thought lightning had
H ire—up t hefty IS per cent from struck the truck because It was
the same period last year.
raining at tha time.
Why the boom? High wage* and The whole tank was blown apart.
plenty at consumer purchasing The m ar was blown off and Uw
power am on* answer—end with
population trends an Uw upbeat,
there am more feet to bo shod,
•ho* merchandiaora will give you
two additional reason*: Low prices
nnd fast-changing atylas.
Whether prices am loo low or
not low enough depends on where
you alt. Manufacturers ronfrooted
amount at i
with rising production costa eay hoiA MOOBSATI
la an eiceU—&gt; drink
rices will eventually go up; re- elderly
persons. If yon era la
illera am bolding (be line. Whoa health, M does an h a m ni
you shop lor • new pair of shoe*
this fall, you'll probably fled
prime just about Ike same as a
r ago- That’! because It's a
er'e market In shoe* today;
competition waa never keener.
Quick ahin* la styles am cal­
culated to bring yon late the atom
•van when the shoes you already
awn have plenty af wear ton to
them. And never before have
atytos bom ihi nged so drastically
dr to often.
Even tha man, long eeeuatomed
to wearing the same style aboe
fe ar to and year sot—or the very
•*»* shoe with wpealad resoling*
—ha** beto mo style conscious.

made of a clear plastic that to
like glass The loci are wide open.
Come fell, u ; the stylists, and
the glass-heeled etippcr will be
tossed into a comer of the closet
while mom and sia turn to an
austere, conservative number pat­
terned after the old "spectator"
or "dressmaker shoe." Colors wtU
be somber and toe* tightly closed.
It's being counted upon to keep
retailers' cash registers jingling
in the fall months, nod to koep the
factories humming.
truck.
Sheriff Robert Bucknls at Osce­
ola County said the truek-which
had just discharged t load of jet
fuel at Plnacastla Air Form Base
near Orlando—waa hit at least
tw*re by bullets of andotermlned

Elderly Person Needs
Lots Of Fluids In Diet

A lot of peopla who probably
would like to taka up hog calling
f( • a hobby have turned a painting
instead because they felt hog call­
ing took more real Inborn talent.
Robert Clerk, a champion in this
vocal art form, feeli such people
are defeatist* — and give up loo
•say. Clark last week won the hog
calling contest at the National Hill­
billy Homecoming hero for the
third itralght season.
Never defeated in action, the 43year-old hlllbom farmer, a strap­
ping d-footer weighing M0 pound*,
met and survived an expected
challenge this year One eompetip tried to outdo him by appealing
to porkiea with a dulcet call blown
simultaneously through two steer
borne.
It wai a musical triumph and
the pigs appeared impressed. But
they sat silent on their bams.
However, when Clark strode to
th* platform and lifted up his old
familiar ery, they iqucaled and
ran frantically after this big Pled
Piper in overalls,
.Modest in victory, Clark ex­
plained later that nothing twally
stir* th* soul of a bog moro than
a loud promising human vole* at
mealtime.
"Th* mein thing to getting a
pig’s attention,” ho said, "is to
hevo a loud vole*.
"Personally, I have a 1 w a y ■
found it bird to whisper. Rut U
you got a loud voice, you have to
Warn to control It."
But Clark disdained tha sugges­
tion that to succeed ai a hog
caller a man needed an) particu­
lar personality ia hia voice, al­
though ho fait that a high tenor
hod certain natural advantage!
over ■ bait,
"Th* pigs ought to he obi* to
hear you at least a mil* away
and com* a • runnln'," ha said.
‘Tv# got a brother who can bray
Ilk* a jack, and you cat hear Urn
for tiro mil#*."
Thera are no national contests
to braying like * jock, however,

Bom* hog callers may try to
make their cries at mysterious a*
the chant of a tobacco auctioneer *
to untrained e trt. But Clerk's call
Is as crystal dear to hit human
auditors at it it to th* pigi to
whom his voice holds magic.
It you sre interested in hog call-

Unhappy Neighbor
Doesn't Appreciate
Constant Loud Gong
TOPEKA. Kan. (JK-Carl Bjorkmen was happy with bit bails—
Including a 940-pound on*—until
last week.
That’s when a new neighbor,
Mrs. Grac* F. Hart, had him ar­
rested on charges of disturbing
th* peace. Sb* doesn’t Ilka tha 940pound bell.
BJorkman, an accountant who
collects bells as a hobby, obtained
the 940-pounder from an old court­
house. He put It in hit front yard
and booked it up with an electrical
clock.
"It tinge all day end all night,1
Mrs. Hart complained. "It's just
terrible. I'm a light sleeper. It
rings th* hour end wake* me op
Then when I get back to sleep,
It's time for the half hour and it
wakes me up again."
Bjorkman, free on bond awaiting
a hearing Monday, eaye he can't
understand why anyone wouldn't
Ilka bia bell.
"Tha high achool and several
churches have them and I never
hear any complaint*," he laid.
Ha Insisted he's not going to dis­
connect his without a court order,
adding: "That would b« ■ confes­
sion of guilt."
Bo Uw bell la atill ringing—every
hour and every half hour, too.

heeet. Pig."
The thrice • repeated word
“ piggy" catchei th* distant hog's
ear. The "o-o-o-oh—heee* stirs
"piggy" eatches the distant hog's
esr. The "o-o-o-oh—heee* itir*
pleasant memories of home In his
stomach. And the short crisp ex
clametion "pig" must be given
quickly and affirmatively. This
creates a doubt in tha hog's mind
a* to whether anybody really cares
whether h« comes home or not.
So he comae ai fast aa ha tan,
hoping he'll atill ba alopped.
"But by and large, you just hive
to hive a loud voice," laid
Clark, honestly.
Hog callers are among the
cleanest livers of any sports cham­
pions. Clark, wbo atill playa
basketball at 43, tays ha naver
"had th* habit of amoking or
drinking in my lifa.”
Anybody wbo want* to gat Into
bog calling even as a part-time
carter had better hurry. It'e a
vanishing art.
Clark waa on* af seven eons
raised on a 40-acre hill farm- He
works now as a blacksmith to the
Alcoa Aluminum plant and has a
lg-acre farm and aix children.
"They used to tot hogs root to
f t wood* and you needed * strong
vole* to reach them over hill and
hollow. But now they keep them
penned," be remarked. "Anybody
can call a hog that ean sea him."
Tha big hog calling champtow
paused and looked concerned.
"1 have an awfully strong voice,
and it comes to me naturally,"
he said. "Have I been talking too
loud I 1 do find it hard to whisper."
*
COMPOSER DIES
PINSON, Ala. uw - Dr. Charles
Faulkner Bryan, 43, composer and
authority on American folk muale,
died unexpectedly at hla home
Thursday.
Ha waa a uatlva of McMinn­
ville, Teno. He had compoaod
mora than 33 musical work*.
Although coal produced M per
cent of U. 8. energy supplies In
1900,'i t now produces Use than
30 per cent.

l y 1 IN N K T T C l I P —

r

K

Bushels M ay Be
Out Like Horses
If Plan Passes

Refugee Apparently
Want To Go Home

BUICK

Tra d e -In s

tsttv o n r n r t o n
• n a a i n t btatw nr

—

TTOLLYWOOD IS FULL of stori a* about the Ufa Barney
1 1 DMfa Mudio dialogue "doctor," end conetont companion of
Bob Hope, Bia« Croeby, Jack Beany, nnd «Uwr great stars.
Barney never could nmern.
te r netnee. When anyone
H a
uguA

Johnson. The work he did may
bsv* brought on hit attack.
So it li even questionable that
when be returns his doctors will
let him resume al Senate leaders
preferring he go beck to the len
demanding roia of senator. HJs
term continual until 1990.
Just bow much Johnson ean do
when ba return! defends upon how
much heart damage he hat tut*
fared and how much h t'i willing
to do at the risk of overdoing it.
Uncertainty Is tha greateit cer­
tainty about the life ai a man wbo
had an attack and survived: l»
may never have another; the nere
one may kill him; or be may last
through a series of attacks and dia
of aomathlng els*.
But anyone who hie hid an st­
uck and seeks the presidency
starts under a political handicap;
C H I C A G O , (Ft— Just may­ th* voters are conscious of th*
be, the bushel as a unit of measure risk to picking him over i s op.
ponent who never had hia lint
may go Iht way of the hors*. At heart attack.
least it will if Important lasders
to th* grain Industry have »ny
thing to say about it.
Seems there’s a driva on now to
switch over to measuring grain and
similar products In 100-pound units
instead of bushels. Proponents
claim the changeover couM save
millions of dollsrs to the nilional ISTANBUL, Turkey UP—A Buieconomy by eliminating conversion garisn who twice fled from his
home country apparently wants to
calisthenics.
go back again.
^
Here’s an txample:
He Is Vasil Mavrodiev, 26. A
Firmer Brown takea a truckload quit Bulgaria In 1949, telling Turk­
of grain to an alevator and I* ish authorities he had been beat­
quoted the current price on a bushel en for voting a blank ballot in so
basis.
election.
But hia loaded truck It weighed He went home to 1933, vnricr
to pounds, emptied*and weighed terms of an amnesty announced
■gain. Th* difference is the net by th* Communista.
weight of the grain. This Is divided
Early this year ha ttowed up
by a fixed ratio of pounds a bushel,
depending on (he kind of grain In Turkey again, with an 18-yearThe result Is mutiipled by the price old girt. He said the proml.w*
a bushel to find out how much which had drawn him back to
garia were lies; this time he was
Brown getsHid the price been quoted erlgl choosing freedom, along with hit
Refuge* groups lent a
nally in hundredweight, the time sweetheart.
hslping hand.
t
and effort spent in making the
In
May
th*
couple
disappearedconversions—and tha possibilities
for error—would have beau - by There’* some ground for belief
they are living to tha Bulgarian
passed.
Earl M. Ellis, general manager consulate. At least, Bulgarian orof Hales and Hunter Co., a Chicago firlals are seeking an exit permit
feed manufacturing firm, says for Mavrodiev to return to Bul­
bushel troubles go deeper than that garia. Tha Turks InsUt ha apH#
to person. There the matter re»fl.
though.
This Is only on* facet of a strug­
Supposing Brown Is selling oate. gle being waged hem and in many
Standard weight U 33 pounds a European cities to reclaim refubushel. Yat nawar, heavier varie­ gees. Agent* tor satellite countries
ties commonly weigh IT to 41 are trying to talk refugees into
pounds a bushel. Th* differential returning bom*. They promise
on millions of bushels ta stupen­ good jobs and forgiveness.
dous.
Soybeans are rattd at 90 pounds
BOAT OPERATOR**
a bushel but No. 1 bean* may
DEINKINO ■ KTT
wtlgh at little aa 89 pounds.
DENTON, Tax. Ill-Sheriff WIW
On tha ether hand, if Brown Barnee aaya this practice of drlnfwants to buy iced grain he jnuat ing a lot of beer and then tearing
aompart the feeding valut of 70- off at high speed baa got to stop.
cent osta with |1M core under the He’a talking about boat operabushel system. With th* hundredweight baili tha price would bo Four drunken boat operators
$2.11 for osta and $2.32 for corn— wem nabbed recently.
"a much mora realistic compari­
son with all other feed pricee,"
In Sweden, 22 per cent ef the
Elite contends.
people are under 18 jrtare old.
On the West Coast, trading of
grain and feedatuffa by tha bund sdweight baa been to effect for
many years.
H. C. E*las, assistant general
manager of the Poultry Producers
of Central California, note* that
grata firms to California who re­
port to Midwatt and Eastern of­
fices mutt convert their figures
from hundredweight to bushels.
hi addition to th* eenvmto
Uitmselves, Eatet tays U la aeceaClearance Salt
tary to carry on aa elaborate sys­
tem at cheeking.
hearings, studying legislation, answtring mail, work on th* Senate
floor, outside speeches, meeting
visitor*.
A Senate leader's job, aucb ss
Johnson’s, Is an even greater tax
on energy and peace at mind. It
requires not only responsibility for
what the Senate does but riding
herd on tha whole Senate to get
it donaUnder Johnson's leadership the
present Senate has been the
smootheit-run in year*. That was
tha raiult of tirelesr work by

n r eanroR D is
a t t u b tx e sss n r

ih B
jjii

Cash. balances wllh ether aenks, Inc Iudlne reserve belt nee*.
iM eaeh Iteine in arose## or colli icito n _______ ___- ...... .. IM ie.tet.i
undid atetoo Uorernmemt ohllnnuosi , direct eed g u a rs a w o l t . i f l . u s .
iiblieetlone of a u to s n i l ooiiucat sal
other bonds, notes, end debenture*
Cortmreie atoche (laclndln* I Jfono a
t.o*,!s**nd dieteuntii~(llicllidtnnXKee*
t**nb i r v t 7 a e &gt;
M*.»&lt;••**, Inralti
(Bank premieee e w n e d lie enkjoeT'
sneumed bp bank I
Real aetata owned other tbaa bank nroi
Inteeimenta nnd ether aaaeta Indirecttr
premie** or other roe) oatato —
&lt;.'ui,omere* liability to this bank on si
b u a r aaaeta......
............................. ..

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#f tadlvMeaZi!Vona*rsfcSj

p oreliant _ _ _ _ _
T im * depM lts of Im
Utpeeltn af Unite*
ta v la *i&gt; _ _ _ _ _

Sivrtita## er ether lltne. I Man*
I Nna* on other real eatate

bunk preinlee* and

------- ------- - ---------

AttUHa nee. a I te s te d bp *r le t Oecaent of this t a s k I l f

_
r*|,itnt*

CAPITAL a O M t n l
-...................-

pi l uM
L s jr * ,.
e r v e e (had ro tlrem eo t a w e n t

CARRAWAY &amp; McKIBBIN
GENERAL INSURANCE
• F ir *

f o r p rafacred aeptt*

TOTAL CAPITAL AOOOOMT* ________ ______

jjayff-raagf j£ s u“x , *Lio* ra"

iUM* u O oQmw

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47 K l il* ~

$

226

�n
SoriaL fcvonidu
(C a le n d a r
f

MONDAY
Th* Executive Board of the Wo­
man of tha Chureh will meat In
the »*s*lon room of tha P in t
Presbyterian Church at 10 a. m.
Circle* of the P in t Presbylerfan Church will meat at the
chureh a t 11 a. m. At 12 noon a
covered diiti luncheon will he
■erved. Inynedtately following will
he the Buainesi and Inspirational
Heeling.
Evening Circle No. 1 of the
First Prrsbytcrican Church. Mn.
W. 8. Brumley, Chairman, will
meet in the Educational Build­
ing a t 8 p.m. with .Mr*. C. M.
Boyd, Mrs. Stanley Vernay and
Mr*. A. W. Knox a* hostesses.
Evening Circle* 2 and 3, Mrs.
C. W. Johnson and Mrs. M. M.
Land, chairmen, will “ meet a t 8
P m. with Mrs. Roy Mann. 121
W est 18th St. Hostesses will he
Mrs. Elisabeth Sharon, Mrs. A.
L. Lyon, Miss Georgi-ru Hart, and
Miss Sandra Dunn.
Circle* of the Women's Society
of Christian Service of the First
Methodist Church will meet at
the following designated places
a t S p. m.j Circle No. 8, Mrs.
L. T. Doss, 1501 E. 2nd St.;
Circle No. 7, Mr*. R. p. Cole,
*24 W. 20th St; Circl* No. 8,
Mrs. Roy Tillla, 220B Magnolia
Ave., Mrs. C. P. Herndon, co-hos­
tess; Circle No. 9, Sirs. Ben
Wiggins, Cameron Avc. and Cir­
cle No. 10, Mr*. J. P. Thurmond,
812 Elm Ave. with Sir*. J. C.
Davie a* co-hostcsa.
Th# WMD of th* First Baptist
Chureh will meet at 10:45 for
circle meeting*. A covered dish
luncheon at 12 noon will b« held

Burmese Beauty
Knows Posture;
Will Be In Movie
ny VIVIAN BROWN

AP Newafeature* Beauty Editor

t

If you don’t hcliev* posture can
he mad* beautiful by walking with
a (took on your head, just take a
look at some Burmese beauties,
and in particular heed the word* of
Miss Win Min Than, who got a
starring rola In her first Hollywood movie.
Win Min say* that of cours*
most Burmese girl* etart off with
good eetraight hacks, the heritage
of their anceators "who balanced
big weight* on their hcada." But
th* girl* practice their walk just
11k* our New York fashion models
do. Says she:
"A beautiful walk la an Im­
portant asset for a woman. It Is
the* difference between looking
like « lady anti not.1’
Win Min who Is B feet 8, has a
lovely stride, a lithe hotly and a
charming vole# that spills out lika
the melodious rhythm of a rip­
pling stream.
"Tics* are the heauty asset*,
• o . artificial one*, that ara ton-

with th* program to be a t 1
o'clock. Mrs. John L. Miller is
leader in charfs. Topic will be
"All Roads ],ead to London.”
Auxiliary members ars invited to
meet with circle* that sponsor
them.
Tl) USD AT
Circles of th* First Methodist
Church will meet as follows at
9:45 a. m.: Circle No. 1, Mrs.
C. E. Meeks, 2493 Orang* Ave;
Circle No. 2, Mr*. C. L. Echols,
W. 20th St; Circle No. 3, Mrs.
Roy Wall, 408 Virginia Ave. for
a picnic and awimming party;
Circle No. 4 with Mr*. Blake
Sawyer, 20ti Elra Ave. with
Mrs. Adam Miller a i co-hosteee;
and Circle No. 5 with Mrs. J. 8.
Williamson 204 W. lfi*h Street.
Th# Unity d as* will meet at.
7:45 p. m. in the Valdes Hotel
with the Rev. Carolyn Taraoni aa
teacher. Th* public la invited.
The First Baptist Intermediate
Royal Ambassadors will meet at
•he ehurch at 7 p. m.
The Pilot Club will have * dinner
meeting at th* home of Mr*. AI
Hunt, 2485 Palmetto Ave., a t
&lt;5:30 p. m.
The R. W A. (night group) cir­
cle of th# Firet Christian Church
Women's fellowship will meet at
the home of Mr*. Lester Tharp on
1100 Oak Ava., at 7:30 p.m.
The Gleaners Class of the First
Baptist Church will meet with
Mrs. M. C. Hagan, 708 Park Ave.,
at B p. m. Mrs. John Fox will be
co-hostess.
WEDNESDAY
The First Baptist Prayer Bleat­
ing service will begin at 7:30 p.
nt. in the Memorial Educational
Building.

THURSDAY
The First Baptist Junior Roysl
Ambassadors will meet at the
church at 7 p. m.
The First Baptist Churrh Choir
relidartal will begin at 7:30 p. m.
siderrd important in Burma and at
the convent school* ah* attended
in Rangoon, she says.
Burma** girls us* no makeup.
They clean their skins with sandal,
wood paste made from grinding
tha wood and mixing It with water.
There ara no beauty salons, but
still most girls hav* husband* at
18, says Win Min.
American girls who overdo their
makeup mjght enjoy this tip. Win
kiln Than says:
"We can’t use makeup vary well
in Burma because bright aunshina
would giva us a hard appearance.
Besides, makeup rulne the akin,
Ws wash our hair with soapy
herb* and use coconut oil as hair
dressing. Hair la usually worn
upward."
Body measuremanta
ara not
known by the average Burmese
girl, because clothee are usually
homemade, eh* lays. Win Min
knows that shs takes 1 8/4 yards
of skirt cloth. (Th* fabric la
wound around the body so that Is
no clue.) Fat girls take 1 1/2
yards, ah* says.
Th* movis studio lists her, she
thinks, as " about 23 waistline,
33 chest and 34 hip*, which are
quite ordinary."
Most American gills are striving
for those “ordinary hips," how­
ever, and Win Min Than manages
to keep alim la spite of eating
curry and rice at every sisal, al­
though breakfast Include* orang*
juice, eggs and fresh fruit.
Har currant good fortune la
being selected to star
erith
Gregory Peck la "Th# Purple
Plain," mad# la Ceylon, eras th*
rseult of a contest so find a
Burmese girl. A friend sant her
photograph, eh* read the script,
and th* rest was simple.
Twenty-one-year-old Miss Than

won't aasd Hollywood masseuses
or voice teachers. Aa a matter of
fact aha probably could teach
something.

Itilz

T h f .i11 i

NOW

S H O W IN G

Miss Sylvia Hayes,
July Bride-Elect,
Honored A t Shower
Mis* Sylvia Hayes, popular
July 15 bride-elect, was honored
by Mr*. J. W. Brown at her home
Friday night with a linen shower
on the Old Lak* Monro* Road
at 8 p. m.
Mis* Bobby* Morton rrrated
the artislic flower arrangements
which were ploced appropriately
•bout tha rooms.
Largs bouquets of yellow ami
white gladioli carried out tha
■ummer theme. On# creation of
yellow gladioli was placet! in a
brown earthern vase on tha tabls
at the entrance and another ar­
rangement on the television.
On the large center table in
th* living room, where th* honoree'i gift* were placed, was a
beautiful arrangement of glad­
ioli, hibiscus and other spring
flower* varying from pure white
to pala pink, adding a spark of
color.
As the guest* arrived each was
presented with a tiny corsage of
s miniature carnation in pale
pink tied with pink n rt and
framed with sprigs of lily-of-thevalley and a pair pink ribbon.
Games were directed by Mis*
Sandra Dunn during the course
of the evening, with prizes going
to hire. W. L. Carter and Mis*
Betsy Anne Carter.
Just before th* honoree openrd
her gifts a unique Idea was car­
ried out in using balloons with
printed message* inside to lie
read sloud by the guest*. Each
verse was in honor of the brideelect and her future.
In the dltdng room, where the
refreshment* were served, addi­
tional white gladioli were used.
The table was covered with a
pure Irish linen cloth and bore
a crystal punch bowl and mat­
ching crystal dishes. On each
sld* of tha bowl were crystal
candlelabra bearing burning white
tapers and surrounding the bot­
tom of the bowl were gladioli
forming runner* to th* end* of
the table, individual cakes, minis,
nuts and Ice cream wire served
also. Candlelight illuminated the
whole room with other candtr* be­
ing placed on the buffet and chi­
na closeL
Mia, Lew-la Barley and Miss
Bobbya Morton wer* cu-hostcsses
with Bln. Brown and assisting
them were Miss Ruby Stenstrom
BIrs. II. E. Long and Bliss Blargle
Morrison.
Those present with Miss Hayes
were, Bln. W. M. Btusarlwhite,
her mother, M n. Charlie Thomaa,
M in Pally Ratigan, Bln. Clara
Matheson, M n. W, L. Vance,
M n, WaUon Wallace, Bliss Sally
Wallace, M n, Don Stowcll, Mn,
A, J. Peterson, M n. C. E. Ben­
ton, Mila Belay Anne Carter, Mn.
W. L. Carter, M in Tat Smith,
M n. R. U. Hutchison, Mrs. W. A.
Morrison, M a r g a r e t Morrison,
Bln. H. E. Long. Miss Ruby
Stenstrom, M n. Harold Gray,
Miss Beverly Gray,, Misa Sandra
Dunn, Bin. Lewis Barley, Miss
Bobbya Blorton, Bln. O. R. Smith,
and the hostesses.
I t’s fun to give a Hawaiian
aupperl For a first course you
might carve a cool drink with
toasted coconut chips. Curried
’chicken with He* would be a fine
choice for tha main course accom­
panied by Macadamia nuta and
chutney. A green salad and a
dessert of sponge cake, pine­
apple and whipped rraam will top
off a delectable meal.

NOTICE
AU Calendar
Listings And
Society News
Are Requested
By 5 p. m. The
Day Preceding
Publication

Summer-Way Sunday Dinner
y

\

j

}Central Baptist's
Sunbeams Meet;
Honor C. Hayes

(p c A A n n a h

Elinor* H Ravencl is confined
to the Halifax Hospital in PnyThe Sunbeam* of the Central Yma Brarh with both legs frac­
Baptist church met at the ehurch tured as a result of an accident
Thursday afternoon for its re­ Saturday afternoon.
gular meeting.
Blr. and Birs. R. W. Turner left
Blr. snd Mrs. Lucein Normand
After roll call the Sunbeam Friday morning to visit with Mr.
watch word and rally creed and snd Mrs. Vernon R. Kaul and of Elder Springs section announce
the engagement of their daughter,
song wa« ted by Miss Bette Gibbs. family in Riverside, Calif.
^ r s X J j
Mrs. Charles Hayes read the
Clair*, to Philip Zinicols of Stam­
The friends of J. A. Bistllne ford, Conn., formerly of th* local
regular story after rue i eh &gt;’
ki
had given a sentence prayer for will be glad to know that he is Naval Air Station.
• MjtS gKk
improving as well as could b* ex­
alt missionaries.
Complete plant will be announced
Miss Peggy Price assistant to pected. Ha is still in the hospital,
Mrs. Hayes and Miss Gibbs arrved
at a later dale.
Mr*. J, (1. Andes who ha* been
the refreshments of birthday cake
and punch in honor of Clyde Hayes hospitalised in the Orange Memor­
ial Hospital is back at work.
f( V ' f .
who hud his first birthday.
Those present were Susie Price,
The many friend* of Mrs, J. E.
Cituly Smith, visitor, Yvonn* Blev­ Tt-rw illegvr will lie glad lo learn
Birs. Anna Katlor at Hagerstown,
ins, Mark Thompson, Rev* Mae that site is home from the hosp­
Wright, Gene Parham, visitor. ital and is with her daughter, Md, announcea the marriage ot
Faye Hayes Dur Lodge, Iiubha Mr*. I’. R. Stephenson.
i-.* v .®
her daughter Edna Florence to
Lodge, Aaron Keith, Paul Duncan,
Claude A. Whlddon, Jr., con o&lt;
Friends
of
Mr*.
J.
E.
BlackTime now to pull out th# picnic basket, pack a sumptuous meal, and
Jackie Duncan, Reeky Lodge,
eat Sunday dinner in the open. The all-meat, ensy-to-vut rnnnui hum
Gena Thompson, Mary Thompson, mun will be glad to know that sne Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Whiddon, lr.,
and the mouth-watering Pineapple Skillet Cake may be baked on Satur­
Clyde lla.ves, Dennie Hayes, Peggy is doing nicely since her surgery of this City.
day. Can* or jars of baked bean* or pork and beans, ripe olivi-s, pickle*
Price, Maybelle llayps, Uettc Gibbs anil is now at home on the Psol*
The wedding took place on July
and mustard are ready to go. Add bicad or rolls for tin
Brenda
lleitlun, and Denver llayca. Bond.
1st in th# First Baptist Church in
sn ip salad and cool drinks.
Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Bradley and Orlando with the Rev. Hansen of
Pineapple Sklllrl Csk#
son of Grrenvill#, S. C. ar* visit­ Relating.
1 can (9 ox.) aliced
,(* cup brown sugar,
ing relative*.
pineapple
firmly tuu-kid
Mr. and Mr*. Whiddon ara resid­
U cupbutter,
Maraschino cherries
Mr, ami Mrs. John Btiktir, Blr. ing at the Gladstone Apia. In O r
or margarine
1 pkg. cake mix
.iml Mrs. Joe Ysnick of Cleve­ lando.
Drain syrup from pineapple Into a deep 9-irtch skillet. Add buller
and brown sugar and cook until thickened. Arrange pineapple slurs
land, Ohio, and Mr. and Mrs.
and cherries in a design in skillet. Prepare rake mix fallowing direction*
i’eter Itukur nr* enjoying a vi­
on parkage. Pour carefully over pineapple. Bake in a node rate oven
LISTEN
sit lo Miami, Key West, and oth­
(350‘F.) about 1 hour. Remove from oven and allow to stand about 5
er
points
of
interest
tn
the
south­
minutes. Turn out on serving plate. One 9-inch rake.
to
ern part of Florida,
To nuke Canned Ham; Remove from ran and place fat side tip on a
Saturday night at the USD a
ii
rack in an open pan. Bake in slow oven (325 F.) 16 minutes per t*ound.
The
Glszs ham if desired.
large crowd enjoyed dancing on
was *ttJoyrd hy a record crowd
the pallo under colored lights.
Sanford A tla n th
Music was furnished by the with Mis* Ruby Stenstrom act­
N ational Bank
juke box and refreshments of ing as Junior hostess. Chocolate
The Worlds And
pmivli and cheese bits were ser­ ice rreani was made and served.
i*
Speak
ved out of door*.
Mrs. W. H. la l'e tr* and Birs.
Whirls Of Youth
Mrs. Arthur Moore and Mr*. Lily Eubank* were senior hostess­
W T R R
W. it. Anderson represented Die es horn Die Presbyterian Church.
9:15 A . M .
Arc Real 'Cool'
Presbyterian Church as senior
Also rnjnyed were television
Lei's lake a spin around oilier hoslc.ne* and Mis* Belty Mi­ and ping pong.
backyard* nod see what gives in chels w«s junior hostess.
Sunday an ice cream frrexe
the world mid whirls of youth. . .
By IlDB THOMAS
I'lilindi-lphin. . . Conte-ns-you.
HAVE YOU SEEN T H E ------HOLLYWOOD m—Tha youthful are parties are popular agnln. A
following of handsome Robert recent Lost railed nt n guest's chine nml listen. Can you hear the
low notes on Die piano qr bass!
Wagner is in for s shock.
“NEW LOOK* AT
Inline with bis buggy for n come- If you can without th* thumpUntil now, the bright young actor as-you-nre breakfast. Sure enough thump you're getting good lowhas titlllatiM fenta’e hearts by —he bagged .a couple of kids ill note result*. Listen lo the clarinet
MRS. APPLEBY’S “LITTLE’*
playing the all-American boy on pajamas and one walking a dog, or violin. Do the high notes screrch T
the screen. Or. as in "Prinea Val­ another playing basketball in tho They should lie" clear and lovely.
RESTAURANT
iant," the all-Norse boy.
local gym. They ale itmigllllls, You should keep the set in a room
Whatever the nationality, Bob Inina ami fruit. Afterward* the with n good rug nod draperies to
in n SO U T H P A R K A V E
around
playing slop echoes from bouncing around
has nearly always been the clean- b o y * lounged
rut, clean-living, clean-faced lad games and the girl* played some ami check the needle oflen lin­
O P E N 4 :1 5 A. M. — T O 9 t0 0 P . M .
new records.
en use of looseness or wear which
girls dream aboutSan
Diego.
,
.
A
high
sebool
piny
tm
v
or
with
reproduction.
Look at him now. lie's working
in a chiller rsllcd *'A Kiss Before principal report* otie of tin* new­
Dying." Hr looks as rlcan-cut ss est slang lerins used by teen­
ever, but he's up to dirty work. agers is: "1 wish I hud * 10-foot
He plays a conniving lad who Irads pole to use for not touching him."
Kansas City. . . Boys wearing
a gay life with a copper heiress.
eharrnnl suit* for dress-up wear
She falls pregnant and insists with pink accessories—shirt, tie*
upon marriage. He lakes her to sneks, rufriink*. Illnrk shoes are
th* roof of s building, says he'll de rigucur Girl* are wearing high
marry her, kisses her and pushes heels and have picked Up the trend
her over the side. He has arranged to seamless nylons. Blow tunes
it to look like suicide, but a friend nr« popular and an Intermission
doubts It. So our Rob shoots the juke box number is Die old British
nosy fellows brains out. He is dance •'Hokey-pokey.”
about to bring a speedy end to
Akron, . . The fad here Is 1o
the dead girl's suspicious stsler dance in your stocking feet, no I
when something goes awry and to save the floor but because it is
he meets stern justice.
morn fun, young timer* say. Stea­
"But 1 don't think the mil wilt dy daters wear matching sports
he entirely unsympalheilr," lie shirts with blue jeans, park their
commented on the set. "In the shoe* at the gym's entry way in
boy’s twisted mind, he thinks ho Is a neat row. The polka is the dance
doing what Is right."
of Die moment.
San Antonio. . . Colinn Irnnta,
He added that he wasn't worried
New low price* on Cannon
about how this departure from a student nt Our laid)’ of Lake
"Combspun”
percale aheet*
College,
claims
lovesick
student*
type would affect his fans.
and pillow cams, snow white.
"Four y e a n ago 1 was voted are no different than in her native
the most promising newcomer," Uruguay. “They u*c Die sonic
72 x 108 _____________ 2.98
he explained. “At (hat time, the tactics," she says, "first they
81 x 1 0 8 _____________8.39
pass
notes
in
rln**
and
limn
they
girls who liked me were in their
Pillow (jutes _________ ,7ilo
mid-letni. By now many of them follow up with soft drink* al Die
have grown up, married and have corner store."
Charlotte. . . Girls are wearing
famlliei of their own.
"My role* have to mature with bln uses over sweaters, boy* wear
tham, too. 1'va been very lucky. swraters over tee shirta and a
The picture* I've had have ail suede jacket over all.
Helena. , . Young people wear
been top budget productions. No­
body could ask for a belter build­ rowlioy bouts and Western fringed
up. Bui the roles I've played have jackets to rhureli.
New York. . • One way to lest
K)0ro DuPont Uncron bed pillows, complete*
been pretty much surface charac­
ly washable, full sire, colorful atnr tirkinif.
ters. They havent' had much whether you have selective hear­
ing when it come* lo music ac­
depth.
• Nnn-Allerjranlc
"Tha boy-next-door buildup la all cording lo llaaard (Buxrl Reeves,
• Lightweight
the
engineer
who
developed
the
right. But eventually you've got
• Comfortable
to mature. I think it happen* with Cinrrumn Sound is lo pul n good
• NunMuttlmr
a lot of arlora. Like Frank Sinatra. hi-fi record on a good hi-fi maIt* tried doing inmethlng different
Only
and K did wonders fur him."
That would indicate that hi* greatBob, who la now 23, has been test following Is among teen age
sen «ltlv# In the naed Tor a boost girls, He needs to corral the uhW
to his career. He soared to fame audience, especially males. A sus­
quickly reaching tba top in popu­ pense story such ss "A Kiss before
larity on tha fan tnsgaxine polls- Dying" rould help.

Engagement Is
Revealed Today

Marriage Told

uso

4

Handsome Bob's
Fans May Get
Great Shock

JULY. HO M E VALUES
at
CANN O N
SHEETS and
PILLOW CASES

BED PILLOWS

(e

*
-rM

\
f

O ja tJ y
Mfri • :ar

t j

W ASH CLOTHS

IN FAMOUS
a e a s tb w g a t.
1 A W *R O G ERS* A M
QUALITY

j

• Roast Ofrywfiara at Ah price*
• Heavily plated aa copper

FKATURKS
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nuv

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• (Ch u la border decoration

Ml

iriimro win.

• M taatcly ptaraad Bang*'

• He* Brat* chased cantor dasloid
)

M hshH

)

Wra. E. KADER
JEW ELER

q y y f l fr u jy

pOattriltS Q r a a l a t l i l j

lit

in u il
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BROUGHT TO Y O U AGAIN
BY POPULAR DEMAND!
11-lncli Heavily Stlverpfatad

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$4.95

ItTJW* C.

j •
it.

THE SANFORD HERALD
Mnn. July 11, 1955
Pag* 8

L a m e H a th *lre 48 x 24 o n l y _________ $1.00

Matrhlnv Hath Klio 27 x 1 5 ______ - .69a
Mntchinfr W wh Cloth O n ly ..... ........... .29e
(ALL MADE TO SELL FOR MUCH MORE)

New ahipment of Cannon
Rath Toweli and matching
waah doth*. P retty eolid
eolora of Sun Gold, French
Blue, Pink Whleper, Seagreen, Marine, Camellia Roaet
and Amethyat.
• Beauti-fluff finish
• Super Abaorbency
• Tightly Anchored Loop# ,
• Shrunk Proof Borders .
• Color F u atn ess

I

�m «*

™ .V A&gt;Znw", "I1

'Spectator Is Handy
Cardinals To Give Slight Aid

Win Over
Lakeland

Sports
Roundup

MEMPHIS, Tenn.
— With a
alight assist from a spectator's
shoulder. Eddie Merrina of Meri­
dian. Miss., beat Mason Rudolph
of Clarksville, Tenn., 1-up Sunday j
By GAYLE TALBOT
for the Colonial Invitational golf
NEW YORK JB—Any lime that
championship.
two or more baseball club owner*
Merrina never let the deter­ or general manager* are seen in
mined Rudolph gel ahead of him, deep conversation at Milwaukee
hut he held only a one hole ad­ today and tomorrow, the mbl* are
vantage when his ball hit the spec­ that they will not be discussing
tator's shoulder aa it appeared either (A) the All-Star (lama or
headed for a trap on the crucial (Rf the problem of what to du
ISth.
about tho tiger they have hy the
The ball landed on the fringe tail, television.
of the fairway and Merrina went
What's killing them at the mo­
on to a par S on even term* with ment is the bonus rule they adopt­
Rudolph, thus protecting the mar­ ed so hopefully a few years ago
gin gained when Rudolph hogeyed and which they have seen grow
the I7lh.
into a monster of alarming mien
Merrina, captain of the I-ouisi- They agree that something must
ana Stale golf squad, gained the b» done about it soon before every­
finals hy whipping Cecil Calhoun body gets devoured, hut they
of Columbus, (la., € and _4_ in Ihei scarcely know-where to tiegin.morning round. Rudolph heat I&gt;on
Tht rule states that a youngster
Blsllnghoff of Orlando in the other who receives more than kl.ooo for
semifinal match.
signing a contract automatically
become* a bonus player and must
he kept by the parent club for two
years before be can be sent to the
minors for Ihe seasoning he al­
most invariably needs.

Hanford's Cardinal* defeated
Lakeland, 9-8. last nlrht at l-*ke.
land and will meet «Ho Pilot* In
■nnlhar game tonight.
In la d night’* «•"&gt;». C™"1*
Mark Rutler tripled, singled and
got a home run and Manager Red
Mao Hello had four single* that
.cored two man. Butler'* barrage
brought in thraa run*.
Gainesville'* (1-Men. a ho hava
haan winning at an .bon clip lately,
dumpad Wad Palm Itaarh In Iwo
I iitim tnd ralirvod IHp Bfivfft of
fourth place In lha Florida Stale
League yestfixJay.
.
Sergio Itebra won the firat game
4 2 on a three-hitler and Orlando
Ortega allowed »a\an blows In tak­
ing the aftarp.aea 13.
West Palm lad 31 going inlo the
ninth of the aacond game but lha
(S-Man broke lnnie for four run*
on ban htta and two arrnra. Ara
Mandar singled In lha daridinf run
leading Orlando defeated second
Well, that's not exa ctly w li.it it
place Cocoa 5-2. and Daytona
states, but it might as w rit. The
Beach heat St. Petersburg 2 0.
boy ran be sent down if his ow n­
RT T i l DC M ^ n C M T K I I
Daylong pitcher Ixory Smith and
\ 4TM»% 41. i . d: ami r.
e rs, who paid him m a y k ’ 130,000
H
i
i
n
m
nn
I
1
***
•
’
b
a
l
»
—
outfielder (Jane Hannctl teamed up C a m p * n » l l i , Htoftlflyit, 33ft.
to sign, wish to risk losing him for
to win the Si Petersburg gray.
linn*
M il d e r . Mir»nVlyi». *4
Ihe SIO.UOQ s h a ll price al Ihe next
It
urn
h
a
i
l
e
d
In
U
n
j
d
e
r
,
M
m
nk
Smith*sci the Saints down on two l ) n I I
w inter m eeting, which i* not lik e ly .
hits while Bennett dmve in one
lllte
Aa ron . M i l w a u k e e . 1*3.
The thought behind the rule was
dnlder.
Itro o klfn ,
l^»*
run and ended St. Pete's most a m|iiitil»l*’»a laudable one. It would crimp the
i
A H i w a u k a e , a n d l l e i t u l e k l , Jit
threatening upriaing with a great |«ssii In, }r*.
wealthy club's practice of outbid­
T t lf t le e - Hriilnrt. A l l l n a u k e e . I
calrh in the sexrnlh. I.en Plcou
Horn* r u n *
K l u e a e w e k l , 4' tn cl a- ding their poor cousin* for the top
had doubled and Bennett t«K*k Bill n a i l . 2*J jimde g, M r o o k l r n , 1*
prospects snd then hiding them
Klnl*n
b«»ea— l l o i er , HI
l.«»ul#
Waltera' long bit with an over the
( out or. their farm !-trr.i whila th:v
1»
shoulder grap in deep left renter1*11 a Is I vi c baked on I d » s l * i o n » —
developed Inlo lug leaguers. If
«* «rattilse, l l i o o k l r n . 14*1. *33
field. Thai rellred the aide. The KeM
they knew that their prises would
ille n n ia
Jn n e e . I ' M f a | n , I I I
defeat was hard fur SI. Pete's
tNNRK'iA l.r.Alil 9ft
have to sit like lump* on Hie bench
l l n t i l r r liiaaed on
SI) Ml ha te —
Caspar del Monte In swallow as he
for two seasons they would think
K alin t.
H elro ll.
H I.
allowed only four hits.
I ’, t in t — Alan tie , .New T n r k .
.ft
twire before they throw their mon­
Mm u h a t t e d In
Janeen. R m lo n.
Three Corns errors that allowed
ey around. The raggrd rluhs would
three unearned runs provided Or­
lin e
K alina.
Vi a lr n lt . 13J.
get their share of future stars at
tti stihlea— K t n l i a a ,
Kaneaa
(!ll),
lando's margin of victory. The Fly­
bargain rates.
ers got sii hits off .lark llerlihy
T r i p l e * — M a n il a . \ a w T o r k , 7.
Thsl was the theory, ant in prarH om e M in a — M a n t l e . „ M i t r T n r k .
while Howie Tresp held lha Indians
lice, it hasn't worked out that way
31
to four. Tresp, winning his 12th of
N in la n ka aa a — R l v t n , ( * h l r a m . at all. Each of the rich and power­
the season, got Inin some light SI
hlnfl kh aae d on 3 d«* talon* • ful clubs still is paying Hie top
spots because rtf walks bill three K oIMtt
n a t a n t k . ,\*e w T n r k ,
1 RdR. price to grab off one nr Iwo of the
N trlkaouta —
lu iti,
(.*!•% e la n d .
double plays eased things for him.
most sought after prospect* and
117.
___________________
k • •
•h
letting them sit it out, without real­
3 a 1 i
ly impairing Ihrir reserve strength
l
|r ? r .il? ik t
4 4 i
DeMarco,
Dupas
4 1 1 t
under the 23 player limit.
The
T a r r a ll If
% t 3 3
M il le t l »
weak and less affluent teams,
• a a
pn&gt;«1er •»
To
Tangle
Tonight
•n
•m •
3 *a
needing desperately to build for
Tl»*»rtiFll «i
3 t J «•
D u lle r rf
the
find their 1(010-1101 clut­
«
4
S
1
ro«.w jit
For Second Match teredfuture,
S 1 2 1
with futiy-chinned kid* who
■i |itillII r f
]^»iBfor«4 p
4 t a a
By M U R R A Y ROHE
are of no earthly use to tlirm now
t
s r IS t r
T«fnU
fa r m e r lightweight champion. and have their playing strength
M H K IfO II
■b S •
a Paddy DeMarco, hoping In strike
impaired to that extent.
r e m i t If
It rich again at Dupa'a exA ld a Hi IK
penst, meets lha New Orleans
X le h a... IK
T u r n e r r f ryoungster for the second time in Cash Registers
l l a n it l. rf rf
a to rounder In New Orleans !u
P m 'a ly I K r f
j t n f l r r s n n ss
night.
a
Ring For Memphis
l . l i i . l , It.
Just II month* ago. the Brooklyn
f .II ......M r
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Itaynn n
veteran was a fading fighter ap­ Cash registers sang merrily to­
ll»v |&gt;
parently oat the way out following day for Ihe new Memphis owner*
Rain n
T u l a la
three beatings in four fights. Than a* the Chicks and Ihe Birming­
f — K aiin.d for I,111iff In alilK
• aaiard ... . ... . e a t sm.l a i s —a he mat and edged Dupas in New ham Baron* prepared In resume
l.nKelanU .
4 ia le e aee e Orleans tnd Iwo months later won
their pulse-tingling arrap for the
K - l ' . - r I. S llllrr. f w .l i . K errtll,
I t — S l l l l a r I l l i i t l a r I . K e n e l l ! , the lightweight crown from Jimmy Southern Aaan. leadership.
A l i n , Ida. X 'lekaua ,
ftanrtle, P r a r , Carter.
Carter took hack hit
fla \ no T h i l l nail
*&lt; l i m l l l ,
fnnk,
The group that bought the Tribe
H i l l - - D n i l r r S. T n r n a r ,
H a n d l e . “ loan" eight months later hy stop, from the Chicago While Sox H i p
Te rre ll.
M rliau a
Hrkm ltt
I ’r a r , ping bustling Paddy In the 15th
other day counted, the largest
Ila u r la lln . I l l - M i l l a r J. Ila yn n lit
— Il u ll a r. l i f t
n u lltr
a l l — f n n k . round.
turnout of Ihe season yesterday at
■— A lm e id a . N la li an a. fit*— A l m e i d a
The nest lima out DeMarco was Rusiwood Park, 7,703, as Ihe
end X iehaua
M a u ilr lln and P ra y .
Il u i inw a kl
and .A lm t ld a .
t. a f l — knocked out in the fifth round hy Chlcka and Rarona divided a twin
Wanfnrd I . I J i k a l a n d 1. f l l l - o f f — Franca't Keratin Ferrer. The Ifbill and remained deadlocked for
l i e ) no I , l a k e l a n d S, li n y I, K l
year old DnMarco came back to the lead.
t a r t. a o l l - K y — l . a n e f n r d I . Stay
* n I , lin y I , K a t a r I
l l l l l t a , n n outpoint Libby Msnto, •
crude
I In S I Militia 4 r nn a , lin y I t In
I 1-1 In n ln g e S r u n e
K a i a r n in youngster, In Iwo 19-rounders, the last on May II.
1*1 I n n l n a a a r a n * . IIA K i t — R a y - Dupas. now 11, ha* fought him­
o 14-41, i J S i f n M 11-41, H o y ( S . l l
self bark inlo lha top contender's
t t i l e r I S . O I 3V p — l - e n g f u i d .
O. D. Farrell 314 I . Firat position.
l i n y . 17— U a ll a s b h a r . S la lo n a r T —
llll.
For 10 vearn thta elare has
• Darrell Floyd, All-Amarira bas­ ronslsteativ ebaarvnd the fal­
lowing b eam
ketball player at Furman tlnlver.
ally leat season, was named the
Week dare t n. m. In t i l l n. m.
latnrdaya 0 a. ns. te TsM a- n .
■theta of the year In the Southern
Conferepc,
Closed from T;M a. m.

Major League
Leaders

Brooklyn Dodger flrat basemen
fran k Kellert began hia athletic
career aa a haakatball player. He
won a scholarship. In .that sport
to Oklahoma A A M In 1B41.
Ram Jnnea, no.hit pitcher far
the Chicago Cubs Is ■ former
member of the Cleveland Burkeyes of the Negro American
League.

^ n e l$ o ,o o o
joa A'cpef
BCrtUS
BAP/
CAa 'E
&lt;jp r o

Standings

MIIsWAL'KKK C/T —For the first time in yearn, the
American and National T-ea{'tte .«i|iindn come up for the an­
nual All-Star Game tomorrow with "rosted'’ pitchers and
s minirritim &lt;d injuries.
Whereas in other year1*. all-sta r p itch ers w ere called

and
Results
VLU H IIIi aT.ITK I.M A U f*

rra
W 1.
upon within 48 hour* after working
.7 (Hi
II a
yaMfearel
a nme-inning game on Sunday, only 1Jr lamJn
s
1)4
13
.4*1
12 7
fixe of the lfi saw action yesterday. 4s« Ifirak ills
»
3
UA
A year ago, five of the aeven L't»t
S r. •411
|I4 ) lo n e lis s c h
THE
.S et
4 n
National League pitcher* and four UikVltOfl
.31#
• 13
\V »• 1 . 1 11
G IArtTZ
of the eight American Leaguers jiL‘ I 's ls ie u u r o
3 13
.214
//V J u n e :
It 1,1 L i s X r . s i i . i i i i x v
had worked nn Sunday.
*954,
o r inn i| i&gt; *. C ooiM 1
Outside
of
Brooklyn's
Boy
CamBU T
kaniiird F. l.akelaarf •
panella, who wa* scratched sev­ Hal* %llle 4«S. \S BM I’alm
P/TCHEO
li 2, 1*1. 1‘rtcia u u i ft
eral days ago because of a dam­ IMI lull# llrat
OfJLY 4
1.%%!»:* 11IU .41
UiSldGS
aged knee, neither side reported ( 'o r o i Mt u rU n ilo
saaiurri al l.a k r la a *
i t A LL
ST.PAUL, Minn. Tommy Boll any , injuries. Last year, Al Rosen, I 'ay !&lt;•„.. l i r a i it a l HI. I ' c l e r a k i i r a
U a il ia a x I I I . a t X X , , I P a l m I J e a i i i
Allie
Reynolds.
Mike
B E A Scti
traded hi* famed t-m per for some 3 ogi, Berra
W T I I I . V V I , I.H .V U IS :
BUT PE
unspertarular patience and a tip Oarcla, C'ampanrlla and Harvey
XX
I,
rr*
lEABHEP
lladdix all were crippled although | l r - f * K I ) *
»» S*
.«&gt;•
from
Ben
Hogan
to
get
bark
in
pleh ty.
llo a u ki •
4* i t
.*&gt;4
the winner's circle today with a some were able to play. In fact, SI
&lt;'hl&lt;aa&lt;
4« I *
.Nr a I M k
4* 41
.» " *
victory in Ihe $15,lam St Paul Open. Rosen, despite an injured index HI.
Id .I I I .
a s 41
.4*4
The srpiaro-Jawed Texan over­ linger, hammered two home runs i i i i i i i i n . i l
a* 4a
,4 .a
■-f'TW
a t 47
.114
P*U L
took little Jerry Barber of-Lo*. and drove in. fixe run* to , lead the r i i t l . n l , l|ii. !a
4" 47
-J**
Angeles yesterday to f.ni-h 19 American* to an 11-9 victory in r m a b u i a l u
r
.
s
i
i
.
T
*
i s :«t i :i i i i a i
a
under par for a 2fi9 in what wa* Cleveland.
,Vtv Vurk a. Hi •.oktyn 1
9
h
i
.
i.»
.i.&gt;
7,
C
h
i
u
a
a
a
Managers Al Lipe* and Leo
O F TH E
one of the steadiest show* of his
HES BE EH
x i l l H a u k . - 7 - s . C l n . - l n n a l l 4-J
*lormy career. It earned him Durocher, who will direct the r n i l a d r l u l . l a 4-1, l ' l l l a k t i r ( H 4-4
f/ E lV Y O R K
TURWHG
II.IH I:* 'I o i l * V
American and National I.eagur
$2,400.
G /A /V T S,
Hi GOP E
(X u a *..... « a. lia *i u l* .l l
Bolt
resisted
Pie
temptation
to
squads,
respectively,
haxv
a
wide
T
E
R
R
IF
IC
,
X
*
4 i:illl'A A k K S I I t a
THE TOPPER
a
ra«
i.
gamble yesterday and kept his choice of pitchers. Most likely
R E LIE F JOPG.
S3 as . i d
N»w To ll*
AUMESOTA
ahr a o r
head in the face of a three.sirolce alerter for the American* f« Early i ‘I , x a la ml
So 34 . m
FOOTBALL
47 aa
CPE p i t FOR
deficit he carried into the final Wynn (11-4». Cleveland's strong- ( hit «a u
41 a«
s;t
ALL-AMER/CAri,
HlG F IR G T 0 O
armed righthander, who probably IlI*.o aI nlu.nil
round.
41
4* *.s««
^LEAG U E Jv'/.V
34
.411
44
will
be
opposed
by
either
Don
K
m
.
.
*
C
i
t
y
Ma s f /h a l l y
Hi.* own fi8 did part of the job
37 M .111
hfREC EN TLY-H E
In sti.ii
B E EM G E TTIN G
and Barber's slow collapse did the Nexveomlie (14-11 of Brooklyn or lXiXaal l. lKi m
23 SS . I s a
.i a
OOEG INTO TAB
Rotdn
Roberts
&lt;
13-7&gt;
of
Philndel
3 L U L H IM Y
rent.
Tiny
Jerry,
the
tournament
IIKKI
l
.
t
a
a chahce ro f r o z e
ARMY IN THE
| to* 11,1 ill. J l a l l li im r a 7 L i n d p v a J L
leader for three rounds, slumped phi*.
r e CAH P /rcH /V BIG
FA LL,Bur AT 2Z
■a i m
to a 73 and finished two stroke.*
A sellout crowd of nearly 45,noo XX a .k l i i f f t n n c-a, 5 » » Y o r k 4-1
Hag p l e n t y c f b &gt;6
LEAGUE GT/LE, TOOK
a
m
behind with 271.
was virtually assured a* Milwau­ C l a * aal aan d«*14»*•- I ,» - iI.' h iIr&gt;arKlrini ll 1-4* • ( # i,
l e a g u e yearg a h ea p.
Fred Hankins, St. Andrew's, kee's baseball-hatty p o p u l a c e
I , x *4t:a r o i l * *
, a a s s .i &lt; 4 a . e - »
4.\o x a i n r a a.- Kad ula il|
III., and Arnold rainier, the 1934 awaited (he ‘JJml annual mid­
national amateur champion from summer spectacle with tremenHill Console, former Boatoa £ a f
Latrok*, Pa., tied for third with dou* interest. To the fans In this
n a.
trenrirn metropolis, me game is fxox minus infielder, is playing
something more than a mere ex­ second base and leading off for
The Western Open golf rhamp- hibition.
Oakland, lie’s Ihera on option,
ionship xxlll be held June ?3-?fi
having
served hi* two-year hnnua
at the Portland Country Hub,
Accident* took 91,000 U. 8.
apprenticeship in tha major*. U
lime last season, Inst six of It an I Portland, fire.
By III! H II.K S
live* in 1954,
nine of 12, respectively.
’Ihr Associated Press
New York played at Ihe same
Nn one won the Americsn
league pennant in Ihe last 10 day*, 50 30 pace y e s t e r d a y , beating
hot it could he that the Chicago Washington 83 after losing the
first game of Ihe twinbill fit.
While Sox and Detroit Tiger* lost Cleveland defeated Chicago 3-2, hot
it in that span.
lost the nightcap t-2. Roston heat
With the All-Star game break all Baltimore JO-7 before rain washril
hand, the New York Yankees hold nut Ihe second game- Detroit
whipped Kansas City 10-1 after the
a five-game lead over the Cleve­ A*a had won 9-5.
land Indians, who are a length in
In the National, Brooklyn'* lead
front of the White Sox. Ten day* wa* trimmed to l l 'i game* in a
ago, the Yanka were 5 'i games to 3 2 defeat bjr New York a* second
the good with Ihe White Sox sec­ plare Milwaukee split with Cincin­
nati. The Braves won 7-4 then losl
ond—I'a up on the Indiana.
Detroit, fourth whrn Hie 10 days 7-fi St. land* whipped Chicago 7-2
starlr.l and «'» games behind, now and Philadelphia trimmed Pitts­
is filth, victim of the onrushlng burgh 4-1 before losing 3-1.
Boston Bed Sox. The Bosox, with
Ihe inromparable Ted Williams,
had a 9 1 rerord for the 10 days,
taking over fourth plare seven
games behind the Yanka and H i
ahead of the Tiger*.
The Yanks played .300 hall,
meeting mostly second division
rluhs, for the 10 days. Cleveland
won eight of 12. The While Sox
and Tigers, who faded at the same
PIUS ALL THISI OUTSTANDING PRIZKS
PA IN T S 0

Boll Trades Temper
For Little Patience
To Overtake Barber

G/EL,

No One Has Clinched AL rin g ;
Sox, Tigers May Have Lost It

'in /i/u m m m M

CHOOSE &amp; USE

Jm

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m

ii

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T h e W n m a n'a International
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rhurrh league! during tha 105465 season.

TIIK COLOR YOU WANT
WHEN YOU W A N T IT
IN ALL FINISHES,

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Regret, tha only filly to win the
Kentucky Derby, wa* foaled at
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series.

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t. ■

NOTHING TO

BUYINO

Just writ# your noma and addrtss on tha official
•ntry blank. . . Drop In tha official antiy box at
your naarby Firastona Daalar or
sama. That's all you Hava to

ON .
BO TH FORD PARTS AND LABOR
When Work On Ford Products ■
- I b Done In Our Shop

eir

"All-Star Pitchers
Pretty Well Rested

T-T-T

Saturday aatll 0 a. as. Man.

FARRELL'S

tlTTLlir&amp;ANT • • • • • • 6/ Afon MdWr

,

W

�n

HOME TOWN
g- a M J a u a g -» THE OLD _________________

I f I t * W orth Anythin*
I t ’s W orth A drarttnhig In

CLASSIFIED ADS

C A. WH1DDON, SR.
Re*. Real Eeuce Breker
i l l S. P a r k

Th. U i

Uaed furniture. appUancea, roots,
etc. BoufbUaold. Larry's Mart
321 E a a tlit St Phone 1631.

g o o d

g r a v y

!i

u1

g w a n 'm a w

f

TH E SANFORD HERALD Mnn. July 11. 193S

By STANLEY

iwm

)

PAW . TH A TS

k H B fC O W A

5HB

YOU don’t have to aae the credit
OUTSTANDING VALUES
m anner to aive dollars legitiBaauUful home in Mayfeir araa
raetely on our GIGANTIC Re.
located on 3 lota, 1 badroomi,
mnvaf SALE.
two tiled bathi, Florida room,
ROBINSON MUSIC CO.
garage. 130,000 00.
220 N. Oranie Ave. Orlande, Fla.
Naw homa, furnished. Block eon(traction, 3 bedrooms, tour lota.
FIT FOR A QUEENU,300 00. Older home, dole in, Foami Rubber Mattresses, lunar
2 bedrooms, W,000.00.
attm its. Couches,
Couch*
S p r if nn gf M attreim.
Terms may ba arranged on any
Baby Beds, Renovating, Urholof theaa homei.
aterin* and Slip Cover work.
. 3. W. HALL, REALTOR
NIX
BEDDING MFG. COFlorida Stain Elank Building
P!
Phone ITS 1311 Sanford Ave.
‘ Call Hall"

J U S T

4

C O M B IN G

DAILY C R O S S W O R D

&gt;

A CRO SS

H A tR ! - &lt;

1. A six#
of type

M A S A lV

G O T A W OUND TO
O U T

A Krtei

^

attendant*
11. Mistake
rs.C ily tF r.)
13 ro ste r
41 Famous
German
rtvar
13 Not# of ’
th« scale
16 She#
17. Hebrew
letter
J 1 Note tn
th# scale
19 Th.is «-*i a
reigning
Roust m
PriU in
21 Revelrl#*
23 Malt kiln
27. Folds :n
thread
26 A ball
It&gt; Conclude#
30 Firrarm
31. L#sv«mng
agant
33 Sen god
3 t Man s nams
37 Tre#
3S t.i #r
near to
39 £:-.ov#
41 Melody
43 Annoy
44 Colorless,
odorless,
gliCOUS
dem ent
43 Summed up

"m '

S N A R L S T H IS S P fP /A J o !

\v

QUICK CASH tar furniture, boat*,

WZLAXA AFAMTWtam: IMS
grtvato bath*. U* W. U rn 8t

OWNER WANTS ACTION! motor*. Buy on* placa or compitta home. Thousand* of art!Hai two Houtat, naedi only one,
the
offers this beautiful 2 bedroom rlea for tala at ___
Home, Kitchen equipped, Hard­ Sapor Trading Pott__ 17-32
wood floors, Tile bath, Nica 1 Mile " •* Pkona 2212-R
landscaping. for tl.000 Down.
Balance leas than rant on a to­ THE CURIOSITY SHOP
tal of 18,713 ooo. Thii homa la
Lota of Plant*
nicely located.
BARGAINS- Begonia, Bougain­

Seminole Realty
Roll*way a a i Baby
Weak er moatR-Tal. 1UA W. DIETRICHS
T. W. HERO
111 W «l I M I Ml Park Ave. Phoaa IT sr 1U
'Uvaloa Apts.
■a Fart

FURNUBED
Av*.
Furnished

Kttraaetta apt*. Air
stumberlaod Court.
South City limits Highway 17-82.

2 bedroom bouae. 4H per cent
mnrtfMc. 140 monthly. 1803
Summerlin.

villea and other*—10c. 23c. hoc
and ILOO, also unfinished chest
of draw a rt. Magnolia— $18.83
Old drop-leaf tab!*—$ IM , Used
chest*—410.00 up, New platform
rockers, plastic—424.83. Used—
410.00, taxing orders for Lawn
Kurnilurr, rnalra—42.85. Swing*
49.83 delivered. 17-92 South.

3 BEDROOM HOME
Pc. Bedroom suite, 1 pr. twin
1,300.00 — U,000.00 Equity. Will g beds,
1 singla twin bed, 3 blonde
accept Auto for part of Equity.
chests. I davenport and »UoPhone J0T3-M.

DREAMWOLD
3 BEDROOM Home for sradoua
living. on 3 beautifully land­
scapes’ lota. Livinf room with
H X E Seminal* Raalty for Dealr.
haatalator fireplace, Electric
* awa Horata and Apia. Phoaa IT
kitchen with ventilating fan.
Jalouiled brreaeway. enclosed
FURNISHED Apt. Fhona 4Q-W
G a r a g e . Excellent buy at

•jsassESSL&amp;iMSi1""

» sa

B A C K -I^ O A D F O L K S /
^WATCH .Y O U * S E L V=f P A W /

cover, 1 pr. tablr lamps, 9 x 12
griy wool hroadloom rug and
pad, solid cherry antique din­
ing room table. 3 antique din­
ing ehaira, pin-up lamps. Phone
14I0-W.

STA N U S*«^&lt;
fTFR

owtr Mower, 13 young laying
hem, 1140 Studebaker Cham*
‘
Reaaanahlc. Phone 430-R.
u tia n

WAMTMP

THREE ApartmenU. Furnished,
cloia in. PhoM 34tAJ.
UnfuraUhad I, BAdroom Housa—
Kitehan «uipped; Larfa fen. ctd la yard. Prefer couple
i with children. 3311 Park Ave.
Phone 30*3.
FURNISHED Cottar*- One Bedrooi Extra alee. Alt Elm Ave.
0 ? Roams and Bath. 113 Elm.
Phene
TWO HOUSES. — One NEW Room, 3 Bedroom unfurnished.
One S Room, x Bedroom furniahed. Phone 3AAA.
COOL, Roomy 3 bedroom furnish
ed Apartment with aereenad
porch. 113.monthly. 1703tt Msgnolia Ave. Ph.ltT3.
CLEAN furalahed Apt. One
.a parson. MOO. All Park
Park ave.
t BEDROOM furalahed Carafe
Apartment 33M MeUonville.
GARAGE APT. FuraJshad, hot
and cold water. Adulta. lioa
French Ave.
BEAUTIFUL 3 Bedroom himithed Apt. Call ASS-M.
UNFURN1IHED 3 B e d ro o m
House. u a t E. Nth Street
(wyanewood)
fFurniahed 3 bedroom firafe
ant. Paola, V. Hinaon. Phone
1S51-J-3.
MODERN A Boom Furalahed
Hoeae. Weit 30th St. Inquire
303 Holly Ave. Phone UOtW.
FURNISHED One Get room Garate Apartment. 3314 Sanford
Ave. J, N. Anuello, Phene
1474

50th Anniversary
SP EC IA LS
Reg. IS.83 14x34 or 14x34
Bevel Plate Giaia
Mirrors ............
Reg. in IS Douwe Door

10.50

Metal utility Cabinet 13.30
Reg. 24.83 54" Metal

-A

Far Better Flu mum*
See or Call

Wal* Cablnat ........... 14.30

85

ftlffiS? HSSS~ “

Swivel Chalra

......... 30.10

Reg. 80,30 Contour Chairs
• with Nylon Cover and
Foam Lata* Filling .. 08.30

Sanford 1221.
DOGS NEED A QUALITY FEED.
Help keep your dogs in ton
condition with PURINA DOG
It's So
CHOW A tasty food dogs go for.
To PlacA A
Como in today.
Juat Call 1821
Simp*on Form Supply
th* Want Ad
111 W 2nd SL
Phone Ittt

FOR SALE — Boxers. A.K.C. and
pedigree,^reasonable. 3131 Elm.

EETFWANtEB

- l»

WANTED — First daai Truck
4 Tractor machanlc. Good pro­
position for right man. See Mr.
e . m at.
phoM i n
, cox, Seminole Truck 4 Tractor
1
Co., 1111 French Ave.
VRNRT1AN BU ND S
(Nationally Adv. BnUa-Hend) AGENTS W
'ED? To tall or
MaaMaetnd h h r t r i
dlnarjjr Ufa Iniuranca on a
moninly oir quarterly
rly pramium
premium

Mather o f Sanford

m vanwT**"

01

tu
USED TRACTORS
I t t t Tractor On
n-as Ann*
Pn
RED-l-MDC OONXRETB
m

mS

H H

E C ^ O lS ^ S s D dIS j o CO.

Corner and 4 MaganUa Ph. 1223
_ _ ‘.M gr.
• til I p, m.

W «M T*

fd 30-49 with thorough know­
ledge and experldoen In recruit­
ing. training and managing
women in direct telling work.
83,MO,-44.000 yearly income p»
.N*Uon|l organisation
wtln modern merchandise me­
thod*. Car essential. Wire eolliving name, address,

phaee number to T. N. B onn.

R R W E e f lB F B :
{ . • X a t t .- T S 1 “ w

M . C M n U r * . Ok
M V M II* It

^ A N T A D
RATES

BF.Airrr PABLOM

-U

F or LovcOer H air

GET PROFESSIONAL CABE1

4 A i.^ t
'i f

Eva-Baaa Baauty Shop
PkoM $42

f-L[?G

Modena Air-Conditioned Salon
Specialist in Personality shaping.
Styling and Waving Cosmetics
for your akin care. Gyro-Later
It w S nay TOD to aa* US before
method of reducing.
buy, Opaa Evcakgs and

HARRIETTS
BEAUTY' NOOK
Harriett Ruth. Dawn
Open 5:30 a. m. alio W4d. p SB.

CARS
TR
_ _ _ _IT
_ SOLD
,
TRADED
Keaj’a Uaea C an
Rey Raai’a
Sealard Av*l 4 n th SL

tt-

equip- FOR SALE —Model "A"
Very Cheap. * n Rnaalia

Ford.

A 4-tina ad, aueb as the aa* above
ia only Me per day oa ear tow 3
day eaned rate economy plan. 4 V
p r day lor 1 days and 64c fur
Buy. SaD, Rent Hire with want
ads, the busiest salesman la
town. Put one to work far you
Phoae 1UL We will be gUd to
charge 1L

: sa ssa rsL *.
JU S.

urn runaaa n m iu s

I

N et d

L.

L u m b e r 1

a
“ O f co u rse, t h a t

L.

to

w lf# h a s b * en a fte r m e

h is wtU t e l
A Rttl* epee* Uke ttbl
e b e fo re __ ort
year message
'em t o
than lB-SOO res
aadera. Tali
1
day! Piwae 1HL
The Wtat Ad Department ts
•pan from S:89 a. m.
■ . until 84:19 p
m. each business day except Bat
ardsy afternoon. Deadline for
week-day insertinns la &gt;:oo p. m
the day preeeding publication,
Any aa* coming
f l In
, l*ter thnan
1:00 (. m. wtU
will be puhli
Too Late To Ciaasify.

BARGAIN!

IIU—Plane Tackaldan
UAL Reel* 1. Buford
n an o — Small Upright,
and condition like naw.
8144.09. Finn* 1745-R,

have a small bnart— ta a
.part of town and a n

Telophase 111 after A V. M.
far e anoint meat 4* aee thle

M

p r o m is in g

j g

a

s

a

.

to

m ake

I

DO

**•••*••
»/&lt;•*•*•*•*

a a n a T ^ t e :*

tllV .M R .

Ph. U

lalion
38. Endowed
with
soma
rift
40 Cmn
iG r.l
41. Scorch#*
42. A kind of
lyrte
poem

16

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Ml

14-

o

17
i
2.0

i32

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i
f .
3* 3b 3b %

■30
33

31

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40

39
43

i4A

i

1*4
UUUUll UL351LHJ
uuL K diJ a n g a i i
P in a a uonrai-JH

13 North
Ameri­
can
scoter
18 Forti­
fied
era-

DOWN
1. Tropical
fruit
2. Foreign
3. Support
4 Hrwmgtool
ft Mix
6 Jumbling
7 Corroded

mi

-4

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l ‘t
/ / / S3
Xv

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I f f i J i M

t o i

32. E at away IJ
33. Blorv
34 Headland
33. Very targe

tre# (PhtL) v

4ft. o p e n rpocL)
W .W h#l?(
. tslang* •

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&gt; 7

s

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Is

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in in

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11 t^ Lwvto ol lUtf«

II "n
II in

11 l l

5» rrr^ frtr Trtmorrriw
V i 8 * i r i D l|* U

A r m ix n o i
.Vain IlMlIirr
II nn 14• L f**ir
I I 1-r L iR tl n f O ur*
Mo»'* )tatta»«
11 I) nn
IK Fj'Of!
1 in X,'Arrv Moor*
i r. f*bhnn»l &lt;*r*itroi1i
1 nn nrlghlrr Hay
I 1:&gt; jsf♦'r • t Ptflrm
1 lu M nvlii |l*tm **«
li n

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tw o

HILOCVCLKa
w n v iM V

irrt'.iiM in v
S en

Tha R hvlhm H our

* on Worll at Six

CVKXIXQ

» IS Twilight (onis

I'lfl *f"p o r i e flook
• r\ Miieiial I’ani
t «n

1 to

Driftln* t&gt;ii A Cloud
C ( e n Iit u Music
U u ita
M a b h t CdlMon
VS (to rr
h i* D in-tllm *
Al Horn* W ith Must*

7 In b i s I "S i" - S'nr

lilt
nn
1 in M ’S

a „n

» to
viin

J

S:«4

brlahlsr P s r
S I S Xscrst Storm
I in O n T o u r Account
S nn TB A
4.11 fisrrjr Moor*
4:*a UfSn U a uss

l« in
in si V»»i
II «n Lav man's Call T e r r a i a r

ii-osio sis* otr

tv

taasu n aia
e l a n 'O n
T r e a r a m Itaauma
aw s-w aath ar

S

acabiau lOLsau'i
n arau unuH U B

%I t
%
%J630

M(HIM Mi

fc* U e rp iif Shaw
s a t r a t tor a

11

%
%

IX

bin H ilt 413 :-3U;iU

23 Agive
fibers
31 Fished *9th
a spoon bait
23. Escape |
tslangl
26 Terror
38 . Fodder
31. Work

13 A fmtiflrd
place

i

10U M7JU J1I4C

□11 U7JUULI

port
U L fSao
t France OHUtin
UHULaa 0(41400
2ft Noth­
ing
6t&gt;*r4ir‘i 4 u « r '

•« Breathe

ttV ^ r - g y a r ta
a ta r f ij i u T k aatrs

sat

I44

4i

i

ra s a s u •
sanstUAY
a rTKBMnet.x
A l v s n t g r s with L'nrls W s l t
Clamor Of th s J u n f I s
N s w s - W s s lh s r - B p ls
Jo h n Daly S a n a
Draw Pearson
Musical Varieties
Duval jhaer
A v a r irath ar*
V olta ♦f r i r a a t o a a
T hose W hit in* d Iris
Albsrt
x i h a l 4_ ______
Iiamo# B u n c o s T h a a lr a
Fore T h isiro
J u s tie*

piKco.

&gt;
3ft

4b

45

I 'a ll s r n - n
T.nn S l s r p i n r fhn*&gt;S.nn Shopper* U uU s
t i i S Ns* s
» in A r t h u r Q niifrsr
n
in f - n k s It Rich
I tit*
V a lis a t L|4y
1.11 Lovt Of Lirs
11 m ftssrrh for T r o w
liras n u i e i n g I J s h t
11.04 Kilchsri Rhnw
srTK N V O O S
11 m Wslc. T ver r
1 nn
hfb Q l,s* ls

II*
1 &gt;$
»/*
151

23 24 2*

i2ft

27

WMUK TV C H 4 S 8 C L 4
tao K o ar
xrT C R srona
s #4 Open Ilnurs
S JO 8 ii perms n
a #&lt;* N - « l , W i h - r , fcpts
r HS TV N s « •
» c- J u l i u s l .s lt n i s
T #n b u r n s 4 Allan
1 p Ynur TV T t e a t r s
1 SO T r * s s m -niiinr &lt;lirls
t t'l E the l Ai Alb-rl *
» on ftummsr T h r i l l lniftO I - d P s rh sm
i n n .1st r - n n n n i M r l
tn &gt;n N i m r • Tn* Ssni*
tlirn N* u s A: H s s l l i s ,
11:1S l.u I ■ h n w
Hits * i | n Oft
T t'E ID S T

a 11 l e i *

1I

&gt; ?

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29

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9

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TELEVISION

* tiio

OM W a U U S L

% 12.

i
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9 Scorch

37. CnneUI-

lu m b e r ."

b SU P P LY YA RD

'

I rm

th e

H IL L LUM BER

IS

alically
iT“
37 Maat
28. Bog
ib
IT
29. Grave
30. Young eagle
i*
34. Beholdf
w .
33. E xtra­
JJ l-l lb
ordinary
person
1/
u la n g i

&gt;8 t o d a y — g v * » »

n eed

13

11. Declared
definitely

y o u n g ste r a d esk . M ayb e I
b e tte r cgU

S

it

IT. Malic#
19 A sinflje
person
or thing
2t Torrid
22 Titlt
of r«spect
23 Litlln
island

U t c h e a T h e n to o , I 'v e b e e n

^

4

3

Z

43. Domestic
pets
44. In this
place

p u t u p a n o t h e r a h e l f In t h e

t i y

flour t i n ! )
33. A lean-to ,

intoxicated
i

- '-to ba"
42. Som#
44. Close to

34. Whcsten

ACROSS
1 Festive
S Cicatrix
9 Common
hour#
moequitn
1ft Carries
12 British
Field
Marshal
UDI3-1916)
13. B rit
14 Hail!
13 Or# truck
1 Brit. I

aystem-

*

Thin home hen Oak Floors.
Ceramic Til* Bath, Dialog
A rea, Large Living Room
and Kitchen Equipped with
G. E . Appliance*.

fa n e e

n eed * m e n d in g . . . a n d m y

jo

3 Bedroom Horn* In Wya*
aewood. 2 Yearn Old.

s - M - u w .u r e w ,

nmmal
in s=
ii
Mlghlly

26 Arranged

ae longer aae. Placa year ad to
day. Phoae UHL

One bear * W uB end

___ *6. h o K g E T

'Do

GET exrra c a s h to r articles

LA U N D ^A ER w S^S

• %L*"r* •

OVMS

23 A
6, Gr»#k .
datty
Thtlosorbvr 2( Insect
7. River tFr.)
23. Arach­
S Delected
nid
ft River (Ger )
with
i-»~
10 App#xr
a
T ib triiy i 4 s i* u
14 Def#cUv»
long,
bomb*
narrow tail 36. Biblcal
nam#
16 Long,
26 Wcfclikc
3S. Impel
tapering
mtmbrano
40 Em*
2$ Plates
rods, used
tn billiards
ploy
3ft Gone by,
41. Part
15 Burrow*
in tun#
* of *
tng
32 Relieved

16 Father

aTmSZimSS,

M-

1843 MOBILE Crulaar., 3A f t . 2
Bedroomi. See Mr«. Sea boll,
Park Ave. Trailer Court.

m

Think* *wr doMlfted s are

For oelr 83.99 the above 5-llne ad
ia 00 tea Job (or you or 3 full
day*. Only 41.23 keeps it working
for you for 3 days. 1 day la only
10c.
Tb# above fUne ad ean be ran
5 full d a n tor only 82.40, 8 dart
Fla. Pkaoa 4141 m
tor only b-80 end one day for T2e
194J-W after A p.m.
Advertisers are requested to no­
tify the Want-Ad Department im­
mediately of any errors In thalr
1 Sanford Herald will be
tor only oaa incorrect
B C R n tu a, m ¥ ognMIa. Fk! iaoerti

•

FOE SALE — Complete

C O gC U TB
ady ktlxMl Concrele. Caaerat*

n?S«-i f S 3f

5 liorau hEA BEE ............. 61.30

A bertfew dtaq (o«l

■AMPLE S IT U AD

MWH SCHOOL BOY with Power
M o w wanu mowlag. Mona

W, g .
na
113 N. Part Ave
LOWBM B.&lt;

3 fi Horse SCOTT-ATWATEU. 6* 50

PoUcybolder*

Native and F ard fi Woods-

0*u

131.M

an

DAILY C R O S S W O R D

BOATS.

Nice egg heater

in

(SiTn t

1. Money
1Rem.)
2. Fi«U of
pUy
i Football)

naerilirc. Located

I 'j Horse SEA KING,

Bendix and Croiley Annhanre*
4711, Orlando, Fla.
I I I M ig m lli Ava. P h. 113
CAPABLE WOMAN - ExperienW W » * h tl
—I IB
in vhild cere, one child,
l i g h t housework. Reference*
raqulred. Fhona XJ8A-J afUr 5
p m
Betea to

P &amp; tS a ^ n n !

t s M iW n jr u s it t
•1 v a a m m panbunq

$2,900.

20 Bake

.9 Jason'sshlp
4 Unit of
u-esght
5 Erbium

&lt;6 Tiny (dial.)
DOWN

w ar

l’a-k Ave. Trailer Court. Terma.
s ^ a e s n ta a a iM to H H H H a

Flan. Large cemmlaalns paid,
nn rate inertas* for pilot* or
carter
career milr
military men. An opportunity for retired military officeri
be.... active and build RANDALL ELECTRIC CO.
cari to become
an additional
me. U Inter- Electrical Contracting ami Krn.ur* 28—BLECTKtCAL
aited, writ* „
NDALL INTV SERVICE CENTER
SURANCE AG___ , F. O. Box

WILL YOU ACCEPT 840. TRADE
IN ALLOWANCE FOR YOUR
DISTRICT MANAGER
OLD MATTRESS A SPRINGS? Woman,
aggreilve, well-groomagardleaa of puko or condL

H T t A ftV Sffi

eil.

7 ', Horae FIRESTONE
129 M
Hi Horae SrOTT.ATWATER, *9*3
t2 Horae EI.TO .................. 69.30
FLOOR leading and finishing 25 Hor*c JOHNSON
Cleaning, waxing. Serving Semi(Good Shine) ............. 249 00
note County nine* IMS. !L M
Complete Stock of Evinruda
Gleason. Lake Mary.
flow will you twin?
How will you Trader
LAWNMOWERS n &amp; a r p e n a d
Your old Motor for a
Bicycle 4 General Repair
Better grade — KVINRUDE!
S lanlty’a Blk* Shop
ROBSON Sporting Goods
419 E. 4th *L T ei 2434
Fvlarude Sale* 4 Service
ENVELOPES. ItUerheeds. atate- 384 E. lsl S t
menu, invoice*, band biUi. and
p r o g r a m * , etc. Progressive FOR SALE - 11' fishing b o at460.00. 14' Runabout. 23 H. John­
Printing Co., Fhooe 40* — 403
son. Top and Trailer. I l l EaWaitt ilih St.
ramhla Dr.
FLOOR BANDING a Finishing; a a . n » v n , r
, n
w
Oak floor* furalahed. laid 4 fin­
ished. In business dace ibza.
E. F. Stevens: Route 8, Boa 227: Buy your Furnlturw at Barry's
Warehouse Fum.. Co., at 801 W.
Call T1A-R-4 Before 7 a. m or
l«t. St. AU nationally adv. furafter * p. a .
nbure at wareh^u t ^ g ^ M

IIA HELP WANTED (Female) ISA

Guaranteed 10 Year*.
Rojral Comfort Mattrew 4 Bex
ring IU8.00 -L aia Trade —
l.oo. Guarantned in Yean,
hpadal Maltreat * Bex Spring
nag. 138.00 Laaa Trade —438.00

btnpicatt, i«*. hcblo eight*

KOR SALE - 36' Stewart Trailer.
2 bedroomi, bath, kitchen, dining
room, doubla walled aluminum
cla'xvl jalouiicd Cabana. 4 x 20
with 4 V Porch, Dolly and Fcnr-

la -

Enay
Want Ad
and aak (or
dapartment
Sanford Herald

ARC Registered Boxer puppies.
1 Monini old. Outstanding pedi­
gree. Phone 2323-JO.

*a*e m m u

__

17— AUTOMOBILES - TRAILERS

UgbMt CASH. TRADE-IN price*
W. J. KING
I Room Apt. 100 Avaeado.
paid for tsood furniture Call AM,
P ert
room bungalow romplataly re­ wllsea-Maier Furniture Go. 3U
FURNISHED 3 Badroom House 3 decorated.
Cloie In. Reasonable. l i tta **•
Dragline service, Lakrfronts 4
Clata la. 811 Wait lit S t Phone
Phone 300A-W.
a i r king. Estimates given. Phone
7—
Alt.
Geneve 2464, Orlando 34304.

&gt; Room Apartment. Completely
furaiahad. 313 Palmetto Ave.

wa

Page 7

_

Ttr.0M .sr
HOR8ISO

a nn f la n On

l.»!

U i - m i n i Call T * P r a r e r
Dawn Iireekera
News
a.ti h i i u r i Ja rab c ra *
s to K a o s
7:00 Sevan O'clock Club
f i ll haws
S n« ( p o r t a At A Qlaac*
o t k a r 'a C&amp;alca
' • r e l a x Davatieaa
lin e Me loit I a*
14 At Nina
0:11 Stuelo F # r Itodlaa
t i l e If t a n Tima
0 41 F o r L a l i a a Only
10i0&lt;i 1400 Club
to I* News
tlf* Cluu^
B apast Barfarm aas*
W orld A t h ' a a o
S:*S

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TYvO T O

ACCOM PANY
M * TO TH E
hospital?

,

I ea bn to
Hrr the
O i Rt ON
E IT H E R
s io e WHEN
&gt;OU S L ID E .
V O U LL
BC A &amp; l e
TO H IT

.

THt*AO

rto w V O SE
A N O LES
AND AVOID
m any ,

TAOS/

m

H EY. Z /A . WAIT ]
P E R U S -W E R E 7 /
TO’ M O R A L , &lt; ' '

JCN THE SECOND
J
FLOOR/TW ERCSA - 4
WAITING ROOM .

&amp;zalch K

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n o t iF 'E D

Ht s a
CATCHER'S
D U TY TO
STU D Y AKD
KNOW
THE STPONO
AND W EAK
P.'MNTS OK
OPPOSING

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SATTER3-

AN O CAU

FOR

P i TC h C
TO THE
W HAT W ETS V C U S W N '
T H A N K S T O P L E T T IN G

CM. BOV. MY FA V O R ITE l
P L U M P T E N D E R -c-----'
STEW ED C H C KEN '
WITH CU M pLIN G S g w .

••and im
STARVED r ~ . J4.&lt;5

ME COOK MV C H IC K EN
ON M XIR STO VE W H ILE
----— -T MINE’S BEING
P E PAIRED,
BLO N D E

.Y E ^ D E A R -1 W AS
O UT SHOPPING THIS
*'~T A FTE R N O O N

LEFTO V ER

COLDCUTS/

J IT LO O KED L IK E C H IC KEN 1
AND IT SM ELLED L IK E CH ICKEN
1 HOW COULD IT COM E O U T r
V----- C O LD -C U T S ? *~A

SHE WANTS
TO KNOW JTi
w hv
rn

M U S fN 0 T
i H A S M A 06 NEW P U L E S
ABOUT PER SO N A L C A L L S
N - t- i DURING B U S IN E S S

SOMtONO

I TEA C H

WOULD OCM E/ TWOUP WITH
BOLD*

SOME

\ V BRJCX!

DIFFERENT 1 V

WAVTO /

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fo r o n ly
BUYING

We Earned th e

FORD

W .U m l n - n - w ^
You can buy t Buiclc Spbcul like the one
shown here if you can buy any new car.
Ybu can boss this b if and brawny Buiek
Sedan lor just about the price of the m ailer
c a n —even ior Uu than soma models of the
three moat widely known smaller ears. Tha

A CA R?

-s&amp;s

$274830

STRICKLANDMORRISON, INC.
a it e . u t a t

n .to o

tha hijh.pow ared C intuay , tha extrar o o m y S u p a b , o r th e o u a to m -b a ilt

�Inside
r« f « 4

Editorial
M ttj
Sports
— TV

Page S
Pat* •
Pat* I

3 Jp? ^ a n to ft iB tta lb
•

Established 1908

VOLUME XLV1

AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPATEB
Pag* 2
Tuw. July 12. 1955
SANFORD. FLORIDA.

MIAMI (IP)— The Miami Herald said today that Robert
Brown, 31, held for fnveatigitior. in the Judith Ann Roberts
^kldnap-slaying a year ago, was given injections of “truth
* » em m " during psychiatric examination.
The Herald aaid the injections were given Saturday

Strolling
Ip Sanford

Psrtlv rtmsdv *H»t etH Wedn**day with testtrrsd evening thun­
dershowers.

*

Associated Prnw leased Wire

No. 2.1n.

Sanford Memoria
Action Postponed
By Commissioners

Brown Is Held
•In Questioning
I Of Miami Case
— ----------------------------------------- and that of Jackson Memorial Hoipi l nI confirmed that fact.
Police have not announced re­
mits of extensive psychiatric tests
cn Brown since he was picked up
at Judith Ann’s crave in Mount
Kcbo Cemetery Friday.
Brown denied the crime and said
ho never harmed or bothered any­
body.
The ptisoner was placed In a
psychopathic ward yesterday for
Director! of the Chamber of Chester Eldredge and Detective*
Commerce wil hold their regular Charles Sapp and Paul Nichols.
monthly meeting a t 8 o'clock to­ While being taken from hla cell
night at City Hall. Subject* for In the Dade County Jail to he
discussion Include plani for wel­ fingerprinted. Brown faced a
coming new Naval officials to swarm of police and newsmen. He
Sanford.
ftnehed at flashtight bulbs.
• » * •
"Why do I have to suffer like
The Sanford Theatre Guild will Lhi.V the unshaven, barefooted
hold tha second In a aeries of man »obbed. *T’ve suffered since
workshop meetings tonight In the I was 4 months old. They all think
City Hall auditorium. Tha meet­ l’nt guilty but I’m not.”
ing will begin at 8 o'clock. Hill Judith Ann was taken from the
Vegan, assistant manager of the home of her grandfather, Harry
Vagabond Players, Flat Hock, N. Rosenberg, In the Rosenberg, auto­
C„ will bo tha guest apaakar.
mobile and her body was found
several hours later. The car waa
A young man and a lady (wc found abandoned near' the spot
don't know where the hails from) where tha body was found.

Weather

Collins Is Next
To Take Action
In Controversy

Structure
Beginning
Discussed

Evidence Is Heard
For Mother Of 3
In Federal Case

THREE FORMER American soldiers, who chance U their minds about living h Red China, smile
happily after reaching Hong Kong. The cx-GIs. wh&gt;&gt; refus.-d repatriation after the Korean war, were
released at the holder of the British crown colonv bv Chinese Communist officials and immediately
turned over to tha U. S. Coneulate who had arranged for their quirk return home on the “President
Cleveland." They are (I. to r .t: William A. Cowart, of Dalton, Ga.j Otho ti. Bell, Olvmnia. Wash,
and lev.ic W. Griegs, Jacksonville. Tex. During an interview they denounced C. mmuntam as a Tone
that kills men's souls, and said they were rcadv to face any charges against them. Mntemalinnslt

TALLAHASSEE (4*-Th. next
BRATTLERORO Vt .f— \ iurr
mme In the lung and biller battle
Excursion Boat
of
seven women sod five men
o\cr reapportioning the Senate was
hegan hearing ettdc.tce in
up to Gov. Colllrts today,
Franchise Okayed today
the fertrral ca-e n».un-t
L:iA bill he criticised as unfair
City Conimtitelmi, in n busy elite Miller. It. mother nf thrm
cleared the Legislature yesterday
with 17 In 9 Senate passage, and session l«&gt;l night. postpum'tl who Is rhar-rtl with xdvLin; nmn
a resolution was bring prepared action on the proposed Con- young men to evade military d rift
ratling (or Immediate adjourn­ oral Sanford Memorial Lib­ rails.
Mrs Miller'* hmband
ment.
rary mid Museum and voted Last Mar
D Itelhcl civil In d e r,
Collins declined In enmmrnl on to a train lak e up at (ho P o x t it Manuel,
held off authorities with , riilo for
the possibility he will auk the Flor­ meeting a p in for an im­ ti hours when they Inod to Inks
id Supreme I'ourl for an advisory mediate start on part of Die his wile away for commitment to
opinion as lo his authority to veto structure.
a menial inMilutlon lie is under
the measure.
Tabling
of Hie appeal liifcb- indiclmrut (or resisting a I S.
"I
am
sick
abniil
II,"
he
said.
.
CLEVELAND (/TI— A lhm*-jml(ro Appellate Court foma rslml.
“ They have failed In perform a liylitcd n meeting which fitw
The Miller* surronderol only
day refused Dr. Suniucl H. Sheppard, ill, n new trial on the duly
wliirh the Constitution makes lhe Commission appro* e nn ex­ after lesr gas was Itred into Iheir
LAKE BUTLER cri-Rsymoml basis of error In the 10-week trial which ended Dec. 21 so clear. I will announce my next cursion boat franchise, hire llo- home. Mrs. Miller vu* committed
■nd Ruth Staffs were sentenced with his conviction for second degree murder in tha bludgeon move by the time the messenger le rt Kelly as a sewer foreman, lo SI. Elltnbclh's lbispil.il, Wash­
8a"I a - ' ^ lo assume lhe rnsl nf
get* down here with Lhe bill."
yesterday to JO years for smuggl­ death of his wife, Marilyn, July 4, 1954.
B.C. She was relented ns
‘‘Tho defendant in this case hns been afforded a fair Collins has said previously he IcSnner^^f sewer line* from Ihr ington,
ing a pistol to desperado George
City limits lo tho Smith Pitiecrest mentally competent lad month.
would
veto
a
bill
whirl)
didn't
do
A.
Heroux
In
state
prison.
Heroux’
Vial
by
an
Impartial
jury,
and
In
happened to be walking from opSir*. Milter is accused In i t
a real Job of reapportioning the Height* subdivision. The rily will counts of knowingly eoun'cling
shot ind killed Asst. Supt. J. C. this rourt'a opinion substantial jusaposite direction! In the park, each
pay
for
the
lines
with
revenue
Senate.
.Some
leglslatort,
however,
Godwin
and
wounded
two
guards
tire hns been done," the Appellate
with a canine on the leash As C IO , A F L Unions
nine young men to refri-e servicn
hava contended reapportionment tliry bring in.
Court ruling said.
April 4.
the dogs met, they rubbed noses
in lhe armed forces and to lura
was a legislative matter under the
Tho couple—she's Heroux* for­
The subdivision, whrie 123 over to her, in violation of law,
The action ruled groundless a
•tfactlonally. "Ah, me," said the Join Up Forces
Constitution
and
lha
governor
mer
wife—pleaded
for
leniency
and
home*
will
be
eirrted,
i*
being
contention
by
tho
osteopath's
at­
young man, "that la what I'd like
their registration certificate* or
couldn't lawfully veto a reippor- •lexeloped by Brailey Odhant, who draft cards.
to do." "Wall, go ahead" laid At Winning Boost showed surprise when Circuit Judge torneys there were 37 astlgmante
Honmenl
bill.
George T. Patten pronounced sen­ of error In hla long trial.
said h# hat let a |1 16,000 con­
tfco girl, ll'a your dog."
riTTSHUnGH uw—nival CIO and tence. They said they had heen
The thrre judgra, I&gt;-r E. Skerl,
trail for sir rets, sewer* and wa­
AFL unions hive teamed up in model prisoners, had testified Julius M. Kovarhy and Joy Seth
there.
Chubby Donna Sue terThaline*Commission
precedent-setting joint bargaining against Heroux, and already had Hurd, Indicated they would not
awarded an
strategy aimed at winning a pay spent 3 limonths in Jill.
rulo until nest werk on a aecond
exclusive franchise to operate an
boost for some 25,000 employes of
WASHINGTON tm -Key lTnuse Alongside Ditch;
Judge Patten ordcre dthat the motion by Sheppard for a new
excursion boat from lhe ritjr pier
•I
member* said today they expert
the Alumlum Co. of America.
sentenre begin upon their delivery trial.
In W. It. Kemp ami Kirhard Bo.
Killer
Still
Sought
The CIO United Steelworkers to state prison, in nsiford. Officers
The second motion is bused on the Elsenhower administration In
dero, Orlando and Winter Pink
scheduled Its first bargaining ses­ Immediately took them thrre.
SIIUJX CITY, Imva lib - A chub­ businessmen. Speaking on behalf
defense claims of “newly diwuw accept, as second choice, a prosion today.
_
Mrs. Staffs, 29.. testified al cred evidence" which centers on ■penal to raise gasoline and like by 2-year-old girl plucked from nf the promoter* w ai. Forrest
The AFL aluminum workers will Heroux* trial that he tried to get teaLlniony by Dr. I'aul L Kirk, taxei almost a billion dollars a her crib by an apparent aex de­ llrerkenrldg*. manager of the
start wage talks Thursday.
her to slip three .45 automatics to professor of criminalistic* at the year to help pay for a huge road- generate. way found raped and Chamber ef Conimarea.
The USW and tho aluminum him for a break and that she University of California, Berke­ building program.
alaln in a farm field yesterday,
lirrcketirnlge, who said Sodero
WASHINGTON 'P - T ’-w nixonworkers have been working out smuggled in a .25 Italian auto­ ley. Calif.
pnlirr said they were without Is now in New York looking over Vsles rnntrart was virtually a
A Housa Public Work* subcom­
WICHITA FALLS, Tex. tfl - Joint strategy for some time, matic as a sign of her "good
clues
tn
Hie
abduction-slaying
of
Should the Court of Appeal* mittee has proposed increases m
|x’*l* for sale, said the men plan dead letter Inday. Rut triumphant
Sheppard Air Force Base ordered spokesmen revealed yesterday.
faith." She said she was afraid hold against Sheppard on his se­ taxes on gas, diesel fuel, trucks curly haired Donna Sue Davis,
use a boat rannbl* of carrying loes in Congress indicated they
• • p.m. curfew for the 16,000 The move Is regarded as signlfi- Heroux' friends on the outsidu cond and final motion, ho would and tires as a means of financing described by neighbors as "the to
4U0 passengers. Convention crowds planned In keep the iv e a liv e —
airmen and officers at the bass can in labor circles. The CIO and might harm her if she didn’t help. he removed from Cuyahoga Coun­ President Eisenhower's proposed darling of the neighborhood."
would be brought by bus from into (he 1956 piViidenial
after gang fights and near-fights AFL are scheduled to vole on a
ty Jail to Ohio Penitentiary to be­ 33-billiun-dollar plan to modernite
Tho pa|*ma-rl.id daughter of Orlandn for m in io n s down the paign, it pnssihle.
Vbroha out during tho weekend be­ merger proposal al separate con­
gin serving a Ilf* term tn which tha nation's highways—particular­ Mr and Mrs. James Davit wav .St. Johns River.
President Euenhnwer ordered
tween civilian teen-agers and mili­ ventions in New York nest De­
he was sentenced. Since last July ly lha lntcratale network—over the lifted from hrr crib within min­ Kemp and Sndrrn rerenlly fi­ lhe conlraH canceled yevterday
tary man.
cember.
30 he ha* heen in the County Jell, next 12 ycari.
ute* after her mother had tucked gured in a proposal to build an after Mayor Frank Toiiey of Mem­
It wai not clear what the fight- David J . McDonald, president of
her tn for the night Sunday.
and the time served has not count­
open-air amusement renter on phis convinced him in , ronterenea
Committee
mambari
aaid
they
lag waa about.
the steelworkers, has been a strong
ed toward the life sentence.
About this lime neighbors re­ l.ake Monroe in the vicinity of the that the j-ity intend, lo build it*
understand
this
Is
the
administra­
Only ana casualty, hat resulted advocate of a CIO AFL merger.
ported seeing a ynimg man prowl­ liandlhrlt and the new hnat basin. own power plant.
tion’s position:
j^an airman waa (lathed and beatCoining out of that meelin;.
Tho President stlU prefer* hi* ing about the Davis' nimlrsl du­ This idea I* stiil being attldied.
mi at a city park a week ago.
plex home.
The
two
men
have
also
gone
Ally.
Gen. Brownell announce 1
original
proposal
to
finance
the
Air
Force
Academy
But tha Wichita Falls Record Confidence Is Put
LONDON (JB—Ruth Ellis wailed
The crumpled body, savagely into thtf harnesi hnrs# training lhe government "will immediately
program by creating a special
News said no single Incident set
calm and resigned In death row
beaten about the head, was found
off the tension, which began build- In Senate's Action
at Holloway Jail today, apparently Has Opened Doors corporation which would sell long­ alongside a ditch at the edge of business al Casselberry. They take »tep* In lerminato' t ha pri­
based tho Aialr* Driving Park vate power contract.
term bonds. These would not be
unconcerned
with
last-mmute
ef
. t e g up about 1* days ago.
WASHINGTON Wl - Rebuffed
But Ren. Kef silver (II i'-nnl,
subject to the national debt limit. a cornfield on the F.rnesl t)eh- U lt week for a 35-&gt;c*r period
9 Authorities slid they w en tipped despite a special appeal to the forts to save her from the gallows For First Class
lerking farm near South Sioux and aitnounred plans to operate who head, an antitrust tuhenmSuch
bonds
would
ba
repaid
by
DENVER lift — The U. S Air
The blonde, 28-year-aM divorcee
that both airmen and civilian teen­ House, administration l e a d e r s
Clly, Neh., Jusl across the Mis­ on a year-round basis.
nutlre which its, been invr, lig a t ­
agers began carrying weapons, in- day to restore deep cute in foreign Is scheduled lo be hinged tomor­ Force Academy opened its doors road lolls.
souri River from hera.
Kally, the aewer foreman, was ing negotiations w h ich led to tini
tn
the
first
clais
of
306
cadets
yes­
tid in g pistols, Sunday.
row
for
the
Easter
Sunday
slaying
aid appropriations.
formarly an inspector for Angus contract, announced the rano»llv.
CoL Melvin S. HoUldge, deputy
But their hopes were none too of a lover who had spurned her. terday amid salutes from roaring
whirh carried out lion "will hsve no effect on our
Jet
bomber*.
the
snap
of
martial
Baas commander, said tha latest bright. Some influential senators _ Opponents of lha death penalty
Estimates Reveal
Former Policeman Atn* Associate,,
hearings."
city saner project.
Incident occurred Sunday night be­ already have demanded additional were expected to raise the Issue music and insplrallonal word* of
"W* expect In get to the hoilntq
hind a baseball park and 90 air- cute In lha I3.8U.741,750 voted by In the House of Commons tonight Air Fnrca leader*.
Little Citrus Left
Ready
For
Safari
of Ihu entire m atter," ho said.
Secretary of the Air Fnrre H*&lt;Man were "apprehended."
the House yesterday to finance in hopes that a vote might be
LAKELAND Uri-Judging h r us- ST. PETERSBURG OB-lt's a Governor Slates
nld E. Talbott told the cadet* and age reports and the July estJmata long way from directing traffic In
Authorities say they discovered the aid program for the current obtained urging clemency.
3,000
Invited
guests
at
Lowry
Air
Only
a
direct
command
from
teat another gang fight was act bookkeeping year which ends next
of the U. 8. Department of Agri­ SI. Petersburg lo directing a lion Good Will Tour
A ter next Friday.
Queen Elisabeth II could halt the Base that "it la to the human ele­ culture, Florida has less than a hunting expedition In Africa but a
June 90.
TALLAHASSEE UP - Gov. Col­
The House acted 251-123 only a execution. The monarch tradi­ ment that the Air Force Acsdmy million boxas of oranges and lass former policeman is all set to make lin* and a group of leading busi­
If
Is
dedicated,
and
especially,
In
tionally
acts
In
such
cases
only
few hours after a White House
than half a million of grapefruit tho big Jump.
’
, nessmen arc scheduled lo Icavr
plea that tha cuts—totaling *627,- on the recommendation of the the leadership we must have If left from Lha 1954-59 crop.
lie Is Richard Rohrfaaugh, 28, a July 23 for a week's good will
*00,000 below, President Eisenhow­ home secretary—Gwilym Unyd- our counlry Is lo lurvive."*
The USDA now estimates the former Marina combat sergeanl. tour of the East
er's request* — would "serously Georgo—who yesterday rejected
orange crop at 88,600,000 boxes and Rohrbaugh read about a safari to
Members of lha party will "ex­
TAMPA (.ft —A m in psrntc-f
clemency appeals and petitions
hamper" the program.
grapefruit at 84,800,000 boxes. That Africa about a year ago and the press Florida's appreciation for Juno 30 will he returned lo Stnls
HOUSHOLDER OPENS
containing more than 29,000 signa­
la
a
cut
of
200
,OM
boxes
In
each
Idea
of
heading
on*
himself
kept
the
confidence
shown
by
Investor*
TWO-WEEK TERM
Prison at Raiford as n ir n tu lly (totures.
cropping up in hla thoughts. Finally in our atita'a future," Collins ranged and dangerous, authorities
w
County Judge Ernest lloushol- ease from tha June estimate.
'Very
High
Brass'
Through July * usage was re ­ he resigned from tha police force said.
dcr today opened e two-week term
HARRISBURG, Pa. WV-Mrt.
said today.
lie will he sccompinicd by | W B. Wilcox, county rsrute inof court. Approximately IT rases, ported at 87,563,000 boxes ef or­ July t tn go Inin it.
Catharine Rraitser headed for Is Not Convincing
anges
and
34.200,000
boxes
of
Board
Is
Prepared
In
the
venture
with
him
It
Rob
members
of
the
State
Developmost
of
them
Involving
traffic
York with her. Bible today,
p m i,or. said hr i, Willie R.
WASHINGTON l i t - Sen. Russell
and liquor violations, are sche­ grapefruit and several hundred Dillon, 30. a former military pilot men! Cnmmlsiloncr-ncwly crea­ Anderson, 30, convicted in j o t s nf
Wttitl keeping mom about her men (DCs) said today "the very high
thousand
boxas
hava
been
used
and
salesman.
They
hope
lo
enlist
To Help Growers
ted lo coordinate Florida's ef­
duled to be heard. No jury had
gy plana.
ha* not convinced him he
about 10 persons for the expedition forts h, promote llsrlf and at­ second degree murder in the •IcatH
since then.
LAKE ALFRED lit — The state been selected this morning.
' And big money U la too. The brass"
of Deputy Sheriff llaygood Elisey
wrong In opposing the Pent- plant board la ready to begin giv­
tract new industries—anil by rr- id Oiler Creek and sentenced lr»
ft-yoar-oid grandmother f r o m la
agon’s
compulsory
military
roprttrnlalivei
of
(he
State
Coun­
ing direct help to citrus growers
nearby Camp HU1, Pa., has won iegvi program.
life imprteunnu'nt.
cil ti»- Industry and Commerce.
fearful of tha disease called
I8S.M0 on a CBS television proAnderson was paroled to sn un­
"I haven’t heard anything here spreading decline.
Luncheon and dinners in Bo,, cle in Tampa but the uncle t.ild
yet
to
cause
me
to
change
my
I jTontgl
Tonight, she'll tall viewers mind," Russell told reporters after Charles Poucher, a special in­ Co. T, 194th Inf. Florida Na- u-iportlng units. The other tank nf. Regt. will mark (he rlos* of ton, Philadelphia and New York Wilcox that Anderson was mulita
will be attended by the group lo wurk and was sent to a hospi­
_ ______ j*U keep her $»00Q or the Senate Armed Services Com­ spector for the board, aaid appli­
a^i Infantry battalions wilt come anuther chapter in the glorious
tpr lor Tha 884,000 Question which
cations are now being accepted tlonal Guard, Sanford'* own i?iit mm Georgia unite, according to history of Florida's oldest military which ah a will appear on tele­ tal
mittee he heada bad wound up from growera who want their will leave for summor-field train­
vision programs
i l the m m a of tha
A doctor indicated Anderson is
Col, Albert Durrell, division ad­ rganitalion.
on a new reserve pro­ groves Inspected and treated.
ing exercises at Fort McClellan, ministrative assistant.
Tha Jeekpot question, as have hearings
"so we are vending him back in
gram
strongly
urged
by
President
It
was
In
1884
that
In
the
grow­
Growers
receiving
this
help
Ala-,
Aug,
19th
It
waa
annoured
&lt; • #11 other questions answered by
dangrroudy insane. Wilcox said,
of tha 48th will be ing state of Florida ao Infantry
must agree to the removal of all by Capt. Joseph D. Bryant, com­ theConversion
&lt;h« woman on the program, will Elasohower.
Raiford end will let them taka
Real
Estate
Dealer
fourth
such
change
tn
a
year
He
added
he
will
continue
to
Battalion
was
fuinu-d.
trees considered necessary by the manding officer of the loral unit. and brings to six the number of
M hind am tha Bible.
care of him from lliere"
push
hla
substitute
plan
to
offer
a
Tho men of this unit wars to
• Ht have always turned In it for
Inspecting crew in order lo slop Sanford’* unit along with other
Ander/nn apparently was alt
armored divisions.
take part in the Spanish-Amarican Journeys To Illinois right when hr wav examined by
guidance," Mrs. Krai tsar said. And *400 c u b bonus to any veteran the disease. Not only the diseased elements of ih t 48lh Inf. Division Guard
The
change-over
continuse
the
who
enlists
la
the
Army
or
Marina
TAMPA
M’l
H
.
B.
Van
Nesa,
War,
tho
1916
border
Incident,
and
tree but those adjacent In every will spend two weeks at the north
tba'll do the name tonight, tho Corps ready reserves.
prison physician, before leaving
direction, muit be removed. Tbeo Alabama military installation un­ program of reshuffling t h e as the redesignated 124th Inf. Re- Tampa real estate dealer aought on parol*, said Francis Bridges,
Mid, when aha must make tha big
Guard's
divisional
structure
to
•luting
an
Inveitigation
of
his
fi­
glV '»t, to fight in both world
treated
dteiaian. Sha aaid aha won’t make
dergoing tho annual ftald-lrainlng
nancial transaction*, is In Evans­ parole commission chairman.
Toucher said *1,700,000 in state teat, combined with tha other bring It In I'ne with modem war­ waTV
tent derision until sha steps out Sanford Included
fare's
requirements
for
speed
and
ton, III,
and
federal
funds
la
available
for
It wea In the Second World War
m tee
training received at the local mobility.
His attorney has advised auth­
armory and on weekends In the M*J. Gen. Joseph B. Fraser of hat the 124th diiUnguiabad Itself orities bar* that Van Neaa was Legal Battle Looms
.
In Appropriations the program.
fn
tho
battles
for
Now
Guinea,
field,
makes
the
National
Guard
WASHINGTON Ifv-Tbe Senate
called to Illinois by illness la bis
Hinesrllle, Ga., will continue ae
the nation's best trained mobilisa­ division commander and Brig. tho Southern Phtlipplnea and Min- family.
Over Judge's Order
Spores
has completed congressional action
danoa.
tion day force.
MIAMI Lit— A legal battle l-mmon a bill authorising *2,360,550,100 State Probation
Can. Maxwell C. Snyder of Jack;
William C. McLean Jr., assistant
Station
This will mark tha last year annvtlle will continue ax assistant Tha wummandlng officer of tho rounty solicitor who la heading an ed today over a circuit Judge's or­
military construction at U. S.
2&lt;th la Col. Robert B. Darkness, investigation Into cotnplainta from der that (he AFL Hotel Kmplojes
System Is Studied that Co. I will train a* a rifle division commander.
bases around the world.
iSSfriStteto Approval of tee measure, au­ TALLAHASSEE IB - A b Interim company In the 124th Inf. Tho Tha division headquarters will of L a k e C i t y , a National a score of Van Ness client*, soli Union refrain from referring tn a
Guardsman for 39 years, Com­ tha case is highly complex.
striks at tha San Marino Hotel in
I bat* at tea Ryukyu thorising tba hundreds of projects, committee of tha Georgia House of 124th, with a history of aver 70 remain la Macon, Ga.
h u t spared tha mighty eaate yesterday. U new goes to Representative* came h en today yuan will be disbanded following
Organisational/ studies are still manding tha third battalion com­
No criminal charge has bean pre­ any publications "cither in this
tea White Housa.
base an Okinawa.
to study Florida's statewide pro. the encampment and by Nov. 1 being mad* and It fs not known at posed of unite in Hanford, Or- ferred but several parsons hava Jurisdiction or elsewhere "
Judge William A Herin il|ne.1
will he converted to armoied this time what type armored unit lindo, Eustli. Daytona Beach, and filed civil aulla to recover down
Money te carry out tha project* batloa system.
will have te ba approved is an The group, headed by Bop- Jock units.
will ba located ta fan/ord. al­ DoLand ta Li. CoL Thomas K. oaymepts (hay said they mad* on tha order yesterday when he callO. Torptey at Union County, In pise* of tho 114th Inf. Ra- though ft is expected to either ha MaCUns Jr., of Winter Park.
ia
homes net built. Mora than 111,000 *4 an election of Sin Marino em­
plsmted caoJersflcei during the day gfmont In Florida will bo ona tank a modern tank company er an Future training sxoreltet for :■ involved In suite filed h en and ployes lo determine If tha union
Auxiliary air atetiea. Basted, With Gov. Catena sad with Urn battalion and two armored Infan­ m o red infantry company.
the motorised unit will he conduct- other complaints hava baan re fil­ represents a majority cl elifibla
1 j w j ln y aa.
ls lakeland.
od *8 Cam# B m t h Georgia.
te* bottoUaaa pub tha
ad A t
j.■•’i- :,1-; ,v r
. ' V - . ••
•
#

•

Couple Senienced Sheppard Is Denied
For Smuggling Gun First Trial Appeal
To George Heroux

Key House Groups
Expect Government
To Accept Proposal

9 P. M. Curfew
‘ Ordered For Men
At Sheppard Base

Confracf Virtually
Dead Lelfer Issue;
Spark Of Life Seen

Blonde Scheduled
To Hang Tomorrow

Wilcox To Return
To Raiford Prison

Woman Musi Make
$64,000 Decision

Co. I Leaving For Alabama Camp

iwo

-w. --

------ —

. Si . . * . .........

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air.Aiu.

THE SANFORD HERALD

T h n r s . .Ttilv 7. IflS S

w rrA m grr*

it ..

AMDAT THEPLATE*.

u s a Buvrr
s it u a t io n

A CATCH

[fiij7K3rrfiL7-i\

s*

3H0HI.D

CAUL FOR
D&lt;EST-HIOH

Pitch es .

THEY ARE
tou gh est

TO BUNT
AND
INC5CABE
T**E CHANCLf
O PA ,

%,S p ® 1

POP-UP/

*• T H IS GOPHER IS 1
RUINING T H E LAWN
1 I L L FLCO O HIM r
V — r O U T A— —&lt;

ID B E T T E R B E ,
* N IC E TO H I M - H E S TOO SM ART
TO HAVE FDR A N r

rf * H A -H A -H A -),
x THAT'LL PROVE
TO YOU THAT MAN
' IS SMARTER THAN
v —
4
BEAST r—

Enem V «.—

GVESt AT THE

WWEIZES
B EETLE?

HOOPITAL
w it h

u

-&lt;

BROSM
DSTOBITTOR

BA) L IT —

fWLEY—■
soeev. wo
r BAJLEV —
L HERE . )

r .i
am
tilii

A S THE UBERATED
PfCFlE PREPARE
TO LEAVE TYM3ANI
ON THE ROCKETS
« WHICH THEY

CAME™, ••

a s xxi sat, ma’am ...na/.w]
Am,DALE.' W YOtlLL H /rU iH .' HERE.MAM' UTCIt &gt; / SOUR M, 'A LL RKXT, CACLIMG'
WE RE SET FOR TAKE­
I GOTTA BLOW WIND HIM Y CN TO THIS MAO HORN AS \jAUBEAU'
JOALtfA\1 HEARIHG^l
...UH, I MEAN...GO* ) III THE I A MEMENTO FROMYOUR eOY 1 I'LL BE OFF/
&lt; NOW TURN OFF
MY ROCKETS READY'/SHiP.I HE'S/ FRIDAY/IF YOU LEARH TO JtKCMi'OUfXX« HEAR:VS AlO AND I AO...IT WASN'T JUST J
^
GET SOME SLEEP WHILE 1 TUNED DOWN... ITS
AN' I WANT FLASH V5TIU. TOO S. FLAYA FEWUCKS. LOOKME
\ BEEN TUMNtO O f f ! J
TOHAVE THIS CRAZY ] WEAK TO j UPAT TVC HOT CLUB, A*0
Jpg**! I taxi y o u Mown/
LORNAS A SOUYtMRj/GET AtOUHOfJ WE’LL HAVE A JAM SESjCNy

r

ivxJLL novae

A O h f AMGOT/A T C O D V

/MM.. AMh COAIfM* -H
7 d o 4 vh t o A o c u r / r a w

/StTOAMSr//M AN
2 H 5 ~ - r 70ntV,

Battling: Bessie
H asH ardPunck;
Appears A t C lu b
Mr co tiM T a o r r
LONDON OH — Battling Basal*
Braddock, tha Labor party 900pounder with a punch to match,
made her night club debut alongaide Marlene Diitrich Tuesday
night and gold-plated Lady Norah
Docker picked up bar marbtea In
fury.
Marlene is being Introduced dur­
ing'her current engagement at the
awgnk Cafe d« Pari* by a different
celebrity nightly. Basiia,.Laborite
member of Parliament and preaident of the -Professional' Boxers
A*an„ waa the barker Tqasday*
Lady Docker,
‘ to bark
next week, waa- on band far a
priviaw. tVhen Bessie curled - her
WHO-so frame into a bow, Norah
grabbed bar multimillionaire huebind and har fur* and haaded for
her g e 1d-t r II an m • d Daimler,
squawking “ I’m fiirtf!!!.” •
Lady D. hai garnered headline*
in the peat by entertaining mlnera
en her apouae’a yacht and aheoting
marblei with wer! ng girls’ clube.
But tu t night, ahe demanded of
the club management;,
i "How d a n m
aek- me to be
traduce Dietrich after Mn. Breddock. You’ll never ace my face
in this place again*"
Benia look the Decker exit
calmly aed went on with her work.
Wearing a dark gray ault and the
bronie medallion af a baser, aha
told the faihioneble a u d i e n c e ,
••Thla Isn’t my way of life." She
said ahe wga doing the turn to
help Britiih-Amerlcan relation!.
She aaid aha’d reciprocate by hav­
ing Marlene to lunch at tha House
of Commons next week-,
" I ’Ve been chaa!
weeks." Marlene toU
"I Just want to. f
and talk polities wl)
What do a
ca n about mi
anywayf

Wear Garmon Copa
■J

W**'-..

a,-V,

Identify Foreigner

A* Cemuk Assassin

&amp; M §£ *g

man pel/ce Wednesday as the bomb
aiiasaia of* Mataa Cernak, - anti.
Communist Slovak refugee leader
and World W ar'll collaborator with
J J NO,THEY WON'T 1
WAKB UP, D A W ... \ I GET A T R A P
w«v..*rwEPE Misvrr W - v f s * B M i

V B P ...
Bo u n d s

_

J

/ \ J s

I

r

California Court
Upholds Dismissal

Information A c!
Put Against Man

SAN FRANCISCO OR — Callfomia'i State Supreme Court has
upheld the dismissal of Dr. Henry
C. Stelnmetx from the San Diego
Stale College faculty because ha
refused to say whether he waa a
Communist party member.
In a 6*1 decision Tuesday, the
court rejectad Dr. StoinmeU’ request for a writ compelling his
reinstatement in the psychology
teaching Job he had held since
IBM. He waa discharged In Feb­
ruary, 19M.
Chief Justice Phil S. Gibson’s
majority opinion, upholding conititutionalily of the 19M legli*
lature’s “ aniwer-er-be • fired"
Luckel Act, declared:
“ Loyalty on tha part of those
in public employment is important
to orderly and dependable govern­
ment and is therefore relevant to
fitness for such employment."

TAMPA (&lt;P| — An information
charging Jerry Lopct, 41, with
sattlng up, promoting and con­
ducting a bolita lottery hai been
filed by ‘County, Solicitor Paul
Johnson.
Lopes only last week made a
complaint to Mayor Curtia Hixoit
that ha waa mistreated by Capt.
Walter Heinrich, head of the
police gambling squad.
Tha solicitor said tha charge
egainit Lopes resulted from tho
aaiture Saturday of Smaller Pal*
mer, 47, a SL Petersburg Negi%
with 2,000. bolita tickets. P alm *
was ee-charged with Lopaa.

WASHINGTON U) — Maj. Gen
Gilman C. Mudgatt.'Army informs
Lion chiaf under Gen. Matthew B.
Ridgway and Secretary Robert T,
Stevens, will take command of the
fth Infantry Division at Ft. Ord,
Calif., in September.
The Aripy said ho will lucceed
Maj. Geo. Edwin K. Wright, who
will ba eligible for retirement this
year.
No lutceaior to Mudgett as chief
o f ' information hai been named.
Only a few of tha southern citlrs
The Army ia seeking a civilian
of Canada have annual tempera*
to fill the peat in accordance with
ture averages above 40 degrees.
a decision •by Defense Secretary
Wilson that the services should re­
Swedish shipbuilders launched
place their military Information
a record 67 ship* with a gross too*
haads with civilians.
naga of 690,000 in 1064.
A native of Valley City, N.D..
Mudgett aanfd. with the 13th Armere Division in Europe in World
War II, In tha Korean War he
served successively as asslitant
■ a r t a r e v c e v n ir to x a v
* T H E C IT S K K * S A X K O F O V IE D O "
chiaf of staff for operations -of the
l " T H E S T A T E O F F L O R ID A
•
•th Army, as a member of the
a t t h e c l o s e o f a t s w H S o sr j i s e s o , t e a *
*
.
a
b
s
k
h
t
s
t
Military Armistice Delegation and
, h a ta n r * . w ith o th a r Wanha, Sna-ludioj r a ia r v * bataneaa,
s i assistant chief of staff far the c a t hAnd
c » * h I t tm i In p r o « « M
c * l l e « t j d n ------1
itn i ooollp
toll fret
3 If* l|
\ Ie Hi. d ire c t an d * u i r A n i i t 4 I | lli*
Far East Command. Ha hai been Umud flu tu 0®v •rnmtnt
*1,t i t 41
tlcal aubdlvDtoaa
(HiileAtien*
el
siataa'
ana"
pallt
chief of.A rm y Information here t&gt;th*r
N on *
•nturti
om .r band),
nataa,
and daaant
band*. n
a l* ». and
------- ... — —
c a r p n r a ta atarka (I n c lu d ln c fN a n * s t o c k o f F e d e ra l
ainca November, iw j .
Kano

Legal Notices

Itaiarva

Bank)

—

4IS.AST.ia

iA im and dlaeaunta H e rla d ljf SNonaovardrafta) .

In 19M, the average American ILinka _pr#mlaa* owned Sla.STLta, turwltur* and datura*
consumed 611 pounds of milk,
( ia a K* pr rmiV#«Taw nad ar*~aubj act ta $N#n* liana not
coppered to 100 pounds at the beaaautnad br bank)
.
■
,
It tel aetata owned other than bank pramtaaa .— ------giftitug of World War H.
Invcatmanta and other aaaat* Indtractlr r*pra«antlne bank
nf cmtM'i fir

as.ioa.t*
Non*

Kano

rttl #*!•!#

Nano
('u.iomara- liability to this bank on accaptancaa outatandln*
Tho number of farm tractors Othtr
Kano
a a a o t s ------------ —
■* ■ ---------------------------in Sweden r*s* from 11,000 in 1939
M
it
.ia
t .ir
TOTAL ASSETS
to 100,000 today.
L IA B IL IT IE S
D em and dapoelta o f Ind ividu al*, p artn srah lp *. • » * c « r -

Legal Notice
ic r w

n cra a n

REM’ E L

MILLER. II

, T f L f t l , M i u n k n ow n
t i n . d e rlss e * . Issstaea ,
rea ltors. o r le g a l r ip r e end a ll pereahe cla im liroexh o r u n der them
1 th em ; an a e ll p artloo
c la im in g lo
h a v e an y
o r tn t ir a it tn tha rea l
itratn d escribed .
D EACH O f TO D A R E
IOTIF1ED that a ault to
to tn* I W U o r
tb o
Ih* W t* o f th e BE'L o f
of a ic t lo a I t . T o w a ih lp
ta n s * I* E aaL ly ln p tn
aunty, n o r l i a . haa Eaan
a ia it you In tha c ir c u it
intlnoU C ou n ty , F lorid a .
P No. t T l l i th o e b r o v ls -

Mt4.aas.Tf
441.ttl.ll

Tuna°d*po*U* ar 1adlvidu .1.7 partnarahipa.- *nd corporaDapadti*of_ Uriit*d Stai*ii~d*v*rnmint tIncludin’* poatat
Da poalta" o * V tat on an d " p o l i n i ^ ! k w i d l ^ l * n * .
J
II 9 0
Pa
l Inl k
R *l *»■■
— • " • " * * " ” ” •***
•'J*
DJef PpOoBsits
o1f b

- ST.1S4.IA
411.714.41

,

......- ........

is.jss.tr
1.SU.U

-

OU,V T j f r ' t &gt; E f c « V ^

borrow #4
Bills payabls, rediscounts, end othor llabllltls* for borrowo
mossy
_______o r ‘ o t h o r Mans. fN o n o o a b a a k p rsm la ss an d I.Yon*
Msrisaeao

M A IL M A N

•.too oa

x a t l .n a sh o w n B g ^

^

.-n j ^ a a c a a
ACCOLM TS

C a p i t a l * ------------- ----------------------------------------------(surplus
............. ........... — --- - -------------- —---- ~—
Undlvldtd profit* — — —
------ — “*n7
H aesrva# &lt;and ratira m an t a c c o u n t f o r p re fe rr e d c a p ita l)

TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS -------------------------------—
TOTAL LIAR lLITtra AND CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
'This bank’s enpltal, consists of:
Common stock with
•**•*•*-••

M l M 4t .i l

A s s e ts p la d a sd e r a sa l* n s4 t * s s c u r s Ita b llltls* an 4 f o r

i i i ,A i h

Ubll*mtlVnsPa u I « r 4*aa to 4 tiT cU tin ira f~ a sp o sito ra s a d e th e r
c r e d ito r s , n o t In clu d ed tn i i a b l l l U * * ------------------- -

Kega
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h ereby c e r t ify th a t I a m e a t i

May^V'lTiT^maa^n/'ayVni*.

i«aO K U atd C err

A N N O U N C I N G ______

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O D E E ’S -SIGN
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L O C A T IO N
S ER V IC E

IS NOW LOCATED IN THE

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#K E N T BU ILD IN G

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201 Commercial

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CIGAR FOR EACB YEAR
COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa («u-A
cigar for every year of hit life.
That waa Martin Wakehoufh'a
gift from veteran railroad workers
who honored hia 100th birthday
Tuoaday.
,
“ We gave him 90 cigars Mat
year sod told him he'd get 100 if
he'd come to the party this year,"
said Henry Wendt, president of
the loeal unit of the Nitional Re­
tired and Veteran Railroad Xm-

The British railways print L &gt;0,000,000 ticks ta • year.

m
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B d a n a a fe E S E B A

f '.v-s. !

•
•
•

- -

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Nona

Kona
a n A y r k tt
.
th* abovo-nam*4 bask, da
I* true, and that It fatly
th* aavaral matters herein

"&amp;K.!alU5,*V»f4LagiW3!a S
An aged G e reiii KeuaMife alee
waa kiOad laatsetly. Thirteen other
bystanders w e n injured.
rt$ e t h l s m e d “ peUllcsl meU m -" Cernak beaded the Netieaal
CeuncQ _efJBaw*kie7 whieh ca n -

None
_ K ona

° 1h T O T A L 1L I A B i U T f E « ~ t M t "iie fu 'd l n * ” »u b e f f f n a t * d ” o bli -

r ’ * *’ *&lt;t—AiV*Vt’i ~ M A B L M ~ a
t, Charles O. ehsffsr. Visa Fro*, o f
solemnly swear that th* above statement
and carraetty raprasenta th* true atat* of

0LOCOM.«

Kona

A c c t p t a n c a ! r a l i c i t *&lt;f'b y * ii~tef T c * o u n t “ o f " i h l a '"b a n k sansi*
ou ts lan d I n * ------— .......................... — — — — — — — ——

(a) Loans aa show* above era artar daenctlan at
raatrvaa of ........................... —— ------...
(b) Securitlas sa shows abovo era after dadactlon of

.**1 — *•."*

l im b it
&lt; 1 -i v
— .
tSPSUNS RlffUT NOWl

BB INJUN9 SN8AU0NG 1 ' ___ , ______ __
OP ON VOU l

\

Mudgett Will Take
Division Command

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Weather

Shop and Save
In Sanford

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V O LU M E X L V I

Established 1908

Tho Stroller atoppod by Hri.
Apptrby'e “ Little" restaurant Id
the Florida State Bank building
thi» morning to Uke note of the
novation that'* been going on
ere during the past weak. She
will re-op*n the ‘ 'Little" eating
place bright and early Monday
siorrJng. What do we mean by
bright and early? We mean at
4:45 B.S. (Before Sun-up.)
• • • •
The Elate Knight Circle o f the
Pi rat BeptUt Church will meet
Monday at I p. m. in the KjUca.
tienal Boildtog with Mra. Roy
Heel aa heeteea. Cueet epeaker
will be Mre. W. A. Hickman Jr.

£

One at our local dry eleanere
eUlme -ahla actually happened.
The Stroller waan’t there to eee
It, bat paaaee It on te you. A digni­
fied women took n Jacket and
■wootor to tho cleaner*. Noticing
a sign offering three garmente
cleaned for the price of one, ahe
Vemptly flipped off her eklrt,
tt te the etartled man,
wrapped bar coat tightly around
her end marched out. The Strol­
ler thinks tt atnat have been in
aeolev weather than we*ro having

Rescue Ships H a ke

Searching For Boat
NSW YOKE tB-Ooart Guard

E teui immU cfiiH U N M th i At*

Itie elf New Jeroay today In a
■ earth Mr a flaking boat reported
•inking yaaterday. IU otiiteseo
A n never boon confirmed.
The naarch began yaaterday
when « dlatrooa M ^SJtrportadly
coming from a beat which identi­
fied ileelf aa the "Blue Star." laid
the craft has going down after
atriking a “atranga object" in the
water.
A bettor room o iptoetoo reportndly eat the craft aflame, Meeting
access te rafta and lifajaekats.
The la it report Mem the my
tBrUry-ehrouded craft w ai relayed
to the Ceart Guard by a com­
m ercial renal at 1:10 a.ra.
n raid a foreign submarine was
•urfadag alongside and waa taking
aboard St aurvivnra af the 40-foot
beat.
Coaat Guard vaarola reaching
toe seoae, pinpointed to tho diatresi menage as SO milea off
Barmegat, N J., found no trace of
•ny beat or aurvivora. But tha
dhoareh continued.

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IN D E P E N D E N T

SANFORD, FI,OR I DA,

Concrete Bear Cage
Nearing Completion;
Other Plans Revealed
S t r o llin g
In Sanford

n

Republican Leaders
Still See Chances
To Salvage Plan

WASHINGTON to -House Re­
publican leaders said today thsy
still have ■ good chance to sal­
vage President Eisenhower’s pro­
posal (or a to-cenu-an-hour mini­
mum wage.
The House Education and Labor
Committee yesterday deflated the
Eisenhower plan on ■ 15-11 tie
vole and approved Instead, Sl-t,
a Democratic bill to increase the
minimum to tl from the present
?» cento.
Key Republicans predicted ■
lively House floor scrap next
week. They said they expect
strong support Mom southern
Democrats for the to-cent figure.
If administration officials put np
e vigorous fight, theta Republi­
£ WALLA WALLA, Waits. tft-The cans said, they probably will he
■ulk of LIW Uunatae el Washing­ •Me to pets the figure, the White
ton Stale Prison traded ban for House requested.
■tars last night rad didn't lika It
— aa tony leaped the first Malta
af their two day revolt
' Meanwhile, penitentiary officiate
harvested aBother crop of weap­
ons. broken glass and damaged
The dtto Infantry Division com­
fixtum , toting up &gt; MU that may posed ef National Guard units to
tun into ail figures.
Florida and Georgia will bo con­
verted to an armored division be­
Idamase
ton dew fob af akak- ginning Nov, I. it wts announced
fng dear* the whale prism for hid­ this week ky Col. &gt;. F. Merritt
den weapons head toe prtoi
Jr., chief ef staff, at toe division's
•utdeetf last night, minted i
Macon. Ga. headquarters.
an aa athtotto Arid within
Sanford’s National Guard unit,
walls.
O b . I, lMto laf. aa a unit in this
Around then stood guard#
division, will be affected by this
■tain patrdmea carrying gens and change ever but CapL Joseph D.
clubs, •tort against any revival of Bryant, CO af the local company
toe reran which started Tuesday has net aa yet received official
with the M im e ef nine I
word aa to what this unit's new
^ a d eantrol af meet of the
status wffl be.

Washington Hates
G e l Stars For Bars

During Cell Check

Joint Declaration
Published Today
By Tito, Nehru

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D A IL Y

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NEW SPAPER

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FRIDAY. JULY fl.1955

Ar-rwrialerl I’ re w 1,rn.*-cH Wirn

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WOMAN** BIG TOR
ROCS BCTTRR THAN DtVKRJ
MOLINE, m. to-Otoe DeBort
On* fieesn wee hltkd end SB was swimming Sunday wheu a dia­
Jnfosed to SOT truffle s o mond ring valued at IMS slipped
i to Semtoeto County in the

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A MARtNt HtltCOPTO m n h fmrty from tee Nam! Air Slattern at
AUugt, Japan, wans the wreckage n/ an S'J-J "Fury* jet fighter
trfentitled as that tn which LC Alan Mr Anrny, of Yonkers, N. Y , * u
killed. Vi. McAncny'* plane crashrd while participating tn th«
search mission for two Marines, whneo plane crasn-lanrint in the
raclfle. The air-*ca search foe the missing airmrn waa drrlaml
“ practically terminated" tn the etrwlpg cl is pier of a Tar Parifle
tragedy Uial took the lives of two Marine*.
(Inlernnlionnlt

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Baseball Campaign Suspects
For Fans' Support Flashing
Is Backed By CoiC Currency
Police Summon

The Seminole County Chamber
nt Commerce a-ul its Ra.cl &gt;11
Committee are too per rent be­
LAS VEGAS, Nrv. &lt;/Pi—
BELGRADE. Yugoslavia to
hind the effort to revitalise the
Yugoslav President Tito and Inbaseball program in Sanford, it Two men brightening the ilice
dian Prime Minister Nehru pub­
was announced today hy Presi­ trillion with now $100 hill.-t
lished a Joint declaration today
tmiehrd n[f n tninwuilmentdent Karl Higginbotham.
again advocating world disarma­
"We have the hr-t working nl iuil ice invent {gut inn of
ment, use of alomie energy for
agreement now that we lta\e had [ their pm*ilite nmnrrlinn "ilh
peaceful purposes only and peace­
in years, ftaseball i.&lt; eo-ding us the biggest ia.*lt bunk rob­
ful coexistence of all nations.
less th's year and Sanford has
MIAMI (.T*)—Joseph Albert, cocky 23-ycnr-old jnilbronk the hc-d riuh that he has had in bery on reenrtl.
They also called for peaceful
New York pnlire .summoned
solution of "the questloni relating nrtlat, wns shot nntl fatally wounded today by a jealous hus­ set re al seasons. In tirw of lho&gt;e
J.
It \M
to Germany end Taiwan" (For- band who told police he found Albert and his wife locked farts we urge the public tn sup­ victim* of the hank robbery
mo**&gt; and ■ U.N. seat for Com­ in a lover’s embrace.
port the rffort of Ihe local base­ lo stew- pitot(Igillphs uf the Inn
today. And rxpi'il* »ve i hrrking
munist China,
The husband, Richard J. Svulioda, 2!&gt;, called polico and ball officials by purchasing the thrir fingerprint* In sm- i nf *
The two worked out tha state­
S2
ami
$4
books
of
tickets
that
will
shut‘ *a man.
reported: I’ve just *L
link with gunmen *&gt;ho tt*ok * :of'.ment during Nehru's week-long
I warned him to stay away from be mailed the first of novl week," PIH) from « t'haao Manhattan Itallk
stato visit to Yugoslavia. Tha In­
Higginbotham reiterated.
my wife."
dian flew to Rome yaiterdiy,
He continued. "Baseball L an i*i Queen*. N Y , l*«t April 8
Thu* tha fantastic lurk of Al­
Police here nitcstt-il frank KM*Tho Tito-Nahru declaration in
Integral
part of the merall reL ! 111 v II
beit, who recently won bail, hit
v or ill, 3d. and Hay Wilson,
general followed the line* of itatarrratinn
program
and
thii
only
freedom after he had been outafter
casino
rn,tilers
told
how
ments oach made earlier this year
victril of murder and who twice way that we can hope to have they moved from one gaming laldo
Jointly with Soviet Premier Niko­
broke out of Miami's akyecrapcr baseball is to suppsvt it liv buy­ to another, buylug chip* with
lai Bulganin.
.•ail, play rd out in a speeding am- ing tickets ami attending the crisp $11(0 Idlls.
Tha statement said Tito and Neh­
games. The boss are playing hard
buleitce.
Detective l.t. It J- Munition said
•fjivktntt A. Hfiite * 1*
ru agreed to exchange minions to
lie was pronounced dead on ar­ and giving the fans everything I'll t worth had fit hiniilred-dollar
irhuo! oYtTuiivt", lit foster trida between their coun­
Ihcy have hy playing hard right
rived at a hospital .
hills and Wilton 31 when they pr«*ft]itritl of Ktv .
tries.
bgt. Stanley Hartlsa . of the down to Hi* last minute of every were pirkeil up hern ytsleiday,
MINNEAPOLIS M V - A tor­
Ullll ill, lit 'Will civ
game."
nado which cut • five-mile swath rounty polir# said Svoboda told
Ellsworth said he sold innga- umnltn -onn Ki amjiu
J. C. navis, chairman of the
through a section of western Min­ ofticer* he returned to Miami this
aine subscriptions, Wilson said ho v.Tfk l»y tl* ’ 'r &gt;■ Mtu
nesota lata yesterday killed a 20- morning from a trip to Nebraska CnfG enniitlillee, al«o urged the v.as a clothier. Police searched
401b nmujiii ( »n\4" '
month-old boy, Injured at least IS to find hi* wife, Kulh, 28, and support of the publie in this re­ their room in a luxury hotel. All
wmiii Idtrrnalinnni
i
newed
effort
to
bark
our
team
other* and cut a path of destruc­ Albert on a couch in the living
told IhiMt found more than |87,lH'tl. Ohio* Nr\* * of Ku&gt; - s
for
the
remainder
of
the
season,
room of en apartment.
tion as far east a* Twin Cities.
Ellsworth wni freed Iasi night huh r*'ci.' iv**i! Ly of ft Thn Chamber is assisting ma­
Svoboda fived a eingle shot from
Hardest hit wa» a 30-mila
on a writ o f habeas rorpu*. Wil -niV
stretch west of Marshall, Minn., a .32 caliber pistol, Tho bullet terially in the program by stuf­ trmaineil in jail on an invcaliga- Kiw iinf« riub of "■
Aa Im.nt of K a fin i
JACKSON, Mieh. to — Tony where the fury of the winds lore struck Albert In the mouth.
fing the envelopes and’ mailing
lion of roldicry hooking,
H
odhI, fUni-y v ii
Duley, "dean" of Ufara and rc down farm buildings, flattened
them
to
the
publir.
Marties (aid Mrs. Svoboda. a
Klliwoith'a attorney posted VI ,- Ifi;&gt;oke.diiiHTi fur n ninfil i
port*dly tha "lonasomcst man" ia crop* and ripped power and tele­ ■lender brunette, reedily admitted
Chamber official, havo urged
0U0
bond with tha writ, wlurh ia million Kiwfoni* in i ?
■authors Mlohlgea priaoe, Glad phone lines.
she had bee« having an affair with that everyone mail hia remittance rrturnahla Monday.
(hrouahtmt !^^ l ■
yastarday.
aa aoon aa possible.
Hall, then a heavy rain tell Albert.
Whit* l.n* V e g a * offiiers nml ('jtrnrln. and ’ \
At TT, Duley was tha oldest to­ over most of the aouthem half of
Svoboda w ii held for Investiga­
checked thn hilts serial nuiidierit, Ill** 11riw Hi t*i r*
1* ij&gt;«i .4-o
mato and had aarvad tha moat the state.
tion.
New York autiioriliee rhe-tkeil roi*«|fi IVon K. Ki'i'b «111,
time—41 years.
Dead Is Itonnia l-arson, son of
Albert and William T. Chapman
photo* and fingerprint* of the WiiNhlnCton luiiiln ' '&lt;rv
Death ended a fight for froadom Mr. and Mre. Marlow Larson. 11a were convicted in 1353 of elaying
pair. Doth have record*.
• ludil tin" j&gt;ont siticr \
which Dulay had waged for most waa flung 300 feet.
Dc. Clifton Springmyer, a Miami
Knll&lt;*V kiaa dlrvutt i
b k
of his adult Ufa and Hamad final
Ha was Inride tha farmhouse of naturopath during an attempted
profriMotml
1tf&lt; to t *
1
ly to ba winning.
Mr. and Mr*. Auguit Wabena holdup.
of th»» |lliy«4h*HltV“hT!- ri
Ha waa said to have gone to when the twister hit. Mr*. Wa11ill bevn *t||u*1 if|CPIItI" U!
yeara in nna stretch without re­ bena said eight person* were in
Indiana
f-..
fll'KNnS AI (IKS, Argentina Ittceiving a letter or a visit.
the house. They tried to get into
it Imiianpoliii fo .'■» ••
Argcntina's
opposition
Radical
Then three years ago Mr. and the cellar, but were uneble to
a
p 'n d ii.ilo nf Kinr.*
i
Parly, which challenged President
Mr*. Marion Baron of Grand Ha make It before the tornado tora
LONDON W — Prime Minister and a momher of 11 « .*
Peion to bark up hia peace talk
ven, Mich., road a story that de­ the dwelling apart. All were in­
BOONSnonn. Md. tr-A fter M with deed.,, say, it ha, been denieil Eden suggested last night that the rrnlly, Vio r^roiYni *•.*
scribed Duley as tha "lonesomest jured.
days and nearly 1.000 mite*. Mr*. radio tune, to answer a president­ Soviet bine eventually mlglil he ilri;i4’ii of tho h« . tor
man in prison." They became In­
brought ndo the Wrslem Euro­ fmm ibat injtit ' i »n.
Emma Gatewood ia still prtlly de ial speerh.
terested.
pean
Union'* arms contiol am)
termined
to
beenma
the
first
wom­
In
a
broadcast
earlier
ltd*
week
At thatr wring, too eorrectioni
an ever to hike the J.OSOmll* Ap Peron absolve.! Ihe politiral oppo­ weapons pool.
commission last March ordered
palerhian Trell alone—cw n if ahe sition of any pan in the June 18 Tho Prime Minister a*,ureil Rus­
Duley’a caaa processed for possible
revolt and inulrd anti-Peronlsta sia Ihe West shod ready to guar­
is fi7.
psrole. But while Duley waited,
death Intervened.
The Gallipoli*. Ohio, grandmoth­ factum, to coinc lo terms with antee her against any threat from
a free, united Germany. Hut he
HEIIMOSA UEAC11, Calif, t o - er emphasised Ihiw yesterday a* him.
The Radical Parly responded said Britain stood firmly behind
The fellow perched on Ihe pole to ahe paused at Washington Mon­
that Peron rould *hnw his sincerity three principles:
day say* he's up there berauw ument Stato Park.
I. "We arc not prepared tn break
W A F lI l N f i T n W
M l
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It’s the quickest way to land— At the rate she'a going, grand­ hy letting It reply over the state
Jitit lIuri Liti|f Can itl*?« mil miinabout five acres of It.
ma F.mma should make it to Ml. radio, Argentina'* only network. up NATO."
I. "We will not lie parts'd from »&lt;1 f’mnpf r dh r \&gt;4nci nl J*»4j i•It
Tho party's national committee
William (Happy) llnward. SV KalabJin. Me., about mld ScptemPORTLAND, Ore. tfl — Frank
('•imphr 11 for cln 1•luor
Ism*
calls himself America's flagpole bcr. She tell the ML Oglethorpe, said last night Ihe Coinmnnieatton, the United Stall ' “
Lechleldner, World War I Infan
likjf thifi nflciiinon «*H 14 t*’pn|t 0
Ministry bail advised that "regu­
sitting
champion
and
says
no
one
.1
"We
will
wink
for
Ilia
unifica­
Ga.,
starting
point
May
3.
tryman who aaw action to Franca
"|jixil«*i«M in conn- 1' IR
n!
lations" prevent the granting of
to HIT, hi* ■ couple of ntw med­ haa challenged his mark of 1W1 Lugging a pack of about 37 freo radio lime fur Ilia Radicals tion of Germany."
con 11 net a in wiiiuli * p*»v4‘i tinu•nt
days, set at Porland, Ore., In 19.’&gt;2. pounds and spending tho nights
"I
can
quite
understand
that
the
al* from tha Department of the
“dtdlfii fo-yi'iir** niur iih k; * y fi*
"I've been up here 12 days," he in her steeping bag or lean to ahel- to answer.
llusviniis fear that a (i re Ger­
Army.
said yesterday. "I'm going to Iry tcra along the way. she has worn
The opposition leadrrs said they many would probably unite with gut 0,1.
Proudly dliplaylng a Silver Star and stay a year. Rut this li my
Campbell’ * ropo . In fi to -r
would enntmiie lo pres, for radio ihe West," Eden said. "1 think
out
two
paira
of
shoes
but
none
and Purple Heart, ha aald they final curtain tn show business. If
(eerivid ye-lrr.lav hy r hail in in
limn, which they have been denied that it would."
of
her
enthusiasm.
arrived only this weak, more thin I make any money I’m going to
Fulltirigllt 41&gt; Ark) ■f ■
“ I'm • great lover of tha out- since I’ enm came to power.
II years after they were awarded. get a five-acra tract of land and
niiltew, rallied the Stoi.fittf in !*»•
doori," site explained.
lay furth'-r ronsiili utmn of a Iiii!
Tha Tl-year-old Portlander aaya try to ralia chickens."
OWNER IS ORDERED
tn extend ter two jF'CRTfi
ha era* told of tha decoration upon
The publicity stunt Is for an au­
TO ATTEND (IHHtCH
ten-* production srl. Thai 1i\+
hfs discharge Mom the Army to tomobile firm. Howard hat in
WALDO, Wi*. Uv—Ueeauso of
gi'iv Itm gnver’
IBM. But it took all thaaa years "apartment" about 5 by 4'* feet
ORLANDO (&gt;T*I— "Davy Cro- in molulii* tn« i.v. inn'ft eronoi ,y
liquor law convictions, tavern op
and three Utters to Washington, atop tha pole, equipped with tele­
erator Sam Zolp will have to go rlrlt" hat h-cn raptured.
for drfclire.
ba aald, bafora he got action, phone, radio and television.
Polin' raid a t'J-yi-ar-nld readi­
Lechltidner aald tha latest query
Without naming (hf* d^llfir AST. PF.TEnSflURG WV—Develop. to church every Sunday for a year. ly admitted yesterday hr « » « ihr
idi*fitifi«'d h •l
waa mailed two weeks ago.
In Circuit Judge K. II. Srhlicht- I,id olio luol.r into linnillton Ply- &gt;i ir until, * ni|i|i
era who recently bought the Pine
ICE COVERS STREET
ENID, Okla. kfi—Tbo thermo­ Key lstanda in the mouth of Tampa ing‘ * court, Sam was charged with ■ oni| Cn. and rang IIn- ballad uf a « b putt *'lmini»lt (ill of ihr l »vmeter registered 87 yesterday Bay are planning for a fully Idling a minor loiter in hi., tavern, Davy Crorkrtt min its tape record­ feiive Mntf-ria! pn&gt; •r*m&lt; iti A ri nc&gt; in 19S1-1V58 “ w! f&gt; 41 ihr «a |1At
when police clerk Paul Hickman rounded beach community of 40.- telling liquor lo two minora am) ing inarhin*.
lima Hm ti ml nf tin* A
i
answered the phone. The 'caller 000 peraona, the city council was idling beer to a minor.
Schllchting placed Zolp on pro­ The rompnny had romplainrd of Zinc, Lend mid Fnudlii : c' f' *
said: "intersection at Willow and told yesterday.
Hyman Green of Miami, a mem­ bation, otds-rol hi* license* re­ fiequi-nt hn-akin* and Ihr tapi- rrGrand Is covered with tee." It was.
HONG KONG to -U . B. and BritPatrolmen, found Ice all over the ber of the development s&gt;udlrate, voked ami said if he fails to attend ■oiding incident ocrured week*
iih authorities today announced place. An tea truck had loti near­ •aid the plans call for three corn church as prescribed he will have ago.
their plans to receive thro# turn
Urterlivs l.t. J. R. liiarli said
plate residential, recreational and to spend hi* probationary period
coat American powi expected to ly a ton of lea as It pulled away
the liny told .them he and right
in Jail.
■hopping areas
from tha intersection.
coma out af Bad China tomorrow,
other youngster*, 7 lo 12, entered
TonlgM I* the Ift-1 •: :i e flip"
British Immigration authorities
the plant six or trvrn times to tho',* Interesti'd to , i t. '1 fur v t
will meat them when they cross
steal ronkirr.
senior life saving ••• ••
tha bridge aver the Bhumchun
"Davy" and lha S«qg were spnnrored by tlie P»mi • ■ ...... . *
River frontier, SI mile* north of
turned over to Drang* County Ju­ Cliapterof tVr Amni. n H I
A special guest at Ilia eonven- venile Court, Their nature wet* Crops at lh^ Muni, ijm! Pi 1.
Hong Kong, and-taka them to tho Mr*. Ruo S. Stevenson, second wood.
vice-president of tha Pilot Club of
Mill Newman will give an ad* Ion will bo Miss Toshiko Morikawa, withheld.
colony immigration office.
Tin* registration dredooi w s
Tha three man an Lewd* W. Sanford will join with over "00 dreae entitled "Fruit* of Our En­ •' Tokyo, Japan, recipient of tho
Wednesday loll anyatn* l.» ■.
r
Griggs ed Jacksonville, Tex.; Otho members ef Pilot Club Internation­ deavor" at the Presidents’ Lunch- I f 1-65 Ruby Newhall Echolarahip
In lake the eouroo and fulled lit
giant. Mis* Morikawa, an out­
G. Ball af Olympia, Wash-; and al attending tho 84th Annual Con­ •on on Thursday.
register mav *lgi; uo i. u . “
Tho projection of rommltteo standing student at Limtenwuod
WUltom A. Cowart af Dalton, Gn. vention to Loi Angeles, Colif., on
The rlat'e* a r e betn;: t.r
: bw
July 27-30, with tho Sutler Hotel plana will bo featured Friday College, Saint Loula, Mo. thi* year,
Hill Fleming and r r n .n ‘
1
ar Headquarters.
morning. A play will highlight this will continue her atudiea at Wash­
i
ach
Wodnewlay
and
Friday
f
;uiu
WASHINGTON
(/T&gt;—
A»»o.
U*E* OWN EQUIPMENT]
Pilot Club International, a Classi­ projection, which will be followed ington University, Saint lamia at
7 until 10 p. pi.
ts SURE o r WIN
fied Service Club for executive by workshops for each of the Pilot Pilot’* tvholarihip aludenl fur rliter of Srr.ste Majority leader
If enough perron* are luterciVDALLAS, Tax. to-Wkfla
Lyndon H. Johnson (D-Tex) agreed ed an instructor’* cuui&gt;« ' ill al­
businasa and professional women, International atending committees, 1066-64.
arraigned an urtndeg charges will bo represented by delegates Tho play was written by Mlsa Ruth
The convention will conclude with l-n'ay he had little warning before so be hr Id.
rootarday, Jamea Cwtto. BB. said from Canada, Bermuda, and other Dickens, of Tulaa, Okla, vica chair­ a formal banquet on Saturday, he wee stricken by a serious heart
shooting diet to kia main fob.
eouatries where Pilot la organ!*- man of tha Pilot International Co­ July 30, when Mrs. Edith McBride attack last weekend.
THAT’S DIFFERENT STORY
"I dant fit to any gam#
L
ord!Bating Committee, in corrobora­ Cameron of Caineaville, Fla., will
LANSING, Mich,
—Thi* liory
Johnson, now under atriet order*
tea I knew rn win," nddad Cur- Tha convention will officially tion with Mia* Mary Elisabeth be Initallrd aa tha international
te rest and relax. Is to the Naval leaked out yciterday: etoctlwo
July 17, with Miss Winifred Morgan, of Texarkana, Ark., Ihe president. Universal • International Mediral Center at nearby Helhes- slat* official* were (on busy
u . s. Oammtoatonar W. M. Hill
ewman, ef Charleston, W. Va. Ptl&lt;t International Coordinating Studioi will provide special enter­ da, Md. Hospital allachet laid he deputy Stale Treasurer C!url&gt;»
to row to a v a l"
dant, orooldtog. Wednesday Ooamtlttao chairman.
tainment for Oia banquet, follow­ bed hie “ best day” yesterday line* N. Lent* happily agreed tn go nut
Tto
•vontog the Pilots o f California wit]
Special entertainment haa boon ing which tha Pilots of Florida the attack Saturday. II* wee de­ last weekend and officiate at a
X tote May wBh
entertain at n welcome dinner with
1, Including sig h t-toein g will ho hostess at a reception hoo- scribed a* mating "steady pro- beer contest Turned out tt waa
orlaf toa new president. —
4 boor coolast.
A
(

Victims Of Theft

Uncanny Luck Ends
For Jailbreak Artist

Kiwanis President
Told Af Conv rn inn
Held In Cleveltin

Minnesota Tornado
Fatal To Infant;
Crops Flattened .

'Lonesomest Han'
Dies In Jail At 77

Peron Challengers
Report On Denial

Elderly Woman Is
Determined To Win

Minister Suggests
That Soviet Bloc
May Be Included

Fellow Makes Try
For Year On Pole;
Is Aiming For Land

Campbell Called
For Qucslioiiiiirj

World W ar 1 Vet
Given New Medals

Pine Key Islands
To Be Developed

'Crockett' Gang
Caught In Orlando

Reception Slated
Sanford Guard Unit
For S Turncoats
Will Be Affected

T ra ffic A ccident
S ta tistics Issued

No

1

Workmen neared completion of a new concrete-block
bear cape at the Sanford Zoo today as too auperintendent
Sidney RiChard announced plans for a long-range improve­
ment program for the popular tourist attraction.
RiChard said the new cage, measuring 12 by 3 - feet,
ia tha type which will eventually
replace the old woodin cage* which
ara "impossible to keep clean."
He laid tha wooden eagvi have
been there eince the mid-1220*.
Ajiothtr future of the new
cage, other then en overhead
■prinkler ayitem deelgned to main­
tain eleanlincii, fi the feet that
heavy wire initead of beri will
be uiad to retain the animalt.
“ I don't lika ban ," RiChard
laid, "and tha wira will provide
better view of the animal*.
Ha laid tha No. « wire uied on
tha cage i» lufficlent to hold a
lion. The wire ia uied at the
Jacksonville *oo, he pointed out.
"W e are going to try to move
in e cub tomorrow and tha reit
of tha bcara Monday," RiChard
added.
The too wee peinted not long
ago, but RiChard »ald there ere
a lot of other thing* that muit
be done before the touriita aeaion
begin*.
.
RiChard aald he waa attll hop­
ing that the Bengal Tiger caplured by Gen. Jamea Van Flaet could
be trenaported from *Pakistan to
tha loo. Gen. Ven Fleet presenU
ed the tiger to the Pakistan gov­
ernment which in turn presented it
to Gov. Collin*. The *oo waa lnformad by Collina that tt could
have the tiger if *ome meena
could bo found to traniport tha
animal hare. Tha Chamber of
Commerce ha» been active In ne­
gotiations to arrange this.
RiChard oaid the tiger would he
■ big a iie f te the too because
Bengal tlgere ere found mainly
in the larger eitiea.
Expansion of the too, RiChard
■aid, ia pretty limited for all tha
available ppere to in use. If the
Atlantia C ou t Line ‘ Ballroed
would let tha too have e little
lend, It could be expended In the
direction of the track ha said.
RiChard ruled out tha possi­
bility of placing part o f the ioo
In the area below tha Court
House. He said this would be a
hasard to children who would be
forced to cross the street to see
acme of the animals.
Richard aald be planned to
“tighten up" tho toe In order to
mako tha fullest possible use of
the available land. He added, how­
ever, that thli dote not maan the
meet will be eliminated.

r

H n r In pirtlv fIfttHr oi'^ fei*.
f*r*H' i n#THr»#vfl
* +r$
tftdnr «nH S»!iirH*r f\ffpi i-Mit*
brief shower*.

Tonitc Last Chance
For Course At Pool

Sanford Woman Plans For Confab

Strict Orders Given
To Senator Johnson

n

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Page 2
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Little Crater
Inside Big One
Getting Active

IS A NAVY PLANE OVER MT*
Ken • vjdtd ehortlv. How fir Etn». SirJy T—A little trater mdown ar.d have a drink, dodged
TH E
L O NG H O RN txliYin tn hands that reached out to catch did e rt ir tav* to nda to get away • • the hip one g!n * t dark red.
Dodgi City wee tr.gst xnn nclay ai ccr arm or wrist—and kept trem ti • -xtt?
“The
na&gt;be you’ve net tr.y then every s nr Id mnutet pepi
xr.d erowtlid wiLb numxmty intxat seeking tho door wnth ner eyea.
like a caeatnut n.i * hot lire
-Like her etrangerf” Kerry mend. Vi m* of riirr.eron."
r.n Revise Uthsuxlves • Ub i For
Ch'irki o! rr.e’.ten reek spout up
•rtVaj ne Cameron?"
Uicia wpoia uiroita were dry w-.’Jj turned at the sound of a volca
inn fe*t or more
“Ths • ighL Know him?"
trill duat. there wea liquor, ar.d near his dhow, and looked into a
Those are the firework) from
"Met
a couple of times "
tor Lhca* 'rtth • dUlerxnt iur.d or thin, olive-colored, emooth-rtiaven
"Smi rt rciiow. Wayne," Gilder Mt Etna, which for fue Cijh’J
thirst. Uieri wxre Eright., -dreaaid. faco and two bright slits of eyes
bar** Armed women whoao pxmtAd that should have been dark, tn that ohserv . L “Gervaraily knows what ha-t heea vnible lor 3n mil*.' os
kps wer« genx'oua w.th emilee Ar.d face, and Diticad. startlingly, were ha's of er Generally get# It. too. mere alor.i th* tournt . crowded
A j
unspoken promiaeA And there almost green, like glittering ellvera Thai's *c.'Uthmg 1 admire is a east rr,ait if Sicily
It i) the mojt activity Europe'"
wert cArda «nd dice to rtkt in of glass, except that you couldn't man."
"Mos f epic do," Krny r*trrt- highest vntono has »ho«n for four
wages thit were burning hole* in see into them.
Kerry''* swift observation added rd. an I •ouldn't resist ediing, years But lookutg into the crater
pockets, or—who knew ?—maybe
that the apeaktre hlack suit and "Yo-i. r.aid Cameron didn't seem from only
to double thtT.
feet away. Lhera
Kerry lexnsd An iibmr on the white ehirt locked ajrpansive. ar.d in kno e &lt;tui r.a was after th.s 11) no »;m that a major aruptios
time
ri*
let
himself
get
*tu*-&lt;
fitted
him
emoothly.
that
he
was
bur, severing e drink paid ter » v i
h n begun
one of the few coma left in his tail, tlun and graceful as a dancer, with “ 'i i)o«t worthier.* strp of
A U S Navy pan lwo-«r.gin»
pocket. H*’d been "rtdmg th* grub and would have been handsome, sar.d ai d c ictus tn the country."
*Fr.« n v hat ha wrota me," Gai­ plane «aa piloted for Uua f-gh'
line," drifting from ranch to rends, except for e near that ran tn a
u-oricing a week or two here end jagged purple line, from hi* right dar re lie- mildly, "meet of tlia over *he crattr by John Pigjuts
good L nd is already taken. Man of w Hancock St Alutfield w
there where en extra hard war eye to the (enter of his mouth.
'She's pretty," Kerry replied named via,' cry—he's the big augur L'a . an iviaV-n ehief marhuuiU
needed, at other pieces just claim­
around th&lt;
isn't hn?"
■n/ite. The coptiot w*» Lt P
ing the hospitality of the bunk- neutrally.
“Yot i: ight call him that.” , I’ .jgerho of yS2 3rd St Verona,
“ Pretty, but not smart."
house for s few nights and mov­
"I wouldn't knew about that. 1 Kerry . grt id, adding dryly. “You'd Pa
ing on. Now here he was tn Drylge.
God knew why, except that b*d never saw her be!era I 'caa Just admire n i l H# generally gets
The new activity ia ih'ida i
what t • r es afur. toe."
always bad a curiosity to tto the locking."
f**t by 30h fK* formed
*6n I t »ar. Eut t " got it a enter
“ Sure." the stranger e gy 'd farr.o'is trail to-wn. and it did
aa years ago it u cn the r'rthst»med as grod I pLio tn drift to “ She's here to bo locked eL But leng tl n« go, Aiiint he?"
eu t side of the mountain Tirri
“TVt :?•
as any. And the wages of hi* you'll have to take out your
“ A I tan that sit# Li the saddle hundred fr*t above it, the huge
drifting were making a lonesome money's worth in looking."
“ I didn't have any other Idra*—" too la' g ti apt to get circlets. main crater now jj quiet
rattle in his pants pocket—the
Inside the northeast crater jr i
The green-eyed mnn gat* him a Haven ye i noticed that?"
first money to d ever earned. He
"Car t u f 1 have, particularly." bed of blark lgvj The r.sw valeuppeerd ha ought to feel proud small, tight smile- "Every man in
of it. But be only remembered the Dodge ha* hid Mesa about Margie Lnpatl iiU' . Kerry ebook cif a casie mouth is a red pimp!* 12
monotony of Lne-rldirg in the hai- one time cr other. T te /v e all vagus ur. s/.-Ats. Broken Spurs the renter ii* l JO feet wide w
irg sun. the dust and stench of been westing their time, except affair* wet i none of hie any more.
Smoke bndi ou' in puff* i.nd i»
“H e; , C ilder." a rough call whipped ) " i y by s vo-milc • an
branding, and thought »galn that one — a crary, fiddle-footed cow.
puncher.
That's
why
1
said
she'e
from
,
u
c
the
card-1
tides
struck
was no way for men to bargain
hour wind. A dark red »1ot
away pis life at thirty a month not smart- But that'e women for at ths r.. you gcrj'.a gimme » br.ghter.j »n cherry *»d every a
you.
None
of
my
Sustnae*.
Just
chance
to
.un
my
money
back*"
and keep.
"No, 3D Wharton, but if you're or Id minutes Thit la when uhi
There was a tudden stopping of thought Td w-arn you." he added,
talk all over the room, ar.d * turn, and held up a hand to the bar* detenr aed to send some more to flames lash up ard the chunk) of
keep
co; ipany, fU obllgi you." molten rock arc hurled mtn Lie air,
mg nt heads tow ard the little stage tender. “ Have one wnth me?"
"Thanks." Kerry noted the soft
Tne nsn ailed Wharton lauqhed to fall hack Into the crater.
where ths rurleins were parting.
Dr Salva'sra Cocussa of the In­
The lanky piano-player tinkled out rtesa and whitens;* of the hand, sourly. He was young, hcary fea­
wamrthing soft and sentimental as put them together with the ex­ tured. flusi wl of face with a sul­ stitute of Volcanology qf the
s girl tn a red dress walked onto pensive clothes, the schooled way len tt' to is thick-Lppcd mouth. I'fiivsffily of flatani* repir?*d Lhe
ths itage. She w-ts small and very of speaking—and the pekar fact Cald'.r tnc ned hi* head toward activity ''ronsiderabl/ increijed ^
pretty, wth a head *ull of black A gambler. That scar was prob­ Kerry. “G *e to take e hind, Mr. in the past ji hour*
curls, and big dark *yes that ably a souvenir of some hot-headed Riordi )? "
'f Lhr spout) continue to go
K«r f fc site led. rtmimbenng higher, some lava wiij pejus apii
Bterird to Invite them all to join eard-pUver w-ho didn't like losing.
“
My
name's
Caidtr—
Lou
Csidthe
ne
u-ea
pty
etato
of
hts
pockher La enjoying - Joka Her smile
eta. Bt t he algnt be luclry tonlghL i'C over the. r:m. at the era'ar
rave ever/ man tn the Lonrhorn er"
the feeling that she was smiling
Kerry murmured his own na®«. Ha cculin u arywav. t&gt; much B*.’ authori'ier reported villagers
living in the possible path of 1
at him. yet It seemed to V rry and fancied ha saw a flicker of worse ou S i*' t a n j uerr.
ta&lt;a flow were showing no iigna
"Don't mind if s d* "
rhe was looking for romelhtng. some kind of reaction In the green
Calder was’a smooth play*.. ?’ » of irigni.
When the black eyes had gone nil eyes, but put It dowro to imagina­
round thn salnnn, he thought ho tion. It wasn't possible the gam­ w-aa luckj’, but Kerry couldn't sea
any evidence that it w-as Anything
sew her Lip- droop as If her search bler had heard of him.
“Just in off th# trail? Thought rr.cra than luck. The only com­
had been disappointing.
Next minute, emiling again, eha I hadn't seen you around tows bo- plaint h« could make w-as that, un­
like most professional gamblers,
began to sing, her votco warm and fore. Texas?"
Kerry grinned. T ea, I'm from the acar-faced man was inclined
■went. Each Urns she stopped,
there wrra claps and shouts for Texas—and no reward out for me." to crow. Ills gUb tonguo rub tied
more, but the third time she
"You never know, do you? Rea­ Kerry's fur the wrong way, and
NEW YORK. N Y — Tha i f e u laughed and shook her bead and son I asked—I’ ve got a friend ha could sea It was doing worse
tures *nd e cuntl# )) e trap a de i nf
cams down off the stage. Emiling- dowrn there. Mescalr.m County— than that to Wharton.
pure miachief that mads up the lif*
(T n jts CoefmunrfJ
Jy she refused invitation* tn tit you ever been around that way?"
of a country boy around the turn
of the century sra reeteaud In
P.icr*nl rrei*’* new publlrstlon
"Whera the Mesdo-*l»rk Cilia.''
written by Verne A Wheeless *t&gt;j^
scheduled for release at the end of
th» month.
Literally hundred* of thcu.eiida
SANTA FE. NM 'F—Thtnrs would come up We've got a home
will rover he quits the same again and a new- car and wa'va always
MINSTEAD. England Jf — St O? •cartel* who h*v« visited I'.'wanted them But tt’a »o nica to Arthur CVtnan Dovl# lien or of rid# know the author aa tha man
for the Ramon Angel family.
In the three weeka ilnee Ramon. have some money in the bank, to Sherlock v,'.;(nes. was reburied who t a k e s pictures at tha Big
1 Santa Fe atreet clia.ier, won you don’t has* to worry, that we re Thx.aday in Britsia'i New Foreat- Tree, the oldest and largest cy­
333.000 m a national contest the Juat going to go back to our Jcbi an ancent hunting ground that pres) tree in the world
Wheelesa's ln.e of natura tomei
f o r t u n e ) of the family have and lease It in there "
waa the are/.e of bis story. "The
•frt m the happy days of It s bo&lt;changed radically and although
White Company "
hood on the Iowan farm where ha
the rath semausder has dwindled
Lady Conar. Doyle, the writer's was bom He now lives fn Lcr.g-.J
to .around M.onn, « new home ar.d
jeecnd wife, was reburied alio in werd. with hie wife and *; .
new car account for a good part of
a ehurehysrd in the wooded re­ ter Mrs f *
trachea first
the difference
gion in southwsrt Hampshire .r.ue at Lyman School
Pamon'i wife. Guadalupe, wai
named in jn’ 9 and eon’ «*‘ '-; to
stricken with a gtomaeh ailment
a hunting preaen— * , 'Villiim !
SECOND-GRADE PUPIL
and operated on five diva after
r.nt1-. &gt;i w,a-&lt; were exhumed lilt
CO' AIITS SUICIDE
a rubber company (R F Good­
wi-el 'mm s gras* at Crowborough1
KOBE. «apan A1— An 8-year-old
rich) executive preiented th# fam­
the .irmly himr
se-ond-grad* pupj committed au.
ily wjth JS.ooo ittver dollars
Alnr th# exhumatio. the first fid , Tuesday by refusing to get
She ts Just back from the hotCHICAGO vR-A top atomt' act- nrvr of which ereited a mild sen- cu* of the way of a freight tra
pltal.
entiit
tnejay called on tan sera, aatios m tius country, the bodiea
A elmmata w-ho was wilk.r;
Sale: men every day have off«r*d
for
the
aake of th# nation, t* In­ art flair lead coffins were taken the tracks with him said the bar#
everything from insurance to
to 1 London undertaker
screamed: "I want to die’ I want*
rancbei to automobile)
spire exceptional atudanta t go
Tl lead coffins u-ere placed tn In die "
On the brighter ild», Pamnn into scientific research
two huge oak coffins, moved to
The reason, Asahl said "*'»i that
w'u promoted by the city and now
Dr Willard F. Libby of the U.S Mutt'east and buried beneath an the boy, tnj.'ther with a doren
drive) a ataamroUer. The family
Engl ah oak in a aerluded corner
will soon mov# min a thr«s-bed- Atomic Energy Commiaaion laid of Lh* churchyard of centuries-old others, was scolded by hi) teacher
•for pitying p.acueal jik«s
room hom* near their adnb* plae# the abort ag* of leiastista and en- Misread church.
And there la s slick-looking new rmearv ' u 1 mittar of i*:tsui
CYLINDER RITA ROCK.
car
eoneera."
m a .v s r n v n m n N cn rn r.A t
The home, with five adjoining
In a speech prepared for deli' try
CRESCENT C m ’ . Calif UP loti, took M.onn Another U.ono . . . . . .
, ...
Tom Mounts, doubly careful, put^
went for the car. Federal income 0 l^e National Education Atan
his
'
22 revolver in the glove comhe said "only about 2 per rent
tax took mors than M,W)
ttt.JTED NATIONS. N Y
“ We rc not going to touch the of those judged mentally capible Bov ng Indian Ambassador V K partmvnt of his e*r in i the cyl­
rest,” lays Guadalupe She sa d of obtaining Pn D degrees do .0 " Krli ini Menon planned tn em- inder tn his shirt pocket
Driving home with hts fimil*.
the only furniture ihe ti going to
Ubby blamed the &gt;hnrta&gt; on plat 1 for London T h u r »-d 1 &gt; he sloppH to pick a vlld Cower
buy Is a living room tulle
to
{iva
prime
Minister
Nchiu
a
As he stooped, thu cylinder fell
Years of frugality can't h« dis­ "inadequate" instruction u. the full report on hts efforts to set up
o to a rock A bullet fired inta ha
carded overnight Ramon figures colleges and secondary schools, a dinct L' 5 -R e d Chtna talks
ch*st
the home 11 an inveitm.ent, a sav­ mistaken b«htf that the fields of
V 4ito« met twqee
. . . with Present
Ha was raporteJ m in i.c a l rossing on rent money, and, with the discovery ire narrowing, end lick r „ . _ k
Eli inhower and three time* vrlth |dition at S-tinde Hospital
five adjoining lots, working out of financial reward
Her retarv of Stat' Dulles during
___________
nicely for hi* five 1-.Jdren The
Libby, on leave himself from the his month
monu, in
ln the United States
e, „ .
..
.
fla
united States
Frigate birds, unlike many e .ear — well, it's a necessity as University of Chicago facutv
»»Id yealrr- birds do not have vtaUrproof plu*
well a) a little touch of luxury. relled on the teachers to "la s p li"! , ' ! c . '*?
The old 1342 model was always
to greater things
giving trouble anyway
in. tensions in the world, parUcu-! The word "Lent" anginally
Most salesmen have gotten a
H* said "!t 11 very Impor ,n? Is y in tha Far East.
! meant "ipring".
cold shoulder.
that adequate attenUon always he
Mrs. Angel said the five little paid to this small but import tnt
ones have gotten soma new clothes fraction of the classes tn matteOUJt SUMMER SPECIALS
all drbta hive been paid and there maUcs and tha science) ut high
For July Only!
is a new "community" p'go stick, school In maiy tnitanrei. ;i]v
which the three older kids enjoy, tmpirational teaching will sufft •»
SIVOO L b Maur Duo Tonic W ave
As soon as she is able, Mrs .Nothing short of an attitude of |i,|«
with Super Seal N rutrallrer—
5 1 0 .0 0
Angel sail she Is gotnc back to sort will excite end malntam Ihrir
S12.M) Zoloa Suprr Lanolin—
c u rr»
work at the moccasin shop where interest "
S10.00 Donat Show Cut I Crea m
she worked before, stitching hand­
made moccasins
N culrallrer— 5 6 .5 0
"We never seemed to hive
• Include'. Shnpint: A: Styling
• 3 Senior Operator*
enough before." she lays. "There
HARRIETT’S
BEAUTY
NOOK
were always hills to pay and when
(Alr-ConditiuneJ
Salon)
u« got a little ahoed, something • AUSTIN. Tax. i/P) —
Th.it
105 S- Oak Ave,
Phone 971
written test was mst t*o tough
for tha boya tasking journeyman
plumbers’ Jteenita.
It "tended to confuse tha tend •;
date rather than meesure 1 *
WASHINGTON JP _ Ren Clem­ ability" tha Texas Stale Boe;J
ents of Kentucky took over as of Plumbing Examiner.' reporuiL
artinr Sens'* Democratic leader
Worried because only JI p*r
Tuesday with expressed deter cent jiassad tha last, tha board «a.
mtnatlon to retry on th# program •mined its examlnitions and re­
of Sen. Lyndon U. Johnson of ported tha written quesiions wmri
aimed a* people with »n lJth .
Texas.
Johnson suiiertd fast Eaturday grade reading laval. Ih* avarai 1
what was described as a moder­ test-taker, tha board said, has .1
ately sever* heart attack which 9th-grada reading level.
will keep him away from tha Sen­
The quaittons were simplified
ate for the remainder of Uu* »*»• and •rnpHgfi* r-? on pioctical.. 3ns E. 1st 5 L
PbPM 41 s’
plumbing demontUationa.
'.HAPTrP FIKTEEN

Longwood Author,
Verne A. Wheeless,
Publication Told

Things Arc Now Quite Different
At Angel Household In Santa Fe

Sherlock Holmes
Creator Reburied

Atomic Scientist
Calls On Teacheis
To Inspire Youths

Roving Ambassado
Rijns London Trip

“*

Legal Notice
» ' m n r. t o i r r r t n
•THE STATE O f FLORIDA TOi
JinAlV. I.ur. TlfCDlAii It &gt;l»rrl« » • M e « l . l.fKiiriiir, K. r.
A * « ' r n r o r u i . i M Penas' t o n
Ul*4 e ce ln it you in tn» Circuit
Court lb end frr Ssmlr.ol* &lt;*«m, m ,
f if'Ht ii i henrery. jnr Divorce,
tfte 1 - m i •It 1• of i i n } |Mi«n
i» i i p c v
a rW oli**
Pifiatirr.
&gt;* jf c s S I i; I L E
THOUA *. D o
fiu ijn l
itifu
p r o m t .re i„
cXuie . n t u n u l r i l i t in til* &gt;n'.f
T ' l i i f f i i ' i i i i * * . ii m y . i " tin
n l tn
aninpliibt fll»4
Krrcln. ini
y n t . rnpr lliirin t up«n Fi#tj»«
h
UU 1 III I I M V n» or IMInrn tk'n
I3M &lt;«y nt July, l t t l , ' h i r i . o
•
I'm f i n ff fi.i trill I f f f i
l * r i 1 »|»|ct&lt; you « n « n.« m u t t
W v " ' *’ p»»t#
W M M &lt; ru&gt; « » n 4 »nS t f f i r u l
R*."1 .V kin lnrd , littnlneln Cnumy.
th u Sird '}#*■ &gt;y Jure I Til.
. « / n p Hnrndnn
c i t r k r l inn &lt; irci.it Cnurt
kmslnnlt Coubty. Tlnrldn
ilfA L I
Or f i n . V FrtdnrttW
Aiturntr le r M t iM ilf
}*&lt;t Ki.rjh Pnrlf Atnuun
n in t u t i
niord. l l o M t
— ■
f K D J iC I ! J( K i m r
O I V tK
:» * ' * • *r» t e r i c n d i » I t i l t i n «t
L t o D m .-t . M n le rd. f u n .
U t . • J l ! J i ! * V M i l At
IHDTTKU St O »TL*(il0P nnd tk*i
*• intend to M f ltln r O l d n on#

t

« Itn tt't Citrk t f tltn Qirrult |
ENTHUSIASTIC RECRUIT
Coyrl. ktnilnnlt C "un iy, ri&lt; r;dt
In t r n . r d t f t w|lh tkn p f ^ i t i n n 1 RICHMOND, V i i-Pi—Thn Air
« f mn F lt tu Uu*
.Ynn-.n f i t i u l t
tniwit rnciloe i l l . 01 FUrlan Mn* Fnrrn w ill h»vn « h»r»l time Ilnd* |
tatm t i l l
.
m s o n&gt;«ie tn U iu tik illc Tkcrult |
Jon T. I mrkin
liu n
Nuiman Suthn laii'l, IS, •
Unrr l l n i n i n l l.unipkin

Expansion Program
Involving Aircraft
Is Told By Airlines

MIAMI .r— An o-penuon pro­
Scot.
. ram involving tl» expenditure ol
Euthrrliml
hat
«
anttd
tn
join
I
O LClVlfc PINKIM
ns million dollari and featuring
r i r U t l f f . the L’ . .c . Air roil* line* fce the purrhate of both turboprop
VI
a h IP. \Vh»n hi inchril IS he i and jet aircraft wit announced
j.iiir
orounr
t’ e r t n i t m ' »'!&lt;)»•_ the miyor of HUlitnoml,
NOTICt: l! l i i l l t l « l\ tu U.nl J i l l . thru £)r. E. E. HuMniW, about it. Tuei lay bjr Nationally Atrltnci
tUBIll I i Cllt l'ltr »T ot tilt
||.I
It t&gt; the firat atep in i four-year
i t n i n i u i o t i l l , on y - r i n r Au* Ho u ti ir|vlicd of the renutre*
plan for ayitem wide develop*
l iti i. i f i i i u on ncf.fW v at
mrnti
ind
the
necciilly
for
a
t i tht
CnurtROuft in tmninrd.
l i a r . l a l th tli m u i t in i t t « l i . tpormr. Parents jueviHeij nn him ment. G T Dakrr. president, aiid
Baker atid the program ralli
nt r u tilt f . r i i n n . in t f « l l n » i n »
Oi.n l i l t Chtwnlnt Tiuck, l.n- to Milt until he m u is He &lt;lid for conitrurtmn of new office
•Hit ni. »■ X A t « J l l )
PlnrMn I •nd hr »tlll m nntrd to join He
building and mamtrnanre facili­
it n -It -011-111. o l d o l n lu bn
*1 public f i c t i o n to the kubnnt wrote Miyor Thonut P- lirjan. ties aa well aa purchase of the
Bryin
turned
the
letter
ovtr
to
tlddOJ
t tin n i t it in . t M i f f m et cert Mij Milium £ . Morgan of the lateit in airline equipment and u
Uln JnlinaatAt r t o r n n d in J id m *
the targaat in NiUonel’a U-year
rsnnl t auk SI Finn 14). nuklli. rn&gt; recruiting itrvlca. Maj Morgan
hiafory.
mrdn nr ftomlnolo Cnunly, P|nr|. bar amt apontor.
nt. n (4 tn n Jttstn m » u 4 y la it.t
First phatei of the project in*
turn .1 i l l ns
8'ithetland Mid h« held two joht
" ‘ iin tt i m&gt; hnnd end ttnl thu
and worked S5 Imun « v u i to elude new general administrative
l l t b dn&gt; ot Junt, ll|t.
get the money for hit paitag* of/irei at Miami International Air­
■t i. Hnkhy, Minrltt
port and new hangir ftcilitiei for
rtmin tln County, finrldn
from Scotland.
Lb« maintenance of yet aircraft
XOTICB
Corporate narsutgt will cever
Kn&lt; re It fetrnkr H o n i n ; i k t 1)11 t l II re i'a lic k A M ler U t
t nr .'.t l fr.tniiA* nr Ibn « : n n k h n l i t o irtnetetina « f farh h a t l n o t i t moat of the coat. Baker added,
• I T r n t i : , i . i.T I t n r t l i &lt;• ill pn h t l i mny c«in» kttnin tnt m o i i B i .
with bank loana not to exceed 33
n Inn n i f o t l T h t kmirerd N t r t i i
K K ftck n .m n a
rsilEca
|i f n r t - r d . P l o r i l t . o »
J u ft i x
iktiaUir
M illt l

o f »AI i.

•« c

: *.w l rSnftlS,’.SVfS "!U'

_________

Written Inquiry
Is Just Too Tougb

Clements Is Acting
As Senate Leader

H I - F I E Q U I P ME N T
P HONOGRAPH S

WI NN TV &amp; R A D I O

�•-

l jn c e fi
Thant. .Tulv 7. 1A55
o r \IIK |K.

TH E SANFORD H ER A LD

I n a suht
sit ua tio n

A CATCHER
SHOULD
SHOULD
CALL FOH
CHEST-MIOM
PiTCHEO.
THEY ARE
TOUGHEST
TO BUVT
AND

-*37773 . 7- 7 ]

INCSSASE

T-ECHAMCU
0*A .
pop- up/

vrv.ntttiir;
x THIS GOWER IS *
RUINING THE LAWN
■r I'LL FLOOD HIM r
^ ---- - OUT

Y"* HA- H A-H A-1,
A THAT1.L PROVE
TO SOU THAT MAN
[ IS SMARTER THAN
^— f BEAST ------

Battling- Bessie
HasHardPutick;
Appears,

L NICE TO Hi m ^
HE'S TOO SMART
TO HAVE FOR AN r
w enemy v-— / '

C a lif
U p h o ft

%r c o t m T i o r r
LONDON on ~ BatUini Battle
Braddock, (ha Labor party 300-

CVEJ? AT THE
KOGP1TAL
V/tTH A &lt;
BROKEN
RSTRlBUTOPt

WELL,DALE.' \ YOU’LL &gt; ''VlASH/HeCT.MAN'LATCH
SOUlT^
I GOTTA BLOW \FlNO HIM ON TD THIS MAO HORNA5 VJAZZCC/UJ'
As the uberated
...UH, I MEAN..CO' ) IMTHE A MEMENTO rSCM YOUR BOY 1 IU B£ &lt;
PEOPLE PREPARE
MY RACKET'S REA0Y'/5HIP/HE,$FRIDAY/ IF YOU LEARN TO /O W N TOj'
TOLEAVETYMBANI AN'I WANT FLASH .STIL
_ L TOO WAY A FEWUCK3, LOOKMl
r_ _ ^ ad'
ON TH ROCKETS TO HAVE TW3 CRAZY ] WEAK TO W at the hot ana. and
« WHICHTHEY HORNAS A 50UYIMRVGET A«OUNO. J WELL HAVE A JAM USHOHV /K S 3
CAME -

r

WASHINGTON 14} — MsJ. Gen
Gilman C. Mudgett.’ Army Informs
tion chief under Gen. Matthew B.
aid* Marlene Dittrich Tuesday Ridgwajr and Secretary Robert T.
night and gold-plated Lady Narah Stevens, will take command of the
Docker picked up bar marbles in 6th Infantry Division at Ft. Ord
fury.
Calif., in September.
Marlene Ii being Introduced dur* Tha Army said ho will succeed
inf her current engagement at the MsJ. Gao. Edwin K. Wright, who
will be eligible for retirement this
swank aCafe
_a,a_l
__l da-« Pam
1 b j .byi a different
•
celebrity nightly. Bessie,, Labvrite year.
member of Parliament and preaiNo successor tn Mudgett as chief
dent of the •Profession*'. • fexan o f ' information has been named.
Ann., was the barker Tuesdgy.
Th&lt; Army is seeking a civilian
Lady Do ‘
* ^ ................ to fill the pest in accordance with
neat week, war on band far ■ a decision'by Defense Secretary
priview. When Benia curled'her Wilson that the services should re­
VMO-M frame into a bow, Norah place their military information
grabbed her multimUUenalra hue- heads with civilians.
band and her fun and h*ad«d for
A native of Valley City, N.D.,
her g e I d&gt;t r ii m m • d Daltnler, Mudgett lin e d , with the lllh Ar­
squawking “ I’m furieui” • ■
mors Division in Europe in World
Lady D. hai garnered headlinai War II. In tha Korean War he
In the pa at by entertaining miner* served successively as assistant
an her spouse's yacht and ihaoting chief of staff for operations mt the
marble* with war! ng |irli' club*. •th Army, as a member of the
But lait night, aha demanded of Military Armistice Delegation and
the club min*|ament:
as assistant chief of ititf far the
i “ How dara yeu aak 'ine trt I* Far Eaat Command. Ha has been
troducc Dietrich after Mn. Brad- chief o f. Army Information here
dock. Voull oarer tea my face since November, 1SSI.

bailey -—

^ ailey—
5W C. t »
r BAJLEY r -

L HERE. J

r ALLright, darling'
WE'RE SET FOR TAKE­
OFF/ HOW TURNOFF
TOUR HEARINGArOAND
« T SOME SLEEP WHILE
I TAXI you HOME/ .

AS YDU SAY, MA'AM...RSf.

JO A iefH Y HEARING^
f AO...IT WASN'T JUST ,
\ TIMED DOWN... IT'S

V BEE** TVWttO O ff!

Information A ct
Put Against Man

u rf

issol

SAN
F*
fo r a ia ’ s S
u p h o ld t h e
C. S t e i n
S ta te C o
re fu s e d t
C om m uni
I n a (V
cou rt r e j
quest f o r
r e in s ta te
te a c h in g
1930. H e
ru ery .
C h ie f J
m a jo r it y
ititu tic m a lA —
la t u r e ' s
“ “
L u ckel A d
"L o y a lty In p u b l i c e
lo o r d e r l y
m ent a n d
fit n e s s f o s r -

TAMPA &lt;,P) — An information
C o u r&lt; b*a charging Jerry Lopes, 41, with

D r.
S a n Dif*°
Y&gt;ecau4a ha
ha A H a
t«ad aF , i*1*
m et*’ r«llin# W*
* ,jy c l» o !o |r

b a l d *ln«
e d in P®^1.

cifaon ’a

W in g . « * •

xn n

setting up, promoting and con­
ducting a bolita lottery haa been
filed by ’ County, Solicitor Paul
Johnson.
Lopes only last week made a
complaint to Mayor Curtis Ilixon
that ha was mistreated by Capt.
Walter Heinrich, head o f the
police gambling squad.
Tha solicitor uid tha charge
against Lopas resulted from tha
leisure Ssturday of Smalley PaU
mer, 47, a St. Petersburg N ig r a
with 2,000, bolita tickets. P a lm ^
was eo-chsrged with Lopas.

lagi*-

Only a few of tha southern cities
of Canada have annual tempera­
e r th ou ture averages above 40 degrees.
important
Swedish shipbuilders launched
b i o govarnr c l a v * nt I® a record 67 ships with a gross ton­
nage of 650.000 in 1064.
ment-*'
.

fin d ­

L e g a l Notices
u , g f o f roxnrrtojr a r
7 , T l p S I BARK OF OVIEDO”
t » T iT t o r FLonins
o r a u i s u i or jure as

° r A lt C T S
».-*■ Its, Including reserve belaneee.
e f c e l le e t le n ........................... .. I

m

As Carnak Assassin
w a wr»,&amp; uMi-Mtv

s s f f S S a a x S’
communist Sevgk rafugaa leader
NO/TVWV VYON'TI

■ wta o&gt;*i

WAJCE ue», D A W ,.. ^

SOUNDS J
UIKB IT / ■ I II

NWV..THtrsrE /MJ5HT -

Bi !£HWv'9 GNCAKiva

S P B U H ^ UlffHT NO W l

UF ON YOU |

VEW...1 KWTCWBDAM
A SLACK-MUFF INJUN I

and Wertd W grU coUiberator with
IbetKKU.
‘
.
T W 'a b -jB g M f MJaUder et eultuna in wartime BlovekJa who becama * fee -e l Cwcbatlevakia’a
p r a i a » t - D H tpyenmmt w u
in a Mmuah peat ettta Tvesigy. A" « ! * G am in heuamtlfe alee
waa killed instantly. Thirteen other
bystanders ware injured.

_ _ V offlcsre * c h e ck s, e tc .) —

DEE'S

SIG N

S ER V IC E

IS NOW LOCATED IN THE

, K E N T B U IL D IN G
201 Commercial

iw

iQ 2 i

' ST.U4.S4

* * * ________ L i ______—

v„

)t,m .3tk.ta

“ g ^ ^ e e e ”b»nkyr*inlsie~«n4tNone

« &gt; BACM ° r TOD ARE
.NOTIFIED that a ault to
of Ibo

^ jp ~ cp e «c c e u T t~ e f~ tiil» bitnk eVd'

w,

U nr Baetlon II, Township
h. Range I# East. lyin g In
la County. Florida, has naan

| In the Circuit
bounty. Florida,
ft tho abravlat * 'X .' J. THO.

Account far preferred capital)

OF TOO ARE

REQflRfeD tn file fou r
other pleading, ac rolaw, with tha Clerk o f
ild Court on or before
l»* l, and oarro a copy
in the .pi tin Hire* altarta , names ana addroaa
aw. In default thereof,
will proceed eg pane
entry o f a decree pro
rainat yea

r
-rltM

m-toora are attar dadactloa of
air0 * * are after deduction o f

a.

IH A F F E R

'ha abo*o-u
abo*o-n
Vina Tree, o f tha
• b o * * atatamant la true, an
CKo true itata o f tha aararal
•

rM a i'f f i i&amp; n i l l Court.
WALKRR

reefore
amine la, an

CIGAB FOB EACH YEAR
Tha British railways print J COUNCIL BLUFFS. Iowa l* -A t00p000,0&lt;&gt;0 tickets g year.
cigar for every year of hit life.
That w u Martin Wakehoufb'a
gift from vrteran railroad worker*
who honored hla tooth birthday
Tueiday.
&gt;
“ We gave him M rlgar* !u t
year and told him he'd gat IM U
he'd coma lo tha party Util year.”
u id Henry Wendt, preiident et
tha local unit of the National Re­
tired and Veteran Railroad Em­
ploye* Ai m .

ROMAN
CLEANSER

-Y

Kona
Kona
. Kona
t.soo oa

MM.TTt.Jt
se.ooe.ea
ao.aoo.ee
1 1 ,000. on
3.0*0.ST

a c c o l' k t* |ar ralaa of («t,»aa.«a

‘ • m to eacara UapimiM and for

I the hand and official
a Clark o f tho .Circuit

*

, iii.n a .ts
11.SSS.1T
i.saa.aa

£ i " , ” a a d ether llebllltle* for h orrew el

yS^SeN SiS

LO CA TIO N

4 0 1 .tll.lt

^ e r u i 'i j n t” &lt;in e iu e m e "p o «i«l

wi'lTte*!’ aabeiriet'wrr —....-Z~,

CwunciJ ad fi^akip, which camWlgna tor I h n b t ’a iadsparlsats
fwm the Prague Oampuglit rw-

A N N O U N C IN G

i,iM.aia.TT

Ip», M d carpers*

Rena
Hene
None
None

1,111,11).IT

w cid uelR - pertaerehips, and cer-

ty&gt; n c r c a n
iAHENCE L MILLER, If
id. If A«»d. bia unknown
h*lr*. Sevfse**. Iigsteea,
credits™. or tarot rapra*
i and att paraona claimthrough ar undar than
e f them: and all partlaa
r claiming to h are any
o or In tercel In tba real
herein described.

,

J*

---------MABIUTIKI

rtcw

ind tho W'H of t...

-~ .--.-c -

b*nk on ncctptf nc«« outiundia*

Legal Notice

iw
m i[a.
* to the n
wu

iM o e.ae

f ^ ^ e ~ i u V j s e f “te |None ilsn« ant

^ . " “ thxn

W ait fiermdn Cope
Identify Fotaigner

N ona

None
4ia.4iT.se

w - i u d i n F INen* everdrafie) .. .
# iu ,a T * -l® , furniture end fixtures

Tha number of farm tractors
In flwaden rasa from 18,000 ia 1838
to 100/XX) today.

7 ])

«i.u a ta

sWiDir ^ * » R •i»*h~ef “rederel“

In 1063, tha average American
consumed 6U pounds of milk,
compared to 800 pounds at tha be­
ginIring of World War IL

rA Q u r m c c m A r r o B Y
MAM.. m b COM/N'
7 0 0 4 V' t o ic o trfra m e .

T l 3 . t il. s a ,

■ubaivlstoes

an,oboot
K sgl
1
Kent
Non#
.el hank. 4*
that it fully
------- herein

�1
Weather

Shop and Save

Clesr to partly clnudr «dth restt»r#d afternoon thund»r*ho» rrs
today and Rtlurday etrcpt i.»alst»d brief shower*.

In Sanford
•
VO LU M E

Established 190ft

XLVI

AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER
H ANFORD. FLO R ID A.

The Stroller stopped bp Mrs.
Appleby's "L ittle" rosuoraat In
the Florida State Bank building
this morning U&gt; taka not* of the
^novation that's beea going on
there during the past week. She
will re-open the "L ittle" eating
place bright and early Monday
morning. What do we mean by
bright and early? We meaa at
4:45 B.S. (Before Sun-up.)
• • • •
Ik e Stele Knight Circle ef the
First Baptist Chnrch will meet
Monday at • p. m. In the Educa­
tional Building with Mr*. Boy
Mel an heeteea. Geeet speaker
will be Mra. W . A . Hickman Jr.
• mteeienary.*
e

e

• e

One ad our local dry cleaners
ale 1ms -this actually happened.
The I trailer wasn't there to see
It, but passes It on he you. A digni­
fied woman took a Jacket and
sweater to the cleaners. Noticing
n sign offering three garments
cleaned for the price ef one. she
JrompUy slipped o ff her skirt.
Bunded it te the startled men.
wrapped her east tightly around
her and marched eat. The Strol­
ler thinks it must here been in
eeolo* weather then we're haring
BOW.

Rescue Ships H a k e

Searching Fo r B oat
NSW YOBJC tit—Coast Guard
L ssU o*oS'jIew 'jersey*"uSsy In a
eetreh Mr e fishing beet reported
sinking yesterday, lie exUteaee
The merch hegea yesterday
when a distrese ten, purportedly
coming from a beet which identi­
fied itself as the "Blue Star." said
the craft Was going down after
striking g "strange abject" in the
water.
A boiler ream aapbwina report­
edly set the craft aflame. Working
access te rafts and lifejackets.
The last report Mem the my*
Bdery-shrewded craft' was relayed
do the Oeast Guard by a com­
mercial vassal at 1:10 a.m.
It laid a foreign submarine was
surfacing alongside and was taking
aboard tt survivors ef the 40-foot
heat.
Coast Guard vessels reaching
tot irnes. pinpointed in the dis­
tress massage as M miles off
Barnegat, N J , found ae trace ef
nay beat or surrlvorn. But C
Search continued.

Workmen neared completion of a new concrete-block
bear crjre at the Sanford Zoo today as roo superintendent
Sidney RiChard announced plans for a long-range improve­
ment program for the popular tourist attraction.
RiChard said tha new cage, measuring 12 by 32 feet,

Republican Leaders
S till See Chances
T o Salvage Plan

WASHINGTON IA -House Re­
publican leaden said today thay
stilt have a good chanc* to salvaga President Eisenhower’s pro­
posal for a to-centa-an-hour mini­
mum wage.
Tba House Education and J*bor
Committee yesterday defeated the
Eisenhower plan on ■ 15-15 tie
vote and approved Instead, tl-l,
a Democratic bill to Increase the
minimum to $1 from the preseat
T*
Kay Republicans predicted a
lively House Boor scrap aest
week. They said they expect
strong support from southern
Democrats for the Mheent figure.
If adaUalstratioa officials put up
• vigorous fight, thase Republi­
4 WALLA WALLA. Wash. UB-Tb cans aaid, they probably will be
hulk of M B l&amp;astas at Waaktog- able to pass the figure, tbs White
ton BUM Friaoa traded bars for House requested.
■tars UsC aight—awd didn't Uka it
—as they reaped tba Aral Malta
-----------tww-day revolt

W ashington M ates
G e t S ta n Fo r Bars

During C e ll Check

Joint Declaration
Published Today
By Tito, Nehru

Infantry Division com
af National Guard units tn
aad Georgia will be con
to aa armored division beNov. I. it was announced
by CoL B. F. Merritt
ef staff, at ths division's
On. baedquartsrs
h National Guard unit,
walls.
Co. L UMh laf. as a unit in this
wrU be affected by this
•Uta ftn im m earryUg gmu and
ever but Capt Joseph D.
‘
aay revival at
0 0 af the local company
•4 ae yet received ef
ae to what this unit's
• a be.

T r a ff ic A cc id e n t
S ta tistic s Issued
ie Oas worses was fcfOad sad
Ctoasa JaJwswd to 1*T tswffia
a*v to to Kwatoala Cavafy to
yastoi '«*w Jawwary tkrw
4

Ttm fatal s r a M

m m nm

W O T BM TDK
THAN DIVERS
M OLD!*, m . IA—Oice DeBerd
'when*
valued at
■
r. toda divers had ae
_
tt. foil
Mrs. DeBerd was
, :__ ______ her foot, ths
. 4 to w s a s bar Mg tea was
j
■ •

lXJ m

Sp C

2: t .

A MASTNS MCMCOPTW o w n * party Town the Navwt .Mr Station at
Atsugr, Japan, sruns the wrretagr of an FJ-J ‘’ Fury1’ jet nglitiy
Identified as that in which LL Alan MeArw-ny, et Tordrer*. N. T , was
killed. Lt. McAneny'i plane owshed while participating to the
•earth mission for two Marines, whose plane crash-landed in the
FaciAe. Tho air-eeo erarrh for the mining airmen win declared
“ practically terminated'* tn tho closing chapter of a Far Pacific
tragedy that took tha Uvea of two Marines.
(InSmtolionaO

Baseball Campaign Suspects
For Fans' Support Flashing
Is Backed By CofC Currency
Police Summon

The Seminole County Chamber
of Commeter ami its R.ocb.ill
Committee are ino per rent be­
hind the effort to revitalise the
baseball program In Sanford, it
was announced today by Presi­
dent Karl Higginbotham,
"We have the he-t working
agreement now that « c hare hail
in years. Rase ball is r&lt;»ling us
less th's year and Sanford has
(he h ot club that he has had in
several seasons. In view of those
faels we urge the public lo sup­
port thr rffnrl of the local base­
ball officials by purchasing the
$2 and S4 books of tickets that will
bo mailed the first of next week,"
Higginbotham reiterated.
He continued, "llasebutl is an
Integral part of the overall re­
creation program and lha onlyway Dial we can hope lo have
baseball is lo support It by buy­
ing tickets ami altrmllng Hie
games. The boys are playing hard
and giving (he fans everything
they have by playing hard right
down to the list minute of every
game."
J. C. Davis, chairman of the
CofC rnntmlllre, alsn urged the
support of the ptihlle In Hus re­
newed effort In bark our tram
for th* remainder of the season.
The Chamber is assisting ma­
terially In the program by fluf­
fing Ihe envelopes and* mailing
litem In the public.
Chamhrr officials havo urged
that everyone matt his remlllauce
as soon as possible.
___________________ s

Victims Of Theft
LAS VKGAS, Nev. (/Tt—

BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (A —
Tivn nicn hrighlciiintr t lie dice
Yugoslav President Tito and In­
Initios with now It 100 bills
dian Prims Minister Nehru pub­
louchoii o f f n inin sron tin cn tlished a Joint declaration today
again advocating world disarma­
nl
police
invest lent inn o f
ment, use of atomic energy for
tlicir ponajlilc connection with
peaceful purposes only and peace­
tho biggest rash bunk rob­
ful coexistence of ail nations.
bery on record.
MIAMI
(.F)—Joseph
Albert,
cocky
23-year-old
jailbrenk
They also called for peaceful
Now York police summoned
solution of "the questions relating artist, was shot and fatally wounded lodny by a jcnlous hus­
victim* of tho hank rubbery
J. A. R \MA
to Gsrmsny and Taiwan" (For­ band who told police ho found Albert and his wifn locked
to view photographs of the two
mosa) and a U.N. seal for Com­ In n lover’s embrace.
★
ic
Vr
today. And experts are rhccking
munist Chins.
The husband, Richard J. Svohodn, 29. called police nnd
their
fingerprints
in
search
of
a
The two worked out the state­
--------------------------------—— rcjlortnI: "I've juat ihol a man.
link with guunien who look J'tnR..
ment during Nehru’s week-long
warned him to slay away (mm
000 from a Cliaso Manhattan Hank
state visit to Yugoslavia. Iha In­
my wife."
ii Queens, N. 5’ ., last April fi.
dian Dew to Rome yesterday.
Thus Ilia fantastic luck of Al­
Police here arrested Frank Ells­
The Tito-Nthru declaration in
beit, who recently won back his
worth, 30. ami Hay Wilson, 33.
general followed the lines of state­
freedom after he had been con­
lifter casino t-aslurr* told how
ments each made earlier thla yssr
victed o f murder and who twie#
they moved fiom one gaming taldn
Jointly with Soviet Premier Niko­
hi oka out of Miami's skyscraper
In another, buying chipa with
lai Bulganin.
jail, played out in ■ speeding m icrisp 5100 Mil*.
The statsmsnt said Tito and Neh­
bill ship.
Detective l.t. H. J. Handler, *»td
Jarkenn A. Raney, Indiani'MIa
ru agreed to ixchangs missions to
lie was pronounced dead on ar­
Ellsworth hail fit hutnlred-dollar school executive, bn» I ;■ named
foster trad* between their coun­
rived at a hospital ,
tolls and Wilson 31 when they president of Klwmil* Jr. ter no*
tries.
of the
MINNEAPOLIS
A tor(Mgt.
.( » Stanley
—.,. . / liartles . —
—
were plrked up hera ysstenlay,
tinnal. Ha was elected t&gt; tho
ns do which cut a five-mile ewath county police aaid 8voboda told
Ellsworth anhi he inld niaga- number-on* Kiwanis pi&gt;*t In -1
through a section of weatqm Min- officers h* returned to Miami this
xine subscriptions. Wilson said ho week by delegates attending tho
ncsota lata yesterday kilted n 50* morning from a trip to Nebraska
oas a rlothi'-r. Pniir* searched 40th annual Convention of Ktmonth-old boy, Injured at least 15 to find hi* wife, Ruth, SO, and
their room in a luxury hotel. All watii* Inlctnallonnl at (’ ! ■clnnd,
others and cut a path of destruc­ Albert on a couch In th# living
told tho# found mote than 587,000. Ohio. New* of Ram i's nisei i
room of an apartment,
tion as far east as Twin Cities.
Ellsworth was freed Inst night WU* received by n(fh&gt; s at tho
Svoboda flved a single shot from
Hardest hit was a 30.mll*
on a xvrit of habeas corpus. Wilson Kiwanis Club of Snnfn i
stretch west of Marshall. Minn., • .32 ratiber pistol. The bullet
remained in jail on an investiga­
As head of Kwun s Interna*
JACKXON, Mich. (A - Tony where ths fury of the winds tore struck Albert In the mouth.
tion of robbery booking.
tinnal,
Jiaticy will be off nt
Dulry. "dean" of lifers and re­ down farm buildings, flattened
liartles said Mr*. Syoboda, a
Ellswoitb’a attorney posted tl,* spokesman lor a!inn*t a ipmiii'r
portedly the "lonasomsst man" in crepe and-ripped power and tele­ slender brunette, readily admitted
ni'0 bond with tba wril, winch is million Kiwanis in d.lltid rln'.-s hi*
southern Mltklga* prison, died phone lines.
- - ■ she had b*«« having an affair with
returnable Monday,
rated thrmichunt the Ul led H'ni s
yesterday.
Hall, then n heavy rain fell Albert.
White l.as V • g a * officers ami Canada, and In At* 1 a i
At TT, DuUy was the oldest In- over most of the southern half of
Svoboda waa held for Invsitigacheeked tha bill* serial numbers. Hie Hawaiian
islands. IU
mats snd hid served the most the state.
Uon.
New York authorities checked reeds Dun K. Fngdiihi, Kpokane,
time—M years.
Dead ia Ronnie Larson, eon or
Albert and William F. Chapman
photos and fingerprints of Ilia Washington lumberman v n h i
Death sqded a fight for freedom Mr. and Mrr. Marlow Larson. Ha ware convicted in 1US3 of allying
pair, llolh have records.
, held the post since August of I ' •!,
which Duley had waged for most was flung 300 feet.
Dr. Clifton Springmyer, a Miami
Raney has devoted must of his
of his sduit life end seemed D u l­
lie wa* inride the farmhouse or naturopath during an attempted
profestinnai
Ilf# to tho edu A t
ly to be winning.
Mr. and Mrs. August Wabetia holdup.
nf lb* physlcally-handiiap)—I. Il.i
He was said to have gone 10 when th* twister hit. Mrs. Y\ahas hern superintendent oi i. i
years in on* stretch without re­ bens said eight persons wrr# in
Indiana Slain School for the lie.if
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (A ceiving * letter or a visit
tha house. They tried to get into
at Indianpolis fo
years. Ha 'n
Argentina's opposition
Radical
Then three years ago Mr. and the cellar, but were unable to
a gradual* of Franklin Collegq
Party, which challenged President
Mrs. Marion Baron of Grand Ha­ make It before the tornado tor*
IDNDON 'A — Prime Minister and a member ef it.s council. Re*
I'rron to bark lip hli peace talk
ven, Mich., read a story that de­ the dwelling apart. All were in­
BOONSIlOnO, Md. (A—After 44 with deeds, says d has l&gt;ern denied Eden suggested last night lhat Ihe cent Iv, h* r.veived tli# hon nrary
scribed Duley si the "lonesomest jured.
days and nearly 1.000 miles. Mr». radin lime lo answer a president­ Soviet blue eventually might he ilfglin of the Dueler nf l.. »
min in prison.” They became in­
brought Into the Western Euro­ from that Injtitntmn.
Emma Gatewood is still pretty de­ ial ipeerh.
terested.
termined to become the first wom­
In a broadcast earlier this week pean Union'* arms control and
At thsir urging, the corrections
an ever to hika the ?,050-mile Ap­ Tcron absolved Ihe political oppn wripon* pool.
commission last March ordered
palachian Trail alone—even if she sition of any part in the June IS Tha Prime Minister a«xured nusDuley’s case processed for possible
revolt and invdrd anll-IVronlsta sla the West stood ready lo guar­
Is tn.
psroie. But while Duley waited,
dtsih intervened.
Tit* Gallipoli*, Ohio, grandmoth­ factions lo come lo terms with antee her against any threat from
a free, united Germany, Rut he
HEItMOSA BEACH. Calif. (A— er emphssiiccl this yesterday a* him.
TTie Radical Party responded said Britain stood firmly behind
The fellow perched on the pols to­ she paused at Washington Mon­
that Peron could allow hia sincerity three principle*:
day says he's up there because ument Slats Pirk.
t. "We am not prepared to break
WASHINGTON (TT— Th# Sen.
U'a the quickest way lo land—
At the rato she's going, grand- by lclting II reply aver the state
ato Hanking Commit!)'* summon­
about five acres of it.
ma Emma should make it to Ml. radio, Argentina's only network. up NATU."
2. "We will not he parted from ed Compl roller General Joseph
The parly’s national rnmmiltce
William (Happy) Howard. 35, KatahJIn, Me., about mid-Septem­
PORTLAND. Ore. (ft — Frink
Campbell fur closcd-dnnr ques'
.
ealls himself America's flagpolr ber. She left the Ml. Oglethorpe, said last night th« Communications the United Sulrs."
Lechleldner, World War I Infan­
ing
tld*
afternoon
on
s
report
of
Ministry
had
advised
that
"regu
3 "We will work for the unifica­
tryman who eaw action in Franca sitting champion and says no one G*., starting point May 3.
"laxiteis" in connection with ilnr
Lugging a pick o( about 35 lalions" prevent the granting of tion of Germany."
in 111?, has a eoupl* of ntw med­ has challenged his mirk of 106
conlrarta In xrbivh a government
free
radio
lime
for
the
Radicals
days,
set
at
Porland,
Or#.,
in
1052.
"I
can
quite
understand
that
the
pounds and spending tha nights
als from ths Department of the
loIlnr-B-yenr" m»n alh-gtlly fi*
" I ’v* been up hero 13 days." he In her sleeping bag or lean-to shel­ to answer,
Russians fear that a fro* Ger­
Army.
said yesterday. "I'm going to try ter* along the way. she has worn
Tha opposition leaders said (hey many would probably unit* with gure&lt;l.
Proudly displaying ■ Silver Star and stay a year, nut this i&gt; my
Campbclt'a report, In # tetter
would continue lo press for radio
and Purple Heart, ha said they final curtain in show business. If out two pairs of shoes but none time, which they have been denied Ihe West," Eden said. "I think received yoxterdnv by rimitman
that
it
would."
arrived only this week, more thin I make any money I'm going to of her enthusiasm.
Fullhright (D-Ark) of tha com*
" I ’ m a great lover o( ths out­ since Teron came lo power.
tt yean after they warn awarded. get n flvs-acra tract of land and
inlit ex. caused th# Snnnte lo de.
doors," she explained.
lay further cunslihrulloii of a bill
Tha Tt-yur-old Portlander says try to raise chickens."
to extend for two years tho do*
OWNER IS ORDERED
hs was told of ths dacomtioo upon
The publicity stunt is for in au­
TO ATTEND CHURCH
fens# production
-t. ThA lire
his discharge from the Army In tomobile firm. Howard has in
WA1.UO, Wis. (A—Urea lisa of
gives tho goversiment aii'honty
lt t . But it took ill these years "apartment" about 5 by 4'» feet
ORLANDO LT’)— "Davy Cm- in mnhilira th# nation's &lt;■ u •-ay
liquor law convictions, tavern op­
aad U rn Utters la Washington, atop ths pole, equipped with tele,
erator Sam Znlp will have to go ekett" ha* bren capturi-d.
for drfense.
he said, before he got action. phone, radio and television.
Poller said a 12-yrar-oid readi­
Without naming th# Hollar-a*
Lechleldner said ths latest query
ST. PETERSBURG (A-Dcvelop- to church every Sunday for t year. ly admltti-d yesterday be was the
was mailed two weeks ago.
era who recently bought the Pine
In Circuit Judge K. H. Selilicht- lad nils bloke into Hamilton Ply. year man, C-.&gt;npbcll Idi-utif■■d h n
ICE COVERS STREET
ENID, Okie. tA—Tin thermo, Key Islands in the mouth of Tampa Ing’ s court, Sam was charged with nod Co. and sang the ballad of a* di-put) iidmlniiltnloi f il.e 1) ••
meter registered 0T yesterday Bay are planning for a fully Idling s minor loiter in his tavern, Davy Crockett into its lapa record­ fense Material I'mriirrm-'til Ai-n*
cy la 1t*ftI- 1Dfvil "who at th# asm#
when police clerk Paul Hickman rounded beach community of 40.- selling liquor la two minors and ing marhina.
tins# was h ad of ihe American
answered ths phono. The 'caller 000 peraona, the city council was selling beer to a minor.
Tha company hail complained of Zinc, Lend and Smelting Co,"
Schllchtlng placed Zolp on pro­
■aid; "intersection at Willow and told yesterday.
Hyman
of Miami,
Grand II Covered with Ice." It was.
flyman Green
urren oi
miami, a
■ memmrm- bation, ordered his license* re­ frequent brcaklns and the tape re­
HONO KONG IA—U. S. and Brit­ Patrolmen, found Ice all over the her of the development syudicate, voked and said if he fails to attend cording incident occurcd weeks
ish authorities today announced
place. An Ice truck had lost near- said the plana call (or three corn- church as prescribed he will have ago.
their plans to receive three turn­
Drlrrtiva l.t, J. R. Reach said
ly a ton of icn as it pulled away plete residential, recreational and to it»cnd his probationary period
coat American pows expected to
tha boy told .them ha and eight
in Jail.
shopping areascoma out ef Bod Chian tomorrow.
nther youngsters, 7 to &gt;2, entered
Tonight I# the test 1-I nn.« fnf
British Immigration authorities
the plant six or seven linn-* to those Interested lo eur« ll for th*
will meet them whan they cross
ttral cookirr,
senior life easing to ire# being
the bridge over ths Bhumehun
"Davy" and tha gaqg were spon-ored by ihe Semino'.e t'uunty
hirer frowttor, tt mils* north of
turned over to Dranga County Ju­ Chapten&gt;f the Amriimn
Mrs. Su« 8. Steven ion, second
A special gunt at tbs ronven- venile Court. Their namra were Cruse at th# Municipal Pool,
Hang Kang, sod-take them to the
vic*-pr*sid*nt ef th* Pilot Club of
Mite Nrwman will give an ad­ lon will be Miss Toshiko Morikaw a, withheld.
many immigration office.
The registration deadline w.xa
The three men aro Lewis W. Hanford will Join with ov*r 700 dress entitled "Fruit* of Our En­ •'Tokyo, Japan, recipient of th#
Wednesday but nnyotto who q i.li ■*
Griggs sf Jacksonville, Tsx.; Otho members o f Pilot Club Internation­ deavor" at th* President*' Lunch­ I I 1-65 Ruby Ncuhall Scholarship
tn take the course ami failed to
grant, kills Morikawa, an out­
G. toil af Olympia, Wash-; and al attending tho 34th Annual Con­ eon on Thursday.
register may sign up tonight.
Tho projection o f committee standing student at Llndrnwuod
William JL Cowart sf Dallas, Gs. vention In Los Angeles, Calif., on
Th# ctasses are being taught by
»
July 17-50, with tha Sutler Hotel plane ^11 bo featured Friday Collage, Saint Louis, Mo. this year,
BUI Fleming and are conduct* J
as Headquarters.
morning. A play will highlight this will continue her studies at Wash­
WASHINGTON DD— Also- ■ach Wednesday and Friday front
VBEB OWN RGUIPNRNTt
Pilot Club International, a Classi­ projection, which will be followed ington University. Saint Louis a*
rlates
ef fer.at* Majority leader 7 until 10 p. m.
U 1I7RB OF WIN
fied Service Club fi
executive by workshops for each of tha Pilot Pilot’s scholarship student fur
If enough peraona are Intrreri*
DALLAS, Tex. IA-WU1* being bueineae and professional women, International standing committees. ill 66-64.
Lyndon B. Johnson (D-Tax) agreed ed an instructor's court# wilt al­
arraigned ns narcotics charges will to represented by delegates Tho play waa written by Miss Ruth
Tha convention will conclude with t^^ay ’ # had lltti* warning before
yesterday, James Curtis, tt, said from Canada, Bermuda, and other Dickans, o f Tuiaa, Okie, vice chair* a formal banquat on Saturday, l.a w » stricken by a serious heart so b* held.
dtoa is kla main Job.
eouatrie* where Pilot la organ!** man o f tho Pilot International Co­ July 50, whan Mra. Edith McBride attack last weekend.
THAT*)! DIFFERENT STORY
"I dent get In nag game
L
ordinating Committee, ia eorroboraLANSING, Mich. &lt;A -T h is story
ef Caincavilla, Fla., will
Johnson, now under strict enters
lew I knew IH win." added Cun Ths convention will officially Uon with MI** Mary Elisabeth Cameron
be- installed a* th* international lo rest and relax, Is In tha Navai leaked nut yesterday: rlcctivv*
tu.
open July 57, with Mile Winifred Morgan, o f Texarkana, Ark., (he president- Universal • International Medical Tenter at nearby Bethes* state officials were too busy so
U. ft.
V. M. HU H. Newman, e f Charleston, W. Va. Pilot International Coordinating Studios will prnrida special enter* da,
Md. Hospital attache* aaid h* deputy State Treasurer Charles
to moo?" presi dent, presiding. Wednesday O—amitfea chairman.
tainmsnt for the banquet, follow* had his "bast day" yesterday line* N. Lents happily agreed to go out
The
evening tha Pilato o f California will
Specie) entertainment has been iny which th* Pilots of Florida th* attack Saturday. He waa da* last weekend and officiate at a
BUy with a y entertain at a welcome dbmar with
Including slght-seafng will
r ill'to hostess
'
at a recaption hon scribed as *“ »u u y "stu d y pro- beer contest. Tuned out tl waa
t toot contest.
wlac the MV imidanti —

Uncanny Lack Ends
For JaiLbreak Artist
Minnesota Tornado
Fatal To Intant;
Crops Flattened ,

'Lonesomest Man’
Dies In Jail At 77

Peron Challengers
Report On Denial

Elderly Woman Is
Determined To Win

Kiwanis President
Told At Convention
Held In Cleveland

Minister Suggests
That Soviet Bloc
May Be Included

Fellow M akes T ry
For Y e a r On Pole;
Is Aiming For Land

Campbell Called
For Questioning

World W ar 1 V et
Given New Medals

Pine Key Islands
T o Be Developed

'Crockett' Gang
Caught In Orlando

Reception Slated
Sanford Guard Unit
For 3 Turncoats
W ill Be Affected

ftxtujwa. totiag up a MU
g w Mto six flgmrwe.
: Jaasawd aafl leeks i
____
te ia s g a plus tha slow fob ef sbablag dowa tba whato priaas for hM- thla
dsn wa spews taept tha prlasawra J r „
aan last Bight,

No

Bank Robbery
Gets New Lea

Nearing Completion;
Other Plans Revealed
ia the type which ill eventually
replece the old wooden eagei which
ure "impoaslbl* to keep clean.
He laid the wooden cage! havs
been there since the mid*19.0i.
Another feature of the new
cage, other than an overhead
sprinkler system designed to main­
tain cleanlinesa, is the fact that
heavy wire in»t*»d of b in will
be used to retain the animals.
" I don't Ilka bars," RiChard
aaid. "and the wire will provide
a better view ef the enlmili.
He said the No. 4 wire used on
the cage la sufficient to hold a
lion. Tho wire i( used at th#
Jacksonville soo, ho pointed out
"W o are going to try to move
in a cub tomorrow and the rest
o f tho bear* Monday," RiChard
added.
The soo wse painted net long
ago, but RiChard said there are
a lot of other thing* that must
bo done before the tourists season
begins.
.
RiChard said ho was still hop­
ing that the Bengal Tiger captor*
ad by Gen. Jamca Van Fleet could
bo transported from •Pakistan to
the »oo. Gen. Van Fleet present­
ed tho tiger to the PaklsUn goveminent which in turn presented It
to Gov. Collins. The too wsi in­
form ed by Collins that it could
have the tiger If some means
oould be found to transport the
animal bare. Tho Chamber of
Commerce has been sctlve in ne­
gotiations to arrange thla.
RiCherd aaid foe tiger would be
a big asacf to the soo because
Bengal tigers are found mainly
la tho larger cities.
Expansion o f tho soo, RiChard
said, ia pretty limited for all the
available spars Is in toe. If the
Atlantia Coast Uns ' Railroad
would lot the too have a little
land. It could bo expanded In the
direction o f the track he mid.
RiChard ruled out the possi­
bility e f placing part of tha soo
in tho area below tha Court
House. Ho aaid this would bs a
hamard to children who would be
forced to cresa lha (treat to toe
some o f tho enlmalsRichard aaid ha planned to
"tighten u p " tha soo in order to
make the fullest possible use of
the available land. Ha added, how­
ever, that this does not mean th*
m oat will bs #11min*ted.

Associated Press Leased Wire.

FRIDAY. JULY R. 1955

Concrete Bear Cage

S tro llin g
In Sanford

*

Tonitc Last Chance
For Course At Pool

Sanford W om an Plans For Confab

Strict Orders Given
To Senator Johnson

J

�Page 2

THE SAVFORP HERALD

FrI. uuly R, 1955

Little Crater
Inside Big One
Getting Active

Dllllh llal.
IUT
w w ujifpF

J rr*LL ia
^86EMeO 7

mfc

GREATOAME.2/P/

I'AB OIVCM

t$U-flick Sumner

co^ T vou crr
ANY WOBO ON MOW"■
t/M«HIS,SKlPPEq *

Kerry nodded shortly. How far
did n men have to ride to got away
tram the pestT
“Then maybe you've met my
mend. Name of Cameron."
•Wayne Cameron T”
“That’s right. Know him?"
"Mat him a couple of tunaa."
"•mart fellow, Wayne," Gaidar
m r n l "Generally knows what
he’s after. OanemUy gate tt. too.
That’* eranethtag I admire to a
DOKT TOUCH

ALEXANDER;

X X 'a ROOM T

ISA

k ANYTHING,
PO O -rVEGO T
EVERYTHIN G

*-r WHERE 1

J&amp; H WANT IT

ilV MV MAT ANO TIES AOS
S INI TH I3 STACK WITH
( m y b o c k c o l l e c t ton
AMD BOOKS t

MV MITT IS UNDER THIS
J A C K E T AND MV V "
TENMIS SHOES A o e )
UNDER THAT r ——^
p i l e w it h m v j .
ft
f o u n t a in r i c n *
1
, pen
&gt;

r howcam lA o d u e
WITH HIMt Hit
f SYSTEM WOPKS
**-* MTTTOTHAM
« m4Lw . MINI y*

BAMt oajo ip rm
&gt;HAPPEN TO Htt/E ANY
QRIPIB,PvJT A NOTE IN
' THIS BOX, AND MBU (SO
lh . — r OVER THEM VTv Vj TWiawr/ J ,

TMANrS TOA Jk ll
TROMBONIST^UO A
\PftAK CONCM-SMIUJ
MAMA EARTH/ PCAOnUL, } ONSUCHUTT18 J
•CRENC, ANDBest FROM/ THMd* TH* , 1
^ HNt'a MAcmtaa/ a wotio turns/ J

a t DON'T cct ahy "! A mp b o ragaom Y.

HELDCLEARD U A eWIMO F*OM A
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THAT'SRVWT: HOMY/ MY V
NESBiWOS'O HAS BEEN
TVRNCO OFF AIL THE WHILE.
AND l’VB HEARD EVERYTHIN*
_ . YOU *AiO/

“Most people do," Kerry retort*
ed. aad couldnx resist adding,
"You. Mend Cameron didn’t seem
to know what be waa after thla
time. Ba let hlmaalf get stuck
With tha moat worthless atrip of
sand aad cactus ta tha country."
"Fran what ba wrote ma," Cal*
dar replied mildly, "mast af the
good land ta already taken. Maa
named Mallory—ha’s the Mg augur
around then, isn’t hat"
"Too might call him that."
Kerry agreed, adding dryly, "You'd
admin him. Ha generally gete
what ba goes after, too."
X hear. But he got U •
long time ago, didn’t he?"
rtfsant"A men that sits tn tha saddle
too long te apt to get rsreins
Haven’t you noUeed that?”
-c a n t aay X have, particularly."
Impatiently, Barry shook off n
vague mu Mill see Broken Bpur’a
attain w en none of hla aay man.
"Hey, Colder,” a rough call
of the eard-taUas struck
at them, "you gonna gimme n
ehanas to wla my rneney hack?"
"No, Mr. Wharton, but U you'n
determined to easui earns m en to
keep tt oompeny, ru oblige you."
The men called Wharton laughed
sourly- He waa youag. heavy tea*
tured, flushed of fens, with a sul­
len eat to hla thick-lipped mouth.
Qsldar taeUnad hie bead toward
Barry. "C an to take n head, Mr.
KterdenT"
Kerry h—Heled, rearm baring
the naar^mpty stato of hla pods*
- ■ Re might be tacky tonight
ho much

there where u ixtn hud m
needed, at ether ple/we Just claimu c the heeptutlty of the bonk*
houM tor a tew alfhta aad movin* on. Now hero he was la Dod*t.
God kaaw why, except that he'd
always had a curiosity to ms tha
famous trail tows, aad it had
tssaasd as food a plans to drift to
u u y . Aad tha wa*ss of bis
drlftia* wtrs maldnc a laassoma
rattls la hla puts pochst—ths
first moasy hs’d over earned Be
supposed ha outfit to tael proud
of It. But ba only remembered tha
monotony of Une-rtdtog In tha bah*
la* eun, tha dual aad atuch at
braadln*. aad thou*bt a*ain that
waa no way ter m u to bar*ain
away bis Ufa at thirty a month
aad katpt
There was a sudden stopping of
talk an over tha room, and a tun*
in* of bsada toward tha little ata*t
where the curtains wars parting.
Tha lanky piano-player tinkled out
Bnmd»km| 10ft |Qd MRtlflUntil ||
a girl la a rad drees walked onto
the stags. She was small aad vary
pretty, wtk a head *uU af black
curls, aad big dark syss that
named to tnvtts them all to join
bar la enjoying joke. liar sails
gave ovary m u la tha Longhorn
ths feeling that she was smiling
at him, yet tt seamed to harry
round the saloon, ba thought ha
saw her Up* droop u If bar search

TZn S w F

# I U U f * T T U iN «

X BVRR MfAKDj
NOW, ABB H|R«,

SANTA F I, N M. (JP—Thlngi
will novar ha quits ths same again
(or tho Btmoa Angel family.
In tho thno weeks since Ramon,
a Sants Fa ■treat cleaner, woe
123,000 In a national contest tha
f o r t u n e a of tho family havo
changed radically aad although
tho cash remainder has dwindled
to around M.ooo, a new home aad
BOWcar aeeeuat for a good part of
tha difference.

would como up. We've got a h&lt;
and a now ear and wo*va alw
wanted thorn. But it's so ales
havo some money la tho honk
you don't havo to worry..thit w
Just going to go back to our }
rad lisavo It ia thoro."
■
A |_
•_ f _• _ s f _ s
A lO flllC jC Ifin ilS l
'N w a o iiiw a
oh
kh
u
a

js r u r t a

Calls On Teachers

u

CHICAGO ift—A top atools
•etI,t taday celled oa teach
for ths like of tho natira. to
spirt sgcaptlraal students to
into acieatifia research.

i

,i n
* * * * * OemmUalee 1
m m boat war their sdoha place, tho ahortego of Kteqtists aad
som

ACTfi .« 6 « L . .
. p a o o ifM e i^ ,

ETTA'S GOT MC •

imthe ooe* v-J

A N /o m e c

-rt

houm

a « a

Creator Reburied

oews af whleh crested a mild sen­
sation la this country, the bodies
Is their lead coffins wore takoa
to a Loadoa undsrUker.
Tha lead coffins wore placed hi
two huge oak coffins, moved to
Mtesteod end buried beneath an
sa«|i|«h oak la a secluded corner

IgOOKHMOBAPE PUPIL t
COMMITS M O M
KOBE, Japan IM— Aa S i u m II
•eeoad-grada pupU eomaittad ml*
«Me Tuesday by refusing to gel
out of tho way of o freight trite.
A classmate who waa walking
tha tracks with him said the hey^
screamed: " I wait to diet I w»at
to die."
’ The reoaeo, Asahl sold, was that
the boy, together with a dates
others, was acoldad by bis Usehsr
for flaytec fftctlcal Jokes

Roving Ambassador
Plans London Trip

UO/TMlOff A B t ' S K M I

UNITED NATIONS. N X Itevteg Indies Ambassador V. E
Krishaa Hsnen plaansd te emaUae ter London T h u r s - d r y
te give Prims MteUtor Nahru a

last," son Quad
tho oaly furniture

/I

MA Q g iS S y ^ fli

Sherlock Holmes

i / S S S r s i * lo Inspire Yeartu
Kwill r r amove
u into
&amp; a Ithree-bedH x **P |*

W H AT'S W 9 0 N Q ,

NEW YORK, N. T. -T h a advanlures and eruntlsss escapades sf
purs mischief that mads up the life
of a couHtry hey around the turn
of the century era recreated in
Pageant Prase's new publication
"Where the Meadowlark Cell*,'*
written by Verne A. Wheekn stx^j
scheduled far (thtM at tho end of
the month.
Literally hundreds of thousands
of
tourists who hava rlsttsd FIs.
MW5TXAO, England IB — Sir
Arthur Cm sb Doyle, creator of nda know the author aa tha maa
Sherlock Molmat. was roburiad who t a k a s pictures at tha Bit
Trot, tho oldest aad laifiat rypress tr«a In tha world.
Whcslssi's love of nature comas
•from ths hippy days of his bay*
hood on tho Iowan fang whan ho
waa born, l a now liras la l a i d
wood, with his wife rad cUagb*
tor. Mrs. Whssltu teaches first
grads at Lynaa School.

aad operated on five days after

•ha la juat back from tho hoipjm.
galassen ovary day havo ctiarad
everything from Uuuraieo to
ruches to automobiles.
Oa tes brlghter side, Ramon

But authorities reported villagers
living In the possible peth of a
lava flow were showing no signs
of fright.

Longwood Author, ^
Verno A. Wheeless,
Publication Told

Things Are Now Quite Different
At Angel Household InSantaFe

J TVlKT'MTWg

IN A NAVY PLANE OVER M T ^
Etna, Sicily 'JT-A Utile crater laside the big one glows dsrk red.
then every 8 or 10 minutes popi
like e chestnut an e hot tin.
Chunks of moltra rock spout ui
ion feet or more.
Those ire the fireworks from
Mt. Etna, which for five sights
have been visible /or 30 miles or
mere along the tourist • crowded
east coast of Sicily.
/
It Is tho mo»t activity Europe'r A
highest volcano has shown for four V
years. But looking into tha enter
from only 300 fMt away, then
is no sign that a major eruptlog
has begun.
A U 8 Navy RAD two-engial
plane was piloted for this flight
over the crater by John Riggini
of 323 Hancock St Bluefield. W,
Va , an aviation chief miehlnlaU
mate. The copilot waa' Lt. R. VA)
Blggenho of IT32 3rd St. Verona,
Pa. •
The naw activity is inside g •
crater 230 f a t by 800 f a t formed
44 yean ago It is on the north­
east side of the mountain. Three
hundred feet above it, the huge
main crater now la quiet.
Inside the northesst crater Is «
bed of black lava. The new vol.
canie mouth Is a red pimple te
the center, about 30 feet wida. W
Smoka boil* out is puffs and Is
whipped sway by a 30-mlla • anhour wind. A dark n d glow
brightens to charry **d every I
or lo minutes. That la when tha
flames lash up and the chunks ol
molten rock arc hurled into tea air,
to fall back into tha crater.
Dr. Salvatora Coeutaa of tho In­
stitute o f , Volcanology of tha
l/Blverslty of Catania reported tlte
activity "eoaaldarably tecreased’#
la the past t4 hours.
If the spouts continue to go
higher, somo lava will begin ipUL
tag over tee rim of the enter.

][ WMeMS

■oorotery of lute Dullao during
his monte la tee United States.
The Indian diplomat said pester-

%
Sul". 2 A3L ^
teg teastens te tea wnrld, partkuLegal Notice
letar'ier. M. J.

W 'i'jSHbbi

rlib

the

etsvk * f the J lr « «

S ielu it County, plortf

1 M c e m s e e . w i| F t t * pm ruit

J** T. Lumekin
atsnr Msreeret Lempkie

«ev«m e»r

O, LtY fU PIMUKA
H u ts BftOYTDr
XOTICR .Is bsrsbr a

ENTNUUABTIC RECRUIT
RfCDfOND. Vs. UA—The Air
Fore* will have a herd time find­
ing a more enthusiastic recruit
Uia« Neman Sutherland, 18, o

Expansion Program
Involving A ircraft
Is Told By Airlines

Butherlead has wanted te join
the U. B. Air Force since he tha purchase af both
was 10. When ha reachsd 10 ha
b tin s u i wrote the mayor of Ricbmoste.
then Dr. E. E. Haddock, about it,

OUR

S U M M E R SPECIALS
For July Only!
M M U I b w D w Te»lo Wave
^
With t e a r Baal NrutraHx«r- f 1(MM
M M U t m Super LbbbMb
cbm
$ &gt; e o e I b h q is iw w o

W ritten Inquiiy
Is Ju st Too Tough

m ic t w i

T ^ Jq

• UtiwimnaBteVTiKSs •tm

•AUSTIN, Taw. m

H I-FI

*
. — »

•

' *’

♦ *

r to rs **:*'■?J a
U I I U U
■V

f U

ft

M A K I A

�1
THE SANFORD ITERXLD Fri. July *. 1955

County Personals
Longwood News

14
I fa

By MRU. REVERLY EATON
Myrl Ifiakcnship,
who
hss
Keen spending several weeks in
Falmouth Heights,
Mai*., re*
tumid to l.ongwood last week and
ha* resum'd work for Mr*. L. R.
Payne in tha Teat Office,
Mr. and Hr*. Nta] Gilhert spent
tha holiday wetland with Mr*.
Gilbert'* parent*, Mr. and Mr*.
June* McGrath. Jama* Robert,
who ha* been spending a week
with them In Eau Gallic, r«*
turned with them.
Mr. *and Mr*. Ray Fraser, antertained Mr. and Mr*. E. Bonnet,
Mr. and Mr*. Howard Warren, and
Mr. and Mra. Everett Hunger of
Sanford, with card* at their home
on Molnar St. Saturday evening.
Mr*. Harriet Deich entertained
Mr. HollUter and Mr*. Florence
Sunderlin at card* Monday even­
ing at her home on Warren St.
Frienda of Mr*. Belle Atnr, will
he lorry to learn aha tuffered a
broken shoulder and other bruise*
when she fell last Wednesday
evening at her home on Maine fit,
Robert Robertson, who Is attending business college In Jackeonvllle, spent the July 4th week­
end at the home of his parents,
Mr. and Mra. C. L. Robertson.
Mr. and Mrs. ‘Tat” Blakenchip, and children of Fittiburgh,
Fa., are spending their vacation
a* Fiesta of hia father at his
home on Maine St. Mr.* Blakenahip is a tree surgeon for the city
of Pittsburgh.
Mr. and Mrs. James McGrath
entertained tha family at a fish
fry Monday evening. Those pre­
sent were: Mr. and Mrs. Herchel
Demoret, "Bobble** and Steven, of
Winter Park) Mr. and Mrs. Mau­
rice Parley, April - and Maurira
Jr., nf Orlando; Mr. and Mr*. Kell
Gilbert nf Eau Gallle; William
MrLaughlin and James Robert.
Mr. and Mrs. J, T. Montgomery,
Donna and Dickl* of Orlando, for­
mer residenta nf Longwood, were
callers on old neighbors July 4th.
Mr. and Mrs. Humiaann of Buf­
falo, N. Y.,* were guests of Mr,
and Mr*. James McGrath on Main*
St. the first of the week.
David Blanchard, son of ‘’ Pete"
and Elisabeth Blanchard of Longwood, arrived last Tuesday even­
ing to spend hia vacation with hi*
grandparents, Clyde and Nina
Wheeler in Cheatarvtlte, Maine.
David made the trip alone by
plane and was met at tha airport
in Augusta hy his grandparents,
Tha Longwood Volunteer Fire­
men entertained their famlliea at
a picnie and dance at Runnyshade
Park last Saturday evening,
Those present were Mr. and
Mr*. John Farina, Mr. and Mrs.
Gprland Bhhw, Mr. and Mra. Har­
old Willis, Mr. and Mrs, Dan Seraensy, Mr. and Mr*. Linton Cox,
Mr. and Mr*. D. Parker, Mr. and
Mr*. Claude Layo, Rudolph Carl­
son, Mr. and Mrs. Jo* Driver,
Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Friadberg of
Cleveland Heights, Ohio, and Mra.
Bette Lockley, Miss Iren* Mills of
Webster, N. Y.; Pat Screaney,
Bruce, Billie, John and Keith WilHe and Sandra Lockley of Web­
ster, N. Y.
Mr. and Mrs. M. R. Friadberg
and children, Cria Allen, Randy
and Heidi, *f Cleveland Heights,
Ohie, left far their home this
meriting after spending a month
at the noma of their parents; Mr.
and Mr*. Maurka Rudolph on
Labs Orange.
Mr. and Mra. John Farina aad
daughters, Deanna and Jonslla,
have returned from Fort Jack■on, R. C., where they visited
Mr. and Mra. Dalton Halms, Mr.
Helms is statiaaad there.
Mr. a*d Mrs, J. G. Payne and
children, Glenda and Darryls, will
return this weak frem Humboit,
T*nn„ where they visited Mr. and
Mrs. L. 8. Hamilton, Mra. Payns’a
parents.

G cn iva
By ADDIR PREVATT
Mrs. T. W. Prevatt and sow
Ctrltag left Friday far Miami t»
apand a weak than with Mr, aad
Mra. A . c . Mather*.
W. L. Sale uadanr
tioa Thursday at tha Fsraaldta ugh ton Memorial hospital.
Friend* *( J. T. McLain fr.
will b* (lad U hear that ha ii
A m w at his haam following aa
.*» operation la tha Orang* Memorial
hospital aad la doing aa wall da
can ha exported.
Mrs. Phil Packard o f Oviado
callad on Mrs. T. W. PrstriU,
Thursday.
Mr. aad Mra. Louis Markham
aad family returned
day after treading a weak hi
Alabama visiting Mr.
0 . WlTha
t * E*t
Rot. aad Mm . N il SUM*
WMd aad
Wedaaeday after ■
daya la Georgia with
Mra. Louia Markham aad foaSUg
aaaat
it Thnrndi
Thursday ta Payiaaa
‘ r, aiator aad ‘
in-law, m
T aad
i
Mr.
Mra. H
Mia
Mr. aad Mr*. Frank Frit* apmst
tsmiar with Ra law. had Mra.
W. I . Xyaar hi
Mr. aad My*. K. H. Grant had
•* thato | * a h taaday. Mr. aad
Ralaad Vsw m m i u u i ,
Mr. aad Mra. Billy Ttodal

Mr. and Mr*. Arnold Rsxtar
and family had a* their recent
guest*, their son snd daughter-inIsw, Mr. and Mr*. Edward Baxter
and children cf S. C., Mr. and
Mra. Bill Hlckion and family and
Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Hickson of
Sanford.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Markham
had a» their recent visitors, Sun­
day. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Legon and
family of Sanford.
Friend* of W. L. Seig wilt be
glad to learn that he has returned
horns after undergoing an opera­
tion. lie 1* doing very nicely.
Mr. and Mra. Donald Atwood
have aa their guesta for the week­
end their daughter and son-in-law,
Mr. ami Mrs. John Bill* and
daughter* of Miami.
Mr*. Cadrr Hart left Monday
for Mistiasippl to attend tha wed­
ding of her neice.
Ben Phillips of Georgia, is visit­
ing friends hero for awhile.
Miss Led* Peters of Jacksonvllle spent the weekend here with
her sister and brother-in-law, Mr.
and Sir*. Vance'Wagnon.
Mr*. T. W. Prevatt called on
Mr. and Mr*. Claude Tlson in Os­
teen Tuesday evening.
Mr. and Mr*. Walter Yarbor­
ough. Tony Whiting. Mr*. E. II.
Kilbee, Mr*. Berth* Lindiry, Mrs.
John Stone. Psle Stone, Mr. and
Mr*. Elwood Shaw, and Mr. and
Mr*. Royer Shaw, all attended the
picnic on th* 4th given hy Mr.
and Mr*. Roy Tlllis of Sanford
nt the Tilll* camp.
Mr. and Mr*. Carl Kelly have
as their guests for * few day*.
1 he Rev. and Mr*. Estes of Tenn­
essee.

Lake Mary News
BY VIRG'NIA P. ANDERSON
Mr. and Mr*. O. L. Shuman of
Atlanta. Ga., former residents of
Lake Mary, were calling on
frienda recently.
Mr. and Mr*. John Leach anil
son, John Edward returned July
1 from a vacation that look them
to Atlanta, Ga.. Burlington and
Winston-Salem, N. C., and Rich­
mond, V*. Her father, Edward P.
Pratt of Waahington, D. C.,
accompanied them to take Mary

foi a visit.
Mr. and Mr*. R. T. Wettingel and son Bob of Cincinnati,
at rived Friday to spend soma
time with her parents, Mr. and
Mr*. C. B. Braslngton.
Mr.t and Mr*. Clay Smith
have ’ moved into thrir now
home in Little Venice.
Mrs. Willamette Hines of Mo­
bile, Ala., has arrived to spend
some time with her son-ln-Iaw
and daughter, Lt. and Mrs. L. R.
Beck Icy,
Mr. and Mr*. ,T, K. Brower and
children, Nancy and Ken, of
West Palm Beach spent Thursday
with her parents, Mr. and Mr*. I*.
D. Anderson. They were en route
to a vacation in North Carolina.
Mr*. Edar Parrish and Haught­
ier, Cindy, of Orlo Vjsts are visit­
ing the former’s parents, Mr. and
Mr*, p. W. Sjoblnm.
Mlsa Yvonne Pritchard and
Eugene McGuire, niece and neph­
ew nf Mrs. R. I.. Howell Jr. ara
visiting thrir uncle and aunt. They
are both from Fitzgerald. Ga.
Lake Mary friends, recently re­
ceived the announrment* of the
marriage of Miss Jo Anne Greg­
ory, daughter of Mr. and Mr*.
R i c h a r d Gregary, to Waller
Janies Gardner, which took place
in Carliimdale, Pa., on Saturday,
June 11. Mr. Gardner spent
aeveral year* in Lake Mary, atlending Intel school* and living
with his uncle, the laic J«e Kansky.
Chief C. It. Bone returned
Tuesday from Memphis, Tenn.,
where he left Mrs. Hone and little
girls with her mother who must
undergo surgery in the nnnr
future.
Mr. and Mra. W. V. Castleberry
spent the Fourth in New Srnyra
Beach, visiting friend*.
Friends of l.t. I,. R. Berkley
will he sorry lo hear, that he is
ronfined to the hospital at the
Jacksonville Naval Air Station,
suffering from ■ head injury.
Miss Jackie Frvin spent the
July Fourth weekend with friend*
ill Miami.
Mr. and Mrs. C. K. MiNled and
daughters, Ccreli* spent the week
end visiting relatives at Charles­
ton, S. C.

30 Pieces Of Silver Left Wife
By Man Who Perished On Desert

JOYOUS STTB. WOCXa s bold aloft thrir rtdef. ©arid J. McDonald (arrow). In Pittsburgh, after the 170nun wag* and policy committee voted to accept the steel Industry's offer ot 13 cents an hour Increase.
The short-lived steel strike came to an end when U. S. Steel, pacesetter in the Industry, agreed lo term*
worked out by Iba n e g o tia to rs meeting in eonUnuoos session. j*yvy&gt;s: (fntmuKiunat •Soutulphoto)

Police Puzzled By Money Pawner
CHICAGO I.P-A hulehcr who
say* (or about three yrar* he has
been pawning money—and getting
cash and pawn tickets—was seized
by police yesterday.
But polirt say lliry don't know
what to do shout it.
Sgt' John Doyle of (be Police
pawn shop detail says that pawn
ing money didn't seem in make
sense. Bui, he added, Iher* is no
law- against II.
The man Doyle arrested in a
pawn shop, Joseph K. Johnson, 43
admitted pawning between 1730
and 31.000 m the last three years
mostly' in small amounts.
Dovlo said Johnson told him hr
would pawn 330 for example, and
receive 327’V) and a pawn ticket
lie never went back t&lt;J redeem Ihe
money.
"What's the Idea." asked Doyle,
who has been looking for Ihe man

Better TV
Predicted
Next Fall

who's been pawning money.
"What do you think?" Johnson
asked in reply, "There’s nothing
illrgat stvoiit it,"
t'nyte said he hmnd seven serial
numbers, clipped from currency,
in Johnson’s possession and de­
rided he would turn him over to
the Secret Service and have John­
son investigated for mutilation of
currency.
Hie Serif I Servirc said II wasn’t
inlrrcslrd after police said the cur­

rency from which Ihe numbers
presumably were cut wa* not
found on Johnson.
Johnson declined to offer any
explanation (or pawning money'or
for rutting srrial numbers. Asked
about ihe serial mi miters, he re­
plied only, "so what?"
Doyle said Johnson told him he
was a butcher and said he had
served » prison sentence in Min­
nesota for forgery, lie was held
overnight without charge.

BURBANK, Calif. UP - A msn
who died in a desert tragedy be­
queathed his divorced wife jusl
"30 pieces of silver—33" because
of "the misery site has caused
me "
Cslvert S Wilum's bequest esme
to ltghl yesterday in * hand
urlltrn will entered for probate by
altomcyi for Wilson's "childhood
sweetheart," lo whom he left half
his cjtale.
Allomeys estimated Ihe estate
left by Wilson, 49, restaurant sup­
ply firm operator, at 330,000. The
will, dated May 21, left the other
hall of his estate to his children,
Brenda. It, and Tamara, 11.
The will read:
"To my childhood sweetheart.
Mrs Algrnc Hoskins, of Soulhrrn
Pines, N.(\—for a love and a faith
that has lived undiminished for 40
years—and because she has been
my inspiration and encouragement
in most of Ihe worthwhile Ihmgs 1
have accomplished in this life—

nTHfifia
AL WAYS

FIRST

ore;

QUALITY!

'W

I leave Ilf other half of my estate
and do hereby appoint her execu­
trix."
Wilson and his wife, Elaine, mar­
ried in 1!&gt;(0 and sc parted In 11*51,
Last June 17 she won *n Inter­
locutory derrev Six days later a
jeep taking Wilson snd threa
friends on a desert trip bmko down
near Barstow, Calif. Wilson died
of exposure seeking help; one msn
died later. The others wers res­
cued.

WRONG PHONE NUMBER
MAY CAUSE DISTURBANCE
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.
fd*l—A family here may get up to
23,71*0 wrong-number phene call*.
The Pikes Peak or Bust Rodeo
Assn, disclosed today it has sent
out that many brochures with nn
entirely unrclntcd number instead
of Ihe rodeo office number. Offi­
cials said nobody noticed it until
Clare W. King's home phon# be­
gan Jangling.
Tho King* announced they'll ha
SOMETHING'S FUNNY
away from homo most of Ilia
LINCOLN, Neb. (JwStat* Tax lime.
Commissioner Fred Herrington
wav telling Ihe Slate Board nf
TRIAL n v JFRT
E q u a l i z a t i o n Tuesday about
A GAN A, Guam &lt;/F)— A bill
"quirk*" in county lax assessment
*H ng Gimnuminn* thn right to
returns lilts yrar.
With a wr ysmile, he said Grant ntal by jury passed the Guam
County—in the heart of Nebraska's Legislature last night.
ranch country—listed no milk cows
Tile right previously was con­
no corn and no wheal on il* farm* fined lo felony cases and civ il
ami ranches on assessment day. litigation involving $2,(IPO or
more.
lie promised In look into il.

n

SergeantSaysTroubleWasWorth
Getting Back Into Marine Corps
QUANTICO, *Va. I* - "Well, II [night and firat learned when he
was worth all Ih* trouble lo gel reported thi* morning ihst he was
back in the Marines rven If it still a married msn.
He said he would pass the word
turns out I didn't hsvt In. do It,"
ssys the sergssnt who got a very 10 Nancy Ann today,
" It uat all cut and dried about
Irmporary divorce in the belief
us getting hack together," he said
he needed it In rr-cnlist.
Walter Sheets, 24 snd former "hut It wa* s lot of trouble."
He hadn’t heard anylhing In In
sergeant, wss working for ihe
Portsmouth. Ohio, Time* when Ihe dicat* he might he in a jam with
Idea of going back In the service Ihe court over Ihe fraud accusa
struck him. Rome place — he was lion.
"No mallrr how much 1rouble
not sure today Just where — he
got th* potion that hi* four de­ 11 was, it was worth it," he said
pendents were one Im many un­
der' re-elistmenl rules.
So Sheet* snd his wire, Nancy
Ann. 22. mother of hi* three chil­
dren, cooked up a lolulinn: Grt a
divorce and remarry after wilier
was back in uniform.
Up to a certain paint lt all wenl
as planned A divorce dreree was
granted lo Nancy Ann June 24 on
cruelly grounds and Walter re-en
lislad July t.
He wai sent lo Ihe Marine base ’ NEW YORK (At—You’re due lo
hers for assignment and examina­ view some bigger and belter tele­
tions gad Nancy Ann followed right vision showi come fall. This, think
along to slay temporarily with many observers, il psrtiy due lo
friends nearby.
the idea of pay-sre TV.
•'Wc were planning lo b# reEvery executive of every net
married next weekend." Rheela
told a reporter who reached him work would stoutly deny that his
by telephone at the base today. outfit Is running scired because of
But the publicity over their the potential threat of coln-iw-lhostratagem brought two unexpected slot T-vlewing. They prefer to say
they’ re planning bigger and better
developments:
1. Judge J. E. Kinnisinn of Jack showi because—well. Just becau»e
•on County, Ohio, vacated the di television la naturally getting big
voeee decree Tuesday, on th* ger and better all the time.
It’e generaly believed that th*
ground that lt was obtained by
Federal Communications Commis­
fraud; end
S. Marine Corps officials, told sion will not render a decision on
of what th* couple had donel, said pay-are TV for another year. And
it wu all unnecessary — Ihe four- —if program promises hold true—
dependent rule doesn't ap&gt; j lu th* networks hope an increasing
number of viewers will be liking
sergeants and higher grade*.
Sheet* was on duly at Ihe Ma­ each other ae tha year wears on:
rin* Carp* base yesterday but said "Just what better things would we
he missed getting news of (he see on pay TV?”
First in th* field of summer
court action. He got liberty overannouncements a couple of days
ago cam* NBC-TV with an earsplitting about: "More than 73
in revn r nr tsiss rm arv mammoth one-shot productions and
siimk , sxsisni.K t e r m , spectaculars, featuring the most
m n
• » p u r i o s . in r a n . celebrated stars in show business
i x a i j T « g ESTATE o r
and embracing ihe entire field of
CHARLEY LEeTEIt WEST. * 11. entertainment, will spark the WSSn*c**»4.
TO ALL WHOM IT MAY CON- SC schedule."
_ k...--e t lr e _
la
bersbr given that Probing deeper into th* a
Paulina Bvertaan . Waal rile* bar nouncement, you find this isn’t
final report aa Eiarutrls *f lb*
eatat* of Charltr Lester ffttl.ir, empty rhetoric. Plans Include:
**c**a*e, Ibat aba fll*4 bar |Stl- Big names — Mary Martin,
•lea foe flaal Alorborco, an* that
Sbo wUI aMir lo Iba Maaarrabl* Frank Sinatra, Helen Hayes, Mau­
R- P- MauahalAar. County Ju
Ji Aa* rice Chevalier, Maurice Evans, the
•f namlMla Court*. FlorlAo,, n* Sadler's Walla Ballet, George Ab­
•bo lib Say #TAua.it A. IblISH.
bott, Patrice Mutual, Rex Harri­
fur approval o# oama aa* for I
eiaa&amp;srjKo’ I* ks*ruTrli''*r’ Vhs*1#*- son. Era LeGalllefine.
Big Shews - "Our Town," "The
Skin of Our Teeth," "Allen ta
"'ullna Kvtrlinn W**t
itri* of tbo .stats of Wonderiaad," "The Devil's Disci­
Looiar W.at, br- ple," tha world premieres af two
&lt;000*004.
new American operas.
orvgy that Rif leiemenUriea (It's tie mewIM. riorlAa lery that « telemealary Is a tele­
diawlnjr
vised documentary); a history nf
nolo
* for tola a Adnif Hitler as depicted on Im■
''thi bleboal on
at iba mat e*«. pmnednd Carmen ttlm; "Nightmare
in End,* aa hour-long history aI
the rise « communism hi Russia.

Tags 3

b la n k e t • v e n t

...... —i— — -------------—

{

s ta rts to m o rro w

- .— 1

a t P e t in e y ’* !
i.

r~

HAIOID M. DUNN, Wt. I*
comforted by his mother at Gov­
ernors Island, N. Y , after he was
formally pronounced guilty of
collaborating with Korean snd
Chinese Communists, lie was
senleneed to eight years at bald
labor, a dishonorable din hares
and forfeiture nr all pay and al­
lowances. Th# Brooklyn, N. Y..
corporal, wearing a string of
decorations, beard lb* sentence
ef Ihe xeven-offlrer roiirtrnartial
Without emotion, f fn terns lions II
CPI.

much publicity, but Ihis week’s an­
nouncement from NBC promises
some real sustenance for viewers
in the coming season.
Why this has rnme shout I* far
less important than lha fact that it
has.
*

K * w ag
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�m-

Gutter Politics

Conference Deadline

Next year a Republican and a Democrat
The Soviet Union, In accepting the July
18 date and the Genevn aite of the acheduled will seek the presidency. Wouldn't it be won­
top-level Big Four dincunaiona, Indicated that derful if the campaign could be conducted
ft wanta the conference to last longer than with a minimum of personal attacks, with
three or four dnya. From tho firnt the an emphasis on tha issues rather than on
United Stntea hat favortd keeping thla Ini­ peraonalitiea?
tial conference brief and following It with
Those who deplore mud slinging politics
lengthier, mora intensive conferences If that too often put the bleme on professional pol
fa found desirable.
iticians. It ia true that some politicians re­
The Ccmmunista, since they first earn# sort to this kind of electioneering—but If
to power, have used extended conference! they do it ia because they have found It to he
effectively. At such conferences they haggle, politically profitable. If there were not weak,
threaten, propagandize and frequently wear mentally-sick people ready to buy dope there
down the other parties to the conference would be no dope peddlera: If there wers not
with what amounts to filibustering.
a sizable b.&gt;dy of voters willing to listen to
President Elsenhower has indicated that the vllifier and the slanderer these unwhole­
he would not let a matter of a few days some type* would vanish from the political
Stand In the wav of achieving a lessening of
scene.
world tensions. He has made it plain, how­
Candiditea for the presidency are some­
ever, that there must be some definite date
times
goaded into intemperate remarks and
for the conference to end. He cannot lie plac­
sometimes
even fall from the high plane of
ed in • position where, if the conference
■hould drag out and hla presence in Wash­ their own accord. But lor the most part they
ington aliotild become essential, it would ap­ view gutter politics with the distaste that
pear that he w h s walking out'on the parley. might be expected from men who Beck such
If the top-level discussion succeeds in a respons'ble position It is the underlings
laying the groundwork for other talks that who most frequently engage In name-calling
can lead to gooJ results It will have accom­ —•‘The Democrats favor the Communists":
plished its purpose. To allow the initial dis­ ‘The Republicans are rcs|ionsible for polio."
cussions to drag on and on might do harm What nonsense!
r W f clUzcm can raise the level of camrather than goodd. The knowledge that there
fs a definite deadline may stimulate frank­ paigna by letting political leader#, even those
ness and d'seourage delaying strategy man­ they favor, know that,any appeal aimed at
arousing the worst instincts of voters will
euvers.
________________
be rejected

The Sanford Herald
N U liM

Cell*

«atar«w ? aa4 eaaSar
ee« * # ■ « n m at.

aa aaraa! *la*a m allet OrleUer IT, m e at
tea paai o M t * at aaalart, P larlia. euCtr Ike S n
a f I'n a r m a* V a rrt X lir e
a nr. ii P e n n i n e , rutiier a a t P a i i a i n
eerw IV T S K IU S II
■ ■■•■(■■ SCCIIer

•t.ee
Oaa Saar

•II M
I h a a h a , r a a a l a l l a a a mmk
aar waa a a f r a l a l a e

Praaa
aa fa r raeahllraIbla aawapaaar.

TODAYH

RIRI.B VKRHR

Who shall ascend into the hill of the
Lord? or who shall stand in his holy place?
— Psalm 24:5.—W* must approach with
clean hands and a pure heart, we must be
free from vanity, from deceitfulness. Then
will we be conscious of God's acceptance.

Civil Defense Drill
It Is hard to tell Just how much good was
accomplished by the civil defense drill which
saw the President anil thousands of govern­
ment workers evacuated from Washington
to a temporary government site.
The drill was conducted under ideal condltiens ami it wvutd lie foolish to hope that
auch conditions would lie duplicated under
actual attack. Everyone knew what to do.
what was expected of him, and yet there
was confusion. Chaos would be compounded
if a real attack should come.
Nevertheless. It Is a good thing to have
every arrangement made to get the Import­
ant government agencies to a safe place
where they can carry out their function of
directing the effort of the nation to recover
and strike back.
The United States wants to avoid war.
If it should come despite our efforts It Is
likely that the enemy will atrlke the first
blow. It is well to know that the first blow
need not be the end of It all, that the coun­
try would not be left without leaderahip,
without a renter around which to rally.

SAM DAWSON

street car

NflanTmiw

TAMES M AR LO W 1

Dixon, Yates Become W ell Known

■v

HAL BOYLE

WASHINGTON im - Mr. Dixon
and Mr. Yates were becoming is
well known is Gilbert and Sullivan.
Pst and Mike, and the Smith
Brother*. They may not be beard
of much any more.
They can truthfully say they
were just minding their own bust
ness, which Is selling electric pow­
er, when they decided to sell some
to the government.
It took them a long time to get
■ contract with the government.
Now it may be canceledThe city of Memphis, Tenn.,
threw the switch on them.
Memphis buys electric power at
fairly cheap rates from the govern­
ment's Tennessee Valley Authority.
The Atomic Energy Commission
takes one third of TVA'a output.
Early In 1K3 A EC and TVA de­
cided a new plant, capable of pro­
ducing 600,000 kilowatts, was need­
ed. That power would be pumped
into Memphis to make up for pow­
er drained off by AEC. What to
do?
TVA wanted to build the plant.
Three times the Republican-run

Congress said no. President Elsen
how«r was against ft too. He want
ed private power companies, or
the people in the ares, to meet
future power needs. Then Dixon
Yates came Into the picture.
Edgar H. Dixon Is president of
Middle South Utilities, Inc., oper
sting In Arkansas, Louisiana and
Mississippi. Eugene Yates I* ehalrman of the board of the South­
ern Co., operating in Mississippi,
Alabama, Georgia and Florida.
They formed the Mississippi Val
ley Generating Co., since known
■s Dlxon-Yate*. This was the Idea:
they'd take care of Memphis' powsr need* by building a 600,000kilowatt plant Just across the river
la West Memphis. Ark.
They'd pump their powwr Into the
TVA system, which would then
supply Memphis- And AEC, be­
cause its needs mads ell this neeeisary, would pay the bill for the

GIANT OMI.WT

BECKET. Mass. (AV-Al though
driver Wallace Denson, 23, of
Grand Rapids, Mich., knew his
tractor trallor was loaded with 111
ermteo of sggt, to deliberately
ceased hie Irak te term evw ra
tie aide.
Police credited Dews**** mere
with raving life end limb—even if
It did smash tha ears.
Danson brought the track ever
Sam enforce discipline on hi* m Its aide when he dleoovscsd.hla
pupils with lead knucka? Nobody breaks were out of order an n
knows.
downgrade. The truck skidds* MO
"But tt isn't likely he needed feet but Densoe wee unhurt.
them," said Mrs. McKentle. "At
ia Sam Houston was S feet S and
During the antarcUe winter, R
weighed SOO pounds."
gate so sold that a man can haar
Big enough even to handle Davy his breath frecte, cays the Nation­
al Geographic Society,
Crockett.

Woman Comes To Sam Houston Aid

MARYVILLE, Tenn. Uh — Davy ing officer, came to town, best on
Crockett, king of the wild frontJerT a drum and called aloud: "H eir
Why, man, there are people here ye; bear; If ya want to Join Gen
In Davy's old home state who'll Jackson's army to fisht the savage
tell you he was nothing but a wet Indian, come end take a dollar
eared boy in an oversired coon from the drumhead, and this will
skin cap compared to B am regularly enroll ye."
Houston.
Young Sam, egged on by
Davy died in the Alimo, but friend, stepped up and took his
Big Sam, who spent his youth here, dollar and became ■ soldier.
was an even greater soldier and
Hi* military and political rise
statesman and led Tsaas Into tha after that was swift. Ha became
Union. It is hard today to Imagine a governor of Tennessee; bs later
what Texas would be like If It commanded the army of Texas;
hadn't been for Bam Houston—and led the Republic of Texas, served
—Ay MOV* « MR
oil walls, of course.
as a U. ,B senator end governor
Central Prate Writer
Young Sam might have been of Texas- He was deposed as gov
LOOM
like
a
pled*
Judged • Juvenile dtllnquent by •rpor because he opposed the en­
t s w e t o r McCarthy Is «uteL
modern standards, but he outgrew trance of Texa* Into the Con
It. And te Mr*. Boyd McKentle, federacy, and died In IMS at the Mauna Ksa te quiet.
I t »
one of a group trying to preserve aga of TO with tha fate of Union
The House voted fe
as a historic shrine the old one- *UU unsettled.
the fa n billion d*M celling. Mat
room log cabin in which Houston
During hla last years someone
once taught school. Davy isn't In once asked him which of all his heepe M up where li t tee high le
the same ctaia with lam as a posts af authority had given him worry about.
f t
frontier hero.
(he moat pleasure. And rather wist­
Actually me *e|h
"We’d never even heard much fully tha old frontier hare said he
of Davy Crockett anti! aix months remembered best the task of being
much te eufsetvaa. ^
ago." sht said firmly.
a schoolteacher la Uw flood lime
Mra- MeKentla la the descendant of his youth.
Mew England Republican* didn't
of a family which owned land naxt
The almpte eld schoothouie, •m to It that tha trout Ashing
to the farm on which lam Hous­ weathered by the winds of 1«1
waa Ant for tke’a visit. Apparent­
ton's widowed mother M ille d la yean, still stand*. Waalthy Train*
ly they’re tahiag him for
Ttnnaaiat. She made tho Irak hore hava triad to buy It and move it ed. tom
from Virginia with bar nine whit te the Lone Btar elate, but Tendren.
neiiM isn’t about to m B K. Or
Young Bam waa an avid reader abou* to fix R up proparly tether,
and avorso to farm work. Ha used Judging from its present look of
to rua away and Uvo with tho dl*repair.
Cherokee ladlaaa who named him
ta UB4 a pair ef ancient lead
The Raven."
kmleka with lam Houston’s name
"Hie first mention hero wae tor scratched on them were found hidpublie drunkene*s at tho ago of dra above the doorway. Did young
U,“ Mid Mrs. MeKonsla. "Ha
ROUCHO MARX mot aa hooeat-to-Hemingway buQ fighter
walked up and down tho rtnots
and aiked him, "How many bulla do you figure you've
boating a drum and waa charged MAN DUMPS CANTALOUPES
met?" **Two hundred, Senor," smirked the matador. "You
TYLER,
Tex.
(&amp;)
—
A
farmer
with disturbing tha peace."
aurely muat be the envy of
^ygo MftpNgOfg
During the next year he opened wae arrested Tuesday for trying
•very cow in Mexico," maraa
a school hem to pay oft debts of to dump a truckload of hla cant*,
veled Marx,
*9| S t t I TIL . f f l M
MO#—a big amount In thoM days. loupe oa the downtown square,
W.
Carl
Waiter,
M,
claimed
Ty­
O
roue
ho
had
another
expo*
V jjB s V \T
Ho bad rua up the bill buying
rtence, thla time at the Louvre
t* X y V r l
OK
v
presents tor bla mother and some ler storm were selling Arisona
melons and "I can't get t cent*
Indian maiden*.
la Porta. Hla teat cigar allpped
X V v H jk B r l C y b
for
mine."
He
began
dumping
hie
out of hie haada and waa j J\ IX /rV I
The pravloua teacher* h a d
promptly maahed to a pulp by / / VI ^ D ^ r y T w y J\\
•harped to a Mmaster tuition," la protest
Arresting officer* bought two
the crowd. •HeO," grumbled [V 1
w/ /
/ Zrl \
laid Mr*. McEoniie, "but 8*m
the Grouch—1
with whiter a I t
/ /i d S r /n V
railed it to |g *bd Insi*ted that bushels at |1 a bushel. But Wester
must appear ta City Court ,on
a third bo paid la caib.
"HI* pupil* ranged In age from chargee ef disturbing tha
Havanan. "Congratulation*,
&lt; to to year*, and so many came
m il e - w jd e r iv e r
beamed the radiomen. That eae
tbit he had to turn some away."
CROSSED IN TUBES
Houston's teaching career we*
DETROIT (A) - Pour
rtef. Ho ran up morn bills, aa ha
hImMlf later admitted, la "riotous from Rivervtew, Ont, crossed the
living." In March, M il, a recruit­ mile-wide Detroit River Tuesday
ta two Inner tubes.
"W e Just came ovr for’ a bottle
and vegetables arrive at wholesale of pop," one of the boys told hermarkets via trucks. Three out ef
shipments they waded ashore.
move by truck. Indeed, nearly all
farm products spead some time
The am
Egyptians te
highway* before they raecb
•n era voyages.
homing pig
dinner table.

YOU'RE TELLING ME!

-------------By BINNITT C U P— -

NEW YORK (ft—Americans will
*feur more ca n thla year than ever
before. But driving on the nalion'i
highway* p r o m l i t i to become
■ o n uncomfortable, more hatanlout and more costly.
The UJ. Bureau of Publie fioadi
reporte there are 1.966.000 milts
« f road* la the country but that
raly tis.oeo mllai paved. The
American Automobile Ann clalmi

one of every three milea U unsafe.
Mott American roads were built
•t least SO yean ago when the
automobile waa Kill a luiury.
At the end of the IBM's (here
s e n lest than H million vehldat
and road travel amounted to about
170 billion miles. Gross national
product (total goods and services
produced) averaged about gg bil­
lion dollars a yaar. Today we have

Older Person Should
Count His Vitamins
T h ere are a am eren * e th e r
. af eoana,
which are
have listed are
hi proheeanee they
el yon b e t
•obeli, i
- JQnsee. * '
•rule help development ef dee

Rte
beetles
«o this far

h ^ k h M lS l

berate

to Mb M

B ite

i m
*

kMA

I have

a

to;

flaaa * m m t t t e

to

SI million vehicles, heavier end
wider, traveling 957 billion miles
a yaar, And the ONP le up to MT
billion dollars- Yet we are apendlag lest h r new roads now
we did In the IMS’*.
More Americans died In high­
way accidsnta than la battle.' Et
cept during the gai rationing
period* ef World War II, between
M.000 and 40,000 persona hava been
killed on the highways every year
h r tha part a yaars, tho National
Safety Council says.
The 1094 traffic death M l was
M M , If traffic Increases a per
cent la the neat 10 yaara aa *»•
pectad accidents at the present
rate wUI take a,ooo Uvea a year.
Some traffic specialists claim
that highway accidents could be
drastically reduitd by Improving
our mada, Carl rritta , vice presi­
dent of the Automotive lafety
Foundation figures a life could b*
isvad ovary yeir for ovary 10
mllaa of Improved roads.
la that food
highways ora essential to the
farmer. Morn than half ef all fruits

power sold by Dlxon-Yatea.
In 35 years Dixon-Yates would
own their 107-million-dollar plant,
financed by bonds. In a contract
signed Nov. 11. 1994, the com pany'^
earnings were te be limited t ^
1400.000 yearly.
Democrats and stile end local
officials in the area which TVA
serves strongly opposed the plan.
They argued private power would
cost more, enrich Dlxon-Yalw,
and he the opening wedge te de­
stroy TVA and the government's
whole power program.
But the administration backed
the plan, saying It was a *ood~
example of private enterprise and^
that further expansion -of TVA
would lead te soelatlim sod govemoWnt control of a l electrie
power.
On June 2 Dixon-Yates started
breaking ground.
ground, By tb« tad of
the month the city of Memphis
rannounced It would never accept
power from Dtion-Yato* but would
build Ite own plant.
TVA Cbalrmaa Herbert D. Vogel,
announced that if Memphlt built
Its own plant It would be kapraatkal to eae Dixon-Yates power
ataewhore in fie TVA area.

Trad e-Ins
Clearance Sale
n*uu.

■ ••a

VIMS ____

m

___ A

■

G

icholson

�1

SodaL

fc v &amp; n td L

Calendar

I

MONDAY
The Executive Board of the Wo­
men of the Church will meet in
the eesaion room of the First
Presbyterian Church at 10 a. m.
Circlet of the First Presbyter­
ian Church will meet at the
chureh at 11 a. m. At 12 noon a
eoverod dish luncheon will be
nerved. Immediately following will
be the Buiineaa and Inspirational
Heeling.
Evening Circle No. 1 of the
First Presbyterican Church, lira.
W. 8. Bromley, Chairman, will
meet in the Educational Build­
ing at § p.m. with Mr**. C. M.
Boyd, Mra. Stanley Vemny and
lira. A. W. Knox aa hostesses.
Evening Circles 2 and 8, Mrs;
C. W. Johnson and Mrs. M. M.
Land, ehairmrn, will meet at 8
p. m. with Mr*. Roy Mann. 121
West 18th St. Hostesses will be
Mra. Elisabeth Sharon, Mra. A.
L. Lyon, Miaa Georgena Hart, and
Miss Sandra Dunn.
Circlet of the Women’s Society
•f Christian Service of the First
Methodist Church will meet at
the following designated placet
at 8 p. in.: Circle No. 8, Mra.
L, T. Do**, 1601 E. 2nd St.;
Circle No. 7, Mra. B. F. Cole,
824 W. 80th St; Cirele No. 8,
Mra. Boy Tiilis, 2208 Magnolia
Avo., Mra. C. P. Herndon, co-hosress; Cirelo No. », Mrs. Ben
Wiggins, Cameron Ave. and Clrele No, 10, Mra. J, P. Thurmond,
612 Elm Ave. with Mra. J. C.
Davie aa co-hoitesa.
The WMU of the First Baptist
Church will meet at 10:16 for
eirele meetings. A covered dish
luncheon at 12 noon will b« held

Bloomer Suit Is
Tops For Younger
Set This Summer
Tope with the younger eet this
eummer Is the bloomer swim cult,
a cinch to make at home.
Now that the high school crowd
Is vacation bound, local sewing
center expert* suggest a profitable
summer pastime — making your
ewn bathing auit and matching
beach robe,
The bloomer ewim auit may be
■nade with a standard pattern,
which comes la Junior altos, It’a
eaay to mak# and fit, uilng a
pattern with ruler* printed right
on It.
The bloomer auit so flattering
to the Blender figure may be Im
proved by the addition of a skirt
for chubbier gills. The skirt, I
' eluded ia the pattern pieces, la
attached ts a dmpped waistline,
the very latest silhouette In
fashion news. For a smooth fit
underneath, straight shorts are
then sabetituUd for the bloomers.
The wide cuffed bodice, higher
than last year’s, ehows the new
eovsred-op look in swim wear. A
terry aloth beech coat brimmed ia
plaid to match the suit completes
the outfit
The suit, which la effective
made taplald (Ingham, Is llnad
In wool Jersey, and elastic is used
for a trim ftt in the bloomer lege.
Light bonlag la the bodice keeps
the top np, with or without atrip*.
The back alpper can be Inserted
ia Jig time by using the elpper
foot attachment on your sewing
machine.
Binding on tha beach eoat h
quickly applied by using the multislotted binder attachment
If extra fabric Is left over, a
matching triangular erarf can be
made, to keep curia eoverod sad
ua and wind.

M A RYESTH ER'S

with the program to be at 1
o’clock. Mra. John L. Miller it
leader in charge. Topic will be
"All Roads Lead to London."
Auxiliary member* are invited to
meet with circles that sponsor
them.
TUESDAY
Circles of ths First Methodist
Chureh will meet as follows at
IMS a. m.: Circle No. 1, Mr*.
C. E. Meeks, 24B3 Orange Ave;
Circle No. 2, Mrs. C. L. Echols,
W. 20th St; Circle No. 8, Mrs.
Roy Wall, 408 Virginia Ave. for
a picnic and swimming party;
Circle No. 4 with Mra. Blake
Sawyer, 200 Elm xAve. with
Mrs. Adam Miller as co-hostess;
and Circle No. 6 with Mrs. J. 8.
Williamson 204 W. lBth Street
The Unity Class will meet at
7:45 p. m. in the Valdes Hotel
with the Rev. Carolyn Parsons as
teacher. The public Is invited.
The First Baptist Intermediate
Royal Ambassador* will meet at
the church at 7 p. m.
The Pilot Club will have q dinner
meeting at the home of Mr*. A1
Hunt, 2486 Palmetto Ave., at
6:10 p. m.
The R. W. A. (night group) cir­
cle of the First Christian Church
Women’s fellowship will meet at
the home of Mrs. Lester Tharp on
1100 Oak Ave., at 7:30 p.m.
The Gleaners Class of the First
Baptist Church will meet with
Mrs. M. C. Hagan, 708 Park Ave.,
at 8 p. m. Mrs, John Fox will be
co-hostess.
WEDNESDAY
The First Baptist Prayer Meet­
ing service will begin at 7:30 p.
m. in th* Memorial Educational
Building.
THURSDAY
Th* First Baptist Junior Royal
Ambassador* will meet at tha
church at 7 p. m.
The First Baptist Church Choir
rehearsal will berin at 7:30 p. m.

Hibiscus Society^
Is Planning Show
To Be On July 31
With the announcement of the
American Hibiscus Society's in­
ternational hibiscus show to be
held July 31, In Floral Hall,
Exposition Park, Orlando, hibis­
cus fanciers are urged by Presi­
dent W. Bruce Parnell of Miami
(o begin priming thrlr hibiscus
for the competitive affair.
The international ahow, first to
be staged by the group with a
local chapter playing host, will be
open to all amateur hibiscus grow­
er* whether they are member* or
not. Mr*. Paul Goodman, chair­
man of the Mid-Florida Chapter,
AHS, host to th* show, Joins Preaidrnt Parnell in urging participa­
tion by every hibiscus fancier in
Central Florida.
Growing, suggestions designed
to produce specimen blooms by Ju­
ly 31, Include a generous por­
tion of a fast-acting fertiliser
followed by__a generous .nutri­
tional spray a week before the
•vent.
Give plants plenty of watrr,
making sure that the eoil drains
freely and it thoroughly dry be­
fore the next watering. It it warn­
ed that hibiscus standing in soggy
soil will not produce the site, col­
or or general quality bloom* nec­
essary for show competition.
Examine plants daily to prevent
insect damage, riant* should be
sprayed with an insect control im­
mediately upon appearance of ap­
hids, scale or other pest* which
may attack hibiscus.
Do not prant plants as the best
bloom is produced on old wood.
Entries close at 10:30, Sunday,
July 31.

Horses Help Kids
Says Jane Dillon,
Washington Rider

(p B A A D W th Miss A. Richter

Reveals Plans

Mrs, E. M. Cain and family,
Rrbrera. IVxrnthy, Stevie and Don­
ald, returned home Tuesday after
Mis* Adelaide Rirhter, daughter
spending sumo time in New Smyr­
of Sir. and Mr*. Henry Richter
na Beach.
nmtnunrrs plans for her marriage
to Stanley Merecki of Jamaica,
Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Hall and
family, Carolyn and Richard, re­ N. Y.
The wedding will take place
turned to their homo on W. First
Street Wednesday nfter spending July 21, at D a. m. in the All Sauls
the Fourth of July lloliduy’s in Catholic Church, with th# Rev.
Father l.eo Merecki officiating.
New Smyrna.
Appropriate music will be pro­
Mr. and Mrs. V. W. Davis and vided by Mrs. F. E. Roumilutt,
, Mr*. Thelma Sikes spent a few organist, and Henry Richter, soday* at the bench and returned
home on Wednesday.

including

If N to Iff*
Value* Formerly

• II"

«.

lo ls t.

Miss Arline Richter of Ft. Ben*
tiing, Ga., will he bri Iramaid.
A reception at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. H. Richter will follow
the ceremony.
All friends are Invited to attend
the wedding and reception. No in*
vitationa are being mailed.
Sausage meat U told in bulk,
cellulose casings or cloth bags. It
contains the same meat and Ki*
sonings as does link sausage.

S T A RTS

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Swaggerty spent the holidays nt the bench
and returned home the early part
of till* week.
Bobby Kinsrd Is the guest this
week of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Jones
and their son Glynn at New

3

SUNDAY

BIG

DAYS

A C T U A L L Y F IL M E D IN tfO N &amp; fC O N &amp; f
E rn e s ) K . O t n n 'i fsbulovis beat*
• » ll* r ...o f H an k L h , a d v sn tu re r

Mrs, Graro Resenberger 1* leav­
ing today for Kansas City, Miss­
ouri for a vacation.

fo r h ire...an d J a n e H o yt, w o m an
In no position to b a rg ain !

MISS DOROTHY ELIZABETH BRADLEY of Atlnntn. Ga. was we.l
Mr*. Lillian Vickery spent Wed­
June 26 to William Evans Rirhrmn of Wavnesville. N. O, She Is n nesday in Haines City where she
former resident of Sanford. Her gown was the traditional white of attended th* funeral of her uncle,
Aleneon lace oxer satin.
D. A. llilU-y,
Mr. and Mrs W. C. Clause have
as guest* their daughter, Mrs,
A. F. Gramling nmi daughters,
Kathy and Nancy of Columbia,
8. C. Also visiting them is their
granddaughter, Diana Clause of
Key West.

Miss S. Hayes
Is Given Tea
At Bitting Home
Miss Sylvia Hayes, July bridrrlcct, was honored with a tea
Wednesday from 3:30 to 6:30 p,
m. at the home of 31r. and Mrs.
W, V. Bitting with Mra. Bitting
and daughter, Gail a* ho*lc**&gt;-*.
A green and white color acheme
was tarried out in th* rooms.
Spring flower* were placed In ap­
propriate apots and the serving
table was covered with a while
cutwork cloth. A silver candela­
bra and burning white taprra was
used to accent the theme. In the
eehter of the table an arrange­
ment of white flower* intersperird with natural greenery wit
used.
Th# honorre was presented with
x hostess gift during the court*
of event*. Assisting with the hos­
tesses were Mrs. J. M. Leonard,
Mr*. T. F. McDaniel and Marilyn
McDaniel. Mr*. O, R. .Smith, Tat
•Smith, Miss Fatty Ratlgan, MIm
Ada Adams, the Misses Joan
Wright, Ann Rnlmrn, Lucia Goff
and Judy Irvin.
Receiving the guest* at they
arrived wer* the hnnorre, her mo­
ther, Mrs. W. M. Musselwhite,
Mrs. Bitting and Miss Bitting. Ap­
proximately 100 people were In­
vited.

WASHINGTON — From the
time she first rode on the track of
a horse propped on a cushion In
front of htr father, Jan* Dillon
has been "Horaa-craxy." Now she’*
transmitting this love to the ehll
dren of many prominent Washing
tnnisna
in
her
thriving
Equitation
School
on
a
farm
in
Aftmoon refreshment; cover a
chocolate cake with mint-flavor­ the nearby Virginia hunt country.
What started out casually five
ed frosting and sarva with hot or
Iced tea or coffee. Uie a standard years ago to be simply a few
7-mlnute frosting recipe and when lessons In horsemanship for her
the frosting has been beaten and nleee Marshall, then B, and ne­
cooked over hot water for the re­ phew, Tommy. 6, and some of
quired length of time, add two their friends has become a full­
or three drop* of green food color­ time four-semester program. Clas­
ing end one or tWo drops of mint ses rang* up to 120 for young­
extract. Beat ran til proper con- sters from five to 16 years.
Some of the pupils spend four or
aiitency and uee for filling and
five afternoons a week at the
frosting two 9-inrh layers.
school and take full responsibility
for the stables on weekrnds. They
Horseradish Sauce Is wonderful help to keep th* stalls clean, take
with assorted cold meats for a care of th* track room, an! water,
ho-wrather buffet Te make the feed end even groom some of th*
sauce, whip e half cup of heavy SB hones maintained there. A
eream and fold in n quarter tea­ doten of the mounts are owned by
spoon salt, « teaspoon of prepar­ Individual pupils, Including "Wee- Jersey and Mra. Slemlnskl.
ed mustard, a tablespoon of lemon Jeep," th* thoroughbred hunter of
*Tve been amased to see lh*
Juice end nbout three tablespoons Christine, 11, daughter of the interest, and the willingness of the
grated bottle horseradish.
Democratic congressman from New children to stick to th# program,"
Mra. Dillon told me. "There'*
something about horses that mak*
nice children nicer, embellishing
their patience, understanding rid
natural good manners."
Som* of th* junior horsemen
who have been with th« school
Took to Um
five year* are now showing on tha
national circuit and some havo
Cervinj teh era available hi almost any tha, wHb blade* from
won ribbons at Madison Rquare
" fa
* t
“ ,inches
L - 'loaf
-------J *handlae
■— " -----*
|i/l
and
of various
varli shapes end Lindt.
Garden and the Pennsylvania Na­
ell ebeose a bleda that
Moil Important Is the quality of the stool]
tional Horae Show. A sizeable
will taka and bald a Won adfa.
group has formed o branch of ths
regular well-known Fairfax Hunt,
"I **n *•* th* change in my
own youngster, even In her appli­
Tha standard eat includes a knife, tort and
cation to her aUidiee at tchool,"
steel with which you sen do all around cerv.
Flop Sieininski said enthusiaaIn* af roasts. Tha blada of tha Inlfa Is • to
tirally.
t Who* leaf. A foard aa iha fort protests
“ It'e a perfect aolution
for
children who may be lonely, «r
find it difficult to make adjust­
ment*. It helps them develop their
sense of confidence end self-as­
surance and provIdea them with
reel companionship."

Try This One

Friends of Mr. and Mr*. W. W.
Culp will regret to learn that they
are in Itradcntnn attending tho
funeral of her father, John A. Tii­
lis, who died Monday in Sanford.

Mr. and Sir*. M. R. Strickland
and Frances, slid Mr. and Mrs.
Al Wilson and Mr. and Mr*. It. A.
COMPANY SUFFER
.Smith have returned from Cleve­
Nut louf is delicious with a land, Ohio where they attended
curried meat dish.
the Kiusnlh International Con­
Curried Lumli with f'hutnry
vention.
Rice
Green Peas
Salad
Nut Loaf
Fruit Compote
Beverage
NUT LOAF
Ingredient#: 3 clip* sifted flour, 3
teaspoon* double - acting baking
powder,
tca-poon baking soda,
1 '» teaspoon salt, •* cup granu­
The Brownlee Bible Class of
lated sugar, &lt;, cup firmly pack­ the First Freshyterian Churrh
ed dark brown sugar, 1 egg, I** sponsored a supper last night
cups milk, ’ « cup butter or mar­ from 7 until 0:30 for the purpose
garine (melted|, ] cup finely Ilf organising a new Sunduy
chopped poran* or walnut#.
School class for the "out-of-high
Method: Rift together the flour, school age group to the out-of.col­
baking powder, baking audit, salt lege age group".
and granulated augur. .Stir tn
The educational building, where
brown sugar; sieve siiaur before the guests gathered, was decorat­
measuring if it I# lumpy. Heat egg ed with c r e p e
myrtle and
enough to romhlne yolk and while; branches. A buffet styl* supper
add 'milk and Inal enough to com­ w h s served by Mrs. Arthur De­
bine; stir in melted butter. Add Young, Mr*. Henry D’ Amico, Mrs.
egg mixture to dry Ingredients; Laura
Garrett,
Mrs. Bernice
stir only until dry ingredlnl* are Hughes snd Mrs. Wendy Johnson,
moistened. Fold in nuts.
Turn
After the delirious meal Henry
Inin grrnred duaf pan &lt;a taunt II by
5 by 3 inches); let stand 211 min­ D’Amico introduced the idea to
utes. Bake in moderate (350 de­ those attending snd • discussion
grees) oven t hour or until eska was held to gather new idea* *nd
tester inserted in center comes out plan* for committee*.
It w h * decided thst the first
clean. Turn over on cuke rack to
cool. Store In tightly covered con­ lesson would he held this coming
Sunday and th# young people
tainer overnight befuru slicing.
are to meet in the Brownlee
l Ins# room for the devotional anil
then proceed tn the Session room,
which will serve #* a temporary
class room. Th* time Is 0:46 a. m.
Harry Weir will b* teacher of
the class slid all young people
between 18 and 23 yeara of age
are Invited to attend.

New Sunday School
Class Is Started
For Presbyterians

f u l l a a Nw.*l t f |rn«a

C IN

em aS c o

P^

rtcnin
c o t cn k, ot t u n
a a . . . . . . „ i n n o « M ( toa

MICHAEL
GENE BARRY

M a n Hr sucor »mr*

taxtna v ,

io w aio

!•&gt;»■ i w , h ttNtti a.

Ritz T h e a tr e
a llo w s

LATEST

AT

1:21 — 3:21 — 3:21
7:21 — 1:21

COLOR CARTOON

the

(w o p ie c e tw o e e f
e h e a t h dreui*

NOTICE
All Calendar
Listings And
Society News
Are Reqnented
By 5 p. m. Tha
Day Preceding
Publication

B I R T H S
Mr. and .Mrs. Edward Whit*, of
Chicago, fit, announce the birth
of a daughter, Hunan Lyn, on July
7. Mrs. Whito is the former Bev­
el ty Mouslk, of Chicago a ini Mr.
White’* parent* are residents of
Sanford.

ADDED
PARAMOUNT
NEWS
i

DINNER M ENU - SUNDAY JU LY 10

will
thno thru Ttoaday July It.
Han b the M f elaurtam
of the season that yoa Kara
baan waiting for . . • fa*-

T H E SA N F O R D H E R A L D
Frl. July 8, 1955
Page 5

CHOICE OF:
Frau Fruit Cup

*®aP

Orange Julre

Erwh Cr»t&gt; Meet Cocktail
Shrimp Cocktail

PINEAPPLE CHEESE SAT,AD
Bckad Turkey with Dreading ft Crtwhrrry Suuca .... .............. .... _ $1.50
p*PP«r Steirti------------------ ....------------------------------------------ 1 .2*

Pried Baa Trout with Lemon_____________________________ _______ j.oo
Frcah Rout Pork Ham ft Dressing................ ...... .......
............ 1.25
Broiled Han Steak with Broiled Plneappla____________________ _ 1.2*
Breaded Veil Cutlet with Tomato fliu re........ ...............
.......... . 1.25
Roaat Sirloin of Deaf with Drown Gravy________ ___ ___________ _ 1.25
Broilad Lamb Chnpa with Jelly------------------------ ------------- ---------- ... l.«5
Frank Fried Shrimp with Lemon____ _____ _______________________ 1.60
Half Triad Sprinf Chicken. Southern Stylo.............. .......
1.50
Staling Western Sirloin Steak__________
.
2.00
Waatani Fillet Mlgnaw
, , ........ ................................................2.50
Waatora T-Bone Steak_____________________________________________ X.50
CHOICE OP TWO VEGETABLES, SALAD, DRINK. A DESSERT
Whipped PuUtuea, Siring Btaitn, Candled Yam*, Cottage Cheese, Buttered S q a a a h ,
Spinach, Steamed Rica, Apple Sauce.
HOT ROLLS, MUFFINS, COFFEE, TEA OR BUTTERMILK

DESSERTS
Hama Made Cake — Ice Cream — Jello — Pudding —
-•(Home Made Pie . . . 10c extra) — Pie A La Mode . •. 25e

a*e* eowbi* *wt» rv*» «■»
a **W""**e exit* e r a s * .4 .Sort to* I
• ..a n d yo* have a fieew toa i

Ito r g B jQ g p a fte M t

COMFORT OF OUR AIR CONDITIONED DINING ROOM

ppleby’s Restaurant
Valdez Hotel

fhone2876

|
Use Our Ctavaakal Lay-away Plea

�WKBSTWgm

Willie Gets Tenth
Homer In As Many
Games; 2 Yesterday

JA C K

Sports

W r r tf T M £ \

M A 3/C tfA S/tr-:
/O P P U T T £ P \
i hW KA f M A *i

FLECK,
TH £

N £W

tr. 5.

e w e / t M/m

T h 'e A V P A Z -

o pe n

G O LP
CHAMf&gt;

r c u c .v , A T
/ £ A s r WW/LP
n H / i£
N £ 9 9S TT//IL
iL

C P A M P JO S ­
H E S NOW o u r
* FO R MORE \
£ HONORS.
. . th a t
r r
8 - ro o re * [ f c !
Me MAP \ J i

Roundup

Barber
Starts
In Lead

Universities___
Still Arguing
About Football

Standings Keith Paces FSL

With Robust .407
Batting Average

Evans, Cooke Fight
To Exciting D ra w l

Rookie Has Carved
Place For Himself
In Baseball Circle

Jowle Takes Lead
In British Open
Golf Championship

M ajor League
Leaders

WSTfifia*

C

The Orlando Flyers rdpril the Sanford Cardinals, R-5, fop

City Softball

M A TIN EES Wed. &amp; Sat at 2

/^*7

V o l u s ia C d u n It
KEN N EL C LU B - u U

Tu .

Alabama-Florido
Man Has No-Hittar

C H O O S E &amp; USE

R SM A IN COOL W HEN
TH E SO M M ER SU N
SA M
*IN SU LA TI
THEN174
D

W A TCH FO R O P EN IN G
ubaai
, -*.r. &gt;■ . v.r

Cardinals, 6-5

the second nijrht in n row here Inst night despite a four-run
By GAYLE TALBOT
NEW YORK IP—A man say* he Sundny rally in the bottom of the ninth.
hsi seen it seriously suggc'trd that
Bob Thorncll hit a grand slntn homer in that frame. Hia
Ihe Brooklyn Dodgers ran win Ihe
National League pennant merely IJ '” 1 7 ™
Hou ii- Trcap n flc r A ndy Schreiber
by pdaying .300 ball the rest of ! ^ ^ 7
®ut £ Z
-u :
........... .* m a t-»
Ihe way, and he wants In know " 0n •chmitl In Ira'i off Ihe inn- innlfiK. TrJ-n 3 In 1 Innlne; IlenJl hl . l .
- I .u . ing. T tc p relieved Sthricftcr at fr.ot « to J-a innlnes: Terrell e la
tl inlx is true. Thr answer is that
.
. •
,
. i - $ tn■- t*t&gt;teit—r t h t inn na«,
- ‘-v. ------.j - j
. . t “ |lhU point end cave up a single |J .
|,
,*.*, -4HreO.ee
they mighl, provided the other by Re.i Mauriello to load the .43f, Mttnfrri]!
f»*4i T#rr#II
....
........ *
Ttr.M r -............
ji u r-Mhr*n.#r. r n
clubs rooperate, but that they had base*.
TVl!*nfL W - Hlirwilifr i t - 2 l I. I
beller not try it
Ipf-sin
f
11
A
i
L
’—
H
'tt.
Carmriia
The Cardinal* will lake on St, T—J IS. A—74|.
In looking hack over lhat fabled Petcrsbuig at Memorial Stadium
season of 1931, the one in whirh tonight. Game time is 8 o’clock.
the Giants passed thcjr "lilllr mirmir­ Oil 1.4 Mill
Rh h b
acle," It »till com et'at mild sur­
i i :
II) II. I'. GORDIE
prise In rcalirr that the Dodgers
b 1 2 «I
4 3 II
In Ihe City Softball League
held a 13'i-gsme lead in the middlr
—4 i j
of a dnubicheidcr on August II.
« 1 « «|Tait nirJit- Itiiipec Sced Cn. hand-*4 t n
d Hunt-McRoi-ei t* its first de­
Alio that from that point on Char*
l 1 1
Irst nf the vrasno hy a score nf
Iry Drrssen'a bewitrhi»J athlete*
I D 3
3 « !!
The riled Bur|*re tram rnl.
played belter than .500 ball—27-25
i» sr 11 Incit'd 11 hits from Hunt pitcher £
to br exact—and did not get into
B
O. Jnnrs Frank Stafford hagthe World Serica.
I. lai’tl two triple* while Gene Ea*
So, it all depend) upon whrthrr I’rey |h
&lt;’!».(( 31.
4
J . fridge picked up one for the winthere la a tram in the league T#rr*»H
IT p
i|nmi: team. The Hunt men rapped
which, atarting within Ihr next Miller Si«
*
Jjonl nils- hits from Rurpce pitcher
month, can put together a victory Hnyiler
IImlffr rr
■&lt; ('ml Wilt.
streak aomewhere approximating Hi lm.ltI rf
r If
”
In *he fire) gspie Wilson-Maier
Ihe 39A drove that cnrritd the M'rlrtfrt
l&gt;trr«#in p
I
» Fiirnituir Fn. nut-pitched and nutGiant* into a tie on the final day MunfrnM p
ft
II e
I
pityed nnlifnn Sporting Gooda
and act the alage for Bobby Thom- Tliorn*
a-K.»[mIi
I
!o win liy a note nf 15-1.
aon’ a dream home run in the laal
Tteini#
nn
smirk nut f«-r Mnnfr*'*1
tarry Chunat nf^, Wilson-Maier
inning of a three-game playoff.
OrtMMlte*
Htlt IMMI Slid
ll is possible, of course, that Knuloril
(•144 ii4t*i *WH— 3 -illowcd Dip Itnlison team only mi# ^
!* IliuPP* hit while Rimsnn e*min not fi.d a
even such a streak by, say, the Hhlrlrv 3 Kh fO»r#lh*r
b p w 4f. I»i4\In, Mil­
Milwaukee Brsvn would not Inrn ler. Ihttler. hhlmiltt
M.nirlelto. pitcher who roul.l stand against
llltl - Knp*.«ttlitn 2, • u- the- slug-happy players of Wilson.
the trick this time, for it I* gen­ Thurnell
itri-.iu t. ftiijriter. I».av|p 2. Thorndl
erally acknowledged that today’s 4. ill - K« liinn, tl.imit r »it. Mil* I Inter.
-ill- ImvI*. IIII—THa«rtirIt f*|t—
Next Tuesday's play will pit
Dodger* are a snunJrr. outfit than hr
IlHipRklutht HK—Hnvilrr, l»l* — Himt-Mcl!nberts against Rnh«on
tha '31 cL±. iccsar Lz r_—rrc |*ri»T*r*
^plfBBwerht^ t(T Sltlrl*^)*
CocMft --4 IN. 4 ti. .
iMN'iti ••• .*»&lt;•*»• » n*,(
-*.. 3A st
strength and In pitching. Barring If,
?&lt;4*»lfi&gt;r»| *, |t|f-nf| f*r!rr*v«if» S, Ilurpee meet* WTlann- 7.’ % a series of crippling Injuries to &gt;fhrrlhrr *. Tetrrll 4, Si»-li&gt;
key men. it It difficult lo imagine Itttor 4, l*»t*rjMtri *. Mmtfr»*ifi 2. Trr- Furniture.
them settling for an even break
the re»t of the way.
Delving into how Ihe 'St eluh
contrived tn Hisiipate it*' great
lead—^
70-33 in the Giants’ 59-51 on
Ihe day the world began to lilt one is struck by luckless Ralph
Branca'a role In Ihe skid tn ob­
livion. Plaintly, it was meant lhat
Ihe young righthander should
throw the ball that Thomson poled
into Ihe Polo Grounds balcony.
Through Aug. II Rranca was
sporting a gaudy 10-3 mark and
appeared In be nn the brink nf a
fine career. He waa lo win only
three more game* while losing
nine, and was never tn regain his
skill and confidence after Thom­
son's climactic belt.
Rrara had some help, nf course.
Don Ncw’combe, who was 13-5 at
Ihe xenith, hung up only a 3 4 rec­
ord while the Giants were closing
In; Carl Ersklne, 12-8 at the peak,
went 4-4 from there on. Only
Preacher Roe stood Iho gaff, go­
ing on from 13-2 In have his grrslest srason with 22 wins and only
vrifJLe
(exrept Sund*y&gt;
three tones.
17
While all the Dodger hitter* frll
off lo some extent, there was nn
real collapse in that department.
Peewe* Reese's drop from .318 to
New Air-Ciinditiiined Clubhouse
.236 probably hurt Ihe moil. Roy
Campanella atilt wound up. hilling
323 and knocking In 10* runs.
Jackie Rpbinson had a .33* sea­
son. and both Gil Hodges and Duke
Snider drove In more than loo
runs. When you get that kind nf
hitting and don't win a flag you're
just not living right.
R OUT E S 2
One of the main reasons the
present Dodgers are not likely to
give a repeat performance ia the
Spend (he weekend in Daytona Beach
very fact that their key men went
through the '31 ordeal and atlll
suffer from the recollection. Some
were a round even back in 1942
\\\ v\\\\w\ i1 » r f r i n .
when the club held a 9l)-g«me
lead in Auguat and Inst to Rt. Louis.
They say it will not happen
again, and declare that If Milwau­
kee atari* streaking they will
match Ihr Braves victory frtr vic­
tory. They do not strike an ob­
server as over-confident, aa both
the '42 and 'St editions did while
they were flying high, but sober
and determined tn keep a lot nf
daylight between them and any
pursucr.

By Eft WILKS
The Aaanclated Preee
7 0 *&gt;N K
Pag* fi
Frl. July K, 1955 Say hey! Willie Meya is thump­
fO R A
in'. not slumpin', these days.
B / p p ie o h
It wa* a long spring for the New
THE 7 £ * HOLE
York Giant's 24-year-old phennm,
turn- now that the -wrather- has
MOOAN PO N T
turned hoi, so haa Willie.
~
B e S oon
With two home runs In the
fo p o o rre N . am p
Giants’ I I victory over Philadel­
phia yesterday, Maya haa hit 10
Me P o esN 'T
in Ihe la»l to games after going
TAKg a l l p a y ro
P U T T WHICH 1
UNIVERSITIES
SITS
24 3 without a homer in the preceding
ST. PAUL, Minn. UP-Keller golf
w e Nope.
* i
(iAINESVII.I-E I*— The Univrr- 11. Tha spree leave* him Juat one course, whirh held up pretty well
starts
/
aity of Florida and Florida Stale thy of the National league lead- for Ihe National PGA last year,
A TPEN P
!
Unlverally
atlll arguing abmil 1era, Brooklyn'* Duke Snider and was left a shambfes yesterday by
-terma for a football game but ; Cincinnati's Ted Klmiew'ski, who |Ihe nalion'i lop golf professional*
acreemrnt ha* been reached on I have 3*.
May* now ha* hammered two in the first round of the SI. Paul
beginning relatmna in minor sport*.
Open.
Competition in golf, Irark. lennia home run* in one game ala times j Lillie Jerry Rarber of I»*
thu
season,
putting
him
within!
and awimming will begin in 1*3*
Angele* knocked nine alroke* off
with ilalea and timea lo be made teach of Ihe league record of 10, the par 72 with a 93 In take Ihe
puhlir when regular achedulea are i set by Ralph Klner of Pittsburgh |lead, Rather teed off today only
in 1947, and lha major league mark
rrlrssed.
11 set bv Detroit'* Dank G reen-!' *,rollf ahead of feed Hawkins
This waa announced by Ihe Unl­ of
berg in 1931.
of St. Andrew*, III., and Art Wall
verally of Florida following a rnrelNeither Greenberg nor Klner had Jr'* •,,,con(&gt; Manor, Pa., who holed
ing on Ihe rampua yeaterday be­
“ dh Ms.
tween Coach Hob Woodruff: Dr. as many aa six "pair*" at this 10,,iTwo
ilrokn off the pare wtre
Jlnward G. Hanford, FSU athletic stage of Ihe season. Greenberg Tommy Bolt, Chattanooga, Tenn,
didn't
make
it
for
the
sixth
t'me
dirertor: and Ihe faeully chairmen
until July 29. Kinera .lath two- Walker Inman, Augusta, Ga., and
of athletira of the two achnola.
r i . O M I I I * STATIC I . K A f l i ■
Arnold Palmer, Latrobe, Pa , the
W I. PH
"No agreement waa rearhed In homer Heme tame «n Aug IS.
National
Amateur
king
in
1934.
OrluhilA
i
11 .«!)
Maya hasn't been going esrluHiNithall, baskelball or liaarhall
I III III
41 IS . I I I
Nn
less
than
S
O
professional*
in
41 II .14)
though there waa eonaiderahle dis- slvrly for Ihe homer, however. a field of 140 slartera shatiered IU&gt;lui» R*srh
41
III .1)4
W. l-ulm llssi-h
ruMion of these aporta," Woodruff Willie, who hit 41 homers and look Krlter'i par of 71 and 14 nf Ine llalnsat
III*
41 4n ,11*
Ihe hatting crown with a .343 mark
444 ' 4* 4TI
•■■ler*
aahl.
)&lt;
t n ,4St
In i ifiion , h*«
hitting
• player* broke 70 in the greatest lakelanrt
The annnurieement continued!
Dan Keith onre mnr* pares (he
34 it .tie
opening day srnring burst in In* Ml. r*lnraluire
HK*I
I.TS
ir:STKHII4V
"The reaaon no agreement waa .390 clip in the last 10 games.
Flnriria fllal* league in batting,
23
years
tournament*
have
been
llrlsnla I. aaalar* I
With May* hitting on* of three
reached in football, haakelhall and
Havinni ll*arh el nalnuvlllt. this week lipping hii avenge eight
played here.
, tain.
baaehall ia that FSU rioea not wlah Giant homer* in a aix-run sixth,
points tn a robust .407, Keilh atilt
Lloyd Mangnim’a emirie record
a a f l i n i l at Ml. r * l a r * b o r e ,
New
York
overcame
a
SO
d»rtrlt
10 compete-with Florida in Ihoae
iiiuse* a substantial lead over hia
A 4N K S TIIII4)
of
*2
withstood
Ihe
firal
withering
aporta unleaa II ia nn a home and In beat the Phillies and strengthen assault. But Ihe first nine record W . P a l m l l a a r h at O l i l s S a
closest rompetitor for hatting
al C n m a
home baaia, and 30-M dlvlaion of ita hold nn fourth place. Half «« nf S-undrr par 30, held jointly by lli. aa lknral aa ni -Ilia
honors, the WPR flrst-sarker. Red
i ai Ha 1 Inna
the Gianta' to hit* wert home run*.
fc«r« al a a a fa r *
the gate receipta "
Roberts, yhn registers a mark of
Joe Coria nf Rt. Paul and Man- SI. I’ a l a » aSKI
O
A
K
HAI.SWindy
McCall
won
In
relic
after
Woodruff laid It* had made five
.391 for his efforts with the wood,
1
%
Pel
I.
grum,
waa
equaled
twice.
(•■tar*
contract offera to FSU to play a the rally chased Murry Dickson,
IS a . m Keilh pares the rlrcuit in base
The firat lo do It waa Barber 1If 1. Hllr.
11 a •MS nits again with 112, and in twofootball game In 1*3*. The lateat who had one-hit the Glint* for five
lin
t,
villa
Iff
a .MT
ami
a
few
minulra
later,
Palmer
offer, he aaid, provide* for a game inninga. Reliefer Jack Meyer wa.
I’m-i-a
ha** hit* with 24.
T a
also
malrhed
it.
Coria
misted
Ihr
t&gt;a&gt;lotia
tagged
with
the
loas.
•
a
to he played on Florida Fieki hera
leading nnc# more in rhl’a ta
ft • .SAT
second nine rerord of a ael by la (.aland
Brooklyn
extended
Ita
l**|i»e
with FSU In receive a *20,000 guar­
w. i* n&gt;a
122 Ino Rodrigues of Cocoa who aporta
» t*
Herman
Coelho,
by
a
stroke.
Ml. Pal*
4 IS Sift an arrumulatlnn of 77, while ha
antee aa Ita ahare of Ihe gale re­ lead to tXVk gamea again, beating
ANr.ltHAS LKAUI K
ceipt! and alaofl.000 reaerved aeata Pittsburgh 4-3. Milwaukee moved a Hawkins and Wall both shot 3w
t. r n again shows the way In homers
under-par 31* on the second nine, S»w Tnrk
II is .ID wiih 11, no rhanga from laat
for uae by FSU aludrnta and fac­ percentage point ahead of third
44 SI
Coria, Ihe tournament* early I'ln aiand
place
Chicago,
defeating
the
Cub*
ulty nr aa FSU aera fit.
1'hlcaa.i
41 It .292 week.
leader Thursday with a morning llnttfin
4* SI .A«l
"Since it la neceaaary for Florida 3-1. St. I/)iil» baat Cincinnati
Roberts repeals aa total has*
llaitnil
11
SI .Aiti
round
of
M,
had
slipped
back
to
With New York Idle in the
to proceed with ill achedullng of
krniai i'll)
' 14 14 411 rhamp with IS*, while Dike Wil­
seventh
by
nightfall.
George
BigtVatlilniina
11 tl *SI| son and Dave Drapp, both qf Or­
nthrr npponenla In 193*, It la de- American, Cleveland' clipped the
llalllinnra
II II •291
airahle that FSU make an early Yankee*’ lead to four game*, beat ham of Kansas City, Killy Max­
IIUM
I.T*
ti:rrr.Ni!Atr
lando, via for runa-arored honors
tng Kama* City 9-1. Third P'»f * well of Odessa, Tex., and Jimmy 4'i«»»l»ns », K&gt;n««t i lly 1
drrislun," he added,
with ** each. Bill Patriae of Day­
V'ni'saa
IS,
lielmli
1
Clark
of
laguna
Beach,
Calif,
Chicago whipped Detroit 11-1. Bos­
I)r. Hartford aaid;
ll na lii a *. W ■■hill Minn *
tona haa noticed the-most triples,
viloly * - m - » *1 hstliilail i
"The poailion taken by FlorMa ton won Ita seventh straight, *-S were deadlocked with ga*.
12, while Orlando Gonxalei of Ci&gt;14*11
Me
TIIII
4
V
Fourteen players were lied at
Stale Unlverally la that home and over Waahlnglon.
roa shows lha way on the l«so
rlm lm d
s i I'h lr a a n ( n l t h t )
among
them
such
tournament
fa
Art
Cecrarelll
held
Cleveland
to
t
,«
li
in
n
I
l
l
S
i
i
t
.
1’
i
a
t
r
a
l
i
4
1
home gamra with equitable opUona
paths with hia 31 stolen bases.
I 'liy al K eirolt (n lg tit)
regarding the diapoiillon of gate one hit. *1* tnnlngi, b u l the vorilea as Mike Snurhak, the na — kI 'oanr t&gt;u4«
On tho hill, Alex Gordey of Or­
ia r r tr a
|t-a&gt; t « .
lin e d
lion's
leading
money
winner,
Dow
receipta ia baaed upon common Tribe got rolling in the last three
lando ran boast lha most wins, It,
New
Tnrk
*1
Meshlngnm
inlahi)
'FinsterwaM,
Bedford
lleiMita,
practice anil ia In acrord with frames lor alt it* runs. Larry Doby
- Tulle)
VtS-Il II
Mrllermnlt while John Fmith of Daylong haa
agreement* that have already been hnmered twice and At Risen once Ohio; Bo Wlnnlnger, Oklahoma 1*-Il
llelllmnre
II
Botina
(nlahll — racked up the most strikeouts,
City;
Rob
Rosburg,
San
Francisco,
In
the
prolonged
rally.
Winner
effected for gamra prior lo 1*31
I’lirlle m-Ji ia tfiiaee 11- S&gt; er tl*.
and
Frank
Slranahan
of
Toledo.
Mulllian Ill-Si
with other Southeaalern Conference Mike Garda and Don Moaat gave
Dave Coririfht singled In Stewart
a*Tiun*k iiKAfit ■
Simmy Snead, who won at Kel
train*, Auburn and Georgia, and the A'* juat sis hit*.
Ctooa to break up the 14-inning
„
,
,
»
l
M
1} )4 ,T*4 gam* before 343 at West Palm
Roiton »cora&lt;i thrff In In# Hr»l ler In 1937 and captured the West Rinnklya
also with the University of Miami."
Mlleatikea
41 1* .U S
WoodruK aaid that "Under Flor­ on Norb Kaurhin's tlth homer, but *m Open her* In 1941, was In an i’hlraan
Reach. The fray became tied up in
41
Si .UT
4"
I * . ) * • the seventh when Cocoa manager
ida's well ealahllahed policies bad lo break a 3-1 tie with three eight-way lie at 70 as were Bud \»w Vnrk
■
'iRalnell
Holscher
and
former
N
a
11
o
n
a
si
at
.«•»
and Hip Inlrrunivrraity agreement more in the seventh. George Susro
Mi. Imui*
aa si :*ea Doug Williams doubled. Each tram
reached nn Feb. .3 this year" bla lived It for reliefer Ellis Kinder, Open Champion Julius Roroa.
I'hlladelpMa
II 4* ,41* picked up a run in Ihe tenth, Co­
Tha tournament’s 72-hole record Pittsburgh
31 *4 .III coa's coming on Cheater Pungan'a
lateat offer la the beat that Florida shutting off a two-run Nat rally
M K a i i .t * T r . s T R M i i * r
11 In a pnilliun In make.
with none out tn the ninth. Single* is a 22-undrr-par 2M. aharrd by V*v Tnrk I, Phllertelphle a
double and an error and W«at Palm
Hinnklyn 4. Plllehurah I
Ilia earlier offers provided for by Jarkle Jensen and Grady Hal­ Mangrum and Cary Middlecoff.
Heath's on a double hy Cortright
SlllireuVee I, I'hlregn t
three to five-year achedulea, with lo sparked the winning rally,
at. Inull S, lilni-lnnall I
and n single by LeRoy Irby.
HANKS TOUAT
all gamea to be played in Gaines­ while Eauchin's blaat off lo»er Bob
Prnnktvn a t &gt;’#w f o r k ( a l e h n
ville, FSU to accept the same Porterfield tied him for the AL
— Newvomba (14-1) v*. Uaglle
(l-4i
guarantee it geta for playing other lead with New York's Mtekay Man­
I'hlledrlphle
at Plllehiirali —
Southeastern Conference team*, tle and Detroit’* At Katina
(nig hti — Wehmelsr
1*-*).' v»
aurknnl tS-St
and FSU In observe SEC eligibility
The While Soi alayed a gam*
t’lnilaneil at Milwaukee ( I ' l w l requirement*.
behind Cleveland and Ito up on
n llh t t — Mlaarrln (4-St and U n ­
li t 14-41 ve. Mpeha ( l - l t and BurBoston with a I* hit attaek behind
Uelte ti- 4 I
LOB
ANGELES
u
rv
—Billy
Evens,
Dick Donovan’* flve-hltter, It waa
i’ hlregn el S l . - M i fh la h ll —
BT. ANDREW#, Scotland t * _
Donovan'* loth victory. Walt Dropo IHU. of Paiadena, Calif, and Winner lT -11 v*. WnnlrlSea (3&gt;l| Btocby Frank Jowl*, .tit* low quali­
nr PuhnUky ll-ll
Wayne
Cooke,
127,
Ixw
Angeles,
drove In five Chicago runs, smart­
fier from Yorkshire, fired a *ing a graod-alam homer In a alx- baltM to ■ sensational 19-round
under-par M today for a third
run alsth. Rookie Duke Maes waa draw at the Olympic Auditorium
round 219 lo takn over the lead
last night. The bout waa televised
the loatr.
In the British Open golf championEvans
lathed
out
In
the
tenth
By THE ASSOCIATED PBP.NB
Brooklyn’* BUly Lo** won his
ship.
Earl Avrrill, • Cleveland farm­ ninth, but had to do*# down a two- with two left hooka lo the jaw that
Hi* « gave him a a-itroke’ lead
hand, I* Just a rookie in Southern run Pirate r*Uy in the ninth In* tent Cooke down for an eight
over Eric Brown of Scotland who
A ssn , baseball but (he stocky Nash­ n'!g. Junior Gilliam homered and rount. With time running out,
had taken an early toad at SU
ville catcher already haa carved ■ tripled for iht Brooka, who scored Cooke nailed Evana with a aerie*
• r th u aewrtATMw rxxae
with a 72.
Awr,atran
k
a
i
u
i
a
of
rights
In
Ihe
head
and
Referee
nirhe for himself in Ihn record their runa off loaer Boa Kiln*.
FTank O. Mitxei of Delrnlt,
lu llin g neeeg an |l* at h*le—
Pdttr Thom ion, of Australia, and
books.
Johnny O'Brien had n double and Rust Bradford ruled that Evans Kalina. lu irn li, ITS.
42nd
president of the American &lt;
P.
t
.
laulldon,
a
Welshman,
who
» New Turk,
■Ol Wi e*n1.
Kune—ate nils,’
The 24-year-old slugger wiped three single* ia lour at bata tor waa out on the rope* although he
Ituaa bailee ’le—Jeaeea, haalaa, were tied with Brown at IM Hart- Bowling Congrvsi, Is the third
had
not
goo*
down.
He
gave
him
out a rerord that had been stand­ the Rues.
II
■
.___ .
Ing today's final M boles, wet* Detroiter ta head the orfanixatioN.
lllie—Kalina, Hetroll. &lt;117.
ing for a quarter of a century
Bobby Thomson's single drove a nln. count before allowing the
Heublae— rialcan. Kaasae City, not among tha tarty third-round
bout
to
rontlnue.
With
only
five
when he blasted three home runa home the winning Milwaukee run
II
* Auault and Mlddleground. two |
Triples—Uenill. New Tnrk, 1. finisher*.
and two doubles for 1* total bases In the eighth at Chicago after Aady second* remaining. Cooke got In
llama runt -reurhle Onring, KaJohnny Falton, ■ Scot, who start­ winners of the Kentucky Derby,
in the Veils* IX-ft rout of Chatta­ Pafko, an aa-Cuh, bit hla fire! 19U another right hand punch and dne^ Del red, sag Manila Na*
ed the third round only on* stroke wan foalad in Texas. They wen
nooga tail night.
homer ia a pinch batter rota with Evans appeared oa bla way to Ihe ^ f l i o l e a k t i i i — R iv e r s , C h ir a c s. off th* leaden, sUyod on their from*tha same stable — King
Averill, son of the former Cleve­ • man on to tia K 1-2 la the *av&lt; deck aa the bell sounded.
Ranch.
land outflrld star, Karl Sr., sur­ enth. Rob Buhl was the winner,
While Ihe rrewd showered rolns . . 'n ic h in g baaed e g I d e cisio n * — heel a .with a 71 for a 211
Prospects
that
Ed
Purge!,
the
passed by one the record for total with All-Mar pitcher Bam J
on the lighten Referee Bradford'*
IM4 American Open champion but be finished with a 72 for a
Paso* In • single game set by aa- losing hia Uth.
decision waa announced i t N la
from Clayton, Mo. would alagt a litother Vnl, Jim Poole, in 1990.
34
tor
Evan*.
Judge
Reggie
GUAahbutn,
__ _____
The Card* moved within a game
comeback, hocamo dimmer.
Byron Nelson, former American
The rookie's performance atole of fifth-place Cincinnati with Bin more called It Itoh to Mto tor
Stirling the day's activiltoa with c h a m p from Roanoke, Tex.,
(he league limelight from the Vinton's seventh-inning homer pro­ Cooke, aed Judge John Thomas lya. 17.
• 117, Purge! took a disastrous T dropped further back with a 7 t for
Memphis Chirks, whoa* two vie- viding the edge. Baeh eluh
called It a 33 3* draw.
on tha 19th halt ia tha morning.
• W total. Nelson also took, a T
rl-s over Lillie Rock pulled them four huriere with atarter* Harvey
m tho 14th.
Ham* rua»— Bnl«*r. a&gt;**Vlra. Until than ha waa g
to a tie for first piece witk’ raln- HadU end Joe Nuahall, hath AU■ a* Klun*ar*hl, CTnrlaaad, 3*.
plagued Birmingham.
^ a i*i** Su m — a * r ir , at. Leute,
The Chick* defeated Util* Rock BUr game chotoee, the pitobara
of record. Khiaaewrtl closed a
m ith ls t fcasag an 9 B*rlaUa* —
M and.4-2 oa a pair of nifty pitch­
B»*c*»«X*. Brnaklxa. 14-1. M l
ing fobs by Rob Cain and. Paul three-run Radtog rally In tka »evBtrlhMula—J a m , rtilrag*, 11 *.
CRESTV1BW,
Ha.,
(«3CreatBtuffel. And
Orleans got a enth. lining md with the
vlew'a Jeff Watkins tuned la aa
masterful mound performance out
Alabama-Ftorida League ne-kliter
o f Curt Raydoa and adged Allaata
Uet night, defeating Dothan M .
Mtckey Mae tie ad tlm Txnkaee
M . Birmingham and Mobile teem
Only three Cardinal* react__
rained mat far the third straight waa the fire* player to the Amer* ftret- TWO mate It *a errors and
-thli eeesee to hit the third was hit hy a
'
eluh.
A total ef t,7to aaltoa and uriot
' (• were mete leal year on bari which ran at the three Nn#
race track*.
T H E S A N F O IU ) H E R A L D

Orlando Edges

C bU U

r

3.V.-

______ ____
'

s l a wV *
•.*- -L -v '
• •* «
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THEOLD HOME TOWN

I f I f * W orth A n yth in g
It's W orth A d v ertisin g la

T1IK SANFORD HERALD Fri. July f&gt;, 1955

By STANLEY

DAILY C R O S S W O R D
a c r c r w in nom a,

b«

A rn oss
1 French city
ft Mourialna
(Ruts)
11. Snnftly
12 Of the note
12. Net Iewer
14. Boundary

- q w oo &lt;j h w h ,

tiled bath eereeatd porch tad
carport#. Excellent condition.
Pnca lU.ooo. Essy tarma.

— Factory to Too —
Thla home hai two large bad*
Aluminum
roemi, siptrit* dialog n o n .
V enetian Blinds
Urge utility room, .Jileu»i*4
porch. It la loeatad on taro lota, Enclosed head. Sag-pronf bstem
ran with plactte ania. Plastic or
h is doubla ftraia.
Prlcad
rayoo tapes. Cottas or aylti*
113.000. Kitchen equipped.
cords.
You ahould aee this lovely lake Senkarlk Glass and Paint Ca*
front hnm* with 96 feet of laka 113-114 West had 81
Pbaoa IS
fronts*#. It h«a taro bedrooma.
3 baths. Florida room, large •1 V A R IE T IE S P A N E L IN G
living room, dosed garage and
Native and Foraign Woods.
Stonge. Good boating ana fish­
See Them At
ing and bathing beach.
8herm an Concrata Pips Co.
C A . W H ID D O N , 8 * .
Owl West 13th St.
Phasa 24N
Beg. Baal Batata Brwkar
i
l
l
ft.
Park
Ph.
u
u
WXLAJGk APABTMENTS i r«m a ,
Used furniture. appOaneas. tools,
prlvsta baths. 114 W. First SC
tie. Bougbt-seld. Larry’s Mart.
OUTSTANDING VALUES
121 E u t 1st St. Phona 1631.
Beautiful homo in Mayfair area
located on 3 lota. ] bedrooma,
METAL ROOFING
two tiled baths. Florida room,
garage. 130,000 00.
New ta Stock. »-V Crimp - I M "
Corrugated— 3H“ Corrugated.
Gat all Your roofing needs at
JiArtlem
New home, furnished. Block eon*
atruetion, 2 bedroom a, four lota. Sherm an Corner*la Pip* C*.
31.500 00. Older heme, dote in, Out West 13th St.
Phase 34N
2 bedrooma. U,000 00.
Tartpa may be arrgsgad oa say
AIR CONDITIONING
of these homes.
Boom or House

I *..;

ir.&amp;rker

D O C /T H A T i s OAJE*
C i e v RDC? H E L P

-..T H A T 'S OAJET
l DIDATr H E A f?,

/n g ! J

E I T H E R !!

*

meadow

29 Shrub
31 Masurium
(arm )
52 Nonaan*#?
33. Varying
'••eight
i
l le.,1 1
St. Draaa

"’SW W SJLIBiSS.

'. SB,

•ffiSTTSTiStlBS®

r L f f i^ u T B ^ D a s

A U$ty food dogt f o far.

2 BEDROOM
Apartment.

50th Annlveraary.
S P E C IA L S

►WiWisjr

eeeeeeeeeessse 10«

1

itarad Bexar puppies
.oUl^Outstanding pedi-

u.

— First elan Truck
Tractor mechanic. Good proisiUots for right man. See Mr.
ut, Seminole Truck ft Tractor
y t id

53 n:ver(Fr.»
59. Ctrl's name
iSp.)
41 Eemblanea
42 Cant
43 Ccmmunr*.
in modern

L I M I T OAi S P O O K W A f ' L A N F

41 Wetw
RANDALL

E L E C T R IC

CO.

and Crosley

112 Magnolia Ave.

II

LAWNMOWERS a t a r p a n
Bicycle ft General Rspalr.
filanley'a Blit* Shop
110 E. 4ih SL TaL *434

i RANDOM! ft Finisbing:
leer* furnished, laid ft As­
ia buainass since 1920.
fiteveas: Route 2. Bo* 227:
riftB-« before 7 a. m. or

DI8TBICT MANAGUt

Chkoeca at* that you have
* list of Mvtrsl home improvemerta you w a n t to
make. Why not give your*
self th* “grew light" by
giv lB g US B csll. Do this
now and you'll toon be en­
joying those improvements
instead of still .thinking
about than.

(0

14
'

16
1

ao

II
p
Vi

1*5

a&gt;

I

i
31

50

iO

22

%
/ ✓ - bZ

I
5b

1 m
3-* v~. 54]

51
%
4A

VI

3tt

41

41

%

.44

I

Ph. 113

Preferred Rales to I
Policy bol d m
J ob * Wimnmn law.

24—

BEAUTY PABLORR

For Lovelier Hair
GET PROFESSIONAL CARE)

Eva-Bess Beauty Shop
Phone 543

Modern Alr-rnndjtlnned Salon
Specialist in Personality Shaping,
Styling and Waving Cosmetics
for your akin rare. Gyro-Lstor
method n( rrHticins.

HARRIETTS
BEAUTY NOOK
uu

Harriett Ruth Dawn
Open 1:30 a. m also Wed. p ra
tea So. Oak Ave. Phona III

buj

luodaya.
CARS
BOUGHT SOLD TRADED
Bey ReeJ’a Use* Car*
Sanford Avn. 4 Uth SL
FOR SALE -M odel “ A”
Very Cheap 601 Rosalia

Ford,

• Oai hour • Wans and Damp
Dry
• One hour 44 • Wash and Dry
Fold
• Finished Laundry
• Saeltone Dry Q sasfig

SouthaMe

Laoadrmat

TWO RISICINT3 try to thumb a ride *s a crippling bus and trolle-v
•trike continued to grip Washington, D. C. and no tmmedlete break
•pprared ta he In elchL Dumper to bumper automobile traffle
Jammed the streets of the nation’s capital.
f/ntcrnationalj

FOR SALE — 3ft’ Stewart Trailer.
2 bedrooms, bath, kitchen, duiing
room, double walled aluminum
glaiaad lalouilad Cabana. • x 20
with 4‘V Porch. Dolly and Fenrcd
12.900
Sacrifice Located
Sill—Plano Technician
Park Ave Trailer Court. Terms. L. L
Phone 2164. Route L Sanford
W. M. Foster

R A D IO
Qtieit H u
Her&lt; ■ T ve la
I ' r m l l y VV» H«ll
«'ft'srvh l^rvlc*
w ir .f '1 C ir li
.'! 1 .*• * . i il.aistar

How will
Haw will
Your old
Better grade

ROBSON

!.

L\ E \ t * Q
W o rM At f t s

T«5*fi rR» # •31•
6S'r»»
Kuisd! r#n»

m Trad e?

Mar fer a
EVINBUDE!

.

Evlarude Salee
394 E. 1st SL

Goods
ndre

OR SALE — U ’ fishing boat—
340f)0 14’ Runabout. 23 h . John­
son. Top and Trallar. 113 Escambla Dr
____
i ' l l i J L t 'i J

Buy yrmr Pumttur* at Barry's
warehous* Fur*.. Co., at Ml w.
1st. St. All nationally adv. fur­
niture at wsrabous* prlres.

BARGAIN!
S Bedmum Horn* In Wynnewood. 2 Year* Old.

n n f t i a r n o A C!«u4
K ' i i i &gt;&gt;r A Ls1v

M utlo

At

H u ila

W ifh

Nah ft

LAvrr.tr
.. . —
...... ....t C
. . t.ll. T- -o
ti o m siea o t t
n ii. m m i

e *i
» ft

« ns
a so
a IS
ass
T *••
T •i

e i f c on
I . . yrr.tr ■ Call Ta P t * ) » r

D*«-a Crtakara
x«»,
xvtitara Jambora*
s i« i
S«v,r» Or.lsrk Club
Na«a

a rti Pporti At A Olancb
* "» J ock*y-» Click*
a,SO Slornme l i t 'o i m n a
a «S 3 !c r c ln c U * l n 4 i «

» "0 tVerll At .Mn*

* IS
» 1#
* «v

5iusia y n r L*4i*a
Hvmn Tim*
lion Club

l * :l' K*we
l « ;a 1aoo Club

FURNISHED AND INSTALLED
BY

DICK M APES
GENERAL TILE CONTRACTOR
TEL. 21M-W

eu»»F

aat t'tin ir

Thin home has Oak Floors,
Caraale Til* Bath, Dining
Ar*s. Laxf* Living Room
and Kitehn Equipped with
G. E. Appliance*.
Telewheae III after 4 P .M .
for appol*fme*t to aee thla

p U I #*M • r ^ r
S ig h t lT4!tton
l n it » i .v g fio r #

Jr * D»r.r*nm*

i
LIGHT

*

Anplisnrr*

r.."»
ll.'
l.*5

G * I I H

3

%
IO

&gt;5

vs*
H

I

n

i

13

I'lm i.iv

IV* So Eftty
To PUe* A Want Ad
Xtut Csll 1821 snd ask for
th* Want Ad d*p*rtm«at
Ssnfard Htnld

b

r~

Sanford

TV SERVICE CENTER

Fendlx

wild
36 Streetcar \
( B rit)
37 Urademed)
39 A majrpia
( Eur. 1
40. Corroded /

f

bints

Electrical rontrarting and Repairs

aiin

log, training and managing

-l

43

fo ote d

.t»
;J '

gift«Bb
S-gS',JSS
ledge and eiperieae* in recruit-

$

Greece

service, Lakefronta A 1933 MOBILE Cruiser., 36 f t . 2 Studio Piano — Small Upright
Bedrooma. Sae Mrs. SeaboJt,
Finish and condition like new
Estimates given. Phone
Price 316.V00. Phonr 1725-R.
Park Ave. Trailer Court.

ENVELOPES, ltUerheads, sUtements. invoices, hind bull, and
p r o g r a m s , ete. Progressive
Printing Co , phone *oa — 403
OFFICE and Credit Man. Youn,
aggressive and willing. SUad

■w
ft

1

S7 J C in do fro ll

Seminole Realty

Vrtlerdty'* Ailtatr
“ t Among

which rate*

relisloua
system
r.f Allah
20 A ty pe nf
ardutec.
ture
25 Marthy

O W N E R W A N T S A C T lO N t
Usa two Houses, needs only ona,
cHtrs this beautiful 2 bedroom
Home, Kitchen equipped. Herdweed floors, Tile bath, Nice
landscaping, for 11.000 Down,
Balance lets than rant, on a to­ YOU don’t have to see the credit
FURNISHED Apt. Phone 433-W.
manager to aeva dollars legiti­ p p tw w M B o r r o m i M i i M u
tal of S9.TU.000. Thla heme is
mately on our OIGANT1C Benicely loeatad.
Bedroom f u ^ a d boua^ * » «
MUST Sacrifice. S u g a r Bowl
mnva! SALE.
per month. Phone NO or T4S*W.(
Newatand, brer licenae. anark
R O B IN SO N M U SIC CO.
bar, Mock and futuraa, DaLand.
W. DIETRICHS
T. W. MEMO 220 N. Orange Avr. Orlando, Fla.
130 N. Boulevard
2 bedroom bouse, nlci:«lr fursiabed, INI Park Are. Phaau V or 143
Porch, carporta amdlerga lawn.
FIT FOR A QUEENLone wood. J. A •
Feam Rubber Mattraaaaa. InnerRAYMOND M. BAL
S p r i n g Mattraaaaa, Couches,
S. D HlirtUeyqjan.
rtnaahtng. R renv nraUng
Baby Beds. Renovating. UphnlO M. Harris an,
M. G. HODGES
W South Park Are.
Server on All Water Pumpa—
Ni x t l e”i) P ING°M F1(L*CbWelle Drilled — Pomp*
2 Room Apt. 200 Avocado.
For yocr Real Estate naees:
1341 Senfard Are.
Phona M4-J.
Paolai Road Phone 740
Cullen
and
Iinrkey,
Realtor*
New Maaonry 3 bedroom house
1M
N.
Park
Are.
Phona
2313.
QUICK
CASH
for
furniture,
boats,
in Casselberry. 360 per month.
USED rLUMOINO FIXTURES
motors. Buy one piece or com­
Phone Orlando 331N.__________
plete
home.
Tbouianda
of
arti­
2 bedroom house. 4 4
FURNISHED 3 Bedroom House.
cles for ula at the
mortgage. IN aoal
Super Trading Post on 1T-K
Close Iq. SI® West 1st SL Thone
Summerlin.
1 Mile baulk. Phoua 2212-1
NICELY Furnished Apertment 2 Bed Room House. Kitchen fur­
THE CURIOSITY SHOP
niture, space heater, VaaaUan
First floor, also Garage Apt.
blinds: Hardwood Boors— tils
Lot* of Plants
» 1209 Magnolia._______________
bath; Low down payment. Call BARGAINS^ Begonia, Bougain­
2 Room Apartment.' Completely
nights 1T49-M, or aee at 210t
villea and others—10c. 25c, 30c
furnlahed. 313 Palmetto Ave.
and 11-00, also unfinished chest
of drawers, Magnolia— 319 95.
THREE Apertments. Furnished, 3 LOTS — Dreamwold Section on
Old drop-leaf table—13 00. Used
and repair*.
comer Maple Ava. at 23th SL
chaste—310 00 up, New pliUorqi
Imall Monthly
Phone BM-W.
rockers, »lsitlc-334 95. U a td FURNISHED On* Bedroom Gar­
110.00, taking orders for Lawn
age Apartment. 2314 Sanford
Furniture, chairs—32.31, Swings
Ave. J. N. Am rello. Phone 3 bedroom home, Tile bath, Utili­
11.63 delivered. 17-92 South.
ty room, Carporte, Screened
1474.
porch. Comer lot. 39200. Month­
ly payments 351.90. aoi Rosalia. 3 Pc. Badroom suite, 1 nr. twin
Unfurnished 3
Kitchaa oquj
beds, 1 single (win bed. 3 blond*
cheats. 1 davenport and slip­
3 BEDROOM HOME
cover, 1 pr. table lamps. 9 x i2
1,509.00 — 12.000.00 Equity. Will
Phqpe 3092.
grey wool broadloom rug and
accept Auto for part of Equity.
Phone 2073-31.
pad, solid cherry anUque din­
P. M. CAMPBELL
ing room table, 3 anUque dinGeneral Contractor
ini chairs, pia-up lamps. Phone
“ Home* of Distinction
DREAMWOLD
■1-Way II tt
Phene
3 BEDROOM Heme for graeii
living, on 2 beautifully In
For Belter riumn
2 Rooms and
See or Cell
Phone 2363-'
W. J. KING
I M i Park Fha

17 Greet
IS Boy
Seoul*
like
thcae
Cft Exel/irnatlon
21 Ahead
22 Allspice
•free
M Mark

13. She fall
are airened
— down a hill------- tBritrl—
uithJack
8. Man'* name .
1!&gt; Sloth
(port 1
23. One of t*.Y&gt;
ft. Body of
equal rarta
water
21 Goddetaof
IP
Vehicle U’ith
hun-rjta *
runners
lit.)
1ft. Scrams

Phene 1

ED A QUALITY FEED.

A. Altruntie
7. Air.eurit on

17. Owned

►----- |'M N O T — , 4
a u s w e ic

DOWN
,’ J. Malayan
mraaur*
5 F.aUmete
th# value cf
3. Quick
4. Frejted
5 Indian
weight

IS Free
IS PUgued

H. 3. POPE C O -IN C

IN Seat* Park Are.

!T W l% a

Page i

4:2S
S "I

Children * C U ttlo
Varlttl**
Town A Ceuetry

i Usa Otl
M ovnar
Mon.Mvo

*

l ie n On
C t w r a n t Call Ta r r a v * l
i ’ iu n b i x . i r i

5 »-* I
5 »*»
s » * » n Oeieela Club
N(« &gt;
V •i, »ra Jamhnr**

t-p r’ i at A ' V i c e *
J e t k»v » Chs't*
Jl^rnlne D « 'a i l " n »
Mornlne 5!*laei*«
'S’orla A* S ir *
3!utic T t LlCin*
Hvnan 7:m »
Per
Cr.ljr
511. lie V -r T,lU
H ' " Club
I t ' " Club
G»-nii Of S!»ledr
V ' i f l l AI \n-n

irtC b v n n v

f i r m D i* «it
Brnnblyn D e ' f i r i

Ilnur

uir.M M iiiv

W » rM At Kcnn
B*4I» F ir m Ol(&gt;*t
Drnoltlsn Dodc* t*
,n. » ,
I4U0 Club
Th
in*e Phvthri
I-n&gt;*r ” Hour
iiour

world At 5l»
e v r 'I .'Q

T w lll fh ) Snag*
£p*rt* 6 - " k
Mu tic .1 Pxm
I'rltlln e On A
fund**- fcb o n l
Jiik* to " , h*t.
M * h t Kdlllon
J u t — link 6 *'
A&lt; lloin* with
iftitV N i x
i l l " " i.«yni«n'* Call
U . o i i * t . j a Off

Cteud
Im o
K 'g b l
Night
Siu.la
Ta Pray«r

ir v n ir

T:00
till
t : 1!
M 'l
.1*0
a 1"
» i» "
Sell

V4UHMM2

Sltn On
&gt;'u»ir.*l Frra
Hymn Tim*
Siutual real.
fiu rd ty M a ra lo c U u i l c . l t
J &amp; Cel*
World At Via*
a&gt; oaphoattte
Sukdav Marnlnp Uuilcela
a la Oaip«l Finf*r*
JiOd Church S«rvlc*
11,00 Sunday f*r*n»d#
AV T fc H 'O O V
IS J" araak.vn n - d * * * »
1 |*« Ou**t Editor

J

ftolny Semard.
A beek-reodlng feel
h
Think* eur dataJfied'a ere
4
Mere enlightening then w heel

Mere then 40,000 Americana,
mostly military personnel, live la
southern Okinawa,
-

�P »p *

THE gA N T O B in iC T X tfj (

FrT. July *, 1W»S

Unofficial Report **
-Tells O f -PrisonerfServing With Reds

derail! offlr* by

10 a. m on th» d o
All i im rco N otioet m uff a# pr* non

CL.NTBAL BAPTIST &lt;H UH CD
A S S E M B L Y O F C.OD C H U R C H ! FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
1607 Sanford A»e.
Hf« i w Pirb«ra, parlor
12th SC and I aurel Ate.
Sunday School
9:45 a. m.
Onr. Fourteenth EL, Oak A te
Sunday Sch&lt;«l 9:45 a m.
Morning Worahip Service 11:00 aSunday b*-h««ol a 45 a m
Morning Worahip I I a m.
m.
Morning Worship Service 11:00 Youth Service 6:45 p m.
B. rn.
Evangeliatie Rally 7:45 p. m.
Training Union 0:30 p. m. It’a a Player and Bibla Study WedneaC. Y. F. A Chl-Rho
6:00 p. m.
family eii-Hox
day at 7:45 p. m.
Evening Worahip Servica 7:U0 p.
Earning WoNblp 1:30 p, m.
'Join tha happy, ainging crowd.
"Coma thou «iU&gt; ua and «a will
I ™.
Worahip tha Lord with ua."
do then good."
pirt
f-OUTH FIDE BAPTIST CHURCH
FOSTER CHAPEL
THE r im u 'H OP GOD
sion
Eatt
2Tth
Street
METHODIST CHURCH
I
at PROPUECT
Mltaionary and Premi)i*niai
Oviedo
2303 Elm A«a
Rev. George II. Carlton, Minister Sunday School
J0:00 a. m.
•
Ritbop A. W. Slaver, Panter
9:45 a.m Sunday School.
Morning Worahip
11:00 “ Lifo’a
1:43 a m fueday Sr bool
11:00 a m. Worihlp Service.
1 U a m Mornmi Worahlp. EerTurning".
1:00 p m. Worabm Seme*.
• Boa by A. W Slnvcx.
Evening Worship
S.00 p. m.
7:49 p. m Evangallrtif Hour.
"Mark of a* Gen'd Baptitt".
UPS ALA COMMUMTT
T:4I p. m. Tuesday Evening SarPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
w nrro r v r i n v s i L a
Prayer Meeting and Bible Study
nn tw o * *
----Rev. C. C White, Mlnialer
‘ tW .-P ra y v t-M cclire -----Wednesday 8:00 p. m.
» Hill*v
lira. Clover Mam, Planlal
7:43 p m. Thruaday Young PaoPastor:
R.
B._
Lunsford
trtcR
v
o
o
.v
Alfred Erlraon
, fl* m**t.
I "V adv*eiur* With Unci* Watt
Superintendent of Churek School Associate Fa»tor: ^\W. L. Stephens 4
ir Wild full Hlcknk
Everynna welcome.
Sunday School Supl. Milton HigGeorge Petold
r .it u v Q
4iS«
THE CHRISTIAN AM) MISSION
V
port*
genbotham
leader al Mid Week Rerrtcaa
a
il
i
l
l
___
_ N*W»
Jrihn
Daly
• ARY ALLIANCE CHURCH
Church School 10 a.m.
Welcome To The Chureh
a 1* M ulnl Vtrlatles
Park Aie. at Fourteenth SC
Worahip II a m.
a. it Stu»*c»l V*r&lt;«ti»»
T ftn rtnlom ln* Quia
Young Fenole I p m.
Parlor, David 6. Carnrlli
THE LITTLE BROWN CHURCH
7 VI 1 upper
Evening
nervico
1.30
p
m.
Sunday School and Doming
ON
THE
HILL
Wedneiday Eveniag 1:30 p m
Worship Combined Service 9.43 «
(Congregational)
Everybody tavitad to attend all
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
tn to 11:30 a ra "Worship Period
ICorner Park Avenue and 241ft RL Park Avenue at Sixth Street
aur tarvlcec
. begina at 10:40 a. m ”
J.
Bernard
Root,
Mini
tier
W. P. Brooks, Jr.
Pastor
Allunce Youth Fellowship 9:90
GENEVA BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday School
9:10 John L. Milter,
Minister of Ed­
p m
Geneva
Morning
Worship
11:00
Evening Servlco 1:43 p m.
Rev. Samuel Stewart. Paatof
ucation
Sermon:
"Paradis* Regained'.’ : Ruth E. Archer,
Wednesday Mid-Week B i b l e
Sunday School 10:00 a. m.
Director of
Study 1-43 p m
Church Service 11:00 a m.
Music
HOLY
CROSS
CHURCH
Training Union 1:00 p m.
“ Wa’v# Raved A Place For Y'ou’*
THE FREE METHODIST
(Episcopal)
Evening Worahlp Service 1:00
Early Morning Worahlp 8:45 a.m.
CHURCH
Rev.
II.
Lyllleton
Zimmerman,
Cor. W. Fourth SC l-aurel Are. p. m.
Sermon
Chaplain F. W. KcmpB. D.. Hector
Wedneiday Prayer Sendee 1:00
G. Eldon Wine, Mini*ter
*on, Guest Treacher
Fifth
Sunday
after
Trinity
p.
m.
Sunday School 9:43 a m
9:45 a- m.
8.0(1 a. m.
Holy Eucharist Sunday School
klormng Worahlp 10 43 a. m.
CHULUOTA BAPTIST CHURCH 9:15
"Come
With
Your
Family
to Sun­
Choral
Eucharist
and
Evening Warship 1.30 p m.
Matter A. Routh Jr., Paator
day School. WeProvide
For
Address
Prayer Meeting Thuraday 1:30
6unday School 10 a.m.
Every* Member of The Family—
Morning
Worahip
Sendee
U
a
m
Services
through
the
week
» »•
Even the Bif.y."
Sermon by tha patlor.
Monday through Thursday and Morning Worship
ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN
11.00 a. m.
Evening
Worahip
Sendee
1:90
Saturday — Holy Communion —
SC Luke'* Lutheran—in Llavia
Sermon Chaplain F. W. Kempm.
Sermon
by
the
paator.
7:30 a. m.
nair Oviedo) Lh* Rav BLsfieo
*on, Guest Preacher
Prayer U eating Wedneiday t:l
I. Tuhy bailor Homing worahlp
Friday — Holy Communion — 9:30
p.m.
Training Union
6:46 p. m.
8:30 am Radio Mission broadcoat
a. m.
Unions for Each Age Group. Com*
it 9:30 a m over WORZ (140 kei:
LAKE MART BAPTIST
Saturday — Sacrament of Pen­
with your family.
Sunday School for all aga groupa,
CHAPEL
ance — 5*6 p. m.
9:10 a m Chnattan Uay BcIsoaI
Lake Alary. Fla.
Evening Worship
8.00 p. m.
IAU vlvmenury gradaa and kinderPaator — Rev. n. A- Frith Jr.
Chaplain F. W. KempFIRST METHODIST CnURClI Sermon
rerun i. Monday through Friday
son. Guest Preacher
Sunday School 9:43 a m.
Mllion H. Wyatt
Pastor
1:80 a.m Children a pror—m. ” 8C
Morning Worahip 11:00.
Luke’s Chapel," Saturday 10:19
9:45
Church School Fellowship hour after the Evening
Servica in th* Memorial Educa­
Training Union 9;S0 p.m.
I I . over IVTRR, 11400 ke.).
Classes for all age*
tional Building.
Evening Worahlp 1:30.
11:00 a. m.
Morning Worahlp
I.UTHERAN CHURCH
Prayar kl eating Wad. 1:90 p.m.
Sermon Topic:
"It being Wednesday Evening Servica 7:30
OP THE REDEEMER
p. m.
la v . Poiliip M-nirairaae. H ia M r BILLCIEST BAPTIST CHURUi
Religious Having Religion7"
Senlraa at The Yacht d a b
Nursery open at all sendee*
Geneva
__ 7:00
M. Y. F. Meetings
Bundav School 9:13 am .
Earphone* for the hard-of-heanng
7:45
Organ
Veipera
Cheeiar
W.
Plank.
Fester
Church fcrrlea 10:19 a m.
WELCOME
Sunday morning aemcaa:
8:00
Evening
Worship
CHURCH OP GOD
til a m. Sunday School.
Sermon Topic; "Jacob’s Lad 11 a.m. Morning Worahlp.
IT S ALA COMM UNITY
French Ava. and 22nd 9L
der."
Sunday evening acndcaa:
Rev. U. W. H n tiT M . Paakar
PKESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Broadcast over W. T. R. R.
9:13
pm.
Training
Union.
Sunday School 1:43 a. nc
Sunday School
10:00 a. m.
1:90 p m Evening Worahip.
Morning Worship
11:00 a. m.
SANFORD
SEVENTH-DAY
Wedneaday
1:90
p.m.
Prayer
’ Evangelistic Service 1:90 p. m
Th* evening services will be
ADVENTIST CHURCH
Mid-Week Service Tueiday 1:19 meeting.
omitted.
TOO Elm Avenue
THE
FIRST
BAPTIST
CHURCH
. 9 ®OP OVIEDO
Young People Service Thar*
W. J. Oatmin
Pastor Wednesday Prayer and Bible
•*udy will be obacned In the
■tv. Louie Day. Mlalalar
day l:so p. m.
Sabbath School (Saturday) 9:30
home.
1:41 am . Sunder School
a. m.
;
CHURCH OP CHRIST
in* Gospel of Mark wiU be
.
SOUTH SIDE BAPTIST
Worship Hour
11:00 a. m.
Rewind SC and Elm Ava.
studied.
CHURCH
Topic,
"Summons
at
Midnight"
Ralph Brewer J r, Mlalalar
PAOLA WESLEY AN
Wednesday — 7:45 p. m. Midweek
Robert E. l/iaiford
Pad*
Sunday i
METHODIST CHURCH
Devotions
Topic,
"Th#
Angel
With
WUllara L. Stephana
Ataodate
Bible School 10 l m.
9 Miles West on Rt. 49
Tha Open Book."
Milton HiggenboUum S S Supt
1 Worahlp 11:00 a. as.
Sunday School
Sunday
School
10
00
a.
m.
Worahlp 1:10 p. ra.
Morning Worship
Morning Worahip
11:00 a. m. "Themfora be ye also ready;
R'edntaday:
Wesleyan Youth
for
In
such
an
hour
a*
ye
think
not
Evening
Worahip
1:00
p
m
Prayer Meeting 9:00 p aa.
Evening Worahip
Prayer Meeting Wed. 9:00 p. m. the Son of man comyth."— Matt. Wednesday I'raj crmeeUng
Thursday i
24:44
ELDER SPRINGS BAPTIST
'
CSENEZER METHODIST
A cardial welcome la extended Friday Cottaga Meeting 7:30 at
CHAPEL
the horn* of Mr*. B. Co*grave
CHURCH
to ait to join us in our Warship
Otnt* Ralghta
Elder Springe
and share in tha fellowship of this Saturday Central College Quartet
Bar. Edward Martin, Paa*ar
7:30
by Flret BepUat Ckertk hour.
Sunday School 10 a. m —dllEveryone Welcome
Sanford, Fla.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
lard E. Johnson, auperinlandasl
Rev. Cecil W. Shaffer
Sunday School
10:00 a. m.
CHURCH
Preaching Service U a. ac
W. O. StanaaU,
Superintendent
Oak Avenue and Third Street
M Y F I p m.
Preaching
11:00 a. m. Rev. A. G. Mclnnis.
Minister
Prayer meeting, Thuraday. 7:10
. H. Martin.
Preacher 9:46 a. m.
SundaySchool
9 m
10-50
a.
m.
Tha
Session
meets
■
m
n
«
DWtitrl
*«.
e
caaiur a*, taiar
n r revn iT iov •&gt;
for Prayer In the &amp;*a«on Room
11:00 n. m.
Morning Worahlp
LAST TIME TONIGHT
Anthems — "Lead Me, Lord "—
AT
STARTS 7:U
II
Edmundson
"Hymn of Freedom" — Thiman
, n « n ° e W ,S k Va . ° r F U S 1 H 5 2 % W .
*S*ETn
Chancel Choir
Cata. baianrt* mm * i e * r Make. I**iu4iag iw ijt*
farm cm
Mr. Metimla1
Ml*nr*. *»4 &lt;‘»»)| 11*1"* la praf»#4 *f r*tlMllO»
J*} - f f J f '
11*11.4 »t*t*» tint •rnm*m *1 UgOM***. * lr « -i•»* «uar*M**d
Church Nursery
10:45 • 12:00
&lt; &gt; au *til-n t « f 4 - t lt * ana p " l n « * t tu k O ltla lM U ------- — — ’
*11111 ! i
* n * « r b -n ** »«i«» *n 4
..
... . —
*4. 4*4 44 Each Sunday Morning for chUC a r p n a i* u m i i v ia c iu e ia e li* .* * # 4* * t* c k r t r * a « r e i R »drra up to five years of age.
*, r **
* " h*
. .
------------l
T:PO p. nvPioneer Fellowship
ant
tin&gt; Citraaki*
ii»clu4M«g
N*** ev»rlr»t»•»*-—
- - ■— . T l i i m t l
ak ur*iai*** n , a * 4 iH.41C.ll. fum liur# aak tUtur**
Senior High Fellow­
t r a c t at 7:00 p. m.
i n :»t ta
■■— --------- r -----------------------t . t l * •« ship
k i«l «a*al* **n »a *lk*r tk*e bank i&gt;r*ml»«* —
( t a u t I .-00 p. ra.
Diaar a t m *
©i
Evening Worahlp
IMI.I11M
Anthem — *1 Think When 1
total a m i - to
Read That Sweet Story" —Gif gx»*aa
*1 i*«lvU«aW.A pari&gt;a*r&gt;ikl»a. l » (
t.tlt.ita it ford
l.M
M
t
l
*«
In«l«l4u*l*.' eartakrthlr*. »*4 cer
Pioneer Choir
pkentlii *r C'ali*4 flat** Oeveremeai,--------— -----Sermon
Hr. Melania
D*m'*lta *1 evai»* aa* M lturel auk4 i«l*i*ii» ...------

I

TELEVISION

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Th* Variety Hour
Th* C nmpas*
Tour Playtime
Lit* •( Riiay
Loretta Toung Skew
Dollar A Strong
Ptarllght Thta lr*
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Reeurag

N*w*.w»ather

Thle ta Tha Lif e
Th* ChTtstephtr*
Feldltra o f Fortune
P ublic

H t a r in g

Let'* Take a Trig
Pocket Fouad
Waterfront

k ren reo

Paepl* Are Funny
Private tecra tary
Toast o f the Tow n
(1 K Theatre
APFOIntmant with A4vei
pr*ak th* Bank
What's My Line

l*o* Bcienee Fiction Thoatro

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Nowa-Woathor
The Morning Show
Teat Pattern
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„ Pregram Itoaura*
Kowa-Woathar
11:** Jark Parr
13:3* I^nd of Ours
li** Ruhort Q. Loo la Shew

22:94

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Viewers Digest
Movie Matinee
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JACKSOTtILLS
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AFTERXOOE
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site western Theatre
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S :t * CBg TV News
■:4S Julius LaRosa
T:** Ptntomlna Quia
T:4S ~
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O il* Our Silas Brooks
0:*4 Play ha of Stars
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11:11 Lata Show
12:11 Haws * tilgn Oft
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Captain Midnight
B t * Top
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a f t e r awow

12:4*
11:44
11:14

|P»yta Review
Dlasy Doan
Dodgers

V*.

(Hants

TAIPEI, Formoio ID—A wholly
unconfirmed report by a Nationallit Chinese news agency Wednes­
day said about 50 U.N. prioonen of
war captured in Kot«a—including
U.S. and Canadian officer*—are
being forced 'to aerve is the Chi­
nese Communist army.
The story came from (he Tateo
agency, operated by th* Nationallit Interior Ministry. Tateo dalmi
to bare underground- sources on
the Red mainland.
The Defense Ministry said tt had
no such information.
The itory was trailed with
ilderabla reserve.
The agency said th* pri&gt;en*n
arrived at Shanghai Jun* a from
Manchuria and tbe next day ware
taken to Hangchow. They are re­
ported attached to artillery units
in Fukien province, nppealta fo r­
m al a.
4;** TBA
4:20
ur.day Bch. Leases
4;** t
1:1*
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•ws
ii;.1 'eatha*
ETExnin
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ssie B*as Th* Clack

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4:42
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1:04

2:20
1:00
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1:44
10:00

10:14

beat Th* Clock
Amarlra'e Or*at*et _
Two For Th* Iteaoy
ra Toa Qo
t Father
, -J»*n Runyon Thaatm
Daman Rnayon Thaalrn

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11:0* Lai* Show
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10:41

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11:04
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South aid* Fr
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Rtar *howeaae
Wild BUI Hlckak
Home Fair
Million | Movie
"Miracle *r th* BeUet
Thi* la Th* u r *
Th* Chrldaphara
Captain Onflant
Let s Take A Trie
Th* Sun. Lucy Skew
ou Are Thar*
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vt Secretary

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1*114
10:14
1:04

Free' T V
Sought By Men
For Politicians
By CHARLE4 MERCER
NEW YORK ID-Net long ago
Frank Stanton,. president ef th*
Columbia Broadcasting lyitam,
laid CBS would be hippy to pro­
vide free television time for a ter*
tea ef "Ltaeoto-Douglai" type d*&gt;
bates between th* two major prea-.
identlal'candidates in 1999. Rut in
ordsr for CBS t* d* this, Stanton
pointed w t, tha present communir
cationa law must b* amended.
Following up Stanton’s outgae*
tion, t*p. Harris (D-Ark) baa in*
traduced a Reuse bill that would
relieve tbe networks ef the re­
quirement of giving equal appeiranoe time ta candidates. It wpuld,
Harris says, "give leeway .(*
broadcasters and networks. , , .*
Leeway is Just what talsviiion
ind radio want H 1999 whan they
hope for tha btggcit political cov­
erage tha m e d i u m kls yet
achieved. Aa th* law new studs,
CIA—end other networks—cannot
give tees time te major partiae
without giving equal time tn minor
partial. That may sound fair until
you remember that fa 1 M there
ware l i parties and 19 pretiianflal
candidates.
•The reality ad the alluatten is
that we’re a two-party country,’*
Stanton said the other day. discus­
sing tha problem in an tatarriew.
•‘Sometime*, el course, important
third partita emarga. If there cam*
a iituition like 1919 (when Thao*
dor* Roosevelt formed th* BuQ
Moot* party) naturally we’d cover
a third party. It would he m w i .h
Basically, television minds like
Stanton’s teak the type ef freedom
newtpapers enjoy in com in g pot
itlci. Stanton belie res television la
a natural medium far fresh ap­
proach** ouch u debate* between
principal presidential candidates.

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Shop and Save
In Sanford

•

W an ted f e r a lii

E w U hliahri 1 9 M

County Judge
Tells Purpose
For Juveniles

MONDAY. J U L Y 11. 195R

AsfOK-latcd Prww I .rawed W ir*

Police Report Auto
Is Out 01 Control
As II Crashes Tree

IttU TU « t * w R ugght auditor of the Metropolitan d u b In New
Work, la attandrl for knifo wound at Roosevelt HoapllaL At right la
Ian ambulance attendant Kexaks charged that watchman Arturo
JHoldonado, who gave hlmaeU up, stabbed him when be ref'wed to
lopen tha club’s aafe. Uoldonado denied any robbery motive. He said
*ha defended MmeU when Kesaka attacked him with a hammerafter
to
at dsak whlla tha auditor went out lor awhile.

Girl Is A p p aren tly
K idnaped From Crib
Parents Know O f No Reason For A ct
Taking Place In Two-Story Duplex

S tr o llin g
In Sanford

SIOUX CITY, Iowa, UP- A I
year-old girl apparefly was kid
naped from her crib last night
while her psreois watched televi­
sion In another room, police said
today.
Mr. and Mrs. James Davis re­
ported their daughter, Donna Sue,
missing to police about 30 min
utes after they had put her to bed
at 9:30 p.m. The father said a
screen had been removed from a
window.
Davli, a clerk for the Chicago
k North Western Railroad, and
hit faroUy live on the first floor
of a two-story duplex in a modest
Sioux City neighborhood.
Police Capt. John Rlipoljc said
he hia learned no motive for a
kidnaping. He said there appar­
ently has been no family trouble
and the pirenls knew of no one
who would want to take the child.
The Davises have two other chil­
dren. Mary Clair, II, and Timmy,
T, who were asleep in another
bedroom.
Several neighbors reported
ing a man come up to the duplex
and go to tha back when tha
bedroom la located.
Although tha end of tha crib

Final | l u i tm welcoming new
Naval officials to Sanford will
ba discussed'At the H cuttf mon­
thly meeting o f Chamber o f Com­
merce directors Tuesday nlfht
at City Hall. Tha meeting will
begin at S o’clock.
e • • •
Roy Holler vouchee for the au­
thenticity of thia on#:—While out
on tha West Side he stopped to
.watch a farmer who wea plow*ing with one mule. He hoard the
farmer yoU. “ Git Fate! Glddap,
Varney 1 Git, Johnny I Get goln’,
Tom!” Roy aaked the farmer,
“ How many namea doea that
.•gnulc have? to which tha fanner
replied, “ Only one. Hia name la
Fata baft ho don’t know hia own
strength, so I puts blinders on
*im, yell a lot of namea at 1m
and ha thinks threo other mules was near the window, polka bej. are helping him.1*
liovc the person mutt have en­
tered the bedroom. Tha window
sill la about four feet from the
Mr. and Mrs. Davis said they
beard, no noise In the bedroom.

Assurance Sought
For Cily To Build

Congressmen Told
No Plans Slated
To Scatter Posts

Own Power Plant
*
■

WASHINGTON Uh-AdmlnUlraJtim officials studying possible
T iir d lir h t of the Dlxon-Yatca
contract opparoatiy eought iron*
clad a sacraace today that the city
of Memphis will build Its own
power pleat.
They am ngod a conference with
Memphis Mayor Frank Tobay and
Maj. Tbom u H. Allen, president
4 : of the city's light, gas and water
division.
Tobey and AOes w en called
Sort to moot with Atty. G«n.
Srowuell, Budget Director Row­
land R. Hughes and Chairman
Vogel of the lbnaeasoo Valley
Authority.
1 The throe w en designated by
Friildmrt Kiaonbowtr to rcstudy
the whole matter of the controvenial- private power coetract
’/ after Memphis announced plana
i to build Ua own plant rather then
buy DUoshYataa power through
|Urn TVA .______________

WASHINGTON UP- The Army
has told sharply critical coagrassmen it has no plans to scatter its
posts more widely in this country
as a precaution against. atomic
warfare.
Rep. Riley (DSC- said thia
might invite a “ major disaster.’’
This was disclosed today with
the release of testimony given
secretly June SO before a House Ap­
propriation! subcommittee whieh
is considering this year's two-billion-dollar mlitery public works
budget.
Under questioning, retiring Sec.
ratary of tha Army Robert T. Ste­
ve na said tha Army’ s “ plsan lug
for the modern stomic ago takoe
tha form” of naw dispersal tactics
la combat, “ rather than any major
change hi the installations thornselvael”

Morrow Take* Over
M anagerial Post

ATLANTA, G«. UP—Two 1
victs who struck and fatally in
jurad two parsons while driving a
stolen prison station wagon In a
futile escape attempt Satarday
khva been charged with euspfdan
of meider.
The convicts, Luther J. Masters,
V . and Harry L. Nelson, IT. set
off a wild chase fluangh Atlanta’s
by taking tha statin
fleeing while on n
at tha Dekalb Goaty

WASRDfOTON ( F » - S v e r s t t
oooffwwf ■ pgpV f nvfiQ
t u p menagerie! poet la
. o ff Mao today. Ho la the first of
kia^moo m hoM n Jab of that

,1 J a T J a L u S S n atfieeT'"sc* the

-z f f

pS;

Convicts Charged
With Suspicion

1st Degree Murder
Charge Faces Wife

Bush Takes Over

As Rotary Leader

The weekly meeting of the San­
ford Rotary Club bald at the
Yacht Club thia noon was featur­
ed by several reports and tha In­
duction into the office of preel*
dent for tha yaar 19BW« of WllKara Boah, Jr. by outgoing preeldent Jaraea F. HcltaeUw.
'A fter an tatereating report on
the setivttiea of the Rotary Baseball League by Roy Holler, who
exprasaed hia appreciation to all
who helped toward the aucceatful

Off-Street Church-State Truce
Parking
Jarred Yesterday
Is Issue
By Demonstration
Other Business
To Be Discussed

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina r_.
Argentina'! uneasy church-state
Public hearings on a Stand- truce n il jarred yesterday a« po­
a r cl Mtli;ii\isiutt ordinanre lice and firemen routed Catholio
and ;m I 'ff-s lr c d park inn rioters .(asms llinr -croud antiantpmimffnt lo the zoning Pcron dcmon.lration in 21 hour*.
The riot landed l.t policeman and
tmliimnce will highlight to­
n ight's regnlap m eeting o f firemen in hospital* and brought
the City Commtealon. The condemnation o( the dcmotvdratnr*
from Santiago Cardinal Cuprite,
nteeling will g e l tmtler way ailing archbishop of Bueno* tire*
at H o'clock.
who ha- urged a peaceful fours®
The ftiilulivtsiott nrtlinnnre in the dispute.
fixe* specific requirements for
Sixty prr*on* were arre-ted but
PMHOtHT &gt;*ao Tae-hmg (V P ), of Communist China, and President
subdivisions and i* the typo in many were released after que*llo Chi Minh, of North Vietnam, chal at ■ reception given for Ho on
n»o in other ritiei, City Clerk 11. tioning,
hi* arrival In Peiping lo confer with Ihe Chinese lender, llo wpe
N. Buyer »aid.
. .
.
_
In Ihe first tiolenee again»t tha
scheduled la visit Moscow after bis visit. (Iniemotional Ka.tiot*holn)
In other
business, the tom- 1 r*rc**i(f**nt Juan I’cron. more Uian
mission wilt dUrusa:
! 5oo demnn.-tratorj milled thivmgh
1. Vacating of the south end the I’ lara del Mayo near Ihe Mrln*of Washington Court and tha pditnn Catheslral. I’ idire trying t»
west end of Wynnewood Drive.
di‘ per&gt;i- the crowd were stoned.
2. Regulations for the operation
Defying church appeal* for pears
of Ihe municipal cemetery.
and I’ eron's own rail for "pacifica.
3. Hrorganuation of the public linn,” the ilenuinstratnr! Jeered p ’«
works departments.
lice’ and shouted "he must go'' lt\
4. Hiring a sewer foreman.
an apparent reference lo the Presi­
9
*
dent,
Bill FVimn, nnslslnnl m nnnucr o f Mio Vnjraliond I’ lnyrrs,
One woman acreamcd at police:
pmfosaionnl i-omimnv u f Elat Buck, N. t'., will apeak at it
"Why didn't y«u come when Ihry
m eeting o f the tia n foid Tliontru (iuild tuinorrmv ni^lit in
were burning the ehurrhrs?"
the C ity lla ll auditorium . Tha im :olin^ will hegiu nt 8
o’clock.

Manager Of Players
Wilt Address Guild

Fcgitn, who has been a.inociated with amateur ami pro­

fessional thestr# for aaven years,
will lead a discussion on “ Other
Forms of Presenting Drama.’’ He
will discuss chiefly threatre-lnthe-round and the growing favor­
ite, the reading theatra.
Illustrations of techniques end
eeenaa from piaya will highlight
hia program.
A graduate of Juniata College
in Pennsylvania, Fegan haa work­
ed ai actor, director and produrrr
in more than 100 production!. He
is in charge of tha school of the
theatra associated with tha Vaga­
bond Players.
As a feature of the evening,
Regan will lead a reading of a
contemporary play, using mem­
bers of the audience in the rest.
Thli will be tha second of a
series of w o r k s h o p meetings be­
ing held by the Hanford Iheatrn
Guild throughout tha aumnirr
months. The purpose ia to foster
interest In amateur theatra by
providing entertainment and inatruetion In acting, makeup, lightIng, Directing. Publicity, set eonitruetion, and other phases of
work.
Interested parson* are invited lo
attend. Tha program is under the
diracllon of Miss Diton Baker,
WASHINGTON t P - Pentagon of­ assisted by Georg* Dabbs.
ficials earrled to the Senate today
V
mill’
a « lr fi|hi ' ° T n •,?Mr*P " rnpulTojy

Pentagon Carries
Fight To Senate

,or

v ,U r ,“ *'

Mrs. Sybil Routh
A t Wisconsin Meet

«&gt;■»■-*• "•••*•• ” ,
i ~
r lh’ i)#.
Mr*. Sybil Routh of Hanford It
m csiyrr a^sngcdto^ hesr the
cna of a group of adulta from all
[*n* •
^ u fi" h, . of testimony over tha United 8tat*a Uking
»
‘ j g j * * ...UUnT .c &gt; part In tha pioneer session of the
new midwest Audubon Camp In
Wisconsin. The camp la similar in
program to three other# operated
tory
iry to
so hia
m. hearer*.
n ™ .
fr0m by the National Audubon Uoclrty
At
this,
part
of tha program,
Pentagon.
In Main*, Connecticut, and Cali­
fill »***•
' |N
H» «4
«’»»'■■■•**(
_________________
fornia. but its canteal location has
HolUelaw| turned tha gavel ef ■*
p . L . * C _ _ _ r
attracted a near-capacity group
authority over to tho now preal- KCV, l\ O D © I T O p c Q i
dent and presented Buah with the ,
Aaa—
r . m n of Uachara, nthrr youth leader#
president’# pin. After thanking IS A t t e n d i n g L -O IT Ip and thosa with a professional nr
__ predecessor
nia
p ir iK lu o r , ha railed on —
. . «Rev, Robert
Tha'
Robert Snear
Spear Jr.,
J r. hobby interest in nature and con­
past _president Brack Farida* .Tr paator, and sia mambera
mambera of
of the servation education.
for tha presentation
rhurth of
^ tha
^ Natarene
Natarene left
left tma
thia
The course of instruction em­
p w u w w s U Jlra Holrv Church
iWo
aal nrdftlfidTlt'l
CiJIj- I
__ *_to _*.*___
a *l . a ...__
the m
pait
president a pin.
attend
the Suwannee phasis## teaching and leadership,
The Rev,r. Locian Scott, new i • R|vtr Youth Camp at the Stephen techniques. It 1* designed to equip
icaat-at-arrai.
arau, _lave_ a short Ulk FolUr UcmoH.I, near Whito the student to plan and ronduct
■Atmmlmil ■
k m lllli.
1 «*__i___
.. m
i___________
an tha RaUrian
nugssina.
Spring!. m
Tha
liva-day
camp___
open- programs furthering nature ap­
George Touhy offered the in- ed todif*
preciation and conservation of na­
vocation at tho beginning of tho
The Rav. Mr. Spear will be a tural resources. The camp is not
mooting! vial tore were Introduced teacher. Accompanying him wtrn limited to members of the Na­
by the Rev. Scott and tha singing Betty and Helen Pittard, Alan, tional Audubon Society. Anyone
was led by Charlie Morrison with Kay and Batty Sandifsr end Mar­ eighteen year* of age or over it
tha piano.
eligible to attend.
Harry
garet Jonas.

K E S V i.i's J r s n T s r
u r y s J :&lt; ".

W ar It Declared
On Short 'F la .!

“•&gt; -

• and Uawty.”

^
» — ■-

^

'At

-----

^

IIIU, FEGAN

Overnight Guards
Called Ai Churches
ATLANTIC CITY. N J. WV-FcarIng a firebug may be on the loose,
authoritire ordered an overnight
pnliro guard at 23 Negro churchr*
after mystery blare* desiroyed
onn and damaged another.
Officials of tho big resort city,
working on the possibility the
tw» fire* were dclther*tidy set,
questioned five Negroes yesterday,
but later released them.
A $300,000 fire leveled tho Ne­
gro Baptist temple Into Saturday
night and a second, smaller blate
damaged the interior of the Ne­
gro Second Baptist rhurrh eight
hour* later. Acting police chief,
commenting on the church fires,
aald, “ this looks like more than
coincidence."
No one was In the rhurclies
when tha fires broke out.

UNUHUAI. BIRTHPLACE
CHICAGO in-M r*. John Purvis
and her Iwoday-old eon, James
William,' are doing fine today,
Done-the-worse for James’ birth un
a sidewalk in front of their North
Side home Saturday night.
The Purvii* timing wai off, and
they barely reached the street on
the way to Ihe hospital when Sir*.
Purvis murmured, “ Ttil* is* it."

Singing Convict Greeted By FBI

MCMFHIB, Teas. uru-The birf.
tone member of aa ascaped Ala*
barns p r im quartet called hia
Birmingham wife from Memphis
last might and stepped from tho
telephone booth into tho arma of
FBL agents.
He waa Walter Tidwell. 10. 4
scribed by Kilby prison officials aa
the “ tough « y " ef the hymn-sing.
o n ted probably the leader of last
Friday’a escape.
They struck IT-rear-old Johnny
At Biretiagbam, Ala., Tidwell’s
H ew u, whs was riding a
Ftorida
many wiia raid he called to say he wee
tekbu “ the next bus to Birming­
e r e jk awaaTSa Ind^etw afctee ham to eeo wee, ead (bass I want
flock sack year you to ^o to KQby with mo to tun
JACKSONVILLE U*-A cem mit­
ten to epeO not Florida '• e i
cUred war aa “ Fla."
It wants people la forago tha
ahWwvlatloa and spall ia full tha
name af this atata an tetters, signs,
or anywhtte they write h.
Chairman HaOa Cehtn. TrckaanUa dapartmmt atetn mu^nthw,
ryiatetd tha Idas:
“ ITal lmt daaaat n*t&lt;i aay

N o. 2 :9 .

Public Hearing Set
For City Hall Meet

County Judge Ernest Housholder emphasized today
that It ia his purpose to “ not only give Seminole County
the outstanding juvenile ctmrL.buL to eliminate juvenile de­
linquency and rreate juvenile obedience.’’
He quoted from a letter he submitted earlier this month
---------------------------------------- to- tha
Courty —.......
Commission and
—*
__ _______,
expressed tne opinion that the
Commission wilt give the Juven­
ile program “ the most careful
consideration.”
In the letter, h* asked tha Com­
mission tor a 11,500 appropria­
* tion for detention home, parental
and general care of Juvenile de­
linquents and dependents. This la
&lt;n addition to tha court's $8.M&gt;0
budget for the fiscal )ear.
Damage estimated at $230 was
The budget was broken down
reported to a 1947 Mercury sedan in this manner: compensation of
which pollca aald went out of con­ tha County Judge, $200 a month!
trol at an interiectlon, Jumped compensation of juvenile counselor
the curb end hit a tree early to­ tarry Jones, $1,800 plus a $300
day.
expensa account; compensation of
The driver. Lola Katherine the secretary and office steno­
Johnson, 19, Welaka Apts., was grapher, $1,800; and mtaccllascharged with cerelet# and negli­ eoua expensri, $200.
Judge Housholder, who has
gent driving and driving without
a license. Police maid the ownar been appointed to tha State Juven­
of tha car, Henry T. Johnson, ile Court committee by the presi­
1319 Celery Art., was charged dent of the State Bar Associa­
with allowing an unauthorised tion, told the Commissioners in
person to drive hie automobile.
hia lettar:
The accident occurred at 12:30
“ You doubtless know that this
a.m, at tha intersection of First court has developed into the most
SL and Mellonvilla Ave.
aetive and exacting court In the
Investigating officer* were Pa­ county and it requires much of
trolman Joa Hickson and W. D. my timo and consideration during
Coagrave.
active office hours and I am
giving much of my out-of-offlee
lima to the study and work of
juvenile problems, welfare and
education.
“ By the elimination end preven­
tion of juvenile dellnquicy we will
have aeved many of our ehlldren
from tha usual pitfall* of youth
and at tha aame time aave the
CEDAR CITY, Utah UP-A wom­ county the expcndituie of thou
an whose husband died of poison­ ■and! of dollars.
ing faced a charge of first degree
“ It 1* my puros# beginning
murder today. Her aliter Is aerv- early thia fall to carry a genaral
Ing a life aentence after being con­ welfare juvenile pi ogam through­
victed of poisoning her own hus­ out tha entile county. Thi* will
band.
Involve Innumerable meetings and
The t o m p l a i n t v ia lodged ■peaking engagement# with tha
■gainst Mr*. Raymond Aihdown, children In every eehool, all FT A •/
33. Her 1liter, Mra. Elisabeth women’# clubs, civic clubs and
Lacey Aihdown, wa» convicted of churches and church organisations,
murder In 1949 after her husband, white and colored.
Vivian, died of poisoning. Vivian
“ During the short period of in
wai Raymond's brother end the months as Juvenila Judga, we
Mrs. Ashdowns are sisters.
have established a court that will
Sheriff Arthur Nelson of Iron stand most favorable comparl-on
County said the Cedar City woman with any other juvenila court pre­
told of putting “ five or six grains sided over by a county judge, or
of strychnine in a glass of lemon •S a matter of fact, with any of
Juice.’ ’
the eeparate and Independent
Her husband, the father of seven, juvenila courte, aven though our
died Tuesday. Hia brother died aft­ facllltlea have been limited.’
er strychnine waa put In his hamJudga Housholder said the office
burgar during e party at Home- In the court house formerly oc­
dale.
cupied by the Farm Home Admin­
istration will ba used by him
for hia chamber* and for Juvenila
Court purpoeea aa aoon aa *ork
Is completed on it. The office ia
directly acrosa from tha present
County Judge’s office.

Fartly rlnurfy In rlnude Ihrnuch
T u n d if with untlfrnl
and thundersho* er«; high todar
83-M, low tonight. 73-7k.

9

AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER

RA N FO RD . F L O R ID A ,

Weather

Tidwell la serving a life sentence
for murder.
The other three members ef the
quartet stopped briefly near Bearcy. Ark., earlier yeaterday, still
driving the prlton station wagon
la which they escaped. Police said
they apparently had left the itate
by the time their trails were picked
OrriDe Gray, IT. who had re­
fused a parole e year ago lo stay
with the quartet, visited a father
and aa unde at thalr homes at
OriflUhville. Ark.
A cafe Operator reported Gray
aa hda two eampaalou, lo o b y

Tidwell, B, and Bnbby Cottrell, 22
of Roanoke, Va., had eaten breakfait at hli cafe at Keniett, Ark.
Sheriff Jack Price said at Searcy
that Gray'* father, Jpsi Gray, and
tha uncle, Louis MacDonald, tried
to talk the fleeing convict, who
had only six months to servo on a
10-ycar robbery lenlepce, into sur­
rendering. Both quoted him ai an­
swering:
“ i ’ll lake rare of that later."
The convicts overpoweied a
guard Friday night while en route
to tho prison at Montgomery, Ala.,
after e singing appearance at LinBen, "

Rodeo Performers
Are Fatally Shot;
Husband Queried

WACO, Tex. (A—Two rodro performer* wrr* *!iot fat ally yester­
day in a Waco motel.
A few hour* later Ilia r*tranged
hu*l&gt;.ind of one of the victims
cam* lo the Dallas County Sher­
iff’ s oflice with hi* sttornry snil
was questioned until the early
morning hours,
Buhby Roy re Darby, 24, was
killed tnrtanlly with two shots in
the head from a imall-riliher
weapon. Mrs. Polly McGowan, 28,
died several hours later from one
gunshot wound in Ihe head.
She rccntly had separated from
her husband, Raymond F. Mc­
Gowan, 49, and moved from Dal­
las to Warn.
Friends said Mrs. McGowan, a
trirk ruling m.trurlor, stopped at
tha mold shout 10 a m. lo pick up
Darby, one of her students.

Manager Admits
He Escaped Gang;
Is Back At Work

New York Editor
Claims Publicity
Has Ruined Scheme
SALT LAKE CITY un-Ncw York
editor Howard Runlimarc, com­
plaining that publicity gicrn a tup
he wanted In he arcrct ha. mad®
hi* sources "clam up" flew back
to Chicago today.
It’s liko "working in a gold fi-H
bowl," he said.
Ru.vhmnre, a fi S SW.pmindrr
I. editor of Confidential, a himnnthlv natmnnt magazine, popped up
in Unite, Mont., under an airomrd
name .Saturday, lie said he wax
.earchlug for a man lie described
as a top Communiti leader,
liol by (Jien publicity abmd hi#
being missing from Chtragn had
raiigld up with him, and he fir v
to Nall Lake Cily looking for an­
other man.
He aald Hie report! about hli lin­
ing mi*.ing were "all a big mulake." They arn»c when lie fall* I
lo keep an appointment Friday
with a Chicago detective.
He denied hi* diaappraianc# was
a publicity stunt.

LOS ANGELES Ufl — Frank M.
nwcrly. who »ay* he'll fight
extradition lo Alabama where he
esr*|icd from a prison road gang
in 1917, haa gone hack In work as
manager ot a Suuvet Strip rest­
aurant.
He was working yr*terd*y, twm
days after admitting to police that ff*
t
A • I W\ o I ■
he wa» really 0«car Fred Twildali'12066767
snd hsd served lw« years of
five-year !enlrnc#. He rlaimed he
was ronvicted nn a false charge
of emhctilliig $200.
Police said the Alabama State
flnaid of Correction! has indicalWASHINGTON UP-A f?,KU,7lf,.
H it will move this week fa ex­
7.V) foreign aid money bill headed
tradite lleverly.
Meanwhile, Bsverly is free on into a cnmfire from budgeta bond returnable Thursday. If* culter* and budget-boonloii today
Is staunchly supported by hi* wife, in tha House.
A f r o s dy
trim mo l $r,;7.!Kx),ooi|
Eunice, 3rt, whom he married
here, ami hia employer, Sam below Pi evident Eisenhow er's re­
quest* by the Appropriation! ( nSptegelman.
miltec, the bill would finance fug
Ihe current fines! year the pro­
gram of military and economist
aid to non-Communist nations.
It would supplement an entim.ifAUSTIN, Urt—Frank Hanirr, long ed WJI7, Rid,000 in unexpended *
lime Texas Ranger captain who balances from previous appropria­
took part in the 1934 ambush that tion*.
Some members dAn't think Ihe
left outlaw! Clyde Harrow' and
Ronnie Parker riddled with bul­ Appropriations Committee hacked
let* nn a lonely Louisiana road, the bill deeply enough, white
others contend it ha! been eut loq
died last night.
A heart attack killed tha 71- deeply.
The budget cutters went Into the
year-old lawman described by
friends as •‘blunt, atubbnrn and fray without the services of thriF
fearless." Ills sfooM 'A frame bad usual leader, Rep. John Taber ol
New York.
been wounded 14 limrs.
lie reportedly served as a Ran­
ger longer than any other man—
about 33 years.
Hamer had lived here sines re­
tiring about ID years ago.

Goes For Crossfire

Old Texas Ranger
Dies From Attack

Permanent Power
O f 578,000 Is Told

FA. TURNPIKE UNED
FOR LANDING FIELD
BEDFORD, Pa. Uiv-Alr Fore#
Maj. Leo Carboncau, lost and out
of fuel in bli FMD Jet plane, bad
ly needed a place to land yestrr
day and picked the Pennsylvania
Turnpike.
Luckily ho landed at a time
when there wai a lull In tha usual
heavy Sunday traffic, Tho major
got hia ship down In an eaatbound
lanr near tha Sideling Hill Tunnel
in Fulton County about M
oait of boro.
He was unhurt and tho plane
waa «u y ttcghtly tatnaftsd.

WASHINGTON UP-Congrev* hag
been told the Army is planning
on a permanent strength of 371,004
men in the indefinite future.
Retiring Secretary of the Army
Robert T. Steven* told a House
Appropriations subcommittee in
testimony released today that thia
la the maximum total for which
tha Army now Intends to ark Con­
gress to flnanos permanent con*
struction.
Under Frrildent Eisenhower's
disputed cutback program, tha
Army ia scheduled to be down to
hy aoXUKt.

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                    <text>FlTCl'O
flH Laid
held in r.i
munlrr r
palhy Irn
named »♦
Tarko I
Di«I Tur«
him .md i
"I hup
1 a rn nt
Itiiin."
I.auhnn
fair., M&lt;
to 1rjl 111
Phmon,
mother ;i

found dc#

JUMBO SUNKIST
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QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

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POTATOES

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told rrpo
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UMIT ONP WITH OTHER FOOD ORDER

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SWEET TREAT SUCED

PINEAPPLE »&gt;»- 29'
“ E AT-R ITE ” VEAL1
TODAY'S BEST MEAT B U Y!
SUGAR PEAS 2 — 25'
Gr’fruit JUICE 2 29"
CH’PD BEEF 2 - 49c
St’pd MALLOWS 19*
FROZEN FOODS
GRAHAM Cr’kers - 23c TURNOVERS g p
/
CREME S’WICH - 19*
POT PIES as * %
PARTY PUNCH - 27c
LIMEADE
1A f
CAKE MIX

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ARGO

’EAT-RITE" ROUND BONE

“ EAT-RITE” VEAL

DEEP SOUTH

'EAT-RITE" r

CUT BEEF

ARMOUR

“ EAT-RITE” VEAL

TAT.RITE" PLATS

CRACKIN’ GOOD

GRADE "A** QUICK FROZEN

CRACKIN’ GOOD

JESSIE JEWELL FRUIT

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MORTONS FROZEN

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AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER
*

Established 1908

VOLUME XLVI

SANFORD. FLORIDA.

THURSDAY. JULY 7. 1955

Men Abandon.
»

Two Orlando and Winter Park businessmen who recent­
ly figured in a proposal to build an open-air amusement centjD on Lnke Monroe hnve gone into the harness horse train­
ing business at Cassclberiy.
•
W. R. Kempt and Richard Sodero. is leasing the Azalea

No Trace
Home Demo Council
Of Ship
Annual Meeting Set
Is Found

.

Strolling
In Sanford

Th e 31sf an mint State Home Denittnntralinn Council
m eeting nml S h ort C ourse will open on the U niversity o f
Florida m nouns tonmroiv, with nunc than -100 delegate* in
attendance.
Tak in g a i its con feren ce theme,
cslct'dny’ s Dream,
Today's Action.— Tomonnw's AcJL.
JL.
rumplifhment*," Ihc Stats Senior
™
Council of Home Prmonstiation
Work, composed of 31* county
home demonstration council* will
begin a fivs day meeting tomor­
row, Running concurrently with
the council meeting will be a lumi*
demonstration shoit course, open
to all hunts demon* hat inn club
members.
An advance guard of Slate coun­
cil officer*; Mr*, ticorgu Otto,
j resident. Long wood; Mi*. Roy T,
Browning, vice-president. Lake­
land; Mrs. It. It. I'clcrson, second
vice-president, Pensacola; Mrs. \V,
I*. Aldrich, secretary, llradrnlon; ami Mrs. 8. M. hi*ke, trea­
surer, Orlando, 'till meet tonight
for a State rounril rnoeilUvo board
meeting. With them will lm Mrs.

1

*

Pilot Apologizes Who's Going To Pay
To Startled London For Citrus Juice?
(or Sudden Burst

LONDON « v -A test pilot who
etarlled Londoner! out of their
eleep with an unscheduled burst
through tha sound barrier apolo­
gized last night lor the stir he
caused.
Early Tuesday Dickie Martin
V ia teat-flying • twln-Jet deltawinged javelin over London at a
routine TOO milea an hour.
^Suddenly hla oxygen tube got
Wngled In the parachute harness.
The plane swerved, gathered speed
and rocketed through the sound
barrier.
Frightened Londoners phoned
police that a bomb had gone off.
Sailors on the Thames prepared
to abandon ships, convinced the
bolltra had burst. Scotland Yard
made extensive lnqulrlea but could
And no explanation.
gffh * Gloiter Aircraft Co. finally
P t In touch with the Air Ministry
to explsln what bad happened and
relay Martin’* apologies.

Investigators Call
For Wenzelt Info
Regarding His Role
WASHINGTON IM-InvestlgaUng
•enatora called for testimony to­
day from Adolphe H. Wenzel)
about bis role—slid by President
Elsenhower to havo been an en­
tirely proper aaa—ia Dixoa-Yatea
contract talk*.
Wenzel] served for a time aa a
Epsultant to tha Budgat Bureau
While still a rice president of tha
First Boston Corp., which later
became financial agent for Um
P lxoa-Yatos utility group.
■ Administration officials have reK tedly said Wenzall did not inaea the contract but merely
nerved as aa adviser oa financing.
Eisenhower said at a new* con­
ference yesterday WaozaU’i rola
waa proper.
mStn. Kefauvcr (D-Tenn), bow
war, opined there may have been
g law vielaUen ia WmueU’a dual
capacity.
- Rtfauver, aa opponent ef the
Dixoa-Yatea plea, beads tha Jodi,
clary subcommittee oa monopoly
matters which ashed Weaatli to
toriUy. ___________ ,___
“ SHOWBOAT FLOODED**
WARWICK, R. I.
The
Austral presentation " B h a w WMt" had to be canceled faut
ht because ef too mark water,
ta flbeded tha orchaatag pit
I lane balsa ia the to * .

ORLANDO, Fla. Idt-The qu*stion of who's going to pay for
Queen Elizabeth's grapefruit Juice
hasn't been settled.
In 1853, Barney J. Cohen, Or
lando citrus msn, thought it a good
idea for Florida to send her $00
cases for the coronation.
He campaigned for subscrip­
tions. Southern Fruit Distributors
Inc. of Orlando made tha shipment.
In court yesterday Southern
Fruit contended it had been paid
only $350 and asked for $1,370
more.
Cohen said he started the promo
tion only as ■ public service and
was not obligated. Only $850 was
subscribed, and some of that was
not paid, be said.
The jurors reported themselves
in disagreement- Judge Terry B
Patterson sent them home with
out indicating whether the case
would b* tried

Air Force Officers
Gather In Taipei
For Buildup Talks
TAIPEI, Formosa (JPt — Three
top U. 8. Air Force officers in the
Pacific flew Into Taipei today to
confer on the buildup of Commu­
nist air power on the nearby Red
mainland.
Simultaneously Chines* Nation­
alists said two Rod air bases
which would bring Formosa and
offshore islands within easy strik­
ing distance ef Communist jet*
were about completed.
Tha visiting officers a n Gtn.
Laurcne* S. Kutar, commander'of
tha Far East Air Fort* In Japan;
Maj. Gen. Sory Smith, chi'? of the
Pacific Air Command in Pearl
Harbor, and Brig. Gen. William L.
Lao, commander of the U. S. 13th
Air Fore# in tha Philippines.
In addition to tha Rad Buildup,
they trill discuss operating prob­
lems of tha U. 8. air task force
on Formosa.

Full Disclosure
Of Names Called

GCARDS AT 1 III! Washington Slate Penitentiary (top), Walla Walla Wash, ate shown watching
prisoners on the inside of the prison a* tinting convicts hrhl xrvrn hostages amt cunt rolled half of
the prison. The riot, touched off bv 33 hardened criminal* aimed with knives ami nrnr blade*, swept
through the penitentiary. The rioters heat ott.« off rri and took eight other hostages hut later le.
leased the injured man and another guard. At bottom i* an air view of Ihc penitm lini v. (International)

Final Immunization California Law Student Awaits
Clinic For Youths Arraignment On Murder Charges
Slated Tomorrow

T . 1« H aniitcr, Perry

LOS ANGELES (T)— I .aw Student John R. Crooker Jr.
nwnlted arraifftimonl today *»t murder churKcx for the death
o f auburn-haired sccinliti' Norma McCauley.
Police say Crooko, III, ronlY■&gt;-od he slabbed Mrs. Mc­
The final Immunisation clinic Cauley, 33, and parroted her with her own stole after she
for Seminole County first and tell a»k*ep while hp begged for a resecond graders who have not re­
ceived their second shot of polio
vaccine will he held tomorrow st
the County Health Unit, Dr. Ter­
ry Bird, County Heslth Officer,
announced. The clinic will begin
at 8 a. m.
Dr. Bird said he had been ad­
vised by the State Health De­
partment
that
tht
National
Foundation for Infantile Paral­
ysis had recalled all unused vac­
cine. Any vaccine left after to*
morrow'* rllnlc will be returned
Monday or Tuesday, he said.
Only 828 of the 1,546 first and
■econd
shot, Dr. Bird reportfirst shot have been given the
second
shot, Dr, Bird report­
ed. He
said the Health Unit
had enough vaccine left to Im­
munize 600 of the remaining 718.

Efforts Being Made
To Help Conditions
TALLAHASSEE tri-Rep. Glcaton of Citrus County says many
Floridarestaurants are not ob­
serving sanitation laws end he
doubts the hetet and restaurant
commission is making proper ef­
forts '* o correct these bad condi­
tions.*
His protest was made in a teller
to Gov. Collins. •
"1 do not think that (he hotel
and restaurant commission Is mak­
ing a half effort to correct these
bad conditions," Gleston said. "I
suggest to you, sir, that If the pres­
ent commission einnot correct
these conditions, you as governor
make soma change* la this de­
partment.”
na complained some restaurants
are full or flies and have rest­
rooms "in such filthy condition as
to b* unusable. These places in
my opinion have not bean inspect­
ed in yeari."

conciliation.
She was found dead Tuesday
morning, the bloody stole knotted
about her neck.
Crooker, who was a houseboy
In the attractive divorcee’s home
when he was attending the Univer-j
sity of California at Los -Angeles,
confessed.
Detectives quoted him as say­
ing:
A new right-handed pitcher,
"We talked about an hour, with Slavic Waddell, optioned by the
my trying to get her to come Sanford Cardinal* from Fresno,
t into tonight’*
back lo me. She either went to Calif., T.rty
sleep or pretended to go to sleep game wlih the Orlando Flyers,
Florida Stnto League president
on the chaise lounge,
“ When I tried to wake her up John Krid el' said today.
Tonight's guinn at Memorial
to rontinue our talks, 1 could not
arouse her and this incensed me, Stadium will get under way at
I started lo choke her with both K o'clock. Crowd* nr* getting
hunts and she started to scream, larger til curb home game, Kid­
t put my left hand over her mouth der emphasized, nnd n I I • n •
to muffle her terrain and reached dance tonight N expected to
into my coat pocket fur a knife 1 nudge tile lino mark.
had found earlier.”
A total of 2,f&gt;n0 un-game
He said he slabbed her, made tickets, selling at 81 each, arc
sure she waa dead and then left, to be mailed out tn every family
in the city, Krider said. "We
taking money from ner pur e
Crooker was married in 19th to hope to have the tickets in the
Mrs. Marian Crooker. They sep­ mull Momluy,” lie added.
arated three years ago.
Mrs. Crooker, 42, said the List
time she saw her husband w.is »
month ago wnen hs visited their
son, 5. and daughter, 3.

Waddell May Get
Chance To Perform
!n Tonight's Game

Mrs. Ella Niblack
Dies A t Rest Home

firs. Ella E. Niblack. 82, dud
at 8 p m. this morning in the Sarepta nest Home where she had
been ill for the past five months.
Mrs. Nibtark had hern in ill
health for about six months
She originally rim e to Sar.forri in
1816 but for the past five year:
she had lived in Orlaadn pflitAA
Born Jun* 8, 1873 In Hie&lt;w-Ga.,
she was a nn-mbe^ of the Christ­
ian Chuich. Survivors Inrlude one
daughter, Mrs. A, C, Anderson,
Staton Island, N. Y.; Iwo sons,
G. A. Nlbl-ck. Sanford; and Earl
F. Niblack of Daytona Beach:
IS grandchildren; 13 great grandchildren and two sisters. Mrs
Georgis Siigh, Ococc; and Mrs.
Ada Pike, Miami.
Funeral services will be held
WASHINGTON (JP-Sen. Russell
Sunday,
10 at 2 p m. in the
(D-Ga) today questioned the pro­ Brissun July
Funrral
Home. Burial
priety of requiring veterans to will he in Lake View Cemetery.
continue to carry tha chief burden
under tha administration's new
military reienre plan.
Ruisall, chairman of lh« Senate
Armel Services. Committee, said
BROOKLINE, Mail. CT—Ur. amt
in a statement prepared for the
opening ef.committee hearings on Mrs. Melvin B. Ellis, who fare the
tha bill which ha* been strongly lots of their adopted daughter be.
cauan they are Jewlih and the it
urged by rresident Eisenhower;
"Our prior-service men find a Catholic, vowed today lo "keep
themselves right where they were on doing everything we can to keep
•t the time of Korea. (They ere) her."
Tha Elliafi have heen engaged
the only men available in this
great nation of ours to shoulder in a long legal battle to keep 4the heavy burden of aa active year-old Hildy McCoy since their
adoption petition was nullified in
combat-ready reserve."
1855
The nullification was based on
FET WEALTH PLAN
a Massachusetts law which says
LOS ANGELES (ft— Household that when practicable a child
H U now can ho enrolled In a pre­ should be given for adoption to a
paid medical care program her** couple of tbn tame religious faith
Involving 80 vetadinary clinics. aa Um child.
Tha Pet Health Plan covers hos­
In thn latest court action, James
pital care as well a*tmedical and Ziaman. counsel for the ElUtei,
surgical treatment fir &amp;
went bain re Supremo Court Judge

Georgia Democrat
Questions Fitness

WASHINGTON OP) —
Sen.
Bridge# (R-NH), today called for
a “ full disclosure of all tha names”
of U. S. officials Burma** Premier
tf. Nu contends do not oppose
Communist China In the
a
Nations.
Aroused by U Nu'a statement
thpi repossible Washington offi­
cials fool Rod China's admission
to tha U. N. ia simply • question
of timing, Bridges add ic an in­
terview
“ If there are any such reopenslbie officials aa U. Nu - 1- 1— u
1* him mam
“
cau. C*et la |M • year,

-*•
- .

No. 227

S O S Message
May Be Hoax

Idea For Park
As Horses Win
— ------------ ---- ------------------- Driving Park for 35 year*, an
nouneed that the plant will be re­
named Seminole Park and will
operate on a year-round basis.
The 150-acre park waa leased
from Mr and Mr*. Stanley Kupiszewski. who purchased it in 1051
from Ilihbaid and Leonard Casselberry. The property includes a
lodge, a - mile traek, stablea for
283 horse* and a grandstand that
seats 5,000.
general business discusKemp and Sodero announced
aion featured tha weekly lunch­ plana for improving the grand­
eon meeting of tha Junior Cham­ stand, stables, traek and lodge.
ber of Commerce today at the They said the infield on the Irark
Yacht Club.
will be landscaped and
bridle
• • i •
will be landscaued a n d » bridle
A proud grandfather told the path prepared.
Stroller that thia actually hapAir conditioning equipment will
gmned. Six-year-old Jackie was he installed in the lodge, and fire
waiting relativei in the country protection equipment will be made
for the fin t time. Everything available throughout the park,
fca beheld waa new and exciting they continued.
to him. Toward aunaet of the se­
Kemp, who owns the Aquaseum
cond day he atood in open- and Coliseum in Orlando, and Soeyed wonderment watching hit dcro, who owns Deming Galleries
grandmother pluckjng a chicken. in Winter Tark, said they expect
After a bit, hia curioaity arous­ the stables to be filled during the
ed, he aaked very aerioualy, season which open* in December,
“ Grandma, do you have to take
No training has been done at tha
(hair clothea off every night?” park tinea the 1952-63 season.
* * * *
Tha park, originally called
•Which eame firat thla yoke or Seminole Driving Park, was con­
that? At leait Mary King, cook structed in 1325 by a group which
at Faults Drug Store might be included the lstc Joe Tinker, fam­
•iking herself that question. At ous shortstop of the Chicago
ahn Drake a medium size egg open Cubs In the Tinker-to-Evers-tothis morning what should appear Chsnce double play era.
aot one yoke but four . . . . . .
Kamp ant Sodero announced
when asked what she did with last month that the erea In the
the oddity the replied; “ Why, vicinity of the bandihell and new
1 threw it in the trash it looked boat basin here was being con­
no funny. It kinda scared me." sidered for a $250,000 open-air rei’L bet it did. Mary . . . But creation center which would be
nk of tha poor thicken!
tha scene of acquatie show* and
•ther spectacles.

A M o rix tn l Press Leased W ire

Congress Will Get
Request To Limit
Dinncrware Import

MIAMI BEACH tri— Congress
will be a-ked to limit Imports at
rllnnrrware to SO per cent of Amer­
ican need*.
A resolution to this effect was
t-mptrd yevlerdoy at a convention
of the international Brotherhood
of Operating Totter*.
''The industry it full capacity
can care for 10 per cent of Ihc
needs of ti,e United Status," said
Frank Moil of Sandusky, Ohm,
president of the union "tVe do
not want full protection. We want
healthy competition, where quality
rather than price will be the big
Item.
"At prrsrnt the Induntry is In s
bad way and the country Is flood­
ed with cheap, low grade dinnerware from Japan," he added.
Delegate*, representing 45,000
poller*. al*o approved the Amer­
ican Federation of labor's de­
mand for a $1.25 minimum wage
law.

immediate

past president, and their advisor*. SIRS. GEORGE OTTO, LongMist Anna Mac Sikes, stole limn* wood President of the Florida
demonstration agent; &gt;li»» Eu­ Mat* It o m • Demonstration
nice Grady, assistant to the Counril.
h im* demonstration agi nt in the
training program, and Mrs. Edith
V, Itarrus, district horn* demon­
stration agent.
Ths executive board meeta to­
morrow to consider its budget for
the coming year. Delegates will
begin arriving oa campus before j
noon tomorrow.
Monday afternoon will he devil­
TALLAHASSEE wv—Copper sul­
ed to committee meetings.
phate will he tested this tall on a
Tomorrow night. Mrs, Otto will lug scale as a means o! combat
entertain all past state council tug the fish-killillS red tide if it
president and county council presi- crops up in the Gulf of Mexico.
nenta at dinner in lh« Flat Ida
Albert Collier of the U S. Fish
Union.
anil Wildlife Srivic« reported the
Dr. J. Wayne Relit, president. plan si a conference with member*
University of Florida, II. G. * lay* nf the legislative ted tide com­
Inn, director, Florid* Agricultural mittee. lie said tlm chemical will
Extension Service; and Mrs. K. \V, be stockpiled in Naples. Fort My­
Cuke, president, will welcome the ers, Sarasota and St. Petersburg
Alurhua County Horn* Dem­ tnr lice against the minute organ­
onstration Council club leaders, ism wliicli periodically turns the
after Mis* Sikes formerly opens waters of the Gulf a ruddy hue
and kill* millions nf fish.
Ui* meeting Monday night.
The legislators also were told
Mr*. Georgs Hlckley, Tampa. I*
chairman of the reception which Hie University of Miami's marine
laboratory plans a study cruise
follows the open meeting.
Auliroy D. Cates, field director, this mouth to seek noire informa­
tion on Hie cause of tlhi red tide.
Counril on Rural Health, Ameriran Medical Association, will be Th« research vessel will leave
from Naples, journey north to a
Tuesday's main ipeaker.
point off Apalarhleola anil return

Big Tests Planned
On Copper Sulphate
To Fight Red Tide

Committee Plans
Advertising Drive
LAKELAND tW-A three-man
committee of tangelo growers »nd
handlers will work with the Flor­
ida Citrus Commission on an ad­
vertising program.
lire tangelo men met yesterday
for the lirtl timr iinre the Itt.U
Legislator* put their fruit under
regulation of Ihc comml**inn.
Generally they agreed tangelo*
should he governed hy the same
regulation* as orange*, but they
preferred to advertise through
store displays rather than big ra­
dio, television ami newspaper pro­
grams.
Named to the committee were
J. B. Prevatt, Tavare*; Le* By­
num, Titusville; and B. F. Wheeler
Jr., Ovirdo.
The tsngelo Is a cross hetwren
an orange and a grapefruit- The
1955-50 crop ia expected lo be
about ion,ooo boxes, a small item
in the Florida ritrua deal.

Parents Determined To Keep Girl

argued for a review- of proceedings
in which the couple wai ordered to
surrender the child or fact arrest
Wilkins gave commonwealth's
attorneys two w-rks to answer
Ziaman'* rontrntioni that the ar­
rest of the Klines without a hear­
ing would be a "deprivation of
their fundamental rights."
EUii, speaking for himself and
hi* wife, said in an interview:
"We are determlnod that Hildy
won't be hurt. Wo feel Htldy'a
mother doesn't want her. We are
going to keep on doing everything
we can to keep her. Wa can only
play a defensive role and try to
counter the altacki of Ibote who
are trying to take her."
Hs laid Mrs. Elba and ths child
JUymcsd S. Wlib&amp;c jxitordsy and tgs "otd sf t o n " kri M l not

No Reply Offerer"
By Coast Guard

"run away to another alate."
EUii said also hia wife is suffer­
ing from a nervous condition and
an Infection and hat been under
tha care of a doctor.
The Ellisea have had Htkly aince
she waa 10 days old.
Tha child was born to Marjorie
McCoy, now Mrs. Marjorie Mc­
Coy Doherty.
Thn mother eon tended shs did
not learn the Elliiti were Jewish
until after they adopted her child.
Probata Judge Raymond F. Rey­
nolds ruled tn 1951 that the mother
wanted ths child back ai far back
a* April 1851 and for primary
reasons.
Tbs Boston Post today quoted
Ellis ns saying hs ia prepared to
8* to jail to toa » tiUto.

by way of the Dry Tortuga*.
The legislators will meet with
red trie researcher* every two
months to keep abreast of devel­
opments ami frame recommenda­
tion* for submission to th« 1957
legislature.

Old North Church
Sports New Spire
Just Like Original
BOSTON, Ma«i. UV-OII North
Churrh, from whine *lrept* hung
(hr lantcrs warning Paul Revere
of lh« approach of the British, has
a new spire Unlay—the exact re­
production of Bis original.
The new steeple was raised yes*
terday. II ii r r I r a n e Carnol hail
toppled the earlier spire on Aug
31. 1951
The rebuilt structure has Hie
original window (nun which hung
Hie lantcrs for Paul Revere on
April 18. 1775. The window and
oilier ancient woodwork were salvaged from the storm wreckage.
The assembled steeple was hoist­
ed into place with a huge rrane
A* workmen bolted it down, Vi­
car Charles Russell Peck rang (he
rhurrh hells to annuunre Ihc
revloration.

Stevenson Strikes
At School System
CHICAGO &lt;JV-Adlal Stevenson
says President Eisenhower prom­
ised the Amrriran school system
“ some prompt effertiv* help" 2'4
yrar* ago, "but nothing hai been
done."
The 1953 Democralle presidential
nominee attacked Eisenhower's
program of school aid in a speech
last night to tha National Educa­
tion Assn.
Stevenson quoted President Ei­
senhower aa saying Just after he
assumed offire;
"Our srhool system demands
tome prompt affective help."
"Inilead of *prompt affective
help' Stevenson added, “ wn nwait
a conference nn education to bt

N E W Y O R K f&lt;T*) — A radio
tiles sage relayed tn the C oast
Guard «:»id today a fishhu?
boat willt 21 persons aboard
was sin ),im: o f f the New Jer­
sey roast. Seven hours Liter
no I rare o f the vessel or sur­
vivors could hr found, indiraliitRr a possible lumx.
Asked if the m essage and
subsequent ones might luve Iwert
a hoax, the Coast Guard would only
say they were proceeding nn But
basis the messages were authentic.
Tile first message reported tha
boat had struck a mysterious ob­
ject, caught fire and began to
sink. A subsequent message re*
Isorted survivors were being taken
aboard a submarine which was
"not an American.”
The Eastern Sea Frontier said
an American submarine was 35
mile* from the scent but H bad
no report of the mishap,
K ir r e p o r t of the mishap cam*
from the fishing boat, Blua Star,
at 2:30 am . At 3:40 a.m. tha tughost Nancy Moran said U picktrf
up this message from tht Blun
Star:
"A submarine i* surfacing about
350 yards front u*. H is coming
alongside. It I* proceeding to takn
survivors aboard It ia dot U\
American submarine."
&lt;
There wat speculation (hat th#
submarine might he a craft of tbn
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
some of which trs stationed *1
Norfolk, Vi.
The Blue Star »aid It struck thn
■thlcrt in the water &gt;&gt;ima 30 miles
off Barncgat, N. J.
Planes and other rescue vessel a
reaching the scene of the reported
mishap .it 7 30 a m said they
found no trace of niher ship o f
passengers.
The Coast Guard s.rd there art
three boats by the tiamt Of Bill*
Star titled on the Fasten seaboard
and two on Ills West t'oasL

New Converfs Won
For Package Plan
In Florida House
TALLAHASSEE M*—Th* resur­
rected pack.ice re apportion merit
program won new converts in tha
House today hill »]M&gt;n&gt;ori appeared
inclined to hold off starting Hot
big push for adoption until senti­
ment Jells more.
Tin plan, which ronsi*ls of two
lulls and a constitutional amend­
ment, was rejected 63-36 by Ole
House last month,
,
However, influent *1 represent­
atives who original!:' opposed it
».nd they now lonkid upon II aa
the only proposal n light with
possibilities of break,Qg tha 13-diy
deadlock.
Sens. Barra way o ' Tallahassen
and Itariser of Veto Beach are getling name, of cou plers to thn
Senate and Itip. Murray of Pollf
County is seeking pltdgei of gup*
port in the HouseBarra way and Barler **M tfto
measures will he Iutn iced si­
multaneously in both ho es when
there are sufficient auu ’ nets of
approval.

Copt. E. Wagner
Arrives A t Base
To Assume Post
Capt. K. O. Wagner, command,
er of Heavy A Hark Wing 1, ar­
rive,I «t th* Sanford Naval
Auxiliary Air Station ye*lenity
afternoon. Ills staff has hern
moving in for tha past several
weeks.
Captain Wagner
graduated
from th* Naval Aradetny In 19-0
and eomplatod flight training at
I'tnaarola
ahortly
afterward.
Previous to his present assign­
ment, ha w»i *hi*f of staff to
Admiral Hickey, commander uf
Carrier Division 8 to Korean
Watera.
Haavy Attack Wing 1 la tha ,
Nnyy’n all-weathar atomU attach *

�mm I

fcir

rTR
Pag
I time have somehow missed the hurry and
I scurry of people being anything but leisure­
In A&lt;&lt;pcn. Colorado, recently, members ly with their extra time.
of the International Design Conference dis­
cussed the problem of leisure time, nr rather,
they interpreted leisure time as a problem. The Lattimore Case
They rightly assumed that more people have
The government acknowledges defeat in
rtore time, but whether It’s correct tn asthe Lattlmore case. Owen Lattimorc, profes­
aiime it is more time in which to do
sor at Johns Hopkins University and an
nothing is a debatable point.
authority on the Far Enst, was twice indicted
People arc using w e l l nnti happily.)hat
for n1lege tily testifying falsely that he was
"nothing” time. They are traveling. They
not a Communist. Twice the essential parts
are seeing this country and so many have of the indictment were thrown out by Fed­
gone ahrnad that tourists in search of Euro­ eral Judge Luther W. Ymmgdahl. and twice
pean "natives** are howling that Americans his decision was essentially upheld by the
are cluttering the continent.
Court of Appeals. Now Attorney-General
Whnt else nre people doing? They're Brownell announces that there Is little like­
painting. Art schools, night achools and adult lihood of a conviction on what remains of the
education programs report classes are full indirtmf nt.
of i&gt;epl» dabbling with considerable skill w ith
Tim government's case came close to try­
brush and paint.
ing n man for his opinions. It would have
They’re dolng-it-lhcmsclvca from pantry heen hard to prove its state'” —'* Hint Latti*
to pnrlor, and the enjoment derived from more sympathized with Com
•'tn, and so
this home-style entertainment and education vague was the statement that *. would have
need'-, n? detailed descrintion.
been hard for him tn refute it. The courts
They aro reading. They nttend lectures therefore threw the indictment out as loo
and study courses.
indefinite for a court case.
This is onlv the beginning of a long list
Partisan denunciation has confused the
nnvono can make, not of what people could issues. Baltimore is left in tho position that
do. but what people are doing.
the government thinks he is a Communist,
The designers in Aspen who predicted a but cannot prove it. He is thus the victim of
twenty veir adjustment to increased leisure an innuendo which he and his friends call a
libel.

Yo
Ha
Fo
ri
e lk ) ;

held '
Timri
pith

mm
Ta

nicd
him
I at
man
La

file

tn ii
l’ lut
mull
(dim
)iom
l.a
tail ,
profi
Mrx

•1
hum
to ni
told
•'ll
calk
typic

The Sanford Herald

"Up

■IIP •ir-l-l
m i w m n r»t m.

UJM
mad
that

w
d*nt
Whli
nigh
*-«-&lt;■1
In ti

Hi
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M r III

day
burg
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I

IVIICRirTIOS nATEa
Up Carrlrr
Mo *•&gt; " « *
Oaa naath
•, -**
Tkrr* Maafba
»l» M*alk*
Oaa Taar
•AMI
M.T*
111 M
All ahlfaarp «a«raa, rar&lt;a of Ikaak*. rosalalloao
■Odra *f aalarlalnmaat far fka parpaaa af ralalas
faa&lt;a aalll k* rkara*4 far at rrralar a*partialap ralaa

«
4
«

ItrpraaaalaA KallaaaliP b f Oaarral AArartfala*
■rrrlra. la*. Ml flaarsla kavlks* Baak IU «.
Afluta oaarala
7b* ffaralA ta a mraibar af tfca AaaarlataA Prata
-kirk la aatltlrS atalaalrrlp ta tha aaa far rapabllra.
tlna aa all tba laral w a . *rlaM la thta ««a****io

wed
tb* •
drill
Jirae

&lt;I l
ri

Thursday, July 7, 10515

Page 2

•|&gt;rn

Mgal
Tt

Where Do We Go Next?

Ent*t*S a* •*,-*»* .rla** wallrp f)Hnb*r &gt;T, 1*11 at
•Ik* f**t Offir* - f a**l*r.t. I'lnrMa, aalar (ha At t
af I'rnlfM . af Marck S, III*
rnr.n rrnK ine. ran»r ■»s t-akii*k*r
JACK •DTnEKf.AWD. Maaaala* E&lt;H»c

"I
and

Ik.
Af

TODArS

BIBLE VERSE

I *m meek and lovely In heart.—-Mall.
11:29.—The humblest alnner may npproach
the throne in comploto assurance of a per­
fect welcome. God Is like the father that
welcomes his prodigal non who had wasted
his subetanen and his future. The father is
looking for us now.

Cars, cars and yet mure cara. Most peo­
ple have an impression from their own ob­
servation that there are morn cara than
usual on the roads. Sometimes they think It
may be the bright colors of the new models
that convey the idea of an unusual number.
The figures, however, shew thnt this expla­
nation docs not tell tho whole story. There
really are more cars.
This year -1,000,000 new cara had been
manufactured hv June 20. In 1050, year of
the largest previous production, that figure
was not nttained until late August. It is
estimated thnt the year’s total will reach 7,000,000. There were 6,605,000 new cara made
in 1050.
The leset curious person must occasional
ly wonder where all this will end. Downtown
districts aro becoming so congested that
merchants lose customers. Are our cities go­
ing to be blighted by the abundance of mass
transportation ?
They do not need to be. Surely something
sensible can he done about roads and park
ing before it is too late.

■fin

t.'li;’ ■;^ fjA L BOYLE
ntntP
offic
With

fir
ha
l*Uf

jrm
Wit

n
■rc

tna
* r5®‘
,
I lh{
4
for
I&gt;°|
' T
few
if.'I

v U N t W C D N I lN M O l*

W hat h Leisure?

* ‘

Young Girl W ants To Be Serious

NEW YORK IH-Sha &gt;* JM
■. j i oung girl far from home trying
to make good in a strange coun
a •try.
Mr
•
.
,
And Bllys Lay haa made good
J fon the roughest street in America
£
But not in the way
w u rBroadway.
n s 1

?Abe wanted In.
- *
, "All my life I've w-anled In he
2

1 glitnurous and languid and—above
l? a ll-to bn taken leriously,” sighed
wl-thg Welsh lass, digging into a
I 'plate nf luncheon eggs with the
2 -hearty sorrow nf youth.
, • "And what rin people rail me?
•'Uulo—wcU, if it’s cute they want
• *ma to be, It’s cut* I'll be. But I’d
M ike once to be taken seriously« Even my friends call mo Dllly."
J a Dilya made an instantaneous hit
"Vast fall as a giddy young flapper
2 In "Tha Boy Friend," a musical
■ -which kids the skirts off life in
a the gay and memorable 1920s.
J * Playgoers found a Peter Pan
! tjualkr in (ho vibrant little visitor,

who can sing, dance, nr play
comedy. A critic compared her
■killed drollery to that of Beatrice
Lillie.
But tha hazel - eyed little actress
who had appeared In 10 plays be­
fore coming here, is now 31 and
would like the world tn realise that
she ii more than Just a madcap.
"In England It Is a wonderful
and Important day—the day a girl
turns 21," she said. "You are
given a key to the house. You are
a woman at last—at last.
"You are free to marry anyone,
even without your parents’ con­
sent. Not that 1 would ever con­
sider doing that myself. I don't
think I could bring myself to do
it even if I were 33."
Dilya wanted her mother, a for­
mer actress who became an ac­
countant, to accompany har here,
but mother turned her down.
"Mum told me 1 was on my
own," aha said. "She doesn't want

lo try to live her own career over
In her children's lives, and she
doesn't want to become a typical
stage mother, always hovering
over her darling."
So Dilya and Julia Andrews, the
pale and lovely ingenue of "the
noy Friend," moved Into an East
Side apartment together. They
have shared the fun and excite
ment of exploring fabuloua Man­
hattan, a new world to both of
them.
"Util you know you can be
lonely in the middle of thousands
of people," said Dilys, "and sometimes, just walking along' the
•treats, I'd find myself suddenly
lonesome for London — tha deep
quirt of London.
"You know there's a subtle dif­
ference belweea coming home to

WASHINGTON ’M-The flrit Intensive study tince the constitu­
tional convention of 1717 on relstinm between the federal govern­
ment and the itatei hit Juil been
completed.
The fob w u done by a 25-man
group tet up under tha direction
of Pmidant Eisenhower and called
the Comminlon on Intergovemmental Relalioni. Appointed in
1953. it has juit reported to Eisenbower.
Tba reason for ite creation hid
Us roots In a problem which has
plagued this country from the beaion of poweri between the federil
government and the states.
The problem has become inereaslnvly acuta since depression
days ind the advent of the New
Deal, which widened federal con­
trol over the cltliena while at the
sama time living them new bene­
fits and protections.
Some, but not all, of what the
federal government hai done might
have been done by the states If

SAM DAWSON

H W A k y f a s t i Cist M w knsd by Kilg Pastures lyttuata.»

NEW YORK
— Those big
electronic computers, called the
“ giant brain." have run Into a
bottleneck—a shortage of human
brains to tell them what to do.
If the truth be 'mown, a giant
brain is really quite itupld. 11 does
only what it It told.
A T.ig brain like Sperry Rand
Corp.’s UNIVAC or IntemaUonal
Business Machine Co.‘a model 703
has the computing ability of 33.000
trained mathematicians. It can
remember enough information to
fill an 1,823-page Manhattan tele­
phone directory, perform logical

Conservation
News
By Ben Wiggins.
Kail Conservationist L’ HUA
Next Tuesday, July 12, an
election will be held to elect
two supervisors to serve on tha
governing board of the Seminole
Soil Conservation District. The
present terms of supervisors
Ralph Hammond and Georga
Harden expire on that date. Mr.
Harden and Kir. Hammond hav
devoted much of their spare
time In promoting tha conserve
tion and wise use of our land
water, and other natural re
sources during their terms'of of­
fice, Mr. Harden doei not da
sire to run again; however, his
son Spencer has agreed lo aerva
as supervisor if elected.
In addition to Kpenrrr, three
other candidate!; W. W. Lana,
W. A. Leffler Jr., and Ralph
Hammond hava each been p*U
tinned by 26 or mnra local land
owners to serve aa a supervisor
for this district. The polling
places for next Tuesday's elec­
tion; Lyman School tn Longwood
Oviedo drug atore In Oviedo
Gardner’s Store In Lake Monroe
and tha Chamber of Commerce
Building in Sanford. Any real
dent qualified to vote In the gen
rrel elections under the mnstitu
Uon and Statute* of Florida, who
Is also • landowner within tha
district. Is qualified to vota. Ac
cording to Secretary BUI Weat
there are plenty of ballots and ■
good turnout of landowners la an
tieipatad.
Soil conservation district* ora
organised by lanownara for their
benefit an for tha benefit of all
tha paopla tn tha district. Sam
Inola County Is a soil conserva­
tion district. There arc now M
such district* in tha State of
Florida.

m

' i

LATEST
•**'.T»-

ii !

H urt are several ways yea can
do this: Olve your child a table­
spoon of mustard mixed In e glass
of wum water, or two taMaef mlt In a glees of warm
or a elaaa of soapy water.
i aaaWr end quicker, hew*
aver, ta the simple procedure of
■ticking your Anger down hla
throat.
Mace your tot face down &lt;
«ewr lap In a g am in g porttlc
Bold hu hand with your right
hand and move the hall af your
left fades finger along tha roof
of bis mouth and then down the
hack of hta throat It you don't
weat ta aae yew Anger, yen cap
•uheUtute a blunt spoon handle.
Sempwt Feenhand

B. B.: Why da I have
in
Answer: The
______
nombaem la the lapa may be dee
to blood vtaaei spasm which can
occur la Bareopa who aaake eaceaaiveiy. On tha ether hand,
there may be aa relationship be*------ the weebaim and mv ~
g. A careful
phyaWaaic

I
SWKt

Now the sun has vaaished and
«
make-believe streams
of
orMga and rod and purple across
the sky have gone. Tm heavens
turn darkly blue and tha air cool*.
Tho boat and ship whistles seem
to come la sad cadence, like a
vaudevillian playing witk felt
covtrod hammers on a set of ran
sknl glasses. Tho loaves of mem­
ory, old Longftllow said, seemed
to make a mournful rustling in
the dork.
There is only a little men- The
little ship throttles down and
swinge for the slip at the eastern
•hero end you look it aver a. _
•oo no crowds waiting — for hon­
estly, now. Just who would meet ■
boat coming in from Jersey ? As
you ease In, tho bow nudging tha
pUlagi tondariy, a ferry starti
out of her slip.
A half-dosen people aro standing
out la tho open bow, letting tha
river air wash their facet and
you know how they fori oof what
they think. They think nothing

V ietnam Minister^
C laim s G overnm ent
A ccep ts Principle
SAIGON, S o u th Viet Nam IA-.
Vietnamese F o r e ig n Minister Vo
Van Msu said XV^dncsdiy Ms gov­
ernment a ccep ts th e principle of an
election next y e a r lo unify Viet
Nam but only I f It is a free baUql,
held under the direction of t l
United Nations.
Mau's d e cla ra tio n was tha first
official statem en t by a member
of Premier N g o D inh Dlim'e Cabi­
net on the e le c t io n , which the In­
dochina a r m is tic e last July speci­
fied should b e
held throughout
North and S o u th Viet Nam not
later than J u ly 1056.
The official
V ia l Nam press
agency said M a u voiced his stifwl
to a visiting g r o u p from the MorS
Rearmament m ovem ent.

There had b e e n speculation re­
cently that D ie m would refuse to i
Join in the v o t in g on the ground
that the Red government in the
North would n ot real!; permit free
elections.
at all. The d a lly - fight with the]
•tona d ty fa o v e r until tomorrow!
morning and t h e y are standlrQl
there in numb, irelaxed, comatose
y a c o — fe e lin g , sensing , , , but
not thinking.
The lines a re aecurcd, the plen'J
!• down, and y o u
troop awayl
through tho l o n g pier bulldingJ
Luckily, you » p y a taxicab and
make for It a n d already tha gtnJ
Uenexs o f the tw iligh t Is anding
•nd the b rig h tn e ss , the fsver, oh
the d ty night h a s begun. Behind
you the City o f Keensburg ho
once, and the le a v e s of memory
stir for a fin a l moment and then
Mttla down, m otion less.

BUICK
Trade-Ins

Permanent!

C le a ra n c e Sale
I C k m lw
I Class, a
1 1 m ___

Extra

$ IN

47

ilu s
class

J.W
$7N

SI

•*4*x

Fxllr

rou r

$iwq

_
Mar*
a l e e a i Ell
%

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m«a &lt; ■ »
SaOaa.
■• ■ Ira a a . M r
m um .
s- m a a l g ,

YOUR OWN FULL TIME BUSINESS

. (

Profitable!

M TATE

He franchise charge. Car required. Contact—
F fcaulU

m

around the house this time of the
year, are a constant hexard lor
your children.
You've got to act awlfUy If your
youngster should swallow a
eoooue liquid or powder. ]
more Important than the proper
antidote la ' " t f i y * emptying
•f hla *VvwMhi

hla head at least eight to tea
Inchea lower then hla hips. You
can use your lift arm ta auppm
hla forehead. If he heglat chok­
ing, thla will prevent him from
breathing any et the vomited
me Uriel tntohli lingo.
Your child may gag and retch
hut bring up httle. If tkli hap­
pens, give him a cup or two ef
auk to awaUev rapUUy____
Uy to moka him vamlt again.
one waralag: Dent make your
youngster vomit If he Boa ewellowed a strong con estve sub­
stance ouch aa *»■»— «* lye or
veahluood “
IttngmJght
_ _ Injure hta esophagus
endetamaeh.

SSMfti^T,p*"r •dwu^»-* * ■»

ea

Washington, m o r e government
states and lo c a l communities. But
at this point t h e report ws* st It:
weakest sin ce
the commission
couU only s u g g e s t ideas and csn'i
enforce them.
11 recom m en d ed stales sod Iocs!
communities d o more for them
selves and r e l y less on the fed­
eral govern m en t. How can it hi
done? That’ s u p to the dates tc
do for th em selves.
Since what th e government d£r
for the People a a a w bol e costs
money, there is the endlen temp,
tation in the sta tes, which don't
wsnt to spend m on ey if they cse
help it, to let t h e federal govern­
ment do the j o b . Each time that
happens mor* pow er is central­
ised in W ashington
As an e x a m p le c* the complex­
ity and in terlock in g of the whole
government s tru ctu re in this coun­
try, the " lo c a l government mjp
of the United States discloses a
maze of approxim ately lOIOOfl
governmental u n its , many of them
overlapping.
“ The figure in clu d es some 3,000
counties. 17,000 incorporated mu.
nidpsLtias. 17,000 towns and townsoins 60,000 Independent school
districts, and 12,000 special ohtricii."

If Child Swallows a Poison

I J t o o u t b e a l t y ” **4 c0untry m **UU
If you're maturo, friendly, ambitious, Loadable 4 truit*
worthy, not afraid to work on commUnion and have a
auccaiaful telling background, a prompt interview with
a company executive may bo arranged.
We provide strong support thru our intemetioaeUy

*•

4$ RPM

M y New York

BY MEL HEIMEIt
NEW YORK - "Behold," wrote
Don Marquis, “ the strong hinds of
Manhattan migktity lifted up and
grasping the gold of the sunset
for her head!"
You see now what he meant.
You sit on deck of the weather
side of the little steamer that has
brought you up from the Jersey
coast and the colors of the even­
ing are riotous and outlandish,
splashing across the bowl full of
many learned experts with a string reeds that is dowstown Manhattan
operations it the rite of 7,200
second and double check every ona of graduate degrees have turned end its ekyscraptrs. If you come
as It goaa along. But when a big out to be lousy programme ri.
Into port by ocean-going liner,
"perhspi the key Is logic." said you customarily make it up the
brain comes lo a point in a prob­
lem where It hasn't been told pre­ Dr. Herbert F. Mitchell Jr., di­ Lower Bay In the early morning
rector of Sperry Rand’s UNIVAC and the city looks gray and clou­
viously what to do, it Just stops.
People who tell the machine applications. "Good old fashioned dy and distant, in the famous, fa­
whet to do ere called progrem horse aense probably is a batter bulous view. But sow it is edging
men. They act up the steps the term."
twilight. The sunset makes it all
machine is to follow before it can
Both Sperry Rand and IBM garish, exciting, unreal.
solve any problem. It msy take found to their surprise that civilian
"It does look a little top-heavy
months to program a problem business applications are harder at this end, at thit," you eay to
which the machine with ita blind to set up for the computer than those with you and because they
ing speed solves within e split- the supposedly much more diffi­ have never heard of the greet
second.
cult scientific probltmi on which hoax of years ego, the sawing-off
The g i a n t electronic brain, they worked for the government of Manhattan island (and the pro­
weighing 114 tons, is hslpless during the war.
posed turning-arousd, because the
without a programmer with s hu
Core of the current difficulty is •messed downtown buildings were
m in brain, weighing about three tha difference between the lan- making it sink et that end), you
pounds.
guagai used by aclanee and busi­ •xptein.
There U a shortage of good pro­ ness. The language of science Is
Then you tight a cigarette and
grammers. There is a shortage, mathematics—precise, definite, un­ settle beck. The aun it going down
too, of people suitable for train varying. Ona and one makes two. flamboyantly over Jersey in the
ing as programmers. Too much Always. But the language of busi­ west and you grin end remember
Isn't known yet about ait the qual­ ness is different.
the young sports writer In Ariiona
ifications but this much Is sure.
asking the o!d-tlmtr if the eun
"Scientific
applications
are
log­
A Ph.D. degree no longer qualifies
always sank Juit behind that par­
a prospect automatically. Too ical and simple," said Dr. Mitch­ ticular gas station. "Son," said
ell, "whereas commercial applica­
tions are subject to tha Individual the old-timer, "the day it doesn't,
know about his land.
gat on the wire to your office.
Interpretations of man."
The owner and the technician
Language la difficult because It You’ll have a beck of a story/'
How gentle the dty seems
go ovfr the entire farm. Thty Is not praelse. The word " f i l l ”
study the land capabilities or can mean fleet of foot or the direct you sell up alongside It in the
natural abilities of the land. Tha opposite at In "tied fait." Or quota dusk. A sleeping tiger, of course,
farmer tells the technician the a different meaning at In a charac­ but et rest now. The wfndowe
sweep d!tally up the building
kind of farming he would like to ter reference.
Hien there la tha Idiom. Idioms sides; many of them are lighted,
do and the technician dlscuasei
with him the capaeity of hla land ara pure tortura to programmers and you picture the cleaning wom­
to do that kind of farming. To­ because they ara not logical. Take en, mope and palls at their aides,
gether they work out a conserva­ a word like "charlayhorse." Char­ poking through the west* baaksts
tion plan for every acre of tha ley is a nickname for Charles. A or stolidly, methodically, emptying
farm. This Is strictly a volun­ hone Is a type of animal but a the ash trays and running damp
teer program. The fine thing eharleyhorse does not mean a clothe over the desks.
The heady smell ef freshly
about it la that tba district pro­ horse named Charity. It Is a mus­
gram aells Itself. When a farmer cular contraction which may taka roasted coffee drifts serose the
sees hit neighbor making batter place in tha calf and can make dirty, p«aeeful waters of the
crops and more Income as a re­ yuu yell like crasy. And calf in Hudson. You are aboard the City
sult nf goodtand use and water this case does not mean a baby of Keeniburg, and the City slows
up and lets an impertinent ferry
management, he la ready tn get cow.
in himself.
Finally, if thla story were pro­ cut across her bow, with short, Ln
Regardless of whore you Uva grammed and given to ■ big brain portent whistle toots.
So here you are, coning up the
or what you do, we urga you to as a problem it would have rear
a good citisen. Get acquainted it In a little less than five thou­ Hudson, which is called North at
thla point for no ready reason,
with your district program and sandths of a second—.00433 of
■nd for a moment, on* of the luc­
the Individual supervisors who second to ba praelse.
ky moments, time stops, You peer
aerva you. Then, go to the poll*
How long did It lake you?
on July 12 and east your vote,
Never mind, ii look longer than upstream and see the lights comremembering your conservation that for this tnrae pound brain ing on at the Washington bridge
program will be only aa good aa to write It. And e big brain nevar and the majesty of the Palisades
on the western shore — and you
you—the people.
could.
•
think of how sUftmtd end delight­
ed end awed old Henry Hudimn
must have been when lie steered
hie little tub thla way for the
first time and beheld what there
BpRHUWN.
wax to see.
INSECTICIDES, left careleedy

really afraid nf boing either pom-1 or irrigation, end lota of other
pout-or lowly,__________
I Important things a favmtr should

I

I

they had enther the willingness or
the financial resources.
So the special commission tried
to examine this whole picture and
make recommendations on whit
the states should do and what the
federal government should do so
that the letter would not eventu­
ally become ill-powerful and dom­
inant.
The commission made some spe­
cific recommendations. For exampie: education is the states' Job
and there should not be any gen­
eral federal aid to education; the
federal goveriment should be in
full control of civil defense.
In short She commission sug­
gested lesa (ovemment f r o m

Really Quite Stupid

Giant

, A

«*u

itA s r o w

Intergovernment Issues Studied

an apartment and coming home to
a home. Last Christmas Julie and
I gave each other a daschund
named Melody.
"Melody, that little dog, made
ua a home We haven't felt so
lonely tince."
Dilya laid the thing that Im­
pressed her most about America
Districts ara a lub-dlvlslon of
was the simplicity of aoelal Ufa.
how much eaiier it was to make atsta government end operate undar atata laws. They hava m U
---------- --------- B y B K N N I T T C I R F --------------------friends.
determination &lt;and ara not con­
Boy friends?
f
PHILADELPHIA correspondent tells us of « business nun
"Amirlcsn boys always look so trolled b y . arm-chair thaorlsta
Wh® left his car In front of a hydrant with this note at* healthy," aha said, "but they don't or any prossure group, but op­
. ’ Uchtd to the wheel: "I know I have parked Illegally, but my take you v«ry seriously «lthar, do erate through tha unsalariad and
unselfish leadership of five tecs!
whole business future de
they?"
pendi on my getting to my
Dilya lakes both btrealf and her landowners. These supervisors
ofltce Instantly. ForgUs us
work seriously. Che t iy s -lf the are alaetad by loco! landowners.
cur trespasses. B. F.H
right serious young man comas Tha district supervisors need
■long—iha'd like to have four chil­ technical help ta carry out tholr
When he climbed back In*
of aall and water condren, but hopea her husband program
tq hi* « r Iwe hour* later
"won't ovor ask me to glvt up scnation, and through ■ memo­
he found a parking violation
tha theatre completely. Jl haa al­ randum of understanding trlth
the Department of Agriculture,
tickat. .with another not*
ways boas my Ufa."
technicians are assigned ta dis­
.which road: "My future also
Suddenly she held out ■ wall- tricts
la help farmers plan and
depends on my nalliiif illegal
browned arm, She had been to the establish no ad ad conaarvaMon
jurkartf Lead us not into
boaeh tha day before.
measures undar guidance of Dis­
J temptation. Motorcycle Of*
"It's tha first tan I aver bad.” trict Supervisors.
Acer J.A."
aba atid. "tt also brought out some
What does all this mean to the
freckles. But I'm not freckly all Individual landowner? Whan a
over-just hst my fice. What do farmer sake his district foe help
° n * TV quli program, a
you think of fm k lti?"
eailor bragged that hi. girl had
supervisors nkay his iwquaat.
1 admired bar fracklet and and tha Boll Conservation Benice
'
2
'
Utu'
*•**
4
,1
fl*n
Dlr*°d®
you
know?"
prodded
aaked
bar
if,
at
U,
she
bad
any
i tha l t d The sailer aaiwered simply, *T counted all of lhamr*
then makts a survey of Ua
fern.
• a
•
•
form. This survey shows tha var­
t think I'm too young tn be ious types or clause of tail an
ion an army ***&lt;■ gravestone; "m e# to hie hsshaar And afraid
of aaything." she sold, and tha form, tha boat use and cap­
conductor quanta: ’ Papa, did you ftjktd tAxknuly;
ability nf each class af aaU,
"Doha that aound pompous? I'm whether tha land needs drainage

Try and Stop Me

Iw a r e s

S T R O U T

'**

R E A L T Y

. . W ITH
QUAUPIKD CAKIi
Tbe wander drugs won't
miracles far you unless ■re■cribid spacifically far
•da- **« your doctor
brio* bla onotriotioa to ual

Fiuat’a Dru* Stare

m.* o a * ru. ttmt T.• 0•.

» .

ids

•

Nicholson'
B u ick Co.

�S o jc ia L £v&amp; nl6u
t)avid Jerome Is
'Chirp Off Block'
In Hines Household

Picnic With Cook-Out Spaghetti
Friend* have been calling lo
offer congratulation* at the Slth
wedding anniversary of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Wagner of Naranja
Drive. Mr. Wagner is a retired
architect from Brooklyn, N. V.
Mr. and Mrs. Einar Tidcman of
Fifth Street have returned from
a month's visit with relatives and
friends in New Jersey and New
Y’ork.
Mr. and Mr*. Wallace (iabter
entertained sixteen friends at
their lakeside home Satuiday even­
ing. Delicious refreshment* were
served and a set of ivory flower
vases wre presented their guest
of honor, Mrs. Florence St. Ainand, in recognition of her biilhday.
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Waite are
visiting Mr. Waite's 90-year-old
mother In Athol, Mas*.
Mr. and Mrs, C. T. Carlson
have returned to their two thous­
and acre ranch in Nevada, after
visiting in DcUary. They plan to
live here in the near future.
Mr. and Mrs. Arne Ericksen
and Mr. and Mr*. Charles Wag­
ner spent the first part of the
week at Daytona Beach, vaca­
tioning at an oeeanside cottage.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Willgooae
have returned from visiting rela­
tives and friends in New Jersey.
Wednesday evening Mr. and Mis.
Louis ijt- Amend entertained at
a bridge and dessert party for
the Rev. and Mrs. Lee Heaton,
.Mr. and Mrs. Arne Ericksen and
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace tiablcr.
The many friend* of Mrs. Har­
ry Brown of Amigos Itosd were
shocked to hear of bop death last
week. Funeral services were held
Monday morning at the All
Saint* Episcopal Church.

MONDAY
The Executive Board of the Wo­
There i* always harmony in the men of the Church will meet in
Jerome Hint* household; Mamma the session room of the First
and I’apa are opera singers, and Presbyterian Church at 10 a. m.
Jilll# David Jerome is a chirp off
Circles of the First Presbyterthe old block.
ian Church will meet at the
"lie was a year old on Valeri. church at 11 a. ir. At 12 noon a
$roe's Day, and already he is covered dish luncheon will be
singing," says hi* pretty, petite served. Immediately following will
mother, Lucia Evangelista of New be the Business and Inspirational
York City Center. "I mean, ' he Meeting.
Evening Citcle No. 1 of the
follows me with the same pitch."
Hines, young Metropolitan Op­ First Presbytcrh-an Church. Mrs.
era Co. basso, nods. "When he's "* S, Bruntley, Chairman, will
old enough to sing bass he can meet in the Educational Build­
ing nl a p.nt. with Mrs. C. M,
have it."
Boyd, Mu, Stanley Vertiay amt
"We don't have a baby-Mtling airs. A. W. Knox as hostesses.
pi obi cm like some couples," ex„ Evening Circles 2 and 3. Mrs.
^ains
Miss Evangelista, vvho
C. W. Johnson and Mrs. M. M.
would rather be called Mrs. Hines. Land, chairmen, will meet at 8
"Both our mothers are at home p. ni. with Mrs. Roy Mann. 121
•with us.”
‘ test 18th St. Hostesses will be
I don't understand all the fuss Mrs. Elizabeth Sharon, Mrs. A.
about mothers-in-law,” says her L. Lyon. Miss Georgeiu Hart, and
hushand. “ We ail get along fine. Alias Sandra Dtiftn.
And Lucia and I haven't had an
Circle* of the Women's Society
argument in our nearly thtea years of Christian Service of the First
of marriage."
Methodist Church will meet at
"He’s too big. 1 know I’ll lose the following designated plates
“ t 3 p. ni.: Circle No. 6, Mrs.
ieforc I start, so why start?"
” “ How could I fight with HER’ ” E. T. Doss, 1501 E. 2nd St.;
Hines, t&gt; foot s&gt;*14, looks like a man S j i„ N'°' 7* Mr' ' R' F- Co!pasking how you could best a soft, •J-l W 20th St; Circle No. 8,
cuddly kitten. "But seriously, it’s Mrs. t oy Tillis, 2208 Magnolia
a big help having two opera sing­ Ave, Mr*, c, P. llemdon, co-hosers in the family. W* understand ress; Circle No. p, Mr* |!fn
each other better bemuse we have wiggins, Cameron Ave. and Cir,0- Mrs. J. P. Thurmond,
the same problems. And since we
ran’t sing the same roles—nature 61- 1.1m Ave. with Mrs. J. c.
having made her a soprano and me Davis as co-hostess.
a basso, thank heaven — there's , Th« WMU of the First Baptist
Church will meet at 10:15 for
iw jealousy.
® " l depend on her professionally errde meetings. A covered dish
too. I come off the stage and ask luncheon at 12 noon will be held
her how I did. If she wrinkles her with the program lo be at 1
jiose, I know what she means." o clock. Mrs, John L. Miller is
IDAHO SPRINGS. Colo. — A
charse- Topic will bs
Mrs. Hines laughs and relates
how her husband got started sing­ All Road* Lead to London." 41-year-old schoolmarm took over
ing; It seems he was asked to drop Auxiliary members are invited to when tha uranium boom enticed a
with circles that sponsor way tha regular driver of
a
out of glee club in his Hollywood, meet
them.
school but serving this mountain
Calif, junior high school because
,
TUESDAT
area.
he couldn't carry a tune. But at
Circle, of the First Methodist
After a week's practice, she i*
16, because the pretty girl who
Church will meet as follows at wheeling the loaded bus over pre­
ed next door was taking voica
r J5r - \ . mV CircIe N'°- !• Mr,. carious roads clinging to the sides
isone, he started too.
C. L. Meeks, 2193 Orange Ave; of
ths towering Rocky MounAt 25 he joined the Met, proving
No. 2. Mrs. C. L. Echols, taint.
something or other about mind
* ‘ u .l,iSt: Clrd* N’°- T Mrs.
Mr*. Kathryn Crirscl, slight
over music. Now, at .'lit, he tings »Roy
Wall, 409 Virginia Ave. for dark • eyed widow and mother of
•IQ leading basso roles.
a picnic and swimming party; two children In their teens, i* not
The singers pursue their hoh- Circle No. « with Mrs. Blake native to th# mountain terrain.
bics in concert — especially spear, Sawyer 206 Elm Ave. with She came here from Indiana on
fishing.
A f c i l|Uhr as co-hostess; vacation and liked the area to
"I'm afraid of sharks and man­ w i m C rC * N 0 ' 5 with M « - J- S. well *ha stayed to teach school
ta rays,” volunteers Mrs. Hines, Williamson 201 W. 18th Street. to first graders In Idaho Springs
^ lu t Jerry's not."
Recently the regulsr driver join,
ed the uranium hunt spreading
Not long ago 1 tangled with a
across tha state from the rich
6 foot shark, says Hines. "He was
plateau area of Colorado and Utah.
hungry and he wanted the fish
There wa* no way to get the 30
J had just speared. Well —
children over the 36 mile* of
] was taller than ha was, so he
mountain trails into Idaho Springs
swam away."
for
school.
He turns to his wife. "I bet
Th, CPO Wive*’ Club met reMrs. Griosel, who rode the bus
David will love spearfishing In a eemiy , t ^
Naval Auxiliary
few years. And by that time . .
R**t,0n triUt the meeting pre­ every day and knew the route
She looks demure. “ Wa want to sided over by Mra. RutselJ Span- but had never driven anything
heavier than a car, volunteered lo
have one more child—a giri," she cer, preaident.
MS*.
A permanent charter for the fill in. After a few trip* with an
w "And after the girl, another club w,g r0Ud upon
p4sje&lt;J instructor, she got a special li­
hoy," her husband goes on.
*“ * charter and by-Iawa were cense and within a week w’as
She sputters. “ That'a easy for WTitten by the board of represen- wheeling ths big bus around hair­
you to say."
tativea headed by vice-president, pin curve* like a veteran.
Only once ha* sha failed to make
But in a minute she decides Mra James Edge. Mrs. James
ho'a hit th# right note after all, Corbitt wa* elected publicity di- th* trip. That was when a howl
■lid she nods. The Hineses tit in rector to fill the post vacated ing blizzard blocked all mountain
harmony again.
by Mr*. Tom Conlon who*# hus­ traila in the area. Several times,
band haa been transferred to Nor- however, older students have had
to help push the clumsy bus out
folk, Va.
All civilians are urged to place of rough section* on the unim •
their housing and apartment ren­ proved road through Beaverbrook
and
tal, with the CPO Wlve’a Bating Canyon from Pine Valley
aervice for the purpose of mak­ other mountain settlements to Ida.
ing them available for incoming ho Spring*.
How do tha children Ilk# a
naval peraonell. Phone Mra. Neil
Truden at 4I6-R or Mr*. W olf, woman drivarT Mra. Grietel say.*
at 21Q-R. Listings from the sur­ she, at any rata, hat no trouble
rounding arras are greatly ap­ with rowdyism.
preciated.
There will be a general alertion Station.
of officer, at tha next meeting to
All members are urged to attend
ba held Tueaday, July 12 at B p. and to cast their vote fur their
m , at the CPO Club on th* Air choice of officers.

Tutor Takes Over
As Uranium Entices
Regular Bus Driver

t

CPO Wives' Club
Votes, Passes
Charter, By-Laws

Sirs. J, f .

J-

SANFORD HERALD Thurs. .!u!r 7. nSS

E.

Min Roi# Levy will leave th#
latter part of tin* week for Nc.v
York on a buying trip fur Holly­
wood Shop*. She will be gone lor
about. 12 day* and wilt spend a
few- day* on Long Island for a
shoit vacation.
Mr and Mrs. Cautr.eti Hutchi­
son have returned to their home
in Fanfold after an absence of
several months

wife ard daugl'.’.er w-R cemi.n
in Sanford for several d a y *
Mr. and Mi*. Homer Bruce of
Sanford and Huy Haw kin* of
Jacksonville left Wednesday for
Palmyra, N. Y.. to *i*it their *onin-lavv anj daughter, Mr and Mix.
David R. Spaulding

Lt. and Mr*. R 1 Young and
von Joe, left 1ucsdny for bail
Dn-go, Calif after spending some
louns’s parents,
lime with Mt
Mr. and Mt&gt;. J, !’ Hall

Mr. and .Mr*. (1. W. Brown. 112
Laurel Ave.. left Wednesday rnmn.
ing for Sturgis, Ky.. to visit her
sister, Mrs. D. M. Sloan. They
will «No visit relative* in LouisVills. Ky.

Mr. and Mr*. A C Cleveland
daughters,
Jeanette no I
The many friend* of Mtv. L. A anu
Guidry will be sorry 10 bam Dial 1'orri. spent the past weekend in
#|ia i* in the UrUltdo Ail Base New Smyrna Bench.
Hospital.
Mr. and Mi* Richard Brown
anil children of Miami were week­
Mr and Mrs Ularemo Rustier end guest* of Mis. II. I., l’crkbii.
ami daughter and sen aic enjoy­
Mr Brown h.i* relumed home and
ing a two week* vacation here.
Mr*. Broun will remain for a
Mi** Melba Johnson i* enjoy­ visit.
ing a vacation with Iter parent*
Mr. and Mr- S J. Dnvi* hav a
in 1 ayrtleville, N. C. and i* expreto.1 to return home Saturday. returned nfi&gt;r a three week* va­
cation visiting their *on, S. .1,
Mr and Mr*. Melvin DrUlc and Dux 1* Jr., in Oklahoma City, OU *.
daughter Suvan have hnd a* tlteir
guest* Mr. and Mr*. Fran Hen­
ning and Debby of Cincinnati,
Ohio They are former resident*
of Sanford. Mr. Henning ha* re­
turned to Cineiimati while his

Courier.
It wav announced that there
JTS picnic time! The Browns, the
The recipe I* rt easy as 1-21
Smiths, and the Thompson*, too. Just brown ground beef, green pep­ would be no \ugu*t mealing. Mr*.
are packing baskets with "tun per. and onion; then blend in Rath Hawthorne an.I Mr*. Broshe
William* contributed to the birth­
feeds" snd trotting on to the picnic cannot spaghetti and seasonings
In ease tud weather keeps th# day bank.
grounds . . . or msvbe Just to the
bark yard. At this time of year any crowd indoors. Cook-Out Spaghetti
A contest about the Declara­
excuse will do tor mating m«al* to will make It seem like a picnic Just tion of Independence wa* held, of
th* same. For It's fine far# with
the outdoor*.
Cook-Out Spaghetti make* the carrot sticks, pickles and olives, which Mis W E. Raines wav the
picnic si much (un for Mom s* It fresh fruit, and rhewy browned winnit; the prize Icing a rcJ,
t* for th* kiddle*. She can prepare marshmallows that taste equally white and blue t&lt;a apton.
th# spaghetti at home and tote It good toasted In the lUeplac# or oxer
Re freshmen I* of angel food
i
to the plcnte in a casserole. wrapped a campfire.
Whether your "rang” number* cake and punch were served by
In newspaper* to keep U hot Or
Uia gang can gather round th* 1 or It, take a vacation from cook­ the July hostesses who were Mr*.
eampllre and take turns stirring the ing. and plan * pi cute with Cock* Charles Meriwether, Mrs. J, M,
Out Spaghetti toon!
spaghetti In a big black kettle.
Hayes, Mr*. S. O. Shinludier,
Mr*. Bessie Zachary*, Mrs. A D.
COOK-OUT SPAGHETTI
Znchniy, Mr*. Richard Hickson,
Its i t
1st 4
and Mr* John Gillon.
t poundi ground be'}
Vi poaad ground Serf
t medium preen peppers, ekopped
1 large green pepper, chopped
Those present worn Mr*. C J.
&lt; It rupij
&lt;t mpj
Meriwether. Mr*. Roy Tilli», Mr*.
I large cston. chopped II tup)
f medium onions, chopped I t cupel
Harry W. Dick, Mr*. Ruth Haw­
t (nblMpooni butter or margorint
t tablespoons butler or ntflrgarvr* thorne,
Ml** llo»sie
Zachary,
Icons fMi cup-tttel spaghetti
, # rani ff-pound J ounrr suef
Mr*. I. J. Hoyt tie, Mr* W. E.
In tomato laure
I spophrlM in tomato sauce
Raines, Mr*. Floyd F. Athow, Mts.
I tablespoon eh tit portfer
1 teaspoon chill powder
Brosiie Williams, Mr*. C. F\ BraV» teaspoon salt
t teaspoons salt
Brown ground beef, green pepper, and onion In shortening. Dltna In nan, Mr*. A. D. Zachary, Mr*. J.
spagbtttl. chill powder, and aalU beat thoroughly.
/sus FI. Courier, Mr*. J. II Anderson
Jr., Mrs. Mablo Monroe, Mr*. Rob­
ert Cole, Mr*. Albert lltckson,
Ml** Alin* Chapman. Mi*» Versa
SUMMER LUNCH
Woodcock and Mr*. Claude Hern­
Y'ou'll find this combination of
don.
fond* just right for a warm-wci­
ther lunch.
Main - Coursa Salad
Hot Bisruit*
Vanilla lea Cream with F'ruit Sauce
CANNES, France (.T-Grela GJf.
t t 'r e n d
bo arrived on the Riviera today In
MAIN - COURSE SALAD
The Sanford Tourist and Shufher usual manner — frit housr
fh lKiard Club had a covered di*h Ingreidrnt*: I small brad lettuce,
slippers, slacks, a plain Home,
supper Tuesday evening. Follow­ I nip thin celery crescents* ‘ x
ing the supper a sliuf flclniard cup cooked bam strips, 'j cup
dark glasses and ducking photo­
cheese
strips, French
tourney was held with New Smyr­ Swi»*
graphers
freshly - ground
na, Del.and, and Orange City com­ dressing, salt,
She came ashore from the liner
pepper, 4 hard-cooked eggs, 2
peting with Sanford.
Constitution with a friend identi­
About 60 member* were present small tomatoes.
Happy Birthday
Method: Tear or shred lettuea
fied as Arthur Schlee. Her fre­
to enjoy the evening. Winner* have
leave* into good-sited bowl. Add
July 6
quent companion in New York Is
not been announced yet.
celery, ham and cheese. Ju»t beMrs. A. K. Shoemaker
George Schlee, husband of dress
On July 111 a hamburger bathe- for# serving to** wllh F'rench
designer Valenti*
eu# is bring planned. Guests are dressing; add salt and pepper to
Fellow passengers said (he for­
asked to bring a salad (&gt;r dessert taste. Divid# th# tossed salad
mer movie queen never left her
a* the re»t of the food will be fur­ among 4 salad ptates; garnish
N O T I C E
cabin during the voyage from
nished by thu cluti. It will start with sli-ed hard-cooked sgg and
America.
at fi p. m.
tomato wedge*. Makr* 4 serving*.
AH
Calendar
At the custom* office she aI firs!
refused to show her passport
Listings And
aurrendering it only after much
Society News
pleading from Schlee- Spotting a
photographer, the ducked baric in­
Are Requested
to the customs office until (he
cameraman disappeared.
By 5 p. m. The
Miss Garbo has bought the large
Day Preceding
villa l'Europe, at Cap d’All. While
it is being repaired, she iv staying
Publication
at the Hotel do Parts in Monte
Carlo.

Vacation Time

Car-Sac

Try This One

Star Greta Garbo
Arrives On Riviera
In Usual Manner

fa r* A

Shufflcboard Club
Has Evening Meal

Happy Birthday

Je /#&gt;«
portable
sloths 1 sloseS

The lightweight, dust-aod-vrinUe.
lire and ecooomicsl war so travel
b| ear, train or plant. Man's 40*
model, illumstrd, holds 4 Stlta.
Women » 14" models (a
plaids, thevis sod even I

* Men's &amp; Radies

59.00 fo 511.00
Plus Tax

Pfweys

CLEARANCE
YEAR AROUND

BROOKFIELD

R-E-A-L-L-Y
FULL CUT! ■

SUITS
P e n n e y Q u a lify F it
TO W N CRA FT®

SH O W IN G
•CARtHYN FT*OUr* la rtsown at
ie was crowned International
weetheart of Sigma Chi at the
•fraternity's 100th year eonventtion In Cincinnati, O. The Judge*
were cartoonist Milton CanlB,
Vincent Sardt, Jr, motion pic­
ture actor John Wayne and
Icnnls star Tony Trabort. Miss
FHroupe, who cornea from
OalnecvUle, Fla, la a member of
Delta Delta Della Sororlly at
Duke University. Durham. K. C.

U N D ERW EA R!

GABARDINES
FLANNELS

ATHLETIC SHIRTS

f

SIZES 34 TO 54

ONE AND TWO
BUTTON STYLES

SNUG BRIEFS
SIZES ZB TO 54

REGULAR
BROADCLOTH SHORTS

$35 «nd $39.75

SIZES ZB TO 54

REDUCED TO

$ 2 4 -9 5
$ 2 7 -9 5

THURSDAY — FRIDAY
STARTS T:«*

T-SHIRTS
SIZES 34 TO 50

$2995

A N D oF pU K Y ^

| - NJitr

mum

nun rn u t n u o

himudcz

" t a r t ROBERT ALDRICH
STARTS SU N DAY

C l a r k G a b l e S u s a n Ha y w a r d

ood dean value* In we!! tailored and well fittinj; nk ' . .
G
few all-wool flannels included. &gt;'a*Lly regulara 3 . • 11!,
few aborts#

(2
un. i2e&gt;&amp; 4cn
V
'
m en s

■:M — 11:15
GJUITOON — NEW *

D a n s ami M i s

mr,

(p e A A v jw lA -

The Daughters -r Wesley ef
th# First Methodist Church met at
McKinley II ill Tuesday nuhi
The room was decorated with
mixed color* snd miniature Amer­
ican flag*. The meeting was called
to order by tbc president. Mrs.
Albert Hick*«n, who led the class
in prayer.
The devotional wa* given by
Mi*. .1 E Courier, whose subject
wav “ My An*wrt" by Betty Gra­
ham. After the usual routine re­
port* by the secretory and trea­
surer, n note of tbnnk* was toad
from Florera McKny Nichols.
Mi*. Claude Herndon, courtesy
chairman, reported four mil* to
shut-in*, three curd- ami
two
bouquet* sent. Mr*. Hickson appointed a nominating committee
rtituisling of Mi*. 1" II Winn,

NOW

Kitz Theatre

I

Ladies Of Wesley
Have Group Meet,
Talk Over Plans

Mt I M S r a « r

Hard Lo heat at any price! All
shirts have deep comfortable
armholes and extra length, even
after washing! T-shirts have
nylon-reinforced collar, taped
shoulder seams for shape and
wear. Wear and comfort are
added to briefs, too, by extra
wide waistband. (AH waist and
leg elastics are specially heat re­
sistant!) Shorts are Sanforised t
. . . have shaped seat. Pick them
in patterns or stripes, yoke or
boxer styles

w e a r

HAN g O T O

r ilQ N C 1222.J

J

�'T R
r .ic

Orlando Travels To Sanford Tonight

Yo
Ha
Foi
c lt l
held
rmiri
path;
nam
Tn
n:r&lt;!
him
"1
i * r [i
ni.&lt;n
Li
ynlc- 4V *
In •(
D ili
tiinii
f- un
IiniuLa
ami
proli
Mcx
-I
h’&gt;m
l« m
told
" II
call '
t \ pit
"H r
w a-r
Iliad
"1
ami
dial

McBride KO'd
By Patterson
In 7th Round

Old Guys
Do Work
For Team

J IM -D A N D Y F O B Y A N K S

- By A toi M

m

r

J IM

*0N
r Tt£IY-

si

REL &gt;B P
• z p e a A L ts r

Bv Pfl Hll.flA
Th# A**ofldl#d Prr*»
Manager Paul Richards rtay
Hav# a *oiiftd Idea for lh# future j
• v /
«
with hi* youth movement at Balti­
BEEN *U CA
more, hill when II come* lo win '
nlhf here »nd now- ll * ihe old
NP W YORK (/Is)—"Floyd Pflllersion is (toiiijr lo be the guy* who gel the job done for Ihe
Oriole*
hfthvytveijrM chump of nil tlmu.”
With a flock of recently llgned
(Jus iJ’Amntn, Pftllerson’^ mniinprer, made Hint stnfn- homi*
youngster* nn Ihe roster, it
mrnl last night. I’ ntlornon, only 20, hail just knocked nut wa* veteran* like Jim Willon (S3i,
Archie McBride, his first ntnn-sincil heavyweight foe, nf* Have I’ hllley fSS'. Hoot Kver»(34),
—............... , ........... ,
ir r jiv ln a away I &amp;** pound*. The
Freddy Marsh (.ill, Chuck fllering
I IIK 8A v M llll* llb B A l .B
rant* .1 Lid nt Ihr *#v4nlh |(32) and Hank Majeskl (3ii who
r&gt;RC 4 Thllrs. July 7, 1955 I(,unj »t MaHi.nn Pquxrc Harden were in Ihe lineup a* Ihe Oriolea
with about 2.S00 fan* watching. pasted Ihe New York Yankee* 4 0
MrBride wa* down three time*.
1a*l night.
Pa((er*on mult win hefoie Jar.
Wilson wa* lh* crafly ''Old
t, tflfiS. for Ihat will he lh» RinokHmcr" who sent New York to It*
lyn hoc'* 21rrt b!rihd*y. J«* 1/mi*
v a* only 21 when he knocked nut fourth ilraight defeat. Th# big
Jimmy Braddock to become lha righthander, in hit mnlh blf leaaiie
youngest heavy ehinip in hl*tory. seaton, gave Ihe Yank* Ju«t frnir
In the meaniime. ti’Amatn must hits and didn't let a rtinrter gel
gn out of town lo gel arlion for hi* part firrl ha*#. He w»lked only
fighter for the mankg'r wool on tan, winning hit *lxth again*!
the Indefinitely suspended li»l af- trghl defcatt.
Wilson, too, lined * fwo-run iintrr
last night'# fight. Ilf had hern
fly flA tl.E lAl-fttft
gle a* Ihe Oriole* trnred all (heir
NEW YDRK i/fl — Tile Yankee* *nt down for rcfu*lng In answer run* in Ihe fourth inning off Whitey
flit the burning m*d l/&gt;.t»y on a question# Shout Ihe Managei* Ford, who like Wil*r»n I* on Ihe
Guild arllcllie* ai lh* recent
V-u trip Which will firry Prnt Ca*ry hearing* of the Sew* York Slate All-Star pitching rtiff
ll wit
flifniel'l leigu# leader* t»r and
Ford'i fourth defeat
wulr belftr# tMy eehirn July 2fi, Athletir Commitaion.
Boston mov#d up on the third
A* MrBride had fought tanked
flv that llm# we ihnuld know prdtr i g r U
I/ M (io T
ofY tA iV B R 'i
w
tv arcfifftely whether the Bomb heavyweight* like Nino \ alder, place Chirego Whit# Jto*. The Bed
drnl
*r&lt; ran win I pennant without Phil Humean# Taarnif Jickaon and Sox heal Waihlnglon 7 3 afler fie
fliriiito playing ihnrtitep for them. Boh Patierfield. he wa* a*ked to troll had knocked off Chicago S 3.
W hll
That Wt Boston l'x game* behind
In loalnjt Ih-ir final three gamr* eomenl on i’atterron’* ability.
nlch
vri'V
“ lie'll tie a champ," &gt;va» &lt;hr elite ago.
it horn#, Including * double heal­
In Ihe Nalional, Brnoklvn ipllt
ing by lha blazing Boston Red Sox, •newer. 'He'* nitreh farter ihaii
ill H
(he Yank* did nothing In encourage Valdes. He'd outla»l Jackson, pro- with Plftshurgh, winning 10 3 and
III
|h#ir following they looked espe hahly knoek him mil. SalterftSM losing 4 1 in a Iwlmghler; Mil
a pi
eially ihaky at ihort, where &gt;nl*lh j (ill* harder, punch for punch. I waukce snared Chicago 5-1; New
lu rlir
fly Ml BRAY ROAP.
lain won't Say &gt;ft dulright But ha
ful Billy Hunter it beginning In made my mi*Uke when I got out York heat Philadelphia 4 2. and St.
day
NEW YORK —An urtiuuilly doesn't l#*vi ifluch doubt that M
of iuv rroueh. 1-el m.v head out." Until deflated Clnrinnili # #.
Make effdfl ml crucial playl.
Innir
f'aMeunn at 170M *»■» ‘ ha
•.Rival manager* said all along
annl
Cleveland tumbled th# A'a, who opiimlitle Harry Hopman believe* think* a "much (Pore relaxed and
ifigl Stengel'* victory rtring would heaviest of hi* eareer hut McBride bad won Hi nf tl, 11 Huhhy Avila hr ha* Ihr man lo whip Amer­ settled" Lew Hoad will oulgun tha
*|irn
Snap abruptly when the little r.r*led inO'l pound*. It was doubled arrn** Iwn run* and Ralph ica’* Tony Traherl In a pivotal Yankee blaster II Forest Hills,
ftyni
ktoyd'a 23rrt virlory in "d pm Klncr hnmered for two more In battle for Ihe Oavll Cup.
Aii|. M M.
*|"1
11 9•pkI * £cnnt#f nn longer wa* Old theic
"I think Hoad haa th# prospects
making hi* miracle *lop« and atari* hi* I5lh knoekout Hi* cur* a ai* run eighth, Herb Score won
The Aurtralian Davis Cup rapth«&lt;k
rent winning itreak wf* atratch* in reliif while Tom (inrmtn of
nf hetrtg th« greatest player hi Ui#
tin- 1 V, throw*. II happened Ju«t a* they
world by Ihe lint# the challenge
laid It would too. fllMuto'a physi. ed to ft. the la»t five by knoek- the A'* suffered one nf hit Infre­
d rill
...... .. III* only defeat wa* a dia- quent fallurea for th« defeat.
round comes around," said Hopcal condition was a powerful fae-|r.„l*
|&gt;iar
puled eight-mund derilion lo Joey
mart “ Lew I* much more te­
til a tk A(or in laat year'* race.
Ted William* (who #1**7 )kfpt
lexed and settled now. He hasn't
A year ign today Ihr Yank* Marini, June 7, IMt.
ihe Red box rolling, hitting hla lllh
been distracted like he was in Aus­
Acre trailing the Cleveland Indian*
homer, a double and a single In
tralia list winter whert M# waa
ty
J'k
game*.
With
Phil
starting
rt
raise
hi*
balling
average
In
.401
iviry day and getting Occailmml
courtinga fli'l'
a* Boston made ll nx ilraight.
UUtf
ftotn
Willie
Miranda
only
In
“ Now that H# if married A# At#
radii
Ted'* homer, good for two run*,
nnlm
l», the Bomber# ran
settled down, lie'll bi abl# to conInga,
fhH fll
Jt'IHI
produced
a
3
4
lead
In
Ihe
fifth.
eirttrat# 6n tennis,
(iff II l l t i IgIM vj etnrleil #rtd pulled
moli
Th# t#cond game nf the icheduled
"Ort a strok# by-ttrok* basis,
aiven wiiH fit# Tiribe fnr on* d#y,
olfir
GAINEAVILLE — Pinal rankIwi-nlghlcr wa* rained nut arid rftJuly m.
L#« U (be best player In Hi#
Ina*
nf
timei
and
disUnrra
re­
with
ichedutnd for tonight.
Then, tha bn* icore* indicate,
world. He haa th* best r#p«rtdir#
off
TitUburgh had threw eonicrutive gistered this season by the na­ Of stroke# thlrt Srtyon#. Dfliy In (A*
liltl#
mifvel
began
(n
feel
the
,ul'.,.
Y
.
.
r
T
*
i
.
W
«
V
J
.
i
J
_
park
tion’!
tnilegiate
track
and
field
homed by J*rfy l.ynth, Prank
run nf hi* year* And (he heal. ftu n » — f tiiM tr . r U ft f ih ljn . TB
p ill IS mnfllh* he hasllT put til#
It &lt;iii * Im tltd In— liiildtr*
Thom a* and Dale Utng—tying a aiblrlea find two Cnlv*rilty of strokes in irUmt. Th# last dm#
*1111 waa in (here, Ihmish fur
l) n„ IT,
Florida
athlalra
high
up
among
major Irague mark held hy many
Mfreaiingly ahorler period*, a* n i l s Atii'it. Milwaujj**. . ! " &gt;
ha showed it wl# Id Dec#IB Mr
I .n u ll
II rlub*—elf Carl Erikina while loi- (hr leader*.
I’.*puli
lb# Yank* won another to *lraight TIimiMesPol# vauller Earl poucher of of 1#SL"
r ip le s - ll r u l i i n , .l ll ln x u l- * * . I
through Aug. IB In Mick within 2'-x llr,ms tu n s
Wiiiatt. Ilirnnklt
ir n ’ -k u. log the opener. In lh* ftlghlcap, flt. I'aterxhurg la tied for fourth
It wa# then that tb# husky yeundr«r
i.netl, **■
J*
h ml K lussrss ski,
I'lhi Inn4|l,
Vi-rn l.aw fanned Hi and Chipped
gapira nf the leader*.
1
heat in tha country, with d vault slcr made I tmaslfig Davl# Cvf
niolr l&gt;ssr» **••.»0&gt;. hi. Iwuil*. 11*.
• Nut until the final month, Ihe I’ll- hln* baseit on I S b t a i f M In # run-irourlng double as tha of 14 fret ft1* Hichc*, while debut by |«idM| lh# Auttt# fore**
hiv
Nis i ••ml*, llrnoklrn. II--I. H I Hura irnred three in Lh# #ighiH
f#enrd *how*, did Phil begin tak­ BtrlktOlllr
. &lt;aui '
Inphomor* aprlnt Star Romper lo « 3 1 victory (Her tM United
Junes. I'lllcaan II *
off reliefer Kd Rneburk. who had W • t t o n o f
ing lo the bench fnr extended pe­
yoi
Et. Lauderdale 9ta(##. Hoad whipped TrlMrt M &lt;
tttr .M iia t
I.erttilR
riod* and. to all lnl#nu, turn the mnlng based on it* *1 hit*— prea#rved Enklne a ninth victory ended in a three-way tie for ftv#-a#t duel Of power end creaked
»lt
K
nil
nr.
l
i
t
!
rol
l,
I
i
j
in th# rirat game.
job over lb Miranda. And ll wa* ll u i.A -M iH ti rl, Nr ft Y m k , IH.
&gt;uU
Sixth place, with a time of t.| Vic Seixai In straight acts.
only id (hit month (hit lh# Indian* ItUlifl tmtlial lit J ri u rn IlmlAH.
I,
Tim (I Iafit a rallied fnr fmir runs etronda In tha 100 yard diah.
Laat n*c#mB#r Tribirt and
ikere Iht# (n throw off their pursu­ III i i Knlif)#. liMtn lt. 111.
aro
in lha alxlh, with (ton Mueller get­
I’ourher, who Ita* vaulted ti ft. Delia* wrcited tha cup away by
mn
er* add pull away lo ihelr final Ii-.ifhlio— Klnlfftit* K t n a i i oiir. ting hit II* breaking, Iwn run hom­ or higher .10 lime* during hit #w#rpirt| lha fifit three matehaa.
er.;
rhmfoflihla lead i4 eight game*
er before rain hatted lh* game rnllrga career, la continuing to Trabcrt *#orad tha big nn* by wal­
Ti if*lf I
Nrw Yotka f
Hot
tnd with New York still ll bit. Curl vault during the uimmtr. He loping (A# l0-y##ho)d Hoad In four
H'tiiir hah* KAjiftP. HMrnlt,
Chi
Mfliillo Nrw Yiirkt 1
of tha aafa.
Kin|#-ti halPi
r . U r K . i hlrd|r&gt;i 12 Simmon* »a# lh# loser with re­ accepted tha invitation
it t
1*1
1a hin
I
n.
bl t l*AflA*l «n A lircIlloftA liefer Ramon Montanl winning hit Amateur Athletir Union to vault
Although Hdad Wal A##ten In
«h&lt;
• |%nB
no r u n t ) , S f W Y o r k .
I «•
first In th# major# #4 N#w York with It# t#am In J#m#l0A on Straight i#(# it WlittBltdon by
t»t%I 1« \ Ala fiti I J l
Miriktftut*
tan
Jutv- a, g and t4.
regained fourth piae#. *
Rudg« Patty and Trabert went on
lor
Cincinnati slipped to fifth is lh#
Walton ran th* 10(1 yard dash to rapture amalaur tennis' greatDot
Card* u*ed itartar Larry Jack.™ In n.R ternndt on four orraalnna e*l individual prlaa, Hopman aaid
fiAULAB
—Phil Caver ret la,
l* r
and three relief pitched lo flniih during Ihe aeaaoft. twit# wax he wasn't “ Unhappy" ov#r th# #«ibrtntt
manager
nf
th#
Chicago
few
off lh* fledfegi in .hi ninth. Rip wa* without aiding wind, and suits.
Cub*,
M
l
#
near
j6b
now
that
he
rdd
epulskl and R#n Andr hnmered the time* were therefore recog­
Ihltika U tougher than piloting a
It d
&lt;hr
0 SI Lnull. Out Bell binged one nised hy the N'.C.A.A. Th##a were
Prlta
Rrirkall, gfl-yaar old
major
Hague
ball
rluh.
thli
foe lha loser#
in a irmi-final heat In th* NOA A ahortfttop for th* Binghamton
He manage# # kiddle* park. It
don
llAflfllXBUfld. Pa. - Hamid
netfftll ended &lt; ilg gam# Ifttlng meet In l.o» Angela* Shift eum- Trlpfita In th« Eastern League,
&lt;*ft# named Candy Mountain Kiddy Johnson, long lima No. 1 contender
the
slump i l Nad Qtrvtr won his first mer and earlier In # trial Mai I# tM amdlleat player in tM
Park by oft* of hla daughter*.
(in &gt;
elrettH. Ha (a « faat BK.
"W'a'v# got six, aa.cn hundred for tight Heavyweight Champion decision line# Jun# f displta 13 *• Ihe K*n*a* Reiftvt.
T
Archie Moore'a bftxlng Crown, waa Whll# fldt kill. At Rilld#'# twoIthe
kid* outlheiaeter the weekend,"
impended lor six montha laat night run hfiffltr In lh# first
fit «did ft.
diet
h# »ay*. "Hot lo wdteh them llkt
hy
the Pcnnjytvanii Alhtiti* Com- match Ing New Yftrk'4
'# Mlrkay
M
Mir key Man
[to t
# hlwk tr they’ll hurt them**lv»».
ml»iton.
tie „
l(#|u&lt; horn# not Mad
tM y try U aland Uh Oil (he ride*
ilo o
The commlitlon, reletting It* with ll
AM aqulrm out of Inllr aeata
T
finding* on a lengthy probe of
G*n# rmtiey, without a vie
YAU'vo
got
I#
he
oft
lh*
alert
&gt;
1
1
Ip op
Jhhnaon'a May # nationally trie- sine# Jun# n , acknowledged
tha tima."
Ipro
"when wd lived in Chicago, w* vised bout with Julio Medrra*, tald All flt#r gim# it
latiu
'
couldn't drwa by dft aimikeinent Johnson aclrd "against the belt his loth with
ihiRl
park without tha kida naming to inlirilt* nf boxiiig" by falling lo lha Cub#. Ed Mlthi
Tha
got out," ha aaplilnk. “J apent to report prior lo tha fight that be wa# emofld 11 Mllw
earn
lose* Sob rush and
iltith money on rldit 1 decided •a* UI.
b«h
Johnion collapsed after the tar.
dow
l'/t buy a park of my ftwti. No* th«
• *«'
aids
Hon Physician* iiibioqueAlly r#ful i
don't rid# much anymore."
n&lt;
Cftvatratu waa lit out a* man- ported that he had been drugged
belli
aker of ui# Cuba laat ye#r and tome time before he entered the
irita
tflan wlrit briefly with th# Chka- ring.
f # WhlU Sot. Hit lay I ha would
Tlka to ftlurti to baalbatl And hat
UlMd (« i roukl# of rluk about
ft; there'* nothing definite about
ll yat but Phil My# h# kftpoa t*
b# bark In IM gam# In d manaf#rial rapidly btferi too long.

.

.

Sports
Roundup

Ik.
Af

Optimistic Harry Hopman Thinks
He Has Right M an To Whip Tony

,

w

TJati f t 1

“

M ajor League
Leaders
^aOWSYKstt",.

Final Rankings
Show UofF Reps
Running In Lead

Flyers Defeat
Cardinals 5-/

Thd Orlando Fiver.# travel to Sanford foniglit for nnolhdr game xvilh the t'iirilinal after defeating them. 5-1,
tail nighf at Orlando’# Tinker Held, Uame time is A o’clock.
SAnford. viclorloud in 10 of 11 slam hofure last night,
spoiled ffowie Tr#sp'a hid for a shutout in the seventh when
the Card* hunched a pair nf walk*
ai-d Dick Snydtr'i xingle for their
lune run.
Tre*p Snd Roland Manfrcdi
w#re locked Iri a tight pitching
hittl* through Ihe fin t six innIrtg* wiln Ihe Flyer* grabbing a 2 0
lead during that atrelch. Churk
Francis reliived in lh# tevcnlh
and gave up Ihe final three run*.
Orl*ndo'a Mike Kaiafhian *pcartd a linking driv# by Sanford
COMMERCE, Old* ifl—Imavine
maneg#r Red MauriCllo in right
center field after a long run. The it'a 1937 and you are sitting in
catch r#m# with two out and the Yankee Stadium, in N-Jiv York
! wailing for Ihe Yanks lo take the
he1#* loaded In th# seventh.
S#nford cut th# lead tn 2-t In field.
Th# publi# addre«4 announcer
ih* atventH but lh# Flyer# match­
ed that tally m the aam* inning. calls out:
Kg»»*btan walked and J*** G*u“ Playing III leftfield. Ray Man­
dreau tingled to right. Kanabian tle; in eeri-vflcld, Mickey Manile;
went to third On th* blow and in rlghtficld, Roy Mantle."
ertrn# home when Comii# Mack
Impossible dream? Three Mantle
ButMr'a throw from right bdune- brothers playing together as the
dd aver Bud Miller at third.
Yankee outfield?
In Other action, Lakeland de­
Not according lo Marshall Ish
feated St. Peteriburg Id, Wdrt mart, now high school coach al
Palm Boaeh look Cocoa U-4 and Jenks, Okta.
Gainesville ran It# Winning siring
A third of the dream already I*
In aii ilraight on a S J decision
true with Mickey now jus! 21 and
over Daytona Beach.
Th# defeat «#* thlrd-plae# Day- playing his fifth seasort of Amer­
tftna'a fifth in a row. A Oainca- ican League baseball.
Ishmael roarhed Ihe other Iwn
vni# tffryti ftf 133 saw Billy Wyatt
single in pitcher Drlanrfo Ortega brothers, twins Roy and Bay, dur­
with thd winning run in the eighth. ing (heir high school daays at Com­
Ortega, picking up hit 13th vic­ merce, Okta., and he'll bet they
tory #g#ift|( four losses, allowed make good irt Ihe majors,
tight hid. (truck out eight and
"I'm not sure (hat Ihe twins wilt
WatkH thr##.
ever approach Mickey’* tremend­
H#»t Falrtl B#*eb ihellOd lour ous stature," Ishmael said. "Rut
Coeoa piteheri for IT hits. Nino I'll certainly be surprised if they
hitl (nd fdur error* salted the don't become the other two-thirds
gam* away In the firrl two in- nf lh# Yankee outfield, flanking
rtlrtgl- Oihby data#, Ihe starter, their famoui brolber."
doubled twice and Dave CnrlRight now, just two years mil of
wright and Ik* Icenour tripled fnr High school and only ID, the twins
lh# Braves. . Tha attdndanc* at ar# playing outlield for Monroe,
Wist Palm Beach wa* MO.
La., In the Class C Colton States
Lakeland wa# held to flv# Ml* League, a farm team of the
by Bob Kuykendall but took ad­ Yankees.
vantage of nln« walk*. Th* win­
Roy it hitting around .3oo while
ning run tame in Ihe ninth when
Jack Libby triped In relief pitcher Ray's baiting average Is down be­
Rip Sewell. A SI. Petersburg low .130 after a slump
Tom Grtcnwade, veteran Yankee
crowd nf about M saw the game.
teoul whn signed Mickey and la
a*. » •
a#atec*
keeping Ms eye# on tha younger
t a ; ? ; .
Mantles, says:
"They're learning and (bey have
lha ability."

Imagine Hearing
Of Mantle Outfield
In Yankee Stadium

f e f it

m
,
Xnyd»r,

.

Kiddle Pork Sold
To Be Tougher
Then Major Loops

Johnson Suspended

For Six Months
By Commission

Standings

*#*»aftM«w. I,*rt -anmro • Or*n4# 111 |l|*-ftrf— Sl*nfr*«l *,

S ri
is p ^ c S a M

Carol*#. ■•&lt;• f - I II.
a—f II,
.l&gt;*J-lftT&gt;- 4 *,a*y darw* .-

Fain Is Released
By Detroit Tigers
DEtROft ufl - Ferris Ftin, dltI
forced Mm Out (if the regular line­
up, 11( been released uneonditlnrtBlly by Ihe Detroit Tiger* after
several run-ini with hi* teammate#.
On Detroit’s racent road trip,
Fain wl* Involved in alight altercat Ions with several of the Tigers,
including Earl Torg non, the for­
mer Nalional Leaguer who waa
given Pals'* firat baa* job three
weak* ago after tft# Tfgera pur­
chased Mm frftm the Philadelphia
PAlllUl.
f i an anaminedstant yesterday,
tha Tiger* i t Id they released Fain
bacatiad #f hla physical kindleep,

imm awacA AndyBrack an te tna
duly vanity warn at IM univer­
Thli aprint, f* r the first ttm*
sity a# Florida who #tUMM IM
alflCft the Notre Dame football
MMM I# i
•ladium Wftft opened Is IBM Ik*
Wnt Virginia university kolill annual spring "Old Timftra-Vftrstfl# IN# foMkan and it t i k#ik«t- Hy Gams'* waa played there. It
kifl ekiaptMabipa ka Ik# Mutt- waa plftyad is Bckaal Fiald, Bmitk
CmWria t i.

J ju f .

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Results
M -n tillM

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Coach Dick Bartell of th# Redlega played in three World Series.
In 1936 and 1B37 he played short­
stop for Ihe Giant* and in IBID he
played short for the Tigers.'
The outstanding indoor albleli^
learn at Ndtr# Dame for Uie p * ,r
four years was Ihe fmeing team.
The fnlhmen compiled a record
of if wins againit three losiea.
Texai League baseball writer*
thia year will *eleet ■ "Manager
of ihe Year" and a "RookJ# of
Ihe Year."

Does Your Home
Need Repairs Or
Modernizing?
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If It’* Worth Anything

THE O L D H O M E T O W N

It's Worth Advertising In

CLASSIFIED ADS

FOR SALE — 3 Bearrwm Home, Srwln;
nr Machine*, and Rroairiar
4 Block from South Side ichool. HERT*S 1*4 S. Park Phone 17C.
Call 2.VIL
concrete

Robert A. Williams, Realtor Ready Mixed Concrete. Concrete

Raymond E. LondquisL AtaociaU
Phone 16*3 Atlantic Bank Bids.

r o u m

—i

inCLAXA APAHTHENTS: roonu.
private bath*, U4 W. F u n St.

Rollaway u d Baby Beda
Day, Week or month—Tel. M25.
Puraitara Crater US West Flral
Avalos Apia.
423,

Efficiency. Phone

FURNISHED Apartment. 400 Park
Ave.
Furnished Kitchenette apt*. Atr
Conditioned. Slumberland Court.
South City limit* Highway 17-32.

Block, Sand. Gravel, Cement
Concrete Pip* to Meet All Quali­
fications.
Phone 2tU

u i totont c**r*

T H E S A N F O R D IIK K A LD Thum . July 7. 1 9 5 V

By STA N LEY

f
I F I’l
I'M T O S I T W IT H Y O U R A N S F L C H IL D /
)&gt; F I P S T
'
I D EM AN D C O M P L E T E D IS A R M A M E N T /

f

DAILY C R O S S W O R D

i i i r w vy.

AND Y O U P G R O C E R Y B O Y IS M Y D R E A M B O A T .
H E S A ID
Y O U P IC E B O X IS OM A

Bedroom home located In onn
of the best sections on two lots
on corner. Beautifully land­ Sherman Conrrcte Pipe Co.
Ont West 13th St.
scaped. hardwood doors, strict­
ly modern. 311,300. Terms.
— Factory to Yon —
Aluminum
2 bedroom home, hardwood Ooots,
Venetian Blind*
tiled bath screened porch and
carportc. F.xcellent condition. Enclosed bead. Sag-proof bottom
I’r.ce $12,000. Easy terms.
rail with placUe rods. Plastic or
rsyoo tspea. Cotton or nyUm
cords.
This ...:ne has two larje bed­
rooms. separate dining room. Senkarik GUan and Paint Co.
Urge utility room, .jalousied 112114 West hod SV
Phone 321
porch. It is located on two lots,
bus double garage. Priced «1 VARIETIES PANELING
$12,000. kitchen equipped.
Native and Foreign Woods.
See Them At
You sljould see this lovelv lake Sherman Concrete Pip® Co.
front home with 96 feet of lake
Phene 241*
frontage. It has two bedroorqs, Ont West 13th St
2 bath.;. Florida room, large Used furniture. appUanee*. mots,
living room, closed garage and
etc. Bmight-sold. Larry’a Mart.
storage. Good boating and fish­
321 East 1st St. Thone 1631.
ing and bathing - beach.
C. A. WHIDDON, SR.
METAL ROOriNG
New tn Stock. 5-V Crimp - 1 M "
Reg. Rani I i t aH Broker
Corrugated— 2 4 " Corrugated.
111 S. Park
Ph. U ll
Get all Your roofing needs at
Whether bnyInc or selling. It will Sherman Concrct® Pip® Co.
pay you to see:
Out West 13th St.
Thone 24*9
J. W. HALL. REALTOR
Florida Stale Bank Building
AIR CONDITIONING
‘ Call Hall"
Phone 1711
Room nr House

O W N E R W A N T S A C T IO N !
X Bedroom Home. 4 Block trom Ha* two Houses, needs only one.
Southildc school. Call 1341.
offers this beautiful 2 bedroom
Home, Kitchen equipped, HardEEE Seminole Realty for Deslrwoed
floors, Tile bath, Nice
able Homes and Apts. Phono 27.
landscaping, for 11.000 Down,
Balance less than rent, on a to­
FURNISHED Apt. Phone 432-W.
tal of 39,715.000. This home is
nicely located
Bedroom furnished house, jtto.no
per month. Phono 938 or 743-W.
after 6:00 p. m,
___
T. W. HERO
2 bedroom house, nicety furnished W. DIETRICHS
Porch, csrporte and lisrge lawn, 1M1 Park Ave. .Phene 27 nr 143
Longwood, J. R. Grant. Call
AN INVESTMENT
263692.
Practically new 2 bed room home
UNFURNISHED 4 Room House
kitchen equipped. City water,
with 2 Bedrooms. Phono 1326-J.
but nuliidc City on Lot 85 x 180
ft. Paved road. Now rented
LARGE. Clean Apartment. Down­
363. per Mo. $8,000. $1,500 cash,
stairs. Small one, 135.00 fill
nil. $30. per Mo.
Pirk Ave.
RAYMOND M. BALL, BROKER
8. D. Hlgtileyman, Associate
2 Room Apt. 200 Avaeado.
O M. Harrison, Associate
Phon# M0
Naw Masonry 2 bedroom bouse 164 South Park Ave.
In Casselberry. 360 per month.
Per
year
Real
Estate
necei:
Phon* Orlando 32198.

Seminole Realty

R.

a.

POPE CO„ INC.

JM Math Park Ave.

Pheu 1449

Foot lockers ............ Special $7.93.
Paint ............................ $2.30 gal.
All sites larpoulins.
ir m y -n a v y Su r p l u s
310 Sanford Ave.
Thona 1321

THE CURIOSITY SHOP
17-92 at Hiawatha. Used A new
furniture, antiques, bric-a-brac.
Como in and brouae around.
YOU don't have tn see the credit
manager to save dollars legiti­
mately on nur GIGANTIC Re­
moval SALE.

ROBINSON MUSIC CO.
22h N. Orange Ave. Orlando, Fit.

I® I

$ * - LAUNPRT W K R w inc - a

USED PLUMBING n X lU R E S

One hour • W in and Damp
Dry
One hour % - Wash and Dry
Feld
Finished laundry
Ssmtooe Dry Cleaning

fy lM
1007 Sanford Ave.

PbaM U13

Sonthnid®

P.ige R

ACROSS
1 A Holland
chenr
S Farm tool
o. retKftd
as a spigot
10. Quick
12. Pronq
13. Vitiate
11. S-sbsped
moMlne
13. A tin* on
a msp.
connecting
f- F-sret
’ ot equal
suniaine
16 OolKHcr.)
IT Endurs
3J Attic
91. Persn
93. Fsncers
use thej*
Erssth*
r.o.sily
tr. sleep
97. Trinsport
American
actor end
humorist
I'*. JftVi'rsa
r-i.ciojcio
.*?. Cilv .a led.i
Z\ FxUrt
of c vivas
SL Mature
people
5t. Impel
79. Pc-erve
40. Urcail
antes
41. Plrque
4-1 Excess of
c* antes
DOWN
J.Ir.reLptton
on x s'**ue
2- Ttii'c iluuicr

3 To'csr-i the
lee rnsut.)

4 PertcnsI

pronoun
5. A mark
(mus)
f- Working
7. Brightly
colored Halt
8. fugacious

f* Foils for

10, Biblical
name
10. A form
cf
govern­
ment

a cour;

13 Prescribed
regimen
1* God of
fleature
tFgJTL)

VtilriJir1! Arm er
it-s'vi
: i Cuddles
33. F.ivcr &lt;Cur-t
96 The diitrers 34. Village
ca ll o f ships
(Jap,I
98 Reims
33 Voiceler*
30. Girls
(Phoaet.)
n ic k n a m e
56 Dry
39 Trick
40. Depart

.

•V

comedians
11 Delaware

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laundi

Seeth Hide Foodmart
199 Ram u th m .

i f Room LOVESEAT and ORLANDO Me
Chair. Good second-hand condi­
Undo Ew
tion. $30.00. Call 2124-J.
Ray. U9U.

'•’ OlfljM
n r t w o SERVICE
FIT FOR A QUEENtM
Foam Rubber Maltressei. Inner- RANDAI.L ELECTRIC CO.
L
L. Sill—Plano Techalclin
A 1L Af. ‘
1
S p r i n g Mattresses, Couches,
fhoaa 2164. Route 1. Sanford
T V SERVICE CENTER
Bsby Beds, Renovating, Uphol­
W A L L BUHNERB
• Factory Supervised Service
Cullen and Harkey, Realtors stering and Slip Cover work.
U you have e irasU business tn a
• House cilia 9 a. ra. till 9 p. tn
FURNISHED 3 Bedroom House.
104 N. Park Ave. Phone 2312.
NIX
BEDDING
MFG.
CO••eluded pert of town and arc
Close In. 819 West 1st St. Phone
(Ail makes and models!
interested In getting customers,
LOT — 75 x 130 on Paved Road 1391 Sanford Ave.
616._______________________
112 Mag. Ava.
Phone 2400 It wit; pay YOU U se® US befwo
list
the service you offer in the
in Plantation Estates. Will sa­
ynu buy. Open Evenings and
MOUNTAIN COTTAGE — July.
Classified column of tb® Sanford
crifice for $700.00 Apt. 1, 2013 QUICK CASH for furniture, boat*,
Sundays.
FHA
Financing
Hendersonville, N. C. Three
Herald. Call UOL
motors. Buy one piece or com­
Sat/ord Ave., Sanford.
Eastside Trailer Sale®,
Per Remodeling sod repatn.
, Bedroom. 14* Baths. Convrnplete home. Thousands of arti­
Pslslis, Fla.
Nothing Down—8 mill Monthly
! lent to stores. Phone A. L. Skin­ 2 bedroom house,
cles for sale at the
cent
The Went Ad Dcpirtmrnt Is
Payments
ner. 1433._________________
Super Trading Poit on 17-92
mortgage. $40
190$
open from 9:30 a. m. until 3:30 p.
CARS
1 Mile South. Phone 221I-R
Summerlin.
Sherman Concrete Cn.
m. each business dsy esrepi Sat­
BOUGHT SOLD TRADED
NICELY Furnished Apartment.
urday afternoon. Deadline for
PheM 2499
Roy Reel's Use® Cere
First floor, also Garage Apt. 2 Bed Room House, Kitchen fur­ TV ANTENNA — rtower pots. Ont West 13th
week-diy insertions is 2:00 p. m.
Sanlord Ave. A Uth SL
1209 Magnolia.
World Wide Reception Radio,
niture, space heater, Venetian
(he day preceding publication
PLUMBING
New, Phone 234-J after fl p. m.
blinds; Hardwood floors— Ilia
Any aas coming Tn Iiler than
S Room Apartment. Completely
Coatraet and renxir work.
bath; Low down payment. Call
FOR
SALE
—Model
’
'A”
Ford
3:00
publl
2:00 p. m. will‘ be published
under
furnished. 313 Palmetto Ave.
ART9CLBB WANTED
esbmslM. R. L. Harvey.
nights 1749-M. or see at 2108 t • Very Cheap. 801 Rosalia
Too Late To Classify.
“
Sanford Ave. Phono
Amelia.
THREE Apartments. Furnished,
Higheat CASH. TRADE-IN pri&lt;
close In. Fhone 2468 J.
FOR SALE — 36’ Slewert Trailer. Call ua about our eusTneaa rates.
paid fur used furniture Call 954
3 LOTS — Dreamwold Section on
P. M. C A M P B E L L
2 bedrooms, bath, kitchen, dining
WUson-Maier
Furniture
Co.
211
corner
Maple
Ave,
at
23th
SL
General
Contractor
FURNISHED One Bedroom Garroom, double walled aluminum A tittle spate like this will get
______
E. 1st SL
Phone 2290-W.
MHemaa of DUUnetiac”
egg Apartment. 2314 Sanford
glassed jalousied Cabana. 8 x 20
your menage before nur more
l-Wey 17-92
Phene til)
Ave. J. N. Auarello, Phone 3 bedroom home. Tile bath. Utili­ T—
with 4 '» ’ Porch. Dolly and Fenc­
than lo.ooo readars. Tell ’em to­
1474.
ed. $2,900 .lacrlflee I-ncated
ty room, Csrporte, Screened
For
Better
Pluraumg
day I Phone 1921.
FOR SALE — one 3 gated saddle
Park
Ave.
Trailer
Court.
Terms
r&gt;m»..i,
Comer
lot.
$9200.
Month­
See
or
Call
Bedroom furnished h o u s e .
lc Buggy horse, bridle, harness
W. M. Foster.
f t e above Aline
^______
ly payments $31.90. 801 Rosalia.
ad—can be
JOHN A. STIPHINS (left), vlrr ptrelilml end chief ncRnlliitnr of the
Phone 912.
W. J. ICING
■nd buggy. Phone 2417-J-3.
5 full dej* for only 12.40,
92.40, 3 days
___
ttS. Steel Cnrpnrnltnn. shakes hands with David .1. MrDonald,
Park Phoae
3
BEDROOM
HOME
fer only J0 end one day for 7tc
Unfurnished 2 Bedroom H ouseIBM MOBILE Cruiser.. 36 fl..
president of the United Steelworkers Union, after sinning a new
DOGS NEED A QUALITY FEED
|
$9,309.00
$2,000.00
Equity.
Will
Kitchen equipped; Large fen
Bedrooms. See Mrs. Sesboli,
contract tn Pittsburgh. Tire etndrnel nlvra workers 13 rents *n he ir
Help keep your does in lop Dragline service. LskefronU A
accept
Auto
for
part
of
Equity.
Advertisers
are
requested
to
no­
eea in yard. Prefer couple
Park Ave. Trailer Court.
condition with PURINA DOG
ditching Estimates ^tvrn. Phone
rauc and sets a pattern for the industry. (International Soumininan)
Phone 20T8-M.__________
tify the Waat-Ad Department im­
with children. 2311 Park Ave.
CHOW. A tasty food dogs go for.
Genev* .2464.
..
Orlando 32344.
mediately of any errors in their
Phone 3092..
Come io today.
Sanford 2221.
REAL ESTATE WANTED
sda, ai The Sanford Herald will be
Slmpfion
Farm
Supply
FURNISHED Cottage. One Bedresponsible for only one incorrect
Mattress A Box Springs
flow will yo® swap?
Insertion.
Phone 1438
rocm. Extra nice. $14 Elm Ave. WILL TRADE - Jacksonville 118 W 2nd SL
Renovated
Ilow will you Traoe?
Beach 2 Bedroom Home; Two“ Free Estimate”
hour old Motor for •
"AMPLE S-UNK AD
ear Garage Apt, on 30 x 123 FL For Sale: COLUE PUPS. AKC
i Bedroom. House,
____ . partlslly ftirn*riler «r»dr _ EYJNRUDE!
ECHOLS BEDDING CO.
Registered, 3 Months. Diworm
* Car Garage. A1S Eastl Landscaped lot. 300 Ft. from
ished, 2
vs t n h — l A v m n n
n p R o rH t**E ie i
i**" it n. n rii t.t-e
GET
egve cash fer article* you
ed.
shots.
Phone
43-R.
C.
J.
Corner 2nd A Magnolia Ph. 1232 ROBSON Sporting Good®
Ocean. 9 Blocks from business
3rd SL Phone 1333-W-10.
o n l a ^no
r m iisd s i
Bamberger, Mgr.
Mililken.
center. Valued at $16,000. FOR
T t ll
_
rVEMSB
day.
2 Rooms and Bath. 112 Elm.
1921.
2;«,1 TI-. Tlhythm
HOME In nr near Sanford.
Hour
K\ i : m m »
dPfj
Phon®
Phone 2913-W.
JVnrM At S t i
S «« Advpfitura SMtH UBCU IValt
It’s So Easy
Might ronslder Busineis Pro­ FOR SALE PIGS «
1
%
A
3-Iine
ad,
such
aa
the
one
above
"t
*
s
lllehf
S.,r
,
,
ft
,
*
.G
10aa-W, 2399 Sanford Ave.
rirtoott r i r m x i l
perty. W. W. Petteraon, l»-9t)i
A . f'l»f*r t &gt; llonR
To Plata A Want Ad
Weekly S#n % »t» * |e\r
TWO HOUSES. — One NEW 4
ta only 28c per day on our low 3 b
* 4’t Mu»|r#1 I'utfitn
Ave.. South Jacksonville Beach, AKC Registered _Boxer
t»f| W it Uiir.Naw • Hpt*
■
puppies Juat Call 1821 and aak for
Room, 2 Bedroom unfurnished.
day earned rat® economy plan, 45c d
?
f ri Jr 2f iftT
» I’iiti
IS John r u lv Ne»9
Buy your rurntturo at Berry’s p r day for 1 days u d Ho for ic 10
____Oulatandlng
u l a u n d l - -p«di"
I Month* old.
:
n ►wtiltic Mualo
Ono 3 Room, 2 Bedroom furnishthe
Want
Ad
department
Hunting »n4 Kl»hlnr
Warehouse Fum Co., at 901 V
:
n I d'lll 1*1•her
gree. Phono 2323-J-3
w
ill
i
■
n
Sanford Herald
M i tilal *’AI * K of Mu He
l*L St. All nationally adv. fuK
t n Lr»n» Jtarfer
f* &lt;•'» Ni#ht 2Mllln% •
allure at warehouse prices.
FOR RALE*— Boxers. A.K.C. and r u » R
Buy. 6*11, R u t, Hire with want f l l .I'i9f!n Pfe4*trta
%IS I rilled Naim ta *
tsadinx and Uni.
t
11
m«
®
r
1
ads,
the
busiest
salesman
in
• l»» !• a l»«n« etirr |
50th Anniversary
it j*»
\ ticnturDt
CJea
aaiag,_____
L waning.__
Serving Sei
10.1C A* ll'&lt;ma U U I Kuilf
9 SO IiMfiRcr'Mi
son OCEAN FRONT Apart
town. Put » • to work for you
g -R L B cm c A L a i n a t f
irn® ^riti Allrrt
nole County since 1993.
.S| N’ w a
Fhona 1821. W® will be glad to lf|&gt; (HI• All l^'nr Thefitra
□kaaon. Late Mary.
•&gt;m•r a call Te frsrw
l tr a aid® with tha Hasalera U.on L•
charge tL
FRIG
ID
AAR
il.O
* * ! 2sJft n O ff
11
N#u a-Spot i r&gt;\Vp it her
Reg. 13 93 16x34 nr 18x34
11! I »
LAWNMOWERS
T h e itia
___
a
n
a
r
p
e
n
n
d
I'M IO 4 f
OFFICE u d Credit Man. Young.
For enJv 93.00 Uie above Aline ad 12.U tiifn Off
Revel Plat® Glasa
Birycla A General
G
Repair.
V ftllS p V
•XiresiJve and willing. Steady
la os the job for you or 3 full
KHI t m t
Mirror* ..................... 10.8#
4 nd ptfn On
'
Stan
ley's
Bike
Shop
HUIt.MSa
merit. Firestone
day*. Only 92J3 keeps It working U 1
• 01 l iunm • C%1 T i F flJ lf
18 9$ Double Dear
Hlf « • « «
219 E. 4Ui SL TeL 2434
« I'S |ijw n fU*Rk« •
fer you tor 3 days. 1 day la only
Metal utility Cabinet 12.30
I’ rrgram A««uiu*
HA RKLP WANTED &lt;
N*w§
• a
90c.
i £S N » w i \ v m b * r
24.93 34’ ’ Metal
* IS u . n . r n Jsm&gt; t r * e
ENVELOPES, iattamsdi, itateTh# llnrtilnc SUnwr
Wei* cabinet ........... 14.30
4. St .Vl. •
menta, invoices, head bills, end
&gt;00 T u t Paoppn
T nn s .it s O clock Club
Reg.
_ 29.9$ Platform Rockers 19.30 STENOGRAPHER and Fll® Clerk,
n
p r o g r a m a, etc. Progressive
7 is Nl» .
W*®dr®ff ft
fiteadr employment by old esReg. 41.30 Berkllne “ Billet"
11 .S1 Slrr.*rtrt
a on .vport. a i A Itaeae
Printing
Co.,
Phone
401
—
401
tablished firm. For appoint
Swivel Chairs ........ 38.30
l*ri*ir«m nppiim»
i os JncWf \'» Cholt- .
West 12th SL
lt:A.» S&gt;w$ - W f i l l i t r
Write .B o x BS, % The
4.2»* M. i nine I'-' - ioi»a
Rag. 19.60 Contour Chairs
I3;ftn
k l*ar»
IIS
Sanford Herald.
llurnlhe Mr 1. , 1st
with Nylon Cover and
FLOO
l . J'l 1/4 lid of c m &gt;•
• t XVorM Vt .Mr .
Foam Latex Filling . . 89.30
11"0 Mnv|i Xat nee
Oak _
u
w
f
e
t
9
is
M
u . io S or l.. t**
D IS W IC T M AN AG ER
1 11 Vl#W#r§ P l t e i t
9 30 Hvron Tim.
Ished.
1 In business alnce
since 1919.
1999,
•—
T SO r*htnn»t rrr-9»rniflt
9 « V S’..r l.aki.s On r
Woman, aggreslve, well-groomE. F. Stevens; Rout® 2, Boa 227;
2 is $0cr** J3torm
i ,i imi i ii &lt;i ('tub
• 1
IMP « , 189 S t
f i e — 2IT
90-43 with thorough know2 3J9 nn Vn'tr A****ount
716-R-4 isefare 7 l b . it
In: }‘l F .» .
4 t*'j F ilm. F « r l a 2'diicy*
nd experience In recruitin
IS
1
*nn
club
4
p.
m.
3 Bedroom Horn* in Wyn­
I II 21r A VJ- a
T E N E T IA
BLINDS
LOW1LL ■ . o t n w
and managing
il;Se asm* ot Mil r.
4i|2 CATtuon ( ‘ arrival
jt selling work,
(JfaWMuhp Ah
U MRII *T%
s r i i n m is s
ne
wood.
2
Year®
Old.
.
—49.000 yearly Income poIt "A
41 Sou
T i l l MMIAT
H
ill
Rialo
K.rm :.®i
ational orginiiation
F o r fx&gt;vcO«r H air
Thin bom® h u Oak Floor®,
it m F r l - l i y U . I I d i *
l-Afli Open H o u i*
landite ms4:20 I ^ r * flartRer
I.IV Km i
GET PROFESSIONAL CARE!
Car eaientialf*
Wire roiCirto New# Wther. Spls.
ills P•r Von* Rmj® ‘
Ceramic Til® Bath, Dining
B tr -B m
B eauty S hop
: -i,a W o rld * t T h r o #
I In f ’ HK TV
•
eddreaa.
PheM 999
ft: 4 S 14i11ii w f ,B Rna*
i ii sin,I, ,l Proeram
Area, Larg® Living Room
i.iu •4* •» Club
T. mm W a te r fr o n t
”
2 Baths, CB construction. Price
f i f t * ^Corpora**on.
«
m
T
S»i
r
i
i
m
n
k '» .
Mwfons Air-Conditioned Safe®
BMW. Down, IM00.W
s.it HDd Club
and Kitchen Equipped with
v York State. Se• tin «-a t* r Flay La.
Specialist fe Personality Shaping.
4 00 Tb* Itbyibm EM I
•ion Mr CMU«n
Styling |nd Waving. Cosmetics
•-2-I WlMr
G. E. Appliance®Stop In Rnd pick up thn
in nn G i m T tlk #
TRACTORS
fo c y o u r skln car*.-Gyro-Lstor
rir#am T l m «
cnmethod of reducing.
TeksluM 191 aftaw 4 P. M.
lft:2* fiRdfA 714
nutcritU you need for
11tAf| S §W § 4 W*«tth«r
HARRIETTS
fer a®p®i®laa®i t® mm thie
11 i s l - i t t S h ow
______ iML Garfield WllWANTED — Mr middle age man, that horn® improvement
BEAUTY NOOK
I M S N t w o A• fl ifn O f f
______________4
_ „ E E D 4-M JX CXINKRETI
John
MaUch, R. W. WUrn iO A T
„
Harriett.
Ruth.
Dawn
A. C. Deudney, Load Rur ^ ^ i k a d a C— srsteG e.
you’ve been thinking o f —
M O R N •M i
» :» ■- m. all® Wed. p. m.
T M t Ftttern
a
IB
1U 8®. Oak Ave. PheM *71
T
new bookshelf, s l i d i n g
I lift Slernln* Show
W eller
Si 0B Shopparn Uuldn
door closet, built-in desk,
Saam l
Silt { f w i
till! Harry Moor.
• Cnamerdal—Custom
Low
earner cupboard. Do it
In.nn Harry Moot.
in.it Harry Moor,
ln.)n {•irlko tl Rich
now and you'll be all act
Him Valiant Lady
IliU Lovo or
. Lite
to add that new touch to
1III* S.irrh For Trow
. Brainy 9oHoard.
t
$
&gt;
44
Uuiainjr
LlsM
your burnt tbla weekend.
A L - - L .J ^ l| n a
arTrwKoo®
ft w E fti'vw B ftllJ W 9I
#
Kltrhtn 8bow
Thinks ear classified’» are
« tie. r . i r i
|)M Rob Q L . v IB
MorionHfhSoninf than schooL
ill Houa.pnriy
oo Hie Rtyotr
tlB Hnb Crothy
0* Hrichtar Day
*ocr.t 8torm
Ph. 8J
nd &gt;■;
Most marble ia very old rocks
I I I V M I l
sg:
'»*•
"
Omt W aM U t t ML
ArS a
2489
*J 4 m rn ft® g»e-f amnrtu
&lt;•»*i'*•
ry w
m
eras.
4-46 Opsa lieuie

I

TELEVISION

R a d io

— y&amp; 'u‘-J,Uem,our

» E r w j." - * « •

n ir ~ iw

i»- 5 3 E 5 B E -»»

SPECIALS

BARGAIN!

Mather of Sanford

m aum m

-r

Recipe For A

'Nowl Weekend

L S L " ii5J 7.“ou'K SS;

H ILL LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY YARD

mi
I

O '—J

�fi

air.Aiu.

THE SANFORD HERALD

T h n r s . .Ttilv 7 . IflS S

w rrA m grr*

it ..

AMDAT THEPLATE*.

[fiij7K3rrfiL7-i\

us a Buvrr
situation
A CATCH

s*

3H0HI.D

CAUL FOR
D&lt;EST-HIOH

Pitch es .

T H E Y ARE
toughest

TO BUNT
AND
INC5CABE
T**E CHANCLf
O PA ,

%,S p ® 1

POP-UP/

*• THIS GOPHER IS 1
RUINING TH E LAWN
1 I LL FLCOO HIM
r

ID B E T T E R BE ,
* NICE TO H I M - H E S TOO S M A R T
TO HAVE FDR A N r
EnemV «.—

rf * H A -H A -H A -),
x THAT'LL PROVE
TO YOU THAT MAN
' IS SMARTER THAN
v—
4
BEAST r—

V — r OUT A— —&lt;

WWEIZES
BEETLE?

GVESt AT THE

HOOPITAL
w it h

u

-&lt;

BROSM
DSTOBITTOR

BA)LIT—
fWLEY—■
soeev. wo
r BAJLEV —
L HERE. )

r .i
am
tilii

as xxi sat, ma’am...na/.w]
A m ,D A L E .' W YOtlLL H / r U i H . ' HERE.MAM ' UTCIt &gt; / SOUR M , 'A L L RKXT, CACLIMG'
WE RE SET FOR TAKE­
I GOTTA BLOW WIND HIM Y CN TO THIS MAO HORN AS
\jAUBEAU'
JOALtfA\1 HEARIHG^l
NOW TURN OFF
. . . UH, I MEAN...GO* ) III THE
I A MEMENTO FROM YOUR eOY 1 I'LL BE OFF/
&lt;
A S THE UBERATED
MY ROCKETS READY'/SHiP.I H E 'S / FRIDAY/IF YOU LEARH TO
J tK C M i'O U X
f X « HEAR:VS AlO AND I AO...IT WASN'T JUST J
PfCFlE PREPARE
^
GET SOME SLEEP WHILE 1 TUNED DOWN... ITS
TO LEAVE TYM3ANI AN' I WANT FLASH V5TIU. TOO S . FLAY A FEW UCKS. LOOK ME
I taxi y o u Mown/
\ BEEN TUMNtO O f f ! J
TO HAVE THIS CRAZY ] WEAK TO
j UP AT TVC HOT CLUB, A *0
Jpg**!
ON THE ROCKETS
« WHICH THEY
LORN AS A SOUYtMRj/GET AtOUHOfJ WE’LL HAVE A JAM S E S j C N y

r

CAME™, ••

ivxJLL n ova e

A O h f AMGOT/A T C O D V

/MM.. AMh COAIfM* -H
7 d o 4 vh t o A o c u r / r a w

/StTOAMSr//M AN
2 H 5 ~ - r 70ntV,

Battling: Bessie
HasHardPunck;
Appears At Club
Mr co tiM T a o r r
LONDON OH — Battling Basal*
Braddock, tha Labor party 900pounder with a punch to match,
made her night club debut alongaide Marlene Diitrich Tuesday
night and gold-plated Lady Norah
Docker picked up bar marbtea In
fury.
Marlene is being Introduced dur­
ing'her current engagement at the
awgnk Cafe d« Pari* by a different
celebrity nightly. Basiia,.Laborite
member of Parliament and preaident of the -Professional' Boxers
A*an„ waa the barker Tqasday*
Lady Docker,
‘ to bark
next week, waa- on band far a
priviaw. tVhen Bessie curled - her
WHO-so frame into a bow, Norah
grabbed bar multimillionaire huebind and har fur* and haaded for
her g e 1d-t r II an m • d Daimler,
squawking “ I’m fiirtf!!!.” •
Lady D. hai garnered headline*
in the peat by entertaining mlnera
en her apouae’a yacht and aheoting
marblei with wer! ng girls’ clube.
But tu t night, ahe demanded of
the club management;,
i "How d a n m
aek- me to be
traduce Dietrich after Mn. Breddock. You’ll never ace my face
in this place again*"
Benia look the Decker exit
calmly aed went on with her work.
Wearing a dark gray ault and the
bronie medallion af a baser, aha
told the faihioneble a u d i e n c e ,
••Thla Isn’t my way of life." She
said ahe wga doing the turn to
help Britiih-Amerlcan relation!.
She aaid aha’d reciprocate by hav­
ing Marlene to lunch at tha House
of Commons next week-,
" I ’Ve been chaa!
weeks." Marlene toU
"I Just want to. f
and talk polities wl)
What do a
ca n about mi
anywayf

Wear
Garmon
Copa
■J
W**'-..
a, -V ,
Identify Foreigner

A * Cem uk Assassin

&amp; M §£ *g

man pel/ce Wednesday as the bomb
aiiasaia of* Mataa Cernak, - anti.
Communist Slovak refugee leader
and World War'll collaborator with
J J N O ,T H E Y W O N 'T 1
WAKB U P , D A W . . . \ I G E T A T R A P
w « v ..* r w E P E M i s v r r W - v f s * B M i

V B P ...
Bo u n d s
l im b it

_

J

/ \ J s

I

.**1 — *•."*

&lt; 1 -i v

— .

r

WASHINGTON U) — Maj. Gen
Gilman C. Mudgatt.'Army informs
Lion chiaf under Gen. Matthew B.
Ridgway and Secretary Robert T,
Stevens, will take command of the
fth Infantry Division at Ft. Ord,
Calif., in September.
The Aripy said ho will lucceed
Maj. Geo. Edwin K. Wright, who
will ba eligible for retirement this
year.
No lutceaior to Mudgett as chief
o f ' information hai been named.
The Army ia seeking a civilian
to fill the peat in accordance with
a decision •by Defense Secretary
Wilson that the services should re­
place their military Information
haads with civilians.
A native of Valley City, N.D..
Mudgett aanfd. with the 13th Armere Division in Europe in World
War II, In tha Korean War he
served successively as asslitant
chiaf of staff for operations -of the
•th Army, as a member of the
Military Armistice Delegation and
s i assistant chief of staff far the
Far East Command. Ha hai been
chief of.A rm y Information here
ainca November, iw j .

California Court
Upholds Dismissal

Information Ac!
Put Against Man

SAN FRANCISCO OR — Callfomia'i State Supreme Court has
upheld the dismissal of Dr. Henry
C. Stelnmetx from the San Diego
Stale College faculty because ha
refused to say whether he waa a
Communist party member.
In a 6*1 decision Tuesday, the
court rejectad Dr. StoinmeU’ request for a writ compelling his
reinstatement in the psychology
teaching Job he had held since
IBM. He waa discharged In Feb­
ruary, 19M.
Chief Justice Phil S. Gibson’s
majority opinion, upholding conititutionalily of the 19M legli*
lature’s “ aniwer-er-be • fired"
Luckel Act, declared:
“ Loyalty on tha part of those
in public employment is important
to orderly and dependable govern­
ment and is therefore relevant to
fitness for such employment."

TAMPA (&lt;P| — An information
charging Jerry Lopct, 41, with
sattlng up, promoting and con­
ducting a bolita lottery hai been
filed by ‘County, Solicitor Paul
Johnson.
Lopes only last week made a
complaint to Mayor Curtia Hixoit
that ha waa mistreated by Capt.
Walter Heinrich, head of the
police gambling squad.
Tha solicitor said tha charge
egainit Lopes resulted from tho
aaiture Saturday of Smaller Pal*
mer, 47, a SL Petersburg Negi%
with 2,000. bolita tickets. P alm *
was ee-charged with Lopaa.
Only a few of tha southern citlrs
of Canada have annual tempera*
ture averages above 40 degrees.
Swedish shipbuilders launched
a record 67 ship* with a gross too*
naga of 690,000 in 1064.

Legal Notices
■ a rta r

ev

c e v n ir to x

0LOCOM.«
MAILMAN

av

*THE CITSKK* SAXK OF OVIEDO"
l" THE STATE OF FLORIDA
th e

close

In 19M, the average American ILinka _pr#mlaa* owned Sla.STLta, turwltur* and datura*
consumed 611 pounds of milk,
( ia a K* pr rmiV#«Taw nad ar*~aubj act ta $N#n* liana not
coppered to 100 pounds at the beaaautnad br bank)
.
■
,
It tel aetata owned other than bank pramtaaa .— ------giftitug of World War H.
Invcatmanta and other aaaat* Indtractlr r*pra«antlne bank

as.ioa.t*
N on *
K an o

nf cmtM'i fir
rttl #*!•!#
Nano
('u.iomara- liability to this bank on accaptancaa outatandln*
Tho number of farm tractors Othtr
K ano
a a a o t s ------------ —
■* ■ ---------------------------in Sweden r*s* from 11,000 in 1939
M
it.iat.ir
T O T A L A S S E TS
to 100,000 today.
LIABILITIES

Legal Notice
icr w

n cra a n

R E M ’ E L M IL L E R . II
, T f L f t l , M i u n k n ow n
t i n . d e rlss e * . Issstaea ,
rea ltors. o r le g a l r ip r e end a ll pereahe cla im liroexh o r u n der them
1 th em ; an a e ll p artloo
c la im in g lo
h a v e an y
o r tn t ir a it tn tha rea l
itratn d escribed .
D EACH O f TO D A R E
IOTIF1ED that a ault to
to tn* I W U o r
tb o
Ih* W t* o f th e BE'L o f
of a ic t lo a I t . T o w a ih lp
ta n s * I* E aaL ly ln p tn
aunty, n o r l i a . haa Eaan
a ia it you In tha c ir c u it
intlnoU C ou n ty , F lorid a .
P No. t T l l i th o e b r o v ls -

D em and dapoelta o f Ind ividu al*, p artn srah lp *. • » * c « r -

Mt4.aas.Tf
441.ttl.ll

T u n a °d *p o * U * a r 1a d lv id u .1 .7 partnarahipa.- *n d c o r p o r a D a p a d t i* o f_ Uriit*d S ta i* ii~ d * v * r n m in t tIncludin’* poatat
,

- ST.1S4.IA
411.714.41

B ills p a y a b ls , r e d isc o u n ts, e n d o t h o r lla b llltls * f o r b o r r o w o#4
m ossy
_______o
M s r is
a e a o r ‘ o t h o r Mans. fN o n o o a b a a k p rsm la ss an d I.Yon*

K on a

Da poalta" o * V tat on an d " p o l i n i ^ ! k w i d l ^ l * n * .
JJfPOBII
Pa
l Inlk
R*l *»■■
— •"•"**"” ” •***
•'J*
D e p o sits9 01
of b

......- ........

is.jss.tr
1.SU.U

-

OU,V T j f r ' t &gt; E f c « V ^

N on e

A c c t p t a n c a ! r a l i c i t *&lt;f 'b y * i i ~ t e f T c * o u n t “ o f " i h l a '" b a n k sansi*
ou ts lan d I n * ------— .......................... — — — — — — — ——

_ K ona

•.too oa

° 1h T O T A L 1L I A B i U T f E « ~ t M t "iie fu 'd l n * ” »u b e f f f n a t * d ” o bli x a t l .n a sh o w n B g ^

^

.-n j ^ a a c a a

ACCOLMTS

C a p ita l*------------------------- ---------------------------(surplus
............. ........... — --- - -------------- —---- ~—
U n d lv ld td p r o fit* — — —
------- — “ *n7
H aesrva# &lt;and ratira m an t a c c o u n t f o r p re fe rr e d c a p ita l)
TOTAL

C A P IT A L

A CCOU N TS

-------------------------------------

—
T O T A L LIARlLITtra A N D C A P IT A L ACCOU N TS
'T h is b a n k ’s e n p lt a l, c o n s is ts o f :
C o m m o n s t o c k w ith
•**•*•*-••

M lM 4 t .il

A s s e ts p la d a sd e r a sa l* n s4 t * s s c u r s Ita b llltls* an 4 f o r
iii

Ubll*mtlVnsPa u I « r 4*aa to 4 tiT cU tin ira f~ a sp o sito ra s a d e th e r
c r e d ito r s , n o t In clu d ed tn i i a b l l l U * * ------------------- ( a ) L o a n s aa s h o w * a b o v e e r a artar d a e n c tla n at
raatrvaa o f ............................. — — ------ ...
( b ) S e cu ritla s s a sh o w s a b o v o e r a a f t e r d a d a ctlo n o f

K ega
'!

•

w fSiT E S
h ereby c e r t ify th a t I a m e a t i

May^V'lTiT^maa^n/'ayVni*.

i«aO K U atd C err
CIGAR FOR EACB YEAR

ANNOUNCING_____

.

m N

ODEE’S -SIGN

‘

t;

L O C A T IO N
SERVICE

IS NOW LOCATED IN THE

. i

#KENT BUILDING

l

201 Commercial

:

rk o® .

lm i

COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa («u-A
cigar for every year of hit life.
That waa Martin Wakehoufh'a
gift from veteran railroad workers
who honored hia 100th birthday
Tuoaday.
,
“ We gave him 90 cigars Mat
year sod told him he'd get 100 if
he'd come to the party this year,"
said Henry Wendt, president of
the loeal unit of the Nitional Re­
tired and Veteran Railroad Xm-

The British railways print L&gt;0,000,000 ticks ta • year.

m
. .
B d a n a a fe E S E B A

f '.v-s. !

•••

- -

•

*■

,A i h

N ona

K on a
a n A y r k tt
.
t h * a b o v o -n a m * 4 b a s k , d a
I* tru e , and th a t It fa t ly
th * aavaral m a tte r s h e re in

"&amp; K.!alU 5,*V»f4L a g iW3 !a S

An aged Gereiii KeuaMife alee
waa kiOad laatsetly. Thirteen other
bystanders w en injured.
rt$et h l s m e d “ peUllcsl meU m -" Cernak beaded the Netieaal
CeuncQ _efJBaw*kie7 whieh can-

•

o f a t s w H S o sr j i s e s o , t e a *
*
.a b s k h t s
t
c a t h , h a ta n r * . w ith o th a r Wanha, Sna-ludioj r a ia r v * bataneaa,
And c » * h I t tm i In p r o « « M
c * l l e « t j d n ------1
fret
U m u d f l u t u 0 ® v •rn mitn
tnti o otoll
llp
\ Ie Hi. d ire c t an d * u i r A n i i t 4 I | lli* 3 If* l|
*1,t i t 41
(HiileAtien* e l s iataa ' a n a " pallttlcal aubdlvDtoaa
N on *
•nturti
o m . r ba
nd ), nataa,
t&gt;th*r
band*.
n a l* ». and daaant
------- ... — —
c a r p n r a ta atarka (I n c lu d ln c fN a n * s t o c k o f F e d e ra l
K an o
Itaiarva B a n k ) —
4IS.AST.ia
iA im and dlaeaunta H e rla d ljf SNonaovardrafta) .
at

r’ *
*’ *&lt; t— AiV*Vt’i ~ M A B L M ~ a
t , C h a rle s O. e h s f f s r . V is a F ro*, o f
s o le m n ly sw e a r th a t th * a b o v e sta te m e n t
an d ca rra e tty rap ra sen ta th * tru e a ta t* o f

tSPSUNS RlffUT NOWl

BB INJUN9 SN8AU0NG 1 ' ___ , ______ __
OP ON VO U l

\

Mudgett Will Take
Division Command

;'

■a .'K&lt; i -

■

�4

Shop and Save
In Sanford
VOLU M E X L V I

Weather
H n r In pirtlv fIfttHr oi'^ fei*.
f*r*H' i n#THr»#vfl
* +r$

S

H

f

*

D

Tho Stroller atoppod by Hri.
Apptrby'e “ Little" restaurant Id
the Florida State Bank building
thi» morning to Uke note of the
£ novation that'* been going on
ere during the past weak. She
will re-op*n the ‘ 'Little" eating
place bright and early Monday
siorrJng. What do we mean by
bright and early? We mean at
4:45 B.S. (Before Sun-up.)
• • • •

The Elate Knight Circle of the
Pi rat BeptUt Church will meet
Monday at I p. m. in the KjUca.
tienal Boildtog with Mra. Roy
Heel aa heeteea. Cueet epeaker
will be Mre. W. A. Hickman Jr.
One at our local dry eleanere
eUlme -ahla actually happened.
The Stroller waan’t there to eee
It, bat paaaee It on te you. A digni­
fied women took n Jacket and
■wootor to tho cleaner*. Noticing
a sign offering three garmente
cleaned for the price of one, ahe
Vemptly flipped o ff her eklrt,
tt te the etartled man,
wrapped bar coat tightly around
her end marched out. The Strol­
ler thinks tt atnat have been in
aeolev weather than we*ro having

Rescue Ships Hake
Searching For Boat
NSW YOKE tB-Ooart Guard
teui immU cfiiH U N M thi At*
Itie elf New Jeroay today In a
■earth Mr a flaking boat reported
•inking yaaterday. IU otiiteseo
A n never boon confirmed.
The naarch began yaaterday
when « dlatrooa M^SJtrportadly
coming from a beat which identi­
fied ileelf aa the "Blue Star." laid
the craft has going down after
atriking a “ atranga object" in the
water.
A bettor room o iptoetoo reportndly eat the craft aflame, Meeting
access te rafta and lifajaekats.
The la it report Mem the my
tBrUry-ehrouded craft wai relayed
to the Ceart Guard by a com­
mercial renal at 1:10 a.ra.
n raid a foreign submarine was
•urfadag alongside and waa taking
aboard St aurvivnra af the 40-foot
beat.
Coaat Guard vaarola reaching
toe seoae, pinpointed to tho diatresi menage as SO milea off
Barmegat, NJ., found no trace of
•ny beat or aurvivora. But tha
dhoareh continued.

E

Established 1908

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SANFORD, FI,OR I DA,

ia tha type which will eventually
replace the old woodin cage* which
ara "impossible to keep clean."
He laid tha wooden eagvi have
been there eince the mid-1220*.
Ajiothtr future of the new
cage, other then en overhead
■prinkler ayitem deelgned to main­
tain eleanlincii, fi the feet that
heavy wire initead of beri will
be uiad to retain the animalt.
“ I don't lika ban," RiChard
laid, "and tha wira will provide
better view of the animal*.
Ha laid tha No. « wire uied on
tha cage i» lufficlent to hold a
lion. The wire ia uied at the
Jacksonville *oo, he pointed out.
"We are going to try to move
in e cub tomorrow and tha reit
of tha bcara Monday," RiChard
added.
The too wee peinted not long
ago, but RiChard »ald there ere
a lot of other thing* that muit
be done before the touriita aeaion
begin*.
.
RiChard aald he waa attll hop­
ing that the Bengal Tiger caplured by Gen. Jamea Van Flaet could
be trenaported from *Pakistan to
tha loo. Gen. Ven Fleet presenU
ed the tiger to the Pakistan gov­
ernment which in turn presented it
to Gov. Collin*. The *oo waa lnformad by Collina that tt could
have the tiger if *ome meena
could bo found to traniport tha
animal hare. Tha Chamber of
Commerce ha» been active In ne­
gotiations to arrange this.
RiChard oaid the tiger would he
■ big aiief te the too because
Bengal tlgere ere found mainly
in the larger eitiea.
Expansion of the too, RiChard
■aid, ia pretty limited for all tha
available ppere to in use. If the
Atlantia Cout Line ‘ Ballroed
would let tha too have e little
lend, It could be expended In the
direction of the track ha said.
RiChard ruled out tha possi­
bility of placing part o f the ioo
In the area below tha Court
House. He said this would be a
hasard to children who would be
forced to cross the street to see
acme of the animals.
Richard aald be planned to
“tighten up" tho toe In order to
mako tha fullest possible use of
the available land. He added, how­
ever, that thli dote not maan the
meet will be eliminated.

Republican Leaders
Still See Chances
To Salvage Plan

Washington Hates
Gel Stars For Bars
During Cell Check

Joint Declaration
Published Today
By Tito, Nehru
BELGRADE. Yugoslavia to
Yugoslav President Tito and Indian Prime Minister Nehru pub­
lished a Joint declaration today
again advocating world disarma­
ment, use of alomie energy for
peaceful purposes only and peace­
ful coexistence of all nations.
They also called for peaceful
solution of "the questloni relating
to Germany end Taiwan" (Formo**&gt; and ■ U.N. seat for Com­
munist China,
The two worked out tha state­
ment during Nehru's week-long
stato visit to Yugoslavia. Tha In­
dian flew to Rome yaiterdiy,
Tho Tito-Nahru declaration in
general followed the line* of itataments oach made earlier this year
Jointly with Soviet Premier Niko­
lai Bulganin.
Tha statement said Tito and Neh­
ru agreed to exchange minions to
foster trida between their coun­
tries.

'Lonesomest Han'
Dies In Jail At 77
JACKSON, Mieh. to — Tony
Duley, "dean" of Ufara and rc
port*dly tha "lonasomcst man" ia
■authors Mlohlgea priaoe, Glad
yastarday.
At TT, Duley was tha oldest to­
mato and had aarvad tha moat
time—41 years.
Death ended a fight for froadom
which Dulay had waged for most
of his adult Ufa and Hamad final
ly to ba winning.
Ha waa said to have gone to
yeara in nna stretch without re­
ceiving a letter or a visit.
Then three years ago Mr. and
Mr*. Marion Baron of Grand Ha
ven, Mich., road a story that de­
scribed Duley as tha "lonesomest
man in prison." They became In­
terested.
At thatr wring, too eorrectioni
commission last March ordered
Duley’a caaa processed for possible
psrole. But while Duley waited,
death Intervened.

World War 1 Vet
Given New Medals
PORTLAND, Ore. tfl — Frank

Lechleldner, World War I Infan
tryman who aaw action to Franca
to HIT, hi* ■ couple of ntw med­
al* from tha Department of the
Army.
Proudly dliplaylng a Silver Star
and Purple Heart, ha aald they
arrived only this weak, more thin
II years after they were awarded.
Tha Tl-year-old Portlander aaya
ha era* told of tha decoration upon
hfs discharge Mom the Army to
IBM. But it took all thaaa years
and three Utters to Washington,
ba aald, bafora he got action,
Lechltidner aald tha latest query
waa mailed two weeks ago.

Reception Slated
Sanford Guard Unit
For S Turncoats
Will Be Affected
HONG KONG to-U . B. and Brit-

WOMAN** BIG TOR
ROCS BCTTRR THAN DtVKRJ
MOLINE, m. to-Otoe DeBort
On* fieesn wee hltkd end SB was swimming Sunday wheu a dia­
Jnfosed to SOT truffle s o mond ring valued at IMS slipped
i to Semtoeto County in the

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iih authorities today announced
their plans to receive thro# turn
coat American powi expected to
coma out af Bad China tomorrow,
British Immigration authorities
will meat them when they cross
tha bridge aver the Bhumchun
River frontier, SI mile* north of
Hong Kong, and-taka them to tho
colony immigration office.
Tha three man a n Lewd* W.
Griggs ed Jacksonville, Tex.; Otho
G. Ball af Olympia, Wash-; and
WUltom A. Cowart af Dalton, Gn.
U*E* OWN EQUIPMENT]
ts SURE o r WIN
DALLAS, Tax. to-Wkfla
arraigned an urtndeg charges
rootarday, Jamea Cwtto. BB. said
shooting diet to kia main fob.
"I dant f i t to any gam#
tea I knew rn win," nddad Curu . s. Oammtoatonar W. M. Hill
t o row to a v a l"
Tto
X tote May wBh

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tftdnr «nH S»!iirH*r f\ffpi i-Mit*

c

brief shower*.

*
Ar-rwrialerl I’ rew 1,rn.*-cH Wirn

FRIDAY. JULY fl.1955

No

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Workmen neared completion o f a new concrete-block
bear cape at the Sanford Zoo today as too auperintendent
Sidney RiChard announced plans for a long-range improve­
ment program for the popular tourist attraction.
RiChard said the new cage, measuring 12 by 3 - feet,

WASHINGTON to -House Re­
publican leaders said today thsy
still have ■ good chance to sal­
vage President Eisenhower’s pro­
posal (or a to-cenu-an-hour mini­
mum wage.
The House Education and Labor
Committee yesterday deflated the
Eisenhower plan on ■ 15-11 tie
vole and approved Instead, Sl-t,
a Democratic bill to increase the
minimum to tl from the present
?» cento.
Key Republicans predicted ■
lively House floor scrap next
week. They said they expect
strong support Mom southern
Democrats for the to-cent figure.
If administration officials put np
e vigorous fight, theta Republi­
£ WALLA WALLA, Waits. tft-The cans said, they probably will he
■ulk of LIW Uunatae el Washing­ •Me to pets the figure, the White
ton Stale Prison traded ban for House requested.
■tars last night rad didn't lika It
—aa tony leaped the first Malta
a f their two day revolt
' Meanwhile, penitentiary officiate
harvested aBother crop of weap­
ons. broken glass and damaged
The dtto Infantry Division com­
fixtum , toting up &gt; MU that may posed ef National Guard units to
tun into ail figures.
Florida and Georgia will bo con­
verted to an armored division be­
Idamase
ton dew fob af akak- ginning Nov, I. it wts announced
fng dear* the whale prism for hid­ this week ky Col. &gt;. F. Merritt
den weapons head toe prtoi
Jr., chief ef staff, at toe division's
•utdeetf last night, minted i
Macon. Ga. headquarters.
an aa athtotto Arid within
Sanford’s National Guard unit,
walls.
O b. I, lMto laf. aa a unit in this
Around then stood guard#
division, will be affected by this
■tain patrdmea carrying gens and change ever but CapL Joseph D.
clubs, •tort against any revival of Bryant, CO af the local company
toe reran which started Tuesday has net aa yet received official
with the M im e ef nine I
word aa to what this unit's new
^ a d eantrol af meet of the
status wffl be.

Traffic Accident
Statistics Issued

n

A S IN DEPEN DEN T DAILY N EW SPAPER

■

Concrete Bear Cage
Nearing Completion;
Other Plans Revealed
Strolling
In Sanford

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A MARtNt HtltCOPTO m n h fmrty from tee Nam! Air Slattern at
AUugt, Japan, wans the wreckage n/ an S'J-J "Fury* jet fighter
trfentitled as that tn which LC Alan Mr Anrny, of Yonkers, N. Y , * u
killed. Vi. McAncny'* plane crashrd while participating tn th«
search mission for two Marines, whneo plane crasn-lanrint in the
raclfle. The air-*ca search foe the missing airmrn waa drrlaml
“ practically terminated" tn the etrwlpg cl is pier of a Tar Parifle
tragedy Uial took the lives of two Marine*.
(Inlernnlionnlt

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Baseball Campaign Suspects
For Fans' Support Flashing
Is Backed By CoiC Currency
Police Summon

The Seminole County Chamber
nt Commerce a-ul its Ra.cl &gt;11
Committee are too per rent be­
LAS VEGAS, Nrv. &lt;/Pi—
hind the effort to revitalise the
baseball program in Sanford, it Two men brightening the ilice
was announced today hy Presi­ trillion with now $100 hill.-t
tmiehrd n[f n tninwuilmentdent Karl Higginbotham.
"We have the hr-t working nl iuil ice invent {gut inn of
agreement now that we lta\e had [ their pm*ilite nmnrrlinn "ilh
in years, ftaseball i.&lt; eo-ding us the biggest ia.*lt bunk rob­
less th's year and Sanford has
MIAMI (.T*)—Joseph Albert, cocky 23-ycnr-old jnilbronk the hc-d riuh that he has had in bery on reenrtl.
New York pnlire .summoned
nrtlat, wns shot nntl fatally wounded today by a jealous hus­ set re al seasons. In tirw of lho&gt;e
J.
It \M
band who told police he found Albert and his wife locked farts we urge the public tn sup­ victim* of the hank robbery
port the rffort of Ihe local base­ lo stew- pitot(Igillphs uf the Inn
in a lover’s embrace.
today. And rxpi'il* »ve i hrrking
The husband, Richard J. Svulioda, 2!&gt;, called polico and ball officials by purchasing the thrir fingerprint* In sm- i nf *
S2
ami
$4
books
of
tickets
that
will
shut‘ *a man.
reported: I’ve just *L
link with gunmen *&gt;ho tt*ok * :of'.I warned him to stay away from be mailed the first of novl week," PIH) from « t'haao Manhattan Itallk
Higginbotham reiterated.
my wife."
He continued. "Baseball L an i*i Queen*. N Y , l*«t April 8
Thu* tha fantastic lurk of Al­
Police here nitcstt-il frank KM*Integral
part of the merall reL ! 111 v II
beit, who recently won bail, hit
v or ill, 3d. and Hay Wilson,
rrratinn
program
and
thii
only
freedom after he had been outafter
casino
rn,tilers
told
how
victril of murder and who twice way that we can hope to have they moved from one gaming laldo
broke out of Miami's akyecrapcr baseball is to suppsvt it liv buy­ to another, buylug chip* with
.•ail, play rd out in a speeding am- ing tickets ami attending the crisp $11(0 Idlls.
games. The boss are playing hard
buleitce.
Detective l.t. It J- Munition said
•fjivktntt A . Hfiite * 1*
lie was pronounced dead on ar­ and giving the fans everything I'll t worth had fit hiniilred-dollar
irhuo! oYtTuiivt", lit Ihcy have hy playing hard right
rived at a hospital .
hills and Wilton 31 when they pr«*ft]itritl of Ktv .
bgt. Stanley Hartlsa . of the down to Hi* last minute of every were pirkeil up hern ytsleiday,
MINNEAPOLIS M V - A tor­
Ullll ill, lit 'Will civ
game."
nado which cut • five-mile swath rounty polir# said Svoboda told
Ellsworth said he sold innga- umnltn -onn Ki amjiu
J. C. navis, chairman of the
through a section of western Min­ ofticer* he returned to Miami this
aine subscriptions, Wilson said ho v.Tfk l»y tl* ’ 'r &gt;■ Mtu
nesota lata yesterday killed a 20- morning from a trip to Nebraska CnfG enniitlillee, al«o urged the v.as a clothier. Police searched
401b nmujiii ( »n\4" '
month-old boy, Injured at least IS to find hi* wife, Kulh, 28, and support of the publie in this re­ their room in a luxury hotel. All
wmiii Idtrrnalinnni
i
newed
effort
to
bark
our
team
other* and cut a path of destruc­ Albert on a couch in the living
told IhiMt found more than |87,lH'tl. Ohio* Nr\* * of Ku&gt; - s
for
the
remainder
of
the
season,
room of en apartment.
tion as far east a* Twin Cities.
Ellsworth wni fre e d Iasi night huh r*'ci.' iv**i! Ly of ft Thn Chamber is assisting ma­
Svoboda fived a eingle shot from
Hardest hit wa» a 30-mila
on a writ o f habeas rorpu*. Wil -niV
stretch west of Marshall, Minn., a .32 caliber pistol, Tho bullet terially in the program by stuf­ trmaineil in jail on an invcaliga- Kiw iinf« riub of "■
Aa Im.nt of K a fin i
fing the envelopes and’ mailing
where the fury of the winds lore struck Albert In the mouth.
lion of roldicry hooking,
H
odhI, fUni-y v ii
them
to
the
publir.
Marties (aid Mrs. Svoboda. a
down farm buildings, flattened
Klliwoith'a attorney posted VI ,- Ifi;&gt;oke.diiiHTi fur n ninfil i
Chamber official, havo urged
crop* and ripped power and tele­ ■lender brunette, reedily admitted
0U0 bond with tha writ, wlurh ia million Kiwfoni* in i ?
she had bee« having an affair with that everyone mail hia remittance rrturnahla Monday.
phone lines.
(hrouahtmt !^^ l ■
aa aoon aa possible.
Hall, then a heavy rain tell Albert.
Whit* l.n* V e g a * offiiers nml ('jtrnrln. and ’ \
over most of the aouthem half of
Svoboda w ii held for Investiga­
checked thn hilts serial nuiidierit, Ill** 11riwHit*i r* 1*ij&gt;«i .4-o
the state.
tion.
New York autiioriliee rhe-tkeil roi*«|fi IVon K. Ki'i'b «111,
Dead Is Itonnia l-arson, son of
Albert and William T. Chapman
photo* and fingerprint* of the WiiNhlnCton luiiiln ' '&lt;rv
Mr. and Mre. Marlow Larson. 11a were convicted in 1353 of elaying
pair. Doth have record*.
• ludil tin" j&gt;ont siticr \
Dc. Clifton Springmyer, a Miami
waa flung 300 feet.
Knll&lt;*V kiaa dlrvutt i
b k
Ha was Inride tha farmhouse of naturopath during an attempted
profriMotml
1tf&lt; to t *
1
Mr. and Mr*. Auguit Wabena holdup.
of th»» |lliy«4h*HltV“hT!- ri
when the twister hit. Mr*. Wa11ill bevn *t||u*1if|CPIItI" U!
bena said eight person* were in
Indiana
f-..
fll'KNnS AI (IKS, Argentina Ittthe house. They tried to get into
it Imiianpoliii fo .'■» ••
Argcntina's
opposition
Radical
the cellar, but were uneble to
a p'ndii.ilo nf Kinr.* i
Parly, which challenged President
make It before the tornado tora
LONDON W — Prime Minister and a momher of 11 « .*
Peion to bark up hia peace talk
the dwelling apart. All were in­
BOONSnonn. Md. tr-A fter M with deed.,, say, it ha, been denieil Eden suggested last night that the rrnlly, Vio r^roiYni *•.*
jured.
days and nearly 1.000 mite*. Mr*. radio tune, to answer a president­ Soviet bine eventually mlglil he ilri;i4’ii of tho h« . tor
brought ndo the Wrslem Euro­ fmm ibat injtit ' i »n.
Emma Gatewood ia still prtlly de ial speerh.
termined to beenma the first wom­
In a broadcast earlier ltd* week pean Union'* arms contiol am)
an ever to hike the J.OSOmll* Ap Peron absolve.! Ihe politiral oppo­ weapons pool.
palerhian Trell alone—cw n if ahe sition of any pan in the June 18 Tho Prime Minister a*,ureil Rus­
revolt and inulrd anti-Peronlsta sia Ihe West shod ready to guar­
is fi7.
The Gallipoli*. Ohio, grandmoth­ factum, to coinc lo terms with antee her against any threat from
a free, united Germany. Hut he
HEIIMOSA UEAC11, Calif, t o - er emphasised Ihiw yesterday a* him.
The Radical Parly responded said Britain stood firmly behind
The fellow perched on Ihe pole to ahe paused at Washington Mon­
that Peron rould *hnw his sincerity three principles:
day say* he's up there berauw ument Stato Park.
I. "We arc not prepared tn break
WAFlIlNfiTnW Ml - 1 "4 C
It’s the quickest way to land— At the rate she'a going, grand­ hy letting It reply over the state
Jitit lIuri Liti|f Can itl*?« mil miinabout five acres of It.
ma F.mma should make it to Ml. radio, Argentina'* only network. up NATO."
I. "We will not lie parts'd from »&lt;1 f’mnpf r dh r \&gt;4nci nl J*»4j i•It
Tho party's national committee
William (Happy) llnward. SV KalabJin. Me., about mld Scptem('•imphr 11 for cln 1•luor
Ism*
calls himself America's flagpole bcr. She tell the ML Oglethorpe, said last night Ihe Coinmnnieatton, the United Stall ' “
0
Ministry bail advised that "regu­
sitting champion and says no one Ga., starting point May 3.
.1 "We will wink for Ilia unifica­ likjf thifi nflciiinon «*H 14 t*’pn|t
"|jixil«*i«M
in
conn1'
IR
n
!
lations"
prevent
the
granting
of
haa challenged his mark of 1W1 Lugging a pack of about 37
tion of Germany."
con 11net a in wiiiuli * p*»v4‘i tinu•nt
days, set at Porland, Ore., In 19.’&gt;2. pounds and spending tho nights freo radio lime fur Ilia Radicals
"I can quite understand that the
“dtdlfii fo-yi'iir** niur iih k; * y fi*
"I've been up here 12 days," he in her steeping bag or lean to ahel- to answer.
llusviniis fear that a (i re Ger­
said yesterday. "I'm going to Iry tcra along the way. she has worn
The opposition leadrrs said they many would probably unite with gut 0,1.
Campbell’ * ropo . In fi to -r
and stay a year. Rut this li my out two paira of shoes but none would enntmiie lo pres, for radio ihe West," Eden said. "1 think
(eerivid ye-lrr.lav hy r hail in in
final curtain tn show business. If of her enthusiasm.
limn, which they have been denied that it would."
Fulltirigllt 41&gt; Ark) ■f ■
I make any money I’m going to
“ I'm • great lover of tha out- since I’ enm came to power.
niiltew, rallied the Stoi.fittf in !*»•
get a five-acra tract of land and doori," site explained.
lay furth'-r ronsiili utmn of a Iiii!
try to ralia chickens."
OWNER IS ORDERED
tn extend ter two jF'CRTfi
The publicity stunt Is for an au­
TO ATTEND (IHHtCH
ten-* production srl. Thai 1i\+
tomobile firm. Howard hat in
WALDO, Wi*. Uv—Ueeauso of
gi' iv Itm gnver’
"apartment" about 5 by 4'* feet
ORLANDO (&gt;T*I— "Davy Cro- in molulii* tn« i.v. inn'ft eronoi ,y
liquor law convictions, tavern op
atop tha pole, equipped with tele­
rlrlt" hat h-cn raptured.
erator
Sam
Zolp
will
have
to
go
for drfclire.
phone, radio and television.
Polin' raid a t'J-yi-ar-nld readi­
Without naming (hf* d^llfir AST. PF.TEnSflURG WV—Develop. to church every Sunday for a year. ly admitted yesterday hr « » « ihr
idi*fitifi«'d h •l
In Circuit Judge K. II. Srhlicht- I,id olio luol.r into linnillton Ply- &gt;i ir until, * ni|i|i
era who recently bought the Pine
ICE COVERS STREET
ENID, Okla. kfi—Tbo thermo­ Key lstanda in the mouth of Tampa ing‘ * court, Sam was charged with ■ oni| Cn. and rang IIn- ballad uf a « b putt *'lmini»lt (ill of ihr l »vmeter registered 87 yesterday Bay are planning for a fully Idling a minor loiter in hi., tavern, Davy Crorkrtt min its tape record­ feiive Mntf-ria! pn&gt; •r*m&lt; iti A ri nc&gt; in 19S1-1V58 “ w! f&gt; 41 ihr «a |1At
when police clerk Paul Hickman rounded beach community of 40.- telling liquor lo two minora am) ing inarhin*.
lima Hm ti ml nf tin* A
i
answered the phone. The 'caller 000 peraona, the city council was idling beer to a minor.
Schllchting placed Zolp on pro­ The rompnny had romplainrd of Zinc, Lend mid Fnudlii : c'f'*
said: "intersection at Willow and told yesterday.
Hyman Green of Miami, a mem­ bation, otds-rol hi* license* re­ fiequi-nt hn-akin* and Ihr tapi- rrGrand Is covered with tee." It was.
Patrolmen, found Ice all over the ber of the development s&gt;udlrate, voked ami said if he fails to attend ■oiding incident ocrured week*
place. An tea truck had loti near­ •aid the plans call for three corn church as prescribed he will have ago.
Urterlivs l.t. J. R. liiarli said
ly a ton of lea as It pulled away plate residential, recreational and to spend hi* probationary period
the liny told .them he and right
in Jail.
■hopping areas
from tha intersection.
other youngster*, 7 lo 12, entered
TonlgM I* the Ift-1 •: :i e flip"
the plant six or trvrn times to tho',* Interesti'd to , i t. '1 fur v t
steal ronkirr.
senior life saving ••• ••
"Davy" and lha S«qg were spnnrored by tlie P»mi • ■ ...... . *
turned over to Drang* County Ju­ Cliapterof tVr Amni. n H I
Mr*. Ruo S. Stevenson, second wood.
A special guest at Ilia eonven- venile Court, Their nature wet* Crops at lh^ Muni, ijm! Pi 1.
vice-president of tha Pilot Club of
Mill Newman will give an ad* Ion will bo Miss Toshiko Morikawa, withheld.
Tin* registration dredooi w s
Sanford will join with over "00 dreae entitled "Fruit* of Our En­ •' Tokyo, Japan, recipient of tho
Wednesday loll anyatn* l.» ■.
r
members ef Pilot Club Internation­ deavor" at the Presidents’ Lunch- I f 1-65 Ruby Newhall Echolarahip
In lake the eouroo and fulled lit
al attending tho 84th Annual Con­ •on on Thursday.
giant. Mis* Morikawa, an out­
register mav *lgi; uo i. u . “
vention to Loi Angeles, Colif., on Tho projection of rommltteo standing student at Limtenwuod
The rlat'e* are betn;: t.r
: bw
July 27-30, with tho Sutler Hotel plana will bo featured Friday College, Saint Loula, Mo. thi* year,
Hill Fleming and r r n. n‘
1
ar Headquarters.
morning. A play will highlight this will continue her atudiea at Wash­
WASHINGTON
(/T&gt;—
A»»o. i ach Wodnewlay and Friday f ;uiu
Pilot Club International, a Classi­ projection, which will be followed ington University, Saint lamia at
7 until 10 p. pi.
fied Service Club for executive by workshops for each of the Pilot Pilot’* tvholarihip aludenl fur rliter of Srr.ste Majority leader
If enough perron* are luterciVLyndon H. Johnson (D-Tex) agreed ed an instructor’* cuui&gt;« ' ill al­
businasa and professional women, International atending committees, 1066-64.
will bo represented by delegates Tho play was written by Mlsa Ruth The convention will conclude with l-n'ay he had little warning before so be hr Id.
from Canada, Bermuda, and other Dickens, of Tulaa, Okla, vica chair­ a formal banquet on Saturday, he wee stricken by a serious heart
eouatries where Pilot la organ!*- man of tha Pilot International Co­ July 30, when Mrs. Edith McBride attack last weekend.
THAT’S DIFFERENT STORY
L
ord!Bating Committee, in corrobora­ Cameron of Caineaville, Fla., will
LANSING, Mich,
—Thi* liory
Johnson, now under atriet order*
Tha convention will officially tion with Mia* Mary Elisabeth be Initallrd aa tha international te rest and relax. Is to the Naval leaked out yciterday: etoctlwo
n
July 17, with Miss Winifred Morgan, of Texarkana, Ark., Ihe president. Universal • International Mediral Center at nearby Helhes- slat* official* were (on busy
ewman, ef Charleston, W. Va. Ptl&lt;t International Coordinating Studioi will provide special enter­ da, Md. Hospital allachet laid he deputy Stale Treasurer C!url&gt;»
dant, orooldtog. Wednesday Ooamtlttao chairman.
tainment for Oia banquet, follow­ bed hie “ best day” yesterday line* N. Lent* happily agreed tn go nut
•vontog the Pilots of California wit]
Special entertainment haa boon ing which tha Pilots of Florida the attack Saturday. II* wee de­ last weekend and officiate at a
entertain at n welcome dinner with
1, Including sight-toeing will ho hostess at a reception hoo- scribed a* mating "steady pro- beer contest Turned out tt waa
orlaf toa new president. —
4 boor coo last.

Victims Of Theft

Uncanny Luck Ends
For Jailbreak Artist

Kiwanis President
Told Af Conv rn inn
Held In Cleveltin

Minnesota Tornado
Fatal To Infant;
Crops Flattened .

Peron Challengers
Report On Denial

Elderly Woman Is
Determined To Win

Minister Suggests
That Soviet Bloc
May Be Included

Fellow Makes Try
For Year On Pole;
Is Aiming For Land

Campbell Called
For Qucslioiiiiirj

Pine Key Islands
To Be Developed

'Crockett' Gang
Caught In Orlando

Tonitc Last Chance
For Course At Pool

Sanford Woman Plans For Confab

Strict Orders Given
To Senator Johnson

(

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' T i n ! HANFO RD H E R AT.P

r a g e fi

HKELTOX GIVES SHOTf

No Plans Indicated
In Pushing Passage

T ups. Ju ly 5, 1955

TOKYO iff—A Japanese govern­
ment ship Monday reported seeing
pew eruptions In the Bayonnalie
Rocks, a chain of uninhabited out­
croppings in the Pacific Ocean
shout midway between Japan snd
Iwo Jima.
The rocks, some SCO mile* south
cl Tokyo, went into a tremendous
volcanic activity in September
1872 and created a new iik't. The
I W1TIIH AMBASSADOR Sir Roger Maktna (center) of the Meet Excellent Order of the British Empire;
Islet disappeared after a second
conferred decorations on 51 American officer* and Sir Roger Making shaking hands with Gen. Mat*
aeries of violent eruptions in March
men who served nr were azsDelated with the British thew B. RJdgway, retiring U.S. Army Chief of SUIT
1351
Commonwealth Division in Korea. Among lhaec and former U.N. commander In the Far East, and
who received awards at a ceremony In the British Gen. Mark W. Clark, who also commanded the
Hiroshi Kato, 27, fishery Mpcrt,
Embassy in Washington are (L to r.): Gen. James UK. forces. The Utter two were named Honorary
said teday he saw a new eruption
Van Fleet, former rommandcr of the IT, 8. 8th Knight Commanders of the Most Honorable Order
Juno 25 whilr conducting a survey
Army, and Gen. Otto P. Weyland, former com­ of the Bath. The decorations were presented on
shout two miles north of the Bamander of the U.N. forces In the Far East, both of behalf of Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II of
yonnalse.
Whom were named Honorary Knight Commanders Great Britain.
(International Sou miphoto J
“At about I p m, The Bayonname suddenly shot up two water
shall he published once eirh week
RAILWAY rOAm TRASHES
columns 20 yards high and several
ter tour ransecutlve weeks.
W I T N E S S m y h a n d s n d o f fic ia l
other columns of 2 to 3 yarda high
TAIPEI, Formosa iff — A mo• eel o f t h e C l a r k o f Ih* c i r c u i t
followed," he said.
toriitd railway coach erashrd
r m ir t , on th is
th e
JOth d a y e l
J u n e . A ft. t a l k .
Sunday night into a truck loaded
/ * / O, P H e r n d o n
CHICAGO
iff
—
A
two-part
study
with sulfuric arid, spraying the
C l e r k of f h e C i r c u i t C o u r t
r
g reased rin
Bimlnol# County, Florid*
roarh and its passengers with the of thr breakdown of discipline in
(BEAL)
f MAKES KOREAN DEBUT
deadly acid. Twenty-nine of the 36 the nation's classrooms is about H e c k N C l e v e la n d , J r .
SEOUL f t — The greased pig passengers suffered severe burns. to he undertaken by the National A t t o r n e y a t L a w
I' o liox ::&lt;v S a n f o r d , F l o r i d a
Educational Assn.'s " t r o u b l e - A
chase has come to Korea. The
ttorney for P lain tiff
old American pastime was Intro­
Tlie United Slate* hat 8,000 shooier."
duced by the 2tlh Infantry Divi- coal producing companie* in 28
It was prompted by a recent l.v ro i.N T V j i n u t:'* &lt;o n e r ,
IN UI.I: t O I N T V , F L O R ID A
flon at II* celebration of July 4.
slate*.
survey of 1.400 “typical" teachers E aMIM
T A T L OK L D IT H it P E I 1HT.
by the 10-member National Com­
DECEASED
N O T IC E TO C R E D I T O R S
mission fur the Defense of Demo­ TO AM,
I'G R S O N H HAVING
CLAIMS OR DEMANDS AGAINST
cracy through education, the In­
SAID E S T A T E !
vestigative branch of the NEA.
You anil e a c h o f y e n a r e h e r *
air coMmrtT’Mir
Tho survey revealed rowdyism n o t i f i e d a n d re -iu lr e d t " fll* a n y
r
l
a
is second in magnitude only to o r l emi t*h e ra nodf ydoeum. amn da ys hwa vhai c ha g avi no sut,
ihe related problem* of teachers' sa id » » (4ta in t h s e f f l r a o f Hon.
T
HOCa H O LDER . County
salaries and overcrowded class­ JEuKdNx *X Sof
S e m in o le C o u n t y , a t hi*
FMONl /i
offli-a
in
th
* C o u r t H o u s e In Banrooms.

WASHINGTON iff — Chairman
Bonner (D-NC) said Monday he
docs not plan to push for passage
of the House Merchant Marine
Committee's bill to build two
peacetime atomic ships.
Unless Bonner changes his mind,
this would apparently dash what­
ever chances remain that Congress
will okay this year the atomicdriven "peace ship" sought by
President Eisenhower to dramatize to the world the nonmiliiary
uses of nuclear power.
Kep. Tollefson of Washington,
the senior committee Republican,
said he would try to persuade Bon­
ner this week to change his course.
Although the number of textile
mill* tn New England has declin­
ed sharply in recent years, re­
maining mills still employ 170,000
people.

Discipline Study
To Be Undertaken

KALAUPAPA, Molokai bland.
T.H. (ft—Comedian Red Skelton in­
terrupted hli vacation and clowned
for an hour Sunday to an unusual
audience.
He wai visibly moved when the
crowd of 100 after bowling with
laughter a t his antics, said
“ Aloah" at the end of the show.
Many of them were blind or
partially so. They are patients at
the local Hansen colony, named
for the disease which used to bo
called leprosy.

SOT. ROHRT l. HARTMAN, 20, North Sacramento, Calff., Bad 9 m m
r . DtiJon (right), 10, Brooklyn, N.Y.. are shown after they were re­
turned to their command In Seoul, Korea, after betng held by North
Korean Reds for 2t hours. The two American soldier* had inad­
vertently wandered into Communist territory while patrolling tho
demilitarized zone. They told newsmen that their Red captoratHed
to obtain military daU tram them.
(/ntenuufoM l Soundphoto)

•7 DESBNT
POnT SAID, Egypt (/F) — Sixty-aeven French Foreign Legion
veterans of the Indochina war
jumped ship In th# " ex Canal
yesterday. It was the biggest
mas* legion desertion to far in
the area.
The closely guarded Shlnkolobw«
mine in the Belgian Congo Is ra t.
ed as ths world’s richest uranium
deposit, nays the National Geo­
graphic Society,
•

D rive the c a r that g iv e s y o u M O IV B o l everything

CHRYSLERS

NOW

Kill Theatre

S H O W IN G

SQUADRON REM-ACED
TOKYO f t—Th# 67th FighterBomber Squadron, flying Sabre
Jets, replaced the 18th Fighter
Interceptor Squadron on Formoia
yesterday, yhe Air Force an­
nounced.

Legal Notice
R f l T i r B TO D E F E N D
T o - J e f f e r s o n D av is i J D t Kalerlo th , c ( n D arrall F a lr rtm h . G e n ­
eral
D eliv ery ,
rA ndraw s, A n ­
drew* C ounty. T * &gt; * e "
You— Je fferso n
DaU*
(JBI
F a l r r l r t h . D e f e n d a n t In t h l a l u l l ,
a r e h e r e b y n o t i fi e d t h a t s u i t In
dlvnrr* h a t been In stltu ta d aa a ln e l
you by y o u r w if e , ih * r u i n t l f f .
R arbar* F alrelolh
Bull Is b e g u n
In t h - C i r e u l t C o u r t . N i n t h r i r rull
Bemlnol*
C o u n tv .
Florida,
eit i i a t e In B a n fo r d , F l o ri d * . T o u
ar* r e q u i r e d t n flic y o u r p l e a d i n g
a n d o r a n s w e r t n th * s u i t In t h *
a b o v e C o u r t a n d fll* a c e p y t h e r e ­
of u e n n E a s t e r H a r r i s
A ttornay
f o r ih * P l a i n t i f f , a t h i s
n f flr e *
s i t u a t e a t a l l B M a in Bl. O r l a n ­
do, F l o r i d a ,
on o r b e f o r e
July
ST, 1**1 o r * d a r r e * p r o r n n fe e a n
w ill b* e n t e r e d a t a l n s t y o u a n d
th * e a s e w i l l p ro ceed ax p art* .
W linesa m y hand and e ta l th la
I J t h d a y of Jwn*. t t l l . a t C l a r k ,
c ire u lt C ourt,
gtm iaola
County
Florida
O P H erndon
C ir c u it C o u r t C l a r k .
iB eth.

ELIA KAZAN'S
JOHN SltlNBLCKb

JULIEHARRIS-JAMESDEAN-RAVpOMASSEY
FEATURES
1:00 — St08
5:18 — 7:24
0:32

T tlE i m B
o r
F L O R ID A TO
F R A N K D O - V O f t R O , REt.t.Xf SR
NO. 1. *T ACV-T R E N T
HOTEL.
TRENTON, NEW JE R B E T l

A sworn Campltlnl for dlvorro
having been filed against you In
th# ClreuH Court In and for Perotnole County, Florid*, by NELLIE
KATHRYN DONOFERO. th* short
mi* of whirh is N e l l ie k a t h RTN' DONDFERO. P I a I n t I f f. v*.
FRANK* DONOFERO. Defendant,
Ihes* present* ar* tn command
ynu tn appear and fll* your writ­
ten defence* herein on or before
th* llrd day of July. A. D ISIS,
or athatwls* a Deere* Prn Confera* will be entered against you.
The banford Herald I* desig­
nated a* a nawepapar nf general
rlrrulgtloa tn which thla cHgUea

ford . F l o r i d * , w i t h i n e l a h t c a l e n ­
d e r m o n t h s f r o m t h * ilro * o f th *
f irat
publication of th is
nolle*.
E a r h r l a l m o r d e m a n d m u s t h* In
w r i t i n g a n d c o n t a i n t h * p l a c e of
r e s i d s n r n a n d p o st o f f i r a a d d r e s s
o f th * c l a i m a n t a n d m u s t b* s w o rn ,
t n b y th * r l s l m s n t . h is a g e n t o r
a tto rn e y , or th*
* a m * ( h a l l b*
void.
J o h n W. P e r r y
As A d m i n i s t r a t o r o f **ld
ci t a t *
F etd ar a n d B e ltln g h au *
A t t o r n e y * f o r lb * E s t a t e of
E d i t h M. P e r r y
I L v p a r Did*
IV In t a r P a r k . F l o r i d a

NOTICE

T h a H o a r d of C o u n t y C o m m ie*
t i n n e r s o l Setnlim l* C o u n t y , F l - r t d a. w ill r e r a l v r b i d s a t ih * C lerk '*
O ffice in t h e C o u r t H o u a * a t F a n f o rd . u p t o * o 'c lo ck P M . J u l y
| l l h l**&gt;. o n t h e f o l lo w in g !

J —Dump

truck*

tcab

and

rhassls)
( o r * cylinder enalne*
Oil f i l l e r
Oil b u l h a i r r l e a n e r

Lnglnt governor

J speed r e a r axle
D u a l t i re * on r e a r a s t * . t l * id 1# pl y tire *
F r o n t f i r e s . I S • / ! # - I pty
a c u b i c y a r d h y d r a u t l r d u m p bn.
d ie s t&lt; larw o o d , A n t h o n y o r e.|ul-

vatartl.

pow er brake*
T u rn sig n a ls
B a n fo r d d a l I* a r y
Bfsrcsaafat b i d d e r t n t e r e p l IB
t r a d * : 1- l » l » D o d f # t o u r No n
m l t b S y a r d body, a n d 1- M U
C h e v r o l e t t o u r No, I S ) , w i t h a
y a r d body.
Rid* w ill b e o p e n e d a t * r e g u l a r
m e e t l n r t o b * h e l d J u l y 1*th 1 ISS.
Dlde l a bo I d e n t i f i e d "B id s o n
T ru c k ! '* a n d r e f e r t o t h i s a d v e r ­
t i s e m e n t . T h * B o a r d r e s e r v e s th #
r i g h t to r e i e c t a n y a n d all bide

John W. Metsch.

man
A f fec t) O. P

Chair­

H erndon. C lark

N O T IC E
i m
&gt;
riC TIT IO V R
N A R K LAWT O W H O M TT M A T CON'CEBN:
N o lle* la h e r e b y g i v e n t h a t th *
u ndersigned. p u rsu a n t to th e F ie .
titlo u s N a m * L a w w ilt r e g i s t e r
w ith th e
C lark of
th#
cT rrutl
C o u r t la a n d f o r Bem lnol* C o u n t y .
F l o r i d a , u p o n r e c e i p t of p r o o f of
p u b lic a tio n o f thla nolle* th* f ic ­
t i t i o u s n a m s C a s s e l b e r r y A u c tio n
n a i l e r y u n d e r w h i c h I a m an g ag w d
Ih buelnre* as sols p ro p rieto r.

_ _____

STATEMENT OP CONDITION

FLORIDA STATE BANK

Comparative

SANFORD, FLORIDA
Orfantxcd Jana 2, 1939

Statement O f Condition

AS OF JUNE M, 1911
RESOURCES
Loans and D iscount*-------- -------Banking Housa.Furnltura, Fixture*

t U9T.890.T7
79,197.00

Banford, Florida'

Kona

O v e rd ra ft* ------- — ---------

Other Bead* ---------- -----

SUTIATIBI
843.609.1T

Cask mud Due from Banka

IJ O tJ U O

U. B. Gov’t Bond*---- -- ■

Florida State Bank of Sanj

TOTAL RESOURCES

ON

BOTH FORD PARTS AND LABOR
W)ien Work On Ford Products
Is pone In Our Shop

Capital Stack
Burtlua

..........———

Undivided Profit* and B m n rta
XHvtdasda Parable Jaly 1. 1984 Deyaalta ....

■

—

TOTAL LIABILITIES-----

|
.

100,000.00
185,000.00
80.1*5-54
8.000.00

Lonni a Discounts----- l— ...........
Banking Houaa. Furnitura A Fixture
Overdrafts — ............
■—U. S. Gov't Bonds , ,
.........
Other Bond*...............
........—Cash snd Due from Banks-----------TOTAL RESOURCES

TO BE
HAPPIER IN YOUR FORD AND
TO HAVE MORE MONEY FOR YOUR
VACATION TRIP, HAVE YOUR FORD
REPAIRED DURING. THIS SENSATIONAL
TUESDAY. THRU THURSDAY

C apital Stock — ■..............—

Surplus-------------- ------- ---Undivided P rofits and Raacrvoa

Rsacrva for Bad Debts .........Bond Valuation Raaama -------Dfvidmda Payabla July 1.1958
Dapoaita ................... - — .—

« 2U25.68S.0e
88,890.00

T

Non*
S,3?8,658.96
807,032.49
8,480,101.08

8 8J40J6555

$ ioo.ooo.oo
280 000.00
17,604.19
42.444.71

ii,oo*.a
IM O jOO
8 J 4 4 J 0 7 .lt

�n

Weathei

Shop and Save
In Sanford

Pertly cloudy to cloudy with
sower* *r thnnderslmweri *»nth•••I and eilreme •noth.

DAILY NEW SPAPER
WEDNESDAY. JtH .Y t , 195S
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&lt;A

2

Sides Claim
Senate Victory
In Dixon-Yates
WASHINGTON (/P&gt;— Both side* claimed victory today
in Senate action to approve— but w ith strings attached—
6 Vs million dollars for a power line to the proposed DixonYates plant.
The Senate passed yesterday the money hill rontaining

funds for this lint, but with len-|
guage stating it cannot he used
rity °f Memphis make* a
definite commitment" in 90 day*
to build it* own power plant, as
it hat said It will do.
Sen, Gore (D-Tcnn), a DixonYataa foe, called this a full vieADM. R o a m B. CAMMY (Wt&gt;, Chief of I fir d Operation*, Hear
tory satisfying to him although ha
Adm. Richard X. ByTd,efficer-ln-ch*rge of “Operation Deep Freet* .•
conceded tome on hit aide wanted
and Rear Adm. Georg* Dufek (right), who will command Navy Task
“unconditional surrender."
Force 43 for the operation, confer In Washington- Adm. Dufek is the
Sen. Knrwland (il-Callf), the
only known retired officer to command ■ peacetime Uak force. A
Republican
leader, insisted that
1117 etatute forbid* a retired officer to eeerdae such a command In
Memphis* decision to fill it* own
peacetime. Centre** has petted a special act to enable Adm. Dufek
needs was a triumph for President
to take commend of the tack farce.
(fat erne flonel Soundphoto)
Elsenhower's "partnership policy"
on electric power.
Gore said there was'no question
but that Memphis’ plan to build
its own plant rather than take
Dixon-1 ate* power had aoundtd
the death knell for the controver­
sial project which Elaenhower or­
dered.
Tl)e FBI was disclosed las* night
to hav# been directed to undertake
what a Justice Department spokes­
man termed "merely a fact-find­
Damage estimated at 975 was ing" mission into Memphis' plana.
reported In a traffic accident ye*
terday afternoon at the intersec­
tion of Ninth Street and French
Ave.
Involved were a 1962 Chevro­
let sedan driven by Willie Grif
fin, 25, Route 2, Sanford, and i
1953 Payloader driven by Otie
BUENOS AIRES uP—The cppoii
Harley Langford, 3(1, of 510 Weat
Ninth St. Griffin's vehicle sus­ tion Radical party askod for
"deeds, not words" last nlgM In
tained all the damage.
reply to Argentine President Juan
A Jockey who had booted home
The Payloader, owned by Craig
a long-shot winner was greeted Construction Co. of Gainesville, Peron's broadcast call for a politi­
•xdtedly by the horse's owner: waa loading bricks from the south cal truce.
The national committee of the
"Toll me what k wai that you side of Ninth St. into a truck
whitptred ia m j horse's ear to parked on the north side, City biggest opposition party laid it
make him n a so fast" “Oh." Police reported. The flagman stood on its June 29 declarationsaid the jockey, “alt I did waa ro- waved for Griffin's car to pro­ issued after the quelling of the
tit* poetry to him." “Poetryt" ceed. Toilet said the car waa hit bloody revolt by naval and Marine
screamed the owner ia dlabellef. in the right aid* by the pan of units—that “there can be no pacifi­
“Sure", aaawerad the jockey. the Payloader which waa being cation without Ubarty."
The committee added that Perm
lowered to pick up another lead of could demonstrate his sincerity by
fcoNta that toe# art made tote bricks.
totting It reply over the state radio
gfaal*
Both Griffin and Langford were network to the speech he made
o o o
Hav# you heard Mile one? charged with careleae and negli­ yesterday over the same hookup.
Peron in his broadcast absolved
•Drive carefully—Don't Insist on gent driving.
Patrolman Joe Hickson investi­ Uw major opposition political par­
Year lite.I"
gated the accident.
ties of any participation in the re
v6H. Ha invited "responsible men'
among the anti-Peronlsta factions
to coma to terms with him.

Accident Takes Place
A t Ninth St., French
Damage Estimated At $75 Is Slight
As Car Is Hit By Pan O f Payloader

Radical Party Asks
'Deeds, Not Words'

Strolling
In Sanford

f

, Efforts To Raise Former Houseboy
Under Suspicion
Program Support In Woman's Death
-Overshadow Action
I
*

“

1/

LOS ANGELES tel - Detectives
questioning a rejected suitor of
slain divorcee Mrs. Norma Thom
pson McCauley through the night
TALLAKABIEE W - Behind Mid early today that he told them:
“I think I killed her."
tho scenes efforts to drum up
John R. Crocker, 94, arrested
support for tho Barber-Camway
parkais program of reapportion- yesterday shortly after Mrs. Mc­
meat over-shadowed floor action Cauley’s body was found in a bed­
today o ^ th li lis t day of the ox- room In her 930,000 Bel-Air home,
had been booked on suspicion of
traordlnlry legislative session.
Sea. Barber oI Vero Boaeh laid I murder.
ha and Sta. Carraway of Talla-1 The questioning, by relays of
has*** were attempting to Hoe np homicide detectives, continued
co-signers for their revived pack­ U lt night and early today at
age plsn before Introducing the downtown Los Angeles police
progiam ia both houses tomorrow. headquarters, later at the Waal
Indications were today’s House Loa Angeles station.
Finally, Crooker appeared on
aad Senate session would bo
brief. The S au te went ia at 11 tho verge of collapse and Detec­
a, m. and the House was to pa­ tive Sergeants Jack Goteh and
William Stamblar laid he told
tent at I p. at.
H e Senate mat but five min­ Usam"
“I tried to talk to hor but somtutes yesterday after returning
cama over me. I think 1
from Its long weekend recess.
a knife and choked her."
Barber and Carraway continued
to be optimistic about chances of
UNCLE OF RESIDENT
getting their package of two bills
DIEM IN DAYTONA
aad - a constitutional amendment
R. F. River, 79, died Saturday
through but soma senators aspressed doubt whether the plea in a Daytona Beach Hospital of
I heart attack. He waa a former
could win S cu ta approval
resident of Sanford.
Funeral service* will be held
Friday at 2 p. m. In the Ilargb
and Black Funeral Home la Day-

Jameson's Studio
Ready For Opening
With Refreshments

Jameson Studio, having moved
from It’s old location at 1019
“
French Ave. to
N. Fork
A ve, ia having it'a grand opts
toaeievcw. Refreshments win
netted and the Studio will bo
an Friday evening* from T to •
p- m.
■aery aad Emily J u w w *
opene d their first Stadia ia Sawfog* to th# foil at 1*47. Ha ted
been bead eg the Photo Lab at
VcDiB Air Field la Tampa
anfoetep college aad
with M iaTlaaM eoa
laaktata a#

tot

T.

Ha « « • • tonal

v.:-i

Girl Electrocuted
In Wet Swim Suit
DETROIT UPt— A 9-year-old
girl, wearing a wet bathing suit,
was electrocuted aa she opened a
self-serve frees*- in a dairy
store
Sharon K in and a playmate had
been called from a baek yard
swimming pool to run an errand
for Sharon's mother Grace.
Mrs. Gertrude Kirby, a clerk,

Hfj&amp;jr “• «w
.

U,ta» *

she

City Tennis

Tournament Starts
July 16; Entry Deadline July 14
A city toonla tournament spon­
sored by the City Hecrsotion Dopartmeot will bsgia July If, retreatise director Edward Christ*
isea aaaouneed today. There will
bo five divisions.
Deadline for oatrfoo i* July Id,
Christens— said. Eatriea may ha
mailed or tetopkoeed to Fred
Genas, tournament director, at
Route t , Bos 171, or telephone
779-R.
Divisions will bo Junior Dirt*
■lea, for tboeo II and under:
Moa'o Mrlatoa, fog theeo over II)
Woumw's Division, for girls over
111 Men's
‘

Evans, doubles; Betty Doris Bar­
ley aad Bill Floating, Mixed Dou­
ble*, aad Bob Betaderf, Junior
Division.
Christenson also announced that
Urn fishing tournament to now In
full swing aad urged tboeo la tho
9-l» ago group to weigh their
catches at tho official weighing
otattoaa. Tho stations are located
at Bebeoa Spdrtteg Goods, Hill
Implement, Grao'a Texaco Service,
Crowe's Fish Camp aad Grim's
Fish Camp.
During the ooooad wash of tho
roaraatioaal
Ho urged toon-agora to report
to tho Bowling Allay from I to
4 p .m . a n *

§mi\*&gt;*- -

A
■■MINI

is

No. 22A.

Uneasy Quiet Rests
Over Penitentiary

Officials
Western Proposals
Lined
Up
Coalition
Are Armed For Geneva Talks
Opinion Difference By Italian Premier
:

Developing Among
U. S. Officials

j

HOSIK (4»j— Taking on the job as Italy's sixth postwar
Premier, Antonio Si'itui lined tip a throe-party coalition gov­
ernment for presentation today to President Giovanni Gronchi. The new government etili faces voles of confidence in
both house.* of Parliament.

S egni annou n ced a ccep tan ce of tin* p re m ie rsh ip last
night. The scholarly, fit-year-old | ” " —— —— — —
— —
Christian Democrat said hi* Cabi­
net would be marie up of mem­
ber* of hli own party, tlir Social
Democrat* and Liberal*, a n d
would have the support of thr
Republican*.
Ex-Premier Mai in Si riba ruled
Italy for the pa*l Id month* with
the barking of this same grouping.
The distribution of Cabinet »eat*
was exported tn be similar to
WASHINGTON 'At — A Home
Srelho'l. Under the previous Pie- committee prepared lo consider
mirr, Ihe Christian Democrats— seiturr legislation today as Ihe
largeat single parly in Parliament capital's transit strike rolled into
—held 14 ministries, Ihe Social its sixth day without a brrak in
Democrat* 4 and the Liberal* 3. sight.
Some personnel change* were
The House District Committee
considered likely, however, A scheduled a special meeting to
rebel right-wing group within Ihe take up a hill by Hep. I)royhill
Christian Democrat* appearrd (U-Va) to authorise teiiure by thr
slated for two or three *eat* In an Dlstrirt of Columbia government
rfiort to won them into line. Thi* o( the Capital Transit Co. system.
fartion furred Seelba’f restg- The bill would empower tha city
natinn June 22.
to run the system under a "no
At least nnp member of Seellta'* strike" ban.
Cabinet—Foreign Minister Galeano
Meanwhile, the District com­
Martino—appeared almost certain missioners, ruling body of the city,
to he held over In the same post. arranged lor a new mediation elfort, this time at a meeting will:
Hie Executive Board of Ihe strik­
ing AFL Transit Worker* Union.
A similar session yesterday with
Capital Transit's Boil'd of Direc­
tors produced no progress beyond
Lei Ho S. Brockway, 97, dim
what Commissioner Samuel Spen­
cer said were "on* or two ideas
ia a DoLand nursing homo BUa ,
NEW YORK W&gt;— Directors of we’re going (o pursue further."
morning aftor aa Illntss of two
months. Ha was born Nov. M, Grnersl Motors Corp. have an1157 In Hamburg, Conn, and has nuuneeJ plan* for a three-for-ons
lived In Sanford for 91 years. He stock Split, subject to stockhold­
resided at 3001 Hibiscus Court.
ers’ approval a t a special meet­
Ha to survived by one one dau­ ing Sept. 23.
The s u r p r i s e announcement
ghter, Mrs. James Houghton,
one sitter, Mlis Bertha L. Brock- came yesterday afternoon after
way. Rocky Hill, Conn: one grand­ the New York Stock Exchange had
TAMPA (it — James Ronald
son, Leslie B. Houghton, of San­ closed for the dav. Even without
ford; a nephew, Elton J. Hough­ new* of the split, GM stork had Mott got a 10-yrar sentence for a
ton Sr. of Sanfiwd; four nieces, risen 93.75 a share during the day, supermarket robbery yesterday
although a judge from another
Mrs. Ralph B. Chapman, Indian­ closing s t 9113.37.
On the West Coast, where new* court came lo his support with
apolis, Ind; Misa Charlotte Mou
ghton, Sanford; Mrs. Georgs of the split arrived ahnitly before a plea for mercy.
Circuit Judge Victor O. Wchlc
Cooper, Raleigh, N. C.; Mrs. exchanges rlosed, GM prirrs
Clyde C. Green, San Francisco, jumped to 9119.75 a share in San of St Petersburg said his investi­
Cal.; a great nephew, Elton J. Francisco and 9121 in l/oa An­ gation showed Mott, II. hat been
tormented throughout his boyhood
Houghton Jr. of Sanford; and a geles.
The corporation, Unreel manu­ because of hit buck teeth.
great niece, Mrs. Robert Gut, In­
"H r wanted to prove his man­
facturing firm In the wnild, gave
dianapolis, Ind.
Funoral services will be hrld no reason for the split, whirh hood when hr wrnt Into one of
■t 4 p. m. tomorrow it/the Uni­ would lurrraae the numt&gt;er of Ihe toughest branrhra of the serson Funeral Home with the Rev. shares outstanding from nearly 93 vire, the paratroopers, and I can’t
help but think thgl it was one of
J. B. Root and tho Rev. A. G. million to shout 279 million.
(he things that caused him to
Mclnnis officiating. Burial will
join tn three holdups," Judgs
be la Evergreen Cemetery,
Wrhle said.
Judgs Wahl* explained he ap­
peared to speak for Mott brrausa
he had a son about Ihe defend­
JACKSONVILLE tr-T h e year's ant's age and the case hag "gotten
polio cast total in Florida in­ under my skin."
creased by seven last weak to 149.
I d tbs similar period last year
were 365 rases.
“Because of extraordinary mer­ there
Ten new cases wrre reported
itorious service rendered to the lest week but three previously di­
Seminole County Unit, American, agnosed as polio were rhanged to
Caneec Society, during Cancrr other dlicascs, the Stale Board
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio tel —
Control Month, the following con­ of Health laid.
Whether or not Marins Walter
cerns, organisation! and Individu­
One of the new cases, nonpara­ Sheet a knows it, he'i (till mar­
als ware recipients of tht coveted lytic, was an ■ year old in St. ried.
citations: The Sanford Herald, Johns County who received two
Judge J. K Kinmann of Jackson
Radio Sution WTRR, Florida shot- In Ihrre Salk vaccine series. County yesterday vacated Ihs di­
State Bank, Rita Theater, San­
The other cases, by counties; vorce granted last week lo Sheets'
ford Naval Auxiliary Air Station, Dade 4; Duval 3; Hillsborough. wife Nancy Ann afler Ihe judge
Raymond Studio; Seminole Coun­ Pinellas and Folk 1 earh. The said he learned Sheets was going
ty Medlral Association,' Rrla Hillsborough rase was bulbar po­
Sigma Phi Sorority, Pilot Club, lio; thr ethrrs wrre nonparalylic to remarry her.
Sheris re enlisted in Ih* Marine
Buslnooa and Professional Women, or unspecified.
Corps at Cfnrlnnatl last week, lie
Seminole County Medical As­
told the recruiter he was eligible
sociation
Auxiliary,
Seminal#
JOURNALISTS PLAN VISIT
for a second hitch because his
County
Homo
Demonstration
BELGRADE Yugoslavia id') — divorce had left him with only
Club; Tho Yowell Store; l.t. 0.
M. Callio M. C.. U8N, NAAS, Radio Belgrade -aid tonight seven three dependents — his children,
Chaplain F. W. Kernpson, US, Yugoslav journalist* would leave ages 3, 2, and 6 months.
NAAS, committee chairman and July 13 for a two-week visit to Tlie Marines would not let him
join with four dependents.
n tew Individuals," stated Mrs. the Soviet Union.
Julius Dlngfeldor, President of the
County Unit.
She added
“these people,
through their unstinting efforts
NEW YORK UP—Mrs. Catherine
Aiming for the 932,000 last night,
and dedication, hav* assumed
E. Kreitxer has a week to decide she was given the name* of Mat­
their humane and civie respons­ whether lo take Ihe 932.000 she thew. Peter. James Ihs Greater
ibilities to tha very highest; they has already won on a television and Jamea the Leia and then was
have enabled ua to surpass our quto show or risk losing It to a asked lo complete the Uat of the
quota for 1955 and, therefore,
for 954,ooo.
12 Apostles.
helped immeasurably to combat tryThe
&gt;94-year-old grandmother
For a moment, H appeared she
maa’a erueleat enemy cancer, and foogi Camp HUl, Pa., survived the might loss out whan she skipped
helped ears lives."
Mit-to-lait hurdle to tha CBS TV John. She quickly ran through the
program The 954,000 Question list a second tima, however, and
when she gave correct answers named the missing disciple aa well
BABT IB SCALDED
DETROIT (/R — Two-montha- to a three-part tioto question last at Andrew, Philip, Bartholomew,
Thaddeui, Thoms*, Simon and
eld Rita Freeman waa aceldad tn
death yesterday whan her mother A devout Bible reader all her Judaa Iscariot.
tripped ever a cat while carrying Uto, Mrs, Krsitscr had chosen to Sha had no trouble with the re­
• hettlo steriliser aad spilled boil* hi quisled mi tho Bible when she maining two parts of Ihs ques­
big water en the child. The e v i­ started on the program two weeks tion: How did Matthew and Pater
dent eeourred in the suburban Oak ago. That night she reached tha make their living and who waa
Perk heeae e t Mr. la d Mrs. John IRON mark and Uat weak earns the father o( Jamea the Lets?
Sbo replied withowt hesitating
back to wk

WASHINGTON 'A-A difference
of opinion has developed among
U.S. officials as to whether Mos­
cow's current peace talk shows
that Russia genuinely wants lo end
ike cold war.
A majority of poliry makers
seems to believe such recent Rus­
sian gestures as (he unprecedented
apology for shooting down an
American plane mean Moscow al
least plans to offer concessions
aimed at easing East-West ten­
sion.
The Geneva summit conference
opening July 19, in the vlaw of
thesa officials, promises to lead
to a series of negotiations which
could slow dow-n the arms race
and make a start Inward solving
critical European and Far Eastern
problems.
An tvidenlly smaller group of
officials, however, describe this
view as dangerously optimistic.
They argue that no end to the
cold war ia in sight and that any
concession, Russia may make trill
be superficial.

Leslie Brockway
Dies In DeLand
After Long Illness

Citation Awards
For Cancer Drive
Step-Up Is Sought Announced Today
O f Pollution Probe

LAKELAND OT) — Both citrus
grower* and phosphate producers
want a atat* legislative committee
to hurry an Investigation ot air
pollution In this are*.
Citrus, paatura grass and cattle
have suffered damage which acianlifts aay may coma from gases
released ia producing auper-phoaphata.
The 1911 Legislator* appropriat­
ed fund* for a study of tha situstho Legislative Commitdelayed ia gettteg to
i of ‘
Hr. Elver was the uncle ef Mrs.
etoa of
G. W. L. Smith ef Sanford.

Asmodated F r a n Leased W i n

House Committee
Ready To Consider
Seizure Legislation

Directors Of GM
Reveal New Plans

Plea For Mercy
Asked By Judge

Folio Cases Lower
Than 1954 Period

Marine Is Married,
Like It O r Not

W ith Guns
Prison Guards
Reinforce Patrol

Being Worked Out

LONDON f/P)— Western propo-.iU for |to«*ih1* roiifidpration
the Genet* summit ronfrrenr*
WALLA WALLA. Wash. at
t t n r hiring win kiwi out in •r\ cr*l
(/P)—An uneasy quirt liruh- European rrntois today. They Inon occasionally l*v sc reaming eluded p!nn&gt; for aims entv, Ger­
taunt* of * hniulful of rrlirll- man m inif lent ion ami » European
iwr prisoner* settled over the security system.
Washington State PenitentiIlritl.«h, Frenrh sml American
experts sie vrheduled to meet in
arv early today.
.
Prison guard* reinforced Paris Eiidsy lo begin putting final
toy state patrol and county louche* on thr proposnt*. in preniid citv officers armed with pmntiim for their review nt n pre, i(|r« and suhmschineKUn* pnlrol-1 conference parley of the Western
|rd the walls and the *.r* *ur- fon-ign ministers July 15.
If approved by the Itig Thrro
rounding the prison. And » r a ­
tional Guard company «a* on gnxrinmrnt*, Ihe ideas will he pre.
standby orders for posdblo duty. Rented as a basis for rii*ru**ions
Rut inside the prison, most or at the Geneva talks, eihrdulrd to
(he more than 1.700 Inmates, ap­ begin July 18.
Diplomatic iiifoiipauts In Lon­
parently in obedience of a whileshirtrd convict-leader or *ome don said last night that thr Allies
S.1 persona directly involved In *n wrie near agreements on a limit­
angry revolt against prison dis­ ed disarmament plan. This was de­
ciplinary procedures and In rnntrol scribed as the first installment of
t f the Institution—remained in a possible parkage deal svilh th*
Soviet* whirh the West hope*
their cell*.
Talk* between prison ami slate rsrntiiallv will include a German
officials anJ spokesmen for the settlement and a continental se­
rebels, aimed al obtaining the re­ curity agreement.
lease of seven hostages tsken at
knif* point whan the trouble started at mldmoming yesterday.
broken off ahorlly before mid­
night.
.
Dr. Thomas Harris, newly ap­
pointed state director of institu­
tion*. aaid the talks probably
would resume today.
The hostages, Including Asso­
WASHINGTON i n - Hnuse Waye
ciate Warden Ted Betseridea. war#
believed in PO immediate danger. and Means Committee Democrats
reported ffVir-fltial agrrrmrnt today on a three-point plan In et*
pand social security payment*and to raise Ihe money lo pay for
them.
'ITti- House group arranged to
take up the program behind closed
WASHINGTON tex-Rvn. Holland doors, with a possibility (hr dav
said today he doe* not see "eye tn may bring action to aend the bill
eye" with the Miami-Dade County, lo Ihe House.
Committee Itemocral* eonferred
Kla.. rham brr of Commerce on
secretly on the plan yesterday.
pending sugar legulalinn,
In a resolution adopted in June, Some a«king not to he quoted hv
the chamber requested that the name, said the majority members
"Florida congressional delegation derided to vote fur:
1. lotwering from 65 to 63 Ihs
be urged to vigorously resist all
efforts in Congress by the domes­ age at which women ran become
tic sugar producers to reduce the rhgihl* for social security pay­
Cuban sugar quota at this lima." ments.
2. Allowing payments after ags
Holland in a letter lo A. Panel,
rhamber general manager, said 50, instead of U7, to disabled walk­
Die pending bill "will not redure ers covered by Ihe system.
3. Continuing benefit* for dis­
by one ounce Cuba's pit-sent quota
and will preserve for her the posi­ abled children past the age of ii.
tion she now enjoys In the Amer­ To pay fnr thr., the informants
ican market. The bill wiU only give said, a social security tux inerrasa
a brief pause lo her Increased of u 9 per cent was found to ba
share and retard Ihe rata of her necessary to keep the (octal i*rufuture increase.
rily tend from running in Ih* rtd.

Ways, Means Group
Near Final Treaty
On 3-Point Plan

Holland H itsTack
At Pending Sugar
Legislation Plan

Golden Gift Inc.
To Continue Action
HARTOW f/P) Golden Gift In*,
of Del.mid will coiitinua euurt ar.
tion seeking authorisation to add
sugar to its chilled orange Juice.
Athough the Florida Citrus
Commission eased up on Its chill.
«d juice standards last week a f­
ter Golden Gift had oldaim-ri a
tem|M&gt;iary injunction against th.-ir
enforcement, the commission stll)
ruled out addition of sugar to Ihe
product
Golden Gift maintains that rer.
tain season* some manges do pot
have a high enough augar content
for a satisfactory product. It has
been adding eane augar to towsolid fruit.
Chesterfield If. Smith, Bartow
law-yer repreaenting tho company,
and he will revise the rom’plainl
in vie wof the commission charges
Ind seek s new hearing.

W om an Faces $64,000 Question
that Paler waa a fisherman and
Matthew a taa collector and
Jamea' father was named Alphaeus.
Mrs. Kreilier'a husband James,
a carpenter, had stayed home with
an injured tog. "1 knew she would
win," he commented after the
show.
Asked M he thought his wife
could answer any question on the
Bible, he replied, "I suppose they
can slump her on something—she
Isn’t that smart."
N she decides to try an­
other question nest week, Mrs.
Kreltacr may bring along any
Bibto authority aha chooses to help
her anawar R.

Active Small Fry
Go On Aspirin Run;
LOS ANGELES tei — Small fry
with big headaches was the only
excuse Emergency Hospital at­
tendants could rite for a run ot
aspirin ruse* last night
Muutren and Anne Taylor. 13inomh-old twin* from China Laks
in Kern County, were placed un­
der observation after they swal­
low til an undetermined amount
of bubv-*i/e aspirin tablet*.
The twin*, who seemed lo b#
enjoying tin- fit's they'd rauseri,
wrre brought here by their pat^
ml* Mr. and Mr*. Kenneth if.
Taylor to visit their grandfather
Osrar Van.
Art li-tlry, Ium Angeles, hur­
ried in with hi* daughter Terry,
I. who, .he said, swallowed 24
baby-sire aspirin. Doctor* got
busy with a stomach pump right
away in Terry's rate.

Gyroscope Program
Readies For Action
SAN FRANCISCO (AT — ThW
Army’s Operation Gyroscope goes
into operation today when SBd
army dependents, wis-e* and chil­
dren of soldier* of the 608th Regi­
mental Combat Team board tha
transport Gen. A. K. Andaraoa
for Japan.
Tomorrow a second group of 351
women and children will board tha
Laiisport Gen. J. C. Urecklnridfw
for tho samo destination.
Tho movement of th* dependent*
is lha first of tho on mnasn move­
ment of Uto entire unit to roptoc*
aaothg* to foraicn

�rnmmm

M illio n s a e e la trh th e A a P s e a l a a u r a s i g n o f

’ TH E RANTOJin HERAT-D

P ier 2

(

Wrd, July fi, IMS

Florida Is Fourth
In United Stales
In New Companies

i

M y-flick Sumner

CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CAMERON rode home tn Double
Diamond. Hard nil own (upper nod
wrote a Utter to a friend in Dodge
City. The w ay thing* wrra ehsp*
TALLAHASSEE lgv-5erretary n( leg up, he'd coon be needing help
Stair Gray reported Tuesday that of a certain kind. Christie hadn't
Florida hart rlimbrd in'o fourth been wrong in siring him up as a
place among the an date* in the man who didn't acare easily, but
he didn't gamble for fun, and he
rate of inrrea.e In the number of hadn't
gone to all the trouhle of
tew corporation! chartered
aettlng up thia hand with any Idea
Hr »ald information from Ptinn o f not being alive to cash In.
fly the lim e he’d finished his
and Hiaditreet, financial reportmc
agency, «ho-as Florida ha* pa reed letter, It war dark. He saddled
Ohio amt ii outranked only bv New up and rode by a roundabout back
York. California and New Jersey. w ay to the ramshackle cabin at
the edge of the neatrr settlement.
&lt;iray said 4.MT domestic and
Lila w as w ranng the rose-pink
foreign corporation' w-err chartrrrd dress she'd worn to the dance—
bv hit office the firat .i\ month! the dress Rob Mallory's money
of this year. In a similar period had paid for. Cameron let the
li»t year, i.MS ftrma were rhsr- thought twitch his Itp3 in a spare
emlln before he turned to the old
tered.
•.The trend n indicative nf Flor- man.
"Sure thing, Wayne, Anything
fdajf rap d economic development .''
jxmj eay. You're all right—you're
the secretary uf n a tr raid. “ Anri m' frtrn*, Wayne— I won't never

Tj

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CD
rr.i
«n
th&lt;
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ni
bn
in
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thd rate of our growth apjeara to fergtt that—" '
be; picking up."
"You bet you won’t," Cameron
"jhe charier tax on new corpo­ raid drily, "t may want you to
ration* amounted to 1183.*77 the earn your liquor soon."
"Suren" Hung you know. Wayne.
first half of thi! year, an increa'p
of t il ATI or .W per cent ater the Ain’t I always done ever-thlng you
tot* me 7 Jea’ you name It—you're
firat half of last yrar.
m' frirn'—"
And the capital Hock tax
Watching him shamble out the
amounted to UM.72* the firat a:x door, Cameron creased his thin lip
month* of thi» yrar, a sain of and asked, "You sure you can

ha
*r
di

It.
Irr
(.'
ai

rn

Ftsurei tompile&lt;l hy the leetctary of itate showed a Heady etui
in new corporation! chartered from
3.273 tn 1348 to 3,703 in ISM G ray,
laid the total thia year should pais

nf
fi.
»

&lt;t&lt;

6 .000 .

In

f&lt;
re

Spy Ring Herded
By Turkish Police

M

K

ISTANBUL, Turkey UP -T u rIu»h police wrre reported roundJnc up a Bulgarian spy ring to­
day after a rrrit of a vice consul
from the neighboring Soviet sale-

th

llife.

n&gt;

1'tanbul Police Chief Alaeddin
I m h announced yeiterday the
Biflgsr official, Georgl Barkanoff
Tcfi&lt; lakrff, had been picked up on
an Istanbul bridge at a midnight
rrndeivoua with a Bulgarian of
Turkish origin. Ali Demirnff.
pemiroff alio .wit arretted. A
third man whose identity wax not
revealed wai reported in cuitody
and more a rre ili were predieted.
The pollee chief laid trired do­
cument! proved the cxutenrr of
• Communist apy ring in Turkey.

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LOUT NEIGHBOR
HOUSTON, Tax. bT) - Classllied ad In th* TVelllnrion Leader:
J-o*ti lawn mower. Someone bor­
rowed It last yaar. Pleas* m u m
to C, AV. Red/ord."

Legal Notice
h o u r s : ns- x r r i.ic x T iu x r o s
T !X IIKKD
xoTtcr.
ts h e r e b y o t v r v .

T h tl J R. Clrmt ih&gt; holder ef th*
felln em g r*rilllrate hta filed attd
rerllflraia for tax d*»d tn h* tt
au*d Ihtrsnn. Th* rartlfltats sum
b*r and star n( lituanr*. tha d*tcrtptloe r l th* p t-p trt), and th*
n»m» In whlrh U s a t at**a**d
• I* at Inline tt
far IIf 1. 1 1 a Xe J»&lt; Y*ar cf It.
*&lt;ianra lur* t&gt;. A I'. 11't
lll.M ft IITII'V OS* m o F E M T li
r *10 ft nf 1,nt U k nf Chulueta
Itoad (Lots Sttl* ltdi
r r J,». a Ftr.t add tlea Ta
0»i*ih&gt; fla t llnnk 1 |'* a* &gt;1}
X*ma In which att*ti*d b D
lien ltl
All ef tald pr«|,*rty b*laa tn
th* t'mtalr ef Bainlnnla, dial* nf
Fieriaa
Ualata *ucti r*rttficat«
on ill ha r»d**mrd arrnrdlns in
lav tha vreptrty d*trtth«d In aurh
t t i l l l l i i l t v lll ha a«M tn |h t htsh# tl hide rr at lha front dt-er nt |h*
h*min.*l* t'e m tp- Cauet limit* at
fitnfmd. Fin,Ida. an th* flt*t il-n .
da v In th* mepih rt Aututt. I PI!,
whkh Ic tba 1st day of A uiutu
l ( Da»*d this J its day er Just.
O P )i*rndna
t'lsrh r it i.i t rnuri. Cataln»l* rnuntr. S'leridn
to m , lai &lt;T«rk a Htalt

.VOTIt S. n r ArrUCATlOX rim
t a x itp .ro
MlIICL l» HEREBY OIVEN.

That J It Oraat tha hnldsr of tha
fntlnwiat r*rttftrata haa fllad aald
rariKIrata far ta t dt*d tn So laaaad |inr*nn Tha rarltfleata tom Mr and )*ar rf itattaarr. the d»t.
criMlee of thn prnprilg. and lha
aaraa la whlrh it waa aaaeaaad
ar* a a rails* i
Cartllicata \ a :&lt;v( Taar ef laan*"'* Juaa J». l p ||
&gt; PIRIPTIOA OF m aFK IITTi

e:

!• IS In It 11 a si srriaa
'i * f r r m . r k H a t B o o k t P a s * * 1
wkkb aaasaaed Rank
e f MulMrrr.
All of aald preptrtr htlag In tfca
Cauatv nf StmiaoU atata of Flo.
etda Lnlaas such carulieata tfeall
ba rtSaaatad arreN l'.a in Up* th*
preswn* dpsert *4 la aurh .aetfft.
c»1* will t,a a-td to tha htfhoat
hlddtr at tha ftpat dour p * th*
(.•tnirtpl* roan tv Court lUua* at
futnford. S t-rida. »n th* Ural
Monday la the month of A-sutt.
ISti. w^Uh la Uo tit day ef lu * .
V mV V /.;* Ju,&lt;- ,H l
tlerh Ctrrull Court. Semi. ,*•*# Ceuatp. Florida
tOffblal fieri, a Mall
B O T It-H O F AFFLICATSOB
TAX l i U D

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ll

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FOB

_ NOTI__
~ C£ i a
T * sl Itoia
■!• follow
Micro la*
*M
la« carUClaaia
c;m tlaat« M l tl
t)l*4
*al4 i tr; ific»t* far tax 4«*4 la
iMuae
lfe*t aaa. Th» roilltwata
auatWr aa4 sta r i f itamara.
'
tha
Haactliiilaa of th*
C w tn d ta * ? *

l i t T .»r • (

Mik
tMM«u U A ll ‘ Ikirwt
----- i*rU U |T»I H-*
-

sober him up when I need him?"
"Sure 1 can. Ain't 1 aJwayaT
Jure you leave Pap to me. Never
mind him." She moved before him,
spreading out her arms tn a tittle
peacocking gesture. "Ain't we got
nothin' belter to think about t"
Ha took her tn hia arms and
gave her the long kiss she ex ­
pected Her tips .lu n g hotly to
his; her body quivered to hia
touch. He reflected, with a brief,
painless regret, that It w as too
had In a way he w as nearly
through with l-ita.
"Honey," aha murmured, "you
ain't been near mo In so long."
"You know 1 can't bo seen
cornin' here, U might make talk."
"You scared that stuck-up Chris­
tie To!and might hear It?"
He allowed Impatience to edge
his voice. "Wc*ve been through
thia before. Lila. You know 1 got
to be a cattleman playin' along
all the way with cattlemen, till the
pay-off," He softened hta tone.
"You want me to be rich and buy
you silk dresses ah' ear-rings,
donU you?"

Aviation Trophies
Won By Test Pilot,
Naval Commander
NEW YOBK if—The IMS llsrmen Austinn Trophies have boon
won by a Navy blimp commander
and the leit pilol for the Naty's
vertical takeoff plane.
Named Monday for "outitanding international achievement! tn
aeronautics" were ie*t pilot J F.
iSkeel!) Coleman and Navy Cipt.
Marion II F.ppev
Coiemsn, a Marine Beirrve
lieutenant colonel, was cited for
making more thin r&lt;h straight-up
takeoffs in the Navy's XFYl
•Togo" turboprop fighter built by
Con*air. He ws* al&lt;o citrJ for
ultimately miking *'hlstory'$ first
traRiilional flight from vertical
takeoff to level Tight and hack
down to a vertical tail-sitting land­
ing ’*
When ready for a takeoff the
XFYl standi on small wheels at­
tached U» its tail with its propeller
pointed skyward Coleman made
lH&gt; harking down landing at Brnwn
Field Navat Auxiliary Air Station
near San Diego. Calif., last Nov. 2.
In hia prue-winmng blimp (light
Eppe* kept a Goodyear Navy airahip ZPGG1 aloft for more thin
eight days and cniiird more than
J.000 miles in a simulated anti­
submarine patrol in May 1»4
This set a new world record for
self-sustained, nonrefueling flight
by any type nf aircraft
Th* awards were established In
1*» in honor of the lata Clifford
®. Harmon, a pioneer flier for
whom Harmon. N.Y., Is named.

c.». -,«• i«*&lt; w

NuikaM « ki*«

a,n rn

IftMH

Tim tossed In the feverish pain of
his wound, and in the other, Mrs.
Larrabra' her frail body propped
high on pUlowa. struggled for
breath. Joe lay bestda nar suffer*
ing with her at each rasping, pain*
fut intake. Her hand lay In his,
such a slight shell of skin over hrr
bonrs that tho worn wedding ring
hung loose on her finger, and Joe
found himself thinking of the
handsome, laughing, black-haired
giri she'd been when he slipped
it on tw enty-five /r a r e ago. She
hadn't wanted to leave the old
country, h* knew, but ahe'd come
with him and never complained.
She d been a good wife tn him, his
Molly, a good mother, and now aha
lay gasping her lite out In n shack
on the prnulr, far Irom the green
hilts she loved and the soft speech
of her own '-Ind. H ad promised
her a fine house and a carriage
and the piano she'd alw ays wanted,
when they'd crossed tho ocean to
this new land where there was a
chance for a man to raise him self
in the world—and he couldn’t even
give hrr pear* to dia in!
"Joe," her thready voice, to
which the Brogue clung far more
tenaciously than to his, was like
an echo c f his own self-accusing
thought*. "Joe, I'm thinking long,"
"What Is tt. alan.nah?"
"Jo*. Tv# never act myself
against you, hav* I?"
"God knows you haven't."
*Tve never asked you to turn
ljack on what you were set on —
not even when you took me away
from my home and my kin?"
-Molly, darlin', what ar* you
talking like this for?"
"Because I'm askin' you now,
Joe. I'm askin' you nqt to go on
with this fight with Mallory." She
felt th* struggle In him, and
added, "I'm djin'. Joo—"
"Whlaht, woman!"
"1-el's not be lyin' to each other
aftrr all Lhesa years together. I'm
dyin', an' I know tt—I don't want
to spend my last days on earth
wonderin’ every blessed mlnut*
you're cut* my sight If you'll b*
carried home stiff an' bloody—or
Tim. 1 wouldn't be askin' you not
to fight If he'd come against you
to take your land aw ay, but pram*
iso you'll not go against him so
long as he'U lesve you be. It's all
I'll ever be askin' you now," aha
pleaded. "Promise me, Joe!"
• ■ •
And In torment h* yielded. *1
There w ss little sleep In the promise you, Molly."
Larra bee cabin where In ona room
I To Do Continued).

"Sure."
“ Then you krrp on helpin' me
like you been doin', an' don t get
fidgety." He gave her a playful
shake, kissed her again and
stepped back from hrr. "Got any
news for me?'*
"No.
Nobody'* been around
since Tim got hurt."
"You better go #e# him tomor­
row. Don't want him to think
you're not worried about him."
"Awright. but I'm grtlin' awful
Ured of him. the big clum sy clod­
hopper." She poutrd. "Wish Kerry
R lordan'd come bark. He was fun
sometimes.”
"Just as well he's gone, then,"
he smiled, swallowing a dry*
chuckle at tho clumsy maneuver
to rouse his jealousy. He guessed
Lit* must really like him in her
w ay—she was so much less shrewd
with him than with other men.
Well, when this play had come off,
K erry Ulordsn w as welcome to her,
but till thrn he'd havo to keep her
happy. He squeezed her shoulder,
and she dimpled at him, her petu­
lance forgotten,
"Anything you want I should
tell Tm»7"
"Just stir him up a little If he
needs It. I don't ..c k o n ho will."
"Shall 1 say Rob Mallory's lwrn
here again? Shall 1 say ho was
brsggin' bout what he was gotn*
t* do to Tun for gunnln* that bigmouth' Art Graves?"
"Use your judgement. N o need
tn spread tt on too thick. He'll be
w o r r ie d
enough."
Cameron
scowled. "I can't figure why Mal­
lory didn't finish him off. Hut it's
just as writ, If he had, the others
might've go* cold feel. Thia way,
they'll stew In their own juice,
worryln’ about what he's goin' to
do, till worry crowds '.hem into a
play. Once they're started, they'll
have to go on till they've smashed
Mallory."
"Or he's smashed them," Lila
objected shrewdly, "lie roust be
purty tough."
"He's not bullet-proof. Once he's
eutta the way, Broken Spur’ll fall
apart—an' 1 move in to pick up
the pieces."
"What 'bout o f man I-arrabee
an' the rest o' the nest era that are
Oggrrin' on movin' n l"
"When the lion's dead," Camer­
on said drily, *'! reckon I can take
care o' the coyote*."

Eccentric Millionaire Couldn't
Bear To Throw Anything Away

PERFECT STRIKE CHUM
ARMO UR'S Star Corned

It

. NBaamad - acoaeatag sa law tM

39c

5-lb.
Box

45c

24-os.
Glass

29c

1-lb.
Can

29c

1-lb.
Cans

27c

1-lb.
Cans

23c

4 0 - ol.
Pkg.

43c

20-ot.
Cans

49c

12-oz.

37c

PRUNES
ANN PAGE

CRAPE JELLY
WHITE HOUSE Non-fot Dry

MILK SOLIDS
IONA large Tender Green

SWEET PEAS 2
MARII lOOttS, 19. or Maywood,
N .J, Is shown after she won tho
title of Miss New Jersey at Faliiades Park, N.J. She will rep­
resent the garden r'ate at tha
Mis* Universe competition in
Is&gt;ne Beach, Calif. At left is
Adrienne Brennan, 31, Union
City, N .J , who came in second
In th* contest. (International)

IONA Cream Style

GOLDEN CORN 2
GOLD MEDAL

BISQUICK
A&amp;P Fancy CHUNKS of Hawaiian

Writer Guareschi
Is Out Of Prison
After 13 Months
TARMA, Italy OR — The creator
of Don Camillo, writer Giovanni
Gusrrescht, Is out of jail after
serving 13 months and 10 days
for things he wrote about the late
Premier Alcide de Gasperi and
former President Luigi EinaudJ.
The author, whore stories of the
Csiholir priest and Communist
mayor have become best sellers
in Europe and America, was given
conditional freedom yesterday. Almo&lt;t seven months of hit 20mon’h sentence were remitted
for good behavior, but he must
report daily to the police until
the full term is up.
He had been, sentenced to .12
months for attributing to 31#
Gasperi a lettrr in his satiric
weekly Candida in which the Pre­
mier purportedly suggested ta the
wartime Allied command that it
bomb Rome. Dc Gasperi denied
liie letter.
Conviction on that count brought
into effect a previous suspended
sentence of eight months given
the writer for article* vilifying
EinaudJ

Wealthy Widow Is
Johannesburg Gets
Found Strangled
Control O f Station

Doors Kicked In
To Save Occupants
JOUET, 111. MY — Two police­
men kicked in th« doom e f 11 apartmenu early today to save S3
parsons from flame* which virtual­
ly destroyed five hualntts build­
ings in the Joliet business area.
The warnings by policemen An
then/ Jane* and Garden Tetro
credited by fellow policemen
enabling all occupants of am­
end and third-floor apartments to
escape unharmed. Several ef them
were ehildreu.
Tbe'flamea wiped out two liquor
stares, two furniture ateres and a
tawdry. Owners f ilm*tod tha
will axcoad 13004100.

X

PINEAPPLE
PY-O-MY Bluaberry

MUFFIN' MIX

SW A N SD O W N , Devils Food i
W hit* or Yellow

HDGBOGRAPH PRINTING — TYPING
CRKDIT INVESTIGATIONS KAOS
ANYWHERE IN UNITED STATE8 OR
FOREIGN COUNTRIES

CREDIT BUREAU OF SANFOBD

Pkg.

5UNNYFIEID Fancy long Groin

CAKE

RICE

lb.

3

Pkg.

43c

LIBBY'S POTTED

2 5&amp; 2 3 c
3 79c MEAT
/UrP^A "Supep-Ktykt iHeatS
. j- v 4 u p ,f .« lf lh f H .av r W«*w&gt; Bo m I . i i beef — - 3U P.H R .R 1G IIT " .llilk-K ctl S h o u ld e r

D A lik in
H

w

H

"V e h l Chops'

I l l r

Rath

STEAK

LB.

,.

39c “!;

f
C la c kU r*...I
Hawk

ii

Dried Beef

U lb,

1

Pork Sausage

* 79c

£

"SUMI-IIOMT" UUUu. Cm 4M

I1

33f |;j

’ir 39*

Smoked Sausage
Alt GOOD S-tsr ( m i Vita*

•

Breakfast Bacon

'SUPER-RIGHT" Milk-Fed VEAL

|

z y c

"iUfte ilOHr Cavolrr SiyU fr».X

47c :

Fla. Crarie A P&amp;I)

Cutlets
's- 8 5 c
!' Rib Chops *■59c Hamburger
"S U fE I-IIG H T * « , , E ^ V E A l ------------ ^

L B '

4 5 C 1'

3

" $1-00

)U»i 5 Uv Myb W »k&gt; A lP i

FRUITS &amp; VEGETABLES

Fancy large Green

v

CUCUMBERS 2FOB9c
WATERMELON 59c
SQUASH lB10c BEANS
Largs Red Rip* Juicy

_

Fre»h Yellow

m

_

i i

neA

AtMOCII S ITS*

Deviled Ham
It

,

AIMOUI * STs|

V « Beef Stew
AtMOUt t STM
/^ a e n r -a iv w F

S P A N I S H BA R

CAKE

29c

JANE PARSES

JolyTef Ban 2 5 c
i

JAMS PARSE* Peach

Strwssd Pit

49c

_ir;4iV2 flv, izia {.’u s
fe v

Can

SALMON

H A SH

Tremendous Bang
Mystifies British

OTTAWA OnL H»—Construction
af two radar w iraiai tinea across
Cantda Is "really rolling." officials
ssy. But it probably will take two
years more to complete them.
Each nf the warning rystems will
be nearly 3,000 miles long. Th*
DEW (distant early warning) lint
runs roughly along Canada's artic
roast. It is costing 330 millions
of U.S. money. The mid-Canada
line, along the Uth Parallel, u
costing 1TQ milUoai of Canadian
funds. Tha U-* and Canadian govera menu arc cooperating ta the
projects.

1-lb.

SULTANA Medium Size

WEST TOINT. SI in . &lt;M — The | "He juat had another room buUt
auctioneer's chant rose Tue»d*y to put it in."
About 300 persons turned up
over the belongings of an ecrvntric
millionaire who cmmldn't bear to to look over items to be sold. More
throw anything away.
thin 1,000 were expected for the
1! was estimated that valuable start of thr sale.
Items included a 1923 Cadillac,
items culled from the vast accu­
mulation of persona! effect* and silver, china, crystal, paintings,
household goods arc worth about i lamps and thousand* of miscellanrout things collected over the
1100.000
years.
Solon Clifton Rose, a recluse for
The lonely millionaire ran his
years, died of a stroke last Feb.
extensive investment business with
21. He was 62
postcards with his handy man run
Dump truck* ami wagons hauled mng the mall. He left about Dv
away tons of yellowing papers, let­ million dollars in cash and bond*
ters and photographs stored in and no will.
eight buildings on the Rose homeThe heir* are Sirs. Rose Wood­
place.
ward and Mrs. Elirabeth Owings,
"Mr. Clifton never threw noth- both of Pulaski, Tenn.; Meredith
-nc away." said his handyman. Flautt of Nashville, Tenn.; J. H. TREMENDOUS
PAGE 1 23 3
LONDON UR—A tremendous dou­
Flautt S r, of hlrntone Ala.; and
Stacy Rosa of Detroit.
ble bang shook up a big stretch of
southern England early today.
And a t big as the bang itself
was the mystery of what caused it.
London newspapers favored two
PHILADELPHIA UR — A-weal­
theories:
thy 6S-&gt;ear-old widow wai found
1. A meteorite rxploded on con­
LONDON l-Pi — Britain is turn­
bound, gagged and draggle yesterdav in her apartment at a Cen­ ing over control of tha big Royal tact with the earth's atmosphere.
2. Som* exuberant U.S. jet pilot
ter City hotel. Police said they Navy base at Slmonstewn, South
had no Immcdlati rlurs tn tha Africa, tn tha Johannesburg gov* topped off Independence Day cele­
eminent. But she retains the right brations by crashing the sound
slayer.
Although there was superficial in u*« it for herself and her a!* barrier.
The bang, which came 14 min­
evidence of ransacking in the lies in wartime, even if South
ute* after midnight rattled win­
apartm m t of Mrs Lnlubel Boss- Africa remains neutral.
Prime Minister Eden announced dows from London's northern
man. almost 14.000 in cash, a
quanity of jewelry and other valu. th* agreement tn the House af suburbs to Maidstone 40 miles to
Commons yeitrrday. He said Brit­ th* south.
able* were untouched.
Thousands rushed out into the
Mrs. Rostman, widow of Palen ain also would he permitted to
P. Botimaa, former senior part­ share the base's facilities In peace­ street* in nightclothes asking
"what was it?"
ner in a firm of certified public time.
It serves as a halfway stop far
Scotland Yard and newspaper of­
accountants, had returned recent­
ly from a trip to Miami Police warships and troop carriers sail­ fices got hundreds of inquiries.
Six hours after th* bang, Scot­
said she was t i n seen alive Sat­ ing between Europe and A*ia via
the Cape of Good Hope and is of land Yard said:
urday by « bellhop
prime importance if the Mediter­
"It's atili a myatcry."
ranean is dosed.

Work Is Rolling
For Radar Lines

1

BLUBBI RRY

5 45c

17e

'£ 35c

Com ad Boof

’iT 45c

Potted M eat

3 ’ST 23c

SHorttning

3 Cm 79C

siMOui i n e t
iw im jrwii

sw im

Jtwol O l

m

Com Mod

* iM 8 c

Tuna R d i

'cT 35c

IX1K HIT Wkite
r a t xtn

O i l d M o e TW t I A ,

29c

'Tuna
lima Fish'

a 33c

reread

tr4 9 c

�1

Xf
rm

!

.1

TTTE N A X FO nn R l f t A t O
UC.AHR

Wed. Julr «, 1955

Tac* 8

IK K

i rocs r a has eiEN

YVORSiED 5 C K ABOUT
F E t f f lq v vnhos ,
&gt; IN THE HOSPITAL A,
■ WAITIN’ TH ARRIVAL ) V —
LF TH STORK... i ' l l /

fl

.ra a_-,a\3
r.E ?=?

INSPIRED i
THAT BELT \
LFOrHC-rJ )

» P.TCh ER

PUTS TH1 1

TO CHECK
IF HIS

• S L JS

TO LCOt
ARCJND

I

OUT IN
FRONT,

t l LOIRS
ARC READY
AMD IN
PROPER

•* //

POSITION
eCFCRT

Ml O ') D I R
IW H A PPY B E C A U S E I M
NOT A C R ED IT O R C F

Q UALITY
EATS

'*

u.s.

noon

FRYERS

hound

■**. T*

STEAK

DtTLK ■AII.ET^ 1 * HAO^ O F ^ .
f H om riV **

CASUALTIES V NOPE.
FROM THE I ftO ftl
HIKE, EH? / . THROAT*!

’c

Lb.

WHOLE
FLORIDA
tilt a in :
A
DRESSED
A

1HIAWN
LYRE'S PALM RIVER

i;

BACON

i

Lb.
COME IN

FRESHLY GROUND

HAMBURGER

FREE

A S FIASM IS I 0 WEKEO TO THE GROUHP

dc peoAe of Trwrtmi awakzm]

am a x '

AS ROM A LONG SlltP NO
NODI M*»UHT AWI-.

No Purchase;* RiNgnin-tl

S E W I N G M A C H IN E
VACUUM CLEANER

LBS.

THOSE BEU.5REA1.lv
OHH, THANK T J
SHOOK HUM UP... BUT | HCAVt« 5 1THANK
yrtuni^l
THIS BOTS BUU.T UKE

nUCEfldUS CRASHof SOUMQ

TODAY

MONARCH

n ,A « a s o R D o i-

As mws towrouwus m a

AND REGISTER

DRAWING SAT. JULY !)—.1:00 P.M.

i t 's s n u

TICKING/

MAXWELL HOUSE

SU G A R FLUFFO COFFEE
SHORTEN ING

TUB u m

BAMOKU-

LBS.
M J r s m /a v r /H r c a r a

LB.
CAN

HUNCH \O U tl. HAVFMQPE
T K O U O tS JP Y O U P C W -r

"

LB.
CAN

eci.L t

Limit 5 lbs. w ith $5 or more Order

Lim it 1 with $5 or more Order

PURINA CAUEI)

CLOROX

EGGS

MICKF.T BODPB

, MlWTgK... 1LU JUST PWACTCI

QUART

DOZ

WAIT T iu -U U ^ O N A W PtADUV
i s m is rro
SOW\a CLOTUISTV

GRADE A
FLORIDA
SMALL

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BEER’3.33

FLORIDA GOLD

FULL CASE 21 CANS

FROZEN
U. 8. NO. 1

Florida's Not Bad;
U. S. Sweltering

HERE'S A B A R G A IN Y O U
C A N 'T A FFO R D TO M ISS!

ly m
ASSOCIATED PRESS
July’i hot end sticky weather
dons to wide area* of tha country
today with no Immediate relief In
aiyht.
Shower* and icattercd thunderahowera during the night brought
^mporary cooling in aome tec
tiona in the central part of the
country However, the heat wave
extended (torn aouthera California
northcaitward through no,-them
Wyoming Into northern South Da
knte and eaitward aeroia Wiicon•in and Michigan into aouthere

TRIPLE PLATE ON COPPER

LBS.

( Limit 9 Cans Please)

'C

C.- ‘
l l
'

ltslae.

&lt;

} ■K

j&amp; z M i

BEECH NUT
STRAINED

-

Early morning temperature*
were In the 70* from South Dakota
t&gt; l! i naebuiitti and aouthward
•
the Gulf atatei and Tesat. Read
Inga were la the Mi and above
IM in the hot belt yeaterday.

BABY
FOOD

REAL ADOPTION
BURLINGTON, N. C. M9 When Bill Albright brought home
a baby squirrel which had tarn*
bled from Ita neat in a tree, the
new pet attned the motherly la.
atinet Ip 'Brownie, the family fox
terrier. The dog not only adopted
* A e aqulrrel at her own but even
changed her diet for her new child
developing a taeto for the shelled
e o n fed the aquimL

C O F F E E S E R V E R . . . 9.00
T E A S E R V E R .............. 9.00
TRAY
.................... ' 6.00
CREAM &amp; SUGAR
. .. 9.00

U T C R IA U R UBRART

Tax Incd.

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. Clt-Byeraoa Public Library hat adapted
»im J m bega end peah ra
Donald W. Eohlstedt, library
netar. eayi. Stay heap petr
Area cluttering cabinets, deaki
Wad caeatcra with hooka aa they

POTATOES

CANS
FOR

TOTAL
RIm wffl he Maiytandl* rape*.
Mststtve In Me Ulae Univerae
aoeapetitlen la Lean Rea eh,
CaUf, whkh te net Batted *e
r
Nickel plating w n firet develop.

NORTHERN
TOILET

P n i.
*°K

Z # C
O

ROLLS

T IS S U E | 7 (

PLANTERS
SALTED

1\/ a

OT

37 &lt;

peanuis

MODESS
12's

39

TIDE
LARGE
SIZE
SUNSHINE
HONEY

|c J0Y
SIZE

^ l l i.

2

GRAHAMS J, c

30c

EAT
WARD’S

T IP-TOP
BREAD

$33.00

• CAN BE BOUGHT SEPARATELY

F R A N K N O ELL, Jeweler
111 W. l g t S L

P A R K AYE. A T 25th ST.

Phong 1294

u

�Legislative Trickery
President Eisenhower ha* spoken out
against the practice of confuting issues
about Im portant legislation by attaching
"ridera" to Im portant bills. A rider is often
a m easure which could not be enacted If It
stood alone but which Is attached to an Im­
portant hill generally favored In the hope
th a t It will slide Into law on the momentum
of the latter.
Several necessary hills are now lied up
In Congress because riders pertaining to se­
gregation have been attached to them. As
m ight he expected, southern members of
Congress oppose these bill! and they are in
danger of not being passed a t this session.
At issue here is not the question of se­
gregation. W hat Is Im portant I* the question
of whether legislation on segregation should
not he considered and debated on Its own
m erits.
The use of riders enables a m inority fac­
tion to defeat a bill simply by attaching to
it a rider which la unacceptable. Quite often
the rider Is only remotely concerned with
the legislation to whlrh it Is joined.
Enacting laws, or blocking them , by the

The Sanford Herald

Tbn fact tbnt Quakers rlo not believe in
fighting cit-ca nut mean they are lacking in
rournge. The Quakers of Plymouth Meeting,
Pa., for eight years stoml up for their libra­
rian, Mrs. Mnry Knowles, whose discharge
waa demanded by such Influential organi­
sation* as the American Legion and tha
D aughters of the American Revolution.
These in perfect sincerity attacked the lib­
rarian on the ground th a t eight years ago aha
had workeil at a school now on the AttorneyGen«ral’s subversive list. The Plymouth
Meeting Onnkers believed in Mrs. Knowles,
and refu«ed to yield to the clamor.
Now the Ford Foundation has recognised
the bravery r.f those Quakers, and has award­
ed their group «5,000 to make up for contri­
butions stopiHHl under local pressure. The
Foundation does not reflect on the sincerity
of the objec tors, b ut commends the Quakers'
courago for not yielding to opponents so
form idable when a moral issue seemed a t
stake.

s r s s c a im o n
M r

a*'

ratks

« r*th
n a a a ra a ts
S ir W n a lk a
O ar

i.i.as

■»•»»

tt.aa
Vear

e ti ••

A l l a h l l a a r r a a t lr a r . e a r ia a f ik a n k t , r a a a ls t la a a a a l
a o d r * «.f a a t m a l a r a r a l f a r I V * s a r s * a s a t r a l a l a a
V a a s a w ilt S r r k e r n e l t a r a t r r a a l a r a S t m l a l a c r a t r a

T h r R a t a l s la a a c k e r a f &lt;ha A a a a r l a l r S P r r a a
s r h l r k la n l l l l r l a a r t a a l r a t f l a I k e a r e f a r r s s a k l t r a V ia a a a a i l I k a l a v a I B a r r a a r i a l e t l a I k l S a a r r a a a a a r .

Wednesday, July 6, 1955

TODAY'S

BIBLE

VERSE

Como unto me ill ye th a t labor and are
heavy laden, and I will g&lt;va you rest,— Matt.
1 1 :28.— Wo are aometimea w eary of atruggllng against aln and troubles. If we commit
our way t to the Lord he will see us through
th e deep w aters.

A b lig e r vote in tha next presidential
election i« the aim nf the American Heritnge
Foundatlnn, headed by Henry Ford II. This
orynnirntion worked hard in 1962 to increase
the shamefully low total of vnlera. and help­
ed to bring the figure up to &lt;52,000,000, the
highest, on record.
U nfortunately even this number is not
particularly creditable to a self-governing
nation. Though vve cast 62|000,000 ballots in
1052. the number eligible to vote was 9fl,377,000. That is only about R2 per cent of
tha number v.ho m ight have voted, and
didn’t. Our voting habits comparn unfavor­
ably with those nf the European countries,
where 85 to 95 per cent of the voters turn
out to pick th eir national officials.
Excuses m ight be made for our failure,
none of them creditable. The nonpartisan
effort of the American H eritage Foundation,
In which both capital and labor join, doaervea nnanlnioua support.

HAL BOYLE

big imstrur portrayer of Untie
Bam.
"Same who do K for mens? may
a u
a « i k U i a i i f * s t n ll A w m "
have a more
expensive uniform"
he said, "but thsy don't rosily
look like Undo Sam. Why, somo
don't even know how to raise their
iwn goalea."
There is no doubt that Davis,
who has white hair, kaen blue
ayes, and a less leathery facs
lined .with kindly wrinkles, looks
like dear old Uaela .Semusl. Ho
looks so exactly like the famous
ar-spangled gentlaman in tho reuiting posters that draft - age
'youths Jump nervously when they
•ee him in kia uniform. Thsy
i wonder if he’e going to point a
flngtr at them,stonily, and say."I
want you,"
•
. "ft all began in UM when I
alckod my cua white shaving with
my old straight edge retor," Davis
m ille d . "Until the cut healed I
•couldn't shevo it, m I grow a
gosloe."
, An official planning a tobacco
testival parade In his home town
noticed the goatee end said, “why
'you took exactly like Uncle Bamr
Mow about bated Uaela Bam la
;&lt;ho parade." . .
*

S

a dollar out of being Uncle Sim.
If there were a reel Uncle Sam,
he eoukl hardly re»ent being poF
trayed by this sturdy old Tarheel.
Davis has thres daughters, six
grandchildren. His wife h n been
e semi - invalid 14 years. He wenl
broke as a farmer before going
into government s e r v i c e , now
wnrks his own small farm again
"I’d bt pretty worried tf I
didn't have that," he said. "It's
Just somsthtng to koep mo busy.
I wasn't going to 1st soy one keep
mo on ths shelf. I didn’t want to
quit work and ! didn't Intend to
"My wife is tho samo way, *von
though aha has arthritis so bad
ths esn’t dose her hinds.
"She's made quite a imputation
for harsoli as s painter. One of
her pictures is in the Raleigh Art
Gallery. It’e ■ rural painting in
spring celled 'Kissed by the Gods.'
end evenrthingi in blocm.
"Sometimes when she cen't hold
• paint brush in her hand she puts

JAMES MARLOW

Quick Glance A t Top Fisherman

sia

FOUR
MBIVUte
wutv

Stand Of The Quakers

Where We Don't Shine
• r C a r r ie r
T fc rrr V r a l k i

GREAT EXPECTATIONS'

use of riders Is a way of fru stra tin g the will
of the m ajority and In principle this is In­
tolerable in a democracy. Political strategy
and parliam entary tactics in pressing for a
desired end are understandable, but legis­
lation by trickery is not.

i i -

■how log the President kites deep
la ■ itroam ever quits satisfy
fiihtrmea.
He's shewn witching Uts water,
heldiag • fly rod aloft, and the
eapUen soya he juit hooked a trout
or missed one.
Flsherpiea want te knew mors
than that.
Eighteen million of them this
ysar will buy fresh water licenses
and they spend a lot of money on
rods, reels, lutes and lures.
Thsy’re M sa endless search for
the right combinetiofl of tackle
that will be as deadly in its sway
as Davy Crockett's rifle.
Of all fishermen In the United
Stales the President is In the heat
spot to have the best: hr not only
can afford it but be gets ■ lot
free.
So, since he has practically the

_

S A M DAW SON

Prosperity, Inflation Resemble
NEW YORK yr—Pro»perlty end
inflation look much silks at the
start. Prosperity is an accepted
and welcomed guest this month.
But many fancy they see inflation
hiding behind prosperity’s skirts
tagging along with prosperity's
frirnds rising labor costs and
booming demand.
Wages have been rising rapidly
this year—as has just been dra­
matically pointed up by the settle­
ments In the auto and steel in­
dustries.
Tha question is: How much of
this Is the reshuffling of tho shares
In prosperity between employe and
employer—and how much of it will
Just mean higher prices for every*
one?
Many businessmen doubtless—
and many stock traders obvious­
ly—have bet an a rise In steel
wages and prices as a sure thing.
Stock traders have boon bidding
up prices of slocks in industrial
that would "profit" from inflation.
As a basic raw malarial for
many industries, coilliar steel will
mean hlghtr production costs in
many factories, ft may take time
for that to trickle down (in whole
nr more likely in part) to the
retail cost of goods (boss factories
produce. And management flees
the risk that customars may balk
at price hikes and thus make the
whole wage-price structure shaky.
Between the end of World War
f! and this year the base wage
rates in the steel Industry have
risen savin times for a total ol
amt cants an hour. Steel prices
have risen seven times toe, ter a
total of gu.ge a ton.
Now wages ire going up an av­
erage of l l cents an hour mors.
Price hikes after they're worked i
out for various steel products, may
average about IT.30 a ton.
The reason that wages sn d !
prices can go up at this Urns is

simple: present prosperity.
If steal snd auto leaders didn't
really believe that good times ere
here for awhUo that plane for extcnslvo plant aad equipment spend-

which Host This means that when
a trout strikes the action is on
the surface of the water, the greate- delight in fishing t&gt; most Attn
Eisenhower used three kinds of
(lies in New England: a Chinchilla,
Royal Coachman, and a Brown
Hacklo. Before each day's fishing
the Presfdent hand-rubs his fly line
with a preparation that makes U
float.
Ha wears boots, long ar short.
(Upending on the Water's depth,
but almost never chest-high rubber
waders.
t
g.
As for ths W fishing question—
Does Eisenhower get bis greatot
This is tho way Hagerty tens it: pleasure at the moment tho fl»h
Since moving Into tna While ■trikes or when he's fighting it?_
House, Elsenhower has done noth­ Hagerty doesn’t know.
ing but trout fishing In streams,
using only a fly rod. He does not
H I 8TRINOS ALONG
use a spinning rod. Although he
GEORGETOWN.
in - An
gets glass rods ss presents, he AWOL soldier was Ky.
traveling on a
uses only bamboo.
shoestring when arrested fer im­
Ha Ukei fairly short rods—seven proper
driving.
'~
feat or less—and on his recent
"I
want
my
shoestring
baelf"
New England visit he used two
bamboo rods—each weighing less tho soldier told polict. Thsy found
on his car, which had bean sto­
than three ounces—made by the It
len.
Orvls Co. la Manchester, Vt.
Police said he had switched li­
(if this Inspires you to niih out
and get an Orvls, in the hope the cense pis lea, tying the new on a
presidential msgle may rub off on with his ■hot tiring.
you, remember that Ih. Orvls rods
Elsenhower used cost between l*o
Canadian officials taps* that
and lioo.
attract temperatures hi their
And ha’s strictly s dry-fly fisher­ country art rising at a rata of th m
#
man, using only artificial flies degroea awry 70 years.
whole world ei fishing gear to
choose from, fUhirmeo want to
know what kind of rods and lines
he uses, what kind of fishing bo
Ukei bast, what lurei ho uiei.
Thu story Is not Orit hind from
tho President. Hit White Home
lidos won’t let a nowiman inter­
view him privately, ovon on fish­
ing.
But It’s good second-hand infor­
mation. It's from his press secre­
tary, James C. Hagerty. Hagerty
and Sherman Adams, Elsenhower's top assistant, have been the
President's most constant fishing
companions on vacation trips.

F o rty -first Be ml-annual

n ri" -rv i* r

S T A T E M E N T OF C O N D I T I O N
J im s 10, 111!

P in t Martfftf* Lo*ni
$ 4,339,419.75
Loans on Savings Accounts
61,723.64
Real E state Owned
941.60
Federal Home Loan Bank Stock
90,000.00
U. S. Bonds
161,325.24'
Cash on H and and in Banks
675,680.18
Office Building and Equipm ent
45,003.79
' TOTAL
9 5,374,16120

M1S&amp;229

News O f M en
In Service
FORT BINNING. B ft Gorki*
W.. Bauman son of Mr. and Mrs.
R. J. Bauman Benford, has arrivod at Fort Banning, Ga. whtre he
will serve as an Instructor for the
1065 General Military Science Re­
serve Officer Training Corn
Bummtr Camp,
S g t Bauman, a veteran of four

Clearance Sale

Saving* Account*
I 4,976,182.01
Loan* in Procera
26,979.10
O ther Liabilities
6,444.79
Reserve*:
Genera] R e se m e 821,887.80
Surplus
Total Reeervea
TOTAL

364,008.80
T 9 * 374,164* )

CURRENT DIVIDEND RATE ON SAVINGS
Sevlngg Accounts In n to i
bjp te $10,000 by n Government InttrumonuBty

H la her mouth, aad goat on
• "It *'U balp « y . I will," »id painting, t don't know bow tha
"111 «a aarttou to kelp deoo it, but she dees."
During e vleit here to see a

. Frleadiy neighbors helped fash- daughter Davis web uoe an Dennis
•tea Us first iialform—his tophat James' CBS-TV, "On Your Ac­
« ee mu his ew t aaete had "worn count." and Use money will go to-

V•die.R fepeonto.
RAE

MA'V.'ft

v:

&lt;*• y * f

�S o c ia l fcvovdtA.

’W SC S Has Meet;
Plans Activities,
Presents
Skit
_..
. ,

JDrought Period

(p sA A O w rfA *

jean, of Coriling To Erid

ttte

R X N tn ’f tn

h B raE p

w eg. JuTy

o,

to s s

p

« c«

k

C alendar

Ml*» Joan Worth of Lake and daughter. Marikn
*•- and
-d 1 _
.
Wn!r» .pent the holiday weekend Wrens, &lt;!»., nre visiting Mr.
V T vv^’A
rl
V* . t
” ' v ilh Mr! and Mrs. Harry |.e t S r .; Mrs. John O.llon Mr. Wh.t e is
WEDNESDAY
O. A’a will meet t i tha church
of tha MSC8 of thr hirat Mttho! rartern district m a n . u r r for
dist Church "a* held Tuesday in
A picnic supper honoring th* at 4 p. m.
houlncrn
.Natural
Gas
Co.
Li. Fdwin Footer, stationed as
Its IIOIl T1IOMA8
McKinley Hall at IMS a. m. f&lt;dTh* First Baptist Junior Royal
Rev. and Mrs. Milton H. Wyatt
HOLLYWOOD P — Thing* are
lowing n hoard meeting at 0 a. m. a Jc* ptlot at Tampa air ba»f,
Ambassador* will meat a t tha
will
b«
sponsored
by
tha
WSCS
Mr vnd Mrs A K. Shoemaker picking tip for Larry Parks and
Mr*. \V. A. Hunter, president, wa* a weekend guest o f Mr. and
of tha F iist Methodist Church. church at 7 p. m.
Sr. have a* their guc«l* thrir hi* wife, Betty Garrett.
pii..''t".( over the .c-xfon. The Mrs. Harry Lee Sr.
TI ■* First Baptist Church eholr
Memheis will meet a t Rock
son
and
hi*
wife,
Mr.
and
.Mr*.
meeting wa* opened 1“ sintin-.
will hold rehearsal at 7:30 p. m.
After
a
period
of
some
drought
Springs
and
supper
will
be
served
W.
L.
Shoemaker
and
Mr.
and
Michigan, worked for the govern- tvucif C run the Crowded Way*
Friends of Mr*. Bennie Brads
in their carreer*, they are doing
MONDAY
menfs
Southeastern
Proving of
fo,towi&gt;(| ,,y .
)Pr U.lt wilt he clad to learn that she Is Mr* Joe Roebuck all of New very well. They Just finished their at 1 p. m. Each family will taka
n pinenic supper and tab!* service.
The Executive Board nf th* Wo.
Ground at Hope, Ark in the New by Mr„
t , „ uleh|&gt;r)n.
improving in the Orange Memor­ York City.
lirst film together, a Ford Thratcr Drinks will bo provided by tha men of the Church will meet in
^ork Ordnance D istrK , and in
Following routine repo:is by tVrc ial Hospital after undergoing sur
the session room of the First
Mr. and Mr*. 0 W Swain and show for TV. They play a husband WSCS.
own publicity service on the U c .t 1P trcu, y
Kollcrl Rcp!y, allJ gcry last Friday.
I
■
■•■til joining
1aio in O Ithe
n a \Marines
f
.
v
Coast
until
Tha First Baptist Sunda. School Fresbyterian Church,at 10 a. m.
son* Allan and Gary have return­ and wife team of screen writer*
' the trra-urer. Mrs. It. W. Turner,
Circle* of the First Fresbyter­
ed to their home in Atlanta. Ga , and a blonde charmer. Joy Lans­ Worker's Council will begin st 7
ln„ l ula- ,
. . .
i , [Ix’nnl
recnmmrndntlnna
were
Mr*. Acne* Wise and Mr*. Jark
ing. complicates their marriage.
p. m. with a covered dish supper. ian Church will meet at thn
j uu nujtht say I had a checkin the group. It was Harris, ssho hate been spending aftrr spending the holiday* with
ered past, she »*&gt;*•
decided that loginning in Septem- the p*M three ssrek* with Mr Mr and Mrs. E. M. Swain at 1518 “ We've appeared together in al­ Tha First Baptist I’rayer Meet­ church at 11 a. m. At 12 noon a
covered dish luncheon will bn
most every other medium," Betty
Her career with the Marines ,)fr lnilivillu,, cirfl(., wouM *,„,„- ami Mrs. Ilalph G. 'Swartz and Sanford Ave.
servico will begin at 7:30 p. served. Immediately following wilt
said on the set of the Screen Gems ing
began at headquarters with the ( „„r mid-week prayer service*, friend.*, ha\e returned to EvansmBring
your
Bibles.
be the Business and Inspirational
Mrs. C. D. l!lcMe&gt;m*n and production. “ Our next objective is
writing of radio and T \ scripts,, Mr(1 j r „ avU ntll, Mt. ,t K&gt;
lntKSDAT .
Mile, InJ.
daughters Joan and Mary of South j making a feature together.”
hut when requests began to mount | Co|. wprp f ,Pt.ted a delegate* i»
Tim F ittt Baptist Junior G. A's Meeting.
Evening Cirete No. t nf tha
Bend. Ind spent the last to day. j That plan will have to wait for
for information about the h.vid attend the schonl of Missions in
Mr and Mrs. Ted Jones and with Mr. an t Mr*. S. D. Iltghley ! iheir other activitir* Larry I* lrav- will meet at tha church at 3:30 First Fresbyteriean Churrh. Mrs.
she was fanned out t„ it for three • UKfU||(| August |-5.
p. m.
W. S. Brumlry, Chairman, will
months, primarily to pieparo a
M ... M r „lbprl . r., announe. children C.lvnn, Shirley and Fred­ man They left Tuesday morning ing for Syracuse, N Y where lie'll
dy, are spending the week at New for Sara»ota where they plan to play the Barney Grrenuald part
Th* First Baptist Intermediate meet In the Educational Build­
Marine Band history brochure for ed *'"*
the following circles would Pe Smyrna Beach.
ing at 8 p.m. with Mr*. C. M.
makr thrir future home.
in "Caine Mutiny Court Martial”
mailing.
responsible for the designated
Boyd, Mrs. Stanley Vernay and
in
summer
Stork,
tftev
that,
Bet­
"The months wrnl on and on dutie* in August: Program. Ciry|r and Urs Imnald Dunn and
Mr*. A. IV. Knox aa hostesses.
ty join* him and they’ll head for
and I've hern there ever »ince-. * . c| N„ ..
Con)mun|
Circle children ate spending a month'*
Evening Circle* 2 and 3. Mrs.
England, where they'll play five
she said 'preparing T \ ami radio v r I
a Li-0 munion.
c
Circle
N
o.,
vacation
in
New
Smyrna
Beach
O. tV, Johnson and Mr*. M. M.
scries, helping with Uie program­
week* of vaudeville in the pro*,
__
I They are being visited there hv
Land, rhairm rn, will meet at 8
ming for visiting school kids to Seven.
tncea.
Mr*. B F. Crenshaw was pie- |||(,jr iwo daughfer* and *on«-inp. m. with Mr*. Roy Mnnn, 121
tie In with their studic*, and help- united
"Those
English
audience*
are
a life membership pin by
ing make movie* to send out to Mis. Colbctl on behalf of the law Mr and Mr*. Ted McDaniels
wonderful,” he explained. “ It** the
Miss Leora t'lnistand of Rock­ West 18th St. Hostesses will ho
and Ted Jr. and Mr. and Mrs
the kids who couldn't romo to WSCS.
Hurd time we've been hark, Oner ford, III., and Robert LaRreo of Mr*. Elizabeth Sharon, Mrs. A.
Hubert Mincy ami Kathy.
Washington.”
they take a liking to you, you're Longwond were mairird last Sat­ L. Lyon, Miss Georgcna Hart, and
Mr*. Hunter then turned the
in ”
urday in the Graee Lutheran Miss Sandra Dunn.
proglam over to Mi*. Albert
M* and Mrs E T. Tidrman
Circle* of the Women's Society
Church In l,s&gt;ve* Park by the Rev.
When
they
return.
I^irry
goes
llirl.*on, chairman of Cuclc No. have relumed to thrir home on
of Christinn Service of the First.
into
the
touring
company
of
"Tea­
Roland
E.
Johnson
in
Rockford.
Eight.
Fifth Street in DeBary after a
house of the August Moon.” play­
Mis* Crossland is tlto daughtrr Methodist Church will meet a t
An intrt csting and amusing three week'* visit with their son
ing the role of the Okinawan in­ of \k&gt;». Anna Shiiley of Rork the following designated places
skit, depicting a regular circle and dauchlrr-in-law, Mr. and Mrs
Falls, 111., ami the gioom, who at .7 p. m.t Circle No. 6, .Mr*.
terpreter.
meeting, wa* then presented with T II T'dcman an I grandchildmade
his home at 908 Theodore I.. T. Dos*. liiOl B. 2nd 8t.;
Betty's
career
1*
at*o
getting
Its
Mrs. Ilii'k.on, acting as chairman.
‘Ti* said that “the burnt child Mrs. J. It. Courier wa* devotional ren, Edwin and Karen of Bloom­
biggest push in years. She won St., in l-ovr* Faik, is tha son of Circle No. 7, Mr*. R. F. Cola,
naves the flame" and we don’t chairman and the following took field, V J. Other resident* of
the pitze role in Hip filniitsir.il Mr. and Mrs. Ilaiold II. LaUrce 324 W. 20lh St; Circle No. 8.
I.
Mrs. Roy Tlllis, 2208 Magnolia
WEEKDAY S U 'I’l ll
seem to learn as we grow older.
|l
„
in|,or,
v|*l- Fifth Street who recently returned
version
of "My Si*trr Eileen." the of l.ongwood.
Ave., Mr*. C. F. Herndon, co-ho»from trip* to New Jersev to \i
**
»JwmI.'an Ol 1* cl; fl
A rslrl rt**
*" Int* •'**•«»
7
■.
—
i
.
,
,
p
—
i
,
n
cre
s
*
num
s-nm
*nuca
lor
vm»; mi*, v. r . nernnon. mrs. rv.
until her skin shrivel*, suffer the' F. Cole, Mr*. W. A. Hunter, Mis. «it rrUTive* are s ir a&gt;d Mr*. gingci bread.
was worn by the bilde along wilh ?»•«; Circle No. 9, Mr*. Ren
the !!&gt;I2 movie and later in
Wiggins, Cameron Ave. and Cir­
usuni misery from overindulgcnre W. P. Chapman, Mr*. Charles Arthur I. Willgoosr, and Mr. and
drrful Town” on Broadway. Betty pink and white acces*oriea. She cle No. to, Mrs. J. F. Thurmond,*
limn Slice with Yams
a* well as remorse from her own Meriwether, Mr*. J. C. Davis, Mrs. J. E Cleland.
carried
a
colonial
bouquet.
i« tied up for a picture a year
Asparagus
stupidity and mnl e all the proper Mr*. Grady Herman, Mr*. M. II
Lot rame Hy land, bridesmaid, 012 Elm Ave. with Mrs. J. C.
with Columbia for the next seven
Bread Tray
Mr*
George
King
and
Catheavowal* that It will never happen Wyatt, Mi*. Hugh Nicholson and
woie pink and bluo wilh vshito Davis as co-hostess.
year*.
The
preview
reaction
to
Gingerbread
with
Pineapple,
ran and Al are visiting her son•gain. But it frequently doe*.
"Eileen" indicate* site's got a art rssories.
TUESDAY
(iiaprfruit Sauce
Miss Ella Iloitnu.
in-law ami daughtrr. Mr. and Mr*
The trouble i*. we don't always
Charles ||odg» of Roiroe, III.,
Circle* of th« First Methodist
winner.
Beverage
John
Piissle
and
Pam
In
Cherry
The
piogratn
v
s
a*
roncluded
by
team from exprtirnrr. We are
PINEAPPLE • GHAPEFKl lT
Tlie I'arks-Gariett activity con­ n iu best man and Jark LaBrce Church will meet as follows a t
likely In .hallrnge our lurk again
formlntr a friendship Point, N. C.
9:45 a. m.l Circle No. 1, Mr*.
SAIT E
trast* with thrir life of the last seated the guests,
again with our *.*i'r
' r » ti. *ni)
*ingin*
tngrthci
A reception was ludd immrsliate. C. E. Meeks, 2(93 Orange Ave;
Ingredirnl*:
2
tablespoon*
corn­
few
yrai*.
Both
career*
hit
a
.and
. . . again . and
.
lli.
tk
T
.
.
1
.
,i
tt.n
,
.
'*
I
H
r
Mr and Mrs. P A. White Jr.
habit of taking thing* in stride. Blrst Be the Tin That Binds."
starch, salt, 't cup sugar, 1', • lump aftrr Larrv lr-tifird about ly after the ceremony in the Cirrle No. 2, Mr*. C. I- Echols,
It I* easy to grt a painless ■
tups canned pineapple juice, 1 hlv tine lime Communist connec- rhun h parlor, with Mis. Williams W. 20th St; Cirrle No. 3, Mr*.
__
t»n nr_ _avoid_ it_ ____________
ultiigpiher if
Roy Wall, 408 Virginia Av*. for
cup froxrn grapefruit Juice (di- lions. That was four years ago. l^iltrrr nssistnig.
j our preference l« to maintain n
The bridegroom is employed by a picnic and swimming party;
tilted according to directions on and he hasn't made a fcatute film
lilywhlte complexion. Protective
the I'ark I'lumbing Company of Cirri* No. 4 with Mrs. Illaka
vani, 2 tablespoons butter or mar­ since.
skin rreams help in rilhrr case.
Sawyer, 200 Elm Ave. with
He wa* askrd If tho major stu­ l/&gt;vri Falk.
garine.
Suntan creams nrc no longer
The young roupla ia ataylng at Mr*. Adam Miller a t ro-hostess;
dio* sun decline to hire him.
Mrlhml:
Stir
rnrn»t«rch.
dash
of
me*sy and inconvenient to use.
nnd Cirri* No. 5 with Mra. J. S.
"Lei's say I haven't worked for t&gt;27 Ashlaml Ave.
salt and sugar together thoioughNEW YORK T —Tun separate ell's scalp,
They may be applied e.**ily with­
Williamson .204 W. 18th Street.
them yet," he replied. "Oh, I
ly
in
n
saucepan.
Gradually
stir
in
A* a result, » mother in our
out staining elothe* and leave no r a i d i n g parties «ralpcd Davy
could
have
made
lousy
plrltires.
| neighborhood, w h o s e roonskin- pineapple and ginprfiuit juices un­
unpleasant odor on the picnic Crockett lire othrr day,
But what's the percentage in
First into the clearing tvhooped capped offspring have been raising til there are no lump*. Cook, that?"
lunch. One new v.vidshlng foam
stirring
constantly
and
vigoroualy,
for sun and sand Is completely in­ Murray Kcmptnn, a writer for the Cain in our petunias it irked.
visible on th? skin, leaving a New York Post He said that “ Won't they leave kali any idols?*’ over moderately low heat until
LOS ANGELES (&lt;in ^Jlie rurthickened and bubbly; cook a few
moisture of film to avoid dry skin. Crockett via* a lazy, hooky-play­ the demands.
rrnl hairdo train among the lad*
Well, now, vshen Crockett first more minute*. Remove from heal
It Is applied easily from an ing. whisky-swigging, illiterate
here rangt* fiom the vvalrifallaeiosol container.
braggart with an Ignoble record hove on llie television «ccnc a&gt; and stir In hotter until melted. |
arhievrd by combing the hair renMake*
about
2*4
nips.
Serve
hot
Yokrgatcrs also must he tnught at soldier, provider and congress a model for youth I ronfess I was
Iriwina fiom Hie sides and thrn
to use aun protection on the skin, man. Hit whoops had handy died * I'M" »urpriscd at the choico. 1 over warm gingerbread square*.
stroking it forward to form a
wear sunglasses and prntrrt the whrn In loped Ilia Personal A thought there were more Important Bake gingpiln end ftnm a standard
forehead rurl-to the pigeon. This
head from the sun's hot rays. A Otherwise Department ol H arper's| #nd «'*«'iling men who could more
ipc or n mix in a lMn.h equate
Donalyn Knight celebrated her one ha* to he put up in curler* J A C K E T S OK
g a m e of application of
a
sun magazine. Klieing deftly and muck- accurately hoar the tag of “ lrpn ,l'»nthird hit Unlay with a party given at night. It's curly up tha mid­
rreant will make If easier to re­ !y, Harper's got the rest of C rock- "crsm in .'' There was Dsn Mon
—
by her mother. Mrs. Donald dle. haa a duck tail effect in C O M P L E T E
member Daughter might spray It
gan and old Dan'l Boone: Kit CarKnight, at their home on Palmetto hack nnd just to complicate m al­
I'eslive Ham Klire
on mother, rubhinp it on the hurdson and at least a dozen Moun­
lei* further there I* a deliberate O U T F IT S
For • festive ham slice serv­ Ave, £attiidnv afternoon.
tan
has
been
acquired
to
avlod
lis—reach areas—bark, neck and
tain Men, to name oly a few ing. plnre a I-ilirh thick smoked
The bieeteway was decorated nnd fnnllke row lit k in front.
blisters
and
skin
peeling,
(lot
a
harks of leg*. Thrn mother should
The Balboa bos big wave* in
smooth bm may hr acquired and But we got Crockett on our hem slirr in a shallow baking with rrepe paper streamers and
apnly it to the yi-ungsier.
screen*.
pan and atli k wilh whole rlovea large balloons printed wilh "Hap­ front ami a duck tail in liatk.
mnintat.ird
if
common
sense
I*
Impress on a youngster that a
I havrn't raided Hie fib’s at ex­ Pprinkle wilh ’* cup of brown py Birthday”. The rhildien enjoy­
little sunshine goes a long way. used.
tensively as Kempton anti Har­ sugar and pour over it ** rup ed playing on the lack lawn. Lat­
ROCK BOTTOM
After a few days of sunbathing,
per's. But I do recall sardonic re­ of plum juire. Bake In a slow er in the afternoon, after Donalvn
SAN' DIEGO. Calif. (,lh—A He.
0 0 r ij j h l in r n m ftir la h fo
more time m y ha spent In its
marks about Crockett by such rep­ oven, 300* F. for I hour, turn­ opened her many piesenta, the partm rnt of Weights and Mea­
warm glow, however. The triek I*
utable historians as Vernon I,. Far­ ing once. At the end of I hour, rhildien snug "Happy Riilhday” ! sure* employe inliodnrrd n frozen
formal ssrar. .Most nirc*.
to g rt the sl in valpied up to it.
rington. In short, 1 string along place whole Idu* plums (I No. to her ns she blew out therundles chicken a* evidence in Municipal
Imi.vh Ion . . man)' quuntl
A good rule of thumb I* that fi |
with the raidrri and believe they ftlhl enn) on hum and return to on the ,-eke.
Com t.
lie
s.
or 10 minute* exposure In the 1
rame up with tha “ true” Davy oven for 15 minute*. This pro­
Bi'ficshmeiit* nf rake, Ice cream
“This rh irlrn sure seems hard.”
beginning wllj he sufficient. After '
Crockett story.
and soft drinks were servo! to rruittikrd attorney Myron Kamivides
4
to
d
serving*.
a few days more time might he
• • •
llio.o present. Karh guest was liar,
As far as the youngest genera­
HOLLYWOOD (fu llo w can they
added. Pretty soon with the aid make “Tea and Sympathy" into tion is enncrined, however, I don't
given a (Ing, balloon ami gum a*
t
oncer
Cooking
“ It should," quipped City Frn«r. &lt;7 M EN 'S
of suntan cream, goggles, brad- a movie and get it past the think the raiders even ram e e!n&gt;a
W EA R
favors.
Ronr&gt;|
and
rolled
roast*
re­
riitor Dirk Curran, “l l ’a a Flygear and perhaps an outdoor um­
to their roopskin idol. The minds quire approximately 111 minute*
Tliosa enjoying the parly were mouth Rork.
censor*?
.tor,
E.
F
lltS
T
I’l l . 12:’2 J
brella one may avqulie a lovely
Thst question hss hern raised that absorb Crorkctt are closed to per pound more rooking time Tommy nnd Kusnn IHngnn, David
tan, spending a day outdoors
Kempton and Harper's. On tint
the hone left in. and Danny O nk, Marilyn and
playing hide and trek with the ever since MGM bought the prize- othrr hand, the raiders performed than roast* with
• • •
Michael Rudd, Ellen Belts, Brenda
winning
play
for
films.
One
nf
sun.
and Jrnnnir Carter, Joy Kdwaids,
a
useful
journalistic
servire
by
exLamb
At
Finest
thine
who
feels
it
can
be
done
Fair types will need to he s«ary
Herr's a ferret to serving Michael Booth, Linda, Fatty and
of the sun even nfter a slight is Drhorah Kerr, who starred in ®nilng a myth, l-or the ilavv
the play on Broadway a n i l the • rorkrit story ts the first Amrri- lamb at Its finest. Mske sure Chris Brown, Johnny Martin, Al­
road and whn will repeat her role ran myth which the young giant when yon sen* lamb that It Is an llarkey, Kathy Fieriy, Lathy
of television has perpetuated suc­ either piping hot nr well rhllled. Stapleton and Sylvia I’arkrr.
in the muvlo.
cessfully.
Also present w e in Mrs. Donald
Lamb should never be served at
“Tea and Sympathy" deals
Reagan, Mrs, Waller Cook, Mrs.
But
I
Hippo**
R
doesn't
matter
an
/'In-between”
Mage.
Featuring Fashions .lust For You
frankly with s prep trhool b&lt;«
Ralph Bella, Mr*. J. W. Carter,
who Is accused by hit follow stu- whether the real Davy was heel or
hero. What matter* at the moment Mrs. J. D. Martin, Mr*. Bernard
•.lent* of bring a homosexual. Hi*
But what about Ihe final scene, ia that Hie televised Davy he nne Hat key, Mr*. Holly I'iercy, Mi*.
rhampmn is s teacher's wife who
Of i M f
Wilmrr Stapleton, Mr*. II. It.
fcx'I* he is (wing unjustly aroused in which the yoman surrender! of nature's nobleman who will in- Farker, Mr*. Glady* Calvrlti, Mr*.
A ym» OMl ratals* ta rsasos* A*
herself
to
tho
boy?
apire malleable young minds to gu
When everyone else has deserted
■ta rtks. lbs bsclbso* css *•&lt;■ I s
Austin Knight and Mrs. Fred My-j
“ That must be included, because out and be likewise.
,lm, she help* prove his manhood
m* Mdw, as
in a final sreno that la a ahockcr. It la very important to the atory,"
TTie moral implicit In Ihe Cmrk- era.
A high official of the production she declared. “ But It can ha Hone •tt atory to me is simply this:
Rrrakfast N&gt;«*
rode office, which rensora all murh more subtly on th e 'screen. Television hss unwittingly stum­
“Naturally, the film version will bled on a tremendous capacity— Rausage links with French
sssrt ss aw *tarMr «sa ta*
Hollywood films, remarked recent­
ly that “Tea and Sympathy" eould nut have the shock value that Hi* a great power to pnpetuate myths. toa*t m*kJ summer hrrnkfast
•Ms ta fwr talk Uw *Mwr ■
never be passed on its baste play did. But thrn. the movies May it always use it* power new*. Use sausage dripping* fur
(Ssodacd sarctaa sst ar a rsstl
wisely.
frying the toast.
theme. Tha rod* forbids even the are a different medium."
b m I dtaar asd ssrssc't Islesr.
waa awL. asstd
•*. aua aw
implication of homosexuality.
X
.
^
Here i» tha big clearance of the saaeon th a l
•** RiWf MT*1W ^
,mW
Miss Kerr feels Hist th* film ran
ribs, taasr Uw tar astads sd|*
be
made,
and
without
sacrificing
you
have been waiting for . . . fashions in­
•lies ***** »
the values of the play.
cluding drccses, sk irts, blouse* and ih o rta. ]
“ I don't want to giva any scrrals away," she remarked. "But
I had a talk with Robert AndtrCat ctaw I* ta w - lis t s
Va lues Formerly
Ion, who wrote the play and D
•Was, b a w a *
ta
a4 a a task takb.
now working on tha movia script
OF THE
f 12-95
To
942*50
RdsdspiidljssiimsstaratHa feels thst It can be done.
a w e * , la ta a w a a d i i&gt;
k* b y
&gt; »
"After all, the p is/ is not about
homosexuality. It is a story that
A N ow , j
shuws that wa mutt five more
than tea and sympathy to our fel­
OF
low human beinga. Its theme la
tut J&gt;w aitse a*J&gt; *a. aw
q oo
the persecution of an individual.
Wa Asa *■ *• btaJ* at a*
“I Hunk another kind of perse­
Mta la W* sMa at *• atanae.
MW* ataStar kiw« tor** **a»*k,
cution can bn substituted, a n i the
Xo«* aaaWar hat ptatta* saw
othrr element ■ of tho them* can
• t a t a t a e m ^ W r t a i.
W EDNESDAY, JU LY 6tK
be implied. The story can still be
touching and moving—If tha per­
THRU SATURDAY, JULY 9tK
THURSDAY
secution ia atrong and convincing
enough."

;

For Larry, Betty

*Sgf. Marjorie Moore Cordon
Is M arine W ho Tells World
WASHINGTON - Sgl. MarJorla Moor* Gordon la a Marina
who’a ho«n telling It to the world.
Since 1949, the classy cover girl
blonde beauty haa been top re*
eearcher and publiciat for the
Corpa' famed Marine Band.
During that lime ahe waa the
•o n ly girl among 4(0 men atatlon*
•d at the Marine Barrack* here.
In aelf defenae »he married one of
them, David Gordon, now with
Washington's Metropolitan Police
force, a. handsome 0 foot 4 Irish­
man who had acen nine ycara'
eerviee In the Marinea.
Sgt. Gordon next month la go­
ing to be Ju»t plain Mra. Gordon,
but ahe'a going to keep right on
acquainting the publie with the
•stirrin g and fascinating story of
the 157*year*old Marine Band and
its leaders in' hooks she plana to
write. One of these will be about
John Philip Sousa, the “March
King,** who led the band from
1880 to 1192, to its greatest
heights .
Sgt. Gordon, daughter of a
government tax expert, and gradu­
ate of Bernard College, after
ytaking a course in mechanical
E ngineering at the University of
Washington. Later. she set up her

Sylvia Hayes
Honored Friday
By Mrs. Leonard
4

Mrs. J. M. Leonard entertained
Friday evening a t &gt; o'clock at her
home on Holly Ave., with a per­
sonal shower honoring Miss Syl­
via Hayes whose marriage will be
an event of July IS.
Pink and white aster* and pink
radiant rose* were used In profusion In decorating
and dining rooms.

the

living

Refreshments were served huf.
fe t style from the dining table
4which w«a covered with an im­
ported rloth of open work linen.
)n tba center af the table wae a
bride doll raka ■flanked on earh
aide by aiivar candelabra. On the
buffet wae an arrangement of
nink and white asters and baby'e
hi rath in a crystal bowl, with
crystal candelabra holding lighted
tilnk tapare. The television eel
field a miniature bride and groom
beneath an improvised arch of
■ ireencry and roees, with bridesmaida dressed in pink and white.
]n the background was a lighted
Church and a fully robed choir.
Miss Lucia Goff held the atarkad plate and waa preienUd a
prise by the hostess. Mrs, Leonard
was assisted In eervlng by Mrs.
R. W. Herron, Mra. W. V. Billing
and Miss Gall Bitting.
Thaa« enjoying the evening were
the henoree and Mra. W. M.
fdusselw hlte, mother of the hon*»--e. Mr*. Watson Wallace, Mis.
W. V. Bitting, Mra. O. K. Goff,
Airs. M. L. Raboyn Hr., Mra. R. R.
Irvin, Mra. O..B. Smith Sr., Mr*.
R. I . Harvey.
Miss Ada Adams, Miss Patty
Ratigcn, Miss Norma Faye Hanrvy,
Miss Gail Bitting, Miss Luria
Coff, Miss Judy Irvin, Miss Ann
Rabem. Misa Jean Wright, Miss
Allca Brawn, Misa Tat Smith,
# l i u Jeanne Moore, Mr*. R. W.
ilerron, Mrs. J. W. W right and
Mrs. Robert Graham,

Marriage Is Told
Of Robert LaBrec,
Lcora Crossland

Smart Vacationers
Learn To Toast Not Broil In Sun

Try This One

Separate Men Scalp Poor Davy;
Irked Mom Doesn't Hide Feelings

Donalyn Knight,
Three Years Old,
Is Given Party

California Lads
Wedding or Formal
Have Hairdo Craze
Coming Up?

FOR RENT

Tea And Sympathy
Receives Backing
By Pretty Deborah

Q ia t tZo&amp; t&amp; n

&gt; C . CARV1NG*MEATCUTS

PRESENTING

OUR

MID-SUMMER
CLEARANCE

&lt;*-

NEW

LOCATION

a

JA M ESO N ST U D IO

N O T IC E
All
fledetj N m

•v-

JULY 7

OUR SUMMER SPECIALS
F or July Onlyl
tlS .O n U M au r Duo Tonic W a r *
w ith Super Seal N eutralizer—

• 12.50 Zotca Super Lanolin—
910.M H a u l Show C a rl Cream
N o a t r n llM r • Indorfea B hn p in r A Sty lin g

$ 10.00

P A R K AVE.

R efreshm ents

$8.50
$6.50
3 Senior Operator*

(Air frarflttmil fU hsl
Its 8. Oak An.

108 N.

V 7 — 9 P .M .

HARRIETT’S BEAUTY
* NOOK

¥

-

tn

STUDIO OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS
T— 9 P.M.
PHONE

3198

r

'tasse-

For Appoint mwl

o

$

.

to

$25.00

Don’t min tha opportunity to shop and saw
on thesa fine raluea.

VYluUuf,
200 N. Park Art.
filora Hoars: 9t00 U 1:30
Wad! 9:00 to 13:00

31T

�m-

T H E SA M 'O K I) H btvA l.il
Pagt I
W ad, July, 6, 1955

O P E ftA H O N

Cards Take 4th Straight

Timetable
Is Calling
Title Bout

tut

NEW YOHK UT—Floyd Patter­
\
t9 $ 9
son's tlmeuble ealli (or a heavy\ NOM*
weight title bout with Rocky Mar­
KlMf
ciano June 1957—provided the Rock
F t HOOT
•till holds the title. But will the
■J f 9 S *
\ ■ flA P H 'T
IK! Olympic champ be ready?
The 15-year-old Brooklyn Negro
? o ffe r
I 6 AFP
takes on his first full-grown heavy­
v pM V grt
weight tonight In Archie McBride,
; / P iO H L f
a 195-pounder from Trenton. N.J.
/
The 10-round match at Madison
A* f f
Square Garden will be carried
' 54W *
ABC on radio and television, start­
;•&lt; f U r o t a
ing at I p.m., EST.
V
H»
Patterson has been In with
; o n /tA T io * .
heavyweights before but the big­
gest of them, Joey Maiim, weighed
ao more than ITT pounds. Pal Joey,
• f course, la the only fighter to,
heat Patterson in a pro starts
and that decision, June 7, 1034,
g m e
was disputed by most of the box­
M A T H £ W T 1 yS |
ing writers present.
#*£&gt; BASCMAN o r TNS*
One of Patterson's roughest
M U W A U H tr B * A V £ %
lights was spent la the ring with
ty ro stto J tD B e m o m
Dick Wagner. He won the fight
A * r u t C tO V T tM B
but was gasping for breath from
it t f m J i eft** a m p
C O r V A L B iC f r tT , TTfAftm
meoAtPATtoa At wa*
body blows when H was over.
TO
t
i
l
*
5
r/C
X
W
O
R
K
p a c k P tN cM -thm eo a h p
Nex' lima they met Patterson pol­
/# i e $ * t* a h 9 * * * * *
9 0 t o o * A F T B R F t*
ished off Wagner in five rounds
pcAf.no aaoucAALY • h f t *
te g M e r c /A P m fD tc r o m /.
and chased him Into retirement.
F /R *r 3 0 ArMATO M tT S
AOMgft* Attp.prove m/ to.
MeBrlde doesn't rank among the
lop 10 heavyweights although he
beat the No. t man, Bob Satter­
field, in hla last outing, May tl.
Satterfield was subbing for Pat­
terson that night in Chicago afler
Floyd pulled out because of pto­
maine poisoning. At M, McBride
has won SO of 21 starts with •
knockouts. Ha was stopped twice,
by Jimmy Walker and Boardwalk
Billy Smith.
The burden of proof Is all on
By BARD L1NDENAN
Battersea who must prove he can
N EW Y O R K OP- "Dumb
By
CHARLES
CHAMBERLAIN
handle • man with a solid weight
CHICAGO in— The power-packed ball players don't win pennants.
advantage over hint. Patterson has
They have good years, yaa, but
won nine straight, stopping his last National Leaguers today were they don’t win pennants."
mads
aarly
favorites
over
the
four opponents, since be lost to
Thla Is the opinion and baseball
American Leaguers ai opposing
Maxim.
managers rounded out their 13- ereed of Fresco Thompson, Sl-yeerQua D'Amato, Patterson's man­ man aquadi for the JJnd All-SUr old Brooklyn Dodgers' vice presi­
ager, plans to move the kid with Gama at Milwaukee Tuesday.
dent who Is cssr of the second
' tbs big boys from now on.
The Americans hold a 13-1 edgt largest minor leigua system In or­
"He's going to beat Marciano in In tha midsummer series and last ganised baseball.
June JKT, and It's going to be ono year won it Cleveland 1M U a
"The Idea that baseball la a
of boxing's all-time great fights," field day for bailers,
garni for alrong backs and weak
said D'Amato, "From now oa It's
It is questionable if the Junior mlnda la ridiculous," said Thomp­
the big boys for Floyd. Not tha circuit's pitching su it selected by son. "Baseball la • acienca ef hit­
top msa but big fellows. Maybe their All-Star manager A) Lopci ting and pitching and ovary time
in a year be'U take on the top of Cleveland ran surpass that of ■ man steps to tha plate two 'id contenders. Time la on our aide rival iklpper Leo Durocher of the enlists’ are matching wits and one
and we're to no hurry."
will win the match."
Giants. 4
Lopes has named nine hurlera,
There are 14 minor league clubs
Including four lefties, with a com­ In tha Brooklyn lyatem and Thompbined record of 75-43 through Mon­ ion pull a tha strings on some 330
day's gamca. They are rookies young playsrs.
Dick Donovan, •-!, Chicago; Herb
"Aptitude ii dam Important."
Score, T-4, Cleveland; Whltey Ford sold Thompson, a former big
154 end Bob Turley 10-7 New league second baseman who fed
York; Early Wynn 114, Cleve­ nton lesions to tha major* end
land; BUly Hocfl, g-3 .Detroit; Bill
morn as a minor league
Pierce, 5-3 Chicago; Frank Sulli­ manager.
van 11-7, Boston; and Jim Wilaon
"We try and teach our young
player* there is something morn
Bp m
ASSOCIATED PBAm 34. Baltimore.
Durocbcr failed to name any of to the game besides catching tha
■ Tradition tips the Males heavily
b, fiver of the Birmingham Barons his ewn Giant pitchers ai ha bob- ban when It cornea toward them
winning their first Southern Assn, tailed hia skiff to seven with a end going to bat."
pemunt to almost a quarter of combined 53-39 record. Hla right­ Because baseball la • thinking,
n century. The Barone last won handers will be Don Neweombe, strenuous and emotional game and
14-1, Brooklyn: Robin Roberta, because men react differently to
ft* —
Since IMS, eight of the 10 taaders il-T, Philadelphia; Gene Conley atrata end emotion and mantel tax­
n e.ef the close of business July 54, Milwaukee; and Bam Jonas ation yon ean not cut Urn smart
4 va. dumb player problem down the
» went en to win the flag. Only 54, Chicago.
The
lefties
wiU
be
Harvey
Hadmiddle with gratraUsaUoni.
failures were Nashville, beaten out
College scholars deni necessari­
bp two gamos to INI, and New dlx, 5-1, St, Loula; Joe Nuxhall,
Orteaas, which fall to fourth after 54. Cincinnati; and rookie Lula ly graduate to make keen, thrilling
Arroyo, 54 8L Loula.
diamond start.
landing to ISO.
Tha opening lineups, including
"Too much Imagination la not
Birmingham led Memphis by
two games yesterday but lost ■ batting averages through Mon­ good," ha explained. "The fellow
with Imagination, tha aenaltiva fal­
chance to increase Its margin over day's games:
American—Ib, Mlckay Vernon, low, la mnra apt to bt concerned
tho Idle Chicks when rain waihed
nut last night's scheduled contest Washington .M ; lb, Nellie Fos, with something that donanl con­
Chicago JIT; Ik Jim Fialgaa, cern today and tha ban gam*. That
with Mehtts.
Bto games of too Barms by whip­ Rensae City, J B as, Harvey la whan 'rocks' happen."
ping Atlanta 1M to tha only game Kuena, Detroit J ll; If, Ted WU- Tha perfect, alert thinking ball
played. The other dubs were not Hams. Boston .Ml; cf Mantle Art; player la the blend ef Imagination
Yogi Berra, Ne v York, JM.
and what la nvanlagly called baseNational—Ih, Kluasewaki, AM; ban toittoet
lb, AI Bchoendlensl, S t Loula, AM;
"Jackla Robinson It tbo bant rva
lb, Mathews AIT; ts Banka AM; MM" said Fresco. "Robinson la
If. Del B u ll, Philadelphia, .gat; ton mom perfect bland ef ban play­
ef,Snider, A ll; if. Don Mueller, er. Ha fea craaUraaiaa and LnagNew York, A ll: c, Boy Campeoeiha mates
la, Brooklyn, All.
Durocher baa named Del Cran­
J M 4 I dall of M flw atot and Smoky Bur­
•I halo— gess of Cinetonatl to back up Camra.
panella. Ho filled out hie
t*
tl
r with Oeoo Baker a t _____
Jackson of Chicago Johnny
iLagan
nf Milwaukee, su n Mtsalal
u»
e( St. Loula and Ott Hodges «f
Brooklyn.

National
Is Favored
In All-Star

Brooklyn Exec
Offers Opinion
O n Ball Players

Barons Are Anxious
M For Another Flag
f Alter Lengthy Wait

Major League
Leaders

gas M t e g s s f e a

Snickers Die
A s 'Bad Deal'
Is Shaping Up
sewskl, the muteular Clncy first
baseman whJ remained nonbelli­
gerent In the fighting, whacked
his 23th homer early in the game.
Robin Roberta drove in three
runs against the Dodger* and
gained his 12th victory with relief
help. Andy Semlnick’e two-run
bomer In the eighth won 1L Duke
Bnidcr hit his N th homer for the
Brooks, now 12 games ahead of
Chicago.
The Gian** had a pair of fourrun Innings while rolling past the
Buc* as Johnny Antonelll won hla
seventh on a four-hlttcr. The New
York lefty, who has lost 10, fan­
ned 10. Willie Maya hit his 24lh
and 23th humors.

Williams Is Fined
By FSL President;
Gets Suspension
Doug Williams, catching mana­
ger of the Cocoa Indiana In the
Florida State Leagua waa fined
IN and suspended yesterday.
The action by John Krlder.
league president, was baaed on
last night's Cocoa disturbance
which required police protection
for the umpire* end necessitated
police action to get Williams and
Bill Call, Cocoa second baseman,
Mf the field.
Cell was fined |10.
BUI GaUaghor, bate umpire, firat
throw Call out ef the gam* for
protesting toe long and to* toad
after an Orlando runner had bora
declared aafa at second.
Williams then got Into tha argu­
ment and after talking for .flva
Minute* was throw* out alto, Kri­
der said.
Erider said both refuted to leave
the field—Williams walking around
taking off hla catching equipment
gad throwing it about.
Whoa police took them away,
the crowd began ahootlog firecrack­
ers and throwing various objects oa
the field.
And when tha gsme was over,
trowda congregated about tho urnptroa* dressing room, necessitating
Bailee escorts to get them away.
Orlando won tho game 4-2.
AI Kalina, •U r outfielder for
tho Detroit Tigers, never fee
played to
la the
th miner league, He
wee signed ft n bonus right
of high ache

from the minute he stage
is designed to
"He's constantly asUag bidtaaif,
at bat ee an tbn baaee, 'What c&lt;
I do to bast tbn etbar guy!"
"That'* the kind et baR yUynr

ing before a home audience of &gt;12,
collected only eight safeties.
Th* St. Petersburg board of di­
rectors met before the game to
dlecuas the plight of the cellar
dweUers who ar* M gamea be­
hind. President Herb Smith said
he was "reasonably certain" funds
ean be raised to finish out tha
season. He said 12 of the M di­
rectors have pledged two-thirds of
the amount needed.
West Palm Beach was licked by
Lakeland 4-3; and leading Orlando
beat second place Cocoa 4-4.
Orlando also had to come from
behind to win. Cocoa, playing be­
fore M3 on home ground*, went
Into the eighth ahead 3-1 but two
hits, a struck batsman, a walk
and an error put the aituation in
Orlando’s favor. Chico Garcia's
doubt* added two insurance run*
to the ninth.
Lakeland won over West Palm
la tha seventh on a single by Wal­
ter Anderson, triple by pitcher Joe
Bayno and single by Danny Al­
meida which netted two runs to
go with four scored In the third. It
waa Bayno’i first start. He al.
lowed eight WU, fanned nine and
walked six. About 330 Lakeland
fans wltnasaed the Day ,

oavTova skaim
Mlrham rt

ill!
m i

Mlrlelil Ih
&gt;nn«ll If

•*n»r i t
Ijiimo *■
Arandt a
VlliH

ing rounds eliminated the reel, In­
cluding 10 Americans.
Now every shot over the indent
Bt. Andrews course Is for keep*.
Only six of the qualifiers are
amateurs and two are from the
United States. They are Joe Con­
rad, of San Antonio, Tex., the
British amateur champion, who got
to with a 134 and Jim McHale,
the former Walker Cupper from
Philadelphia, who had a 143.
The three American pros who
■till are In the running are Ed
Furgol, of Clayton, Mo., the 1934
U.B. Open champion (143), Byron
Nelson of Roanoke Tex. the former terror of the fairway* who
now playa for fun (143); and John­
ny Bulla, Pittsburgh (147).
Ed Lowery, a San Franclaco
amateur, and Mortle Dutra, of Los
Angeles, ware Juit on* stroke be­
yond the qualifying limit of lO.
Other Americans eliminated In­
cluded George Fetlo, Philadelphia;
Jack Munger, Dallas; Harreld
Kirkpatrick and W. A. Wickliffe,
both of Graenvilla, S.C.; O. M.
Woodward Grosso tie. Mich,; R. D,
Lull, Clearwater, Fla.; Calvin
Cook, Steubanville, Ohio; and Mika
Krak Wicrton W.Va.
Lowest qualifier of aB was Frank
Jowte, the 43-year-old Englishman
who had everyone hare gasping
with bis record 43 Monday. Be fin­
is h * with a 134.

i

Fight Results

a Msta

•an rows*

Prnr Ih

U a u r M ln •
T e r r e ll I f
S illie r
lb

s e l l
P. Cook Sb
1 * 9 *
B u ll* ; r (
S i l l
Wchmitl cf
a t I •
Snyder &gt;r
[ I *
Lnnetodd *
„ .n c l. ,
, I , •t ! I
•-Thorn,fi
to *
TalaU
IS SIT
*—I out when wianlne run acarad.
•—•truck out tor Langfard in Ith.
BariaM naaah _ tin eet or

r a m b k h -i .t* a rm ________
n s r a i r a i *m s s t i &gt;!0 r a c i*
UBTHUIT — Johnny Hutnmerlln,
USSTRUIT
199.
i Whit** Detroit,
------- outpointed
‘ ointaa M
Marl
ah uret. If I, Ealtlaeara, a,
u i ami 1i £ acii. Ha. -aaarya
Jahneon, IISU, Trent'-*
eto^pe* Charlie Cotton,
Cottas, III,
S9&lt; Tel ale,
oriiCAN PAUK. c u t — Jtapa
l&gt;H lit. Oakland, autpolnled
pick
lick Goldtteln
Gold
ISS, AM Aaaaiaa,
19,
1 BCAUMOyrr. Tan.
•utvInltL

Haifa. RHI —Mlchom! fi
—Hchmtll, Waterrutter. Butler I
nn—i-ax.na, n. rook i n r—kir

lalll la Kaithi Wiener to Kaltb
(•aft—Darlann Reach I, Senfar*
4 nn-arr—Lanytara I. Araaii I.
ArenJt J|l*4|&lt; U— KatU**.

AND ITOKAGB c a

L OWHOLESALE
C K E R AND
P LRETAIL
ANT
- Pm

MV*

T H U FKICKH HfTKCflVK WTOWL ■ WB. . 1AT.
A—
LAMB

55c
V. &amp;

IMS

te u . BU.

KXTRA LOB,

58c

a 'T U

WMTWUf U, • . CMOICB BKKF M l

SHORT RIBS
RA1T

£

LB

BEEF LIVER

39c

gro CK d ^ kp

Cbiro car-

L k l7 «

CRy and ant•f

i.
N.»
•-uri•.r

3

mi
*&lt;

•v

&amp;

t o a e u i n n i u n a t Muelon IS I k V
n l e l i l ) — A b e r n a t h y t l - l ) a n d I'uqg.
i n i,id
|T-1S) va. U r e n a r
l* -,J
aud tiatiry t l - l l .

L'lmi.i.t al kanaea City tulxht;
—hcore (i-li nr liuulteuiau l«,S|
ee. K e l l n e r «*-1J.
Chlcaiu at Lelrolt — Tiucha
ts-aj Ve, Unrear |e-V).
RATlUAAL LKAtitle
h t. Pr4
BrookI) a
SS sa ■toe
Calunnu
44 s* .4-0
Miinaukea
4u as u:a
cinciuiiati
Id S7 .4,1
MW &gt;oik
SI 4* .4*7
PL Luule
S4 •41
r’llllnUelplila
II 41
ritiiburcu
SI el
HCnLLTa Tr.aTKMUAV New tork it. Piuaournn t
I’hiindelvhla I, Wrouklyn 4
Clncmuall S, pt, Louie 4
tuoly *«!*•« aclieduled)
UAMKS TODAT
Brooklyn at ntUburpk ft twL
nlputi t-udree (I-t) and kreklb*
ll-«&gt; va Law (S-S) and Paas tu-o.
Hi 'iaiule at Cincinnati (nlehtl
—Jackson tl-4) va folium t&lt;-it.
Atllwaukee at Chlfago —Conic/
(l-u) ee Kueh tl-ll.
Philadelphia at New Tork (aletity
glinmune tl-e) ea. Hearn tt-» 7.

Fifth Win Bogged
By Hunt-Mckobarts
r '

Hunt-McRoberta picked up thalr
fifth wia to the City lofibaQ Lea.
gua play last sight behind the
tight pitching of C. O. Jonas and
BUI Flaming's big bom* run bat,
hi* second of th* season. Chuaal
was tha losing pitcher for WIIsqm
Malar.
Burpea Bead Company fitte d
thalr second win of tbn season
by dotriilng th* Robson Sporting •
Goods team 5-4, with Witt « tha
bUI. Tickle took iht Iota far RobCUy SeftbaR Magna

Hunt-Me Robert*
Wllaon-Meier
Burpee Bend Compeny
Robson Iporting Goods
.1
i it.
In 1544 pitcher Ruben Gomes
«f the Giant* .won bis second
rams «f th* —anon an May 92.
Ha rale bratad the anniversary
thla
year by wtontog bh
Orlaaaa,

c u m u LL rU N U D A QUICK

1”

FLORIDA STATU LRAOlll
W L I
.44*
Orlando
»» jj •i;s
Cocoa
44 &lt;* it t
Daytona Raarh
*} »T .n
s
IV. Palm Reach
4S 4»
tlalneevllla
41 4*
Malar*
40 41 AM
lutkfland
1» to .sea
St. patarebure
*&lt; 37 .111

94 Golfers Begin
Big 72-Hole Grind
Of British Tourney

There were anickrra when the Kanana City Athletic*
shelled out ffiO.OOO to c*t Tom Gorman, Ewell Blackwell and
Dick Kryhoaki from the New York Ynnkuaa laat March—but
maybe it w asn’t such n bnd deal a fte r nil.
The A’* took a alznble risk In the deal and it looked
worse whan Blackwell and Kryhonk! departed for tha minors. But
nuw Gorman has roms through
with tha big payoff.
Only a aa-so reliafer In three
trials with tha Yanks, Gorman
has looked almost brilliant for tha
A'a, Ha flashed hla atuff again
last night, putting down an eightInning rally and going on to beat
Ute Cleveland Indiana 4-3.
U was the 10th victory in tho
Inti 12 decision* for the A'a—and
Carman, a 20-year-old right-hand­
er, hea won two of thsm and sav­
ed five other*. For the season, Gor­
man has made 20 appearances,
nailing up a 4-1 record the defeat
came on an unearned Boston run
Mty II and aavlng nint other
games.
Tha bespectacled New Yorker,
who won hla chances with tha
Yanks off hla minor leaguo show­
ing with tha eld Kansas City
Blues, earns en against the In­
diana with tha score tied at 3-3
an Jim Hagan's homer off start­
er Bobby Bhanla. The little lefty
with two on and two out and Gor­
man got AI Rosen en a foul pop
with hla first pitch to end the Inn­
ing.
Oorman retired tha Tribe in or­
der In the ninth.
Joe DeMavatrl and Hector Lopes
unlikely power aourcee, each horn•red to bring tha A'a home aafa.
Lopes smacked hie third of the
season in tho otghth for tho big
run. DeMaastri unloadod hla No.
3 belt to leadoff tho first in­
ning, ondlng a 25-inning scorelees itraak far Early Wynn, who
lost hla third against II victories.
The defeat, suffered to the tom
American League game scheduled,
dropped the Tribe to third place,
five percentage points behind Chi­
cago. Both new nr* l i t gamea
shy ef the Yankee*.
In the National, Cinetonatl sdg*d BL Louie 1-4 after a ninthInning free-for-all; Philadelphia
defeated first place Brooklyn 4-4;
and the New York Giants whipped
Pittsburgh lt-1. Chicago and Mil­
waukee were -idle.
Though only four gamue were
played, 14 homo rune were hit.
Five ef them cam* at Cincin­
nati, where police had to break
up tha brawl touched off by Man­
ager* Birdie Tehketta and Harry
(The Hat) Walker. Tebbetts got it
going by complaining that the
Cards were stalling.
When order was restored, John­
ny Temple lined • tingle to scare
the winning ran and cap a two-run
rally by the Radioes. Ted Ktoa-

Standings4

Sanford'a Cardinal* tangle w ith th e Orlando Flyars
tonight a t Orlando's T inker Field a fte r posting four stra ig h t
victories over Daytona Beach.
RKBlLTa TRSTBBDAT
Victory No. 4 waa scored here last night as Connie Mack
Butler, form er Rollins College s ta r, racked up th e tying Orlando 4, Craa 4
— u r* V
i
1
run nnd batted to th* winning run
Malar* at or lend*
In Sanford's 3-2 triumph over the
Daytona at Ualneivllla *
Oocoa at W. Palm Reach
Islanders.
Lakeland at SI Petersburg
Tbs first division of the Florida
■MLtJRD IdALP
li
State League waa e little crowded
Bastard
today—it has five members. And
■SIS
urinndi.
.SIS
U'nreriUa
It looks like the latest addition,
.SIS
Cocoa
the Gainesville G-men, aim to
.411
Dnyiona
.SIS
Ml Data
atay.
.Ivl
k T tt.c h
The G-men, winning their fifth
AJSKSSICAM LSAUISS
straight, whipped St. -Petersburg
to L
15-4 last night for their eighth vies:
Nate Tork
IT. ANDREWS. England (B - Chicnsc
.lea
44
toty in their last ten games. Thus
4*
.Sea
clereiunS
A
total
of
54
qualifiers,
tocludlni
they nesUed Into fourth plsce with
•SjT
44
Hoelon
.evj
•I
West Palm Beach which ha* won five Americans, wiped the slate Deirult
SI
.417
City
clean today and began th. T!-hole Kaiieee
only three of Its last ten.
3f
.117
waeiiltieiwn
St
ItalUimne
&gt;ie4
grind
for
the
British
Open
golf
Manager BUI Wyatt, Saverino
Sta.SLI.TI IKIUSUAV
Mendci, Willie Brown end Herm championship. '
Kw h , City ,. Cieveiauu • (only
guinea ecneouleut
Piuero each got throe bits in
They are all that remain of a
14AJSets 1UUAV
Gainesville's 13-hit attack on throe alerting field of &gt;70. Two qualify­
Hew Sura at Uullituura &lt;nl|ht&gt;
—
ford
tlu-S)
ve. tolleun (4-S).
Saints pitchers. The Salnls, play­

Aaron,

kata—

MUwashes; and Frank
FlHahargk.
w fatted to aatoet « atogto
gUpor.gf tha Magna champion ha« Martini m et But Mank nmadfod that by m m -

Flyers Visit
Local Stadium

&gt;■
■;'

�1
Sweet Sixteen Says She Has Missed
Glamor At Her In-Between Age

TV Public Affairs
Director Is Named
As Former Soviet
BURLINGTON, Vt. un-Charki
Lewis, 47, public affairs director
of WCAX-TV, iiy i he it one of
&gt;3 former newsmen named before
the Internal Security subcommit­
tee at a member or former mem­
ber of the Communist party.
In his disclosure M o n d a y ,
Lewis said he "joined the party
In 1037 and quit two or three
months later because I had my
note full."
He added: "I have volunteered
to appear before the (Senate In­
ternal Security committee and
XU tell everything 1 know."
Lewis was one of those named
by Winston Buixletl as a member
of tie Brooklyn Eagle communist
cell in 1937 - Burden testified last
Wednesday before the Senate com­
mittee.
C. P. Hasbrook, president of
WCAX-TV, said Lewis volunteered
the information about himself as
soon as Burdett’s testimony was
published.
Hasbrook said Lewis has been
granted a leave of absence with
pay to enable him to go to Wash­
ington to testify before the com­
mittee.
Lewis at one time was radio
chief of the U.S. Office of Mili­
tary Government In Germany anJ
founder of "Radio In American
Sector of Berlin," an anli-Cocmunist radio station.

Marital Counselor
Divorced By Wife
LO« ANGELES W^A marriage
eounsalor'a wife won a divorce yes­
terday and the judge commented
that her husband's credo seemed
to be: "Don't do as I do; do as
I say."
Mrs. Arthur Globa, 19. testified
bar husband "would barrage me
jsith words until 4 or S o'clock
In the morning."
The judge asked if Globe, IT,
ever struck her.
"Yes, but I’d rather not talk
•bout that."
The judge asked Mrs. Globe's
daughter by a previous marriage,
Esther Boaenshine, IS, if aho ever
asked her stepfather for matri­
monial advice. She said no.
"Take my advice," said the
Judge, "and don't."

HeatWave Starting
To Show Effects
In Pennsylvania
PHILADELPHIA LR - The heat
wave started to show Its effects
yesterday la Pennsylvania.
la Chester, a woman turned In a
false alarm and captained she did
ft "because I was hot." She went
to the cooler.
In Jim Thorpe, a t*n»**d*—•«—•
■hort-clrculted tha civil defense
alert system, blaring a warum.
Signal Into three counties.
ta the Wilkes-Barre ares, there
was an appearance of winter after
a brief hail storm piled up an ac­
cumulation of more than a foot.
Intercourse, Pa., reported an un­
official high of 110 degrees but In
•eartoy Paradise It was a relative­
ly cool M.
And the new terminal building
•t International Airport here had
ana of Us busiest days. Aviation
director Louis Inwood axplalnad
that thousands, apparently attract­
ed by advertising that the terminal
w u 100 par cant air conditioned,
drafted ta to cod off.

_ ______________ _ieea a fc*r*wM.i knock on the d r a r and tveey dinner gong presented to him

inthe While Mouee by Prime Minister U Nu (rtf b»&gt; ** Burma. In renter la Secretary of State John Foster

Duties. The Burmese statesman la to the United States for a goodwill visit. He also presented a $5,000
tog orphan at ♦—r * - |- nrrto—
m»~s to Buzina during World War IL (IntenujtkmaU

Brilliant Young
Man Found Dead
With Suicide Note

$44 Million Damage
Estimated In Rains
Lashing A t Island

TOKYO &lt;dt—A brilliant young
mathematician was found dead to­
day in Tokyo University with a
note addressed to police, saying
"This is a distinct suicide."
He was instructor Akira Mori
30. a doctor of science.
His neatly written note read:
“This is a distinct suicide
autopsy may not be necessary. I
ground up 300 sleeping pills and
took them at about 7 p.tn. July 5
I cannot tell when I died. I cannot
briefly describe the reason, but
consider this case falling under
the category of suicide stemming
from nervous breakdown. I apolo­
gise for all the troubles."
Police said his mouth showed
cyanide r e a c t i o n and despite
Mori's note will c o n d u c t an
autopsy. Cyanide, a violent poison
la not contained in sleeping pills.

SAPPORO, Japan ctv—The Hok­
kaido prefrclural government today estimated the damasks from
Hokkaido's worst rainstorm and
flood in 10 years at IS billion yen
(about 44 mdlion dollars).
Up to 5 inches nf rain lathed
the area Sunday night and Mon­
day.
' Hokkaido is Japan's northern­
most island.
Incomplete figures placed (he
death toll at 12 dead and 32 miss­
ing. Thirty-six people were seri­
ously injured, while 21.000 houses
and 33.900 acres of land were in­
undated.
U.S. hellcopteri rescued more
than 60 Japanese adults and chil­
dren from the three towns worst
hit by rampaging floodwatcrs.

One Little Word
Complicates Deal

Navy Is Looking
For 31 Captains
To Be Admirals

TAMPA, Fla. id*—One little word
complicated a million-dollar be­
quest today.
Dr. C. T. Young, of Plan! Clly,
who died March 27, left a will
specifying that the bulk of hla
estate go to the "Presbyterian
Church of the United Slates (South­
ern Division)."
The executor, noting that the
correct form of the name of that
c h u r c h Is the "Prosbylerian
Church In the United Stales,"
asked County Judge William C.
Brooker If the million dollars could
properly be turned over to that
church.
Judge Brooker set a hearing fot
July IS.

WASHINGTON OB — A Navy
board under instructions from Sec­
retary Charles S. Thomas to seek
out younger men and scientific
specialists started yesterday look
big for 31 men to become admirals.
That many will be chosen from
the approximately l.fioo Navy cap­
tains to fill 31 vacancies eaused
by death amt retirement.
Thomas* directive to Adm. Jarrauld Wright, head of thq selection
b o a r d , was also circularized
throughout the Nary, an unusual
step.
Soft-pedaling tha traditional a n
phasls on s e a g o i n g experience,
Thomas asked the board to pay
apeciil attention to specialists In
such fields as atomic power, elec­
tronics and guided missiiei.

Duncan Sisters Are
Celebration Guests
LOS ANGELES W—The Duncan
listers, Rosetta and Vivian, will
be ipecial guests tonight as tha
Theatre Mart celebratai the 23nd
anniversary of Its production of
"The Drunkard."
The onetime Tcpsy and Eva of
the stage will help old-timers from
tbs perennial Los Angeles produc­
tion celebaata the birthday for
"Tha Drunkard," which now
shares the itage alternately with
a musical version, "Tha Wayward
Way.'"

MU- 9 a m B A D , H . Wantagh,
N. Y , ta checked by an ambu­
lance doctor for signs of Ufa
after ehe bad plunged to her
death from a ledge on the SSIb
floor of a Wall Street building.
She landed on tha Sind story ex­
tension of tha M-atnry structure
(diagram at top). Minute* before
aha had broken away from two
men who had stopped her from
leaping from another building In
Naw York's financial district.
Neighbors said that Mrs. Blake,
the mother of two children, and
the wife of a bank employee, waa
In poor health. (International)
If you want to keep your kids
away from appetite-destroying pop
tor a couple of years, try fruit
Juices mixed with soda water.
They give nourishment as they
satisfy the afternoon hunger.
If a door key sticks to a lock,

can often be made to operate
smoothly by nibbing It with a
•oft lead panel.
tt

L e g a l N o tic e
n n n rK o r

M L ’A L I B A T I O K
H B K T IX a
N n t i c s I s h s r r t ij r g i v e n t h a t t h a
B e ard
of
f ’o u a i r
C o m m U . In n . r .
o f th a . C o u n t y o f S e m i n a l * . F l o r i ­
da, * «
m a a t In R e g u l a r A d t o u r n ad
S u ila a
at I
o 'c l o c k F
fiL
IS , IS IS . In th e C o u n ty C om m lM lo e a r '*
Aoon
at
th a
C o u rt
H o u s a In H a n fo r d , th a
p la e a
o f m e e t l a c o f a a id liz a r d , f o r t h a
p u rrpoaa
p ose
u
h
a r ln x
c
o m pplain
l a i n tt*
*
&lt;&gt;ff
h rrarlu
x
com
d rr os ia t* to
to ttha
c crllilh
v l n rf ttcallm
a a t l m ony
ony a
he

July

usual

and
value
----y ---------lua o‘
ot an
i&gt;ron#rlr. real‘ or
personal.
raenal. a * flacd l&gt;y the County
( • • • o r o f T a x * * an lha t i l l
. x A sasasm sn t Roll, and of pay.
e ctln x,
rsv U w lo x and
(q u ails-

nx
f£

tha aasa.smant

&lt;&gt;
• -P. ll«
..• rn d n a
C la r k

S'

nf said B oard

CH0OSE&amp;USE

CAR FOR CRIPPLES
LAPEER, Mich. l/P) _ A Tyear-old Lapeer girl and h*r threeyear-old brother have switched
from a wheelchair to a miniature
automobile. They are Kay and
Jim Brown and they suffer from
Oppenhcim'a disease, | muscular
ailment that prevents them from
walking or standing.
Beauford Miller, 30, a worker
in a Flint auto factory, heard how
they always had to ait on tha
sidelines when other Lapeer rhll*
drrn paraded to opening of the
town’s playground for the sum­
mer.
Miller enlisted the aid of sever­
al fellow workers and built Kay
and Jim a car. They made moat
of the paita *for the one-horaeower engine by hand. Tha car
aa forward and reverse geara
and a complete lighting system
that works. A governor keeps the
speed down to 3 m. p. h. Two
thousand spare time hours went
into Its construction.

Heine sixteen is not so exciting
one young timer ■»)'•&lt;. Instead of
being the glamorous age of firsts
from high heels to girdle to lipstick to enrrings to a real kiss, it
is just an era of suspense. So
says a pretty blonde named Mary.
"Fifteen norv does everything
16 U‘ed to do," *ho says. “Six­
teen was famous for the sweet 1*5
party, sort of a nub-deb coming
out event. But now 15 runs patties
into the ground. Sixteen is just a
lull 'till 17 which is u real
glamorous age."
On the subject of dates “which
are definitely an invention of
lf.crs," Mary says there is a
problem. She explains
“Some fifteeners even steady
date—• great departure from tiro
norm. Just a few year* ago nixteener* weren’t allowed to steady
date ami you had to wait until
you graduated from high school
to get your engagement ring."
Sixteen, »he says, "is just a
stop gap between 15 and 17."
Seventeen i* the marrying ago
says Mary. The«c days if you have
a beau at 1*5, even if you've been
steady dating from lfi your par­
ents "wouldn't let you marry until
you are IT. Maybe 18."
But that’s just as well sav*
Mary because somehow at 16 the
boys who look good to you at 15
seem mighty Juvenile. On the other
hand the hoy* you'll like to date
only want older girls- 17, 18. lb.
"Ever since I've been 16,' Miys

MACON. C,a. I.P — Two Class /*
baseball c lu b s— Macon of the South
Atlantic League and !&gt;c* Moines of
the Western League — had new
managers today.
Ivy Griffin succeeded Pepper
yjarlin last night a* manager of
the Macnn Peaches. Martin was
to arrive at TVs Mein's today to
take over the Hruins, Chicago
Cubs' affiliate.
Martin was to have exchanged
Jobs with Bruins manager Les
Pedcn but Peden said yesterday he
was "not going to Macon."
While his "plans were uncer­
tain," Peden declared his inten­
tion nf withdrawing from "Hie Chi­
cago Cubs organization."

Whitehurst Suffers
Brain Concussion
DETROIT UP—ltert Whitehurst,
of Baltimore, suffered a brain con­
cussion last night in a heavyweight
bold with Johnny Summerlin, of
Detroit.
Doctors at Detroit Memorial
Hospital described Whitehurst's
condition as fair. They also said
he was suffering Irom heat ex
haustlon.
Whitehurst took a savaue pound
Ing in the eight-round bout. He
staggered to his corner at the end
of the fight and had to be assisted
to hla dressing room, where be
collapsed.
Whitehurst I* a sparring partner
for heavyweight champion Itncky
Marciano
Summerlin was awarded a un
animous decision.

a

JA M B GUT AGENCY

CHESAPEAKE, Ohio IF—A con
vlct serving a life term In the
West Virginia Penitentiary may be
heir to a share of a 3500,000 trust
fund left by bis »Ulor.
11c is William Ellis, 43, whose
sister Mrs. Melon E. Roy. former­
ly from tills area, died in Victorkitchen or other shower. Then all
the girls bring an interesting
shower gift for the hnpo chest."
Gift* are kept timeless, Mary
say*. You’ve got to avoid colors,
except for embroidery, and thing*
like wall clock* or other Hem*
that might go out of style.
No danger of that happening,
these day*, though »ay» Mary.
"When you get to be 17," she say*
with glowing eyes, "you just fight
off the male*, stand back and take
your pick."

vllle Calif., in 1950, and left her
$300,000 estate in trust tn her hus­
band John. He died last month.
Robert Ellis. 39, Union Town­
ship clerk, and Carroll Ellis, 23
a truck driver nephews oi the
Roys, are leaving their Chesapeake
home Friday for California to
claim
share in the trust fund.
.Other apparent heir* Include
Mrs. Roy's sister Mrs. Tennessee
Christian, Chesapeake, and two
other brothers, Roy Ellis, 53 of
near Greasy Ridge, Ohio, and Pete
Ellis, 65. of near Ironton.

a

W ELL D R IL L IN G
Howard C. Long
Phone
207

K.

388

C o m m e rc ia l

BRAND

P IC N IC

Lb.

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FLA. GA. GRADE A D&amp;D

TAST KITE ItK K F SA L E
FR E SH GROUND

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STEW
T-HONE

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79
49

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TAST-RITB B EEF

TART-KITE

SIRLOIN STEAK CHUCK lb.
ROAST

39

FRESH HOC.

MAW b9'/z(
FRESH MEATY

W ar Games Erupt
Into Fatal Ending
NORTH SACRAMENTO. Calif.
UB—War games which erupted Into
a fiery explosion killed 13 year-old
Jimmy Whitley yesterday.
Jimmy’s brolher Michael, 10,
told firemen:
The boy* were playing war
gamea, using a imnll shed con­
taining gasoline, kernrine, paint
thinner and paint as Uwir amino
dump.
Suddenly there was a fire. Mich­
ael thought he kicked over a can
of gasoline in scrambling out.
Jimmy was trapped Inside.
Firemen found a fireworks cap
which they presumed started tin'
fire.

THE COOLEST COAT

PIG
TAILS
THU-FLAVOR

tfj

0LE0 r* 19&lt;

IT'S NEW
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CAN

GREEN GIANT COLDEN
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_
F

corn2b

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I

»15‘

29‘ j /
C.FRHERS STRAINED

S L O A rS CUT

C |B A B Y
FOOD

3

Jars

. f k Ntw “AlreoftoJ"

GREEN
BEANS

RAINCOAT

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LIMIT 6— PLEA SE!

BUTTER

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UNDER THE SON

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I k NC *m initN "
Fly-Front Coot
D s n is aomsthinx nrw unJ* r the ratal
A raiacosi that’s 100% waterproof, yes
*—J si * brecar. thanks to »ii tit holes,
e Tcilr coo&lt;*»lrd seder a stylish
vie bsck . . .
A raincoat so perfect to style — k easily
doublet is * topcoat. . ,
A Mineoti 11X11* of T am a Stxehgth
K u n i xuteiUl ih*t i* tiuly wrinkle
assistant sod remain* soft sod pliable
m arctic or tropics! rampennues . . .
tom is hnished in sheen gabardine
mature — in fashion's newest oustulroe
actor: O ccam Sand .

1%.

BETTER

Convict May Get
Share Of Fortune

Two Class A Teams
Get New Managers

Om roar ’»Jrested” Huu-GUa ralo­
ams TODAY.
§kmi SmmU (H iQ
MU. (iS-40)
Li* &lt;42-441

General Insurance

Mary, "it Just sort of stoppod dead in its tracks. I seem to
be spending more time alone or
with my girl friends, rather than
on parties or planning date*.
"The whole trouble 1* I look 16.
At 15 a girl look* like she'* going
to develop into something. At 17
she's done it. Hut 16 i* neither
fish nor fowl, and yon just can't
pretend."
Mary say* that 16 is a Rood ago
for Ironing up on marriage. It is a
good time to learn to cook, sew,
do your own hair, and organize a
hope chest, she says. '
And that, say* Mary, I* one of
the hig occupation* of her set —
filling the hope chest. Girl* are
marrying *o young that sometim­
es parent* can’t oblige with pretty
thing* when the mortgage still
needs paying off. So the girl* have
hope chest h«'n parties at every
opportunity. Mary say*:
"We have trial shower* on our
birthdays. The girls plan a linen.

THE SANFORD TIERAl.n
Wed. July 6, 1955
Pege 7

PEAS 2™

35

PEPPER

29
35
10

10

EELBECK FANCY
BLUE ROSE

V. S. NO. 1

RICE 3 3 9

Potatoes 3 5 c

irisii

* 4 .9 5

__________ OU WANT
W O N TOU WANT IT
IN ALL FINISHES,

SANFORD
F A I N T CO.
4#t w . r a s r n .

— PARKING

c &lt; Y / Y 7 /Z

i

T
/P T &amp; P S upir
Marku
* » As V
ri/r7*7 to . *
32 9 *rhs ■

.

AS

M

'

23331

i l

�*3

r T fn5 BATTftRT) R W A T /n
Tage S
Wort, July B, H*r*S

Young Japanese
Has No Sympathy
For U. S. Airman
FUKUOKA, Japan r - F.lti* Fu­
el il Lauhnn Jr., a U S. aiiman
h e ld in G*l*c*1nn, T px., on a triple
Ttiurili-r chaise wilt grt no »&gt;mpath)' from the 17-year-nld girl he
named a* hi* Japanese wife.
T.irkn Rurukl, Incited here, de
niid Tuesday *he had ever married
him and quickly added,
“ I never want to v.*» him again
1 am now engaged to another
man.”
l.nuhnn x iv plckesj up al Nogate*. Mexico, Friday, allrmpting
to sell Ihe car nf Mr* Htihv Mej&gt;hrr*«-n, 42. Mr*. Mcl’her.-on her
mother and 12-yrar-nlr| *.in were
found dead in thru D.eklnvon, Tex.
home.
l.auhnn stair! he wa* Irving to
mil hack lo Taeko—for whom he
profc-*ed great lovi—through a
Jlexlei.ii purl.
“Thire months after he g-d hack
home hr wrote me he ha.I derided
to marry an American gir.," Taeko
told reporter*.
“ lie spoke good J.ip.ine-r ..n t
calk'.l himarlf Kuzuo Kakurai, »
typical Japane.-e name,” she *aid.
“ He didn't smoke or drink . . . and
wasn’t a tiail nan, hut tic oltrn
made me angry,
"I knew l.auhnn ah-m! a year
and vi 1. talked abooi **•_--■
*■-»
that u alt.”

Ike Back On Job
After Short Rest
WASHINGTON' f/Pl — Presi dent Kisenlinwrr irln n o ’d in die
JVhilC House shortly after mid­
night after spending
a .fy-day
weekend al (irltyihurg, P a , and
in the mountains nf Maiyland.
He arid Mr*. Klsrnlmwer gave
• pirnle for While House alaff
niemliera and Iheir families Fri­
day at their fnim near Geltyihurg It wns their iltilh wedding
anniversary.
The
Kisenhowers
■pent several hour* al die faun
again yeaterday.
They spent the remainder nf the
xvrrkrml at nearby Camp David In
the Calorlin Mountain*. Tire I’resident spent some tune yesterday
practicing on a golf giern install­
ed at til, ('amp David Irndge.

DO \H I SAY
r i r r s n u f i G i i i /i */ -

N ot tong

• fter John Stewart begun a new
radio ahow her* — titled “ Open
Hoad” — and designed to help
motorists conpeiate with tialfie
n(flci is hr liaii hia fiist
brush
ullli the law. Hi* ear was hauled
off In tli* auto pound because he
parked overtime.

r

ta o

Editor’* Vole—The writer nf the gentins, one of the mo»t Plrrete tain Lalin-Amcrican »oldifri for
following ertirle served a year a t'a n d formerly one of the mott Korea.
an AP repurler in Porno* Alrf* dcmorratic of Ihe South American' president Marry S. Truman " a t
a favorite target. One Bueno* Aire*
and for two year* ohserved K~ republic*.
grntine developments from Rio de
The resentment, In pari. w a * ! newspaper for month* carried a
Janeiro,
based on economic and political daily front-page pholograp
rivalry. Argentina, an agricultural text hclitlling tha American rre»By .STANFORD BRADSHAW
WASHINGTON •* — The cry state, produces principally meat ( idem.
'Peron. si! Bra-.ien, no!" is a and wheat, ft found tha United
With Ihe election of Dwight D.
o!;v*
thing of the past in Argentine State* in competition in certain I EUenlinwcr, h o w e v e r ,
markets, ft also had ambition* to branches began to appear. Eiscntoday.
The mobs whleh gather in front be the leader of Ihe American re-.hnwer, It was said in Argent.na,
of Government House during mass public*, and felt itself thwarted by was a genera! and he could underdemonstration* recently changed the bigger, more powerful United stand and gel along with Grn.
Peron. All the presumed difficult
their »houl to 'Ternn, li! P riej'i, States.
The difference* became acute In 'tie* with Ihe United Stale* wee*
no!”
That change, in * way, symbo­ Ihe 1M0* when the United States j said to have been Truman’s fault,
lise* a two-year turn in relation* refused to admit fresh Argentine} Thi* shift, however, could hava
between Ihe U.5. and Argentine beef. It wanted to protect its own boon motivated by sevrral reason*,
1. Peron'* anti-American cam­
government*. Unlike the past herds from hoof and mouth di«paign in I.atin America prnved a
those relations are now described r *«e.
The Argenline* construed the complete failuie The Argentine ria* friendly, although not rinse
ler had made himself «!tghlly ftThe essential fad is that Ihe ban as a national insult.
United Stale* no longer is the whip­ Ever *inre, except (or relatively dinilou* In the eye* of reaostic
ping Jboy for President Juan Do­ brief period* of warmer relations. Latin diplomat*
2. Argentina had spent all I*
mingo Peron He has turned his Argentina ha* shown distrust and
attention toward Roman Calhnlir little liking lor the ’’colossui of war-accumulated foreign reserve*,
and needed money for an amhipriests. And he may be finding the North.”
Pernn, in beginning hi* climb tinus second five-scar nlan Pwrun
a more formidable opponent than
a U S straw man, epitomize I hy to power in 1913, found it conviof had announced. A hitter drought
former US. A m basudor Spruill enl and ti«eful politically to fan in 1951-52 and low government
anti-American feeling Relation* lived price-, h .d halved il* wheat
Braden.
’
harvest rn -I decimated som e of it*
There haa long Ven, however tumbled to an all-time low after herd* It* woof «** overpriced in
an undercurrent of resentment
closure and expropriation in
against Ihe United Statea in Ar- 1931 of l.a Prensa, the great world market*. The nation wa» in
Hueno* Aire* newspaper which * erase economic rri*i*. Foreign
had long been an independent j investment, il was thought, could
critic of Pemn.
| help.
A wave of unpieredented cril-j
icum. largely from elemrnl* In
the United States, broke around
Ihe head of the Argentine ru ler,!
He reiented it bitterly, and the
antl-Amrriran attacks stcunrd up.
AJJiT TEMP. TONIGHT
Throughout 11)31 and most ol
M AIM S 7:15
1932, Ihe almost completely con­
trolled Argentine pres* blasted Ihe
DENVER
- The nationwide United Stale*, and yelled “ Yanqui
copper strike moved into It* fifth imperialism” on every possible oc
day today a* an estimated 22.non rasion. The Slate Department was
members of Ihe International Un­ a c c u s r d of sponsoring unrest
ion nf Mine, .Mill and Smeller against Peron, and seeking to nbWorker* continued picketing at
plant* and mine* operated hy three
of Ihe four biggest producers.
All negotiation* concerning the
independent union'* demand for a
snort
20-rent hourly wage hike guar*WASHINGTON UP - llainld E
*n«n
tcedannual wage and fringe hen- St as sen say* il appear* unlikely
efil* were suspended over Ihe In­ that 1935 will *ee a further In­
Clewal
Ctittue iam
dependence Day weekend.
crease in Western trade In non.
IMITID A S Iim
However, a union spokesman al strategic goods with the Commu­
STARRING
Denver said he expected the talks nist blor, up 24 per cent last year.
DAN (i'HERI.IIIY
would resume on several front*
Statscn laid in a report to Con1:33 Only
loday.
gre»» that Mn»rnw u using com­
PLUS
The walkout began early Friday merce with the West a* a “ vehicle
“WICKED
at facilities of ihe Poelps-Dodge of in often aggressive total for­
Corp., Kennecolt Copper Corp. and eign policy,” and he cordinued:
WOMAN”
American Smelting Jt Refining Co
"Though Ihene overlure* nf the
STARRING
after Mine-Mill contract* with the .Soviet bloc present a continuing
BKVKRLY aiHTHF.lJE
firm* expired.
challenge, (hey have failed to
,
RICH ARD KG AN
Anaconda Copper Co.,,the oilier divide free nation* which are co­
.7:57 — H:15
member of the Rig Four, ao far operating in the flow of strategic
CARTOON
ha* not been alniek.
material*.

Bergen Harbor Fire
Now Under Control
RKRtfAN, Norway &lt;/Pt — A fire
viflirh lagett through the Ncrgen
llalhor area for neatly four hours
wn* brought under eonlrnl early
today. It leveled half of Ihe early
IRth reiitury wooden trading
houses on Ihe ancient “(iiirban
Quay."
Some 40 nf the most historic
buildings in Norway were reduced
to ashes. Damages were estioiated
at about IJ 10.000.
Due seam an w as bad ly
h u rt
w hile help in g w ith re e ru e o peralion*.

Nationwide Strike
In Copper Plants
Eniers Fifth Day

Itei gen's old waterfront building* wei e oiiginally built by
Hanseatic trader* from north Ger­
many in the 1 tth and tfrlh cen­
turies, The area « « leveled hy
TilMl" 111 JTTC, tFrft trxtr lTM
iri m% ffvrr-»**i«% weir (iifin rebuilt on ih i iinic
pattern.

Fire Appears Gone
From Heated Issue
WASHINGTON

'JT— 'T hr

Renat,

lakes up today the money hill car­

rying fund* for a power line In
the Dixon-Vate* project, hut murh
of the fire appeared to ha gone
frnqt the tonlroveray.
A year ago the l**ur lied up the
Senate In debate for about two
week*, and foe* of the contract, a
symbol nf the public V*. privatr
power fight had planned a deter­
mined fight again Ihi* year.
Hut that was before President
Eisenhower lari Thiir»day railed
fur a rrrimly lo determine whether
“ to continue or In canrel” the
Dixon-Yate* cnntrarl.
JOHNSON ST1I.I. rRITICAI.
WASHINGTON i/B-Sen. f.yndnn
n. Johnson (D-Texl wa* laid y e s ­
terday In he riill In lerioui e.milllion but “ making aatlafaclitry progrei*.”
Johnson, the Senile Demoriallc
leader, late Saturday nifferr.l a
heart allark which allies have said
will keep him away from Ih# Senale for lli« remainder of Hill ««•
•Ion.

You Needn't Feel Old I

an

'Peron, Si! Braden, No! Is Now
Cry O f Long Past In Argentina

MOSCOW &lt;0*— Ne«v York'* nllr*eapitaiist Twenty One Club has
invited an ultra-Commiinisl lo drop
around for a meat.
A raviar hover for the iwanky
Mnd Street eatery, Malcolm Beyer,
said he extended the invitation In
Soviet Deputy Premier A. I. Mlknvan at the American Kmbsisy'*
July 4 reception yeslerday. Thr
American reported that Mlknvan,
who has visited Ihe United Stale*
before, replied he'd he around the
next time he i* In New York
Beyer i» the first American
raviar buyer to visit Rii»«ii *inrr
the war. Previous purrhaves have
Item arranged through Soviet
trade agenrie* In We»tern conn
trie* or through Iran.

fly HERMAN N. IWDIItN,
YOU may be old—but yon don't What cany i do? T h an &lt;
have to feel old. Replenlah the what I do.
ItuppHc* your body need* and
you'll probably Ire able to keep up
with peraont a lot younger than
Par year* now I‘vu b**n taking
you.
vitamin and mineral supple­
I'm 73 yean ntd. Yet I bound ment*. Pm (Irmly convinced that
•round my nfRce quicker than Ihi* ha* not only addad year* to
many employee! 40 yeara young­ my fife, but Ufa to aiy yeara aa
er. BupervUIng operation* of the well.
Hoard of Health In a big city like
The earlier you atari with the**
Chicago 1* a very taxing fob. But su p p lem en t*, af c o u n a , th a
It docan't wear me ouL I'm fre«h better. When you reach that
when I get lo work In the morn­ period la life when you feat tired,
in g and I’m freah when 1 leave nervou*. logy and mentally alugfor home In the evening.
i gtah. you should eartainly begin
the** supplement#. Itchy akin
Don't Sll Back
r
often la a sign af vitamin defi­
* l ‘m not being tmmodeet, hot ciency. Just about everyoM soar
few pertona believe that I am aa AOshould be taUag them.
old aa I really am. Artually I find
-*••
|lt difficult to believe H myaelf, I G o o d l e a r n t *
think I am living proof that you
▼ttamtn and mineral eupiM*don't have to alt back and watch menta In tablet, capaui* and
tha world go by when you gal up liquid form a n available at your
In yeara.
neighborhood pharmacy. I’m not
The aecret of thl* full Rfe for going ta advise any particular
the elderly la almple: the right brand, but every reputable drag
diet and tha right aupplcmenti manufacturer make* LaMet* con­
to that diet.
taining tha umatlal daily mini­
Food* In ProfMrAaaaatB . Jf* mum rttamin aw'
The older you get the more tra- qulrementa.
I think mart a fy
portsnt ft li that you rat the
proper fooda in tb ? p rop er than*.
amounts. Your diet ahould be
high In. protein* and low in faL
M ra . K . : C a n y u a t a l m e t h a t
The protein* grt Important be
«au*a they help burn up tba car­
bohydrate* and keep your weight
down. rat*, of coura*, lead toward ly p m a f t r e a t m a r t adtrtaad f o r
•xeeaa poundage, lamenting you B u a rg u r w W m u a a . T h e p ra d u e •Iditera ahould be upeelally aai»- U m a f le u a r b p t h a rtjo e tim a a #
«ul about
—
u a d a a m a p ha b etp fm L
_ But Iran with a careful flat, I
a m M a r t u t la u la t a th w
fcelkva, you cannot get enough
- MlUmitu, miner ah and highly
■ M an u al amino add* without
t t ia g

TT A LW JT 5T A T 3 O F F . . .

Twenty One Club’^
Sends Invitation
To Soviet Premier

Commies Accused
By U. N. Command
Of Truce Violation
PANMUN.IOM tJT - The U N.
today aeruaed the fommuni*l* of repeated and flagrant
Violations of the Korean truce
agreement, and demanded a Uriel
art .Minting nf riimhal material
brought into Korea by the Red*.
Maj. Grn. Harlan
Park*, tenior U N. member on the Military
Ai mistier Commission. »aid Ihe
fled* were guilty of “complete in­
sincerity dishoneily and utter lack
nf Integrity” In maintaining the
arnilriir* agreement.
A few hour* later, Parks harred
Allied newsmen from a pre*i eon.
ferenr* called by lire CnmmuniM
delegate, North Korean G.n. I.ee
Sang Cho. Park* told Ihe news­
men:
“ I rib not ronridrr il appropriate
that representative* of Ihe enemy
aide enler my ramp In attend my
pre** ronferenre. Conversely, I do
not think a e r r e d l t e d ror
respondent! nf the UNC should
rnl&gt; r their ramp for iimilar eon*
frrencei."

No Increase Seen
In Western Trade

PoiTimxtid

m uch

tb M W h im

• M M M T I M N N O O T B R m .

XXSSl^ASS^&amp;SSSiSS^

Collapse Of Bridge
Subject Of Session
Missouri Democrat
Brings Group Meet
Sticks To Revision CHKROKKF, N.C. UB - Dial.

WASHINGTON ‘in - Sen. Hennlng* iD-Mo) said today he i&lt;
standing pal on a proposed revl
aion nf the federal eleclinn law*
despite strong—and ptMiblv f*|*|
—Repuhllcaii and Democratic opposition.
A hill by Henning* In r»l*e Ihe
expenditure* limit* on presidential
Renalr and llnuse campaign* i*
on Ihe Senate calendar with ap­
proval nf a majority nf the Rule*
Cnmmlllee. It also would irquire
mme detailed reporting nf rim psign spending than al pr**ent.
Rut Democratic leaders have de­
layed action nn Ihe measure in a
reported searrh for a compnml*#
which would make il mote palat­
able In Fouthern Demo*r*i*. who
nppojt x.hat they trrm I* Ural in­
terference in primary election*.

MaeweR n . TavVne,

the mcnming Army CM * « » a*, at * • W W U H o |W .T W &gt; ^ l

SolieJlnr Thad D, Rry*nn Jr., ol
Rryson City, planned lo roofer
here today with law enforcement
and Indian reservation official* in
the rnllapse nf a swinging bridge
Sunday.
, Fifty person* were plumed Inin
the Ornnaliiflrr River and (wn
women were killed eftrr. Ihe rimelure drew Inoae from ita mooring*.
Rrvann said he 1* making Ihe
“investigation In d i t e r a i i a * if
Iherr waa any possibility nf erimi*
n*l negligence” and lb*L he
perl* In rail lb* Bute .Bureau af
Invettigalloa' Into the; ease.
f
____
f
Anvona who pejra I,000 pound*
a yaar in rfll chargee ta tha Brltlnh railway* la' entitled ta a par*
aortal pun, good aw dny train.

WRONG A m i ' l l MKT

CASHKH, Wyo.
A pr«»p-ctive juror, asked if he wa* pre­
judiced in a damage suit being
iirard, replied:
“The only thing Dial prejudice* !
me le an attorney who lakre an
hour tn *ay what rnuld he eaid
in two minute*.''
“ Karuacd fiom Jury duty,"
■aid Diatrirt Judge Franklin B.
Sheldon.
PARK 1MPIU1VKMKNT
WKHT HI-ACIKB, Mont. t-P) —
A mltllnn-doilar ronstructlnn pro­
gram U under way in Glacier Na­
tional Park.' Supt. J. W; Kmmtrt
•aid $&amp;nO,.tOO will lie aprnt on Going-ln-lhe-Hun Highway
which
hiaerta tha park. Il will ha tha
park’a Urgent aaaaUuclion year.

2806 PARK AVE.—QUAN1TY RIGHTS RESERVED

We S p e c ia liz e In Q u a lity M e a ts
• ----------------------------------------------- •
U. H. GOOD GRADE B E E F

CHUCK RO AST

•

FRESH GROUND (U. 8. GOOD GRADE B E E F )

HAMBURGER

3

39

l b s -

LEAN ft MEATY

C

99c

BEEF SH O R T RIBS

LB.

29c

SLICED B A C O N

LB.

47c

PALM RIVER

BI BINRiB AB USUAL
MIAMI, Kla. (AS - "Mind your
own huiinyee,” retorted. Jntaph
Adjml, III, whrn a motnrUt aakad
him if ho didn't know ha waa
breaking tha law hy Jaywalking.
Tha mnloifat — Municipal
Judge Alhart Duddin, whnaa hullnaaa inrludae piiniahfng traffic affender* — took tha advice. In
court, Adjml paid • ta (Ui*.
Although Panama hat at taming
Junglra on the Atlantic aid*, the
pari of tha country on tko Pacific
aid* U dry and apan.

SUPREX MARKET

P IL L S B U R Y

(W H IT E

O R

Y E LLO W )

17 0 2 .

C A K E M IX

Pkg.

8 W IF T N IK G

SH O R T E N IN G
SO AP PO W DER

3 Lb. Can

25c
69c

TREND

O rlan d o

Lge. Pkg. 2

For

35c

ST A N D A R D

RECOMMENDS

TOM ATOES
PILLSBURY FLO UR

TELEVISIONELECTRONICS

303&lt;*» 10c
* ru* 95c

DELSEY

DETOUR AHEAD

TOILET TISSUE
DEL MONTE

W
H O L E A P R IC O T S 2'/&gt;8l“ &lt;*" 29c
MORTON’S FROZEN IBVi OC.
PIES Apple, Peach or Cherry
^ For 89c

H nw unp

FAMILY SIZE
.

' *• . •- •*’ *jSV 1^7«- .
•

v AS

‘K M * ® ? * ; ■

x

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•

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*___________________________________________ .
v

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(Hi LB.)

*-■

�If i
tj

It»a W orth A dT crtU lnc 1b

CLASSIFIED ADS
*

—t
WELa KA APART MElfTS: rooms,
priTita baths. 114 W. P int St,
R otlaw iy u d Baby
*y, Week or month—Tel. H2S.
Center 111 West First
Apts. Efficiency. Phone
425.
JFINISHED Apartment. 500 Park
|Av«._________ _______________
mnushed Kitchenette apt*. Air
■Conditioned. Slumberland Court.
^South City limits Highway 11-81■ Bedroom Home. H B'°&lt;* iiom
| Southside school. Call 1541.
CE Seminole Realty for Desir­
ee Homes and Apia. Phone 27.
JRN1&amp;HED Apt. Phone 432-W
rnltbcd cottage lor couple, or
with baby. »14 Elm Avenue.
Bedroom furnished house, tto /n
per month. Phono iw or 743-W.
lite r 4:00 p. m.
ledroom house, nicely furnished.
&gt;orch, carport, and large lawn,
ymfiwood, J. R. Grant, Call
* 3 6 3 2 . ________________
r#URN!SHED 4 Room Housa
with 2 Bedrooms. Phone 1326-J.
ARGE. Clean Apartment. Down
"stairs Small one, $35.00 411
Park Ave.
______
Room Apt. 200 Avacado.
Few Masonry 2 bedroom houie
in Casselberry. 560 per month.
Phone Orlando 3219*._________
lavy cuuple only, 3 room apt
b n ished. Desirable location.
[one 2989-J.
Moi
URNISHED 3 Bedroom Houie.
Close In. 119 West 1st St. Phone
616
___
OUNTAIN COTTAGE - July.
Hendersonville, N. C. Three
Bedroom, 1H Baths. Coovenient to stores. Phone A. L. Skin­
ner. 1433.
__________
IICELY Furnished Apartment.
First floor, also Garage Apt.
Magnolia
Room Apartment. Completely
furnished. 313 Palmetto Ave,
Room Furnished Apt. Close in.
145.00 plus gaa. 107 Locust Ave.
Phone 721-M.
TfREE Apartments. Furnished,
close In. Phone 2468-J.
Room furnished apt., Private
bath, Screened porch, Private
entrance, Window exhaust fan,
Wcctricity, Hot lc Cold water
finished. Walking distance to
the Beat. Near shopping crnler.
Phone 170*. or 2S0-W after 5
p. m., 2471 Palmetto Avenue.
FURNISHED One Bedroom Gar
age Apartment. 2514 Sanford
Ave. J. N. Aiiaretlo, Phone
1474.
Bedroom furniabed h o u i e .
Phone il l .
Bedroom, Furnished House,
.war Longwood. Phone Mrs. H.
B. LaBree. Winter Park. 26-2369.
Unfurnished 2 Bedroom House—
Kitchen eouieped: Largee feneed in yard. Preler couple
e
with children. 2511 Park Ave.
M om
- EKACW RENTAL* - !■

f M il 'T i n T

_W( M. "BBT* STEMPER

£ ms&amp;^ssss^
&gt;Wa £122
112 N. Park Ave.

w JS u

L O W E L L 'S . OZIEB
C oaSSjB om ee^end Farida
Tittiliter low east homes
dew
lew t% bedroom concrete block
ho u s e . FHA approval. 2431
Myrtle. Owner 34*9 Myrtle.

THE OLD HOME TOWN

T H E SANKOI(I) HERALD W rti. J u ly 6, 1353

By STANLEY

U. 1 h w 0"*e

Seminole Realty

CONCRETE

e. Auxiliary

verb
1 1 . P -.ir .g e n t
v eg e ta b le

12. Capital cC
V iet
N am

I*. Former

C

50th Anniversary
SPECIALS

11.50
1* 50

■ t ____ __________________
o r r i c c end Credit Man. Young,
aggressive and willing. Steady
employment. Firestone Stores.
1*A HELP WANTED iFemaUt 1IA
STENOGRAPHER and File Clerk.
Steady employment by old es­
tablished firm For appoint­
ment. Write Box BS. ft. The
Sanford Herald.

39.50

DISTRICT MANAGER

10.50
U.50

35. C o r n m e a l

(South- '

v -estern
V .S &gt;

3ft.More Just
1?. Cone
(.mat.)

?EF A T‘i£

#*.’■&amp;

rt»Sr7ti.S,2S'AS,« 8
■aanyURFon

SB. F o reig n
27. F i n d t h '
• a n s w e r to
JS. Broods of
p h ta sa n U
(ob s)
J 9. D e l i b e r a t e
M . In d ia n s
liv in g
tn U ia h
52. N e g a t i v e
re p ly

-S- tYT*.
•».
S

—MB

•-'O U G

h

T O

"• - °?5=5.r “"**

BOAT8 - MOTORS
-II
19I». II. CAM PBELL
General Gentraclor
ROBSON'S SPORTING GOOD'S
“Homes of Distinction”
WILL BE CLOSED JULY I, 5
-Way 17-92
Fhawe 1441
A ft FIELD TESTING EQUIP­
For Better Plumnmg
MENT.
See or Call
Iliiw will you «wanT
W. J. KING
Mom will you Trane?
2994 South Park Phene 5*
Your old Motor (nr a
natter grade - EVLNRUDE!
Dragline service, Lakefronti A
ditching. Estimates given. Phone HOBSON Sporting Goods
Geneve 2464. Orlando 52504,
Kvlarude galea A Service
Sanford 2221.
2*1 K. lit HI.
PhMW H*
Matlresx A Box Springs
te . FURNITURE- » 'hete O—4e »
Renovated
•‘Free Estimate"
Buy your Furniture at Berry'a
ECnOUS BEDDING CO.
Warehouse Furn , CO., at 901 W.
Corner 2nd A Magnolia Th. 1231
III. St. All nationally adv. fur'Bed' Bamberger, Mgr.
nilurr at warehouse prices.
It’e So F.key
22—KLKtTTCICAI, HUBVICma—a

To Piece A W ant Ad
Ju*t Call 1821 and aak far FfUGIDAntR appDanpes. sale*
and aervtee. G. If. High. Oviedo.
th* W ant Ad departm ent
Fla. Phene 4131 or
Sanford Herald
1543-W after * p m.

Raadxll E lectrk Cm

i and croatey Appliance*
Youngs Lave Kitchen/
Electrical eontrarttng and repair*
112 H njwolte Av«. Ph— e I I I
orw ew

c w tp iim

HAYNES Office machine Ce.,
Tyeenitteia . adding mactttttea,
Sales-RenUU, 214 Magnolia, Ph.
24-

BEAUTY FARLORR

For Lovelier II*lr

Era-Bean Beauty Shop
Ph«a* 542

HABBIKTTS
BEAUTY NOOK
(Air Conditioned Salon.)
IH 8a. Oak Ave. Pheaa 911
LAUNDRY BERWICK
•
•

One hour Watt sad Damp
Dry
One hour 18 Wash and Dry

•
•

Flaiabed Laundry
Rasihme Dry Cleaning

Paid

Huolkwide

‘

St.

PhoM u

The Want Ad Department is
•pen from 8:30 a. m. until 5:30 n.
m. each business day except Satnrit.it aitrrnoon. (leadline for
»*cko!ay insertions is 2:00 p. m.
the day prrrrdinj; publication.
Any ads coming In lalrr than
2:00 n. m. will be published umlt*
Too ltein To Classify.
Call ui about our tmsrnrai ratra.
A little apace like this will get
your mestagn before our more
than toooo rradrra. Tell 'em to
day! Phone 1*21.
Thn above 4-llne ad ran be run
$ ful! days for only 5? 40. 3 days
for only 51.80 and one day (nr 72r
Advertisers are requested to no
ttfy the Want-Ad Department Im
medlalrtv of any errors tu their
ads, as The Sanford tlersld will be
responsible fur only one Incorrect
insertion.
BAMPLE a-LINK AD
GET estra cash for artirlra you
no longer use. Place your ad U&gt;
day. Phone 1121.
A 3 line ad, aueh as the one above
is only 36c per day on our low 3
day earned rate economy plan, 45c
per day for 2 days and 54c for
1 day.
Buy. Sell, Rent, litre with want
ads, the busiest salesman in
town. Put one to work for you.
Phone 1*21. We will be glad to
charge It
For only 53 oo the above 5-Rne ad
la on tna Job for you or 5 full
days. Only 52.25 keeps It working
for you for 3 days. 1 day la only
BDe.
CUUmriED OUTPLAY

—24

GET PROFESSIONAL CARE!

'/■ /

Su

•te

'/ / / t

/ .V i

14

Zo

il

z*&gt;
it

t
Su
%

11

s-v

ii

/// Wv

SB

40. Ah entire
range
41. By oneself
42. Acctimulite
43. Founda­
tion*

&lt;&lt;&lt;

«AO

%

'M
A\

J

BARGAIN!
3 Bedroom Horn* in Wjrnnewood. 2 Year* Old.
Thia home hi* Oak Floor*,
Ceramic Tile Bath, Dining
Are*. Large Living Room
and Kitchen Equipped with
G. E. Appliance*.
Telephone 111 after * P. M.
for ippoM lm el Is ere this
home.

«OT CAMrAtmiA, catcher fur the Tlronklyn Ucalcrrs. inrwerr; que-tlim* fur Investiguttons Commissioner J, Irwin S hapiro (left) on a
Harlem liquor store tie owns. Shapiro Is bolding sh inquiry tn N ew
York Into the State Liquor Authority. The ballplayer, hacked up h r
hw attorney. William J. O'Hara (background), declared Out lu»
•*w»s clean from the wotd go” on tits purchase rf a fillin g bustnev.
tn Queens to obtain a liquor license in Manhattan, (inlem atum ol*

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TELEVISION

1 1 .0

H ILL LUMBER
&gt;l&gt; W. M

Y ft %
zs CO l*

IO

IN SU R A N C E

n

• Factory Supervised Service
• House calls 9 a. m. till a p. m 17 - Airn»woBii.iwTmAnJttt«
&lt;All makci and models I
112 Mag. Ave.
Pbone 2400 U will pay YOU to see US before
you buy. Open Evenings and
FH A
Sundays.
Kaslslde Trailer Bales,
Far Bernadettes and repair*.
Palalia, Fla.
^.'Yk-r-.v.-i.z^r—
------:---------------n
CARS
Skerwuus CosserwU Col
BOUGHT SOLD TRADED
Out Weet 1318
Phew 2tt)
Roy Heel's Useo Care
Sanlord Av*. A Ulh SL
PLUM BING
Contract and repair work. Free
estimates. R. L Ilarvey. 904 FOR SALE —Model "A" Ford,
Vrry Cheap. *01 Rosalia
Sanford Ave. Phene 162*.

ials . . call 83 first. Every­
thing will be ready to pick
up on the double-quick
when you rome In. This ix
another of our helpful
urviccA to make 83 the
num ber to call fo r lum ber
and material*.

s t

it

1

I'HOn E 811
ATLANTIC B ank f uDG

RANDALL ELECTRIC CO.
T V SERVICE CENTER

FLOOR sanding and finishing
Cleaning, waxing. Serving Semi­
nole County since 1225. IL M
Gleason, Lake Mary.
r pei
Bicycle A General Repair.
S ta n ley 's Hike Shop
310 E. 4th St. TeL 2434
ENVELOPES, letterheads, state­
ments. Invoices, hand hills, and
p r o g r a m s , etc. Progressive
Printing Co., Phona 409 — 403
West 13th «L

riAieo B kanrac

L. L Sill—Piano Terhnlrian.
Phone 2164. Route 1. Sanford.
■MALL aUKlNUto
U you have a am all business In a
■•eluded part of town and are
interested In getting ruatnmera,
Jilt thn service you offer In the
Ctaialfled column ot Urn Sanford
Herald. Call

BmlWall

ORLANDO
Undo
Ray. 11424.

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SS. W ith m ig h t
C 9. B o u n d a r y

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SC. e?om s o f

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53. Soothing

W A IT IN G F O f? TH E- L A S T B U S
O N S P O O K W A Y L A N E - B E T W E E N |^ 7
IV.V.•
D IS M A L . D IP A N C &gt; B E I5 IE - R O A D -

5

l

11

e-Rir*

&amp; SUPPLY Y A RD
ott AB Water

i

E o e n t

M;i ►e it E a y

MIDDLE AGED_ MAN~wllI conslder any type of work. Care­
Hirarle Csacnte Co.
taker, etc. write Box JWW %
M8 Elm Are.
FBowo I2M
Tiu Sanford Unfold
WILL
YOU
ACCEPT
840.
TRADE
12
hen, 3 Bedrooms
IN ALLOWANCE FOR YOUR
CB construction. Price
OLD MATTRESS A SPRINGS; FOR SALE — Small Used Furni­
Down. 56,40000
Regardless of make or condi­
ture and Clothing Business.
Priced right! Write P. O. Box
tion!
723 Orange City. Fla.
MUST Sacrifice. S u g a r Bowl
10 year*,
Prteraew JL. loy a l Guaranteed
Newstaad, beer license, snark
Comfort Mattreis A Box
bff» riork and fixtures, DcLand,
Spring *119 00 —Loss 7&gt;ada —
130 N. Boulevard.
579 M. Guaranteed Id Years.
A. C.
. Lead

■

IP. A metallic

Woman, aggrrslve, well-groomed.
ed, 3045 with th
thorough know- FLOOR RANDOM! A Finishing;
Oak fleam furnished, laid A fin­
experience In recruitledgo and expwier
HK
ished. Za business since 1920.
leg, training at
and managing
M ather of Sanford
E. F. sterna*: Route t, Bex Iff;
women la directt selling work.
Call 71* B-4 before 7 a. m. or
53,000 —59.000 yearly income po­
2*248 r . 1st 84.
Phew# Iff
after S y s L
tential. National organization
with modern merchandize me­
VENETIAN BLINDS
thods. Car essential. Wire col­
(Nationally Adv. RoUa-Ktad)
lect, giving nams, address,
Manufactured fee
phone number to T. N, RogersSeefawle V«m 4Jm
Empire C r a f t s Corporationj
tae west ard «l
pi
Ntwark. New York Stale. Se.
Ire
ted
applications
will
be
in­
■ ttfg tr ty
O n r o iif s e 11
terviewed Ir
‘ ‘
“Your Wes
Weatinghouse Dealer"
Maytag Washers
US HagneUe Avn.
Pham Mil
WANTED —■By middle age man, W hen you w ant to pick up
a Jcb as clerk or salesman pra/erred. Reply P. O. Box M3, lumber or building m ater­
Sanford.

RED-I-MIX CONCRETE

chaic)
24. O n. of
place in
the hills I'fjt-rdsy's Aa&gt;» «r
w a te r
34 Biblical,
of r.mr.a
?. Capua!
r im e
25 Route* a
new i*ny
i rtermt:da)
53- Tibet in
rrieil
5 Biblical
27. Diitrci*
name
signal
36. Cm! s r.trn.A
37 One of a
ft. Theater seat 23. Foct-Ulie
lo One u ho L;j
famous
part
36. Any
31. Canvas
radio team ^
rmaoeoua
39 tjvborstory
shelters
tree
(at-br.)
S3 Here.dale

II. Creek
letter

':
•^

tim e s
(ar­

6. Shallow

coin*
»Pp)

Ift.f-la v

15 Know
(Scot &gt;
20 Recline
21. Famous
Italian
volcano
2:.Oi.1

r&gt;. Half enu

rilv e r

T H E C U R IO SIT Y S H O P
17-92 at Itiawalha. Used 1 new
14furniture, antiques, bric-a-brac.
IM RllANnt
14-1
Como in and bmuse around.
USED PLUMBING FIXTURES
YOU don’t have to see the credit
Preferred Rates to
manager to save dollars legiti­
Policyholders
mately on our GIGANTIC ReJohn WtniaaM I sm.
innva* SALE.
411 8ael.rdAll.wUc
RODINSON MUSIC CO.
I lU
220 N. Orange Ave. Orlando, Fla. 1007 Sanford Are.

T. IT. HERO
W. DIETRICHS
rkowe 17
IN! Park A
AN INVESTMENT
Practically naw 2 bed room home
kitchen equipped. Cily water,
hut outside City on I»t 65 x 1*0
fl. Paved road. Now rented
$65. per Ho. $6,000. $1,500 cash,
hal. 550. per Mo.
RAYMOND *H. BALL, BROKER
S. D. Highlaymaa. Associate
TUX — 36 short, excellent condi­
O M .lfaiTison, Associate
tion. Phona 645-W.
104 South Park Avt.
Phone M0
Living Room LOVESEAT and
For your Real Estate seeds:
Chair. Good second hand condi­
Cullen and H arkey, Realtors tion. 550.00. Call 2124-J.
1M N. Park Ave. Phene 2312.
FIT FOR A QUEEN3 Bed., Nothing to do —Just Foam nubber Mattresaes, InnerS
p
r
i n g Mattresses, Couches,
move In, A*1 condition, El. KitH*bv Beds, Renovating. Uphol­
chin, separate dining room, 2
stering and Slip Cover work.
utility rooms, carporte. TV an­
tenna, trees on 116 lot, hack N IX BEDDING MFG. COyd. fence, $12,500. 1S04 Mellon- 1341 Sanford Ave.
Phene M4-J.
villa. Phono 2121-W.
QUICK CASH for furniture, boats,
LOT — 75* x 150 on Paved Road
motors. Buy one piece or com­
in Plantation Estates. Will sa­
plete home. Thousands of arti­
crifice for 5700.00 Apt. 1, 2015
cles for sale at the
Sanford Ave., Sanford.
Super Trading Post on 11-*2
I Mile South. Phone 22II-R
2 bedroom house. 4S4 per rent
mortgage, fto monthly. IMS TV ANTENNA - Flower pots,
Summerlin.
World Wide Reception Radio,
Nrw. Phone 234-J after 6 p. m.
2 Bed Room House. Kitchen fur­
niture, space heater, Venetian
AETTCtER WANTED - 4
blinds; Hardwood floors— Ule
hath; Low down payment. Call Highest CASH, TRADE-IN prtrrs
‘l for need furniture Call 95*.
nights 174S-M. or see at 2101
on-Maltr Furniture Co. 311
Amelia,
E. lit S t
3 IXJTS A- Drcamwnld Section on T— Pom-jJt—tark-BeepIke —7
corner Maple Ave, at 25th SL
Phone 2290-W.
rOR SALE — one 5 gated saddle
A Buggy horse, bridle, harness
3 bedroom home, Tile bath, Utili­
and buggy. Phone 2417-J-3.
ty room, Carporte, Screened
poieh. Corner lot. 5*200. Month- PERSONAL! TO DOG LOVERS.
^vji£m em s_15im ^ l0^ R osaJia.
Give your dug the food chosen
best- tasting by hundreds of
4 - REAL ESTATE WANTED - 4
dog*. New. Improved PURINA
DOG CHOW. Contains every­
WILL TRADE — Jacksonville
thing normal dogi need to main­
Beach 3 Bedroom Home; Twotain sturdy vigor and they love
car Garage Art, on 50 x 125 Ft.
Landscaped lot. 200 Ft. from
Simpson F e r n Supply
Ocean. 9 Blocks from business
Phone 145*
renter. Valued at 516,000. FOR II* W 2nd 81.
HOMS In or near Sanford. For Sale:, COLLIE TUPS. AKC
Alight consider Business Pro­
Registered, 3 Months. Dewormperty. W. W. Patterson, 129-9th
ed, shots. Phone 43-R. C. J.
Avt.. South Jacksonville Beach,
Millikan.
Fla.
FOR SALE PIGS — Phone
1039-W. 231* ganford Ave.

DOWS’
I. Native rf
Cos rtto; x
2 Rtztlesi’y
w Narrow
inlets
(gcol)
4 French
writer

ACROSS
7. Corse

Robert A . WHllama, R ealtor Ready Mixed Concrete. Concrete
Block, Sand. Gravel, Cement
Raymond E. Lundqalst, AaswcUte
Concrete Pipe to Meet All Quali­
Phone 1673 Atlantic Bank Bldg.
fications.
2 Bedroom home located in one
Phene 2400
of (he best sections on two lots Sherm an Concrete Pipe Co.
cm corner. Beautifully land­
Owt Weal 12th 84.
scaped, hardwood Doors, strict­
ly modern. 511,500. Terms.
— Factory to Yen —
3 bedroom home, hsrdwood floors,
V ew elU a Bllndn
tiled bath screened porch and
carporte. Excellent condition. Encleeed head. S a g p ro o t-------rail with plactlc ends. Plastic or
Pr.cc $12,000. Easy terms.
rayon tapes. Cotton or nylew
cords.
This home hss two Urge bed­
rooms, sepsrate dining .room Senkarlk G U n and P aint Cn.
Phone 331
large utility room, Jslousled 112-114 West Bed St
porch. It is located on two lots,
has double garage. Priced ( l VARIETIES PANELING
Native and Foreign Woods
$12,000. Kitchen equipped.
See Them At
You should see this lovely lake Sherm an Concrete Pip* Cofront home with 96 feet of lake Out Weet 12th 84.
Phene 1U1
frontage, tt has two bedrooms.
2 bathe. Florida room, large Used furniture, eppllaneea, cools,
living room, closed garage and
etc. Bought-sold. Larry's Mart.
storage. Rood boating and fish­
321 East 1st St. Phona 1131.
ing ami bathing beach.
METAL ROOFING
C. A- WHIDDON, SR.
New In Slock. 5-V Crimp - 1 U "
Reg. Real l u s t s Braknr
Corrugated2W“ Corrugated
u s s. Park
Ph. i m
Get all Your roofing needs et
Whether baying or aeffing. tt will Sherm an Concrete Pipe Ce.
pay you to see;
Out West 12th St.
Phone
J. W. HALL, REALTOR
Building
AIR CONDITIONING
Florida StalaB
Pbona ITS*
‘ Cali Hall"
Room or House
H. 3. POPE CO , INC.
COUNTRY HOME!
M South Park Ave. Pheoe 1440
2 Bedrooms, furnished, good wa­
ter. a'l modern conveniences, Foollockcra ............ Special $7.95.
situated on approx, one acre of Paint ........................... $2 30 gal.
good high land. 5 miles west
All sites tarpoulin*.
of Sanford, total prlee U anly
ARMY-NAVY SUB PLUS
54.900.00, with terms.
310 Sanford Ave.
Phone 1321

P age {7

DAf LY C R O S S W O R D

Harhtwee, and Repairing
8 104 S. Park Pbewe 1742.

FOR SALE - 3 Beflroom Home.
H Block from South Side school.
Call 2541.

Rtr. 15 *5 16x34 nr 11x54
Bevel Plate Glass
Mirrors ...............
Reg. 16 *5 Double Door
Metal utility Cabinet
Reg. 34 95 54" Metal
Wall Cabinet ............
Futcklsoo OCEAN .FRONT Apart- Rt&amp; 2*
*5 Platform Roeken
U i n South AUaatte Dav- Reg. 4*.50
Berk line "Ballat"
Beach, Fla. Phone Et7*-W,
Swivel Chairs ........
Reg. M.50 Contour Chairs
with Nylon Cover and
Foam Latex Filling ..

W oodruff * 8 1 a tte U r y

BALE-A

F

I f It's W orth A n y th in g

| Brainy Bornerd,
A book-eooding teal
Thinks our clossifiodT oro
Mors onWghtsning than whooL

(t h e *
t .ie M

S rT K IIS O Q S
t V e lc T u n
Q Leva
S ober)
ouee patty

13 ss
l 0*
I 3*
1 e &gt; n (f
1:»*
n . H o t. «’ to « h y
1 at,
M i t t i t I« e y
tt II e e r ie ' •)&lt;■ m
4.1* ud Tour Account

Tho heart is among the strong*
est and most durablo organs in
the human body, says tho Ameri*
cast H urt Assn.

■
»'

�FlTCl'O
flH Laid
held in r.i
m unlrr r
palhy Irn
named »♦
Tarko I
Di«I Tur«
him .md i
"I hup
1 a rn nt
Itiiin."
I .auhnn
fa ir., M&lt;
to 1rjl 111
P hm on,
mother ;i

found dc#

JUMBO SUNKIST
r n i c c s g o o d t h r u s a t , j u l t oth

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

llOIIIC.

Latihnn
tail back
profr..rd
Mexican
"Three
home hr
lo marry
told rrpo
"lie M
talk'd hi

POTATOES

JUMBO PASCAL

typical J i

"H r rluln
rnnn'l a

IT

Blade me

OTH6R

LARGE WESTERN

"I kmand u* l&gt;
that ii a

LARGE CUBAN

MAXWELL HOUSE
W A R N

OFFEEi7

drnt Li.

W h ite

H

niclit nil
Vretrod
in

I he

n

Hr mu
• pirnlr
lunnliera
day at •
hnrjr. It
annlverar
aprnt »r«

UMIT ONP WITH OTHER FOOD ORDER

attain yr

t f M H P * M IR A C L E
.
# *
LAW *

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n rrkrnd
the Cat™
rlrnt

A ” S L IC E D B E E F .

»pi

piartiidn
td a t th

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after .In
tadln all
Hoad" •

m n tn r l.tr
officer*

u itli th e
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vou
have t

taupplle
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with p&lt;

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■round
many r
er. Sup
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It doeat
when I
In c am
(or hon

Don’t S
* I'm t
few pet
rold aa I

jit dime

think I
don't h
the wot
IIn year.

The i
the eld
diet an
t o that

Foods I
The c
portent
p rop et
•mount
t i l t h In

Th# pr

eauaa U
bnhydn

«Jown. F

•aeeaa )

SWEET TREAT SUCED

PINEAPPLE »&gt;»- 29'
“ E A T -R IT E ” VEAL1
TODAY'S BEST M EAT B U Y !
SUGAR PEAS 2 — 25'
Gr’fruit JUICE 2 29"
CH’PD BEEF 2 - 49c
St’pd MALLOWS 19*
FROZEN FOODS
GRAHAM Cr’kers - 23c TURNOVERS g p
/
CREME S’WICH - 19*
POT PIES as * %
PARTY PUNCH - 27c
Mis ’m m
LIMEADE
1A f
CAKE MIX
ARGO

But ■

’EAT-RITE" ROUND BONE

“EAT-RITE” VEAL

DEEP SOUTH

'EAT-RITE" r

CUT BEEF

ARMOUR

“EAT-RITE” VEAL

TAT.RITE" PLATS

CRACKIN’ GOOD

GRADE "A** QUICK FROZEN

CRACKIN’ GOOD

JESSIE JEWELL FRUIT

M ix ’« * I

CRACKIN' GOOD

MORTONS FROZEN

GROUPED

PkfS %

MEDIUM
Sugar Crook Brk2at Link

PAR KEN

SAUSAGE

BETTY CROCKER

Whit*, Yellow
or Devil* Food

DINTY MOORE

■Idaten
«ul abo’
fcellm,
ivltt min

•’EAT-RITE" BEEP

20-os
Pkf

Lb.

LAND O’ SUNSHINE

GREEN GIANT

Ik iC o a V |C
1

SWANSON'S

lOVi-oz. Can

GREEN GIANT YELLOW
FLAGA

CK. OF THE SEA SOUD PK. WHITE

OLD FASHION
SCHIMMEL

LIBBY TOMATO

TOUR SOAP
L IF E IM Y
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t i e i . tie
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SWEETHEART
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�Weather

i | t m lh

Fartly cloudy through Friday
with »-»MfreH *ho»»r* tad thun­
dershower* mostly in *ftfrnoon.

AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER
*

Established 1908

VOLUME XLVI

SANFORD. FLORIDA.

THURSDAY. JULY 7. 1955

M en

No. 227

Abandon.
Idea For Park
As Horses Win

S O S Message
M ay Be Hoax

Two Orlando and W inter P ark businessmen who recent­
ly figured in a proposal to build an open-air amusement centjD on Lnke Monroe hnve gone into the harness horse train ­
ing business a t Cassclberiy.
•
W. R. Kem pt and Richard Sodero. is leasing the Azalea

No Trace
Home Demo Council
Of Ship
Annual Meeting Set
Is Found

»

.

— ---------------- ------------------ Driving Park for 35 year*, an
nouneed that the plant will be re­
named Seminole Park and will
operate on a year-round basis.
The 150-acre park waa leased
from Mr and Mr*. Stanley Kupiszewski. who purchased it in 1051
from Ilihbaid and Leonard Casselberry. The property includes a
lodge, a - mile traek, stablea for
283 horse* and a grandstand that
seats 5,000.
general business discusKemp and Sodero announced
aion featured tha weekly lunch­ plana for improving the grand­
eon meeting of tha Junior Cham­ stand, stables, traek and lodge.
ber of Commerce today at the They said the infield on the Irark
Yacht Club.
will be landscaped and
bridle
• • i •
will be landscaued a n d » bridle
A proud grandfather told the path prepared.
Stroller that thia actually hapAir conditioning equipment will
gmned. Six-year-old Jackie was he installed in the lodge, and fire
waiting relativei in the country protection equipment will be made
for the f in t time. Everything available throughout the park,
fca beheld waa new and exciting they continued.
to him. Toward aunaet of the se­
Kemp, who owns the Aquaseum
cond day he atood in open- and Coliseum in Orlando, and Soeyed wonderment watching hit dcro, who owns Deming Galleries
grandmother pluckjng a chicken. in Winter Tark, said they expect
After a bit, hia curioaity arous­ the stables to be filled during the
ed, he aaked very aerioualy, season which open* in December,
“Grandma, do you have to take
No training has been done a t tha
(hair clothea off every night?” park tinea the 1952-63 season.
* * * *
Tha park, originally called
•W hich eame firat thla yoke or Seminole Driving Park, was con­
that? At leait Mary King, cook structed in 1325 by a group which
at Faults Drug Store might be included the lstc Joe Tinker, fam­
•iking herself that question. At ous shortstop of the Chicago
ahn Drake a medium size egg open Cubs In the Tinker-to-Evers-tothis morning what should appear Chsnce double play era.
aot one yoke but four . . . . . .
Kamp an t Sodero announced
when asked what she did with last month that the erea In the
the oddity the replied; “Why, vicinity of the bandihell and new
1 threw it in the trash it looked boat basin here was being con­
no funny. It kinda scared me." sidered for a $250,000 open-air rei’L bet it did. Mary . . . But creation center which would be
nk of tha poor thicken!
tha scene of acquatie show* and
•ther spectacles.

Strolling
In Sanford

1

A M o rix tn l P ress Leased W ire

The 31sf an mint S tate Home Denittnntralinn Council
m eeting nml Short Course will open on the University of
Florida m nouns tonmroiv, with nunc than -100 delegate* in
attendance.
Taking a i its conference theme,
cslct'dny’s Dream,

Investigators Call
For Wenzelt Info
Regarding His Role

Air Force Officers
Gather In Taipei
For Buildup Talks
TAIPEI, Formosa (JPt — Three
top U. 8. Air Force officers in the
Pacific flew Into Taipei today to
confer on the buildup of Commu­
nist air power on the nearby Red
mainland.
Simultaneously Chines* Nation­
alists said two Rod air bases
which would bring Formosa and
offshore islands within easy strik­
ing distance ef Communist jet*
were about completed.
Tha visiting officers a n Gtn.
Laurcne* S. Kutar, commander'of
tha Far East Air Fort* In Japan;
Maj. Gen. Sory Smith, chi'? of the
Pacific Air Command in Pearl
Harbor, and Brig. Gen. William L.
Lao, commander of the U. S. 13th
Air Fore# in tha Philippines.
In addition to tha Rad Buildup,
they trill discuss operating prob­
lems of tha U. 8. air task force
on Formosa.

a

-*•
- .

LAKELAND tW-A three-man
committee of tangelo growers »nd
handlers will work with the Flor­
ida Citrus Commission on an ad­
vertising program.
lire tangelo men met yesterday
for the lirtl timr iinre the I t t . U
Legislator* put their fruit under
regulation of Ihc comml**inn.
Generally they agreed tangelo*
should he governed hy the same
r e g u l a t i o n * as orange*, but they
preferred to advertise through
store displays rather than big ra­
dio, television ami newspaper pro­
grams.
Named to the committee were
J. B. Prevatt, Tavare*; Le* By­
num, Titusville; and B. F. Wheeler
Jr., Ovirdo.
The tsngelo Is a cross hetwren
an orange and a grapefruit- The
1955-50 crop ia expected lo be
about ion,ooo boxes, a small item
in the Florida ritrua deal.

of

The final Immunisation clinic
for Seminole County first and
second graders who have not re­
ceived their second shot of polio
vaccine will he held tomorrow s t
the County Health Unit, Dr. Ter­
ry Bird, County Heslth Officer,
announced. The clinic will begin
a t 8 a. m.
Dr. Bird said he had been ad­
vised by the State Health De­
partment th at th t
National
Foundation for Infantile Paral­
ysis had recalled all unused vac­
cine. Any vaccine left after to*
morrow'* rllnlc will be returned
Monday or Tuesday, he said.
Only 828 of the 1,546 first and
■econd
shot, Dr. Bird reportfirst shot have been given the
second
shot, Dr, Bird report­
ed. He
said the Health Unit
had enough vaccine left to Im­
munize 600 of the remaining 718.

Efforts Being Made
To Help Conditions
TALLAHASSEE tri-Rep. Glcaton of Citrus County says many
Floridarestaurants are not ob­
serving sanitation laws end he
doubts the hetet and restaurant
commission is making proper ef­
forts '*o correct these bad condi­
tions.*
His protest was made in a teller
to Gov. Collins. •
"1 do not think that (he hotel
and restaurant commission Is mak­
ing a half effort to correct these
bad conditions," Gleston said. "I
suggest to you, sir, that If the pres­
ent commission einnot correct
these conditions, you as governor
make soma change* la this de­
partment.”
na complained some restaurants
are full or flies and have rest­
rooms "in such filthy condition as
to b* unusable. These places in
my opinion have not bean inspect­
ed in yeari."

Cauley, 33, and parroted her with her own stole after she
tell a»k*ep while hp begged for a reconciliation.
She was found dead Tuesday
morning, the bloody stole knotted
about her neck.
Crooker, who was a houseboy
In the attractive divorcee’s home
when he was attending the Univer-j
sity of California at Los -Angeles,
confessed.
Detectives quoted him as say­
ing:
A new right-handed pitcher,
"We talked about an hour, with Slavic Waddell, optioned by the
my trying to get her to come Sanford Cardinal* from Fresno,
t into tonight’*
back lo me. She either went to Calif., T.rty
sleep or pretended to go to sleep game wlih the Orlando Flyers,
Florida Stnto League president
on the chaise lounge,
“ When I tried to wake her up John Krid el' said today.
Tonight's guinn at Memorial
to rontinue our talks, 1 could not
arouse her and this incensed me, Stadium will get under way at
I started lo choke her with both K o'clock. Crowd* nr* getting
hunts and she started to scream, larger til curb home game, Kid­
t put my left hand over her mouth der emphasized, nnd n I I • n •
to muffle her terrain and reached dance tonight N expected to
into my coat pocket fur a knife 1 nudge tile l i n o mark.
had found earlier.”
A total of 2,f&gt;n0 un-game
He said he slabbed her, made tickets, selling at 81 each, arc
sure she waa dead and then left, to be mailed out tn every family
in the city, Krider said. "We
taking money from ner pur e
Crooker was married in 19th to hope to have the tickets in the
Mrs. Marian Crooker. They sep­ mull Momluy,” lie added.
arated three years ago.
Mrs. Crooker, 42, said the List
time she saw her husband w.is »
month ago wnen hs visited their
son, 5. and daughter, 3.

Waddell May Get
Chance To Perform
!n Tonight's Game

Mrs. Ella Niblack
Dies A t Rest Home

firs. Ella E. Niblack. 82, dud
at 8 p m. this morning in the Sarepta nest Home where she had
been ill for the past five months.
Mrs. Nibtark had hern in ill
health for about six months
She originally rim e to Sar.forri in
1816 but for the past five year:
she had lived in Orlaadn pflitAA
Born Jun* 8, 1873 In Hie&lt;w-Ga.,
she was a nn-mbe^ of the Christ­
ian Chuich. Survivors Inrlude one
daughter, Mrs. A, C, Anderson,
Staton Island, N. Y.; Iwo sons,
G. A. Nlbl-ck. Sanford; and Earl
F. Niblack of Daytona Beach:
IS grandchildren; 13 great grandchildren and two sisters. Mrs
Georgis Siigh, Ococc; and Mrs.
Ada Pike, Miami.
Funeral services will be held
WASHINGTON (JP-Sen. Russell
Sunday,
10 at 2 p m. in the
(D-Ga) today questioned the pro­ Brissun July
Funrral Home. Burial
priety of requiring veterans to will he in Lake View Cemetery.
continue to carry tha chief burden
under tha administration's new
military reienre plan.
Ruisall, chairman of lh« Senate
Armel Services. Committee, said
BROOKLINE, Mail. CT—Ur. amt
in a statement prepared for the
opening ef.committee hearings on Mrs. Melvin B. Ellis, who fare the
tha bill which ha* been strongly lots of their adopted daughter be.
cauan they are Jewlih and the it
urged by rresident Eisenhower;
"Our prior-service men find a Catholic, vowed today lo "keep
themselves right where they were on doing everything we can to keep
•t the time of Korea. (They ere) her."
Tha Elliafi have heen engaged
the only men available in this
great nation of ours to shoulder in a long legal battle to keep 4the heavy burden of aa active year-old Hildy McCoy since their
adoption petition was nullified in
combat-ready reserve."
1855
The nullification was based on
FET WEALTH PLAN
a Massachusetts law which says
LOS ANGELES (ft— Household that when practicable a child
H U now can ho enrolled In a pre­ should be given for adoption to a
paid medical care program her** couple of tbn tame religious faith
Involving 80 vetadinary clinics. aa Um child.
Tha Pet Health Plan covers hos­
In thn latest court action, James
pital care as well a* t medical and Ziaman. counsel for the ElUtei,
surgical treatment f i r &amp;
went bain re Supremo Court Judge

WASHINGTON IM-InvestlgaUng
•enatora called for testimony to­
day from Adolphe H. Wenzel)
about bis role—slid by President
Georgia Democrat
Elsenhower to havo been an en­
tirely proper aaa—ia Dixoa-Yatea
Questions Fitness
contract talk*.
Wenzel] served for a time aa a
E psultant to tha Budgat Bureau
While still a rice president of tha
First Boston Corp., which later
became financial agent for Um
P lxoa-Yatos utility group.
■ Administration officials have retedly said Wenzall did not inaea the contract but merely
nerved as aa adviser oa financing.
Eisenhower said at a new* con­
ference yesterday WaozaU’i rola Full Disclosure
waa proper.
m S tn . Kefauvcr (D-Tenn), bow O f Names Called
w a r, opined there may have been
WASHINGTON OP) —
Sen.
g law vielaUen ia WmueU’a dual Bridge# (R-NH), today called for
capacity.
a “full disclosure of all tha names”
- Rtfauver, aa opponent ef the of U. S. officials Burma** Premier
Dixoa-Yatea plea, beads tha Jodi, tf. Nu contends do not oppose
clary subcommittee oa monopoly
Communist China In the
matters which ashed Weaatli to
Nations.
Aroused by U Nu'a statement
toriUy. __________ ,___
thpi re possible Washington offi­
“SHOWBOAT FLOODED**
cials fool Rod China's admission
WARWICK, R. I.
The to tha U. N. ia simply • question
A ustral presentation " B h a w - of timing, Bridges add ic an in­
WMt" had to be canceled faut terview
“If there are any such reopenht because ef too mark water,
ta flbeded tha orchaatag pit slbie officials aa U. N u - 1- 1— u
1* him mam
“
I lane balsa ia the to * .
cau. C*et la |M • year,

K

MIAMI BEACH tri— Congress
will be a-ked to limit Imports at
rllnnrrware to SO per cent of Amer­
ican need*.
A resolution to this effect was
t-mptrd yevlerdoy at a convention
of the international Brotherhood
of Operating Totter*.
''The industry i t full capacity
can care for 10 per cent of Ihc
needs of ti,e United Status," said
Frank Moil of Sandusky, Ohm,
president of the union "tVe do
not want full protection. We want
healthy competition, where quality
rather than price will be the big
Item.
"At prrsrnt the Induntry is In s
bad way and the country Is flood­
ed with cheap, low grade dinnerware from Japan," he added.
Delegate*, representing 45,000
poller*. al*o approved the Amer­
ican Federation of lab o r's de­
mand for a $1.25 minimum wage
law.

Final Immunization California Law Student Awaits
On Murder Charges
Clinic For Youths Arraignment
LOS ANGELES (T)— I .aw Student John R. Crooker Jr.
nwnlted arraifftimonl today *»t murder churKcx for the death
auburn-haired sccinliti' Norma McCauley.
Slated Tomorrow
Police say Crooko, III, ronlY■&gt;-od he slabbed Mrs. Mc­

Pilot Apologizes Who's Going To Pay
To Startled London For Citrus Juice?
(or Sudden Burst

LONDON «v-A test pilot who
etarlled Londoner! out of their
eleep with an unscheduled burst
through tha sound barrier apolo­
gized last night lor the stir he
caused.
Early Tuesday Dickie Martin
V ia teat-flying • twln-Jet deltawinged javelin over London at a
routine TOO milea an hour.
^Suddenly hla oxygen tube got
Wngled In the parachute harness.
The plane swerved, gathered speed
and rocketed through the sound
barrier.
Frightened Londoners phoned
police that a bomb had gone off.
Sailors on the Thames prepared
to abandon ships, convinced the
bolltra had burst. Scotland Yard
made extensive lnqulrlea but could
And no explanation.
gffh* Gloiter Aircraft Co. finally
P t In touch with the Air Ministry
to explsln what bad happened and
relay Martin’* apologies.

Congress Will Get
Request To Limit
Dinncrware Import

GCARDS AT 1 III! Washington Slate Penitentiary (top), Walla Walla W ash, ate shown watching
prisoners on the inside of the prison a* tinting convicts hrhl xrvrn hostages amt cunt rolled half of
the prison. The riot, touched off bv 33 hardened criminal* aimed with knives ami n r n r blade*, swept
through the penitentiary. The rioters heat ott.« off rri and took eight other hostages hut later le .
leased the injured man and another guard. At bottom i* an air view of Ihc penitm lini v. (International)

*

ORLANDO, Fla. Idt-The qu*stion of who's going to pay for
Queen Elizabeth's grapefruit Juice
hasn't been settled.
In 1853, Barney J. Cohen, Or
lando citrus msn, thought it a good
idea for Florida to send her $00
cases for the coronation.
He campaigned for subscrip­
tions. Southern Fruit Distributors
Inc. of Orlando made tha shipment.
In court yesterday Southern
Fruit contended it had been paid
only $350 and asked for $1,370
more.
Cohen said he started the promo
tion only as ■ public service and
was not obligated. Only $850 was
subscribed, and some of that was
not paid, be said.
The jurors reported themselves
in disagreement- Judge Terry B
Patterson sent them home with
out indicating whether the case
would b* tried

Today's Action.— Tomonnw's AcJL.
JL.
rumplifhment*," Ihc Stats Senior
™
Council of Home Prmonstiation
Work, composed of 31* county
home demonstration council* will
begin a fivs day meeting tomor­
row, Running concurrently with
the council meeting will be a lumi*
demonstration shoit course, open
to all hunts demon* h at inn club
members.
An advance guard of Slate coun­
cil officer*; Mr*, ticorgu Otto,
j resident. Long wood; Mi*. Roy T,
Browning, vice-president. Lake­
land; Mrs. It. It. I'clcrson, second
vice-president, Pensacola; Mrs. \V,
I*. Aldrich, secretary, llradrnlon; ami Mrs. 8. M. hi*ke, trea­
surer, Orlando, 'till meet tonight
for a State rounril rnoeilUvo board
meeting. With them will lm Mrs.
T. 1« Haniitcr, Perry immediate
past president, and their advisor*. SIRS. G E O R G E OTTO, LongMist Anna Mac Sikes, stole limn* wood President of the Florida
demonstration agent; &gt;li»» Eu­ Mat* It o m • Demonstration
nice Grady, assistant to the Counril.
h im* demonstration agi nt in the
training program, and Mrs. Edith
V, Itarrus, district horn* demon­
stration agent.
Ths executive board meeta to­
morrow to consider its budget for
the coming year. Delegates will
begin arriving oa campus before j
noon tomorrow.
Monday afternoon will he devil­
TALLAHASSEE wv—Copper sul­
ed to committee meetings.
phate will he tested this tall on a
Tomorrow night. Mrs, Otto will lug scale as a means o! combat
entertain all past state council tug the fish-killillS red tide if it
president and county council presi- crops up in the Gulf of Mexico.
nenta at dinner in lh« Flat Ida
Albert Collier of the U S. Fish
Union.
anil Wildlife Srivic« reported the
Dr. J. Wayne Relit, president. plan si a conference with member*
University of Florida, II. G. * lay* nf the legislative ted tide com­
Inn, director, Florid* Agricultural mittee. lie said tlm chemical will
Extension Service; and Mrs. K. \V, be stockpiled in Naples. Fort My­
Cuke, president, will welcome the ers, Sarasota and St. Petersburg
Alurhua County Horn* Dem­ tnr lice against the minute organ­
onstration Council club leaders, ism wliicli periodically turns the
after Mis* Sikes formerly opens waters of the Gulf a ruddy hue
and kill* millions nf fish.
Ui* meeting Monday night.
The legislators also were told
Mr*. Georgs Hlckley, Tampa. I*
chairman of the reception which Hie University of Miami's marine
laboratory plans a study cruise
follows the open meeting.
Auliroy D. Cates, field director, this mouth to seek noire informa­
Counril on Rural Health, Ameri- tion on Hie cause of tlhi red tide.
ran Medical Association, will be Th« research vessel will leave
from Naples, journey north to a
Tuesday's main ipeaker.
point off Apalarhleola anil return
by way of the Dry Tortuga*.
The legislators will meet with
red trie researcher* every two
months to keep abreast of devel­
opments ami frame recommenda­
tion* for submission to th« 1957
legislature.

Big Tests Planned
On Copper Sulphate
To Fight Red Tide

Committee Plans
Advertising Drive

Parents Determined To Keep Girl

argued for a review- of proceedings
in which the couple wai ordered to
surrender the child or fact arrest
Wilkins gave commonwealth's
attorneys two w-rks to answer
Ziaman'* rontrntioni that the ar­
rest of the Klines without a hear­
ing would be a "deprivation of
their fundamental rights."
EUii, speaking for himself and
hi* wife, said in an interview:
"We are determlnod that Hildy
won't be hurt. Wo feel Htldy'a
mother doesn't want her. We are
going to keep on doing everything
we can to keep her. Wa can only
play a defensive role and try to
counter the altacki of Ibote who
are trying to take her."
Hs laid Mrs. Elba and ths child
JUymcsd S. Wlib&amp;c jxitordsy and tgs "otd sf t o n " k ri M l not

"run away to another alate."
EUii said also hia wife is suffer­
ing from a nervous condition and
an Infection and hat been under
tha care of a doctor.
The Ellisea have had Htkly aince
she waa 10 days old.
Tha child was born to Marjorie
McCoy, now Mrs. Marjorie Mc­
Coy Doherty.
Thn mother eon tended shs did
not learn the E lliiti were Jewish
until after they adopted her child.
Probata Judge Raymond F. Rey­
nolds ruled tn 1951 that the mother
wanted ths child back ai far back
a* April 1851 and for primary
reasons.
Tbs Boston Post today quoted
Ellis ns saying hs ia prepared to
8* to jail to toa» tiU to.

Old North Church
Sports New Spire
Just Like Original
BOSTON, Ma«i. UV-OII North
Churrh, from whine *lrept* hung
(hr lantcrs warning Paul Revere
of lh« approach of the British, has
a new spire Unlay—the exact re­
production of Bis original.
The new steeple was raised yes*
terday. II ii r r I r a n e Carnol hail
toppled the earlier spire on Aug
31. 1951
The rebuilt structure has Hie
original window (nun which hung
Hie lantcrs for Paul Revere on
April 18. 1775. The window and
oilier ancient woodwork were salvaged from the storm wreckage.
The assembled steeple was hoist­
ed into place with a huge rrane
A* workmen bolted it down, Vi­
car Charles Russell Peck rang (he
rhurrh hells to annuunre Ihc
revloration.

Stevenson Strikes
At School System
CHICAGO &lt;JV-Adlal Stevenson
says President Eisenhower prom­
ised the Amrriran school system
“ some prompt effertiv* help" 2'4
yrar* ago, "but nothing hai been
done."
The 1953 Democralle presidential
nominee attacked Eisenhower's
program of school aid in a speech
last night to tha National Educa­
tion Assn.
Stevenson quoted President Ei­
senhower aa saying Just after he
assumed offire;
"Our srhool system demands
tome prompt affective help."
"Inilead of *prompt affective
help' Stevenson added, “wn nwait
a conference nn education to bt

No Reply Offerer"
By Coast Guard
N E W Y O R K f&lt;T*) — A radio
tiles sage relayed tn the C o a st
G u a rd «:»id today a fish h u ?
boat w illt 21 p erso ns aboard
w as sin),im: o ff the N e w Je r­
sey roast. Seven h o u rs Liter
no I rare of the vessel or s u r­
v iv o rs could hr found, indiraliitRr a possible lumx.
A sk e d if the m e ssage and

subsequent ones might luve Iwert
a hoax, the Coast Guard would only
say they were proceeding nn But
basis the messages were authentic.
Tile first message reported tha
boat had struck a mysterious ob­
ject, caught fire and began to
sink. A subsequent message re*
Isorted survivors were being taken
aboard a submarine which was
"not an American.”
The Eastern Sea Frontier said
an American submarine was 35
mile* from the scent but H bad
no report of the mishap,
K i r r e p o r t of the mishap cam*
from the fishing boat, Blua Star,
at 2:30 a m . At 3:40 a.m. tha tughost Nancy Moran said U picktrf
up this message from tht Blun
Star:
"A submarine i* surfacing about
350 yards front u*. H is coming
alongside. It I* proceeding to takn
survivors aboard It ia dot U\
American submarine."
&lt;
There wat speculation (hat th#
submarine might he a craft of tbn
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
some of which tr s stationed *1
Norfolk, Vi.
The Blue Star »aid It struck thn
■thlcrt in the water &gt;&gt;ima 30 miles
off Barncgat, N. J.
Planes and other rescue vessel a
reaching the scene of the reported
mishap .it 7 30 a m said they
found no trace of niher ship of
passengers.
The Coast Guard s.rd there a r t
three boats by the tiamt Of Bill*
Star titled on the F a ste n seaboard
and two on Ills West t'oasL

New Converfs Won
For Package Plan
In Florida House
TALLAHASSEE M*—Th* resur­
rected pack.ice re apportion merit
program won new converts in tha
House today hill »]M&gt;n&gt;ori appeared
inclined to hold off starting Hot
big push for adoption until senti­
ment Jells more.
Tin plan, which ronsi*ls of two
lulls and a constitutional amend­
ment, was rejected 63-36 by Ole
House last month,
,
However, influent *1 represent­
atives who original!:' opposed it
».nd they now lonkid upon II aa
the only proposal n light with
possibilities of break,Qg tha 13-diy
deadlock.
Sens. Barra way o ' Tallahassen
and It a riser of Veto Beach are getling n a m e , of c o u p le rs to thn
Senate and Itip. Murray of Pollf
County is seeking pltdgei of gup*
port in the HouseBarra way and B arler **M tfto
measures will he Iutn iced si­
multaneously in both ho es when
there are sufficient a u u ’nets of
approval.

Copt. E. Wagner
Arrives A t Base
To Assume Post
Capt. K. O. Wagner, command,
er of Heavy AHark Wing 1, ar­
rive,I «t th* Sanford Naval
Auxiliary Air Station ye*lenity
afternoon. Ills staff has hern
moving in for tha past several
weeks.
Captain Wagner
graduated
from th* Naval Aradetny In 19-0
and eomplatod flight training at
I'tnaarola
ahortly
afterward.
Previous to his present assign­
ment, ha w»i *hi*f of staff to
Admiral Hickey, commander uf
Carrier Division 8 to Korean
Watera.
Haavy Attack Wing 1 la tha ,
Nnyy’n all-weathar atomU attach *

�FlTCl'O
flH Laid
held in r.i
m unlrr r
palhy Irn
named »♦
Tarko I
Di«I Tur«
him .md i
"I hup
1 a rn nt
Itiiin."
I .auhnn
fa ir., M&lt;
to 1rjl 111
P hm on,
mother ;i
found dc#

JUMBO SUNKIST
r n i c c s g o o d t h r u s a t , j u l t oth

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

llOIIIC.

Latihnn
tail back
profr..rd

M e x ic a n
"Three
home hr
lo marry
told rrpo
"lie M
talk'd hi
typical Ji
"H r r l u l n
rnnn'l a
Blade me
"I kmand u* l&gt;
that ii a

POTATOES

JUMBO PASCAL

IT
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LARGE WESTERN
LARGE CUBAN

MAXWELL HOUSE
WARN
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Hr mu
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lunnliera
day at •
hnrjr. It
annlverar
aprnt »r«
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n rrkrnd
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rlrnt »pi
piartiidn
td a t th

OFFEEi7
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A ” S L IC E D B E E F .

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think I
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the wot
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SWEET TREAT SUCED

PINEAPPLE »&gt;»- 29'
“ E A T -R IT E ” VEAL1
TODAY'S BEST M EAT B U Y !
SUGAR PEAS 2 — 25'
Gr’fruit JUICE 2 29"
CH’PD BEEF 2 - 49c
St’pd MALLOWS 19*
FROZEN FOODS
GRAHAM Cr’kers - 23c TURNOVERS g p
/
CREME S’WICH - 19*
POT PIES as * %
PARTY PUNCH - 27c
LIMEADE
1A f
CAKE MIX
ARGO

But ■

’EAT-RITE" ROUND BONE

“EAT-RITE” VEAL

DEEP SOUTH

'EAT-RITE" r

CUT BEEF

ARMOUR

“EAT-RITE” VEAL

TAT.RITE" PLATS

CRACKIN’ GOOD

GRADE "A** QUICK FROZEN

CRACKIN’ GOOD

JESSIE JEWELL FRUIT

M ix ’« * I

CRACKIN' GOOD

MORTONS FROZEN

GROUPED

PkfS %

MEDIUM
Sugar Crook Brk2at Link

M is ’m m

PAR KEN

SAUSAGE

BETTY CROCKER

Whit*, Yellow
or Devil* Food

DINTY MOORE

■Idaten
«ul abo’
fcellm ,
ivltt min

•’EAT-RITE" BEEP

20-os
Pkf

Lb.

LAND O’ SUNSHINE

GREEN GIANT

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AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER
*

Established 1908

VOLUME XLVI

SANFORD. FLORIDA.

THURSDAY. JULY 7. 1955

M en

No. 227

Abandon.
Idea For Park
As Horses Win

S O S Message
M ay Be Hoax

Two Orlando and W inter P ark businessmen who recent­
ly figured in a proposal to build an open-air amusement centjD on Lnke Monroe hnve gone into the harness horse train ­
in g business a t Cassclberiy.
•
W. R. Kem pt and Richard Sodero. is leasing the Azalea

No Trace
Home Demo Council
Of Ship
Annual Meeting Set
Is Found

»

.

— ---------------- ------------------ Driving Park for 35 year*, an
nouneed that the plant will be re­
named Seminole Park and will
operate on a year-round basis.
The 150-acre park waa leased
from Mr and Mr*. Stanley Kupiszewski. who purchased it in 1051
from Ilihbaid and Leonard Casselberry. The property includes a
lodge, a - mile traek, stablea for
283 horse* and a grandstand that
seats 5,000.
general business discusKemp and Sodero announced
aion featured tha weekly lunch­ plana for improving the grand­
eon meeting of tha Junior Cham­ stand, stables, traek and lodge.
ber of Commerce today at the They said the infield on the Irark
Yacht Club.
will be landscaped and
bridle
• • i •
will be landscaued a n d » bridle
A proud grandfather told the path prepared.
Stroller that thia actually hapAir conditioning equipment will
gmned. Six-year-old Jackie was he installed in the lodge, and fire
waiting relativei in the country protection equipment will be made
for the f in t time. Everything available throughout the park,
fca beheld waa new and exciting they continued.
to him. Toward aunaet of the se­
Kemp, who owns the Aquaseum
cond day he atood in open- and Coliseum in Orlando, and Soeyed wonderment watching hit dcro, who owns Deming Galleries
grandmother pluckjng a chicken. in Winter Tark, said they expect
After a bit, hia curioaity arous­ the stables to be filled during the
ed, he aaked very aerioualy, season which open* in December,
“Grandma, do you have to take
No training has been done a t tha
(hair clothea off every night?” park tinea the 1952-63 season.
* * * *
Tha park, originally called
•W hich eame firat thla yoke or Seminole Driving Park, was con­
that? At leait Mary King, cook structed in 1325 by a group which
at Faults Drug Store might be included the lstc Joe Tinker, fam­
•iking herself that question. At ous shortstop of the Chicago
ahn Drake a medium size egg open Cubs In the Tinker-to-Evers-tothis morning what should appear Chsnce double play era.
aot one yoke but four . . . . . .
Kamp an t Sodero announced
when asked what she did with last month that the erea In the
the oddity the replied; “Why, vicinity of the bandihell and new
1 threw it in the trash it looked boat basin here was being con­
no funny. It kinda scared me." sidered for a $250,000 open-air rei’L bet it did. Mary . . . But creation center which would be
nk of tha poor thicken!
tha scene of acquatie show* and
•ther spectacles.

Strolling
In Sanford

1

A M orixtn l P ress Leased W ire

The 31sf an mint S tate Home Denittnntralinn Council
m eeting nml Short Course will open on the University of
Florida m nouns tonmroiv, with nunc than -100 delegate* in
attendance.
Taking a i its conference theme,
cslct'dny’s Dream,

Investigators Call
For Wenzelt Info
Regarding His Role

Air Force Officers
Gather In Taipei
For Buildup Talks
TAIPEI, Formosa (JPt — Three
top U. 8. Air Force officers in the
Pacific flew Into Taipei today to
confer on the buildup of Commu­
nist air power on the nearby Red
mainland.
Simultaneously Chines* Nation­
alists said two Rod air bases
which would bring Formosa and
offshore islands within easy strik­
ing distance ef Communist jet*
were about completed.
Tha visiting officers a n Gtn.
Laurcne* S. Kutar, commander'of
tha Far East Air Fort* In Japan;
Maj. Gen. Sory Smith, chi'? of the
Pacific Air Command in Pearl
Harbor, and Brig. Gen. William L.
Lao, commander of the U. S. 13th
Air Fore# in tha Philippines.
In addition to tha Rad Buildup,
they trill discuss operating prob­
lems of tha U. 8. air task force
on Formosa.

WASHINGTON IM-InvestlgaUng
•enatora called for testimony to­
day from Adolphe H. Wenzel)
about bis role—slid by President
Elsenhower to havo been an en­
tirely proper aaa—ia Dixoa-Yatea
contract talk*.
Wenzel] served for a time aa a
E psultant to tha Budgat Bureau
While still a rice president of tha
First Boston Corp., which later
became financial agent for Um
P lxoa-Yatos utility group.
■ Administration officials have retedly said Wenzall did not inaea the contract but merely
nerved as aa adviser oa financing.
Eisenhower said at a new* con­
ference yesterday WaozaU’i rola Full Disclosure
waa proper.
m S tn . Kefauvcr (D-Tenn), bow O f Names Called
w a r, opined there may have been
WASHINGTON OP) —
Sen.
g law vielaUen ia WmueU’a dual Bridge# (R-NH), today called for
capacity.
a “full disclosure of all tha names”
- Rtfauver, aa opponent ef the of U. S. officials Burma** Premier
Dixoa-Yatea plea, beads tha Jodi, tf. Nu contends do not oppose
clary subcommittee oa monopoly
Communist China In the
matters which ashed Weaatli to
Nations.
Aroused by U Nu'a statement
toriUy. __________ ,___
thpi re possible Washington offi­
“SHOWBOAT FLOODED**
cials fool Rod China's admission
WARWICK, R. I.
The to tha U. N. ia simply • question
A ustral presentation " B h a w - of timing, Bridges add ic an in­
WMt" had to be canceled faut terview
“If there are any such reopenht because ef too mark water,
ta flbeded tha orchaatag pit slbie officials aa U. N u - 1- 1— u
1* him mam
“
I lane balsa ia the to * .

K

a

-*•
- .

MIAMI BEACH tri— Congress
will be a-ked to limit Imports at
rllnnrrware to SO per cent of Amer­
ican need*.
A resolution to this effect was
t-mptrd yevlerdoy at a convention
of the international Brotherhood
of Operating Totter*.
''The industry i t full capacity
can care for 10 per cent of Ihc
needs of ti,e United Status," said
Frank Moil of Sandusky, Ohm,
president of the union "tVe do
not want full protection. We want
healthy competition, where quality
rather than price will be the big
Item.
"At prrsrnt the Induntry is In s
bad way and the country Is flood­
ed with cheap, low grade dinnerware from Japan," he added.
Delegate*, representing 45,000
poller*. al*o approved the Amer­
ican Federation of lab o r's de­
mand for a $1.25 minimum wage
law.

LAKELAND tW-A three-man
committee of tangelo growers »nd
handlers will work with the Flor­
ida Citrus Commission on an ad­
vertising program.
lire tangelo men met yesterday
for the lirtl timr iinre the I t t . U
Legislator* put their fruit under
regulation of Ihc comml**inn.
Generally they agreed tangelo*
should he governed hy the same
r e g u l a t i o n * as orange*, but they
preferred to advertise through
store displays rather than big ra­
dio, television ami newspaper pro­
grams.
Named to the committee were
J. B. Prevatt, Tavare*; Le* By­
num, Titusville; and B. F. Wheeler
Jr., Ovirdo.
The tsngelo Is a cross hetwren
an orange and a grapefruit- The
1955-50 crop ia expected lo be
about ion,ooo boxes, a small item
in the Florida ritrua deal.

Final Immunization California Law Student Awaits
On Murder Charges
Clinic For Youths Arraignment
LOS ANGELES (T)— I .aw Student John R. Crooker Jr.
nwnlted arraifftimonl today *»t murder churKcx for the death
auburn-haired sccinliti' Norma McCauley.
Slated Tomorrow
Police say Crooko, III, ronlY■&gt;-od he slabbed Mrs. Mc­
of

Pilot Apologizes Who's Going To Pay
To Startled London For Citrus Juice?
(or Sudden Burst

LONDON «v-A test pilot who
etarlled Londoner! out of their
eleep with an unscheduled burst
through tha sound barrier apolo­
gized last night lor the stir he
caused.
Early Tuesday Dickie Martin
V ia teat-flying • twln-Jet deltawinged javelin over London at a
routine TOO milea an hour.
^Suddenly hla oxygen tube got
Wngled In the parachute harness.
The plane swerved, gathered speed
and rocketed through the sound
barrier.
Frightened Londoners phoned
police that a bomb had gone off.
Sailors on the Thames prepared
to abandon ships, convinced the
bolltra had burst. Scotland Yard
made extensive lnqulrlea but could
And no explanation.
gffh* Gloiter Aircraft Co. finally
P t In touch with the Air Ministry
to explsln what bad happened and
relay Martin’* apologies.

Congress Will Get
Request To Limit
Dinncrware Import

GCARDS AT 1 III! Washington Slate Penitentiary (top), Walla Walla W ash, ate shown watching
prisoners on the inside of the prison a* tinting convicts hrhl xrvrn hostages amt cunt rolled half of
the prison. The riot, touched off bv 33 hardened criminal* aimed with knives ami n r n r blade*, swept
through the penitentiary. The rioters heat ott.« off rri and took eight other hostages hut later le .
leased the injured man and another guard. At bottom i* an air view of Ihc penitm lini v. (International)

*

ORLANDO, Fla. Idt-The qu*stion of who's going to pay for
Queen Elizabeth's grapefruit Juice
hasn't been settled.
In 1853, Barney J. Cohen, Or
lando citrus msn, thought it a good
idea for Florida to send her $00
cases for the coronation.
He campaigned for subscrip­
tions. Southern Fruit Distributors
Inc. of Orlando made tha shipment.
In court yesterday Southern
Fruit contended it had been paid
only $350 and asked for $1,370
more.
Cohen said he started the promo
tion only as ■ public service and
was not obligated. Only $850 was
subscribed, and some of that was
not paid, be said.
The jurors reported themselves
in disagreement- Judge Terry B
Patterson sent them home with
out indicating whether the case
would b* tried

Today's Action.— Tomonnw's AcJL.
JL.
rumplifhment*," Ihc Stats Senior
™
Council of Home Prmonstiation
Work, composed of 31* county
home demonstration council* will
begin a fivs day meeting tomor­
row, Running concurrently with
the council meeting will be a lumi*
demonstration shoit course, open
to all hunts demon* h at inn club
members.
An advance guard of Slate coun­
cil officer*; Mr*, ticorgu Otto,
j resident. Long wood; Mi*. Roy T,
Browning, vice-president. Lake­
land; Mrs. It. It. I'clcrson, second
vice-president, Pensacola; Mrs. \V,
I*. Aldrich, secretary, llradrnlon; ami Mrs. 8. M. hi*ke, trea­
surer, Orlando, 'till meet tonight
for a State rounril rnoeilUvo board
meeting. With them will lm Mrs.
T. 1« Haniitcr, Perry immediate
past president, and their advisor*. SIRS. GEORGE OTTO, LongMist Anna Mac Sikes, stole limn* wood President of the Florida
demonstration agent; &gt;li»» Eu­ Mat* It o m • Demonstration
nice Grady, assistant to the Counril.
h im* demonstration agi nt in the
training program, and Mrs. Edith
V, Itarrus, district horn* demon­
stration agent.
Ths executive board meeta to­
morrow to consider its budget for
the coming year. Delegates will
begin arriving oa campus before j
noon tomorrow.
Monday afternoon will he devil­
TALLAHASSEE wv—Copper sul­
ed to committee meetings.
phate will he tested this tall on a
Tomorrow night. Mrs, Otto will lug scale as a means o! combat
entertain all past state council tug the fish-killillS red tide if it
president and county council presi- crops up in the Gulf of Mexico.
nenta at dinner in lh« Flat Ida
Albert Collier of the U S. Fish
Union.
anil Wildlife Srivic« reported the
Dr. J. Wayne Relit, president. plan si a conference with member*
University of Florida, II. G. * lay* nf the legislative ted tide com­
Inn, director, Florid* Agricultural mittee. lie said tlm chemical will
Extension Service; and Mrs. K. \V, be stockpiled in Naples. Fort My­
Cuke, president, will welcome the ers, Sarasota and St. Petersburg
Alurhua County Horn* Dem­ tnr lice against the minute organ­
onstration Council club leaders, ism wliicli periodically turns the
after Mis* Sikes formerly opens waters of the Gulf a ruddy hue
and kill* millions nf fish.
Ui* meeting Monday night.
The legislators also were told
Mr*. Georgs Hlckley, Tampa. I*
chairman of the reception which Hie University of Miami's marine
laboratory plans a study cruise
follows the open meeting.
Auliroy D. Cates, field director, this mouth to seek noire informa­
Counril on Rural Health, Ameri- tion on Hie cause of tlhi red tide.
ran Medical Association, will be Th« research vessel will leave
from Naples, journey north to a
Tuesday's main ipeaker.
point off Apalarhleola anil return
by way of the Dry Tortuga*.
The legislators will meet with
red trie researcher* every two
months to keep abreast of devel­
opments ami frame recommenda­
tion* for submission to th« 1957
legislature.

The final Immunisation clinic
for Seminole County first and
second graders who have not re­
ceived their second shot of polio
vaccine will he held tomorrow s t
the County Health Unit, Dr. Ter­
ry Bird, County Heslth Officer,
announced. The clinic will begin
a t 8 a. m.
Dr. Bird said he had been ad­
vised by the State Health De­
partment th at th t
National
Foundation for Infantile Paral­
ysis had recalled all unused vac­
cine. Any vaccine left after to*
morrow'* rllnlc will be returned
Monday or Tuesday, he said.
Only 828 of the 1,546 first and
■econd
shot, Dr. Bird reportfirst shot have been given the
second
shot, Dr, Bird report­
ed. He
said the Health Unit
had enough vaccine left to Im­
munize 600 of the remaining 718.

Efforts Being Made
To Help Conditions
TALLAHASSEE tri-Rep. Glcaton of Citrus County says many
Floridarestaurants are not ob­
serving sanitation laws end he
doubts the hetet and restaurant
commission is making proper ef­
forts '*o correct these bad condi­
tions.*
His protest was made in a teller
to Gov. Collins. •
"1 do not think that (he hotel
and restaurant commission Is mak­
ing a half effort to correct these
bad conditions," Gleston said. "I
suggest to you, sir, that If the pres­
ent commission einnot correct
these conditions, you as governor
make soma change* la this de­
partment.”
na complained some restaurants
are full or flies and have rest­
rooms "in such filthy condition as
to b* unusable. These places in
my opinion have not bean inspect­
ed in yeari."

Cauley, 33, and parroted her with her own stole after she
tell a»k*ep while hp begged for a reconciliation.
She was found dead Tuesday
morning, the bloody stole knotted
about her neck.
Crooker, who was a houseboy
In the attractive divorcee’s home
when he was attending the Univer-j
sity of California at Los -Angeles,
confessed.
Detectives quoted him as say­
ing:
A new right-handed pitcher,
"We talked about an hour, with Slavic Waddell, optioned by the
my trying to get her to come Sanford Cardinal* from Fresno,
t into tonight’*
back lo me. She either went to Calif., T.rty
sleep or pretended to go to sleep game wlih the Orlando Flyers,
Florida Stnto League president
on the chaise lounge,
“ When I tried to wake her up John Krid el' said today.
Tonight's guinn at Memorial
to rontinue our talks, 1 could not
arouse her and this incensed me, Stadium will get under way at
I started lo choke her with both K o'clock. Crowd* nr* getting
hunts and she started to scream, larger til curb home game, Kid­
t put my left hand over her mouth der emphasized, nnd n I I • n •
to muffle her terrain and reached dance tonight N expected to
into my coat pocket fur a knife 1 nudge tile l i n o mark.
had found earlier.”
A total of 2,f&gt;n0 un-game
He said he slabbed her, made tickets, selling at 81 each, arc
sure she waa dead and then left, to be mailed out tn every family
in the city, Krider said. "We
taking money from ner pur e
Crooker was married in 19th to hope to have the tickets in the
Mrs. Marian Crooker. They sep­ mull Momluy,” lie added.
arated three years ago.
Mrs. Crooker, 42, said the List
time she saw her husband w.is »
month ago wnen hs visited their
son, 5. and daughter, 3.

Waddell May Get
Chance To Perform
!n Tonight's Game

Mrs. Ella Niblack
Dies A t Rest Home

firs. Ella E. Niblack. 82, dud
at 8 p m. this morning in the Sarepta nest Home where she had
been ill for the past five months.
Mrs. Nibtark had hern in ill
health for about six months
She originally rim e to Sar.forri in
1816 but for the past five year:
she had lived in Orlaadn pflitAA
Born Jun* 8, 1873 In Hie&lt;w-Ga.,
she was a nn-mbe^ of the Christ­
ian Chuich. Survivors Inrlude one
daughter, Mrs. A, C, Anderson,
Staton Island, N. Y.; Iwo sons,
G. A. Nlbl-ck. Sanford; and Earl
F. Niblack of Daytona Beach:
IS grandchildren; 13 great grandchildren and two sisters. Mrs
Georgis Siigh, Ococc; and Mrs.
Ada Pike, Miami.
Funeral services will be held
WASHINGTON (JP-Sen. Russell
Sunday,
10 at 2 p m. in the
(D-Ga) today questioned the pro­ Brissun July
Funrral Home. Burial
priety of requiring veterans to will he in Lake View Cemetery.
continue to carry tha chief burden
under tha administration's new
military reienre plan.
Ruisall, chairman of lh« Senate
Armel Services. Committee, said
BROOKLINE, Mail. CT—Ur. amt
in a statement prepared for the
opening ef.committee hearings on Mrs. Melvin B. Ellis, who fare the
tha bill which ha* been strongly lots of their adopted daughter be.
cauan they are Jewlih and the it
urged by rresident Eisenhower;
"Our prior-service men find a Catholic, vowed today lo "keep
themselves right where they were on doing everything we can to keep
•t the time of Korea. (They ere) her."
Tha Elliafi have heen engaged
the only men available in this
great nation of ours to shoulder in a long legal battle to keep 4the heavy burden of aa active year-old Hildy McCoy since their
adoption petition was nullified in
combat-ready reserve."
1855
The nullification was based on
FET WEALTH PLAN
a Massachusetts law which says
LOS ANGELES (ft— Household that when practicable a child
H U now can ho enrolled In a pre­ should be given for adoption to a
paid medical care program her** couple of tbn tame religious faith
Involving 80 vetadinary clinics. aa Um child.
Tha Pet Health Plan covers hos­
In thn latest court action, James
pital care as well a* t medical and Ziaman. counsel for the ElUtei,
surgical treatment f i r &amp;
went bain re Supremo Court Judge
cau. C*et la |M • year,
JUymcsd S. Wlib&amp;c jxitordsy and

Georgia Democrat
Questions Fitness

Big Tests Planned
On Copper Sulphate
To Fight Red Tide

Committee Plans
Advertising Drive

Parents Determined To Keep Girl
argued for a review- of proceedings
in which the couple wai ordered to
surrender the child or fact arrest
Wilkins gave commonwealth's
attorneys two w-rks to answer
Ziaman'* rontrntioni that the ar­
rest of the Klines without a hear­
ing would be a "deprivation of
their fundamental rights."
EUii, speaking for himself and
hi* wife, said in an interview:
"We are determlnod that Hildy
won't be hurt. Wo feel Htldy'a
mother doesn't want her. We are
going to keep on doing everything
we can to keep her. Wa can only
play a defensive role and try to
counter the altacki of Ibote who
are trying to take her."
Hs laid Mrs. Elba and ths child
tgs "otd sf t o n " k ri M l not

"run away to another alate."
EUii said also hia wife is suffer­
ing from a nervous condition and
an Infection and hat been under
tha care of a doctor.
The Ellisea have had Htkly aince
she waa 10 days old.
Tha child was born to Marjorie
McCoy, now Mrs. Marjorie Mc­
Coy Doherty.
Thn mother eon tended shs did
not learn the E lliiti were Jewish
until after they adopted her child.
Probata Judge Raymond F. Rey­
nolds ruled tn 1951 that the mother
wanted ths child back ai far back
a* April 1851 and for primary
reasons.
Tbs Boston Post today quoted
Ellis ns saying hs ia prepared to
8* to jail to toa» tiU to.

Old North Church
Sports New Spire
Just Like Original
BOSTON, Ma«i. UV-OII North
Churrh, from whine *lrept* hung
(hr lantcrs warning Paul Revere
of lh« approach of the British, has
a new spire Unlay—the exact re­
production of Bis original.
The new steeple was raised yes*
terday. II ii r r I r a n e Carnol hail
toppled the earlier spire on Aug
31. 1951
The rebuilt structure has Hie
original window (nun which hung
Hie lantcrs for Paul Revere on
April 18. 1775. The window and
oilier ancient woodwork were salvaged from the storm wreckage.
The assembled steeple was hoist­
ed into place with a huge rrane
A* workmen bolted it down, Vi­
car Charles Russell Peck rang (he
rhurrh hells to annuunre Ihc
revloration.

Stevenson Strikes
At School System
CHICAGO &lt;JV-Adlal Stevenson
says President Eisenhower prom­
ised the Amrriran school system
“ some prompt effertiv* help" 2'4
yrar* ago, "but nothing hai been
done."
The 1953 Democralle presidential
nominee attacked Eisenhower's
program of school aid in a speech
last night to tha National Educa­
tion Assn.
Stevenson quoted President Ei­
senhower aa saying Just after he
assumed offire;
"Our srhool system demands
tome prompt affective help."
"Inilead of *prompt affective
help' Stevenson added, “wn nwait
a conference nn education to bt

No Reply Offerer"
By Coast Guard
NEW YORK f&lt;T*) — A radio
tiles sage relayed tn the Coast

Guard «:»id today a fishhu?
boat willt 21 persons aboard
was sin),im: off the New J e r­
sey roast. Seven hours Liter
no I rare of the vessel or sur­
vivors could hr found, indiraliitRr a possible lumx.
Asked if the message and
subsequent ones might luve Iwert
a hoax, the Coast Guard would only
say they were proceeding nn But
basis the messages were authentic.
Tile first message reported tha
boat had struck a mysterious ob­
ject, caught fire and began to
sink. A subsequent message re*
Isorted survivors were being taken
aboard a submarine which was
"not an American.”
The Eastern Sea Frontier said
an American submarine was 35
mile* from the scent but H bad
no report of the mishap,
K i r r e p o r t of the mishap cam*
from the fishing boat, Blua Star,
at 2:30 a m . At 3:40 a.m. tha tughost Nancy Moran said U picktrf
up this message from tht Blun
Star:
"A submarine i* surfacing about
350 yards front u*. H is coming
alongside. It I* proceeding to takn
survivors aboard It ia dot U\
American submarine."
&lt;
There wat speculation (hat th#
submarine might he a craft of tbn
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
some of which tr s stationed *1
Norfolk, Vi.
The Blue Star »aid It struck thn
■thlcrt in the water &gt;&gt;ima 30 miles
off Barncgat, N. J.
Planes and other rescue vessel a
reaching the scene of the reported
mishap .it 7 30 a m said they
found no trace of niher ship of
passengers.
The Coast Guard s.rd there a r t
three boats by the tiamt Of Bill*
Star titled on the F a ste n seaboard
and two on Ills West t'oasL

New Converfs Won
For Package Plan
In Florida House
TALLAHASSEE M*—Th* resur­
rected pack.ice re apportion merit
program won new converts in tha
House today hill »]M&gt;n&gt;ori appeared
inclined to hold off starting Hot
big push for adoption until senti­
ment Jells more.
Tin plan, which ronsi*ls of two
lulls and a constitutional amend­
ment, was rejected 63-36 by Ole
House last month,
,
However, influent *1 represent­
atives who original!:' opposed it
».nd they now lonkid upon II aa
the only proposal n light with
possibilities of break,Qg tha 13-diy
deadlock.
Sens. Barra way o ' Tallahassen
and It a riser of Veto Beach are getling n a m e , of c o u p le rs to thn
Senate and Itip. Murray of Pollf
County is seeking pltdgei of gup*
port in the HouseBarra way and B arler **M tfto
measures will he Iutn iced si­
multaneously in both ho es when
there are sufficient a u u ’nets of
approval.

Copt. E. Wagner
Arrives A t Base
To Assume Post
Capt. K. O. Wagner, command,
er of Heavy AHark Wing 1, ar­
rive,I «t th* Sanford Naval
Auxiliary Air Station ye*lenity
afternoon. Ills staff has hern
moving in for tha past several
weeks.
Captain Wagner
graduated
from th* Naval Aradetny In 19-0
and eomplatod flight training at
I'tnaarola
ahortly
afterward.
Previous to his present assign­
ment, ha w»i *hi*f of staff to
Admiral Hickey, commander uf
Carrier Division 8 to Korean
Watera.
Haavy Attack Wing 1 la tha ,
Nnyy’n all-weathar atomU attach *

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