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                    <text>• *

OUTFOQ
A SW IM /

B ur i r s
bough

too

'-THAT

Economic Omens
Are. Showing 1955
As Biggest Year

INDECTCW i s „
------- - TOUGH-*

( ITS OfcTAV'
I—
— MR'S
'WATCHING
HV PET T.V.
program !

NlTE, „
FRANKIE

^
r --—
OOfeS.'TViATS
you MEAN
WHV f Ll« fT-‘
XXI WATCHS T U F F K - - r g
ATTWIS H O U R L / \f&gt; \\A

M3ULL HAVE TOOPEN
A CAN OP LEANS, T-t"
DEAR-QUO 7----- V
SUPPER
,
Ju srw e N T k ^ fI~ l|'
UP THE
i
a l l e y n !

H h er c .p u p s .
thcec DOLLARS YOU CAN EACH
CARRY A
M R.BJM SrEAD /
~ t PACKAGE

J C

QAGWOOO.
W ILL YOU*
LEN P WE J
FIV E -0

H OW D O I K N O W

YOU LL PAY M£

■
— r BACK ?&gt;-

W E L L .IP I D O N T RA Y YOU,

I’M A M ARRIED
WOMAN. AM r
, 1 NOT ? ] — ^

YOU CAN A LW A YS J ------ ■
CO LLECT V —
F R O M M V ) - ,HUSBAND

^

DOLLARS'?

WS.TI.r; UjtlLliV—
NO MOW ~
bleeping on
the GROUND

FOR ME.‘SEE-,

=

r you
&gt;
MEAN YOUR
BLANKET
- ROU.T J

HIM-HEMJ
rre not wm
BLANKET/

BUT WHAT ABE
YOU SOINO
TO CCWER UP
WITH ON

■Jsrr cold

2 / t wbh Tb ?

U ~ THATtMBUTKiy NOIM1
i——* I CAN'T STOP IT/ IT'S
(HUVUMME 4 U 0 /IU MAST
IT WITH CVtKYTHMB H MV
MUSICAL POWtR... S MUST ,

__
4^4

B Y TH E TIM E I REALIZE
I'M B EIN G TAKEN
- T I'M TOOK &gt;—

As WashWASHINGTON
ton reads the economic omens.
1933 will easily be the "biggest
ever year for business and con­
sumers, unmarred by either se­
vere joblessness or menacing innation.
At mid year, officials and econ­
omists of the Eisenhower admin­
istration report no sign of a secondhalf slump which six months agq
some of them thought might occur.
Instead they find production and
income at all time highs and evi­
dently still gaining'. They have vir­
tually stopped worrying about a
possible autumn sag in automobiles or bousing production, figur­
ing that by now down draft* in
some industries can be offset by
up drafts in others.
One White House adviser esti­
mates unofficially that the total
national output hit a rale equal to
roughly 3TT billion dollars annuJanuary- • March quarter which
matchnl the peak ol the best pre­
vious year, 1933.
Political office holders are elat­
ed. The boom looks ample enough
to last into the Presidential elec­
tion year of 1936. If it does, Re­
publicans can take to the voters a
story of high employment, high
wages, probable tax cuts and at
least the promise of a balanced
budget.
,
Industrial
developments
last
month erased one potential blight
on the general optimism but added
another. The new wage agreements
another. The new wage agreements
in automobile allayed fears of a
crippling wave of strikes but made
some businessmen Jittery over the
possibility of wage-inflation.
A consensus of official opinion
put together from the off-the-record
guesses of economics in the ex­
ecutive branch, congressional staffs
and the White House presents this
prospect for the second hall of an
already prosperous year.
1. Production will top the earlyyear official forecast. Total output
of goods and services exceeded the
1933 peak of nearly 363 billion dol­
lars in the first quarter and
climbed steeply in the second.
The rise may be lets rapid in
the terend six-month period, or it
may level off. But officials see
small prospect of anS autumn re*
cession.
2 Personal income, which never
stopped rising even during the 18month recession that began two
years ago, will exceed the 286 bil­
lion dollars of 1933 and the 286*3
billion record of last year. It stood
at a 293&gt;a billion dollar annual
rate in April and. the experts said,
la bound to be lifted by the newly
negotiated wage Increases, tha re­
sumption of overtime work in
many factories and the subitantlal rehinng of workers in the late
spring.
3. Living eoeta should be quite
stable. Some experts forecast a
rise of le u than one per cent, othera a fractional decline. Industrial
atalrelaw .ngpri sshrdcmfwETA
raw materials will go up some­
what, It la believed with negligible
effect on retail prices.
4. Em ploym ent'could top the
1933 average of 82J13.000. There
were 62,703,000 Jobholders la May
but because &lt;4 the growth of the
labor force unemployment w et 2.8
per cant as against only 2.S per
cent ii» the record year.
8. Joblessness will rise In the

■I h

BUYING
A CAR?

f™ie^r

| |

nl

j

MERIDIAN, Mill JT-Frid and
Ai Key warmed up the lw-horaopower Wright Whirlwind engine on
Ole M in today to re-enact an air­
borne refueling stunt that helped
make aviation history 20 yean
ago.
Such itunga arc commonplace
in this day and age when swift
Jets auckle up to tankers far out
at ica, but in 1925 the Key broth­
ers used the feat to set a 27-day
world endurance flying record that
still stands.
At a banquet here last night
aviation notables from throughout
the world honored the brothers and
•heir Curtis Robin monoplane Ole
Miss for ushering in a new- flying
era.
Col. Roscoe Turner, of Coronth,
Miss, and Indianapolis, In d , cred­
ited the Keys with leading the way
t o w a r d modern long-distance
flights add inspiring many young­
sters to look to the skies for a
career.
*
In 1911, when Ihe Keys flew over
neat several weeks as student*
and housewives hunt summer Jobs
but will decline as they (ind work
or stop looking. The year long
unemployment average will be low­
er than last year but probably not
as good as 1933. In May there
were fewer than 2l&gt; million un­
employed, the best record since
1933.
6. No major strikes now are con­
sidered threatening. NegotiaUons
in steel and some other basic in­
dustries must still be completed
and stoppages could cause widen­
ing circles of idleness and lost pro­
duction.
7. A balanced budget, cherished
goal of administration policy, Is at
last In sight. Officials hope to pare
down the estimated &lt;2.400,000,000
deficit for the 1936 fiscal year, nowbeginning, and to wipe out the red
ink entirely In the '37 budget which
President Elsenhower presents in
January.
8. The budget picture makes It
almost certain that Congress will
approve tax cuts next season. Ris­
ing corporation profits and indi­
vidual incomes have improved tax
collections markedly In recant
months and, on the political aide,
byth parties are anxious to give
the voters a tax break in a cam­
paign yeay.
On Just one of these points, does
business opinion appear to differ
sharply from the Washington ap­
praisal. Industry fear* the Infla­
tionary Impact of the new auto
conlracts. They will add an esti­
mated *4 of a billion dollars to the
wage co»» A Ford and Gff alone.
Smaller companies quail at the
prospect of similar wage booata
and guarantee layoff pay demands.
S t Aug-uatlne, Fla., was found­
ed in 1666.
O. D. Farrell
810 E. F irst
For 10 yrare this etore hee
consistently observed the fol­
lowing hour*:
Week days 9 e. w. to 9:18 a. wl
Saturdays I a. m. te 7 J* u- a t
Closed from 7:80 p. m,
Saturday until 9 u- ns- Mon.

Arcade Package
STO R E

«nce test sponsored by the Junior
Chamber of Commerce, aviation
was still in its swaddling clothe*
Ole Mils proved that man is
mightier than bird and that the
man-made bird can take a lot of
punishment. For its long-fliitance
jaunt around Meridian, Old Mlsi
will rate a place in- the Smith
aonlan Institution at Washington
alongside C h a r l e s Lindbergh's
Spirit of St. Louis.
As befitting a hardy member
of a vanishing race, the Ole Mira
will make the trip undei* its own
power. It was ready to take off
at 3:30 p.m. today, spend the night
in Atlanta, Ga„ and arrive in

at S p.m.
in(« mechai
. . .
,
14 ye
bo *1 ™ c
The refue
a reenactm
of the histoi
brothers ref
lng the 27-d
they used 6.
*nt* 300 6*^
Al is now
In charge o
to Columbia
of Meridian'
their honor.

MIMEOGRAPH PRINTING — TYPING
CREDIT INVESTIGATIONS MADE
ANYWHERE IN UNITED STATES OB
FOREIGN COUNTRIES

CREDIT BUREAU OF SANFORD
T E L E P H O N E S ISO «irf 1071

CARRAW A Y &amp; McKIBBIN
GENERAL IN SU R A N CE
Bonds
Automobile,
Outboard Motorboats
P . 8.— W e e ls e w r ite H o m Owner* P o licies
* 409

114 N . P ark A r e .

SHOW ING

)— SPECIAL SHOW
3 ^ 5 'i FOR THE FOURTH \

M

•A N E R U S S F I L
IF I F C H A N D L E R

DAN

STARTS
TOMORROW

DURYUA

�I - —

Shop and Save
. In Sanford
VOLUME XLVI

Sty* d o t t e d fe ra lfr
■
Established 1908

AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER
9
TUESDAY. JULY 5. 19M
SANFORD, FLORIDA.

Permission Is Granted
,Inland Construction Co.
For Loch. Arbor Paving
Strolling
In Sanford
Forrest B reeketrldfs, manager
of the Chamber of Commerce,
returned to Sanford last night af­
ter a two-neck business-vacation
—trip. Ha attended the Southern
® Institute at the University of
Norm Carolina and contacted in­
dustrial prospects in tha Pittaburgh area and Indiana.

• • • •

W

Yesterday was Sanford’s quiet­
est Fourth of July in years, Chief
of Police floy Williams said. No
automobile accidents were re ­
ported, and Chief Williams said
drivers v ere apparently “ taking
it easy."

• • • •

Registration of voters began to­
day in the Chamber of Commerce
building. Voters will be register­
ed there from 8 a. m. until noon
and from 2 to S p. m. each Tues­
day.

• • • •

City Building Inspector John
Gill on has received his certificate
of membership in the Southern
-B u ild in g Codu Congress, which
" w i l l hold its annual meeting Nov.
A-U in Birmingham, Ala.

Cold Reception
; Is Being Planned
»For Reluming Men
- L‘l

n'1■ ■

,

Promotional Drive
For Sanford Cards
Is Told By Krider

KDTffT KONO I f i- U J .
are arranging * coldly eorract re­
ception for three American turn­
coat prisoners of war due to cross
into Hong Kong Saturday from Red
China.
Tha Communist Chines# Red
Cross informed the Indian Rad
Cross in New Delhi yesterday of
the July • arrival- data for the
9 three Korean War veterans who
stayed with Use Communists after
the 1B33 armistice then recently
changed their minds.
The men ^ara Lewis W, Griggs
of Jacksonville, Tex.; Otho Ball,
of Olympia, Wash.; and William
A. Cowart, of Dalton, Ga. Co­
wart originally asked to b f sent Argentine Prelates
to Japan but recent reports from
Peiping hive "said ha now prefers On Way To Genoa
returning to the United Statai.
^
Tha U.S. Defense and Justice With 'Permission'
departments so far have pot said
VATICAN CITY (D—The Vatican
what action would be
secretary of atata office said today
•gainst the men.
that two Argentina prelates recent­
ly expelled by the Argentina govsm m enl have “evidently realty ob­
tained permission to return home."
A spokesman said that no per­
mission, however, had bean re­
layed through tha Vatican. Nor was
there any immediate confirmation
from President Juan Peron'a gov­
\ * 1 MEXICO CITY UR — Mexico's ernment in Bueno* Aires.
government Party of Revolution­
The pralalas arc Bishop Manual
ary Institutions (PRD baa claimed
overwhelming victory in tha no­ Tito, whoa* expulsion on Juno U
tional congressional elections, Tim was qxickly followed by Vatican
National Electoral Commltaien euatomuafeation af Perea and aD
and his
saya final results will not be known othersu responsible,
. n „ . mn.
lent,
llig r. Ramoa
Ramon Novoa.
Novoa.
before tomorrow.
ini, Migr.
Although public interest
They sailed yesterday from Getsbeen alight, the PRI eaid T*
tha toteraatioaal EueharKucher• Bar I lor the
cant of tha aattoa'o nine mlldaa totk Congress at Ria da Janeiro
* voters turned out Sunday far tha BraxA July 1T-H.
* election of 1«1 members to the
Chamber of Deputies. A sweeping
government victory bed baaa anti­
cipated.
So far tho outcome w a s __
only in tha Federal District em­
bracing Mexico City. j u govern­
ment party aanasad M of the t t
•rats in the capital, white too
Other S went to the cauarvattea
Party of National Action.
J H u PAN, whleh la e t n a * * to
Jalisco stela, claimed to hava waa
20 leala in aU.

Mexico's PRI Says
Victory Is Assured

Are Still A t Large
GREEN COVE SPRINGS W —
rive of nine convicts who broke
out of the Doctor* Inlet stale roid
camp remained at large today and
officers expressed belief they have
left thia area.
Camp Capt. J. J. Segrsst said
“Although wa don't feel Ilka they•ra still around her*, the »earch
In Clay County will continue until
w« hear Uiry're recaptured some­
where else."
The man escaped Saturday mid­
night by cutting through their met­
al sleeping quarters and scaling
an eight-foot fane*.
Carl Henry, 21, and Jack Twin­
ing, If, sentenced in Dsde County
for breaking and entering, were
eiu*ht iundar
e*“*nv
7
PARTICULAR* THIEF
HOUSTON, Tex. tel — lie was
a Choo*y sort of ebap. Whan he
held up a package atore, ha eald.
“Give me all
aU the
tha money
moaey axccot
extent
“Givo
pennies and foreign eotoa." The
clerk beaded ----ever—

Little Ida Mae
Found In Woods
ByHappyDaddy
LIBBY. Mont, igv—Found un­
harmed in a wooded hollow
2-year-old Ida Mae Curtis bounded
to her father's arm* with a cheer­
ful "Hi Daddy" late yesterday
after she was Inxt fur 22 hours in
a rugged mountain ares south of
here.
Searchers found her only 300
yards from where she disappeared
Sunday evening.
Fearful hi* daughter might have
born earned trom their tent by
WINSTON BURDSTT, Columbia Broadcasting Ryrirtti commentator,
one of several hears »rcn in the
confer* In Washington with hi* wife ami Sen. James O. F.islluml
vicinity, Mortimer Curtis, the
(top, right) after confrssinfi that he worked abroad as a Cornimmlri
child's father, broke down and
reent. The Senate Internal Security subcommittee heard him de­
cried upon embracing her.
scribe his activities while a corrwipondcnt In Europe between 1940
Mrs, Curtis, mother of tevrn,
nnd IBIS, how his first wife was murdered hy the Herts, and thp men
had said she saw- two bears near
he worked with. Buntelt named Monroe W. {item (bottom, ieftl. a
the ramp where Curtis works ax
nev-spupermnn, who denied being a lied, nnd l.ylo Dowling (right),
a loggrr shortly after Ida Mae
former newspaper executive, who invoked Uie 6th Amendment.
vanished.
Tha youngster was reported In
"pcitcct condition." Sheriff Hay
Frost ol Lincoln County said she
hadn't a scratch.
“She may hava been frightened
by a hear, but 1 doubt if it touched
her," he said. “She was awake
when we found her lying on her
side. She was a little frightened
In Sartfortl nml Seminole County over Ihattoliiluy week­ but not a* much as you would
end only three Occidents occurred making a record “th a t the think."

Drivers Are 'Good'
In Seminole County

people can ho proud of."
I'tlnm. Carl William* stated th at "the Friday through
Monday" traffic was heavy hul “good", “There were very
few violation* that were scrums,”
ha said.
He also pointed out that the dif­
ferent law enforcement officers
in Sanford and Seminole County
would like to thank the people for
observing traffic laws ami that
“it d&lt;»e» gay lo be haft,"
Two of the accident* occmveii
on Saturday. The first reported
was at fl:25 when two vehicles, a
tow Dodge pickup truck driven
by Daniel Robinson Hi. t, 09 year*
old, and a 1918'Mercury converti­
ble, drivcvn by John M. O'Malley,
student. 19 year* of Tampa, hit on
17-92 by l.ake Monroe. The Mer­
cury hit the truck broad ride, It
was reported. Injured were l.jv v
renco E. Hardin Jr., of Tampa,
with muitlpleeuts on hit face ami
left arm in the Mercury and J -hn
Kelly, seven, lacerations on righht
temple ami fractured pelvis; Da­
vid Kelly, age It, laceration of
face and fractured right leg; and
Leonard Kelly, 13, with a head hi Jury. All Iho boys, brothers, were
of fit. 1 Sanford. Leonard smt
David were later taken to the
Onmgo Memorial Hospital for
further treatment
Both ears were a total lots
and charges were against O'Mal­
ley.
Th» second wreck caused liulc
damage, a 1918 lo rd twoilmr
Sedan missed a corner near Paula
and hit an orange tree. The dri­
ver was not identified and the
damage was considered “slight".
On July 1, in Fern Pail at
12:43 p m a 1953 Buick driven
by Halsey B. Ticrcy, Sanford. 23
years old; and a 1033 Cadillac
Sedan, driven by Jana Elizabeth
Leatherbury, Orlando, 38 years
old were damaged slightly.
The buirk hit the bark of the
Cadillac in falling to stop soon
enough, it waa 'reported. No in­
juria* occurred.

Apparent Victory
Declared By Segni
ROME tet-U ftx /ca a ter Cbrir
tian Democrat Aatoate legal a a.
red today to have waa hte fight
rebuild tea fear-party coaler
coalition with which Maria M l
governed Italy Bar M maatta,
Tha scholarly, M-yaarteM advo­
cate af land rafara m ail m a r t

r

^ tU R a u a rsu r*

Nn. 228

Aworiattd Press leased Wire

Secretary Says
Reds Can Wait

Permission was (rranted Inland Construction Co. to pave
streets in the Loch Arbor Farlane section housing subdivision
being built by Inland Construction Company this morning
a t the meeting of the County Commissioners.
Al Doudney, surveyor representing Inland, presented

------------------------ -------— drawings oi the are* effected The
commissioners approved unanim­
ously.
Surveyors Bill K iastncr and Al
Doudnry appearrd before the
commission to aik permission to
use certain printing machinri un­
der the supervision of the County
Clerk, O. P. Herndon. Herndon
stated that the machine had been
used in the past at a public ser­
vice but he felt that the eomFlorida Slate League president mistlonera approval would bo
John Krider laid today he is tak­ needed.
ing over direction of tha Sanford
Chairman John Melsch stated
Cardinals for 15 days and an­ that they would take it into con­
nounced plans for a vigorous pro­ sideration and at some later date
motional campaign.
give a decision. Kraetner said that
Emphaaiilng the need for funds they were willing to pay a reason­
to curry the team through the able fee and would also pay for
rest of Vie season, Krider said any damages that might occur.
General Joseph H u t c h i s o n ,
(he campaign will Include a tic­
ket-telling canvas of the business Frank Evans and Fred Wilson ap­
district and mailing of a 10-game peared before the commissioner*
ticket to every family in the city. to requeet fundi to start con­
Kridar said tha tickets to be struction on the General Sanford
mailed to families tell for f t each Library. Chairman Meisch stated
and may b« used by any mem­ that the County had donated $8,ber of tha family. An “added WO over a three year prrlod to­
inducement” will be included in ward* the construction providing
tha envelop* with each .ticket, he the City donates the tame amount.
“The money la ready any time
added.
•Thia special prica," Krider you wish to begin construction” ,
.
continued, "mike* baseball really he stated.
Wilson laid the City had donat­
cheap entertainment ami should
be of great Interest lo every fam­ ed $7,600 and land between the
Chamber of Commerce building
ily."
and Seminole Blvd. in addition to
Kndtr pointed out that the the money. Tha Library represen­
Cardinals are piling up an out­ tatives wilt appear before the
standing record under the mana­ n e it City Commission meeting for
gement of Mario “Red" Mauriet- permission to start construction.
lo and now hava a firm grip on
A requeet to build a concession
first place in the second half of •tend and rent boat* in Mullet
the etaaon. Home game crowds, Lake Park was mad* by Mr. Rich­
ha said, are growing larger taeh ardson. H# stated th at if permis­
night. Last Night's crowd passed sion were given h# would live on
the fOO mark.
on the park ground* and main­
Fra* 10-gam* tickets will be tain them.
•warded to cartels teas at aach -County surveyor, If . C. Hagan
home D M beginning Thursday stated that the park la presently
night, Krider said. A photograph maintained and used by the
will be taken of a section of to­ Sportsman'* Aesoeiatlon. County
nights crowd and the heads of Attorney Mack Cleveland was in­
ont or more persona will be ring­ structed to further study of the
ed. These (ana will get the tic­ request!
kets. Tha photograph will ba post­
Jack F or, county right-of-way
ed Thursday night on lh* bulletin agent, appeared before the Com­
board Inside the stadium. Slmiiiar mission with recommendation*
'photographs will be taken at aach from the County Zoning Board reborne game.
garding prohibiting construction
Kridar said ha planned to speak of 17-03 right-of-way.
•
to the Xlwania Club tomorrow
and tha Jaycees Thursday on the
Five O f 9 Convicts
baseball situation.

Weather
Conriderahle cloudiness with scatI w d ihnwrri or thundershowers
southeast roari; partly rloody
with scattered ihowrri.

rfttto fa a lia a M B
**“■ **• MeAaeoy,
**• v»
K disappeared last week.
MeAuay m A e d tote a paak to a thick bax* while
tofitefjart to • teste ter Brno attar
M tetegih -Fartaea, M m , and LL

Super-Duper Snarl
Tangles Trallic
In Capital City
WASHINGTON U*-A potentially
Miper-dupcr traffic snarl confront­
ed the capital today w-ilh Iho end
of a lung holiday weekend conoiding with the fifth day of a street­
car and buv strike.
Friday, when the strike started
was had enough. But many gov­
ernment worker* among the Mime
400,000 persons who normally use
public trim-it doily look the day
off to begin their July 4 holiday
early—many of them lo bypass the
transportation profilem.
A full force of 200 park police
■nd 2,200 metropolitan officer* was
ordered out In help keep traffic
moving today in the face of the
added influx of private autos, some
of them bringing resident* belated­
ly hark from the weekend.
Some 2,400 AFL strertcar and
bus operators and mechanics are
•coking s pay tncreate of 15 rent*
an hour for operator*, who got
$1.90 an hour under the old contrarl, and 31 cents for mechanics
who got $2 09. Tli* union has pro­
posed arbitration.

Resolution Offered
By Raymond M. Ball
On Highway 17-92
Raymond M Hall, rhairman of
the Seminole County zoning com­
mittee pre«ented a resolution of
moniini'ioiations con- rnnng Con­
struction on highway 17-92 this
morning.
The irsnlutlon staled "ilmt a
regulation be adopted and enfnrerd as soon as pntrihle by the
Board of County Commissioner*
of Rsminola County, Florida, pro­
hibiting any structure or building
being ptaerd, erected nr constructfd, repaired, struetm ally altered
nr improved, including any struc­
ture or building upon which con­
struction has been kuspsndsd,
within the proposed right of way
according to the approved right
of way mnp of thr Slate lload
Department of Florida, covering
that part of section 7701. State
Road 16-000, in Semlnola County,
Florida from tha intersection of
said roid with French Av*., at San­
ford. Florida, aouthrrly to the
Seminole County-Oiange County
Lina.'*
The County Commissioners ap­
proved the recommendations and
have tel a public bearing to b*
held In tha Court House a t 7
p. m. Friday, July 20th.

Airline Captain
Able To Wrangle
From Tight Spots

Khrushchev Sanford Atlantic
Is Seeking Shows Large Gain
Honesty' Since December 3t
Communist Tells
Of Red Strength

MOSCOW (/F)— CnnirminLt Party Secretary Nikita
Khrushchev said yesterday
Mint Husain wants nn agree­
ment "on nn honest basis" at
the Geneva summit talks but
is slrouu enough to wliit if
the West is not prepared lo
negotiate seriously.
Khrushchev's host at the
V. S. Embassy's Fourth of July
party, Charged 'A ffairrs Walter
N. Watmalry, replied: “ I do not
think the President of the United
S 'atrs would go to Geneva with­
out seriims reasons."
The Communist party chief and
other top Russian offlrinls, includ­
ing Premier Nikolai Bulganin, put
in a sutprl'e appearance at thn
party. No such high-ranking group
of Soviet lenders have ever before
attended an embassy function.
In a speech he said he wanted
to make to tbs guests, Khrushchev
said the Husiians are not going, lo
the July 18 conference “with brok­
en Ieg»"—rrippted by harvest fail­
ure* or other breakdowns in the
Soviet ernnomy.
“ We are going upright like sol­
diers to meet with worthy partners
sod that is Ihe only right way,"
tie declared. “If we talk on an
equal basis, ail parties, ami if the
talks are honest and ainrare, equal
to equal, something will come of
it."
The party waa held la the elih•haileii garden of Spaxso Hnute,
Ambassador Charlea K. Ilohlen's
residence. In addition to Khruxhehev and Bulganin, former Pre­
mier Georgi Malenkov, First Dep­
uty Premiers A. I. Mikoyan and
l.aiar Kaganovich and Defense
Minister Grorgl Zhukov were
among the Soviet bigwigs on hand.

LONDON IP—Airline Capt, Cam­
eron T. Walker who landed a
planeload of passengers safety last
year despite a Jammed nose wheel
seem* la b* making a habit of «srapes from lieldiah situations. This
lime it involved a poisonous snake.
Walker, who hails from Massepeqiis, N Y., killed Ihe reptile with
a Jungle knlfa yesterday as it slith
ered across the forwanl luggage
hold of his airliner toward the
crowded passenger cabin. The In­
cident occurri*J Just brfore the
New York-to-lamdon Fan Ameri­
can plan* landed at Shannon, Ire­
land.
State Comptroller
The snake apparently had es­
caped from a crate containing 28 Releases Figures
rattlesnakes, copperheads, coral
snakes ind some unidentified va­ On Gasoline Taxes
rieties being shipped to DiiexselAn-oidlng to Information redorf Germany. Ail of them were
loaaed today hy Itey E. Green,
helieyed poisonous.
The passenger* wera unaware of State Comptroller, tale* of gaso­
line in Floriila during the year
the Incident.
ended May 31 totaled 1,162,271.060
gallons. The 7 cent per gallon
70 Permits Issued tax remitted thereon to the Comp­
trollers office amounted to $60,During Last Month 66H.973.57.
Thia total, whirh represents the
Seventy building permits valued
at $414,1106 were issued in Jims statr’a largest single source of
nun pared with fig permits ami icvenue, Is $6,810,667."6 greater
$148,922 lh* previous month. City for the fisrat year which ended
Building inspector John
Gillon June 36, 1966, than tha amount
rollmtcd during tha preceding
reported today
Gillon said penults wera grant­ year. •
The tax paid by gasoline deal­
ed 30 (Ingle-family dwellings, val­
ued at a total of $378,009, and ers hn Keminolo County for the
totaled
$641,806.43
of
fur two small rnmmerrial build­ year
ings, totaling $6,226. Thr remain­ whirh Green distributed $220,684.der of tha permits went for re­ 34 for mail bonds and road build­
sidential and eommsreial repairs. ing purposes in the county.

First Federal Directors Again
Declare Dividends For Accounts
The directors of Ihe First Fed­
eral Savings ami Loan Aixoeia
lion again declared a threr per
rent dividend on tha saving* ac­
count*. resulting in a distribu­
tion of over $67,000.00 lo these
•aver*. II wai said alio by George
Touliy, Executive Vice iTcxidrnt,
that in lending $206,300 on first
mortgage* for the purchase, con1 1 r u c l i o n or maintenance of
homes In tha community, tha a l­
location had ict a new high for
id 20 years existence in this type
service for its clirnl*.
The statement of the thrift firm
bring released now and allowing
the condition of tha builneaa on
June 30 reveals total a n a ls of
$3,374,1MJO. Thia is an Increase
of ovnr 12 per cent lines their
list statement on Dee. 21, last
year.
*
In this same all months tha
saving* account balances have
Jumped 14.7 per cent and now to­
tal $4,971,132.01,
At the June meeting to* Board
of Directors increased to* re­
serve and surplua accounts from

* BLACK DAY
klNGSTREE, K. C. ID — Mrs. $313,647J $ to $564,10* M w h ich i*
L. II. Cromer reports three four per cent more than to* 12.2%
squirrels came down her chimney I n e r t * * * in loan aeeounU out­
and then, black with toot, ran ail standing, Dae. II, IBM to too pre­
over toe aurteini, woodwork sad sent.
mantle, overturned tempi and
It was said that fas tha past 11
Gowar pots.

advanced 20 per cent.
Commenting on the progress,
Touliy said that because of the
growth demands fur Inins, some
people might feel (hat reserve*
were taking place in the econo­
mic picture. On the contrary, tie
pointed out, it is the continued
prosperity that ronvlncrs people
that they can make commitments
for the future with assurance of
meetinr them that prompts the
borrowing.
Along with Ihr demand for mo­
ney there has been a projection
of lha thrift responsibility, either
to provide funds to meet a possi­
ble emergency or to set up an acrount for a particular project or
need This Is fortunate for ihe
community, for It is these savings
account* lhat provide tha funds
that help build more homes,
Touhy said.
In the face of what many call
“boom conditions" the directors
art striving to keep a baianea betwees adequate lately of the savlags areouata asd toe noun ting
demand for increased loans oo
residential property, tha manag­
ing officer said. The director*
a n Howard Favitto, B. P, Doudnay. H. Jamas Out, A. Kdwla
Wilnholtar, E. C. Harper, tor., J.
H. Va* Hop m 4 Touhy.

Advancement i&lt; being made a t
deposit* in Iho Sanlord Atlantis
National Hank tlimv a gain of
5390,197,37 since December 31,
1954, it wa* announced bv It, J.
Bauman, president.
lit went on to say that total
for the same period show
a gain of $730,126.12 a* of Juns
30, 19\3 The bank'* dcporil to­
tal wa* $7,181,133 25 and total atset* were $8,195,230 69.
“The lncrca*p reflects better
economic conditions in the com­
munity and sl-o s steady growth
of Sanford and Seminole County"
he pointed out.
Tin Sanford Atlantic paid a
stock dividend in January of 106
per rent thereby inerrating it*
capital from $100,000.00 to $200,-

000 oo.

“ A semiannual dividend of
sight per cent was paid on Bis
itock si of July I, 1953" h t said.
Hurinexs for the last half of
1933 “ should ba as good or even
better. More peopla arc moring
to this community steadily and
tha inerrsis in personnel at tha
Naval station ii particularly wsl-_
corns.**

-------------------

)

Holiday Tragedies
Exceed .Estimates
Issued By Council

I

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Traffic deaths In lh« United
Slates 05er the Fourlh nf July
wrrkrnd Miami to a record high
for the holiday.
The over-all scciitcntsl death
toll atm was the hravifit in years
for Ihe Independence Day period.
Traffic accidrnti from I p.nt.
Friday to midnight Monday killed
at Iraxl 382 person*. That was
mure than Ihe number estimated
by Ihe National Safely Council and
compared to the previous record
id 366 in a three-day Fouith of
July period in 1952.
In the 78-hour period, 232 per­
rons drowned and 133 others lo*t
their live* in mUcrllaneon* acci­
dent*. The over all total of 748 was
a record for a three-day Fourth
of July holiday and rom pirrd wnth
tha record nf 793 for a four-day
Fourth of July period in 1950. Thn
traffic toll in 1950 wax an all-tlma
high of 491.
Every Matt and the District n#
Columbia reported at leavl oo* ac­
cidental death.

Mother is Graleful
For Many Prayers4
CHICAGO IT—A young mother's
•ppeal for prayer* for her iitlla
daughter, virtim of tierping sicknc»». hat Iwen answered by a
flood of irttcia from around tha
world.
Two weeks ago that Mrs. Joan
lla.lfii'ld, 24, asked that prayers
he offer* d for her daughter Debbia
Ann, who was stricken with encep­
halitis lari Nov is. she was re­
leased from filling* Hospital April
29, still ina coma, amt is being
cared for In her home in subur­
ban Park Ridge.
Mr*. Hadfield said more torn
1,000 Ictlers from throughout tha
nation and from Canada, Mexico
and European countries have been
received. Shs said all lh# writers
promised prayers for Debbie, who
will be 3 Aug. 3.

County Commission
To Get Complaints
Notire is being given that tha
Board of County Commianera will
meet in the regular adjaursd ses­
sion on July 29 at l p. m. in too
County Commixsiunara room at
the Court House.
The purpose uf the meeting to
to haar complaints and receive
testimony aa to the value of any
rati or personal property fixed
by the County Tax Assessor oo
the 1968 Tax Assessment RolL
They will also receiva testimony
and hear oemplainU aa to the
perfecting, reviewing and equal!xtog af toa iu su isb I
__ _ •

•

*

�• -

1

TTTE SA?m)WT) HERALD
T ilt* . J u ly 5, 1955

From the Atlantic, the Panama
Canal rims southeast, not west,
to ona riciflc, says tha National
tjcogiaphic Society.

Uy-flick Sumer ^
By BENNETT CERF-

—t T H E iO O S L ,

CEOTATNLV A R E
HAVING A LO T '
OF FUN PLAYIN G

7 2 Accidental

ANUBSEANOPCTEJK
r A FIREMAN. BUT vory
Sr IS ELMO SLOPING,
OVER THERE7 i ^

Deaths Occur
During Holidays

. C U T H E R E J— '

FESTIVITIES CONTINUE
PITTSFIELD, Mat*. IP. - Offlrials of SI. Luka's and Pittsfield
General hospitals yesterday asked
fireman lo postpone the remaining
events of the ninth annual fireme'* muster after both hospitals
became overcrowded with 37 piradars failed by th* beat. Eveo
though the temperature waa in the
Ms. the festivities continued.
JULT « ***NOW“
MORRISTOWN. N. J. IN-Leit
winter. Chief of Detective Robert
Kleindinst mentioned tn • neigh­
bor that ba enjoyed snowy weather
and would be happy if U snowed
oo July «. Yesterday the neighbor,
Edward Fordham, gave Coindinst a Fourth ot July surprise—
a package of snow he bad kept in
his deep trees* since winter.
Employee of British railroad*
who graduate from first aid ruraee ere gtren holiday* with free

WEDDING CAKE TAKEN
PORT HURON. Mich. UN—Burt
**“*•.*!£!.*?’.“ 4 J ,m t’ s P«nc,rHHladale, Mich., were held
00 • charge of pally larceny after
P0116*
of takjig a
tour-loot cake from tha wedding
of Edward Coleman and
“ » brid* Myrtle Carpenter.
_
_ ----------------- *
Thy alb*tree* often file, at a-

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Twelve persons died aceWactslly
in Florida during the holiday week­
end but the state escaped the miJor traffic toll that had been pre­
dicted.
Four persons had been killed on
the highways when the 71-hour
Fourth of July weekend cnd«l.
The predicted toll had been U.
The figure for the corresponding
weekend last year was 12.
H. N. Klrkman, tha highway pa­
trol director, was jubilant at the
report.
“The people were just more
safety minded this year.” be said.
He said the highway patrol
staged a “saturation enforcement
program during the last three
days.”
“We put about 2S0 cars on tha
road and the men patrolled in them
'to to &amp;&gt; hours each." be said.
“Some of the men who were out
to midnight would be back no the
road at 5 a. m."
•
Thou*aads of persons fought the
beat with water dur-ng the week­
end and at least five drowned.
The latest two reported victims
were Clarence Oliver Jr., a 17ytar-oid boy who drowned at Port
St. Joe; and William Banks,
a Pompano Beach Negro whs
drowned while rescuing an ll-year&gt;
old boy.*
A Coral Gables youngster died
on a boat while fishing with hii
father near the Bahamas Islands.
His lather said Stephen Kitehfil

STOVE TAKEN FROM ROME:
COII.NBREAD ETUI* IN OVEN
COLUMBUS, Ga. ID-Mri. J. c f l
Simpson put supper In tha oven,
then left the house to meet htr
husband who hid bean working.
When she got home supper and
the stove ware gone.
County Poliee Capt. 0. F. Gunn
reported Buck Simpson, no kin. to
Mrs. Simpson, was being held (or
investigation. The officer said hsw.
arrested Simpson after seeing hla™
with an oil stove tied to bis auto.
Gunn said cornbrtad was still in
tha oven.
crawled in a bunk when he became
seasick and later tumbled out.
striking his head. The father said
th* boy choked to death before ho
waa found.
Robert Lawrence Jr. 23, w « |
accidentally electrocuted yes ter*
day at Daytona Beach whan he
touched a fruit Julcemxehln* while
standing barefoot on a tret floor.

cnA PT E R T tn rtT K K N
oarer the Mescalcro coon try. Chris­ night, a flrr aha was hi bed and
A BROKEN 81‘UR man had tie Toland beard it in Sundown, should have bean asleep in her
died by a Dealer's gun, and their and came back to Slash T with her usual healthy sleep.
roused temper demanded payment tare set in tinna ot atara gravity.
Kerry couldn't have known
in kind. Perhaps no ona but Ilob
Jared and Wayne Cameron were what was going to happen — or
Mallory could have held that tem­ titling on the oorch when she came could ha 7 Thcrc'd been talk go­
per in check. Ha gave no sign of up, silent Us their polite neutrality. ing round among the nrstcre, even
noticing Its voice. With a jerk of Cameron let her aee the quick before tha fight at the schoolhis head toward hla riders, ba look of admiration warns hie face, house. She herself had hoard it
ordered, “Taka him up,“ and up to Use cold, unchanging ryes, Ui Sundown, and Kerry, aha re­
obediently Bill and Tip climbed b a I o r • he aakrd concernedly, membered painfully, had friends
down.
"Somethin’ wrong, Christie T Too at the Forks. Had he heard tho
talk, and run away from danger
In a frown alienee, they hoisted look bothered.“
“Plenty," ah# Informed him as he'd always run away from re­
up the sprawled body, lashed It
ABUU IftVRNlOH la seen In the role of father-in-law as he poses
across Art's saddle, mounted their grimly, and poured out the story. sponsibility 7
with his eon, Adlai Swing. I t, and the latter’* bride, the former
8h# couldn't make herself come
own horses and waited for their Jared sucked in his breath with a
Nancy Lewi* Anderson, following their marriage In Louisville. Ky.
bleak look in his faded eyea. Cam­ to an answer that satis! led her—
boss's orders.
The couple will live In Cambridge, Mass, where young Stevenson
T a k e him home." Boh turned eron observed, "Well, a tough man and m tha code she'd been bred
la a student at Harvard Lew School. U menial tonal Souadphoto)
In hla saddle tor a last word. “I met up with Use kind of finish his in, lack ot courage in a man was
didn't want, killing, Lsrrabc*. kind got to expect. But It's not the one nnforgivcabla sin that
In 19Bt, the Infant mortality a new low of 2G.7 per 1,000 live Whether there’ll bo any more of It tha end of K. Good man are Ukely made him contemptible, lesa than
to d»a before we saa tha last s' a man.
•ale In the Untied States reached birtha.
la up to you."
Wayne Cameron rode aw n/ from
Tha five ridere and tha sixth this."
“Yea," Christie aaaentad, tight- Slash T humming a song under
horso with Its gruesome load, head­
tipped.
“Mora
than
likely."
hia breath. Ha knew he'd pul m
ed north into the bloody last light
“Good men on both aide*," Cam­ a good day’s work—Just enough
ot the setting sun. ljirrabcc turned
and not too much. That was one
to his son, and gently lowered him eron added.
"I suppose a a But I emnt fed ot ths things that art him above
to a seat on tha ground.
“Nate, you're a good hand at as sorry tor the neslera aa 1 did. most ot hla kind—he always knew
doctoring. 8ce what you can do Oh, I'm not shedding any tears when not to crowd things. Chris­
over Art Graves. Lika you said, tie Toland couldn't he crowded.
tor him."
Cullen ripped away the bloody he was one ot the wild bunch, and She was smart. Her brains made
alccve, examined the gash, and ho probably bad It coming to him. her hard to book, but worth the
nodded his grizzled head with re­ But I-arrabee and his crowd stirred trouble. Ones caught, ahe'd be a
lief. "Just a flesh v-ound. It's ail this up, trying to grab what help to aa ambitious man.
Cameron wasn't indifferent to
deep, an’ he lost a lot o' blood, but didn’t belong to them."
’T h ai's Usa way It goea." Cam­ women, but hod never let his
he'll ha all right." Rrelng the
trouble on his friend's laca, he eron sighed. “A thing Uka Una senses run away with hla judge­
added kindly. T ie had to do It, happens, and right away people ment. He'd always seen where a
Joe. Man's got a right to defend start lakin' aide*. Bren tha fairest woman could be fitted Into his
himarlt. That fellow was a killer. minded people—they can’t help plana. I-lte Dawson, now—she ws.i
No call for you to feel bad about gettln’ riled up. once there's been smart enough In her way, and
blood spilled. Bein’ a stranger," I under hi* direction alia d been a
him."
“It's not him th ai’k ha tmbl.'WR he added, with an apoiagrue half- I useful bolt in a lot of ramca. Bui
my sleep." The cars tn his mind smile, “1 rrexon i n u t reel It quits ima Um* m waa oiler tagger
brought the singing nsa and fall o r the way yon d a Mallory's your slakes than a herd ot cattle or a
an Irish keen into Joe'a tongue, (riend. An’ there’s goln’ to be a greenhorn's roll. U ta • ould still be
e r a s i n g the carefully learned tot more reelin’ the sauna way, oo a help In getting It, but he needed
speech of nls adopted country. both aides. “Rlordan," ha added a woman like Christie to help hint
•'But It's not tho llko of Bob Mal­ casually, “picked hlmaalf a good usa IL A woman with looks and
brains and dignity, who would be
lory to ba Irtttng a man of hut
• • * * • * • • * • *
an asset la a man with designs of
be killed and him he doing nothing
cutting n wide swath in tho world,
Here’s a rugged, all-purpose truck designed not only fur highway
atwut it. There'll he black trouble
even If aha hadn't carried tho in­
tn rome of this. I have the feeling
travel, but with the extra insurance nf 4-wbccl drive fur difficult
hen lane* of Mlaoh T. That had
of
It
in
my
hones."
terrain or weather —the 'Jeep' Truck!
been a card ha hadn’t npired on
"Gettln' tlie second sight of your
It shifts easily frnm 2-wheel drive for highway or street into 1-wheel
old age?" Cullm snapped. But body ever hinted he didn’t have whrn he'd aclectod this country
as his base at operations—but nodrive whe^extra traction ia needed to carry its pajlnsd of nver a
his Irritability only let hla own un­ nerve."
one omild say of Wayne Cameron
rase show the more clearly.
ton through mud, eend, snow or soft earth where ordinary (rucks
"Yon know him better ♦*«*■ 1 that ha didn’t know how to make
can't go. Equipped with power take-off, it supplies mobile power
do." Comerun sold politely, end the moot of any unexpected trumps
It didn't taka the story of Art changed the subject, but Christie's fata dropped in hla hand.
for many types of machinery for business or farm. The ‘Jeep* Truck
Graves' death long to spread all
la now available with power brakes.
(To Ot Contmmed)

Sugar cane has been widely rul.
tivatcd for leas than 500 years.

__________________

ptond

.
jjLL

C V f*
y -J wf )

YOUR
HEALTH i

'''aMBBRsk
‘

TsWe Topics cites tha csia
Of three gay old gale—total
age about 120—w|to rim e in
from Ih* suburbs for lunch in
town anil a m.itmre One waved
her menu kitlrnishly ami ex­
claimed, “Rememher, ctrls, this Is our day In throw caution In the
winds' W lu tll uc start with; M inima, Ucotch, or marinated herting?"

Tha wonder drugs won't work
miracles for vou unless pre­
scribed specifically for vour
needs. See vour doctor first:
bring his prescription to us!

“Teaching my wife to play poker." boasted Artstedrs Henpeck. 3
“was a positive Inaptiation. Why, last Saturday night I won back
third of niy salary!"
Copyright. ISM. by B-nnrtl Cerf. Distributed by King Features Syndicate,

ju s t

m

me

m

aa
vcation trip

HOW GETOH^.

■&lt;im i i k T ^ V p i '

W A TC H FOR O P EN IN G

•win* m b it s
■TARRING
DAN O'HERUBT
M l Only
PLUS

World Is Thirstier; W ater Down

“WICKED
WOMAN*
t J l r 11
l %mr § ,

STARRING
BEVERLY NICHAKI
CARTOON

A sk lor e demonstration ty ia y ..t

CO R D ELLS

REPAIR

WO E . 2 n d ST.

SHOP
I'll ON K 083

No, other premium gas
gives you the Amoco
Extra energy on the
Despite Hot Weather

ILL MAULDIN confides the form ula w hereby Harold Roj*,'
B
late and great New Yorker editor, managed to stay off
radio and TV program s. Iloss explained, “ W henever one of
those — — round-tables or
som ething called up. I'd say,
'Hell, yes. I'll be glad to sit
in on y b u r --------panel, or
w hatever the — you call
It!* T he word soon got

Pngc I

th e road. *
.
.
___
• And usable road octane is th e only o ctane th a t m a tte rs —it's
th e only practical w ay to d eterm in e th e value o f th e octane in
th e g a i you buy.

;

Only the new, unleaded Amoco-Gas
gives you a unique Octane BONUS

Today, from the world's largest, most advanced petroleum Ultra*
former, oomes the new high-octane Amoco-Gas—the one gas th a t needs
no lead! Every ounce of octane-energy in the new Amoco-Gas is usable
octane in your car. No lead deposits caniorm on engine parts. No octane
is wasted fighting them* *
Result? Jdore octane is put to work turning tho wheels than for
any leaded.gas you can buy. That’* w hat we call the big Amoco-Gas
Octane Bonus,
T ryitr^it does a wonderful thing for your car!

The white gas with the

b e a u *

i t c o n ta in s n o le a d !

d-00-16 Ixchongw if your old lire*
or* rscoppoblw

SIZ E

6 .7 0 - 1 5

2

fo r

1 7 .7 5

ticfcowge —If your aid lire* ere rareppoblw

N O
lN

O

E x c i s e

i n s t a l l a t i o n

TAX

J

k

c h a r g e

rwhere it counts!

O th e r gasolines g et .th eir h ig h la b o ra to ry octane ra tin g s by
adding lead! B ut lead can leave h arm fu l deposits th a t keep valu­
able octane from w orking. T hen som e o f th e pow er fails to reach

.

’ crops ran flourish only if Irrigated
[ So what thi* rotintry Is looking
, for—along with many other na, lions—Is a cheap, wholesale meth­
od that will convert thousands n(
acres nf potentially abundant land
' into rropv (hat will eliminate dust
bowls and sidestep thp ro*t nf
reaching out hundreds of miles for
water.
The prartira! solution remainIhe purification of ocean water by
removing lit minerals.
In addition lo Ihe ro d , Ihrre Is
always the expense of transportinn
water lo Inland areas where it Is
needed; so the Department nf In­
terior is tarklmg Ihe problem on
a number nf fronts and un a long
range basis.
The program, with a I wo million
dollar appropriation, was started
in 19J2. Recently Congress author­
ized 10 million more In continue
the research for another 1.1 years.
Some two doten firms hold run
tracts for experimentation with
various diilillalmn methods—Mem­
branes that attract mineral salts
like magnets; eheinlrals that Idol
up purr water and ignore hnnr;
aupersonie vibrations,
freering
electrical rharges, grand scale
variations of a steaming teapot
All sorts of fuels are under rnnaideratinn, including "free" energy
captured from Ihe sun and, nf
course, nuclear power.
Nuclear Development
Assn
elates, Inc., a combine here of
physlcista, rheniists and engi­
neers Including a number o f Oak
Ridge alumni, is under a fTO.Oon
a-year contract trying In develop
• h a t is railed Ihe "supercritical
ayatem". This, In over-simplify, In­
volves healing sea water in sealed
vein—king-sire pressure rnokrrs,
really—to temperatures over 7no
degrees and pressures over 3,000
pounds a square inch.
Such high temperatures do
itrange things In water, permitting
pure 1120 lo he drawn off from Ihe
lop and undralrable minerals to
drain away from the bottom.
Berause sea water corrodes most
metals, NBA experimented until
it found one which rexist* pilling
and eating. It's expensive titanium
which costs lin to 314 a pound
Scientists still are working to find
something tn eliminate sludge—
the mineral residue that clogs the
pipes like aewaga In a kitchen
drain.
Gregory Laserson, NBA phyilciat, estimates that today twrel
water rould he processed—at Ihe
pumping station, not your fauret —
for 30 rents a thousand gallons
This figure is based on a plant
producing 75 million gallons a day,
which would cost 40 million dollars
to build. It still does not Include
the cost of getting water into the
fields, factories or :.omes where it
Might be needed.
**Weler.” Dr. Laserson ex­
plained, "costs from • cents to 20
cents a thousand gallons it pump­
ing stations In most areas in this
country. But in many areas of the
Near Esst It runs as high as 35 or
M. Thus we could find a market
for fresh water at t l a thousand.
At M cents, we could find n signifi­
cant demand. If w« could produce
H for 1* cents n thousand, the

M

T in sto n e
STORES

W

B

l

�Attacking A Hero

Electing The President
'

Senator Hubert H. Humphrey of Minne­
sota haa Introduced a constitutional amendmant providing for the direct election of
; president*. Other propoaal* already offered
would continue the electoral college, but
! have it rhosen in different way*.
Humphrey asks, “Why keep it at all?”
When the Constitution wa* drawn up,
; electing the head of the atate by popular
vote wa* a new Idea, alarming to conserva­
tives. The electoral college system wa* a
concession to thetn; Now It has become large­
ly a formality, yet In 1824, 1878 and 1888
it enahied a president tu win though the
majority of the popular vote was against
him.
Had a couple of thousand votes gone
otherwise in New York in 1884, James G.
Blaine would have beaten Grover Cleveland.
A like change In 1916 would have made
Charles K. Hughes president In World War I
Instead cf Woodrow Wilson. Yet both Wilson
•nd Clevelnnd had popular pluralities,
i Humphrey argues that today’s system
dlsrourages a large vote. Why should Demo­
crats turn out In Maine or Kansas, or Repub­
lican* In Alabama or Georgia? The state la
Cure to he against them. Under the direct
elect'on sv*tem the votes of a local minority
might he enough to turn the scale in a close
national election.
HI* plnn deserves consideration. If
adopted, some federal supervision of elec­
tions would be needed to guard against hnllot-vtufflny where the minority oartv was
too feeh'e to protest effectively. This need
pot he a reason for rejecting the plnn.

The Sanford Herald
pahll-h** Sail* * «r»r*

aataM a?

Saarfar

ta« K o t rtr.1 ai.

Patera* a* w m t rl»«a » « M r » OHafcrr ST. I t U at
Ska Pa«t fifflr# at e »s la »* riartSa. aaSrr lfc» A rt
at f a a a rr— at H a rr* *- l*Tt
M l M l e i:it K I* S . M lt a r a nt OaMlafcrr
tA C * i r T l l t '.n i . A W n ttaaaalaa KAIIar
s r a A t w i m o * m a t s ;*
Mr f a rH a r
I V *av a * t t
ttaa aiaatk
»IA «
T h r r r Maalba
I I I WoatSa
Oaa t u t
A IM
«A.T»
S it Aa
*11 aM laars aaHraa. rant* at tka*ha, rraalallaaa aa*
M l Ira - at aalartalamaa* far tk « para— » at ratal aa
taa*a tall* ke akaraa* taa at raaalaa M t a r t U la a a*laa
Maaraaaala*
M ailaaallr . kt flaarral
■arrira, laa&gt; SSI Oaa rata Sari
A llaata Maaaata

A * «artlala«

T k a Marat* I* a aw aker at Ik* Aaaartata* t r i al
a kirk la aatllla* aaatkatratr la tka aaa ter raaaktlram k &lt; (d a ta * I* IkM aaatpa aar.

Tuesday, July 8, 1955

P age 4

roD A Y t

vm rlr

vkrhk

Knock and it ahall be opened unto you—
Matt. 7:8— The door tv the heart of the
Infinls is pot locked. Sincerity ia the key
th a t opens the door when we knock.

One bcok collector, asked what type of
book he favored,- is said to have answered
■“Defamatory biographies." Most lives of the
great are written by admirers, and apt to be
sugary-sweet, *eelng no flaw In their heroes,
A few are written by enemies, and according­
ly are often interesting, even If not neces­
sarily true.
"Lawrence of Arabia", by Richard Ald­
ington, is a book the collector mentioned
above would have treasured, criticizing tha
fabulous adventurer who was largely reaponsibte for rescuing Arabia from the Turks,
and helping the British to capture Jerusalem
In 1917. This was Col. Thomas Edward Law­
rence, ever since known as "Lawrence of
Arabia."
Lawrence won the confidence of the ever
suspicious Arab* by knowing their language
and customs almost better than they did
themselves. He made promises of Indepen­
dence which the British government did not
carry out. Disillusioned, he resigned from
the armv, and entered the aviation corps as
an ordinary workman, changing hia name to
Shaw. He was killed In a motorcycle accident
in 1985. He found time tn writ# “Seven Pil­
lars of Wisdom," a mnsrive account of his
Arabian adventures, and to translate Homer'e
“Odyssey."
Aldington denies Imwrence’a greatness,
and behoves him a faker Yet better judges,
By ALTON L. BLAXBSLBK
marked relaxation and lots of eon
perhaps, aiwuy* admired Lawrence. One Is N S W Y O R K , (It — Neel aetousseta and especially lota of
sleepy? Then consider the plight vision, an of which arc obvious
Sir Winatnn Churchill.

Enough Is Enough; Hose Snipped
DOWNEY, Calif, UT- Enough,
laid track driver Gears* Di Peso,
1a enough, so be ended the M |* of
hi* burrowing garden hove with
a pair of heavy ibear*.
The 50-foot green plastic bote
began myiteriouuy worming its
way down Into the ground in hit
front yard last Thuriday. It kept
on dluppearing in the general di
rectloo of Chins st a r»lo of s
or S inch** an hour.
Approximately SO feet war goat
by y*ftcrd*y. Hundred* of per*o«i
trampled over the lawn to watch.
DI Pcao received bstchei of sdvlce
■nd suggestions; telephone call*
from as far sway as New York,
Tokyo, Canada and England.
Finally, yesterday, he cut the
hot* and said:
“If it wanla to sink down farther
and disappear completely, my
prayers go with i t If it decidat
to stay the way It la and doesn't
move any more, I’m going to bury
it."
He and his family had planned
to go to the mountains tot tha
July 4 weekend but called off the
outing.
“1 couldn't stand ft any longer,"
ho Said. "This thing was getting

out of hand. Hy life baa been
made a big mats."
A consulting geologist 8. Bruce
Lockwood, Glendale, said water*
saturated sand or mud. Uka quicksand, below the surface might
draw the hose down, but be knew
of no such formation, nor any un­
derground river, in this area.

Two other u s e s ad that nature
pepped up yesterday. Calvin Barbam, of'Mtarby Norwalk, said his
hose started descending^ after ha
ituek it into tha greoal to water
tree roet*. With fir# fret goo*.
Barham dug dew* M l MB he
found the end embedded ia aoft

Start Foaling Sorry For Cattle

Hawaiian Anniversary
July 71h marks the 67th anniversary of
the annexation of the Hawaiian Islands by
the United States. Five years before that,
the. islanders hnd established a republic af­
ter a revolt against Queen Llliuokalini, In
1900 Hawn1! was granted territorial status
with American citizenship conferred on all
Its inhaiiitants.
It now appears that Congress will ad­
journ again without granting the people
of Han nil statehood. At every session of
Congresr there Is speculation that tha tima
has finally come for statehood for both of
our great territories but always tha ses­
sions end without action, dasplts tha fact
that both political partita havt andorsed
statehood for thsm.
Thera are thoughtful and IntaUIgsnt Ha*
valiant who ballsva they a rt bettar off as
they are now. However, tha people of Hawat
who do wish statahood could be excused If
thry began to wonder If their dream would
aver be realised. They are demonstrating
ramarkable patience, and tha tlma may fin­
ally come whan tha political parties wit]
mean What they aay and tnuulata their
promise* Into deads.

JAM ES MARLOW

of eowa and sheep which never
sleep at eU -er only rarely.
So, at least reports a British
scientist ia the scientific journal
Nature.
Pram his own and other observe
tiona, hs concludes that healthy
adult cattle and sheep under nor­
mal conditions “sleep tittle, if at
ail. If sleep does occur, It ean only
be of a very light and transient
nature."
Ha thinks the sleepleeaaeM la
perhaps due to the fa c t that they
era eud-chewtra and must held la
aa upright or particular sidewise
position an their doubt* stom achs
cae work property without causing
k ick b a c k s or a kind at indigestion.
Tka fwmplecsnt cow Is, by this
view, h badly adf as tka'worrier
who baa sontlauous Insomnia.
The eud-chewer* or rymJnoata
in (Moral probably a n an pretty
much alike, Including sheep, ha
aaya. It'a not anggtstod that (ha
reason aheap pant sleep la because
human toaomaiaca era eeuatiag
them an night
C. C. Belch at tha National Inatituto tor Xtioarch ia Dairying,
University at Beading, outlines his
(tody strew sleep to a totter to the
editors at Nature.
He u id ho
also had art reported aay
that healthy cattle “ever lost can.
tonaaeea by day or night." Oth­
ers Mid they tbonsM It debatable

mal lying position, and may alao
sleep."
ft may bo only normal adult
ramlnsnta or eud-chewer* which
apparently don’t sleep because
their digestive system is working
fully, bo says.
Balcb add* that horse* sleep. Ns
cites one German study showing
that horaea kept in a stable slept
seven hours out of 24.
Using special tost devices, Balcfa
measured the rat* of breathing nnd
rat* of stomach activity in some
eowa. Ha also observed eows to
determine if thay aver closed their
•yea.
Only a few animals showed the
deep, regular breathing customary
with sleep, ha said. Thsse periods
usually eama when the stomach
activity stowed down.

signs at stoop la other animals.
Cud-chawing animals swallow
thalr food into ■ first stomaeh or
rumen, then regurgitate It later on
and chew It some more, he writes.
When they finally swallow It,, the
food goes into n second area of
the ttomaeh where gaatrie Juices
are called into the digestion proc­
ess.
- Gravity aoemf to play a role In
this arrangement, Batch Mid. Be­
cause at Ihla, Use animal may
hava to hoop its cheat la a position
that wont interfere with the work­
ings of the stomachs. Cattle keep
their heads upright, or lie in a side­
wise position which probably does
art Interfere with the stomach ar­
rangement, ha Mid.
“Young calves appear to Sleep
and aomrtimea Ut flat an their
There nr* enough autos to tha
to*; u d very fat beef cattle Uni tod 8Uts* to carry every per­
sometimes roll over because of son In th* country with ail tho
their inability to maintain the
rnsr santo empty.

SANFORD ELECTRIC COMPANY
118 M i g a i l i A n ,

Q ]oQ *1trf**a!9 &gt;

Moreell Is Rugged Individualist
WASHINGTON * - Here’s a 1 apostle of rugged individualism
candidate—Ben Moreell—for any ia the mid-lOlh century.
portrait painter looking for the No.
That a-ysar-old retired admiral
and export on construction work
la ai square and aolid as a Mock
of cement, one at hla favorite
building materials. He's the author
of a booh on cement
After M years ia the Navy
Moreell la 1M7 became chainaaa
of the Board ai Dlieetera ad the
Joaea * LaugUla Steal Co. Ha

Clearance B a l t

that the government step building
power planla and pat rid «f Stoat
power policies.
The task tort* investigated ler
This was
as to*
toe strata
atraog tar tho Mootore p u r s and so March at head­
mlsston,
whh than made
n, whtoh
ed the commission Ha iwcemmeanuthmfcdtr i
datioas In aa f B p a g e report it
M -h p fcM I n c u t tfem a o sa ttO M r iN K t, MnSai 4 |

G A Y G IB S O N

!pedaling
iT*ha”^^a*rtSl*tS||
8'[w®* ytfu on easy summer.
what ha thinks.
And whet ho thiake-that tha
with
govsnuosal should Mil to private
utilities Its public power ptaals and
property, including tha Tennessee
Valley Authority—la going to bo
a fla t cotton that needs
th* aourag at oontrovoray tar a
tang tlma.
But hia Making m
no
pond just Batting th*

\ f c v etrtainhr ought to eon* ia and mb

I for youiWwbytMi newkind o&lt;hard*

ont of th* i ui lnoaa at
trio power to eonsnmera at
ratao than these ai private |
emuenkSa
Morartl expUtand Me
•f government at n recant Wa*h-|
Initaa dinar with i
arid the g
taxpayers to
have to pay
tolved by eon
One at ton
admiral's

at theI
taOrtl

a ,.

__.
v^-T s*
V- &gt; V

•t'j- r ?tv; -“j
________
:

.

�1
/PcAAnnali

S o a a L fcvswJtA.

awl Mn. Peter Bukur have
as thalr guests for two weeks,
his brother end sister-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. John Bukur and Mr. and
Mrs. Jo* Yanlck, all of Claveland, Ohio.

Smart Women Today Make Own Bridal
Gowns Out O f Washable Materials
Every bride-to-be dreamt of ■
fairy-tale gown, fragile and deli­
cate aa a cobweb and lovelier
than any dreie la the world.
Soaetlmea inch a drear cornea
high and to many bridei today
are returning to the gentle cuatoma
of yeateryear, and are making
their own wedding gowna, Thua
they not only aevo money, but
can afford the finaat fabrica and
can worh out their own Ideal of
their own particular dream d fa i.
For many glrla, however, there
alao ia a aentlmental reaaon that
goer far deeper than economy.
Fortunately, the technique of
making a wedding drear ia much
■Impllar than It war 100 years
ago. Grandmother uaed to atart
her wedding gown aa much aa
aia months before the big day,
patiently gathering and ruffling
with thousand! of tiny hand stit­
ch** Today, with modern aleetrie
aewtng machines and wldtly avai­
lable dressmaking Instructions,
even a beginner will have little
treuble fashioning the dress of
her heart’s content
A fabulous dress, designed for
the bride who loves tradition, Is a
. gown with tiari of net Boating
from a Lace bodice. The thrifty
. bride Me plea ta remove the low­
er tier of net alter the wedding,
making a abort summer evening
dress.
The dress may be made by a
etendard pattern, and local sewiag
canter experts offer tips on hand­
ling the lace and tulle for the beat
results.
The dress chosen features a
closely fitted bodice which dips
to a graceful V la front. Since the
offset of a tiny waist depends on
having the
waistline exactly
aligned with your own waistline,
he aura to make as* of the ruler

printed or tbt pattern for accurate
adjustments. Make all altema
tlons right on the patten before
cutting Into the lace.
Do an fitting over tha founds
lion garment you plan to wear on
your wedding day. A long torso
strapless b n probably will be
your choice.
Onlf 1 % yards of lac* Is re
qliked fot tha artfully dnped
bodice, so you can afford to buy
the loveliest lace you een find,
such as a chaatllly-type lace, now
available In dacron. When cutting
tha bodies, leave an extra wide
seam allowance, so that yon can
match tha laca pattern whan you
bast*.
You wfll find that stitching on
lac* Is no problem If you back the
lace with tissue paper, which will
keep the lace from stretching and
sliding. Tha paptr ia puullad away
easily after the stitching.
Tha shirt of this gown requires
•Vi yards of lb-inch taffeta, plus
about IS yards of TP-inch net, or
nylon lulls. Whan stitching the
tulls, act your maehlnt with loose
tensiow and haavy pressure, and
thread both aeedlas and bobbin
with dacron thread. With nylon
lulls yeu will not need a paper
backing. If you usa silk tuUe, you
sbostid us* tha tissua paper back
ing, and a fine marcarlted thread.
Tha gathering foot attachment of
your machine will make quick
work of tha gathers.
The skirt will bava a romantic
sweep If you stiffen the lining of
the underskirt with n bend of
horsehair. Crlnollns petticoats, of
course, wlU account the graceful
bell silhouette.
After the dresi Is finished, hang
it from a chandelier or ia a big
eloset where the Bounces eennot
be flattened. You don’t want to

Mrs. L. T. Tarbutton and young
son Greg arrived Sunday to spend
three weeks with her parents,
Mr. end Mrs. R. L. Johnson. She
Is the former Miss Rachael John
son.

*

Mr. and Mrs. L. K. Walker and
family and W. R. Jennings re­
turned yesterday from Interla*
chtn where they spent the week­
end with Mr. Walker** brother
and family, Mr. and Mn. R. W
Walker and Jill.
be pressing your gown the morn­
ing of the wedding.
When msUng e gown as im­
portant as this, don't taka short
cuts. Pin, baste, press, fit and
stitch vary carefully, and always
test the tension end pressure of
your machine on a scrap of fabric
before stitching tha dress. After
all, your daughter n ay want to
wear it soma day, and in tha
meantime you want to b# the most
beautiful bride of tha season.

Blind Woman 'Sees'
With Her Fingers
In Inspecting Job

Featuring Fashions Just For You
OUR

MIDSUMMER
CLEARANCE
• ...... /

- —

la th« biff draraaa* o f th* m a im that
you h a r t boon waiting f o r , , . fashions Id .
glutting dmaaot, skirts, blooms and shorts.

B in

Value* Formerly
9I2J&gt;

T*

*42*°

Now

S g .o o to $25.00
WEDNESDAY, JULY 8th
THRU SATURDAY, JULY 9th

DENVER — BapersOMltlv* fingers of blind Libby Solomon, M,
enable her to da a topflight Job of
cheeking and reconditioning hypodermic needles at Denver General
Hospital.
Every morning when Mrs. Solo­
mon reports for worh she has a
H-hour fxpply of needles M arly
IMS to (aspect
Her highly
doped eense of
touch—she's 1
blind since she
was »—permits bar to feel out
minute defects la the needles.
After each use, a hypodermic need­
le see* through a sharpeniag-steriUsing protean.
The fragile needles are highly
tempera* tubes t f steel wUch
pick up rough spots In many ways.
The points art Muatod sometimes
in puncturing th* (Ida. Often they
era dulled In cleaning pans.
Mr*. Solomon examines eeab of
the needle's three Strain with her
finger*. XonM
with a quick rub across an ell
sae. 11m Mn, Solomon aorta th*
•dU* by Mae and places them
ta taboo. Formerly aha need a
■ansi
tha sharpentag stone
ta sett Me needles but she doesn't
na* E any mere because af bar

Dm * mini tha opportunity to shop iM m m
m th e n ftnn value*.

Vttjtvuf.
nr

m K. Part Am.
It 9 i M to

for Iced coffee. More than
125 years ago, French colo­
nial soldiers stationed at

Matagran, Algeria, found
that drinking coffee synip
mixed with cold water made
the desert heat more endur­
able. The soldiers carried
the vogue back to Paria,
where it is to this day called
Cafe M aiagrin, with th*
added fillip of ice in tall,
frosty glasses.

Americans ire thalr coffee
for summertime meals, so­
cials, or coffee breaks, Per­
fectionists make it double
strength to avoid dilution,
and pour it hot over ice,
while others brew their coffre as usual, and allow it
to cool before serving.

LL William M. Brown, son of
Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Brown, flaw
to Sanford from Williams Air
Force base at Phoenix, Aril., to
spend the wee hand with Us fam­
ily. LL Brown was graduated
from the aviation cadets last weak
and received his wings and com
mtlsloa. Ha left yesterday morn
lag for his base at Phoenix.
Friend* of George Hiar* will
be glad to know that ht is recoupanting nicely at Us horns In
Lakt Monro* aftor surgery In the
Fereald Laughton Manorial HoipitaL

I tit

M

We a n thank the French

Mis* Mary Ann Bukur returned
Sunday from a two weak vaca­
tion In Clavcland, * Ohio, where
she visited with friends and re­
latives.

VYlaMf. £ aHw i6u
PRESENTING

H o w Ic o d C o ffe e B o g a n

Many hostesses make cof­
fee regular strength, and use
coffee ice cubes. Cream and
sugar may be used with
iced coffee aa preferred.

Home Demo Clubs
Plan Short Course
More than 400 hums demonstra­
tion clubmwnbvra hava registered
for th« Horn* Demonstration Short
Court* and Slat Annual Matting
of tha Florida State Council of
Senior Home Demonstration- Work
to be held a t tha University of
Florida, July 11-15, Miss Anna
Ma* Sikes, state home demonstra­
tion agent, said today.
Dr. J. Wayne Belts, presi­
dent, University of Florida, heads
the list of guest speakers, which
Includes Willard Flfield, provost
for agriculture. University of Flo*
rida; H. C. Clayton, director, Flo.
rida Agricultural Extension Ser­
vice, Aubrey D. Gates, field di­
rector, Council on Rural Health,
American Medical Associations
Steva Willis Farm Editor, Flori­
da Timts-Unlos; Rev. U. S. Gor­
don, First Presbyterian Church,
Gainesrille; and J. Dayton Smith,
professor of music, Florida State
University .
Mrs. Georgs Otto, Loagwood,
president of tha state horns de­
monstration council, will preside
at Uta mealing. Other stats eouncll officer* are, first vice-presi­
dent, ,M r«-— (tor T. Browning,
lakeland; aecond vice-president,
Mrs. H. R. Paterson, Pcnsarola;
secretary, Mrs. W. P. Aldrich,
Bradenton; treasurer, Mrs. S. M.
Ptahe, Orlando.
Mlaa Bikes, Mias Eunice Grady,
assistant ta the stat* home de­
monstration agent In training pro­
gram, and Mr*- Edith Y. Parrus,
district horn* demonstration agent,

Happy Birthday
Ralph A. Bwarls
Tt may be hird to understand,
hut It's wonderful to wear! A
new plastic slicker that breathe*
Is the latest addition to rainwear.
The plastic film keep* out the wet,
yet lets body heat esca)&lt;a through
thousands of Uny pairs to the
square yard that create Its rooting system. Smart colors, such a*
salmon and aqua, can he kept
freih In aplte of rin and mud,
heeuse you slmttiy swab the sur­
face with a soapy cloth.
will serve a* council advisors.
Short courses In family food,
fashions, home grounds beautifi­
cation, your home, re-creation In
tha home, mental health, consum­
er buying, home mansgemrnt and
family life are scheduled for tho
week.
Dr. and Mra. J. Wayne Belts
will entertain th* group at a
garden party at the president's
home on Thursday afternoon, Ju­
ly 14.

Intelligent Student
Is High On List
In Polished Era
Do you know how to put your
bent foot forward? This Is th* era
of the polished young timer, tho
chic, intelligent student. Upper­
most in the minds of struggling
young adults Is "how?" Thti
«ho\v-me attitude put* emphasis
on the Importance of doing every­
thing well, or doing It at all.
A revised edition of the book
"Your Best Foot Forward" by
Dorothy Stratton and Helen Sehleman (MrGraw Hill) answers many
of the etiquette questions puuling
our young friends. Here's the gist
of tome pertaining to tabla man­
ners.
Tipping th* soup plate . , . Th*
less moving you do the better . , .
lie content with th* soup you can
procure without tipping it.
Breaking Bread , • , Little bits
broken off at a time and buttered
n. needed is proper. (Don't butter
a whole slice of bread or a whole
roll.)
Cutting Meat . . . The Amer­
ican style i* to cut a few pieces
(for one piece) of meat, tranferring your fork to your right hand,
and eating bitea of meat Intaresp.
ersed with bltca of tha raat of the
dinner.
Eating with Fingers . . . Foods
that can be eaten neatly without
getting fingers sticky or greasy
may b# treated as finger foods—
olives, nuts, whols pickles, celery,
radishes, fresh
fruits bread*
crackers, sandwiches, cookies, corn
on the rob, etc.
To Blow or not to Blow , • .
Soup that Is. Pleas* don't. You
may drink It if It Is of a con­
sistency that warrants drinking
and if th* cup has on* or two
handies ,
About Demitass* . . . If sugar
and cream are provided for demitasse it may be used, but techni­
cally it is served without.
The Table Accident . . . If It I*
small such a* dropping a ult of
salad on the tahle, retrieve it in­
conspicuously. If a glass of water
or wine I* overturned, make apolo­
gies to the hostess sincerely and
briefly and she, being correct, will
mop It up unobtrusively.
Something In tha Food * • It
could lx* anything and it should be
ignored. Eat only what you care to
cat, dawdling along so that you
are not being conspicuous. Say
nothing and try to hide It from
your neighbor*. In a restaurant
be quiet about Informing the
waiter, who will if h* I* good, re­
move your plat* for a new cm*
immediately,
What to Leave on the plat#
. . . It is no longer necessary to
leave * hit of food on the plat*.
But don't scrape nr mop up a
plat* with a crust of bread.
Introductions . . . T h e person
on your right glvss hi* or h tr
name, th* next person givs* first
person's names plus his own, the
third person give* names of first
and sscond person plus hi* own
—and to on around th* table.
How many helper* . . . If you
have kept fairly well abreast of
the others in eating spaed you
might ask to have a dish passed if
you want mors.

TH* HANFORD HKKALD
Tuts. July 5, 1955 Pafe S
WEDNESDAY
A picnic supper honoring tha
Kav, and Mr*. Milton H. Wyatt
will be sponsored by th* WSCS
of the First Methodist Church.
Members will meet a t Bock
Spring* and supper will be served
at 7 p. m. Each family will taka
a plncnic supper and table service.
Drinks will be provided by tha
WSCS.
Tha First Baptist Sunds. School
Worker’s Council will begin at 1

(Dof i t

p. m. with a covered dish tapper.
Th* First Baptiet Prayer Meet­
ing servic* will begin at 1:30 p.
m.. Bring your Bibles,
THURSDAY
The Flrsv Baptist Junior G. A'e
will meet at tha church at S:30
p. m.
The First Baptist Intermediate
G. A'e will meet at tha church
at 4 p. m.
.
The First Baptist Junior loyal
Ambassador* will meet at th*
church at 7 p. m.

&lt;YYUaa . JJvl&amp;sl

Sahqm nA,!
W OM EN'S

&amp; G IR LS ' SH O ES

Values to $14.95

1 TABLE

$300
1 TABLE

$5-00
OTHERSt

$ 6 .8 5 - $7.85

1 LARGE

TA BLE

Children's Sandals
3.95 t o
NOW

4.95

$2 .00

PAIR

MEN'S S H O E S G R E A T L Y
REDUCED FOR

Q U IC K

CLEARAN CE

IVEY'S
*Where Quality Is Higher Thin Price"

N O T IC E
Afl fialnn^pr
Lifting* And
Sodtty Ntfwi
A rfB fq n fU d
B7 lB .rn .T lM

w«it • :* to sii«

O P fy
_

o

^

OF THB

W/ y f

«
o
JAMESON STUDIO
LOCATION

n e w

THURSDAY
JU LY

7

-

101 N. Y A R K

AVE.

T tra B P .H .

. L
r

1

�* .

aytona With 10-5 Victory

Car
TIIK SANFOnn HERALD
F iirc 6 Tucs. July fi,

★
p i' / Net P -rv o r

ROCKY ROAD NOW
APO RE

MOORE,

CBCy/Ho T//E

Sports

O LD
A D A G E TO
'W E E P

Roundup
By CAY IK TALBOT
NEW YORK y Tile sooner that
AVpi Sanlcc or nine other Amcrifan runner hotfoot* a four-minute
mil-* the hitter, ■■v oUicials anil;
employe* of the local liranrti of
the AAU. They’re beginning to net
a bit impatient.
For nearly M year* no* the Met­
ropolitan A"U. h»&lt; bien giving
home room In a h ire mol burnt
mmcly imposing hunk of silv rvote, Jii-t waiting (or the day wh it
Ihnift (lie prize into the
of a frllort rltiren at"!
arrant out of thrre having finally
discharged a solemn nhllcallnn.
Hark juit over t year * 50, when
Roger Bannister -ml Inhn l.andy
began rippm. off Imir-tninute miles
for weekend aserel « ami it looked
a. thongfl the feat might heroine
coinmnnplare, the girl around the
of fire hauled the two-fool trophy
from it* hiding plm-c and gave it
a terrific potlili jot*.
Since then thrv have vairbed
despairingly aa Santee and his fed
low American harrier* fired and
fell hark and the rup gradually
reverted to it* former tarnished
itate.
The Mory of the orphaned object
foci hack to Sept. 25, IBtt, when
Col. Hans Lagrrlncf a member
of Ibe local Swedish American Atli
lctlc Club, doo.lcd It to the Met
ropiditan group fur pre-enlatlon In
the first Yankee doodlrr &lt;P bit I lie
manic mark “ before Nov. 1. HUS "
The rolonrl evidently felt there
was fining to be a fnur-mlnutc mite
almost any day, and be m-siimed,
naturally, that an American v otild
be the bucko to ft» 11- If* played
aafe only to the txlcnl of saying
that, In the' Improbable event nolhjng had bappenril within tin* speci­
fied period, the AAlt could do with
the cup a* It xnvv fit.
There came the rub. Thrre Was
I war, and (nr seVeral years
Amerira’a athletes hail things to
think about besides miming the
mile. Win n Nov. 1, lino, came and
went without the mug having
found a Home, Its temporary guar­
dian* had to make a decision. HIther they could award the perco­
lator to, say, this first amateur
athlete turning in an honest ex­
pense account,;nr they emild atirk
to Col. Lagei loot's original dream.
They’ve been sturk ever since.

California Women
Declared First
In Powder Derby
SPRINGFIELD, Mas*. US— Two
California women—one a youthful
grnnrtniidhcr-vcre hailed today
a* the first liuisliers In the ninth
cross-rnimlry Powder Puff lirrby.
Mr*. Isabilio Mcl'rac, of Lemon
Grove. Calif., a former Air Farce
/light nurse, am) her eo pilot Mr*.
Bdly McNeil, of La Mi fa. Cnllf.,
grimtlpnlbcr of six, were first to
complete the 2j 800-mile airplane
r.ii* yesterday. Rotli listed tlu'Ir
•ye as 39.
However, the first plane In li nut
necessarily the winner of tin* derby
because of pic handicap syilem
that cpualire* speeds between »in
ilc ami multiengine planes of varyng horsepower. Winner of the tnua
first priie will he announced at a
banquet Thursday.
A crowd of 21100 person* wa*
on hand In see the first arrivals
in tho- race from Lon? Reich,
Calif., to llamea-Wcsttield Airport
here. They landed al 4:tti p.m.
itecond In flniih were Gladys
Muter and Burl* Langher, both of
Chicago, at 4:49 p.m. Mr* Muter,
pilot of her own plane, also It «
gran dm id her.

J

W h e n e v e r Ilrooklyn Dodger
•first hasrninn (ill H'oilgi* Kit a
home run in KhheU Field h«
“ throwa" * kit* t,* Ids ssifa a*
K M Ctoaaca home plate.
Jack Barry, former a la r.player
for th- Philadelphia Alhletlrs,
Athletics,
ha* been the coach of tho Hedy
Croaa baseball team since 1921.

Pi/ECftMlG?

HAG
E M A IL /
EARNED A
GHOT A T
THE P !G O \’F,
FOCRT
A 'A R O /A A 'O ,
THE
HE A W WEIGHT
CHAM P.

FOR A WHtEE IT
ICOKEOA* /F A ROHE
WOULD O C T H/G
GOC/AL 5C C U R/TA
PEfo rd he g o t

p o c p y - H:0

REAL AGE /$ A
1
GEO R E T PETWEEfiX
tf//)1 AHD H/G
\
D R A F T PCARD
(W O R LD W A R T,
F O R HARD ,}
jM Ir ila lil I f E l« |

Ijf-dbtsa*#

£0 Mead Signal Sent
To Amateur Bicyclists
(In oli'-ml Mtnmlu him* Itreii (riven for tin* Stiitu Rlrvrln
Chamiiliiimh!|i« lo in* Jttdtl in Winter Park, Sunday Julv ?J.
Winter I’ark ( ity -Malinger Clnrk .Maxwell inform.*
NeWd Publication* thnl nil is clear from ‘thu city’s side, t&gt;r
Police* Dcpnilpu'iit lias laun noli licit ami is ready to take
tore of it* part In the big evrnt
.,,ni the .Statu ttuiid Department
ha* given it* approve}.
Mb. P, J. Conner, Florida Hints
repnsentative of tlie Amateur
Rji-yrla l.&lt; ague, expresses his
satisfaction user the Winter Park
decision.
“ It U very cueouraging,” he
soys, •’and it *111 mean n great
|ui»k for Florida a* It 1» the
Unit time th.it a Htiitc Chauipl....
»||!p lias been arranged within
the state."
A very smooth itietch on
(li align AVi. between Holt Ave.
Itr.d a spot Ji - west of lbo Htntn
Auto Body Works " til be used.
On this alretch there will ho urlUUgrd a loop, 40 feet wide.

Any boy under 17 yenis can
enter the junior class, those over
17 can -tart In thu senior class.
Thu junior rial* will compete
over three distances, li mile, 1
mile, and 5 miles. The winner in
carh laeo will receive 7 points, se­
cond mini will get fi points, third
mill, 9, fouith mab U and fifth
inuii t point. Tho lidrr with thu
highest point* will he junior sham*
pi on.
The senior clu** will compete
ever 'k mite, 1 mile. 6 mile* and
in miles. Point* will l&gt;u given a*
for the junior class.
The winner* of the two classes
will lie Invited to go to New
York, all expense* paid, fuf the
National Championship*, August
2d, 27, and 28 on one condition,
that then* will !»■ at least ten
Mallei* In fpeh rliis*, Second and
third men aie welcome to the New

York meeting but at their own
1xpense.
Tii* bicycle* will lie Inspected
bcf’.ie t'ne 1* 1 July 'Al, nod have
H bo light weight bicycle* with
fire wheej of multiger. Tho rider*
Imvu to we.tr helmet* for their
own protection.
Before the rare* every rider
will lie examined by a doctor.
Cornier does not wunt to goes*
how muiiy competitors will turn
up hut lie hopes fur a field of
about fill riders this first time.
The course is wide enough lo
slat t 20 riders. Hhmild more rid­
er* turn Up they will he divided
lulu heat*.
The first thing to do now fur
bicycling Imyv nnd athlete* i* to
register will, the Amatiiu liicyrie
League nod send in their entrance* to the races. The registra­
tion fee i* .fibe for Junior* and
ft fm seniors, 'Hip entrance fro I*
$2. It egist rattan • and entrances
linilld lie pent under the address,
Box lOllfi, III tumid. They will also
Im» received by Cook's Killarnry
.Spoil Hhop, 1781 Fairbanks Ave.,
nnd Winter Park Sport Shop, 1(50
Couth Park Avenue before July 18.

Williams Is Glad
He Didn't Retire

’•

Terrell Leads Pace Vfith 3 Out Of 4

Standings
tMlMIIIA HTATK f.KUitK
VV 1. PH
.v1 31 *J)5
Drill ml*#
1'*»♦■!M
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Ila ltlm n re «. VV M .hliiato ii 2.
( i ( l l i : s T O IIIV

riosetand »• K*n«*» t’ltv (maiu)

— IV &gt; n n

IU - 2 )

.N A T I O N A L

18-Yea70Td Girl
Is First To Swim
15-Mile Stretch

vi»,

Nil tin f a

L i:A 4 a
VV

f ir on It 1) n
i 'M i .ic it
M llu u u k t #
f l n « I n r«91f
Nm
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I 'M I w d r lii liia
1*11l i b l i m i t

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m :si i ,t » ir.vT t:»ti*»
llrnnl.lin ||- i I'hilailrllihiti J-I
I'lltslitKuh 4-S. .Vewr Vink 2-S
|n*i i,Sil 11 inttlns-l
HI land* (-1. Milwaukee 2-1 (se­
rin,-I lo InnlnuM
Clin moult S-2. rhli aan 2-4
lilllU S TIMMY
,V«-w- Vnrk ul 1*IU”l&gt;uiKh (niehtl
— .Voimn 111
ve l.iiv H -2 l.
II.... . n el riiljeifrlitlila (rUictill

CRYSTAL BEACH, Ont. « S Eighlren-year-old Grcla PaHrr*m
of Batavia, N.Y., yesterday be­
came the first person to swim
Ihe 15-mlle streleh of Lake Erie
between Ihia amusement resort
and Angola, N.Y. *
Greta tapped a pier and ended
her long swim just 13 hours and 3
minutes after she strode Into the
surf on tire. .Amcrifan shore at
(:35 a m.
” 1 thought IM never make It.
hut I did” she told reporters ex­
citedly. Siren* screamed end an
estimated 20,000 pertona strained
In catch • glimpse of the girl
who was graduated from high
school only last week.
“ Come nn, haby doll,” pleaded
voices in the boat nf her trainer,
Lawrence Slocum, an Attica State
Prison guard.

— ,U|tn.»uer 12*1} v . lin o rrta (T l-7 &gt;
Hi
lam ia « i r i m In n ,ill m I k M I

—.Vrrovn I'-J l so. Hmliy («••&gt;.
Ualjr

lie itta a H rlird u lril-

Michigan State will bh the'host
college next fall for the NCAA
cross country championships. It
will mnrk the 17th time the event
has taken place there.
Mike Mitchell, a Cincinnati out­
fielder, was the first halter to
hit a fair hall nut of Forl»c*
Field, Pittsburgh, He did It lest
that a month after the park waa
opened in 1909.

SnnrnnV* Cnnllnnln have certainly ppt th? hex on Paytnna Reach. Tonijiht at Memorial StatUvtttl they po after theiP
fourth victory over the utapperinp Islander*. Game time u
In last nipht’s patnc here, Terry Terrell and Rod Miller
led a 1 t-hlt t.ttark on two Daytona
P:u h r „ as Snsforil defeated the
W lS ilL *
lia r toon — ——
•—
• nit f Hftf
1ast
1*1^“ ' ’*
Islanders, 10-6 .
r, I'alrn*. Kelli1. iHI»
Tprrell got three hit* for four , r rr;_1.Hnide
M ir fis u L
It — r r a y . W * l e r »
Under. Snyder I. MatirlMH
at hat, including two doubles and riillri.
Trrreil 2, nmlrr l\«*«*r. XIIa triple ami three run* hatted in. rliam.
IteWell. Fisnrls. l&gt;nnelS
Ilu^ Miller nl«o got three for four, llltlil—MIII r r J llennelt, »*n«n1er
. .Ulrltam. I’atrls.. I&gt; C'nok. . «r*
including n dttihle and three rbi’s. 2nil
1
Welrrcutler, .TerrriL
Starter Orlando Pena was the idllrr. Mlrhatn. H JrT'L,*ll A 'f c
Cnrdrr
8—
Tertrll. !&lt;t— lllllef
victim. He wrs chased after giving
up six runs in five innings. San*
ford went ahead to stay in the t *, n u -o ft-l^ r.e k &gt;. Tommy a.
sicond on Dick Snydec's two-run
homer.
A erowd of SIR saw the Florida
State League game.
In other aetion, Gainesville de­
feated SI. Petersburg 15-6, West
Palm Brarh whipped Lakeland 6-4,
and leading Orlando turned back
second place Cocoa 5-2.
Orlando’s victory behind the
seveu-hi! pitching id Alex Gnrdey
strclchcd Ihe Flyers' league lea-1
to fi'j games. The Flyers com­
bined three walks, singles by J - ‘ n r T im t « n r t m : » ) Fftr.M ’
(isudrcati and Have Drapp for two
U l K I l i m MtAlilK
%
runs in the second when they went
lu ill tip I
on IT** a I bo t
li.ilinp,
hot
rol
l
*
.211.
ahead to stay. A Cocoa crowd ol
1ti(n»s~MaDtle, .New Tnfk,
7G7 saw the game.
Hup* bftttrd In —J#n»#n# Dos*
hi,
Dave Beider's single with the Inn,
Hll»-Kftlif)#, fleirnlt 1H;
bases loaded which scored two rum
llninv
Manilt, New York*
won West Paiih Brac’s's game al II HhllD b » c i —K|v«ra. ChlrAgn,
Lakeland in the sixt'i inning Lc- IT
PJIrlilng
on % 4#rUlnnf~^
Boy Irby hnmered for insurance in
Knn*tftnt|'» &gt;)*#»' York, §■•&lt;*. ITon,
thr next frame.
Mtrikennfft - - Ifroie. hlevcltnd
Runny filoodwnrth pitched alt the • o«l Tiit’r), N*w York* 131.
NATION II* I.KMII K
way for Gainesville although he
flfttlln g iiaeffl on I7 i *1 t»Ata—*.j
allowed 16 hits. Accurate throwing Aftiitturn,
riiilarln liililft. S I? .
*
Hun* —Hrtirler, Hroaklyn* i i
hy his outfielder* and poor St.
ltun« ha tied In —bnlder, Brook#
Petersburg base running helped Iifi.
*1.
i I lie — ,\nmn.
in?
him keep control. He hit a double
It'I
me
ruiiP —Mulder, llrooklf®
with the bases loaded that scored fth’l KluftieM
*kl« ritulnnfttl. ST.
Stolen baft## —ll“&gt;rr, ML Louis*
three runs in Ure eighth and hU
mates produced other big hits when 1i*rltrh ln r
on
Krwiotnltt, Urrmkli’n,
they were needed.
IIVVIONV II12.%I’ll
Warner !H
Ml* i frill 111
Mli (anil, ut
K #iiH lit
WYtitltr rf
l*afiifta »•
lt*nvt*H If
rf •
!&gt;fi« |i
Tftmitr, p
A-1.?4|L'*iTk.1
TftfRla
• AAMIIII)
Vtry lh
Mftutirlln e
Trirrll If
Mlltrr St&gt;
II, t'fwik lb
Holler rf
Mr h it ! l i t «*f
Knyiler «»
flmrlek p
ytntit 1# p

M ajor League
Leaders

fifft lft

COMBINt YOUR NIW
CHFVBOIET PUtCHAU WITH
YOUR VACATION PLANS! r #
&lt;V4#i e eei _____ _____ _
_
»k*. gick II up «4 Ml. pies) I. 711.t,
M ltklfe*, i . t Ckevrel.li built. K
like, a . e etive yews fceee. Ckeacee

we. yev'lt sen e ivhWmlW ilwrs ef,

The rost of keeping and train­
ing the average race h»r*e le ap­
proximately IB.tKK) a year, re­
port! the Monmouth Park Jockey
Club,

$2.90

Plastic or* Fibre
Roof C o a tin g ....................G al. $ .90
Copper-Napthenate
Wood Preservative - - - G al. $1.60
Turpentine
.............
G al. $1.40
Seal-Crete Cement
Paint - 25 lbs. sack $2.50
Sturdy Stepladders - - - Ft. $ .99
Plastic H o s e ...............50 Ft. $2.98
GalV. Buckets - - - - - l O Q t . $ .69
. 12 Qt. $ .79
String Mops
i*
85c »«
99c
5 $tring Brobms ...............
$1.25
Paint-Interior, E x t / - - - G a l . $2.55

'■

V
■

' CLEAN y’ p —
m.&gt; » UP
— PAINT UP
y
•

s io e e tw

. -r ;

j

You can apol ttitiM*bjTU# hrf« LnpfpSTHeiaA?
tar what you drive, pmi’ra folntr to aaa twia-axbauak
Chevroiela pulllnv a way-in trafie, m tha touebaat
hllta, on tha lone atraifktawajra.
’ /
' ‘
V
. , . Unless yxwi hart a “Super Turbo-FIra V«"« of
jrour own. And than you'll know what it'a Uka to pUoti
tha car that aata tha paea for evarythiny alao-andi
doean't pauaa to nod tha prka total
.
\
What mokaa tha Supar teat? Chavralat'a auparh
raiva-io-haod VA HiUt tho lharlaat ainha i t tha

___ . ____
r __ _ ^ 9mm
It-volt
•i^ trjeal a f t t n in iU fteid-aU Ui* plus a four,
^orral carburetor and free-hrtathlnf twin eLwiata,*
| W»nt U anmpla thfa ailk-llncd cydonaT Just tiva
•V
th l. week, and
liT V " ? Ju*t h « »
V A eanba.
•Opfseaof al eafra «Mt.
tSU lu * X*g*a mrnUU have tiapta eaAaaat pipta.

&gt;

4

WHOLESALE A

■

★

Big 14-Hit Barrage
Smothers Islanders

When Miami'* trnnla team drfrHtrd the University of North
Carolina it snapped a string of
29 consecutive Tar Heel net vict­
ories.

Asphalt Akm rinum ---- Gal.

NEW YORK u f-T rd William*,
Mill baseball1* best hllUr althouith
approaching 37, Is glad he changed
his mind about retiring. 1
The Luky Boston Bed Sox ilug
gcr lust recovered Irorn an in­
flammation bf a muscle in his
back tin the old day* they called
it lumbago) that sidelined him
fnr 10 day*, is at* pleased with
hit hitting, he now says he will
play as long a* ho believe* he
can help the club.
“ My back |s still • tittle lo re ”
lie said before yesterday’s doubleheader against the New York Yan­
kees, “ and my leg* hurt a bit
when I try to run real hard. Out­
side of that, I feel wonderful for
an old man, better than t have
In years.”

EQ U IPM EN T

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland UP —
The harrowing reputation of this
ancient cradle of golf was at stake
today In the British Open.
Is it really a fire-breathing mon­
ster nr have gutters down through
the years let superstition gel the
better of them?
They walk in awe on the fi,93&lt;!
yard, par-72 Old Course and are
only slightly less re-perlfnl of the
fi,52fi-yard. par-71 New- Course.
But yesterday in the first I*hole qualifying round for Ihe Open,
Americans, Englishmen Scots,
Continentals and the one Atli'rali
an in Hie tournament—defend n j
champion Peter Thomson—blasted
their way atound the two layouts
as though they were bush league
course*. •
Out of a field of 270, 19 pUjer*
broke 70 and Idlie-known Frank
Joule, a 43-year-olil Yorkshire
man, ran up an amanng fi3 on the
New Course.
When it was all over, here were
some of the vital stalistirs:
1. Forty posted scores bettering
par.
2. II was the finest round of
roifipclitlve golf ever rreorded in
Uic NO vf--4-j ef st. As-- r-wm.
3. Jowle’s round was the lowest
ever posted in Hie 95-year-old Brit­
ish Ojien.
Americans also joinnl in the as­
sault. British amateur champion
Joe Conrad, of San Antonio, had
a H7, while Byron Nelson, now a
play-tor-fun golfer, came up with
a 69. Jimmy Mcllale, of Philadel­
phia had a 70. Kd Flirgol, 1U34
U S. Open champion, shot a 71,

★

Bright Alum inum -------- Gal. $3.60

- Am .

Z"

By LI) WILKS
The Associated Press
What in the world arc the Boston
Sox doing bark there in fourth
place? The way those guys look
they ought to be away out front
in the American League race.
They showed ju*t about every­
thing a manager could w a n tpower hitting and great pitchingwhile whacking the league-leading
New Y’ork Yankees in a doubleheader yesterday 4-2 and 10-5.
The sweep gave Boston 24 vic­
tories in the last 29 games.
Cleveland took second place In
the league by beating Detroit
twice. H i and M-.'i, while the While
Spx slipped lo tiiird by splitting
at Kansas City. Chicago won the
opener 8-3. lost the second 4-3.
Baltimore beat Washington 6-2 in
tiie only single game action.
In the N a t i o n a l , first-place
Brooklyn r a p p c d Philadelphia
twice, 11-2 and 6-3; Chicago split
with Cincinnati, Inwng fi 3 before
winning 4-3; St. Louis took two
from Milwaukee, 4-2 and S-4; Pitts­
burgh beat New York 4-3, then
lust 53.
The day’s work left the Yanks
atop the Antrricar, Lragut, five
games up on Cleveland and Brookhit ahead of the Cubs by 12'v m
Hie National. The Fourth of July
ride of thumb ho* sent .Vi Anted
can League leader* tm the Fourth
to Ibe World Scries in Ihe past 51
years Thirty-four of the National
League leaders at this point have
gun-,! on to win in Ihe last 55 veur*.
Both Hie Yanks and Dodge**,
incidentally, have been among the
more notable exceptions to tne
rule in the past.
Cleveland moved a half game
ahead of the While Sox on Hal
Naragon'a pinch single to heat Deiroit in Hip l.Ytnning opener with
Boh Lemon winning No. 11 in rc
lief. Larry Doliy hit a pair of
homers and Al lloscn one in the
nightcap, hut it was Bobby
Young's two run triple that broke
up a 5-5 Hr for the victory.
Tlie While Sox had Ifl lilts to
beat Kansas City in their tin t
game, but the A’s hoimccd back
to win the nightcap on an un
earned nut In tho eighth -after
Hector Lopri had tied it two 'in­
nings rartier with a two-run
homer.
Tit* Gianta salvaged a split on
Willie Mays' 23rd homer In the
lllh inning of the second game
Pittsburgh won tl&gt;o first when Paul
Glel walked home the big run in
the ninth Inning,
Wiilic Miranda hit a basesloaded double and Bay Moore, a
reliefer turned starter, lined ■ tworun single as the Orioles scored
four times In the eighth to beat
Washington and end a 13-game los­
ing streak.

Reputation
Of Golfing
Is At Stake

★

★

■ SA VE $
SPECIALS

layler and Colorado.U/il*cr»lty
lu v e signed for (wo foolbaU
tam es in Boulder, Colo., on Scpi
Jim lirgan, catcher fo r Ue
96, 1958
1938 and -in
.Watw, Texas on
or Clevaland Indians sella Insurance
B6,
in iWesu,
•apt. 25. 19M.
during the off-season.
I ,

How Are Bosox
In Fourth. Slot
With Hot Team?

★

AIL
INS SMS

8 - ’ we* -j

■4 ■

- ».

i t ’'■* 1
-v.-' K s
____________________________________________ _________________

�1

’ /Wen*
If It's Worth Anything
It’s Worth A d re tlsln f 1*

CLASSIFIED ADS

THE SANFOKD IIKKALD Tucs. July ,1, 1935
O d o r • WoBor
Geweral Cl
o Commercial—Curtom
Coat Homu
ivflU At*.

Robert A. Willlama, Saalter

L u t n t s t Aa**ctat*
phone 1173 AtUnUcBsnk Bid*.
3 Bedroom home located In one
of the best sections on two lots
on corner. Beautifully land*
reaped, hardwood floors, strictly modern.
3 bedroom home, hardwood floors,
tiled bath screened porch and
carports. Excellent condition.
Price *12.000. Easy terms.

__ i ______ foonif,

tu. vt

THE O L D H O M E T O W N

C O N C R ETE
Ready Mixed Concrete. Concrete
Block, Sand. Gravel, Cement
Concrete Pip* to Meet All Quali­
fication*. _
24S9
Sherm an C em ent* Pip* Co.
Oct west I3tk fit
WILL YOU ACCEPT *40. TRADE
IN ALLOWANCE FOR YOUR
OLD MATTRESS A SPRINGS*
Regtrdless of make or condi­
tion l
Qutllop Mattress ft Box Spring.
Reg. 131.00., Less Trade *99.00
Guaranteed 10 Years.
Royal Comfort Mattress A Box
Spring *119.00 —Lets Trade —
*19.00. Guaranteed 10 Years.
PB Special Mattress A Box Spring
Reg. *99.00 Less Trsde —*39.00
Guaranteed 10 Years.

By STAN LEY

10m

DAILY CROSSWORD
A cnoss
S Raised.
as pete
9 Kind
of roeU
10. Tanker
carrying
oil
12. Tube
fer

•'to be"

17. He was
n fox
39. Keel-Wiled
cuckoo
20 Sinss
,
louder

This home has two Ur*e bed*
roemi, separate dining room,
ECHOLS BEDDING CO.
large utility room, .jatouiled
porch. It Is located cm two Inis, Corner 2nd ft Magnolia Ph. 1233
‘’Bed" Bamberger, Mgr.
has double garage. Triced
Open Monday's til 9 p. m.
l l j ooo. Kitchen equipped.

Used furniture, eppllincei, roots,
ete. Bou*ht-sold. Larry's Mart
COUNTRY HOME!
t Bedroom Horn*. H
*ro®
331 E n t l i t S t Phone 1131.
Southiida school. Call 3841.
* Bedrooms, furnished, good wa*
ter, all modars convaalancei.
ROOTING
EEC Seminole R*aRy tor Deiir.
situated on approx, one acre of New InMETAL
Stock. S-V Crimp - 1U “
able Hon** and Aptt. Phoa* IT.
good high land. S miles west
Corrugated- 1W" Corrugated.
of Sanford, total price la only
Oat all Your rooflng needs at
*4,900.00, with terms,
FURNISHED Apt Phoo* 432-W.
B h en a a a Conerwte . P ipe C*.
c o o l - a Room Putnbbed Apert
Seminole Realty Out West 13th 6L Phone MM
w ant Frost and back screened W. MBTEICMi
T. W. MRBO
A IK CO NDITIO NING
I porchea. Gtrago. Taj* on* XM P u t Arena*
P I m 17
child. No P#U. ON Palmetto
Room or House
I Ave. Shown by appolntnaat
H . a . PO PE C O -I N C .
AN
INVESTMENT
Phoo* I 7 0 J . ___________
Bewth Pert Arm I t e m 144*
Practically ntw l bed room home
Purniihed cotta**, ter couple, *r
kitchen equipped. City water, Footlochers ............ Special *7.93.
__________________
but outslda City on Lot SI x 1H Paint ............................. $3AO gal.
with babp. SUKlmi Avoau*.
ft. Pavad road. Now rented
All s lu t tinoullna.
S Bedroom ftumt*h*d bou«.JMOJO
ARMY-NAVY SURPLUS
per month. Phone Mt or Ttt-W.
»
ss.’f
c
'
s
r
«•“
Phone 1311
alter 6:00 p. m .______________ RAYMOND M. BALL. BROKER 31* Sanford Ave.
A
D.
Hlgbieynsii,
associate
* bedroom bouse. nicely furnished.
THE CURIOSITY SHOP
M. Harrison, Associate
Porch, carport*s and
J lerga lawn. SMOBoot*
17-92 at Hiawatha. Used ft new
Park
Ave.
t
e
a
s
M
Lons wood. J . B. Grant Call
furniture, antique*, -brie-a-brac.
Com* In and brouie around.
For y ew Real Estate
UNFURNISHED 4 Room House Cullen and Harkey, Realtor! YOU don’t have to aee the eredlt
1M N. Park Av*. Phase *312.
with 3 Bedrooms. P h o o e1 H IJ
manager to save dollars legiti­
mately on our GIGANTIC HeLARGE. Clean,Apartment Down- 3 Bed., Nothin* to do —Just
movat SALE.
move In, A-l condition, El. Kitstairs. Small on*. $3140 t i l
ROBINSON MUSIC CO.
ehin, separate dining room, 3
Park Ave.
utility rooms, carport*. TV an­ 3M N. Orange Ave. Orlaade, Fla.
. * Room Apt. AN Avocado.
tenna, trees on IVi lot, bsck
yd. fence, 9U.S00. 1904 Mellon- Baby Bed ft Mattress . . . . *14.00
New Masonry S bedroom house
Good Kteamar Trunk ......... 4.30
ville, Phone illl-W .
in Casselberry. SflO per month
Nlee Utility Cabinet ......... 12.00
Phone Orlando 33191.
LOT — 75 x ISO on Paved Road Kitchen Cabinet, as new . . . . ll.oo
in Plantation Estates. Will sa­ Single Bed, Inner Spring . . . . 33.00
Navy coupl* only, _3 room apt.
crifice for S700.M Apt. 1, 2013 Cabinet Comb. Coffee Table 15.00
________
furnished/ Desirable
_______ i location.
Lata Living Room S u ite __ 33.00
Sanford Ave., Sanford.
Phone ___
Extra Good, Dinnatte Set .. 16.00
2
bedroom
bouse.
4J4
per
cent
(Hundreds of other items.)
FURNISHED 3 Bedroom House.
mortgage. *40 monthly. 1903
Super Trading Peat
Close in. l i t West 1st fit. Pbon*
Summerlin.
Open Evenings. 17-13 South
US
(Phone 3211-R.)
Bed Room House, Kitchen fur­
FURNISHED Home. Bee Jock X niture.
space heater. Venetian Wood Casement W in d o w s , 4
Hay. Jr. at 1M W. 10th fit. Own­
blinds; Hardwood floors— tile
lights; fit openings 37 x SOVi ft
er Mrs. A. R. Flower.
bath; Low down payment. Call
37 x 37; Screens to match. Call
nights
1749-M.
or
see
at
210S
a FURNISHED I and 4 Room Apert30M-M after 3 p. m.
•ft% ments. AdulU. I l l N. JasseAmelia.
USED Gas Refrigerator and Misc.
min*.
:
3 LOTS — Dreamwold Section on
Furniture. 70&gt; Oik Ave.
iiff
comer Maple Ave. at 23lh SL
ROSE COURT APARTMENTS
4
Phono 229D-W.
TUX — 36 short, excellent condi­
2U I Banterd Ave.
tion. Phone 643-W.
Furnished S Room Apt CaQ
I s One
Steeo 1949 Wo Havo Built In Sa­
1IM.
ferd Homes for over 1,000 peo­ Living Room LOVE8EAT and
Chair. Good second-hand condi­
MOUNTAIN COTTAGE — July.
ple! We have the borne for you
tion. *30.00. Cali 2134-J.
Hendersonville, N. C. Thre* —In Wynnewood — or Dreamwold
I Bedroom, 1H Baths. Conven—Loch Arbor, 3 and 4 bedrooms, „
r iT FOR A QUEEN! lent to stores. Phone A. L. Skin­
l f t 7 Baths, Large Lots, Puli
Rubber Mattreiaes, Innerner. 1433.
Tile Bath* —Large Kitchens — Foam
S
p
r
i n g Mattresses, Couches,
Screened
porches
—
Garage
or
Baby Beds, Renovating. UpboiNICELY Furnished Apartment
Carport*. Beat Pontble Finan•term* and Slip Cover work.
First floor, also Gara*« Apt
fteg
Np
Down
Payment
doeU09 Magnolia.
NIX BEDDING MFG. COtee Cost* Only.
Ave.
W ellborn
Phillip* J r*
S Room Apartment Completely
furnished. 313 Palmetto Av*.
Builder
Phew* 1M4
S Room Furnished Apt Close In.
CASH. TRADE-IN nrieee
M.D0 pk^i^as. 107 Locust Av* Sale* Office on comer Otoeole Dr Hlgke*
paid for need furniture CeU MS,
end Mohawk Are in Dreamwold.
WU*on-M*i*r Furmiiure Co. I ll
E. tat SL
Wi
?S ?u A‘K S T iL J,.“ "ur - WILL TRADE — Jacksonville
Beach 3 Bedroom Home: TwoS Room furnished apt, Private
SALE — om S gated aeddle
car Oarage Apt. on M x US FL FOR
hath, Screened porch, Private
ft Buggy horse, bridle, harness
Landscaped Jot. 300 Ft. from
entrance, Window exhaust fan.
and buggy. Phone I417-J-3.
Ocean. 9 Block* from business
Electricity, Hot ft Cold water
center. Valued at *19,000. FOR For Sale — A.K.C. registered
furniihed. Walking distenc* to
HUME in or near Sanford.
Boxer puppies, brlndie and
Bm? w
c« te r .
Might consider Businon Pro­
Plum* ITor or jm -W after S
faun color, six weeks old. CeU
perty. WTjT. Patterson, 139.9th
p. » ., 3ITS Palmetto Avenue,
2325-J.3.
Aye.. South Jacksonville Beach,
FURNISHED On* Bedroom Ger*
WANTED; Good Horn* for I yard
do*,i« both In goodL condition.
Will make fine watch dogs end
J. H. Ni

m

c.

MMi WT1T1 f f m

J}

s ,n r L S L tti

80th Annirerury
SP EC IA LS

l i t U H IteM — llx tt
Revel Plate Gian
Mirror*
................... 10JO

fast

PERSONAL' TO DOG LOVERS.
Give your doc the food choeen
best- tatting liy huadreds of

HIGH SCHOOL BOY with Power FLOOR sanding and finishing
Mower want* mowing. Phooe
Cleaning, waxing. Servteg Semi­
TlS-M-4.
nole County since IMS. H. M
Glesson, Lake Mary.
WANTED — By middle age man
a jcb as clerk nr salesman prr LAWNMOWEItS n f t i r p e n e d
ferrrd. Reply P, O. Box M2,
Birycle ft Genrril Repsir.

Stanley's

310 E. 4th SL TcL 3434
ENVELUPES.
letterheads, stale,
FOR SALE — Small Utrd Furnl
ments. invoice*, hand bills, and
turn and Clothing BuilnrsN.
p r o g r a m s , elc. Progressive
Priced right! Write P. O. Box
Printing Co., Thone 401 — 403
723 BOran|c Lily Fla
WljI 13th SL
IVM W M . SEBV9CE -1 4 FLOOR SANDtwo A Finishing;
Oak floors furnished, laid ft fix
Ftambing.
■elng. Ri
Rrtesy "
nee
r jih i
ished. in business since 1920.
M. G. HODGES
E. F. Stevens: Route l, Bex 227:
5*rv&lt;te on All Water Pump*—
Call 7t» R-4 before 7 a. m. or
Wells Drilled — Fawps
liter 4 p. m.
Paata Read IW m 7fo
ORLANDO Mi
lend* Etm i
OaR
Ray. IU M .
4 T ...
1
V* l "
\ 11 A •

19n Saiford A m

RANDALL ELECTRIC CO.
T V SERVICE CENTER

Ce.
FLUMBIRO
aid repair ____
caKmatee. R. L. Harvey.
Sanford A m ------- —

P. M. CAMPBELL
_~H*me« af Diatineliea
■•Way 17 99
Pkews u m
fo r Better PIu l
See or CaU

_ _ F o e* Latex FlUiag .. m u

- :

b

I £

.

Y u N .p s r s r
LOWBLL B. OCIBI

jg fts iu i

n t t t t P A r I» u t

Mather of Senford
F . I * SL

ffc a e m

VENETIAN BUNDS

CARS
BOUGHT SOLD TRADED
■ey Rrei’e Use* Cere
Sanford Ave. ft llth SL
FOR SALE — Must sell trans*
ferrrd. will vacate immediately.
27 ft. aluminum trailer plus
canana with medal bunk bads.
Full priec for quick tala
*1,300. Mrs. Todd, Sanford,
Phone 9232._________ ____

t* BOATS MOTORfi
-4 *
« Beeib Park Pham M
ROBSON’S SPORTING GOOD'S
WILL BE CLOSED JULY 4. S
Dragline sendee, Lakafraau ft
ft 4 FIELD TESTING EQUIP­
ditching. Estimates riven. Phooe
MENT.
Geneva 1444. OrUndo
fiamtord 3221.
Hew will yea ewea?
How will ytm Trade?
Mattreia ft Bos Springs
Yoer old Motor for a
Renovated
Better grade - EVINRUDEI
"Free Estimate'*
ROBSON Sporting Goode
ECHOLS BEDDING CO.
Kvlarade Sale* ft Service
9*1 E. Ill BL
a e - w y ^ r , -----------

.

To PUen A W*nt Ad

/wrt CaU 1821 And Aik for
tk# Want Ad dwpaitMiut
SAAford Hamid

Bur your Yunmuxe el Berry'*
Warihou** Fura.. Co., at SOI W.
1*L St. All nationally adv. furaiture at warehouse prlees.

O &lt; «&lt;

r , n &lt;1

S f \J •?! p

l o m b C f
f

o u ?

STENOGRAFHKR and File Clerk,
gwn*. W rite..Box Rfi, V T b t

Herald.

D ornucr

Woman,

^ S a a -a e

m a n a g er

aggreslva, well-graom.
with thorough know,

lance u recruit-

a m

a * § £
SC

Com# In And lot's talk over
your need*. Whether it'a
white pine for bookshelves
or paneling for that extra
room, we'll help you figure
the material* ao there's no
waste, if you'd like to look
over literature or plana,
call 83 and Mt us know.

H IL L LU M BER Cr
’ SU PPLY C O .
SU Wot M St.

Pk. U

|n * I

(0

£b
i
32 JJ J4-

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41 Ir.stcU

For livelier Ilair

HARHIETTS
BEAUTY NOOK

(Air Conditioned Salon.)

1*3 So. Osk A te. Phone 171

LAUNDRY NKRW1CB
A One hour • Wise and Damp
Dry
* One hour W - Walk and Dry
Fold
A Finished (.sundry
• Sinitone Dry Cleaning
B oetheide
'
HWe Faedmsrt
1M Bam 2Mb 9L

n-

riAieo m u T ici

—a

« * ,.

. u - 1(V - c- —

TELEVISION
Tbs Want Ad Department Is
open from S:30 a. m. unUl 5:30 p.
m. each business slay except Salarday afternoon. Deadline for
week-day Insertions U 2:00 p. m.
the day preceding Publication.
Any ads coming Tn later than
...................................
9:00 tp. m. will
be ptibllsbed under
Too Late To Classify.

H im o

tv rn « \.\i:i.
T l s: i i m v

-

BARGAIN!
This home has Oak Floors,
Cersmlc Til* Bath, Dining
Area, Large Living Room
and Kitchen Equipped with
G. E. AppUanccsTsieekeea 1*1 after A P. M.
fer appsmtseeot U i n this

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Radio

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II 0&gt;l 'V.»tli«r.,v»» i.cjil*.
ft11i John r-slv &gt;■•«»
ft M Don Mott « i Mmr
ft M hiurltmin - - Inti
TrHff T u tk .'f I ho T o w n
7 14 Muolril V'orlotiro
7:3n I.U'OtO. »
CaU us about our huainets rate*.
I ■Hij I l.r»l Tli&gt;#» l . l t c ,
» 3ff h e lll«hl Thrslro
3 .i*fl h tim tn o r T h r o l f o
A tittle sp u e like this will get
hhiiliiw Hliitnporo
T -M » n In a c t i o n
your message before our more
HI*, hi*
than 14.000 renters. Tali 'am te 11 ;ft»» 1t«,tnn
N'»
h . Hpl* -\\ ratltrr
day I Phone 1121.
11*11 ti ' » r l i * h t T i t , atm
12.1* H a n - o f f
The above 4-1in• ad can be run
« K hV C SIU T
5 full days for only *2.40, 9 days
HO I I.M M i
fer only *1.90 and one day for 72c
t i n F(»n.nn
r r -l'iw rtioma
DBPIAT
Kill N- o .t S .d h .r
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lOVtlt FOtEION HUHtmi V. M. Vnlotov vlsll* the Ameriean M uIriim of Natural History tn New York and, examining a desert sccnrJ
nrki the director, Dr.’AUwrt F J r a r r ( r e n t e r ),.whnt use esett h.iviV
* in evrryday llfe.".Thc answer was, “Not murh." At rigtit Is Gcorgf
N. 7.aruliin, Soviet Ambassador to the'United States. Mololov.wax
driven from the muaeum tnlaing Island for.a private luncheon With}
Tlrmard M . llam rh. Anwrican elder iU lc s m a n .7 ..fintcrnotioital)

S Bedroom Horn* In W yno.
41*1

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1*4

T 7 5 A / W / 2o
v/&lt; W a
•V y
-&gt;
y //, d
m
4.7 2fS i*
2b

It wiE pay YOU te see US before
you buy. Open EvtsUngs and
Sundays.
t s s W f t Tralter Sales,
Pelalke, Fla.

W. J. KING

It'i So Enxy

II

%
1J
Y /%
iS

l-v

41

6

lO

iZ

to one'*
lire!
43. Entrarrn
to a held

t

b

Ft, ivcycrfl
I Anit.t
?*' Flipped
C7. Cry. as

• Faeteiy Supervised Service
• H n se calls • a. m. till 9 p. i
(Ail make* and models)
113 Mag. Av*.
Phooe 2400
*ad repstea.

%

II

im aix eusiNR-sa
U ym have a small buainesa In e
secluded pert of town and arc
ia termed tn getting customers,
Hat the service you offer in the
Claaslfiad column of Um ~
Herald. Cali UOL

lill

FHA

•w

L. 1. Rill—rtan a Technician
rbon* 214L Route L Sanford

i *« '*

USED PLUMBING FIXTURES

—24

5

GET PKOKESSIONAI. CAIIE!
Eva-Dean B eauty Shop
Phone 543

Bike Shep

M B m O P P O g ftW T I B ll

RBAITTT PARLORB

l

80. Public

42 Walks clo;e

31. Habitual
drunkard*
2r&gt;.Bicrr.Lsh &lt;
22. E'.ue grail ^
4P. Coin (Jap.)
42. Exela- ,
nation

30. Cover
32. Company
of
eight
amgera

*»

V,

33.0.riitraoa
aonga

23. Dry

■

(p rirD
4t. The muxiic
f.ar.)

V u lu ilr 't A li» «

fungus

Wa 1

a dovn

39JO 1*4 RBLP WANTED (Female) 14A

A

P . M ast

11. Car:!-sr
13. Ctaaaify
35. Creek
letter
1J Organ
Of smell

rs. Tilted
di). Let it stand

24—

teries

23. Crir-g.
iff
about *
21. Large
cf enter
fi, Cecemor.y
worm t
7. Hlfh pc;c:t 27. A kind
R, Make tnrxne
of

33. Bene

U J.

Bopply
H an |
£

beverage
4. Hehrr.v
letter
8. Flat piece*

vehicle

r tio io

M IS M" Metal
_
,Wal» Cabinet . . . . . . . . 14J0
Wm| — r i m
Reg. 3I.M Platform Beckers 19JO HI W 2nd ML

3. M a l t

23. LUIvtums
26 The great
American
game

8** Them At
Shm naa Coaernt* Pip# C*.
Phene MM
PtsoMlTW Oat Weet in* 9 t

*

2. Joyous

than
22. High cards

— Peatery to Ten —
You rhould aee this lovely lake
front home with M feet of lake
frontage. It hae two bedroome,
Venetian BUa*
RoIUwmy u 4 Baby
2 baths, Florida room, large Eneleeed head. Sag-proof betmaa
Say, Week ar ■ a o tb -T et
living
room,
closed
garage
and
1
_
'
•
----.—
—
h
i
weal
fin
*
rail
with
pUctlc anas. Plastic *r
* Fanltora C O M
U l Wert V tnl
storage. Good boating and fishrayon tapes. Cotton or ayten
tog and bathing beech
W A vsk* Apt*.
fhaa*
C A. WHu j DON,
Senksrlk Gtaaa and P ain t On.
" 423
US-114 Root had 91
Pbono *»
119 S ^ a A * 1 t n * - *Ph. u m
FURN1SHKD Apartment *00 Park
&lt;1 V A R IE T IE S P A N E L IN G
Whether bvylag or segteg. It vUl
Av«
Nativa and Foreign Woods.

21. Trou­
ble*
22. Head*
of
monas­

A m e rica n
republic

liquid*

13. Irony
24. Lofty
mountain
73 r..ppc&lt;!
16 Part of

19. Some

DOWN

1. Bouth

7. F e l l o w

"privsta itethi, U* W .Fteit SL

Furnished KHiimarr* «gt*r hte
r —Hltinw+q- slumber land Court.
South Cup Units Highway 17-01.

Vast T

ft Z&lt;\

finvoflonB
ft li Morriing'
Mftrnlng
ft 00 ftVnrld
At aS'lnt
ft 1ft MuPia For La4i«r
H y m n TimQ
ft ftft For I.Adlqj Ouljr
I d do
4

1#* lft
11:30
i:.co

Hft'i Clu&gt;
Nt» l

Iftftft C l u b
0 * m * of M»I’ i f
ftVv 11 ! At Koon
.ft I T l.lIN n o N

FAdio F i r m

D trr* l

11:3® ftft b 1; «s t4 y l l i U n t i
1:13 N*w$
lilft H i r V on# F i n c h
1:0* W o r l d i t T h r u
1:1ft Vnliftil N i t t o m
I 30 I
ft110 N&gt;w* C l u b
4 lft Iftuu Club

&lt;:.,;un.»- i . i . u

K ilrh a n Show
M’alc. T a a r a
B ob. Q. Latvia
K su saeartv
B ir F ayafr
pot, C r o i b r
Jtn rh ta r Day
( tacra i a t n r t n
Om r r y

M oor*

Op«a lloufit 4

J
•fJe

�m

' T i n ! H A N F O R D H E R AT.P
rage fi Tups. July 5, 1955

HKELTOX GIVES SHOTf
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.

No Plans Indicated
In Pushing Passage

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 rO A m 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- Discipline Study
• 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 To Be Undertaken
/*/
O,
P
Herndon
CHICAGO
iff
—
A
two-part
study
with sulfuric arid, spraying the
Clerk of fhe Circuit Court
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 le v e la n d , J r .
SEOUL f t — The greased pig passengers suffered severe burns. to he undertaken by the National Attorney at Law
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 - Attorney
chase has come to Korea. The
for Plaintiff
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 roi.NTV j i nut:'* &lt;o n e r ,
M IM IN U I.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 EaTATL
OK LDITH it PEI1HT.
by the 10-member National Com­
DECEASED
N
O
T
IC
T O C R E D IT O R S
mission fur the Defense of Demo­ TO AM, IE' GRS
ONH HAVING
CLAIMS OR DEMANDS AGAINST
cracy through education, the In­
SAID ESTATE!
vestigative branch of the NEA.
You anil each of yen are her*
a ir coMmrtT’M ir
Tho survey revealed rowdyism notified and re-iulred t" fll* any
rlalm*
demands which vou,
is second in magnitude only to or eitherand
of you. may hava against
ihe related problem* of teachers' said »»(4ta in ths efflra of Hon.
EKNXST HOCa HOLDER. County
salaries and overcrowded class­ Judx*
of Seminole County, at hi*
FMONl /i
offli-a
in th* Court House In Banrooms.
ford. Florid*, within elaht calen­
der months from th* ilro* of th*
firat publication of this nolle*.
Earh rlalm or demand must h* In
SQUADRON REM-ACED
and contain th* place of
TOKYO f t—Th# 67th Fighter- writing
residsnrn and post offira address
Bomber Squadron, flying Sabre of th* claimant and must b* sworn,
by th* rlslmsnt. his agent or
Jets, replaced the 18th Fighter tn
attorney, or th* *am* (hall b*
Interceptor Squadron on Formoia void.
John W. Perry
yesterday, yhe Air Force an­
As Administrator of **ld
ci tat*
nounced.
Fetdar and Beltlnghau*
Attorney* for lb* Estate of
Edith M. Perry
Legal Notice
I Lvpar Did*
IVIn tar Park. Florida
RflTirB TO DEFEND
To- Jefferson Davis iJ D t KaleNOTICE
rloth, c(n Darrall Falrrtmh. Gen­
Tha Hoard of County Commie*
eral Delivery, rAndraws, An­ tinners
ol Setnliml* County, Fl-rtdrew* County. T*&gt;*e"
bids at ih* Clerk'*
You— Jefferson DaU* ( J BI da. willinreralvr
the Court Houa* at FanFalrrlrth. Defendant In thla lull, Office
up to * o'clock P M . July
are hereby notified that suit In ford. l**&gt;.
on the following!
dlvnrr* hat been Instltutad aaalnel |llh
J —Dump truck* tcab and
you by your wife, ih* ruintlff.
rhassls)
Rarbar* Falrelolh Bull Is begun
( or * cylinder enalne*
In th- Cireult Court. Ninth rirOil filler
rull Bemlnol* Countv. Florida,
Oil bulh air rleaner
eitiiate In Banford, Florid*. Tou
Lnglnt governor
ar* required tn flic your pleading
J
speed rear axle
and or answer tn th* suit In th*
Dual tire* on rear ast*. tl* idabove Court and fll* a cepy there­
1#
ply tire*
of uenn Easter Harris Attornay
Front fires. IS•/!# -I pty
for ih* Plaintiff, at his nfflre*
a
cubic
yard hydrautlr dump bn.
situate at all B Main Bl. Orlan­
dies t&lt;larwood, Anthony or e.|uldo, Florida, on or before July
vatartl.
ST, 1**1 or * darre* pro rnnfeean
power brake*
will b* entered atalnst you and
Turn signals
th* ease will proceed ax part*.
Banford dal I*ary
Wlinesa my hand and etal thla
Bfsrcsaafat bidder tn terepl IB
IJth day of Jwn*. ttll. at Clark,
cireult Court, gtmiaola County trad*: 1- l»l» Dodf# tour No n
mltb
S yard body, and 1- MU
Florida
Chevrolet tour No, IS), with a
O P Herndon
yard
body.
Circuit Court Clark.
Rid* will be opened at * regular
iBeth.
meetlnr to b* held July 1*th 1ISS.
T tlE i m B
o r
F L O R ID A TO Dlde la bo Identified "Bids on
F R A N K D O - V O f t R O , REt.t.Xf SR Truck!'* and refer to this adver­
NO. 1. *T ACV-T R E N T
H O T E L . tisement. Th* Board reserves th#
right to reiect any and all bide
TRENTON, NEW JE R B E T l
John W. Metsch. Chair­
A sworn Campltlnl for dlvorro
man
having been filed against you In
th# ClreuH Court In and for Perot- Affect) O. P Herndon. Clark
nole County, Florid*, by NELLIE
riC TIT IO V R
KATHRYN DONOFERO. th* short N O T IC E i m &gt;
N A R K LAWmi* of whirh is N e l l ie k a t h RTN' DONDFERO. P I a I n t I f f. v*. TO WHOM TT MAT CON'CEBN:
Nolle* la hereby given that th*
FRANK* DONOFERO. Defendant,
Ihes* present* ar* tn command undersigned. pursuant to the Fie.
FEATURES
ynu tn appear and fll* your writ­ titlous Nam* Law wilt register
ten defence* herein on or before with the Clark of th# cTrrutl
1:00 — St08
th* llrd day of July. A. D ISIS, Court la and for Bemlnol* County.
or athatwls* a Deere* Prn Confer- Florida, upon receipt of proof of
5:18 — 7:24
publication of thla nolle* th* fic­
a* will be entered against you.
The banford Herald I* desig­ titious nams Casselberry Auction
0:32
nated a* a nawepapar nf general nailery under which I am angagwd
rlrrulgtloa tn which thla cHgUea Ih buelnre* as sols proprietor.
_ _____

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.

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 r iv e th e c a r that g i v e s y o u M O IV B o l e v e ry th in g

CHRYSLERS

NOW

Kill Theatre

SHOWING

ELIA KAZAN'S
JOHN S lt lN B L C K b

JULIE HARRIS-JAMES DEAN-RAVpO MASSEY

STATEMENT OP CONDITION

FLORIDA STATE BANK
SANFORD, FLORIDA
Orfantxcd Jana 2, 1939
AS OF JUNE M, 1911
RESOURCES
Loans and Discount*-------- --------

Banking Housa.Furnltura, Fixture*

t U9T.890.T7
79,197.00

Comparative
Statement O f Condition
Florida State Bank of Sanj
Banford, F lo rid a '

Kona

O verdraft*------- — --------SUTIATIBI
843.609.1T
Other Bead* ----------------I
J
O tJ U O
Cask mud Due from Banka

U. B. Gov’t Bond*---- -- ■

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 D iscounts------ l— ............
Banking Houaa. Furnitura A F ix tu re

« 2U 25 .6 8 S .0 e

Overdrafts —
.............
■—U. S. Gov't Bonds , ,
..........
Other B ond*.................
.........—Cash snd Due from B anks-------------

T

TOTAL RESOURCES

TO BE
HAPPIER IN YOUR FORD AND
TO HAVE MORE MONEY FOR YOUR
VACATION TRIP, HAVE YOUR FORD
REPAIRED DURING. TH IS SENSATIONAL
TUESDAY. THRU THURSDAY

Capital Stock — ■............. —
S u rp lu s --------------- ------------Undivided Profits and Raacrvoa
Rsacrva for Bad Debts ..........Bond Valuation Raaama --------Dfvidmda Payabla July 1.1958
Dapoaita ...... .............. - — .—

88,890.00

Non*
S,3?8,658.96
807,032.49
8,480,101.08

8 8J40J6555

$ io o .o o o .o o
2 8 0 0 00.00
17,604.19
42.444.71
ii,o o * .a
I M 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 NEWSPAPER
WEDNESDAY. JtH.Y t, 195S
r «IIJ| ■l &lt; '-y
lisj'V . "•

2 Sides Claim

T

Senate Victory
In Dixon-Yates

&lt;A

WASHINGTON (/P&gt;— Both side* claimed victory today
in Senate action to approve—but with 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
Damage Estimated A t $75 Is Slight
to hav# been directed to undertake
what a Justice Department spokes­
A s C ar Is Hit By Pan O f Payloader
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.
driving.
Peron in his broadcast absolved
•Drive carefully—Don't Insist on gent
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'
the anti-Peronlsta factions
Former Houseboy among
to coma to terms with him.

Accident Takes Place
A t Ninth St., French

Radical Party Asks
'Deeds, Not Words'

Strolling
In Sanford

f

, Efforts To Raise
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
Jameson's Studio
and Black Funeral Home la Day-

Ready For Opening
With Refreshments

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

Step-Up Is Sought
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.

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 •
A city toonla tournament spon­
p- m.
■aery aad Emily Juw w * sored by the City Hecrsotion Doopened their first Stadia ia Saw- partmeot will bsgia July If, refog* to th# foil at 1*47. Ha ted treatise director Edward Christ*
isea aaaouneed today. There will
been bead eg the Photo Lab at
bo five divisions.
VcDiB Air Field la Tampa
Deadline for oatrfoo i* July Id,
anfoetep college aad
with M iaTlaaM eoa
Christens— said. Eatriea may ha
mailed or tetopkoeed to Fred
laaktata a#
Genas, tournament director, at
T.
Route t , Bos 171, or telephone
Ha « « • • tonal
779-R.
Divisions will bo Junior Dirt*

tot

Girl Electrocuted
In Wet Swim Suit

City Tennis Tournament Starts

July 16; Entry Deadline July 14

■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

v.:-i
Ho urged toon-agora to report
to tho Bowling Allay from I to

4 p.m . an*
§ m

*- i\*&gt;

A

■■MINI

is

Asmodated F r a n Leased W i n

No. 22A.

Uneasy Quiet Rests
Over Penitentiary

Officials
Western Proposals
Lined
Up
Coalition
Are Armed For Geneva Talks
Opinion Difference By Italian Premier
:

j

HOSIK (4»j— Taking on the job as Italy's sixth postwar With Guns
Developing Among ernment
Premier, Antonio Si'itui lined tip a throe-party coalition gov­
Being Worked Out
for presentation today to President Giovanni GronPrison Guards
chi. The new government etili faces voles of confidence in
Reinforce Patrol
U. S. Officials
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
Leslie Brockway
ing AFL Transit Worker* Union.
Dies In DeLand
A similar session yesterday with
Capital Transit's Boil'd of Direc­
After Long Illness
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’ approva l 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
Citation Awards
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."
For Cancer Drive
creased by seven last weak to 149.
I d tbs similar period last year
Announced Today there
were 365 rases.
“Because of extraordinary mer­
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.

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 Or Not

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 id eas will he pre.
standby orders for posdblo duty. Rented a s a b a sis for rii*ru **io n s
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 itsT a c k
At Pending Sugar
Legislation Plan

Golden G ift 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.

Woman Faces $ 6 4 ,0 0 0 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

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Pig* 4

FrL July 1 , 1955 THE BANTORP HERALD

County Personals

J
By VIRGINIA P. ANDERSON
F
Mr. and Mr*. Georg* Dodson
11 and family have moved to Fern
. Park where he It employed.
Mr. and Mr*. Li J. Schad have
* rented the Mark William* house
r across from the Natarene ChurchHe it with the Navy and stationed
at NAAS, Sanford.
4 .The Rev. and Sirs. C. C. Whit*
„ ere home again, after attending
Synod and Synodical Held this
p»*t week In Winter Haven. They
represented the Uptela Church of
which he is psstor. .
Mr and JVr*. R. R. Blizxerd end
sons, who have been visiting her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Brastngton, returned to tjielr home in
Cincinnati, 0 .. Saturday.
Paymond M. Ball, enrout* from
South America to his home In
. New York, spent the Fathers
*• Day weekend with hls parents,
r Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Ball.
.......... Burke entertained
a group of her daughter, Geyl* •
friend*, with a slumber party,
June 21, In honor of the latter*
twelfth hir’ hdey. For supper they
enjoyrd h*mburK*r», hot do**,
potato sated, baked been#, ire
1 1 e e m an* assorted cookie#
Mr. and Mr*. Chester Truslow
and »on% Chf*tcr L*o ind Donald
e f Fredericksburg. Va. ar* th*
guests of tier parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Lampert.
Friday. L E. McConaghy of
Mobile. Ala. and hls uncle, Lawrenre Pease of Ocala were the
guests nf Mr and Mr*. P. D. An­
derson. Mr. McConaghy Is a bro­
ther-in-law of Mr. Anderson and
hat visited In Lake Mary on num­
erous occasions.
Th# Friendship CUss of the
Presoyterian Church met Friday
evening at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. C. R. Bon*. Tha old and re­
vised plan* for tha new Educa­
tional Building of the church were
shown and dlsrusafdt Following
the business sesilfiti, tlmblss,
home mad* tea cream and a birth­
day cake, honoring Mrs. Eilleen
Willard and Nancy Bona were
served.
Those attending were Mr. and
Mr*. Marshall Smith, Gara and
Lynn, Mr. and Mrs- Richard
Keogh, Mr. and Mra. Ralph Keogh
e f Walterboro, S. C.. Mrs. Willard,
Mra. Ted Brooklyn and Busan,
Mr. and Mra. Birger WesUr, tha
Ktv. and hire. L. W. Scott, Mra.
J R, Williams and Melanie, Mr.
and Mrs. Bone and daughters,
Melania and Nancy -&lt;■

Sunday evening,
Mrs. I d a
Keogh entertained with a family
jupper, spread plenlf style down
by the lake, honoring hat daugh­
ter, Mrs. Eilleen Willard, who was
celebrating a birthday. The menu
consisted of potato chips, mrat
loaf, tossed salad, chicken salad,
rolls, deviled eggs, pickles, tea,
coffee and birthday cake.
Beside* Mi* Keogh ann the hon­
ors* were Mr. and Mrs. Mile*
Keogh and I'aughlers, Brenda and
lynn o f Orlando, Mr. and Mr*,
kalph Keogh end Mel of Waiterboro, S. C-, Kathy Willard, Mr.
and Mra. Richard Keogh and aons,
Crag and Keith.
Friend* o f Mr*. J. E. Green
will be sorry to hear of the death
nt her mothrr, Mr*. Alice E. Cubhedge which occurred
Friday
evening in Falatka. The Green
family are remaining theie for the
funeral, which wa* held on Mon­
day.
Mr. and Mr*. P. H. Stalling* and
lamlly of Sanford have bought the
Vaughn house near Little Venice
on the Country Club Road and have
moved In.
Fred Cummings and daughter,
Patricia Anr of Commerce, Okla.
were the guest* o f hi* uncle and
cunt, Mr. end Mr*. J. R Reaves,
over the weekend.
Friend* of Mr. end Mr* Frank
McBride will be interested to hear
that his son cante down and ac­
companied them to their former
home in Camden, N. J., June 25.
Mr. McBride continues ill.
Mr. and Mr*. W. E. Order*
nevj purchased the II. H. Grier
house on Fifth Street. He Is em­
ployed by a Sanford construction
company and »he will be remem­
bered as the former Virginia
Hawkins of Lake Monro*.
Mr. and Mr*. David 8&lt;ott have
purchased a home in Little Venice
and will be moving In aoon. He Is
being transferred from the Naval
Air Station, Jacksonville to NA­
AS Sanford.
Mr. and Mr*. A. A. Green have
rented the Betty Million house.
Friend* of Mr*. Irving Hauser
will be glad to hear that she ha*
sufficlantly recovered to be mov­
ed, June 2ft, from the Florida San­
itarium in Orlando to her aon’e
home In DeLand.
Mr. and Mra. H. M. Cochran
war* called to Telham, Georgia
over the part weekend, to attend
the funeral of the mother-in-law
of her brother, Cecil Sinnquefleld.
P. D. Anderson Jr. and his aon,
P. D. Ill o f Miami, were the guests'
of the fomier’a parent*, 5!r. and
Mr*. P. D. Anderson, Monday.
Friend* of Mr. and Mra. Albert
Burlto, former residents o f Lake
Mary, wdll bs sorry to hear that he
suffered a heart attack In Fort
Laudardala Tuesday and passed away. She la taking tha body to thalr

funner home In Utica. N. Y., for
burial.
Mr. and Mr*. James Howard h*ve
rented the Clay Smith house. Ha
work* with Mr. Smith in Orlando.
Mr. and Mr* Janie* Howard have
(.eraburg are announcing the birth
o f a ion. Richard Wilbui on June
20. Thi yourg man weighed In at
ft lb*.. 13 ox. Georg* Lea will re­
membered a&gt; tha aon of Mr. and
Mr*. Franklin Lee o f Lake Mary.
Mi** Lita Lippincott of Plain*
field. N. J arrived Sunday, by
plane to apcnd mm* time with her
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mra.
Eugene Seaman.
Friend* o f Mra. Z. E. Smith will
he xorry to hear that »b« I* con­
fined to the Fernald Laughton
Memorial Hospital with pneum­
onia. She i* aome better and it ia
hoped that *ha may aoon be
brought home.

Longwood
By MRS. BEVERLY EATON
Mrs. George Otto, Mra. Violet
Faint end Mr*. Vincent Meteckl
of the Longwood Home Demon­
stration club have left to attend
the .list annual meeting of the
Florida Stale Council o f Home
Demonstration Work at the Univarsity of Florida to be held
July 11-15.
Mrs. 5laxin* McGrath and Blrs.
W. Drmorrett and children were
luncheon guerts of Mra. Charlra
Searcy Jr. on Tuesday at the home
of Mr. and Mr*. Charles Searcy
Er.
••Pete" Blanchsrd left by plen*
for Main* to apend hls vacation
with hi* grandparents, Sir. and
Mr*. Frod BUnchard and 51r. and
Mrs. Clyde Wheeler. His parents,
Mr. and Mr*. W. Blanchard will
follow later to spend thalr vaca­
tion In Maina alto.
W* are very happy to report
that J. A. Bistline la showing im­
provement after suffering a heart
attack.
Henry Ptleffar hat relumed
from Dayton. O., after being call­
ed thera by tha serious illness o f
hia father, Hmry Phlaffar Sr. who
ia still vary ill.
James Robert McGrath It spend­
ing a weak with hia slater, Mrs.
Neal Gilbert In Eau Galli*.
Mra. Bette Lockley and daugh­
ter, Sendra, and Mlaa Irene Mill*
of Webster, N. Y „ arrived on
Thursday to spend their vacation
with tha formera parent’*, Mr.
and Mrs, Claud# Layo.

W all the natural ice on earth
wore to malt, It would release tnough water to rale* tha level of
th# oceans about 100 foot, aays
tha National OaorgrayIhe Society.
Vatican In
once. They

ITXOrsiB

lory's, o f course, but I don't like
the Idea ef neetera m oving in on
the ran ge a n y better than you do.
O nly I try to look at both aides.
These farm er* think they've go t
the law on their tide. And you'll
admit w e could ua* a little more
lew out here, w on't y o u ? "
Christie couldn't argu e th at
point: it waa one ahr had m ad*
too often herself. When Cam eron
had taken hie leave, aoon a fte r,
tha regarded her father thoughtfull y.
"Y o u don’t like hint, do you,
d a d ?"
"I'm getlin* old, honay. Reckon.
Ume a man geta to m y age, he
geta cantankerous. B ut I never did
tru st a poker-faced man th a t's g o t
a good anew er fo r everyth in g!1'
,

ltot&gt; Msllorj hod hoped hie foster» ,j K tu y IdonUn. would sntl* down
now. wed Ihrlr neighboring mother.
Christie ToUnd. take o\tr Ihe menagemeat of Broke* t*pur. whlth Mallory
had built into a T e u a cattle empire
But there wan a wild elreak la the boy
which droit him oft on drinking • preen.
Into the arms of Ihe earthy L ilt Dawtoo. It wee botouae of Lite (hat Chris­
tie had brokra with Kerry sad had
turned her attrntloa to Wayne Camiron, an Iry.eyed etrangcr. Trouble la
tha area hed long tbrnetened. for farm­
ers hid begun to nest oa (ho land,
deputes as la righta tad boundaries
arose, end ranee war seemed Inevitable.
At a local dance, pbyeleai violence
flared sharply. when Tim Larrsbee.
fanner, and Kerry Rlordes rancher,
fought for the favor of beautiful,
earthy LIU. And when Mallory Immed
of this latent "meea" Involving hie boy
with Lila. h« whipped the led roundly,
wounding his pride, driving him from
Broken Spur la queet of adventure. But
adventure was brooking right bsro on
Broken Spur, ftnmenna had dared
stretrh a wire fence across port ef Mailory’s land, and one of Broken Ppur*s
row hands had beta killed la tha raeulag dispute

0 * 0

Rob w asn 't w orryin g seriously
about an y th rea t L arrabe* could
offer to Broken Bpur. B ut once
the first shock at outrage bad
passed, he didn't blam e the neater
too much fo r try in g to tak e w h at
he thought be could g e t a w a y
w ith. In Larrmbce'a shoes, he ac­
knowledged. he'd probably have
don* the earn* thing.
No. it w asn ’t a n g er th at kep t
him sleepless. B ut som ething—
maybw the unaccustom ed amotion
he'd let him self show that a fte r ­
noon— had shaken him. towered
bars in hi* mind that w ere usually
kept up, and tha thoughts th a t
crowded through didn’t m ake fo r
sleep. T houghts o f tha peat he had
deliberately cut a w a y when he
cam e to this wild, raw country.
Lieutenant Robert M allory, late of
the U. B. C a v a lry , brokea out o f
the service fo r conduct unbecom ­
in g an officer! Nobody in T e x a s
knew th a t chapter o f his history, i

CH APTER ELEVEN
B A N D Y sucked in hia breath, and
C h ristie's knuckles whitened on
the reins. Both of them looked at
Rob, w aitin g fo r the explosion of
violence th a t would certain ly fo l­
low this blasphemy. But he sat
aUtue-atlU, and hls voice, when he
broke the electric silence, w aa low
and level, although It grated.
*
"I'v e been expecting some Idiot
to try this play sooner o r later.
Bure, between all the different g o v ­
ernm ents T exas has had In the
last hundred years, moat e f the
Spanish gran ts are cloudy enough
so a sm art law yer could find holes
In them If he w as paid to look. But
Broken Spur's mine! My title ’*
all tha year* of m y life I sweated
blond to build It up — and It’U take
more than a law yer or a law -quot­
in g sod buster to g e t It w a y from
ma! I'U give you Just-tw enty-four
hours to get your barbed w ire off
m y p lace— If it’s still standing this
tim e tomorrow, m y men’ll rip It

o
w
:
OARY L NOUN, 23, Kansas City, Mo. who fell from tha top of 1MM
foot water tank to a narrow catwalk 20 feet below is lowered t».
safety-—tied to a short Udder—In Grandview, Mo. Tha daring 1
rescue, requiring four hours, was performed by firemen of Grand-1
view Air F o r a Baas. Nolen had a broken arm and back Injuries^

Planning
To Remodel?
tng it up, till be stood today a bv»
trig legend, ooa of tha richest mm
ta Texas, a asm* to conjure with
all over tha Bouthweot, feared, t o

No Need Is Seen
For Alarm Over
Soviet Air Power
SUN VALLEY. Idaho (JB - Sen.
Welker (R-ldaho) says ha doesn’t
"see any gnat point In becoming
loo alarmed over recent report*
of lucreutd Soviet capability In
the air."
"We do know enough about the
Runlan air force, however," he
tald, "to lay that tha United
States has not lost superiority in
the air and will not losa It so long
as wa retain an Intelligent atti­
tude towards providing for this vi­
tal defense force."
"Because tha Ruailana showed
• number of lata modal aircraft
at a Moscow fly-by thera Is no
valid reason to believe that they
now outstrip us In sir production
and training," ha laid.
He said Ruula praients a far
greater threat In tha political, economle scientific and psychologies!
Balds.
Welker addressed the InternaUonsl Circulation Managers Assn,
yesterday.

MAYORBO

Hu-Nick Sumner; t

Auto Industry To Feel Effect O f Steel Strike
DETROIT lit—The halt In steel
production will affect the au(o in­
dustry U it laiU as much aa a
tingle week.
Mott of tha car maker* have
stockpile* of iteel ranging from
th* need* of a couple of week*
to as much ss 45 dsys. But they
are concerned about their suppliers* raw malarial* inventories.
Isek of steel at tha supplier
level c o u l d stop car production
over night.
General Motors and Chrysler ap­
parently are somewhat better po­
sitioned right now with respect to
steel stockpiles than Is Ford. Al­
though Fond has its own blast
furnaces and produces about 50
per cant of tha steel It requires,

...................

Until recently It was believed
that only leguminous plant* can
fig nitrogen from the air but n
recent discovery Indicates that a
species of elder tree can da iL '

It we* long believed that the
Tory newspaper, the Royal Amer­
ican. suspended publication-In New
York City Aug. 1, 1713, but tha
Now York Historical Sociaty has
acquired what It says la th* only
known copy of oa issue published
Aug. T, 1173.

20 YEARS
A C H IE V E M E N T
Ia IMS when wo started thd first Mutual Insur­
ance Agency in Sanford, there war* only a few mutual*
operating in Florida with agenta in nine citiea. Thia
typo of inauranco waa unfamliar to moat Flordiana at
that tima.
Our ambition haa been to furnish our euatomera—
Ioauranca A t A Saving—for their HOME— AUTOMO­
BILE and BUSINESS. The fact that we have paid to
our cuatomara over $225,000.00-in dividends the paft
SO year* would indicate we have to aome extent ae&gt;

m r a was Nov. 18, 1981. ($41,596.50 including ioas of
wRome) w m laaured in mutual companies. Thia losa waa
adjusted and paid through our agency.
Wa have not been unmindful of the fact that paytag daimi ia tha moat, Important part of the insurance

�Weather

Slop and Save
In Sanford

ST h* ^ m tfo rfc
■

y m S fim r m

Established 1908

AN

IN D E P E N D E N T

S A N F O R D . F L O R ID A ,

No*, long ago, according to Mort
Weialnger io "Thia - Week,*' the
pcerlaia Weighing and Vending
Jtaehinea Corp. of Long Ialand,
Jf. Y. whoie icalea diipcm e the
date, your weight and character
lor one cent, advertised for e
teles executive to head its Exit
Coail staff.
a One applicant stated In his let*
«er: “ I am intelligent, diplomatic,
tactful, loyal, enterprising, perse­
vering, resourceful, trustworthy
and ambitious." Ha clinched the
fob by enclosing ten
Peerless
cards attesting to these virtues
aa hla evidence.

By TEE ASSOCIATED PBESS
The United States today cele­
brates ita moat important aummertim t holiday, the lltth anniversary
the Declaration of Independ-

Prosperity Of Bank Senator Johnson
Is Shown In Report Said Seriously III
Prosperity and progress seem to be the two key words
for the Florida State Bank as reports show steady increase
in deposits. The bank made an all high in deposits of 8.5
million which is approximately one and n quarter million
WASHINGTON m — A sfrioui
heart attack suffered by Senate
ahead o f last year.
T. E. Tucker, president, stated that the first half of Democratic Loader LyndoO B.

After Heart Attack

Seven Navy Fliers
Burned In Bomber
henier-Designafe ReslJnHospital
Winds Up Efforts /
BOMB (ft — Premier-designate
Antonio Itgni embarked today on
the final phase of hla weaklong
efforts to form l government for
crisis-ridden Italy. Kit chances of
T icceii were termed good.
Told by President Giovanni
Gronchl to report by tomorrow
whether he can gtcfc ■ cabinet to
•ucceed Premier Mario 8celba’i
government which collapsed 11
days ego, l e g n l arranged meet­
ings with Liberal party leaders to
bargain lor tbflr backing.
The liberal! have posed the
main threat to the left-of-center
ri*Uaq Democrat’s etforta to orniae * four-party cabinet.

«Host Still Squirms

Way Into Old Earth
DOWNEY, Calif. tlt-George Dl
Faso's green plastic hose is still
squirming ita way mysteriously in­
to the earth—at the rate of three
Inches an hour.
f i t ' * been doing It at about the
same rate for lour days. No one
known why.
But bnadmda af curious eeraona
flock to the Di Peso front yard
at all howe of the day and night
%to watch. And the sleep of the
Di Pa sea and their throe young*
•tors kaa boon interrupted re­
peatedly by long-distance talephone tafia fle a newsmen and
others ashing details af the myA cvuple af times the b o a has
Mapped eft an ahapUca tugged. DI
Face baa patttod what remains
•boon ground af the 18-foot length
BAIN
TOKYO IN Heavy rain lashed
Sakha Ida, Japan's northern main
Island Inst night and today, laavlag funr parsons du d, two miss^ag^end five Injured. Morn that

Tfl?
OAKLAND Calif. (N — Seven
Navy fliers burned and wounded
in a Neptune patrol bomber
downed by Russian MIGs over the
Bering Sea June 23 rested today
in Oak Knoll Naval Hospital.
Wives of three were waiting at
Alameda Naval Air Station when
their hoapita) transport plane land
ed yesterday from Anchorage,
Alaska.
Mrs. Nellie Janke, of Alim eds,
burst into te r n when aha aaw the
bandages swathing her husband,
Chief Electronics Technician El­
mer R. Janke.
Aviation Machinist's Mate Thad.
deua Malars, of Oakland, propped
himself up un hia stretcher to
look for the first time at hla 5weekt-old son Thad Jr.
Aviation Ordnanceman Martin
E. Berg, of Alameda, hugged his
wife firmly despite heavily ban­
daged handi.

DeSapio Expresses
Views For '56 Race
In T V Interview
WASHINGTON iP -C i rmin# De
Sapio, close political ally o f Gov,
Averell Hardman of New York,
say* be doesn't believe the 1K8
Democratic presidential nomina­
tion ia "in the bag for anybody,"
In an NBC-TV Interview. De
Sapio yesterday Hated both Hard­
man and Adlai Stevenson as
among Iba possible candidates.
DeSapio, New York secretary
af state and a Democratic national
committeeman, w o u I d n’t say
whether he'd prefer Hardman. But
ho expressed confidence the New
York delegation would support the
state's governor.
In New York, Sen. Murray (DMont) forecast on ardving front
Europe the Stevenson win again
gat the nomination and will win
the election.

1065 earnings were ' ‘Rood'* and
that the hank ha* transferred
fifty thousand dollars to the sur­
plus account.
“ Bank activities show evidence
that 1955 will be the biggest year
In the city of Sanford," he said,
C. It. McNulty, head o f the Mc­
Nulty group of banks, present for
the monthly director* meeting
made the following statement*;
“ The ft rat 4 halt of 1DSS la
above the predietiona o f the econ­
omists. The economic outlook for
the balanco o f this year it optim­
istic. The cattle market is up
two to three per cent and industry
has gone ahead".
He also said that “ ‘ Merchandis­
ing is four billion dollars ahead
of last year and tha steel in­
dustry fs estimated to operate at
60 per cent capacity and at the
first half ot this year it operated
at a Ot percent capacity."
“ Consumer* credit is growing
rapidly" he went on. “ The popu­
lation will grow thiee million an­
nually plus seven hundred incusand new families will be »• emu­
lated. Florida is a leader in the
nation In increasing in popula­
tion and the economic outlook for
1055 is good."
Tucker added that “ Our bank
activities in construction loans
fill in with tha policy to 'help San­
ford grow' " ,
“ We anticipate to make one
and one-half million to two mil­
lion in construction loans," it was
pointed out.
Officers o f the Florida State
Bank ara C. H. McNulty, chair­
man o f the board; T. E. Tucker,
president; W. J. Peacock Jr.,
Cashier; Mary Lynd Douglas, as­
sistant cashier; Ralph W. Peaold
assistant cashier; Dallas E. Loop,
manager personal Joan depart­
ment; directors: Andrew Carraway, C. R. Clonta. C. H. McNulty,
W. A. Patrick and T. E. Tucker.

Cabinet Resigns
For Panama Head
PANAMA (N—President Ricardo
Arias Espinosa's eight-man Cabinet resigned last night to glva him
a free band to choose his own gov­
ernment.
The National Assembly has des­
ignated Arias to finish out the term
of assassinated President Jose
Antonio Remon. The term ends
Oct. 31. Arias is expected to name
Ms new ministers tomorrow.

Ladejinsky Is _Not Seen A s Risk
Repeating a previous statement
by Harold E. SUatea, gave LadeJInsky security clearance and hired that on ‘ security questions "it is
Africultara Dspsrtmst swards him to work on land reform to in- possible for two equally reason-'
fiwwfcrtfc wti aa( sbnsr Waif
able and conscientious men to
Ha now bolds that post under
tha now International Cooperation reach dlffarept conclusions," Ben­
Administration, successor to FOA son wrote Carlson:
" , . * To emphasise our feeling
a part ad tha Stole Departthat the previous security decision
i*i new action waa an- made tor thia department should
. to a letter to Sen. Carlson not coalman to bo permanently ef­
(R-Xan), who had asked the sec­ fective, and particularly since Mr.
retary far general information on Lwfajtoaky ia aa employe ad an­
the Agriculture Department's am- other agency, 1 hare given Instruc­
tions that tha memorandum record
Carlson, serving an a Sonata ad too declaim aad too press re­
Ciwfl Sec vine Subcommittee which lease ad Doc. a which announced
la .Issfctorf l*to tha security pro­ it Mfe bo canceled to that our
gram. mads ton letter gnhUe lata record wifi not show Mr. LadeJiaafcjr aa g anenrity risk."
Saturday. ’
u » ■ » '» £ o m S I K

**? ssSti!y r K u gfe.

SfC

M ON DAY. JU LY

Florida Firms
Are Accused
Ot Violation

U. S. Celebrating
flost Important
Summer Holiday

A
K

NEW SPAPER

9
4,

1855

A s s o c ia t 'd P re ss l e a s e d W ir s

N o. 221.

Waterfront Groups
Are Back On Docks

S t r o llin g
In Sanford

Many of the saUon'a elllieaa enfcy the holiday at baachea and
W O parts, at picnic grounds or
m shady yards at home.
Others gather for parades and
• p a e c h a s commemorating the
Pounding of American freedom by
« congress of eoloelai leaders In
the sweltering city of Philadelphia
la 1178.
By evening, la eltiea and towns
rougbout the tend, milllona will
•athcr for patriotic firework dia* ya like the big one at the Washton Monument grounda in the
nation's capital.
Around crowded centers like
New York, the IMiday is expected
to bring traffic Jama and crowds
like those that dogged highways
aad filled parts and baachca to
capacity yesterday.

D A IL Y

if m t U t

Wear tn p» rt]y cloudy ttrnocfc
Tuesday with widely »cattqr*d
afternoon showers nr thunder­
showers; also few nltht and earIt morning ahowrrs Invar r a il
m ail.

Johnson was generally regarded
today is unlikely to have -much
effect on Congress' accomplish­
ments for the rest of the session.
Johnson, stricken late Saturday,
was described by the Bclhcada
(M d.) Naval Hospital as "serious­
ly ill." It ssltl his condition “ has
not changed significantly"—ttyat is,
tint he was "comfortabb* and
somewhat mura liable, b)it (till
serious."
President Eisenhower expressed
"deep regret*." From many of
Johnson's colleagues, both Demo­
crats and Republicans, came ex­
pressions of regret.
Ills position as majority leader,
in charge of steering legislation
through the Senate, will be filled
by Sen. Clements (D-Ky), assist■
ant leader. Clement* filled in for
Johnson earlier this year when
the latter underwent a kidney
stone operation ami was absrnt
from the Senate for more than
six weeks.

Countess Of Mayo
Is Back From Cave
LONDON Its—The Countess ot
Mayo, once famed as a Mayfair
hostess is back in circulation aft­
er spending two month* in a
Himalayan cave.
The 5t-year-old counicii, who re­
lumed to London this weekend,
told reporter* *he had gone to
Rithlkeih, northern India, to itudy
the rayitic Swaml sect whoso mem­
ber* dwell in cave*.
She laid she was the only woman
in the whole colony,
*’ My cave wa* somewhat sim­
pler than the 21-room house I kept
up before the war," she said.
"There was no furniture and I
had a boulder and some wire net­
ting to keep out monkeys.
"A ll I had to cat was fruit and
potatoes. The swaniis offered me
curry, but it was too but."

Suspenson Bridge
Is Fatal For Two
CHEROKEE. N. C. IP - A suspension foot bridge tore loose
from Its mooring* near here yes­
terday. hurling more than So per­
sons inti the shallow waters of
the Ocontluftee River, 20 feel be­
low.
Two women died of Injuries.
Of the 48 persons Injured. 18
were hospitalized at nearby Sylva
and Bryson City. Mr*. Hrnry T.
Halle Jr., IS, of Daisy, Tenn., died
en route to a hospital. She struck
her head on a rock. Sirs, Law­
rence Rainwater, 31, of Atlanta.
G a„ died in the Sylva Hospital
of internal injuries.
Thr ISofool-long
bridge Is a
tourist attraction at U&gt;' Cherokee
Indian Reservation.

TRADE AGREED UPON
TOKYO un—Japan and Sweden
agreed today on a trade formula
for the real o f this year, the For­
eign Office announced. Japan
plans to import from Sweden 3U
million dollars worth of goods and
to export five million until the end
of this year.

ORLANDO (.1*—Three Florida
firm* were accused of violating
the Fair Labor Standards Act in
complaint* filed in federal court
by the U S. Department ot Labor
last week.
The department asked restrain­
ing orders against Southern Fruit
Distributors Inc., Orlando; Ohio
Farmer* Ine., Zell wood; and Lib­
by. McNeill k Libby, Ocala.
Southern Fruit and Libby were
charged with failing to pay some
workers the minimum 75 cents an
hour and lime and a halt for hours
over to a week as required for
employes engaged in interstate
commerce.
Roth plants process citrus. The
action against Southern Fruit was
filed here and the Libby caso in
Ocala,
Ohio Farmers was accused of
violating the child labor and rec­
ord keeping provisions of the art.
The complaint, filed here said the
firm used several children under
16 on its Orango County farm
where it grow'* and packs radishes
and ulhcr products.

Imperial Farmer's
Predictions Appear
To Turn Out Wrong

Six W e e k s' Strike Bolt Of Lightning
Idling British Ships Kills Ohio Mother,
Has High Price Tag Her Three Children

LONDON (A P)— Britain’.* 18.000 waterfront striker.*
streamed Lack to the docks today after a stonpiiRe that idled
hundreds of ships for tdz week; and cost the nation millions
of pounds in trade.
The striker? hml gn tiinl virtually nothing’ from lliulr

Washington Strike
In Transit System
Begins Fourth Day
WASHINGTON UP—Washington’ *
citywide tr.iu*it strike was in it*
fourth day today with federal me­
diator* making new effort* to ar­
range a bargaining session be­
tween AFL striker* and the firm
that operate* the capital'* street­
car* and buses.
AJier a meeting yrslrnlay of
District of Columbia commission­
ers and top official* of tho Capital
Transit Co., Commissioner Samuel
Spencer laid there was no pros­
pect ot a settlement before tomor­
row.
In Ip* Angeles, U. S. marshals
were preparing to subpoena lands
E. Wolfson, board chairman of Ihe
transit firm, for ■ Thursday ap­
pearance at a Senate hearing.
Wolfson'* testimony was sought
on a bill by Sen. Morse (D-Ore)
to revoke Capital Transit's fran­
chise, Wolfson recently lost a bid
to take over control ot Montgomcrcry Ward A Co.
Some 2.400 AFL etreelrar and
bu* drivers ualkrd out early Fri­
day in a wage dispute.

EL CENTRO, Calif. *jn—A year
ago an Imperial Valley farmer
said;
"1 think the wetback* who haw
been carted off w ill ho back before
long. They’ve had these drive* be­
fore. The wets will always come
bark."
It apf-cnr* today (lint the farmer
was wrong and Operation Wet
back, conducted by the U.S. Bor'
dcr Patrol, was a success.
in previous years there had been
a flood of wetbacks—the term ap
hy usd o swim h Rlhhttcttrtrctcct
plied to illegal Immigrants from
Mexico stemming from days when
they used In swim the Riu Grande
into Texas.
In the Border Patrol’ * El Pa*n
sector which cover* most of the
GALVESTON, Tex. UP-A huskr
CaUfornia-Mrxico
and
ArizonaMexicu border, 416,657 wetbacks airman—&lt;o terrified of being cap­
were apprehended In the year tured for being AWOL, ho said,
that he killed three persons—sot
ended June 30, 1054.
in his rrll today, apparently un­
concerned about tho triple slaying
charge* against him.
Me freely told officer* and newsnun dclads of killing Mrs. Ruby
RICHMOND, Va. UP -V irginia McPherson, 42; her mother Mr*.
officialdom pondered ihc school Zola Norman, At; and her son
problem today with toinn new and Georg*’, 12, in Uieir home In Dickin­
different food
for thought-tho son, Tex , near here June 22.
Tlie airman Ellis Euclid Lauendorsement by a maRir school
division of the principle of integra­ hon Jr., 2ii. told officers ha was
tion.
trying to reach Japan, where, he
Thr enforcement came from the said, hr ha* a Japanese wife. He
school board of Norfolk, the state's ex;ierled to sail in a ahip from
largest city, and represented a soma Mox lean port.
sitatde crack in the solid wall of
official opposition to anything that
would mix the races in Virginia
public school*,
"W e intend,
without
mental
reservation, to uphold and abide
WASHINGTON UP-Now they're
by the law of Ihe land," said the
Norfolk board’s weekend state­ pulling skins on bananas.
The Department of Agriculture
ment. "We bcileva In the public
school ayrtem and pledge our ef­ said today all bananas exported
fort* tu its continuation in this from Jamaica to the United King­
dom soon will be encases! in poly­
city."
ethylene film, a plastic substance.
Tho department did not explain
WALL CRUMBLES
SEOUI, ip—Four smell children the advantage* or tho move, but
were killed end four injured list presumably the bananas will keep
night when a rain-soakrd stone better.
and mud wall crumbled and
The move was ordered by the
cruihcd a home, pollco said.
Jemalcan Banana Board.

Airman Apparently
Shows Unconcern

Virginian Leaders
Discuss Problems

Bananas Will Get
Plastic Covering

walkout. They went hack m lull
force this morning, but many were
bewildered and angry as a result
of Ihe factoin.il squabble* that
marked Ihc strike.
Docker* quickly formed up into
gangs to dear some 170 ship* ly­
ing idle at London, Hull, Man­
chester,
Liverpool,
Birkenhead,
Rochester and Garshin.
Rut the rift between the North­
ern and Southern strike factions
in tin* National Amalgamated
Stevedores and Docker* Union re­
mained.
In the t/indon area the strikers
had voted earlier to return it the
Northern groups del likewise. Not
until last night did ih* Northern
ports agiee.
The strike began a* a Jurisdic­
tional struggle hy docker* union to
gain equal bargaining rights on the
waterfront* with the big Transport
and General Workers Union.
At the height of tha strike more
than 20000 men were out but mem­
bers of TGWU, which opposed Die
strike, stayed on (lie Jolt.
"
*
l)

Japanese Divers
Plunge Into Second
Da/ Of Ship Probe
YOKOHAMA, Japan i.W-SprInkting rice and wine In Tokyo Hay
to consult the spirits ot lung-dead
American sailors, Japanese diver*
today plunged into their second
day of salvage work on the wreck
of the IISS Oneida.
I,cgrnd say* tho 158-foot gun­
boat had |loo,OCX) worth of Jap­
anese gold aboard when slip took
117 men to the bottom 65 years
ago.
U.S. naval records show two offics’ rs and 57 men were saved.
Veslerday a 20 man Japanese
salvage tram began raking sand
and aeaweed away from her wood­
en hulk, which has lain in !5u feet
of water since she collided wllh
tho British steamer Bombay in
1870.
Salvage host llisato Takeshlma
say* he has been scouting the
wreck since 1031.

Byrd Says Congress
M ay Get Additional
Control Next Year
WASHINGTON UP — Sen. Byrd
(D-Va) laid today Congress may
gain some added control over fed­
eral spending next year 1/ the Ei­
senhower administration adopts a
proposed change in submitting its
budget.
Byrd discioacd lhat ftecretary of
Iho Treasury Humphrey recently
told the Senate Finance Commit­
tee in a closed session the ad­
ministration is working on a plan
to return to a system of annual
review of appropriations by Congrris.
As Byrd explained it, this would
involve abandonment of the pres­
ent system under which Congress
lias piled up around ftn billion dol­
lars in unspent appropriation* tu
be u*ed by the executive depart­
ment* lu the next acveral years.

COLUMBUS. Ohio UP—A holt of
lightning ran down a tali o.ik and
kilted a young mother and her
Hirer rhildrrn who W’.’ re on a FieriIdnv picnic nutlli of here yester­
day.’
Duly surviving member of the
family today is 27-yr.ir-old Quido
ItosM-tlt, of Columbus. Rossetti and
hi* wife Kda. also 27, and children
had taken refuge beneath a quill
under llu- Iree when a thunder­
storm struck.
Dead with Mrs. Rns»rti were
daughters Julia, IS months, and
Debbie 4, amt son John, 6
Witnesses among several huntiled person* at the picnic ground*
said the Imil produced a blinding
while flash that seemed tn engulf
tha whole area. They said the vic­
tims were hurled as far as 50 feet
from tti*' tree.
Rossetti escaped with flash
burn* on his legs. Also suffering
severe shock, he is in fair condi­
tion at University Hospital, Colum­
bus,
’HI

Foreigners Given
Glimpse Of Jets
MOSCOW up — Russia gave for­
eigners Ihrir first glimpse of her
new supersonic jet fighters yester­
day In » spectacular Air Forco
Day show featuring a wide rang*
of war and transport craft.
Weeteni observers watched In­
tently at the pride of llu*sir's air
arm-fighters, bombers, transport*
and liugfl helicopters- passed over
.Moscow's Tuihimi Airfield.
The high spot of the allow- earns
when 46 supersonic single-let
fighters flashed past. Most of tho
other aircraft had been seen in
rehearsal flights over
ktnscow,
hut these jets wine new.
Another freah sight Hint brought
cheers from some inn.non Musco­
vites thronging Ihe flag-brderkrd
field was a sleek new twin-engined
Jet transport.

Officials Take Poll
Of Summer School
OKLAHOMA CITY IP — School
officials link a poll hero to find
out why high school students go
to summer school.
Of the 32.1 questioned, 103 re­
plied they were attending to make
up subjects they faded. The other*
are attending simply to atudy ex­
tra subjects—apparently to maka
it easier In future tcrm i.
Rome of Ihe answers received
were revealing. Fur instance:
One 17-year-old stated simply,
"I goofcif."
Hie students whn failed subjects
were asked to give their rca»on.
Teachers were blamed in soma
instances. In other lepiies, students
refused to pas* the buck.
"I went tn sleep in elasi," a
17-year-old boy said.
"Kicked ou t!" was another can­
did answer.

Forces Virtually
Abandon All Hope
TOKYO IP—The U S Navy amt
Air Force today virtually aban­
doned hope of finding two Marion
flier s whose Jet plane vanished
over tlif l'anltc near Tokyo eight
days ago.
The Navy said it is dissolving
its 10-ship search force and th '
Air Force sakl that from now on
search planes will check only
mountain peaks, islands and eoaaU
linos for signs uf wreckage.
Dozens of planes and ship* have
searched tome &gt;3.000 square mile*
uf water in a vain hunt (or Bin
fliers' emergency rafts. The aearch
extended aa far aa 300 mile* eaat
of the Japanese eoaat.
At TRESS RECUPERATING
SANTA MONICA, Calif. &lt; * _
Actress Barbara Stanwyck ia re­
cuperating at borne after tor*#
days of hospital treatment for back
injuries auffcivd to a fall last
Wednesday.
M ill Stanwyck, 47, trippad M
some atep* at borne and fell. Sh*
waa treated for *ev*r« bruiaee ot
tb# aaerailiac area.

�Of Freedom

Solid Rows O f Houses

Testaments

A aolld row o f houaaa, wltH windows only
at tha front and back, aeem an architectural
monitrollty to many people, though found in
many eastern cities and ofteq In expensive
residential district!. Boston's Beacon Street
and Marlboro Street, homes of the Cabots,
Lowells and other Bostonian first families,
have many such rows.
Now the origin o f this architecuril type
has been traced back to the 18th century,
and In this country to the flret English set­
tlement, Jameatown, Va. There foundations
have been unearthed, providing for a struc­
ture 170 feet long and 21 wide, containing
five or six,adjoining houses, The Impelling
reason wss safety against Indiana. Settlers
with houses built together would find only
two aides vulnerable, and help close at hand.
Row houses are said also to exist in 17th
century England, but there they could not
have had the excuse that existed in pioneer
Virginia. Fortunately today’e houeea lay
more stress on air and aunshlne.

Tha man who signed their name* to the
Declaration o f Independence showed a rare
kind o f bravery’. Their lives and property
would have been forfeited had their cauae
failed. Yet it wss not this that msde them
remarkable— men had rtoked ns much many
tlmea before for a king, for personal glory
or for tho love o f danger for ita own sake.
Those men were risking their lives, fortunes
and sacred honor for an idea—an idea that
must have been aa frightening to them in
some aspects aa the possible consequences of
failure.
They ware saying, these men who sign­
ed tha document, thnt all men have cer­
tain "unalienable rights"— not mere rights
granted by a King, a Parliament or by com­
mon consent* but "unalienable righla'* with
which their Creator had endowed them. They
stated boldly that the prime function of gov­
ernment was to secure these rights and that
governments derived their Just powers from
the consent of tho governed.
This was more than a revolutionary docu­
ment— it was a testament to all generation*
ot men, wharever they lived. We who ha.»
accepted the legacy have found that it la
not always an easy one to live with. It
sometimes takes courage and it always taken
work and thought to live up to it.
They dared greatly, thoae men who fix
ed their signatures to the Declaration of
Independence. We who art their halrrf can
not complain if the way they pointed for
ua to take le not always essy, for the know­
ledge o f our freedom and dignity as men
was their legacy to ua, also.

The Sanford Herald
Wohltoko* Sail?

tint *
sm w«a*

aatotoar aa*
rtm n.

Real Values And Fake

MM to a M t o • ( A a
i to oetftloa aaaiatovtor «• tka «aa tat
t o * aa all tka t o d m m potato* la tkto

Monday July 4,1955

Pag* 1
TODAY'S

They that wait upon tha Lord ihatl re­
new thalr strength.— Taa. 40:81.— 8ome
think that all energy cornea from tha Sun.
But ha who mad* tha Sun ta tha aeurea o f
all atrangth, and w* may call upon him for
il o f atrangth.

Whan a college commencement has as a
speaker a governor, who has held many dis­
tinguished piats and is frequently mention­
ed for hie party’a presidential nomination,
that might be thought the occasion'* chief
feature. Not so at City College in New York.
There the speaker waa Gov. Averell H ard­
man, but the great event waa the award of
a doctors to of laws to Dr. Jonas Salk, dis­
coverer o f the polio vaccine.
Gov. Harriman said with becoming mod­
esty and recognition o f facta, "Few of you
will remember that tho Governor of New
York spoke here tonight. But few o f you
will not remember that Jonas Salk was
here."
Governor* come and go, and many art
useful. But few have the opportunity to ren­
der the eerviea to the world that haa coma
to tha lot of a hard-working scientist.

July 4,1776 W as Only Beginning
PHILADELPHIA, iff - Violent
thunderstorms shook toe city.
Tha cannoned* ot thunder and tha
din of rain aomtoinaa drowned tha
volcei to the dim hell aa men rot*
to demand the attention of the
chairman, Benjamin HerriaoQ of
Virginia.
The people to toe hall were forg
tog a new nation. But tha act of
July 4, i m waa but one stroke to
tha revolution.
There waa, to begin with, the
war ttoelf—a frequently disconnected Mrtea of amali wan and cam
ptlgaa induced by oeooomte op*
praeaioa. ta that early trimmer of
I t its flrat phase had eaded. Tho
com mender in chief, Georg* Wash'
togton, had drawn a ring around
the British to Boaton so tightly
that Ufa became untenable there
for them aad they filed onto their
ahlpe aad salted away.
Thera continued, meanwhile, aad
would laat for torn* time, on* of
those fiasco adventures for which
ell young armlet team to have a
ia n tis: The campaigns to Can
ada and the northern approaches

Peaceful Picketing
Continuing Today
A t Copper Plants

SAM DAWSON

Bright Prospects Face Business
NEW YORK tB—Profit prospects
art bright at business enters the
second half of the year today.
The first 34 industrial corpora­
tions to report on earnings for the
first six months of their fiscal
yeer show nst Income after taxes,
on average, running 13 per cent
higher than a year ago. More than
half of them noted improvement,
end to tome instances tha galas
were substantial,
Railroad profits are even more
impressive when compared with
a year ago. In tha first five months
of this year, nat Income waa run­
ning nearly double.

Bank earning) are expected to
be very eatiafectory when tho fi­
nancial institution! make their re­
ports in lha next woek or two.
Higher interest rales from invest
mcnls, end tocreiitag demand for
loans to business have aided the
banks.
Utilitisi art enjoying increased
sties volume. Electrical power
output la now at aa ali-Um* peak.
The 34 industrial corporailana
that have already reported bad a
combined first-half net Income of
tT4.00T.90t. A year ago tha same
34 hsd combined profit of 943A4T,-

Sun Is Good for Baby.
. WITH ale* weather open it,
ltt laporUal that your baby
•pends a tot of Uaa la Uw ftwh
air. Bat If ba*a Ilka a p u t b u t
tote, hla dUeanteated walla map
^ k tla c t o m r a tim m L

wS5

kaap Urn autentad and quiet
Tte fraah air la u gaad for you

7AMMS MARLOW

Mg. The increase wei ISA per
But IS of to* 34 slipped back
tola year, moat ot them only
slightly, la a few special cases
(la which too particular firm ap­
pears to be running counter to tha
trend to 1U own Industry) tha de­
cline waa fairly substantial
Among too compaates showing
notabte gains to profits tola year
over laat war* firma to to* tex­
tile, farm machinery, container,
rubber aad plywood Industries.
Some industries stUl haven’t
worked olit of the slump. Others
have been booming. Some com­
panies within prosperous indus­
tries have had rough sledding.

Bookeepor Freed
Under Stiff Bail
Potted By Hubby

Nationalist Police
Report Gang Crash

LANCASTER, Pa. &lt;*-A 44-yesrold women bookkeeper who police
said, confessed stealing 1100,000
from hor employer over to* peat
eight years to pay blackmail to a
former husband waa fra* today
under 110,000 ball.
f bond tor Un. Kathryn R.
Kassel wss posted yesterday by
bar peasant husband Edward Has­
te], aa ataetito refrigerator re­
pairman.
Mrs. Httaal wee charged with
lartaay by aa ampler*, fraudulent

rnnvrrim
umm
i wusev^ewnyt
m bh Ipiiv .
w
m

Her former husband John P.
Huber, 0 , ■ well-to-do poultry
farmer and kte fatter Prank Hu­
ber, TO, are being bald ta lieu
af bail. Tka younger Huber U
charged with blackmail and con­
spiracy. Hla fatter is aeeused of
roc*!vug
Piracy

Heaatimrtr can taka enormous he'd |«t M. Ha aatit tka
comfort from Ui* clobbering Bap. to Ota Beotia's Foreign
McCarthy (R-Wls) took tola weak, Committee at aaea.
aot baeauaa it was McCarthy, but Ob Tutiday that croup,
dkrn . i M Jll&gt;aaaa af #km aUik.

1b* Meat* amaatod W-4 a propoaal b* McCarthy whleh would
E m Interfered with. if it dkta't
wtaeh, Kieantewar'a daaUaia with
ftp Buaalaaa la too Big four Boot*
tag ta July.
lb * veto waa, la atfaet, aa asproMtaa of confidence by .«■ overutelmlBl Bu*b*r of m tutors at

YOU’RE TELLING ME)

far*
1M4-

to tha colonies. The venture would spectacles, Franklin askad, "Why
end lucidly and happily for toe not merely say tost we bold them
Americans a year later at a place to be seif-avidentT"
now called Saratoga—thanks less So the document was written and
to American generalship than to brought into the crowded hall of
the State House on the flrtt day of
colossal British blundering.
Now, as the mood of resolution July. Through heat and violent#
grew to the Congress, toe com­ storms that did not cool to* air
mander. was bringing his ragtag the members argued the cause.
aad bobtail army down from Bos On July 2 a vote established the
ton to New York and disposing it feet of Independence. Then atten­
thinly around Long bland add Man' tion turned to Jefferson's work,
hattsn with a fine disregard for the document that set forth to all
exposed flanks. He was courting t the world why this great decision
military disaster tost would see bad been reached. On July 4 tte
bis army routed and its remnants members agreed to the im mortal
chased clean aeros- New Jersey to preamble.
the coming' fall. Then, whan the There followed a few days ot
end would aeem near end the neck­ haggling over toe main body ofV
cloths of congressmen would feel the work. Meanwhile, toe country
as tight at tha noose, the com did not wait. Philadelphia pressea
mender would regroup on toe west struck off copy after rspy and
hank of tho Delaware and (trike mounted messengers rod* forth
boldly at Trenton and Princeton with bulging saddlebags. It was
and throw toe British back to New read aloud In New York and Boston
and Williamsburg, Va.
York.
In the still, hot days of that June Thera remained doubters. Thera
of *71 a rider loped Into Philadel­ would come traitors. But there was,
phia from Chanaston, EC. with say contemporary chroniclers, ra*
Joiclng throughout tte lend.
^
news: Carolinians, fighting to a
palmetto fort under a breve and
•ffabla colonel named William
Moultrie, hid drives off a mighty
British task force under the earl
of Cornwallis, Ike biggest Ameri­
can port south of Philadelphia was
still safa.
DENVER til—Peaceful picketing
But ovan this good nswi.had no continued today at plants and
direct tearing on tha fact that
re* of tte nation's big­
Americans, through their delegates gest copper producers, struck Fri­
to Congress, hsd determined to be day by the Independent Inteme-w
free. Tbay had not thrown too tea tlonai Union of Mine, Mill aad*
In tte harbor or fired on tha regu­ Smelter Workers.
lars at Lexington with to* idea of Union headquarters here said
becoming an independent nation. wage negotiations with American
In to* earliest years they had aim- Smelting * Refining Go., Etna*
sought redress of economic cott copper Corp. and tha Phelpsply soug)
injustice.
Dodge Copper Corp. bed been re­
Then, slowly at first and finally cessed ever to* Independence Day
marcurially, then flamed through weekend.
tho lend tho idea of Independence.
More Ulkt could not te expected
Prom the vantage point of his­ before tomorrow he said.
tory it’s obvious that tho best An osUmited 0,000 workers a*.
minds of Congress chose the dar­ Plante end mines to it states have*
ing, the emotional courts to defi­ heeded tte Mine-Mill strike call.
ance of tho military facts. So It The union Is seeking a SO-cent
cam* about that a committee ot houriy wage boost and fringe team
five was appointed to shape ■ doc­
ument: Adams, Benjamin Frank­
lin, cloaking wiadon with wit and
gravity with urbanity; Roger fiberman of Connecticut, his first mis­
givings buoyed by the rising Ud*
of feeling for freedom; Robert Liv­ TAIPEI, Formosa im— Chinas*
ingston. the wealthy New Yorker Nationalist police said today th e *
who should hav* been a Tory If had smashed a gang that n e e ?
tola were simply a clast war; and tte international parcel port to
Tkomii Jefferson.
emuggle an estimated lt.3oo.ooo
To taR, red hatred Thornes Jef­ worth of Nineties tote Formosa
ferson of Virginia than 33 years from Hong Kong.
old, was given tte talk of sitting Press reports said r paraona
down with pan and papar and writ­ wsraarrteted and six ottenwar*
ing a draft of fateful words. As he
paced hie sitting room on Phila­ Among these implicated police
delphia's Seventh I treat. He know, aald, war* inspected ot tha Chi­
■s a student of history, be was be­ nese meritim* customs attached
ginning n document such as his­ tolte general port office to Taipei*
tory never had sees,
P 4 entlra team, headed by Chltr
Whan to tha cauraa ot human
U *m M M k , k u t o ,
event* it becomes necessary . . .**
he wrote. There were many Inter­
polations and questions to his mind
_ APPOINTMENT MADE
and in too mfadt of tte commlt­
^ H l * * ^ ® 8* *
—Gov. Col.
taa; "I wonder bow — auppoa* you n
,’n!
appointed Robert N.
•ay *To dissolve to* polities! hands HeinUelnux_ *f Orlando * memwhich hav* connected them with hte 0 to* Orange dainty School
Board i»uc«owttog la t e s t * . Carr.
Old Dr. Vranklte, eeaaalag a pa*
sgraph, read tte antont* that tegaa "Wa hold these truths to ha
sacred and undeniable
tog up ta Jeffers* over hla small

BUICK

Trade-Ins

tag to Oaaava.
Otto |aur itopubUeafli, latiudr
tag MsCarthy, voted tor tte pro■taaLAUtoa Democrat* aadoto^ * 2 ^ —jUi. . — am it» Amr at tha

Clearance Sal#
• **«*.

S B it W AYS ta tfd M fa fc

tboaa two ye*
administrate*'

ic y

Urn
*

rjBL
HE

wr

■

;.*..

�4

,

Evelyn Ratliff Ernest Pollitz
Are W ed In Presbyterian Church.

S o c ia l fr o e r d i.
J p e A A o n a lA
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Klrahner,
owners of the Raymond Studio
are leaving tomorrow for a vaca­
tion In Balsam, N.- C. and Nash­
ville. Tcnn. They will be gone for
about two or three weeks and the
studio will be closed during this
time.

#Rev., Mrs. Wyatt
J o Be Honor Guests
A t Church Party
The Rev. snd Mrs. Milton II.
Wyatt will be honor guests at *
picnic lo be sponsored by the wo­
men's Society of Christian Servlcq
9 n f the First Methodist Church Wed­
nesday at Rock Springs.
The Rev. Wyatt is beginning his
third year as pastpr of the church,
an4 all member* of the church are
cordially Invited lo attend.
Mrs. W. A. Hunter president of
the WSCS announced that supper
would be served at 7 p.m. Those
attending arc asked to bring a picf n i c supper and table service for
members of their families. Drinks
will be furnished by the WSCS.

• *

The real threat to a lady'* mani­
cure la the way (he uses her
nails to tackle household chores.
If they ere employed as sharp
Instruments to scrub at stubborn
dirt, pretty soon they'll have
■bout as much charm as a scourlng pad. You won't mar the
symmetry of your nails If you
loosen stains first —for example,
eoak potv usd pans In hot soap­
suds until even burned-on dirt
will wipe away. And do train
yourself to work with the cush­
ions of your fingers, not the nail
Ups.

•

Caviar, in cae« you're in th« marA ket, comas in three types. Black
® Imported never run* when It’*
spread. Black domestle has eggs
(hat are ao small they can hardly
be seen. Red domestic has much
larger egg* than the other two
varieties.

Marriage Is Told
Mr. end Mr*. Philip James Allen
announce the marriage of their
daughter, Phyllli Allen Proctor
to Charles N. Shaffer of Colum­
bus, O.
The wedding waa performed on
June 23 In Columbus where the
couple will reside. Mr. Shaffer Is
engaged In farming and the lum­
ber business In Columbus.

TUIWDAT
A board meeting of the WSCS
o f the Firet Methodist Church
will be held at 0 a.m. to be fol­
lowed by the general meeting at
9:45 a. m. in McKinley Hell.
The Daughter* o f Wesley Sun­
day School Clasa of Ihe First
Methodist Church will have the
regular buainest and eocial meet­
ing in Me Klnley Hall at 8 p. m.
The Intermediata Royal Ambas­
sadors will meat at the First
Baptist Church at 7 p. m.
The First Baptist Church Bus
will leave at 8:30 p. m. to carry
tho men of the Brotherhood to the
Association*!
meeting in
the
First Baptist
Church,
Deleon
Springe.
The CPO Wive* Club will hold
a social at 8 p. m. in the CPO
Club on the Nava) Auxiliary Air
Station. Refre hments will be serv­
ed.
The Sanford Tourist and Shuffleboard Club will have a covered
dish supper at 0 p. m. in the
club. Carnes will follow.
WEDNESDAY
A picnic supper honoring the
Rev. and Mra. Stilton H. Wyatt
will be aponaored by the WSCS
of tha Flrat Methodist Church.
Members wilt meet
at Rock
Springe and supper will be served
at 7 p. m. Each family will taka
a pincnlc supper and table service.
Drinks will b* provided by the
WSCS.
Th* First Baptist Junior G. A’*
will meet at tha Church at 3:30
p- m.
Tha First Baptist Sun da; School
Worker** Council will begin at 7
p. m. with a covered dish supper.
Th* First Baptist Prayer Meet­
ing aervlc* will begin at 7:30 p.
xo- Bring your Bibles.

tin-Nick. Simmer,
ir ta Jeered. “What's the matMallory T Qettin' too old to
Ma jour own fight* T“
Bob’s llpa tightened, b u tte is oared quietly, "goose day when
rve got time, n settle that with
you. If you're Interested. Today,
re * got bualnaw to attend to. U r nbea," ta turned to Joe, Ignoring
"I gave you twentyIt's up. My men are
that h oes If you’ve
gat the sene* I always gave you
credit (o r/ you w cat try to atop
toward
, and tha foreman ordered
-A ll right Get to i f
Hla voice waa rough because ha
had seen something tn Lott* bee's
(see that made him suddenly dis­
like the Job. The heater waa too
practical a man In tackle th* odd*
eg ate guns to one, but on hla
teethsry cheek* there waa the hot
painful Siuti at a proud saan
forced ta swallow hla pride.
He couldn’t bring htmeelf to look
•I Ma eon, but be raecbed out to
lay • band cu the big ana that
waa swelling and teasing under
the Mu* sleeve. "Another tins*,
son." ta muttered huskily.
Mate CuOea'a stem prophet**
M g iHNPtd into (hi litU ia m
"Ton aria this time ‘cane* you got
Mm guta on your side—but we got
tha ww an m
an* you cant beat
r with guns—not (or
day you aattlamanH

-------- Brother!" Art drama

•Maud ta Ironically. He waa rod*
fitfxNI Mhd iW'titliTif from
if (Orta, tar Uu Lambaqa had dooo
a pood. aoUd Job of setting their

ftoo*-poets, and Uke most cowhands, ha eoeuidared this sort at
work bosuatb bio dignity.
"Young men," Cullen told him,
•you better bo careful bow you
Jeer at Odd1* Holy Word. Might
bo you'll bo wealin' ttooooer'n you
think."
"■hut ta ta* «•* • VU* **“ &gt;0^
Art," Bandy - ‘ t t *'1
The young sue obeyed. Ms (ana
•olka. Finally, ‘he last port wae
dmva, and the (coca Uut bad beaa
a DauaUng cMUeago waa Jurt a

(Photo by C oi)

★

★

★

■

★

★

★

Jeanne Miller, Donald Baron
United In Impressive Ceremony
In a beautiful and Impressive candlelight service performed Sat­
urday evening at 8 p. m. at the First Baptist Church, Miss Jeanne Lane
Miller became the bride o f tlonald Baron, son of Mr. and Mrs. D, O.
Olson of Phoenix, Arizona.
The Rev. W. P. Brooke Jr. officiated at the double-ring eeremony
performed before an altar banked
with tall palme and pedestal bas­
THURSDAY
Tho Flrit Baptist Junior G. A ’a kets of white gladioli, pom pom
will meet at tha church »t 3:30 chrysanthemum* and fern. In tha
background, five eathcdrml-type
p. m.
The First Baptist Intermediata standards of seven branched can­
G. A ’a will meet at the church delabra bearing white taper* form ­
ed an arch and furnished illumi­
at 4 p. m.
nation as tho nuptial vows were
The First Baptist Junior Royal ■poken. The family pewa wera
Ambassadors will meet at the marked with white gladioli, green­
church at 7 p. m.
ery and white eatin streamers.
T1 s First Baptist Church choir
Miss Margaret Davie who ha*
will hold rehearsal at 7:30 p. m.
been the bride's music teacher
since eerty childhood, played the
traditional wedding marrhes, and
rendered a prelude of y g a n music
consisting of "N octum ?" by Chop­
in; “ O Perfect Love” , Bamby
“ Romance” , Rubenstein; “ Ich Hebe
dich” (I Lova Thee) Grieg; "O
Promise
Ma",
DeKoven;
and
V N U men e m
"Deep In My Heart” , Romberg.
at them. It brought the rebellious During the lighting of the can­
young puncher Into the Battel*
dles she used the “ Indian Lova
Even Tim felt the weight of It and Call” by Friml, and as the wed­
fell silent, kicking sullenly at the ding vow* were spoken, “ Clar de
of wire.
tune” by Debussy. Soloist, Miss
But Art's frustrated tamper had Norma Faye Harvey seng “ Ah
to Ond name outlet, and as hla
mount, • nervous, high-stepping Sweet Mystery of Life” and "A i­
cteybenk, fidgeted under him,- ha wa)'*".
The Bride
Jerked Its bend up with a vicious
The bride, given in marriage
■aw of tha rains. Instantly the ani­
mal bucked, head going down and by her father, waa radiant. In her
back up with a snap that Jarred formal wedding gown of Imported
th* rider's spine. Art’s spurs raked lac* over bridal satin. Tha mould­
the horse's sides and It reared ed bodice featured a yoke o f illu­
back, front hooves lashing the air. sion bordered by scalloped lace em­
The neater*, with a hasty pru­ broidered with Iridescent sequins.
dence, leaped out mi range. Art Iridescent* accented the smell laco
held hie precarious east with a collar. 8*lfcov*red button! extendpracticed grip.•d down the back and the full
Th* struggle waa aa abort a* tt length alaevas terminated In point*
waa fierce. The quivering beast, at tha wrists. The voluminous
acknowledging tha mastery of the skirt, gathered at tha pointed
creature on Its back, dropped to
waistline, ewept to a graceful
all four* again. But on* descend­
ing forefoot tangled la the mass chapel train. Her finger-tip veil
of wire Tim had kicked said* aa o f illusion waa attached to a tiara,
be (prang bock. Tha animal Mum­ embroidered with seed pear)* and
bled and thrashed, trapped by the silver beads, Interspersed with
tormenting barbs, and Art waa rhinestones. A fin* bolder of
pitched sideways out of the saddle rosepolnt laea adorned thq crown.
and sprawled (ao* down cn the She carried a cascade bouquet of
torn-up earth.
white carnations cantered with a
Ha cams up choking and splut­ white orchid with white tulle end
tering, wiping dirt (ram hla eyes white satin streamer* attached.
with cos hand white tha other
Attendant*
clawed (or hla gun. T h a t mangy
Miss Sandra Dunn aarved a* tha
eon mt a out-satin' neater! Ha did brida’e maid o f honor and wore •
ballerina length gown of white
eatin with a high walstllno and
•Ur, ia4 at the m om manual, with brlof aot-in alaovoa. Tho wldo
■ swiftness mo mao would have **- scooped neck in front fell in
pocUd (ram til* ciumay bulk, TUn
lunged forward tod analched up graceful folds and draped In back
Uu shotgun, and the two triggers to form a vce-ntcklln*. Around
her neck ah* wore a double etrand
spoke together.
Ttu dirt la hla eyes, or tha ahock o f pearla centered with a rhine­
of Uu (all, bad shaken Art’* aim. stone clip, a gift o f tha bride. A
Hla bullet went high, tearing short hoop was worn under the
through Uu dealt of Ttm'i shoul- full flared skirt. Her tiara like
dor, But tko cowboy took Uu headdress was madj of veil at­
heavy shotgun charge square In tached in icallope to n rad velvet
tko cheat He stumbled, coughed, a bandeau. She wore red satin
look o f dull surprise g lasing hie pumps and carried a cascade bou­
quet o f red and whit* carnations
with rod and white tulle and satin
atraamars.
Bridesmaids, Miss Patsy Col­
lins and Miss Peggy Wright worn
gowns identical to that of tho
maid o f honor, but carried cas­
cade bouquets o f solid red carna­
tions, with rod tullo and satin
streamers. They also wort double
strand paarls.
Jackie Miller, brother of tho
brld« .served tho bridegroom as
bast man, and Troy Ray Jr., cou­
sin o f tho bride, Via Tuckstt and
Bob Wills were usher-groomsmen.
Mrs. Miller choee for her daugh-

Mis* Evelyn Virginia Ratliff, Daytona Beach, daughter o f Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Ratliff Sr. and Ernest Pollits Jr. Jacksonville, son
Mr. and Mr*. Ernest Pollitt, Daytcna Beach, were wed July 2 at
8 r&gt;. m. in the First Presbyterian Church with the Rev. A. G. Mclnnis
officiating the candlelight, double-ring eeremony.
Palms, and baskets of gladioli
along with fern and arrangements
of astors were used to decorate
tha church and form the fitting
background for Ihe impressive
rites.
Mrs. Georg* Touhy rendered tha
traditional wedding music.
The bride, given in marriage
by &gt;ter father, was radiint In tha
traditional formal gown of import­
ed alencon lace over white satin
featuring a scalloped neckline with
a fitted bodice
and tapered
sleeves. Tiered lace and nylon
tullo ruffles fell Into a cathcra!
train while a tiered veil of silk
Illusion fell from a half hat of
Rich little muffin* help make a scalioped lace and seed pearls.
guest meal good.
Her bridal bouquet was of steCreamy Clam Chowder
phanotls and lily or the valley
Grapefruit and Avocado Salad
centered with a white orchid.
Currant Pecan Muffins
Miss Mildred Miller, was maid of
Chocolate Moussa
Coffee
honor and her only bridaP atten­
CURRANT PECAN MUFFINS dant. She wore a full length gown
Ingredient*: 2 cups sifted flour of pink embroidered organdy and
3 teaspoons double-acting baking nylon net with a taffeta eummepowder, l* teaspoon salt, 6 labia- bund.. A tiara of pink erysUl’red
spoon* sugar, ’* cup butter or oranga blossoms wss worn in her
»* cup milk, hair and she carried a bouquet of
margarine 2 eggs, 4«
H cup broken pecans, l i cup pink camitiun*.
currant* (rinsed in hot water and
Donald Best, Gainesville, served
drained).
as best min and Harold Waldron,
Method: Sift together the flour, Port Orange, and Ernest Hugged,
baking powder, salt and sugar in Jacksonville, were ushers.
Mrs. Ratliff chose for her daugh­
to a large mixing bowl. Cut In
butter with pastry blender until ter* wedding a gray lace dress
particles are very amrll. Beat with matching taffeta and pink
eggs until thick and ivory color­ accessories. She wore a corsage of
ed beat In milk enough to com­ pink carnations Mrs. Pollitz was
bine. Fold egg mixture, pecan* gowned in a blue n; Idn dress over
and currants into flour mixture; taffeta with white accessories and
use a* few stroke* at possible
moistenVd. Fill grraied
muffin
pant two-third* full; full bake In
moderate (375 degree*) oven about
23 minutes for good-sised muffin*,
or until cake tester inserted in
center of a muffin come* out
clean. If muffin pan cup* are
HOLLYWOOD UP — Tiis week
’ &gt; eup alt*, recipe will make NBC-TV ventured Into the ''wide,
M muffins; if muffin cup* are
wide world” and so did Mike Todil.
■liout H cup alt*, r*cip* will
The flamboyant producer took a
/make 12 muffin*.
couple of planeloads of observer*
to Tijuana. Baja California, tn
ter’e wedding, an orchid taffeta watch the Mexican poirtion of the
formal with a yoke of nylon net International spectacular. No. Todd
outlined with nylon net ruffling. hat no connection with NBC.
Her coriage we* of yellow csrnsBut ha la making a picture of
tloni, yellow tulle and yellow aatin Jules Verne’i "Around the World
ribbon.
In M Day*,” and one of his stars
The Reception
is Cantinfla*, the Mexican Idol.
Immediately following the wed­ NBC ahoued Cantinflas fighting
ding, a reception was held in the tha bull on the TV show. Now
Memorial Educational Building of you get tha picture,
the church. The room* were de­
Cantlnflai put on a whrt~ of a
corated with basket* of white ght, too.
ahsh stir shrd shrd hr
gladioli, pom pom chrysanthe­
Thli was no phony match of man
mums, fern and other greenery. and bull. The Mexican comic ac­
Candelabra on standard* wara tually got into tha ring with the
used in tha background and on animal. Soma aeoffer* remarked
either end o f the serving tables. that itwas a small bull. Okay It
Garlands of fern interiparad with was small. But the only way most
white
blossoms
were
draped observers would hav* wanted to
around the room tastefully to meet It would be well-done and
create a scalloped affect and form swimming in gravy.
a fitting background for tha can­
Weiring long drawers, a shabby
delabra and burning tapers.
piece of cloth purported to he a
Mrs. Charles Mulrhead render­ vest and panta drooping on his
ed soft musle during the course hips, Cantinflas performed amasIng stunt* before the bull. While
of the reception.
The bride’s table was covered the bull gazed defiantly, waiting
with a white madera cut-work to charge, the comic seated him­
cloth and a four-tiered wedding self and stared it down.
‘ 'Mambo" ahouted the cheering
cake topped with a miniature
bride and groom. A low arrange­ crowd.
Cantlnflai signaled the band,
ment e f white gladioli and pom
pom chrysanthemums computed which broke into music. H* then
the eenterpiec*. Another table tossed away hla cape and perheld tha punch bowl and eprayi
of white gladioli and greenery, soriea war* o f pal* yellow and
Mrs. W. P. Brooks Jr. cut the she wore the orchid from her lirlcake and was assisted at tha table tlhl bouquet.
The bride ie a native of Sanford,
by Mre. C. C. McManus. Punch
waa served by Mri. II. M. Pearce having attended the local school*
end graduated from Seminole
and Mri. C. A. Anderson Jr.
Mra. A. J. Peterson and Mra. High School with the claea of 'SL
C L Clark Sr. were in complete She was an honor atudent, accom­
eharg* o f the reception arrange­ panist for tha Glee Club for three
ment* with Mra. Mlehatl Thomas, yean , and chosen as on* of the
Mrs. Evans McCoy, and Mrs. II. L. six outstanding senior girls. She
Is presently employed by the J. C.
Osborne assisting.
The guest* wars greeted at tha Penney Company as cashier.
door and shown to tha receiving
Mr. Baron waa born In Phoenix,
line by Mri. Christine Woodruff, Arisons and attended school*
who wae charming in ■ formal o f than. If* entered the U. R, Navy
pala yellow nylon net end crystal- in '83 and will be discharged on
atte taffeta with moulded bodice May t( In 'M . At present he (■
and long torao lines. She wore a stationed at the Sanford Naval
corsage of orchid carnations with Auxiliary Air Station with VC-B.
orchid tull* and eatin streamers. After hie discharge he plans to
From the receiving line, the attend Law School at tha Univer­
guest* were directed by MUa Nancy sity o f Arlaona.
Rountree to the Bride’s book
Out of town gutsta at tha wad­
which waa kept by Mrs. W. R. ding ware Mr, and Mra. I&gt;. C.
Howard. Floating hoateasea during McCrary, Mra. Mill*, Mis* Bhrlla
the evening were MUa Ellen Lyon, Cameron, Mra. Lula Miller, Or­
MUa Martha Owtn and Mias Eli- lando; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Dooley,
■abeth Woodruff.
DaLand; Mr*. R. D. Harrison and
The bride and groom left later Mra. Eddl* Stout, Daytona Beach.
tn the evening for a ahort wedding trip after which they will be
For Good Portraits
■t home at 430 Oak Avenue.
Mre. Baron chose for he going
•way outfit, a tw o-plq# aleevalesa
drasa o f olive green sateen with
• contrast o f pelt yellow in tha
Pkoa* l i l t
101 N. Park Ava.
long torao ovarblous*. Her aects-

Todd To Produce
Picture Starring
Mexican Idol

)

THE SANFORD HERALD Mon. July 4, 105*

m iis . e r n e s t

★

★

Page 3

r o L i.r n

★

s corsage of white carnations.
A reception uas held immediate­
ly after the ceremony in the edu­
cational I!ulMing of the church.
The bride's book was kept by

Mrs. Vincent Cara and serving
were Mrs. Lowry Miller, Miss Bar­
bara Chapman Miss Joyce {levels,
and Miss Geraldine Kell.
A Ihrve-lired rake on a lacs
covered lahle surrounded by an
arrangement of fern and asters
and accented by silver candelabra
was cut by the couple.
For a nodding trip to North Caro­
lina. Mr*. Pollili wore a silk print
dress anil a navy lln-’ n duster with
while accessories and a while or­
chid from her bridal bouquet.
Out-of-town guests ineliuled Mlsi
Beth Davis. Shelby, N. C., Commdr.
and Mrs. Rudy Peterson, Jackson­
ville; Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Rags­
dale, Jr., Coral Gables; Mr. and
Mrs. Anthony Walsh, Mr. and Mrs.
Ariel Sage, Mr. and Mr*. Henry
Mrs. Hilda Itsulereon
llarilrsty, Miss Ann Moore, Miss
Kvrlyn Robinson, and Miss Carol
formed a mambo before the bull, Hall. Daytona Reach.
Tlte young couple will reside at
lie even turned bis bock on it
the Lakewood Aparlments, In Jack­
as hr danced.
That was when Todd performed. sonville after July 10.
The producer screamed "Don’t—
you crazy charactert" or words
to that effect and kicked Uic
grandstand savagely.
Despite Todd's pleas, Cantinfla*
continued his daredevil stunts. At
LAST TIME TONIGHT
one point he lay down right in
STARTS 7 :IS
front of the bull. When the tor­
mented animal decided lo charge,
ion doocuu
t’antinflas showed great agility In
JUNM CIAIN
making an esenpo.
CUUIE THYOI
After tlio TV cameras were
MAN WITHOUT
turned off.h e made the kill—such
A STAR
things aro unsuitable for tender
eyes above the bonder. The hull
refused lo give up. f'antlnflns
8:01 — 11:35
walked right up and held a show
PLUS
under its nose. It reportedly con­
tained chloroform. The comic sal
(malty collapsed.

Happy Birthday

Green Pastures: Park
moist
earth or &lt;awdost into a wide shal­
low cake pan. Sow with grass
seed and place the pan in a sun­
ny window, keeping tho rarlh
quite moist. When the surface is
covered with green, let the child­
ren place miniature animals in

A N N O U N C IN G

JwHlna
9:53 Only
CARTOON — NKWg

. . . .

N EW LOCATION
ODEE'S SIGN SERVICE
IS NOW

LOCATED

IN THE

KENT BUILDING
201 Cummcrclnl
Phone

1021

Jameton Studio

L A D I E S D O N 'T W A S H
THOSE BLANKETS!
• Regular Weight * Blankets Dry Cleaned A
Proofed With Famous S u ez System.
REG. PRICE 1.15

THRU JULY •

Momfny kissed Paddy

y.

-fcoDA

ISht i$ proud of tow He drives

Uke a ReaL MAn-cWFu|.

Moth

' '

P E O P L E R E S P E C T GOOD DRI VE RS'
Contributed « o public lenrlce by

SPECIAL PUCK

SM IT H 'S SNAPPIN' TURTLE .
POWER MOWERS — POWER ROGERS
ORLANDO HIGHWAY
-AT*

P H O N E StlS

�f

TH E SAN TORB H ERALD
Be 4
M o n . Ju ly 3. 1935

Fay Crocker Takes
Women's Golf Lead
Into Championship

I

WICHITA, Kan. u n-F ay Crocker,
who grabbed the lead In the open­
ing round and maintained it
through three windy dayt, la the
new Women’a National Open Golf
Tournament champion.
Milt Crocker, o f Montevideo
Uruguay, wound up Saturday pith
a fourth-round T« and a 299 total.
She earned •2,000.
Tied for aecond were t/rnlse
Suggi, Sea hland. G a„ and Mary
Lena Faulk, Thom a ■villa, Ga.
Their 30li brought them &gt;1,123
•piece.
M ill Suggi and Patty Berg of
St. Andrew*. III., who finlihed with
• JOT, were the pre-tournament
favorltea.
Windi with guile up lo 43 m p.h.
hampered player* during the three
day*. M ill Berg ihot the only subpar round of the &gt;7500 meet. She
bad a 71 on her !a*t is hole* over
the 9.330-yard par-72 Wichita Coun
try Club cour*e.

Pro golfer Ted Krofj, a former
i
i Infantry lergeant, wa* wounded
i five time* in Italy and France.
i He alio took part in the Antio
Beach landing
a
t
J
t in r o r i T
o r ru n
rntNTY
J in n * ;,
e r .w iw n i.v :
rot vtv.
r
•T4TK n r rt.n n m | . i&gt; r a n .
1
■ a r r ..
e IN RE THE ESTATE OF
o u i A r . t a t Lo r
*
4 TO ALL WHOM IT MAT CON­
CERN i

Legal Notice

a
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N o lle ' It h«r*t&gt;v tlvan Ih ll Ann it P Waennn (Had litr rintl it*
iarl a A d m ln ltlitir li o f tb# t t at- « f 01 ra P Taylor. *r&lt;-ra»»&lt;l;
th»t tb* HIM h tr pttitlan far (In­
al dlarhara*. and (b it aha *111
apply to tha Honerabla
Ernttt
Moutheldtr. C ou n t' Judae or &gt;&lt;»•
mine)* Cenniy, Florida, an tha
loth day of July. I***, for appro,
vai al taint and for float dlarhara*
at A dm lolttrairlx of tht a tla fr o f
P lea P Taylor. d*&lt; tatad, an fhla
IfIh day of June. ISSl.
Annlr P. IViannn Admlnlaira trlt o f tha ttia ia o f Ol■a P. Taylor, dacraird.

J

NfWICI. IK
IlE R K nV
UIVKN
thal I am tn ra e rd In hualntti at
111 Waat lit Ktrttt undtr tht firtltln ui pama of Hanford K rrlfht
halva** Co and that I Inland lo
raettlar aald n a n t with tht Cltrk
o f tht
Circuit Court,
eim in n lt
County, Florida, In arrordanra « i i b
lha provision o f Ilia
Flrtlllm ia
Rant*
Ktaluta.
ta -w lt:
Hat Hon
l l l . e i Florida Slatntra ISIS.
John K. IVhlta

I* THE CINCI IT COI IT , NINTH
JLOICIAL riR C IIT, IN t i n
ra n - pk n in o l k c o l n t v . rt.o .

t irfriiA N C E n T
■

no . h it
CAMcnoN M Ne a l ,

Plalnlll*.
1
ALICE r. NEAL.
r
rfandant.
NOTICE TO OErEyNO
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^ S B ‘ * a S e ’' k ^ R E R ? 1 NOTIFIED
n that ae Complaint for
tor D lvnrre
l _____ ha&gt;
haan
fit ad a ft ln r t you, and you
x
ara loqutrad to **r»* » cop y of
j your Anawar ar Plaadlna to tha
fcampUlht
CampUIni on
oa ,tha
h , rplain
ja T -H * . ^ t t o j.
par. J. RUBIELL IIOI
Nerth Main atreet,
_____ 0
jr l a n d o r i o « rrlda.
i d a f eand
M filed tha
orf~
the original
A ntw er
e r rieadlna in tha o lflre of Ih*
Clark o f the Circuit Court in amt
fa r gem laoto County.
. , Florida, on
•r hater* tha Ith d a
. _______
ay. . .or
Auauet,,
A - D lf| l. If rail fall to do an,
judamant by default will b* taken
against yau fo r tha rallaf demand-

it

* r&gt;(?NE' AN*S ' Pi R P&gt;ERED at Baalor-l. Florida, this tad day af July,

&gt;

n r

c ir c u it
C o u n ty ,

3llteRrniiilih r .

o

H e rn d o n . C la r k of
c o u r t , K e m io o l*
F In r id * .

L

Hunt P. c

Atlornatr! fa r "W a llftlff

I 'PENNANT M M ?

Cards Take Daytona;
Play Home Tonight
Manager
Exhibits International Field
Prize Man
8 o ’c lo c k .

. . .

,

Sanders Displays
One-Stroke Lead
THOMASVILLE, Ga. UR - Doug
Sandeti of Cadartown, pre-tourna­
ment favorite and defending cham­
pion held a ona-slroke laid today
at the halfway mark In the 37th
annual Piney Wood* golf tourna­
ment.
The championship flight, nar­
rowed to 17 at the end of yester­
day's 18-holas, lied off today for
tha final M hole* over the a,344yard, par-71 Glen Arvcn Country
Club course.
The correct name of former
middleweight boxing champ Tony
Zale la Anthony Florian Zaleakl.

Of Anxious Golfers
Today Begins Chase

ST. ANDREWS, SCOTLAND IF
_An inlernallonal field of 272 golf­
ers. including 14 American* todsr
begin a ch ^ e after the British
Open Championship, tho oldest of
the hig prise* in golf.
The American contingent, led by
former U S Open chemplona By­
ron Nelson and Ed Furgol. are
far away from tha traditional
Independence Day acenaa they
know at home.
With a weekend atorm Just
passed end threat! of more rain
and cold to eomt, the winner will
need all tha great shots of golf,
(he weather wisdom of a trawler
skipper, tha irpn constitution of a
Scottish shepherd, and Just to be
on the safe aide, a few hot toddles
back at his hotel to ward off
pneumonia.
Qualifying play today and to­
morrow will be over the Old and
New courses, with each man play­
ing 1&gt; holes on each. Than the
100 low scorers will move forward
Wednesday to the championship
proper over Ihe par-72 Old Course
with ita 6.IU yards o f bunkers,
double greens, tradition* and hid­
den sorrowi. The New C ount par­
allel to the Old, it rated a atrokc
easier.
After lg-hole rounds Wednesday
and Thursday, tha field will be
cut lo 50 for tha final 3* holes Fri­
day. T / n comes tha great testing
lime e.lh fatigue and the wind
begi 0 ng to lake their toll.

Quillian Defeats
Daniel In Finals

( o o n t i Pfwrr,
^ -w /W lS T p e t

IN A C A S E LIKE T H I»
„ i u s ii a rbal

ru rro*. not a
w aei

who had lost H of 2« their last
previous starts fell on Eddie Lopat and hia aueceisorl for 12 hits,
snapping a live-game Yank win­
ning string.
Cleveland broke loose with 19
hits, including a homer by Al
Smith, to take the series from
Chicago, two games c t of three.
The Tribe rcmaiqpd in third piar*
but moved to within a half gam*
of the Sox. Ray Narkskl, who re­
lieved Boh Lemon, drove in four
runs to help himself grab the de­
cision.
The streaking Rad Sox*, who hav*
won 22 of their last 27, had litti*
trouble subduing Baltimore. Ted
Williams, returning to . -lion for
tha first lime in nine days, con­
tributed one infield single In four
trips. He had been sidelined by
muscle spasms in his back.
Despite Al Kallne's two homer*
and two singles. Kansas City final­
ly Itruggkd home in front of De&gt;
troit on Power'* second homer.
Lm. Sic ate r, me futh ‘a* pitcher
was the winner over George Zu*
verink.

22.
W r *ur
H I fAPMi*
g hr
I S Y 0 A P ft

| ! iff9 m 4

i_I,

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F

A three-run burst In the fifth inning on only two hits

BROOKLYN UP — Ronnie Kline,
23-year-old right-hander, la Exhibit
A of Manager Fred Haney’ a for­
mula which call* for giving hi*
youthful Pittsburgh Pirale* plenty
of experience.
"Wa’re much stronger than moit
people think we are." aald Haney
afUi die r i n t c t ipfit a doubleheader with the league-leading
Rrooklyn Dodgers yeiterday and
Klin* hung up hii aecond victory
In relief in ai many day*
"And wa're going to m a lot
tougher in the aecond half of tha
iea*on when the O’ Brien twins get
In ihape. My Idea of ihifting line­
up* frequently lo give the kida all
the experience poiiibie la paying
dividendi."
Eddie and Johnny O’ Brien,
known for their baikethall exploit!
ai Seattle Univeriily, recently re­
turned from the Army
Rut it was to Kline that Haney
pointed emphatically while be
talked of hi* youth movement.
"He always hid a good slow
curve and now he is developing
a hard curve and control," said
the Tirata manager, “ lie's getting
belter with every game.”
Againit the Dodgcri Saturday,
Kline gave only one hit in two
innings, and yesterday, as the Pi­
rates won the opener 7-4, he
checked them with two htta over
the last seven innings.
What pleases Haney still more
was lltil Kline, a native of Gallery,
a western Pennsylvania hamlet nr
l.soa didn’ t Issue a walk In yes­
terday's stint. Ha issued one Sat­
urday.
Ai a starter this year Kllna has
had tough going, finishing only
three of hii 14 games. But in relief
it haa been a different alory. Ills
over-all record now ahowa six wins
against 10 defeats.

If A d d age Holds True,
It's Yanks, Dodgers
By JACK RAND
The Associated Proas
If tha old Tourth of July laying
ntiU hold* true, it will be the Dodg­
ers and Yankaas in the World
Series at Yankee Stadium Sept.

The Dayton* Beach Tshndere, beaten last night by Shnford's red-hot Cardinals. 6 4 will travel here to take on
the Cardinals tonight at Memorial Stadium. Gam* time is
plus sterling clutch pitching by
Rogat Cook gave tha Cardinals
last night's victory.
Connie Buliar and Ran Schmidt
ainglad In all thraa nine In tha
fifth that chased Daytona’a starter
Ixm L ift r and brought tht Cards
from a 2-4 difirlt,
Cocos'* Joe Petriell* pitched
fhree-hit ahutout ball, then won
his own gams by scoring tha only
run In Uia Florida State U a gu t
feature last night.
The righthander doubted off
Lakeland’s Dave Eater in the
ninth and crossed the plate after
Orlando Gonial*! singled. Extar
•Uowed tight hits.
A crowd of 411 law the 1-0 game
at Cocoa. Lakeland made a big
threat in the aaventh when two
errors put runntra on sacond and
third with one mai\ out but centerfielder Carloi Rodrlguea staved off
a run by a brilliant eatch of Jack
Liddy's line drive.
A pitcher also was the hero at ■
game attended by 07* at Gaineaville whtra for tha sacond night
in a row Norman Hughes defatted
leading Orlando. Tha acora was
19-0 la 10 Innings.
•
Hughas, who went nine full in­
nings Saturday night, pitched I
and two-thirds last night after re­
lieving in tha first when Orlando
acored four runt on alx walks, ■
wild pitch and a sacrifice. Ger­
main Pitiaro tripled in two runs
to aew up Iht game in the 10th.
He elao had a tingle, double and
four RBI'a In aix tlmaa up.
Wait Palm Beach aignad ■ work­
ing agreement with Milwaukee and
changed ita name from Indiana to
Brsvaa but the change didn’t help
■■ St. Petersburg won S-S. Tbs
Isat-place Saints chased Dave Ho­
gan with threo runa in tha firat
three innings. The decision went
to Caspar del Monto who went all
tha way and now has a record of
10 victories, I defeat!.
aaaroRD

M W 04
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HUY

M E * CL,
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COMPMACK if
CONTlHUtfi, W/LL
MBAH SOMUCM n

M TTtR* AMP

rue 5oV

/ rear

PiNHANT HOPS*.

M A R P tM S .

Standings
PLOEIDA BTATE I . K S n i l
w
Pal
L
(Vrlanda
t l 11 .414
f n , r&gt;«
4« IS .ssa
41 St ,143
r&gt;a&gt;t'&lt;na Raarh
W. Palm Rtach
41 SIS .I I I
saa
4* 4*
lla ln a s'tll*
IMa f»r4
(Ml 41 .48*
Lakalan*
11 4 * . ,s»s
21 SS . u t
l i . Patarahura
a
Y S :» T K n n * Y » • c a t t.TB
at.
Patttrabura S.
W ait
Palm
Eaarh I
M a te r* • n a r i* * * Eaarh 4
C ocoa &gt; I^ikalan* o
(JalntatHI* It, Orlando I 1* la.

BlBf*

T o u s t ' i a r r .D i i-E
flalnaavllla al at Petersburg
DayiAoa Naarh a l Baafar*
Orlando at t'oroa
R e at Palm Rtarh at f-akalaat
aATIO NAL LEA (ILK
W L
Pet
B rooklyn
St
Ultra ao
IS
Mltwauka*
,»«i
Cincinnati
.in
;«id
New York
,««a
Fhlladalnhla
Louie
.441
.141
n tU b u r a h

Prar Ih
h. ro o k
Tarrall
If
RPARTANBURO, i.C , (ft - Bill
MUIar Ih
Quillian of Sfattle, Wash., lived Rilttar rf
up to hii top-seeded ranking In the K&lt;-hmTkf ef
Th'rnall e
Mth annual Mid-Dixie Tennla Tour­ antaar as
nament her* Saturday defeating Caak w
Sam Daniel of Columbia in tha BATTOia BEACH
finals, 4-4, «•], t-4, 7-5.
Wanner
.
’
Mike Green of Miami Beac&gt;i, "la
Raia n a lt It
Fla., then teamed up with Quillian
ii!h*TV et
W lt r ef
to win tha doublai title, * 2 . 1-T, *4
tb
over Allen Quay of Fort Lauder- MarialtFalriaa a*
data, Fla., and BUJ Umataedter of Haffall a
Later p
AbbtviUt. Quillian and Or*Mw«ra Tnmmr
p
seeded No. 1.
a-Latana
Bmli f i*
Quillian waa awarded the feyra
Total a
_
Struck aut far T t n m r In (Ih
Kennedy trophy for bin singles vic­ a—
ItB *08 M B .
Baa fa r t __________
tory.
D n issa ... ......... sat a** a*aE — Marfall. Mlrham. Lagar,
Tharaall *. Millar. R—Ters-Sl I,
The Monmouth Park race track
MUIar, Haidar, Ranaatt,
Fairly
n »t —
—T
- x -U * „____,
employa M vacationing students, Mlch*nik’ Mlrlalll*
rapraaantlnf 41 different college*.

TF.aTERBara BEatt-Ta

at l/ouia i - s, C h ira c* a-ta
Milwaukee T, Clnrlnnall I
"
Turk «; Philadelphia
Philadelphia *■
Pitlaburgh 7*1, E reoh lrn »■*
T O D A Y '! 8( H NOLLE
Brooklyn at Philadelphia
Saw York at Flltaburak
hi . Laul* at M llwauksa
Claclaaatl at Chlcaao
A M E E trA Y LEA RCB

pirn

i

New T ork
C h icago
tTlavalani
Boaton
Datrait
Kanes* C lip

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4i
4}
Si
It

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IISSt .iiii
.141

L *llm "ri‘ "

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41 .411

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VEBTEED AT’ a BEBL'LTS
Kaoaaa t’ ltv I. P etrsit a t l la a la * i
W aahlngion a, New Tark •
ria v a la n t 14, rh lra a a a
■aataa T. Ealtlmara f
____T 5 1 BCMEDLLE
rh lra a a at Kanaaa C lip
I
Pal ro ll at Clavaland
feoatoa at Kaw York
t
W ash la g ton at Baftlm ara

iK iR ivw sm '

MIC S4ICY HOI HE

MOLD ONI TMAfT

B y A la n M o v t r

Tony Trabert
Returns Safely
Home With Title

Brooklyn hardly looked like a
pennant winner over the weekend,
losing three of four to the last
place Pittsburgh Pirates. In fact.
It appeared they were going to
drop their first double-header of
the season until Gil Hodges hit a
three-run homer to pull out the
aecond game.
It’s a sad commentary on the
National League "race" that the
Pirates have done the best job of
beating Ihe runaway Brooks.aThey
have won five from the Dodgers,
tops In the league.
Pittsburgh made it three straight
over Brooklyn on Ronnie Kline’s
fins relief pitching in the 7-3 first
gama but Hodges’ homer and tho
combination of Pilchers Billy Loes
and Clem Labmt salvaged the
aecond for the Dodgers 3-1.
Chicago remained U ’ i games
behind the leaders by splitting a
double with St. Louis. The Cards
grabbed the opener I- Jon Floyd
Wooldridge’ s five-hitter but Jim
King, Hank Sauer, Ernie Banks
and Dee Fondy hit homers for a
10-5 Cub victory in the aecond.
Milwaukee oulaluggcd Cincinnati
7-3 with home run punch by Bobby
Thomson, Eddie Mathews and Del
Crandall. The New- York Giants
nipped Philadelphia 4*3 when re­
liefer Jack Meyer uncorked a wild
pitch with the bases loaded in tha
seventh.
Although the New York Yankees
bowed to Washington 3-0 on the
fine five-hit pitching of veteran
Johnny Schmitt, they dung to
their 614-game lead over the run­
ner-up Chicago While Sox, who
bowed to Cleveland 14-9.
Frank Sullivan won hii lllh as
the Boston Red Sox hinded Balti­
more ita 12th 'straight defeat 7-2
and Vic Power's aecond home run
of the game in tha 14th gave Kan­
sas City a 9 « decision over Detroll the A's fifth .consecutive vic­
tory.
Kline, winning on relief for the
aecond day in a row, retired the
last 1* Dodger batten in lueeei
aioa. After a halting start, tha Pi
rates finally tied tha score and
forged ahead on a pair of triplet
by R o b e r t o Clemente. Frank
Thomas and Gene Freese hit tin­
m en for Pittsburgh, Cart Furillo
for Brooklyn.
A Brooklyn pitcher failed to go
the rout* for the 12th straight lime
When Loes tired la tha heat and
gav* way for a pinch hitter In
tha aecond gam*. Labiiw finished
up for a combination six-hitter.
The Cubs' split waa their eighth
In 12 doubleheaden with Sam
Jooea winning hii ninth after bob­
bing in and out of trouble due to
nine walks. Manager Harry Walk
er of tha Carda, appearing In hia
first National Leagua gama alnca
1*40, cam* through wlUf a pinch
atagi* and acored a nln. la tha
opener, the Carda finally topped
tha Cuba after losing seven straight
to them.
Warren Spahn waa torched up
for Ted Kluizewaki’i 2t*h homer

WIMBLEDON, England (JR Tony Trabert return* home to the
United Slatei with tha Wimbledon
men'a singles tills safely tucked
away and a ntw serving technique
to purtle the world's court atari.
Trabert rarely uses hit booming
firat aerva these days. It Is al­
ways then In reserve but the Cin
cinnati Davis Cup star won the
coveted Wimbledon Utla without
ualng it
Denmark'i Kurt Nielsen, tha
man Trabert dafeated In tha final,
waa the firat to admit that Trabert’a aervlce had him worried.
"I thought ha made smart use ol
hii service," laid tha Dane.
Trabert uses a three-quarter spin
aerva and alma to gat tha first
one ia court each time. The main
object of that *is that ha can go
to the net, probably get in th* first
volley and so gain an early ad
vanUga.
Mrs. Dorothy Round, tha former
Dorothy Little who won the Wim­
bledon’s woman'!' ainglta title in
IBM and 1*37, called Trabert "as
good as, If not batter than, any
other champion."
Writing In the London Sunday
Exprosa she said: "Hit strikes car­
ried him to victory ia tba final
because they wer* more powerful
and accurat* than Nielsen’s—and
b* la quite ruthless on court.”
Trabert has no intention of turnlag professional before th* Davia
and Wally Poat’s Ifth but want the
Cup Chilling a Round this fall. rout* for Milwaukee to whip Jo*
Aftar that ha la *ip*ct*d to go for NuxhaU.
the hig money.

Wild Flag Scrap
Puts Birmingham
In Driver's Seat
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Birmingham Barons., who
suffer Ihe longest pennant drought
In Southern Assn, annals, occupied
tha driver’s seat this July 4 in the
old Dixie circuit’s hottest flag
scrip in IS years.
Birmingham overtook Memphis
yesterday with a 2-0 verdict over
the Chicks, second straight for tha
Barons over the former pace set­
ters.
The Barons, who haven’t flown
the bunting since 1931, had leithander Dave Benedict (7-2) and
John Wingo (9-5) act to face tho
tribe in tonight’ i doublehcader.
John Gabler, who evened his rec­
ord at *-*, threw the Sabbath ihuL
out.
Third plac* New Orleans staved
off a last-inning Chattanooga rally
for a 3 2 edge over the Lookouts,
Nashville swept a twin bill from
Mobile S-t and 4-3 and Littla Rock
trimmed the Atlanta Crackers 4-1
on Milt Jordan’s two-hitter.
Monmoulh Park offers thren
types of thoroughbred racing.
The horses compete on the dirt
course, the grasl course and over
tha hurdles.

nJpj*likP

Hwrieon
Dillard,
Olympia
■•fiig tad hurdl* champio* la
Lao Duroehar et tha Glaate and
IMS tad 1MI mpectivaiy, raMay*
Smith of thn Phili engaged
oahmi * apeclal scroll from tha
. JUNIOR GOLF BET
in a dual of managerial strategy
BaUviaa govanimpwt la. approWEST LAFYETTE, tnd. fA F ) ia the aeventh Inning at Philadaleigttm af hit good will lour I* —The tth Junior Amatura Cham
hia. La* sent up aid Gordon to
InuhJ* o f th* U. I . Golf Ai m .
tryat for Hank Thompson and Smith
I * held at th* Purdue University
had May*r, n right-bandar, replace
•ottan Billy Jo* Patton and south emirs* Aug. a through i
tha left-handad Ran Mroiinski
Hnjnrtn Buna warn aalectad as Entrie« a rt ape* lo amataura who againit
th* right-handed pinch hit­
(bn ditHandlng amatew athletes will not have reacted their Mth
ter. Wb«n Dumber yanked Gor­
tt the y*ar by the Carolina! M ilM ay by mtdaight af Aug. 1
don tad sent up Dust yRhadsi.
a tafly, Smith ordered Rhodes
patent totentioniUy, Meyer thn
P«pp*p . Martin, mrmar Card- Damn Jbotball team, halla Warn
wiid-piuhed to upset the matterbMl atar, In maaagtng Miens, Sooth Bead, lad., where tb* MtOn., M Os data A Sally Lnagan. vanity is Muted.
Mkkty Varoan'a throe-rue ho­
mer gav* Schmlta mom than be
•ended at Yankee Stadium at the
M-ycuvetd left-hander boosted hia
matins* record against New York
I* H The

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TOR SANFORD HERALD Mon. July I. IMS
it s Worth Advartlaiag U

CLASSIFIED ADS

FOR SALE — S Bearoom Home.
Vs Block from South Side school.
Call 3S4L

CONCRETE

ACROSS
1 Cry. as
a crow
4 Loudly
0. A lake
In tlaly
10 Wsnne.s’
52. Head of
an » N v )'
14 Light boat

Sherman Concrete Pip* Ca.
Phone 1134 • A. B. r e t * n o c .» m p
Oat Weal 12th 8L
Associates • A. li. £ * t*£*®*
P. J. Cheaunon. Garfleld W|WILL
YOU
ACCEPT $40, TRADE
letts. John Jleiseh, B, W. Wil­
IN ALLOWANCE FOR YOUR
lis mi. A. C. Doudoey. Land SurOLD MATTRESS A SPRINGS?
vsyor.
_____
Regardless of make or condl-

rather
IT. Ijn d under
cultivation
JS. Audience
It* Magpie
tEur.t
(8I. Molybde.
num (sym .)
22. Sanction
2.V Hoisting
device
2A Antelope
tAfr.)
29 Saul
31. From
32. Clique
33. Shinto
tempto
34. UinU
39 A riitleof
■tefense
41. Speak
4.7. Force along
41. Braided

Qutltcp Mattress A Box Spring.
General CantraeUa*
Reg. MS.OO., Lets Trad# $09.00
m i Low
• Comm treial—Custom
Guaranteed 10 Veers.
Cost Homes
Roy si Comfort Mattress A Box
1»1
13M MtUaavUle Ave.
Spring $110.00 —Less Trsde —
$7900. Guaranteed 10 Years.
Three bedrooms, screened porch, PB Special M atveis a Box Spring
Reg $01.00 Less Trsde —$39.00
two lots with trees, garage. An
Guaranteed 10 Years.
older homo but the price Is only
ECHULS BEDDING CO.
$6930 with terms.
Robert A. Williams, Realtor Corner 2nd A Magnolia Ph. 1333
“ B ed" Bamberger. Mgr.
Raymond C . U f d fa la t ***** ato
Open Menday's tfl • p. m.
Phone 1173 Atlantic Bank Bids.
yrivat* baths. U4 W. T in t SL

tSi

Seminole Realty

Li585: W i S T S * " ®
Park Aye.

METIREE

T. W. HERO

_____

h.

a.

IU

WORK WAKTRP

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ta— nritrxAi, 1

14-

WANTED — By middle age man, LAWNMOWERS
nnarpened
a jcb a i clerk nr salesman pre­
Bicycle A Geoersl Repair.
ferred. Reply P, O. Box 402,
Stanley's Bike Shop
Sanford.
______ __
310 E. 4th SI. T4L 2434

» mmwgM o p p o e iw iw e s 12 ENVELOPES, letterheads, state­
FOn SALE - Small Used Furni­
ture and Clothing Business.
Priced right! Write P. O. Box
72.1 (Irsrifje City. Fla
14-

HPBCIAL SEKTICW

—14

Plembiag. Rrecxy Dealing

M. G. HODGES
Serv&gt;ce on All Water Pump*—
Welli Drillrd - Pnmna
Facia Read Phone 70S

c o , rtic.
ORLANDO Momma SenUoaL Or­
« . Pfceoe I1446
344 Booh Perk Ave.
lando Evening Star. CaUlatph
pope

Ray. 1144-1.
1431 Mustang motorcycle. Good
condition. Phone 2UT-J-3.
AN INVESTMENT
USED PLUMBING FIXTURES
Practically new 2 bed room home
1T03S4 Hag. 3 bedroom furnished
fury;
FooUockeia ............. Special 17-43.
kitchen
equipped,
City
water,
e p t |U. muathly. Pt&gt;. 1473.
but outside City on Lot S5 x 110 Paint .............................. *2.30 gal.
All siaes (arpoulins.
ft. Paved roed. Now rented
ARMY-NAVY SURPLUS
M l. per Mo. $6,000. *1,300 cash,
Phone 1231
SIO Sanford Ave.
Phone Orlando 31198.
10tn Sanford Ave.
Phone lilS
RAYMOND % RAIL, BROKER
room a p t
THE CURIOSITY 8HOP
S. D. Birnleymsn, Associate
location.
" l I K f
M. ^fsrrUon^ Associate__ 11-92 at Hiawatha. Used A new RANDALL ELECTRIC CO.
T V SERVICE CENTER
furniture, antiques, bric-a-brac.
n w M M .
• Factory Supervised Service
Come in and brouse around.
i t . utilities Per yew Real Estate sirtu
t room .furabbad
• Hoese calls I a. m. till I p n
Cullen and Harkejr, Realtors YOU don't have to see the credit
(All makes and models)
i e
manager
to
save
dollars
legiti­
241 N. P u t Ave. Phase SUE
l i t Mag. Ave.
Pbona 1400
mately on our GIGANTIC Re­
move* SALE.
S Bed., Nothing to do —Just
J*
FHA
f* In,
move
. A -l condition, El. Kit*
ROBINSON MUSIC CO.
end regain.
t w g % \ % s n . ,!s x i
separate dining room, 3 229 N. Orange Ave. Orlando, Fin.
Nothing Down—Small Menthl]
414.
utility1 rooms, eerporte, TV an­
Payments
tenna, trees on 1V4 lot. beck Baby Red A Mattress . . . . $14.00
Furnished 3 bedroom apt. IU .
Sherman ConcreU Co.
yd. fence, $12.M0. n o t Mellon- Good Steamer Trunk ......... 430
monthly. Also 1 bedroom furNice Utility Cabinet ......... 12.00 OM Warn IMb
vflie, Phone 2121-w.
Rltchen Cabinet, aa new . . . . 15.00
PLUMBING
LOT — 73 x 130 on Paved Roed
1* Bed,. Ipner
Inner Spring . . . . 35.00
H a Plantation Estates. Will is- Cabinet
Como, Coffee Table i s .00 Cantract a id rm U r work. F n *
___loot Co
eatlmata*. R. L Harvey. » t
erafict. for $700.00 Apt. l, 301$ Late Livtol
J v ln g Room
___________
35.00
Suita
Sanford Avt. Ph«n* lim
Sanford Ave., Sanford.
Extra Good, Dlnnett* Set .. 13.00
(Hundreds of other itema.)
I bedroom bouse. 4tt per rent
P. M. CAMPBELL
^
ifi l(fis A* X« Flowift
Super Trading Post
mortgage. 440 monthly. l$0S
General Contractor
Open Evenings. 17-B2 South
Summerlin.
“ Hamss of DliUnetion”
l-Way t i n
Phene ten
S Bed Boom House, Kitchen fur­ Wood Casement W i n d o w s , 4
niture, space heater. Venetian
For
Better
Piunmmg
lights; fit openings IT x 50Vi A
bltodij Hero wood floors— 'tile
ROSR
TMCMTS
See or CeU
27 x 37; Screens to match. Call
bath: Lew down payment. Cell
W .J . KING
M44-M after 3 p. m.
nights 1T40-M. or see at 3104
ne FurSshed
I
4 Room A|p t CaO
« Sooth Perk
Amelia.
MM.
Dragila* service, Lakefronts A
A n.
S LOTS — Dreemwold Section on
dttehmg Fttimates gives. Phone
str Maple Ave. at 25th SL TUX — 34 abort, excellent condi­
Geneva
2444, Orlando 12304.
me 3290-W.
tion. Phone 444-W.
Sanford 222L
_
iant to sterna. Phone A. U ik teLiving Room LOVESEAT and
t
ner. 1411.
Cbaly.. Geed second-hand condlM1CKLV " Punished Apdrtmeat.
_ . TRADE — J.ck.ODvIlll, |f l i n J 3 M 0 i^ a l ^ J k ^ i
Tint floor, elan Gance Apt
a rt 3 Bedroom Home: Twoeear
a r Oarage
____ Apt. on so x 131 F t
— ed lot. 300 Ft. from
LendKaped
Mattrna A Vox Bgrtagi
Ocean. I Block*
B
from business
_ Renova tad
enter. Veil
blued at $14,000. FOR
FOMI In or near Sanford.
a Room Fumlahed A p t Cloee la.
E C H O L S * B E D D IN G C O .
light consider Busmen
Business ProPro­
107 Locust AM ,

s

IS ' S H BK

Y

n B O R ^ E U IC S
» s s r m w r iia
"fiT M S M E S 1

’W H P g y M

vWA&amp;.*i£,s:iUr

&lt;- utkmatm m
*K

an/. WTW, Patterson. 124-Mh
ve.. South Jacksonville leach,

FOR SALE v a Ruom furnished apt.,
bath.

30th Anniversary
SPECIALS

y r »a s £ g fig-?

a NF

iT tv*.
H-

Sale — A X C .

ixer puppies, krtodTe
ua color, six week* old.
S
23S3-J.3.

'^

10 JO

_
Metal utility Cabtaat 1230
Rag. 24.44 44" Metal
#1' Cabinet
)

Mather of Sanford

M

T e m p le

SL

John WflUamn Ian.
4)7 Su m

AUaattc
&gt;4

iT -A tT X iH oa a K A -T K A n jta x

S s

------normal dogi need to malnJarn sturdy vigor end they love
I h m

tS5f Cm

Phene Ml

•R U sa sa W k

m Si n r n

S a p fijr

ir 3 r j n*
r ««

im r v X .

» ! '• « « .
* °- *“
•nCNOGRAFHXI and File
Ft d a rk .

—SI

L
Mil—Plano
Tcchnlrlan
Phone 1164. Route 1. Sanford

SMALL BUSINESS
U you have a amali btumeaa to a
secluded part at town and are
Interested In getUng customers,
list the service you offer to toe
Classified column uf Use Saulord
Herald. Cell UOL

CARS
BOUGHT BOLD TRADED
Roy ■ eel's UsM C an
Sanford Av*. A ltth KL
FOR SALE — Mint sell trans­
ferred. will vacate Immediately,
27 ft. aluminum trailer plus
The Want Ad Department Is
m u n i with medal bunk beds.
Full
price
for quick
isle open from 4:30 e. m. unUI 3:30 p.
11.500. Mrs, Todd, Sanford, n . each business day except SatDeadline for
afternoon.
Phone 3331.____________________
lb wstk^day insertions Is l;oo p. m.
the day preceding
leding publication,
pi
V“ **!
■
ay
aas eomlfig
In 1
later than
, l f l to
ROBSON’S SPORTING GOOD’* 3:00 p. m. will ne publls
Uahed under
WILL RE CLOSED JULY 4, 3 Too Let* To Classify,
A R FIELD TESTINO EQUIP­
MENT.
Call ns about our business rate*.

How will yen ewap?
How will you Trade?

Your old Motor for a
Better grade - KMNRUDEI

ROBSON

Sporting

Good*

Fvlnrude Sale* A Service
104 F. 1st 84.
P bgjr^ aa

14 - FU RW m jRR- I*he4S Oee4e m

IS

P —Fl.rXTTICAL s u w c m - R

P RIGIDAIRK

_

eng service. O.
Fla. PhetM
I44S-W after «

Sui
m &amp; U BDBU I
0*w

IP gOOk AO

Ik * above Aline ed can bo run
S full deya for only $1.40, $ days
fe» only M J0 end oea day for T3c

DUPLAY

BARGAIN!
Thin home haa Oalfaloofa,
Ceramic Tit* Bath. Dining
Arta, Large Living Room
and Kitchen Equipped with
G. E, Appliances.
Teleghase 1*1 after I P. K
for aggelutment to oea

US W at M

X

Ph. u

IS

ii
zo

24

SI
41

j*&gt;

1Kh

41

n

14 t

44

i2*

ti

tt

140

:•*

%
40

44

45

i
4*

#4

I4S

Ah
i

V/V -

*8

41
w

1
7-S

,

DOWN
18. Places
where
1. Instrument
seals
used in
ment due
■ re
defense
to use
2. Ttin Orient
tuinted
8. Strike,
3. Tree
ei a fly
20. Jewish
month
4. Music rote
9. Comfort
8. Fur-bearing On Beauti­
10. Every, of
ful
mammal
two or tnoro
aquatle
6 A cascade
11. Bind with
7. One-spot
bird
s rope
card
23. Congers Gitvrdasr's Arums
12. Irrigates
36. Call out
8 . Tho chair
26. Toward
14. Fit
sharply
the lee
of s
13. Goddess of
aoverelgn
27.'To work old 37. Additional
volcanoes
amount
material
11. Coin* of
(Hawaii)
' Itntn anew
39. Body of
Latvia
16. Excla­
water ^
form
13. tttcher
mation
40. Arch N.
13. Furnished
29. Recognlred
17. Toward
42 . Foreign
With shoes
truths
16. Body of
office
13. Kind of
30. lltvrr
water
tabbr.)
furl
deposit
19. City (Nev.)
21. Unfasten
2 1 Ban away
e
s 0
4 A
1
t
21. French
%
paintrr
10
i
20. Inland see
L
m
(Asia)
12
&gt;5
11
W
26. Ehelley
drams
lb
IS
3J. Tha smooth
breathing
17 20
18
n
(phonet.)
$
*
32. Sick
25
u
£1
33 Greek tetter
:
34. Whit?
2S
24S3 Cereal
%
I
I
grain
21 so
28
2b 27
ST.Wtra
v;
measure
33
32
31
38. Not so
I
difficult
if
45 56
54
40. Foot
i
covering
40
47
3*
,41 Close, as
i
hawk’s
44
m
v y j 41
eye*
42. Fashion
i
44
4S
41. Book clasp
1
■44 Iain
i
J
Ta Jk
debt

TELEVISION
tvsum vr mtsxBL e
1 "0
* la
« nr&gt;
Silft
«:Il
t »a
;
&gt;.110
R SO
T'liin
I01I1O
&gt;0:1a
lo jn
ttibn
11:11
1H4S
ill
T:eo
I.ft#
SiJS
ii ft
llift#
11:11
it rSW
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11 : 1#

1 :ft#

v n tn ir
am iN M ouiv
Open llniiio
fluptrnift n
N«w», av'thtr. Spla.
CP* TV VtW'l
Juttui L&gt;Rnia
luirns lr A11»n
Yi.ur TV Tbsati#
1 I.'IVR I.ucv
Xthel a allisrl
Hiiinm-r Tlii&gt;alri»
J:*&lt;1 I’srhsm
.Irr ronnasr'ilRl
Naim) Th«
n* » i A WsaiStr
I.*l* Show .
Sian Off
T ir a n a r
MUHXIXG
Tsai ratitm -o
Marnlng Shaw
Phcpotra Ou&gt;4*
Newt
Arthur Q ritr » r
ftrihri It Plrr,
Vstunl l.»4r
l-fph-i Uf l.lt*
►«jrrh for Trow
riulrtira Llfht
Kltclitn Show
AS'TERXOO*
tvsle. T’vorR.
JrcS. - „Lawls
llo u stp a rlr
Pig pRvoff

till
»:«•
llSft Itnb Croshr
Si*e PrlrhlR r l&gt;sr
1:1* b*cr•1 aiorm
1:10 On Your Arrouat
Bead Of Ufa
Garry Monro
ll« opin llouit
w o r d Tv r n i m t a
Moxnav
m m n n x

of Firoatoaa

tiot
B .A Ib .rt
p
r ,Lv
--m aa Ruayoa

PIPE CO.

|

\A

I)«4

It

I
1
ta i l

A aiO S B r o t h t r o

SUPPLY Y A R D

i
II

W

NnwR.xVoathor-SplB
John Daly Pitwa
Prow Ft* ra«a
Musical* varloilaa
Duval S h a w

H IL L LUM BER &amp;

8

10

It

lb

A d v o n lu ro w ith H n rlo IV a ii
H u m o r O f tha J u l ia to

old es*

1

DAILY C R O S S W O R D

S

3 Bedroom Horn* in Wyn*
Rewood. 2 Year* Old.

Am

b

i

(naut)
4fi Gang
47. Native
chief* iP. I )
4S Feminine
pronoun
DOWN
J Venomous
Rnsko
. A »hadr*
r f brown
. Cloth
. From:
prefix

A little specs Uka this will get
iur m ctisge before our more
an 10.000 readars. Tell 'em to
day I Pnom* 1431._______________

Buy your Furniture at Harry's
Warehouse Furn., Co., at 401 W.
lsi. 5t. All nstionally adv. furallure at warehouse prices.

112
"Men who have teamed to
usa tool*. . . build things. .
make home repairs and im*
provements — are respect­
ed In this m e c h a n i c a l
“buiJdlnK” world of ours.
Bast way to learn ii to
make thing! with lumber.
Let’s stop in at 213 W, 3rd
S t and pick up lumber for
a workbench.”

FfAWO WKRVICK

It will pay YOU to sea US before
yuu buy. Opto Xvealiigi and
Ciunrtiys,
Eaalatde Trailer Sale*,
Palalka, Fla.

s i s a

Gtv#

beat*

at
M

w

PERSONAL* TO

B. let M.

•

a id
Cell

Efcep
W ant A d
a n d a sk f o r
d a p a rtm e n t
H era ld

i ' S " S X fii

Chairs

S e e * *

registered

It*B 8 0
To R im A
J u st O i l 1821
th a W a n t A d
S a a fe r d

L.

Preferred Rataa to
Policyholdera

On.

OU11
R t f. 14.43 Double Door

A o .T W T U S t T B S

For

m i l gated eat
hnraeae

One hour - Wain and Damp
Dry
One hour V4 • Wash and Dry
Fold
Finished Laundry
Ssnltone Dry Cleaning
8 o a th n ld e
la u n d r o m a t
South Side Foodmart BMg.
1*4 East tSlk 84.

PHONE 81*

ATLANTIC i

fa V U i

B t tr J s e

IS— LAUNDRY BERWICK —21

m OUGHTO** i n SURa n l i

S Room A p t JOB Avacedo.

I»

(

1 1. Impair­

(Air Condltlnnrd Salon.)
165 80, Oak Ave. Phone &gt;71

-M B

W4

3

A cn o .s s

HARRIETTS
BEAUTY NOOK

P

14-1

—24

F nr l,o v e lir r H a ir
GET PROFESSIONAL CARE!
E va-B ean B eau ty S h op
Phone 563

ment!. involcei, hand bills, and
r o g r a m * , etc. Progressive
'rintlr.R Cn phone 403 — 403
West I.Hit St.
FLOOR BANDUIO • Finishing;
Osk floors furnished, laid A fin
Mini. In business since 1920.
E. F. Stevens; Route 2, Box 227;
Call 716 11-4 before 7 a. m. or
after 6 p. m.

HKAITTV FARIA)KH

A

il

cord

to

1

I■j

ataaa uanLi

□ fi'JCJ UUMDiiR
23. A
a a a a o n a 5? a
srrtng
H M n u n n u a r ’j
flower
a u tssu
26. Proved H a a aa u
a n ^ a c is
to be
□ l iu u s a w
wrong
BBtrj rcuaunts
27. Tart o f Lgn u u iiiu n a n
uenntiM
aaau*
"to bo"
u a a o a tJ K ii
CO Famous
QdiDlO
botant* J
FSi
cal
gardens. Yrtterdit'l Atl.tv
35. DuEng
pstchiil;
33 Spear
40. Dow
of
42 Diver
grass
31 Hang
tSp. t
name)
fluttering
13 Tensile
33. Afresh
strength
37. Spirit
lamp
tabbr.) &gt;

3. 100 000
rupeea
1 India)
6 Fatron
eaint of
sailors
7. Forearm
bone
?. A door
attendant
9 Sleeveless
garment
1t Mold again
]3. Outbursts
of anger
16 Knock
20. Saluted
22 miRcellsny
23. Ancient
24. Virginia
tabbr )

15 C hoose

Osier - •Waller Bowen, Inc.

__

rifsiata u n u ' j

DAILY C R O S S W O R D

Ready Mixed Concrete. Concrete
Block. Sand. Gravel. Cemeat
Concrete Pipe to Meet All Quali­
fications.
Phene 206 _

Sewing Machine*, and Repairing
3 Badroom home located in one B EETS 144 3. Park fhon# lisa.
of
the
beat
sections
on
two
lota
Rallaway aai Baby Bad*
on corner.
Beautifully land­
RED-I-M1X CONKRETE
scaped. hardwood floors, strict­
Miracle Concrete Ca.
ly modern.
• Elm Ave.
PhoM 1334
3 bedroom home, hardwood floors,
Avalon Apta- EflWaaey.
FIT FOR A QUEENtiled bath screened porch and Foam Rubber Mattresses, Inner, u s.
earporte. Excellent condition.
S p r i n g Mattresses, Couches,
Price 411,000. Easy terms.
Baby Beds. Renovating, Uphol­
art. MO P u b
FURNISHED A|
stering and Slip Cover work.
Ava.
This home his two Urge bed­
NIX BEDDING MFC. COa tuuiui
rooms, sepirate dining
room, 1341 Sanford Ave.
PI
Furnish *d KUrtanett* apt*; Air
Jalousies
large utility
room,
.. i- . ----.-J
yg ,0I1
Cnndltionad. fiambcrUna Court.
porch. It is located on two lota,
—
Factory
Ton
—
South City limits Highway 1T-M.
his
double
garage.
F
Priced
A
ln
m
b
i
r
a
$12,000. Kitchen equipped.
S Bedroom Homo. H
Iron
Venetian BIUmM
Souths! da school. Call 3S4L
You should set this lovely lake Enclosed bead. Sag-proof
ran with piaetle ends. Plastic or
front home with 96 feet of like
SEE Seminole Really for Desirrayon tapes. Cottas or nyLa
frontage. It has two bedrooms,
ib lr Homes and Apts. Phono 27.
cords.
2 baths, Florida room, large
living room, closed garage end Snakarik Glum and Palat Co.
I FURNISHED Apt. Phono 432-W.
storage. Good boating and fish­ 113-114 West 2nd 81
Phone US
COOL— 5 Room Furnished Apart
ing and bathing beach,
ment. Front and back screened
•1 VARIETIES PANELING
C A. WH1DDON, SR.
porches. Garage. Tako one
Native and Foreign Woods.
■ i s Real Estate Broker
child. No Pets. 606 Palmetto
See Them At
111 8. Park
Ph. 120
Ave. Shown by appointment,
Sherman Concrete Pipo Co.
phone 1 7 4 4 . _____________
“
Whether baying or safltog, It will Ont West 11th S t
Furnished cottars for couple, or
pay you to see:
Used
furniture,
appliances,
tools,
J. W. HALL, REALTOR
with baby. IHTElm Avenue.
etc. Bought-sold. Larry's Mart.
Florida State Rank Building
I Bedroom furnished house. *M.«t •Call H a ir
321 E is t l s t SL Phone 1431.
Phone 1734
per month. Phone t i l or 743-W.
METAL ROOFING
I after 4:00 p. m.
COUNTRY HOME!
New la Stack. 3-V Crimp -1 1 4 "
Doma, fumii
S bedroom house, nicely furnished.
Corrugated— J H " Corrugated.
ter, ell modern conveniences,
Get ell Your roofing needs at
Porch, eerporte end large lawn.
me
ai
situated,
approx,
ope
acre
of
eet
on
appn
1/ i ngwood. J . R. Grant, Call
mUea west Sherman Concrete Pl$e Co.
good high land.
land, 4 miles
Phone 2443
of
___Sanford,
anford, total
total price ie only Out Wesi 13th SL
$4,900.00, with terms.
UNFURNISHED 4 Root
AIR CONDITIONING
hone UJ4-J.
with 3 Bedrooms. Pboi
Room or House ,

Page S

By ST A N LEY

THE O L D H O M E T O W N

If It’s Worth Ah/ thing

Tkaatra

Fora Tbaaue
Juatlra
Art Divio
Noora-Woallitr-Saorta

ThMlM

T t l'. in S Y

M4UWUO.
't

I IS
1 51
r.i't
*011

airn-On
rrogrim RRiums
For* r&gt;WRsIhRr
Th« M rrnlnt S h o w
T**t Pattern
AS’ltiii.von.v
li S# Sian-oa
Pmerarti

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1 Oft
1 ft#
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1 14
I ■(
Si)i)

liasumv

N iM -W n tS tr
Film Kira
in* ravnff

I7»rer llo f t n Bbow
■Sir, and Mrs'*
P*rrn Htnrm

Mums JUIluiv

Radio

u tii 11—sAkrnxo
1400 HILOCYCLKB
WtthOtV
ASTl.ll.Von*
I ftft Tho Pbrlhtn Hour
1.00 W'nrl# at Six
» t r .M &gt; u

ft 14

Sanfnrd &lt;*ardt

1 It Mutlrn] Fill
ItlO hanfnrd C*r4*
Ift.l# A1 Homo With Ifuito
10:11 Norro
tl:#o Loymon'o Coll To rrftr«P
11:04)4 Sica Off
TUESDAY
MORXIXO

1:4ft atyn On
.
*41 UrmiR'i Coll Ta Frsyac
4:ftl
4iia
1:14
4:44
lift#
*#
l!»IIl
S.ftO
SiOS
■ i l #
1:44
a.irn
H:Ui
if SG

Ds»a Urookoro
Nowo
wooiora Jamboroa
Now*
tftvon O’clock Club
Nowo
Sports At A.Otsaea
Juckor 0 Chaleo
'oroln* Dovrillnaa
nrnlng U rIoOIoo
Furld At Nino
Slualo P&lt;tr 1.ailic0
llsma Tim*
• i l l For L0O100 Oaly
J iifl Muolo For Too
1AilS 1400 Qub

_ Ctuu
i11:41
i t®
Ropoot Porfarwase*
Worts At Rota

AFTERXOOT

\\\l H SZ&amp; *JB Sg*

li

Wu

J&amp;ssJr-

4.44 i W f i b b

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OUTFOQ
A S W IM /

Bur i r s
bough

too

'-T H A T

Economic Omens
Are. Showing 1955
As Biggest Year

INDECTCW i s „
------- - TOUGH-*

( ITS OfcTAV'
I —— MR'S
'WATCHING
HV PET T.V.

NlTE, „
FRANKIE

program !

^
r --—
OOfeS.'TViATS
you MEAN
WHV f L l« fT-‘
XXI WATCH S T U F F K - - r g
ATTWIS H O U R L /

\f&gt;\\A

M3ULL HAVE TO OPEN
A CAN OP LEANS, T-t"
DEAR-QUO 7----- V
SUPPER
,
Ju srw eN T k ^ fI~ l|'
UP THE
i
a l l e y n !

H h e r c .p u p s .
thcec DOLLARS YOU CAN EACH
CARRY A
MR.BJMSrEAD/
~ t PACKAGE

J C HOW DO I KNOW
YOU LL PAY M£

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MUSICAL POWtR... S MUST ,

BY THE TIME I REALIZE
I'M BEING TAKEN
- T I'M TOOK &gt;—

As WashWASHINGTON
ton reads the economic omens.
1933 will easily be the "biggest
ever year for business and con­
sumers, unmarred by either se­
vere joblessness or menacing innation.
At mid year, officials and econ­
omists of the Eisenhower admin­
istration report no sign of a secondhalf slump which six months agq
some of them thought might occur.
Instead they find production and
income at all time highs and evi­
dently still gaining'. They have vir­
tually stopped worrying about a
possible autumn sag in automobiles or bousing production, figur­
ing that by now down draft* in
some industries can be offset by
up drafts in others.
One White House adviser esti­
mates unofficially that the total
national output hit a rale equal to
roughly 3TT billion dollars annu-

MERIDIAN, M ill JT-Frid and
Ai Key warmed up the lw-horaopower Wright Whirlwind engine on
Ole M in today to re-enact an air­
borne refueling stunt that helped
make aviation history 20 yean
ago.
Such itunga arc commonplace
in this day and age when swift
Jets auckle up to tankers far out
at ica, but in 1925 the Key broth­
ers used the feat to set a 27-day
world endurance flying record that
still stands.
At a banquet here last night
aviation notables from throughout
the world honored the brothers and
•heir Curtis Robin monoplane Ole
Miss for ushering in a new- flying
era.
Col. Roscoe Turner, of Coronth,
Miss, and Indianapolis, In d, cred­
ited the Keys with leading the way
toward
modern long-distance
flights add inspiring many young­
sters to look to the skies for a
career.
*
In 1911, when Ihe Keys flew over
neat several weeks as student*
and housewives hunt summer Jobs
but will decline as they (ind work
or stop looking. The year long
unemployment average will be low­
er than last year but probably not
as good as 1933. In May there
were fewer than 2l&gt; million un­
employed, the best record since
1933.
6. No major strikes now are con­
sidered threatening. NegotiaUons
in steel and some other basic in­
dustries must still be completed
and stoppages could cause widen­
ing circles of idleness and lost pro­
duction.
7. A balanced budget, cherished
goal of administration policy, Is at
last In sight. Officials hope to pare
down the estimated &lt;2.400,000,000
deficit for the 1936 fiscal year, nowbeginning, and to wipe out the red
ink entirely In the '37 budget which
President Elsenhower presents in
January.
8. The budget picture makes It
almost certain that Congress will
approve tax cuts next season. Ris­
ing corporation profits and indi­
vidual incomes have improved tax
collections markedly In recant
months and, on the political aide,
byth parties are anxious to give
the voters a tax break in a cam­
paign yeay.
On Just one of these points, does
business opinion appear to differ
sharply from the Washington ap­
praisal. Industry fear* the Infla­
tionary Impact o f the new auto
conlracts. They will add an esti­
mated *4 of a billion dollars to the
wage co»» A Ford and G ff alone.
Smaller companies quail at the
prospect of similar wage booata
and guarantee layoff pay demands.

January- • March quarter which
matchnl the peak ol the best pre­
vious year, 1933.
Political office holders are elat­
ed. The boom looks ample enough
to last into the Presidential elec­
tion year of 1936. If it does, Re­
publicans can take to the voters a
story of high employment, high
wages, probable tax cuts and at
least the promise of a balanced
budget.
,
Industrial
developments
last
month erased one potential blight
on the general optimism but added
another. The new wage agreements
another. The new wage agreements
in automobile allayed fears of a
crippling wave of strikes but made
some businessmen Jittery over the
possibility of wage-inflation.
A consensus of official opinion
put together from the off-the-record
guesses of econom ics in the ex­
ecutive branch, congressional staffs
and the White House presents this
prospect for the second hall of an
already prosperous year.
1. Production will top the earlyyear official forecast. Total output
of goods and services exceeded the
1933 peak of nearly 363 billion dol­
lars in the first quarter and
climbed steeply in the second.
The rise may be lets rapid in
the terend six-month period, or it
may level off. But officials see
small prospect of anS autumn re*
cession.
2 Personal income, which never
stopped rising even during the 18month recession that began two
years ago, will exceed the 286 bil­
lion dollars of 1933 and the 286*3
billion record of last year. It stood
at a 293&gt;a billion dollar annual
S t Aug-uatlne, Fla., was found­
rate in April and. the experts said, ed in 1666.
la bound to be lifted by the newly
negotiated wage Increases, tha re­
810 E. First
sumption of overtime work in O. D. Farrell
For 10 yrare this etore hee
many factories and the subitanconsistently observed the fol­
tlal rehinng of workers in the late
lowing hour*:
spring.
3. Living eoeta should be quite
Week days 9 e. w. to 9:18 a. wl
stable. Some experts forecast a Saturdays I a. m. te 7 J * u- at
rise of le u than one per cent, othClosed from 7:80 p. m,
era a fractional decline. Industrial
Saturday until 9 u- ns- Mon.
atalrelaw
.ngpri sshrdcmfwETA
raw materials will go up some­
what, It la believed with negligible
effect on retail prices.
4. Em ploym ent'could top the
1933 average of 82J13.000. There
were 62,703,000 Jobholders la May
but because &lt;4 the growth of the
labor force unemployment w et 2.8
per cant as against only 2.S per
cent ii» the record year.
8. Joblessness will rise In the

Arcade Package
STORE

■I h

BUYING
A CAR?

f™ie^r
||

jnl

«nce test sponsored by the Junior
Chamber of Commerce, aviation
was still in its swaddling clothe*
Ole Mils proved that man is
mightier than bird and that the
man-made bird can take a lot of
punishment. For its long-fliitance
jaunt around Meridian, Old Mlsi
will rate a place in- the Smith
aonlan Institution at Washington
alongside C h a r l e s Lindbergh's
Spirit of St. Louis.
As befitting a hardy member
of a vanishing race, the Ole Mira
will make the trip undei* its own
power. It was ready to take off
at 3:30 p.m. today, spend the night
in Atlanta, G a„ and arrive in

at S p.m.
in(« mechai
. . .
,
14 ye
bo *1 ™ c
The refue
a reenactm
of the histoi
brothers ref
lng the 27-d
they used 6.
*nt* 300 6*^
Al is now
In charge o
to Columbia
of Meridian'
their honor.

MIMEOGRAPH PRINTING — TYPING
CREDIT INVESTIGATIONS MADE
ANYWHERE IN UNITED STATES OB
FOREIGN COUNTRIES

CREDIT BUREAU OF SANFORD
TELEPHONES ISO «irf 1071

C A R R A W A Y &amp; M c K IB B IN
G E N E R A L IN S U R A N C E
Bonds
Autom obile,
Outboard Motorboats
P. 8 .— We else write H o
* 409

m

Owner* Policies
114 N. Park Are.

S H O W IN G

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—
S
P
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3 ^ 5 'i FO
•A N E R U S S F I L
IF I F C H A N D L E R

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STARTS
TOMORROW

DURYUA

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Weather

Shop and Save
. In Sanford

S ty *

d o tte d

■

AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER

Established 1908

VOLUME XLVI

SANFORD, FLORIDA.

f e r a lf r

Little Ida M ae
Found In Woods
ByHappyDaddy

Strolling
In Sanford Promotional Drive
For Sanford Cards
Is Told By Krider

Forrest Breeketrldfs, manager
of the Chamber of Commerce,
returned to Sanford last night a f­
ter a two-neck business-vacation
— trip. Ha attended the Southern
® Institute at the University of
Norm Carolina and contacted in­
dustrial prospects in tha Pittaburgh area and Indiana.
• • • •
Yesterday was Sanford’s quiet­
est Fourth of July in years, Chief
of Police floy Williams said. No
automobile accidents were re­
ported, and Chief Williams said
drivers vere apparently “ taking
it easy."
W
• • • •
Registration of voters began to­
day in the Chamber of Commerce
building. Voters will be register­
ed there from 8 a. m. until noon
and from 2 to S p. m. each Tues­
day.
• • • •
City Building Inspector John
Gill on has received his certificate
o f membership in the Southern
-B u ild in g Codu Congress,
which
" w i l l hold its annual meeting Nov.
A-U in Birmingham, Ala.

Cold Reception
; Is Being Planned
»For Reluming Men
- L‘l

n'1■ ■

,

KDTffT KONO Ifi-U J .
are arranging * coldly eorract re­
ception for three American turn­
coat prisoners of war due to cross
into Hong Kong Saturday from Red
China.
Tha Communist Chines# Red
Cross informed the Indian Rad
Cross in New Delhi yesterday of
the July • arrival- data for the
9 three Korean War veterans who
stayed with Use Communists after
the 1B33 armistice then recently
changed their minds.
The men ^ara Lewis W, Griggs
of Jacksonville, Tex.; Otho Ball,
of Olympia, Wash.; and William
A. Cowart, of Dalton, Ga. Co­
wart originally asked to b f sent
to Japan but recent reports from
Peiping hive "said ha now prefers
returning to the United Statai.
^
Tha U.S. Defense and Justice
departments so far have pot said
what action would be
•gainst the men.

Mexico's PRI Says
Victory Is Assured
\* 1

MEXICO CITY UR — Mexico's
government Party of Revolution­
ary Institutions (PRD baa claimed
overwhelming victory in tha no­
tional congressional elections, Tim
National Electoral Commltaien
saya final results will not be known
before tomorrow.
Although public interest
been alight, the PRI eaid T*
• Bar

to the Xlwania Club tomorrow
and tha Jaycees Thursday on the
baseball situation.

Argentine Prelates
On Way To Genoa
With 'Permission'
VATICAN CITY (D—The Vatican
secretary of atata office said today
that two Argentina prelates recent­
ly expelled by the Argentina govsmmenl have “ evidently realty ob­
tained permission to return home."
A spokesman said that no per­
mission, however, had bean re­
layed through tha Vatican. Nor was
there any immediate confirmation
from President Juan Peron'a gov­
ernment in Bueno* Aires.
The pralalas arc Bishop Manual
Tito, whoa* expulsion on Juno U
was qxickly followed by Vatican
euatomuafeation af Perea and aD
others responsible, and his
u . n „ . mn.
lent,
Novoa.
ini, lligr.
Migr. Ramon
Ramoa Novoa.
They sailed yesterday from GetsI lor tha
Kucherthe toteraatioaal Euehar-

Five O f 9 Convicts
Are Still A t Large
GREEN COVE SPRINGS W —
rive of nine convicts who broke
out of the Doctor* Inlet stale roid
camp remained at large today and
officers expressed belief they have
left thia area.
Camp Capt. J. J. Segrsst said
“ Although wa don't feel Ilka they•ra still around her*, the »earch
In Clay County will continue until
w« hear Uiry're recaptured some­
where else."
The man escaped Saturday mid­
night by cutting through their met­
al sleeping quarters and scaling
an eight-foot fane*.
Carl Henry, 21, and Jack Twin­
ing, If, sentenced in Dsde County
for breaking and entering, were
eiu*ht iundar
e*“*nv
7
PARTICULAR* THIEF
HOUSTON, Tex. tel — lie was
a Choo*y sort of ebap. Whan he
held up a package atore, ha eald.
Give me aU
tha money
moaey axccot
extent
“ Givo
all the

cant of tha aattoa'o nine mlldaa totk Congress at Ria da Janeiro pennies and foreign eotoa." The

* voters turned out Sunday far tha BraxA July 1T-H.
* election of 1«1 members to the
Chamber of Deputies. A sweeping
government victory bed baaa anti­
cipated.
So far tho outcome w a s __
only in tha Federal District em­
bracing Mexico City. ju govern­
ment party aanasad M of the tt
•rats in the capital, white too
Other S went to the cauarvattea
Party of National Action.
J Hu PAN, whleh la e t n a * * to
Jalisco stela, claimed to hava waa

clerk beaded ----ever—

WINSTON BURDSTT, Columbia Broadcasting Ryrirtti commentator,
confer* In Washington with hi* wife ami Sen. James O. F.islluml
(top, right) after confrssinfi that he worked abroad as a Cornimmlri
reent. The Senate Internal Security subcommittee heard him de­
scribe his activities while a corrwipondcnt In Europe between 1940
nnd IBIS, how his first wife was murdered hy the Herts, and thp men
he worked with. Buntelt named Monroe W. {item (bottom, ieftl. a
nev-spupermnn, who denied being a lied, nnd l.ylo Dowling (right),
former newspaper executive, who invoked Uie 6th Amendment.

Drivers Are 'Good'
In Seminole County
In Sartfortl nml Seminole County over Ihattoliiluy week­
end only three Occidents occurred making a record “that the
people can ho proud of."
I'tlnm. Carl William* stated that "the Friday through
Monday" traffic was heavy hul “ good", “ There were very
few violation* that were scrums,”
ha said.
He also pointed out that the dif­
ferent law enforcement officers
in Sanford and Seminole County
would like to thank the people for
observing traffic laws ami that
“ it d&lt;»e» gay lo be haft,"
Two of the accident* occmveii
on Saturday. The first reported
was at fl:2 5 when two vehicles, a
tow Dodge pickup truck driven
by Daniel Robinson Hi. t, 09 year*
old, and a 1918'Mercury converti­
ble, drivcvn by John M. O'Malley,
student. 19 year* of Tampa, hit on
17-92 by l.ake Monroe. The Mer­
cury hit the truck broad ride, It
was reported. Injured were l.jvv
renco E. Hardin Jr., of Tampa,
with muitlpleeuts on hit face ami
left arm in the Mercury and J -hn
Kelly, seven, lacerations on righht
temple ami fractured pelvis; Da­
vid Kelly, age It, laceration of
face and fractured right leg; and
Leonard Kelly, 13, with a head hiJury. All Iho boys, brothers, were
of fit. 1 Sanford. Leonard smt
David were later taken to the
Onmgo
Memorial
Hospital for
further treatment
Both ears were a total lots
and charges were against O'Mal­
ley.
Th» second wreck caused liulc
damage, a 1918 lo r d twoilmr
Sedan missed a corner near Paula
and hit an orange tree. The dri­
ver was not identified and the
damage was considered “ slight".
On July 1, in Fern Pail at
12:43 p m a 1953 Buick driven
by Halsey B. Ticrcy, Sanford. 23
years old; and a 1033 Cadillac
Sedan, driven by Jana Elizabeth
Leatherbury, Orlando, 38 years
old were damaged slightly.
The buirk hit the bark of the
Cadillac in falling to stop soon
enough, it waa 'reported. No in­
juria* occurred.

20 leala in aU.

Apparent Victory
Declared By Segni
ROME tet-Uftx/caater Cbrir
tian Democrat Aatoate legal aa.
red today to have waa hte fight
rebuild tea fear-party coaler
coalition with which Maria M l
governed Italy Bar M maatta,
Tha scholarly, M-yaarteM advo­
cate af land rafara mail m art

r

^tURauarsur*

rfttto fa a lia a M B
**“■ **• MeAaeoy,
K disappeared last week.
MeAuay mAed tote a paak to a thick bax* while
tofitefjart to • teste ter Brno attar
M tetegih -Fartaea, M m , and LL
**• v»

Nn. 228

Aw oriattd Press leased W ire

Secretary Says
Reds Can W ait

Permission was (rranted Inland Construction Co. to pave
streets in the Loch Arbor Farlane section housing subdivision
being built by Inland Construction Company this morning
at the meeting of the County Commissioners.
Al Doudney, surveyor representing Inland, presented

--------------------------- ------- — drawings oi the are* effected The
commissioners approved unanim­
ously.
Surveyors Bill Kiastncr and Al
Doudnry appearrd before the
commission to aik permission to
use certain printing machinri un­
der the supervision of the County
Clerk, O. P. Herndon. Herndon
stated that the machine had been
used in the past at a public ser­
vice but he felt that the eomFlorida Slate League president mistlonera approval would bo
John Krider laid today he is tak­ needed.
ing over direction of tha Sanford
Chairman John Melsch stated
Cardinals for 15 days and an­ that they would take it into con­
nounced plans for a vigorous pro­ sideration and at some later date
motional campaign.
give a decision. Kraetner said that
Emphaaiilng the need for funds they were willing to pay a reason­
to curry the team through the able fee and would also pay for
rest of Vie season, Krider said any damages that might occur.
General Joseph H u t c h i s o n ,
(he campaign will Include a tic­
ket-telling canvas of the business Frank Evans and Fred Wilson ap­
district and mailing of a 10-game peared before the commissioner*
ticket to every family in the city. to requeet fundi to start con­
Kridar said tha tickets to be struction on the General Sanford
mailed to families tell for ft each Library. Chairman Meisch stated
and may b« used by any mem­ that the County had donated $8,ber of tha family. An “ added WO over a three year prrlod to­
inducement” will be included in ward* the construction providing
tha envelop* with each .ticket, he the City donates the tame amount.
“ The money la ready any time
added.
•Thia special prica," Krider you wish to begin construction” ,
.
continued, "mike* baseball really he stated.
Wilson laid the City had donat­
cheap entertainment ami should
be of great Interest lo every fam­ ed $7,600 and land between the
Chamber of Commerce building
ily."
and Seminole Blvd. in addition to
Kndtr pointed out that the the money. Tha Library represen­
Cardinals are piling up an out­ tatives wilt appear before the
standing record under the mana­ n eit City Commission meeting for
gement of Mario “ Red" Mauriet- permission to start construction.
lo and now hava a firm grip on
A requeet to build a concession
first place in the second half of •tend and rent boat* in Mullet
the etaaon. Home game crowds, Lake Park was mad* by Mr. Rich­
ha said, are growing larger taeh ardson. H# stated that if permis­
night. Last Night's crowd passed sion were given h# would live on
the fOO mark.
on the park ground* and main­
Fra* 10-gam* tickets will be tain them.
•warded to cartels teas at aach -County surveyor, I f . C. Hagan
home D M beginning Thursday stated that the park la presently
night, Krider said. A photograph maintained and used by the
will be taken of a section of to­ Sportsman'* Aesoeiatlon. County
nights crowd and the heads of Attorney Mack Cleveland was in­
ont or more persona will be ring­ structed to further study of the
ed. These (ana will get the tic­ request!
kets. Tha photograph will ba post­
Jack F or, county right-of-way
ed Thursday night on lh* bulletin agent, appeared before the Com­
board Inside the stadium. Slmiiiar mission with recommendation*
'photographs will be taken at aach from the County Zoning Board reborne game.
garding prohibiting construction
Kridar said ha planned to speak o f 17-03 right-of-way.
•

9

TUESDAY. JULY 5. 19M

Permission Is Granted
,Inland Construction Co.
For Loch. Arbor Paving

Conriderahle cloudiness with scatI w d ihnwrri or thundershowers
southeast roari; partly rloody
with scattered ihowrri.

Super-Duper Snarl
Tangles Trallic
In Capital City
WASHINGTON U*-A potentially
Miper-dupcr traffic snarl confront­
ed the capital today w-ilh Iho end
of a lung holiday weekend conoiding with the fifth day of a street­
car and buv strike.
Friday, when the strike started
was had enough. But many gov­
ernment worker* among the Mime
400,000 persons who normally use
public trim-it doily look the day
off to begin their July 4 holiday
early—many of them lo bypass the
transportation profilem.
A full force of 200 park police
■nd 2,200 metropolitan officer* was
ordered out In help keep traffic
moving today in the face of the
added influx of private autos, some
of them bringing resident* belated­
ly hark from the weekend.
Some 2,400 AFL strertcar and
bus operators and mechanics are
•coking s pay tncreate of 15 rent*
an hour for operator*, who got
$1.90 an hour under the old contrarl, and 31 cents for mechanics
who got $2 09. Tli* union has pro­
posed arbitration.

Resolution Offered
By Raymond M. Ball
On Highway 17-92
Raymond M Hall, rhairman of
the Seminole County zoning com­
mittee pre«ented a resolution of
moniini'ioiations con- rnnng Con­
struction on highway 17-92 this
morning.
The irsnlutlon staled "ilmt a
regulation be adopted and enfnrerd as soon as pntrihle by the
Board of County Commissioner*
o f Rsminola County, Florida, pro­
hibiting any structure or building
being ptaerd, erected nr constructfd, repaired, struetm ally altered
nr improved, including any struc­
ture or building upon which con­
struction has been kuspsndsd,
within the proposed right of way
according to the approved right
o f way mnp of thr Slate lload
Department of Florida, covering
that part of section 7701. State
Road 16-000, in Semlnola County,
Florida from tha intersection of
said roid with French Av*., at San­
ford. Florida, aouthrrly to the
Seminole County-Oiange County
Lina.'*
The County Commissioners ap­
proved the recommendations and
have tel a public bearing to b*
held In tha Court House at 7
p. m. Friday, July 20th.

LIBBY. Mont, igv—Found un­
harmed in a wooded hollow
2-year-old Ida Mae Curtis bounded
to her father's arm* with a cheer­
ful "Hi Daddy" late yesterday
after she was Inxt fur 22 hours in
a rugged mountain ares south of
here.
Searchers found her only 300
yards from where she disappeared
Sunday evening.
Fearful hi* daughter might have
born earned trom their tent by
one of several hears »rcn in the
vicinity, Mortimer Curtis, the
child's father, broke down and
cried upon embracing her.
Mrs, Curtis, mother of tevrn,
had said she saw- two bears near
the ramp where Curtis works ax
a loggrr shortly after Ida Mae
vanished.
Tha youngster was reported In
"pcitcct condition." Sheriff Hay
Frost ol Lincoln County said she
hadn't a scratch.
“ She may hava been frightened
by a hear, but 1 doubt if it touched
her," he said. “ She was awake
when we found her lying on her
side. She was a little frightened
but not a* much as you would
think."

Airline Captain
Able To Wrangle
From Tight Spots

Khrushchev Sanford Atlantic
Is Seeking Shows Large Gain
Honesty' Since December 3t
Communist Tells
Of Red Strength

MOSCOW (/F)— CnnirminLt Party Secretary Nikita
Khrushchev said yesterday
Mint Husain wants nn agree­
ment "on nn honest basis" at
the Geneva summit talks but
is slrouu enough to wliit if
the West is not prepared lo
negotiate seriously.
Khrushchev's host at the
V . S. Embassy's Fourth of July
party, Charged 'Affairrs Walter
N. Watmalry, replied: “ I do not
think the President of the United
S'atrs would go to Geneva with­
out seriims reasons."
The Communist party chief and
other top Russian offlrinls, includ­
ing Premier Nikolai Bulganin, put
in a sutprl'e appearance at thn
party. No such high-ranking group
of Soviet lenders have ever before
attended an embassy function.
In a speech he said he wanted
to make to tbs guests, Khrushchev
said the Husiians are not going, lo
the July 18 conference “ with brok­
en Ieg»"— rrippted by harvest fail­
ure* or other breakdowns in the
Soviet ernnomy.
“ We are going upright like sol­
diers to meet with worthy partners
sod that is Ihe only right way,"
tie declared. “ If we talk on an
equal basis, ail parties, ami if the
talks are honest and ainrare, equal
to equal, something will come of
it."
The party waa held la the elih•haileii garden of Spaxso Hnute,
Ambassador Charlea K. Ilohlen's
residence. In addition to Khruxhehev and Bulganin, former Pre­
mier Georgi Malenkov, First Dep­
uty Premiers A. I. Mikoyan and
l.aiar Kaganovich and Defense
Minister Grorgl Zhukov were
among the Soviet bigwigs on hand.

LONDON IP—Airline Capt, Cam­
eron T. Walker who landed a
planeload of passengers safety last
year despite a Jammed nose wheel
seem* la b* making a habit of «srapes from lieldiah situations. This
lime it involved a poisonous snake.
Walker, who hails from Massepeqiis, N Y., killed Ihe reptile with
a Jungle knlfa yesterday as it slith
ered across the forwanl luggage
hold of his airliner toward the
crowded passenger cabin. The In­
cident occurri*J Just brfore the
New York-to-lamdon Fan Ameri­
can plan* landed at Shannon, Ire­
land.
The snake apparently had es­
caped from a crate containing 28
rattlesnakes, copperheads, coral
snakes ind some unidentified va­
rieties being shipped to DiiexselAn-oidlng to Information
redorf Germany. Ail of them were
loaaed today hy Itey E. Green,
helieyed poisonous.
The passenger* wera unaware of State Comptroller, tale* o f gaso­
line in Floriila during the year
the Incident.
ended May 31 totaled 1,162,271.060
gallons. The 7 cent per gallon
tax remitted thereon to the Comp­
trollers office amounted to $60,66H.973.57.
Thia total, whirh represents the
Seventy building permits valued
at $414,1106 were issued in Jims statr’a largest single source of
nun pared with fig permits ami icvenue, Is $6,810,667."6 greater
$148,922 lh* previous month. City for the fisrat year which ended
Building inspector John
Gillon June 36, 1966, than tha amount
rollmtcd during
tha preceding
reported today
Gillon said penults wera grant­ year. •
The tax paid by gasoline deal­
ed 30 (Ingle-family dwellings, val­
ued at a total of $378,009, and ers hn Keminolo County for the
totaled
$641,806.43
of
fur two small rnmmerrial build­ year
ings, totaling $6,226. Thr remain­ whirh Green distributed $220,684.der of tha permits went for re­ 34 for mail bonds and road build­
sidential and eommsreial repairs. ing purposes in the county.

State Comptroller
Releases Figures
On Gasoline Taxes

70 Permits Issued
During Last Month

First Federal Directors A gain
Declare Dividends For Accounts
The directors of Ihe First Fed­
eral Savings ami Loan Aixoeia
lion again declared a threr per
rent dividend on tha saving* ac­
count*. resulting in a distribu­
tion of over $67,000.00 lo these
•aver*. II wai said alio by George
Touliy, Executive Vice iTcxidrnt,
that in lending $206,300 on first
mortgage* for the purchase, con1 1 r u c l i o n or maintenance of
homes In tha community, tha a l­
location had ict a new high for
id 20 years existence in this type
service for its clirnl*.
The statement of the thrift firm
bring released now and allowing
the condition of tha builneaa on
June 30 reveals total anals of
$3,374,1MJO. Thia is an Increase
of ovnr 12 per cent lines their
list statement on Dee. 21, last
year.
*

In this same all months tha
saving* account balances have
Jumped 14.7 per cent and now to­
tal $4,971,132.01,
At the June meeting to* Board
of Directors increased to* re­
serve and surplua accounts from

* BLACK DAY
klNGSTREE, K. C. ID — Mrs. $313,647J $ to $564,10* M which i*
L. II. Cromer reports three four per cent more than to* 12.2%
squirrels came down her chimney In ert*** in loan aeeounU out­
and then, black with toot, ran ail standing, Dae. II, IBM to too pre­
over toe aurteini, woodwork sad sent.
mantle, overturned tempi and
It was said that fas tha past 11
Gowar pots.

advanced 20 per cent.

Commenting on the progress,
Touliy said that because of the
growth demands fur Inins, some
people might feel (hat reserve*
were taking place in the econo­
mic picture. On the contrary, tie
pointed out, it is the continued
prosperity that ronvlncrs people
that they can make commitments
for the future with assurance of
meetinr them that prompts the
borrowing.
Along with Ihr demand for mo­
ney there has been a projection
of lha thrift responsibility, either
to provide funds to meet a possi­
ble emergency or to set up an acrount for a particular project or
need This Is fortunate for ihe
community, for It is these savings
account* lhat provide tha funds
that help build more homes,
Touhy said.
In the face of what many call
“ boom conditions" the directors
art striving to keep a baianea betwees adequate lately of the savlags areouata asd toe nounting
demand for increased loans oo
residential property, tha manag­
ing officer said. The director*
a n Howard Favitto, B. P, Doudnay. H. Jamas Out, A. Kdwla
Wilnholtar, E. C. Harper, tor., J.
H. Va* Hop m 4 Touhy.

Advancement i&lt; being made at
deposit* in Iho Sanlord Atlantis
National Hank tlimv a gain of
5390,197,37 since December 31,
1954, it wa* announced bv It, J.
Bauman, president.
lit went on to say that total
for the same period show
a gain of $730,126.12 a* of Juns
30, 19\3 The bank'* dcporil to­
tal wa* $7,181,133 25 and total atset* were $8,195,230 69.
“ The lncrca*p reflects better
economic conditions in the com­
munity and sl-o s steady growth
of Sanford and Seminole County"
he pointed out.
Tin Sanford Atlantic paid a
stock dividend in January of 106
per rent thereby inerrating it*
capital from $100,000.00 to $200,000 oo.
“ A semiannual dividend of
sight per cent was paid on Bis
itock si of July I, 1953" ht said.
Hurinexs for the last half of
1933 “ should ba as good or even
better. More peopla arc moring
to this community steadily and
tha inerrsis in personnel at tha
Naval station ii particularly wsl-_
corns.**

-----------------

)

Holiday Tragedies
Exceed .Estimates
Issued By Council

I

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Traffic deaths In lh« United
Slates 05er the Fourlh nf July
wrrkrnd Miami to a record high
for the holiday.
The over-all scciitcntsl death
toll atm was the hravifit in years
for Ihe Independence Day period.
Traffic accidrnti from I p.nt.
Friday to midnight Monday killed
at Iraxl 382 person*. That was
mure than Ihe number estimated
by Ihe National Safely Council and
compared to the previous record
id 366 in a three-day Fouith of
July period in 1952.
In the 78-hour period, 232 per­
rons drowned and 133 others lo*t
their live* in mUcrllaneon* acci­
dent*. The over all total of 748 was
a record for a three-day Fourth
of July holiday and rompirrd wnth
tha record nf 793 for a four-day
Fourth of July period in 1950. Thn
traffic toll in 1950 wax an all-tlma
high of 491.
Every Matt and the District n#
Columbia reported at leavl oo* ac­
cidental death.

Mother is Graleful
For Many Prayers4
CHICAGO IT—A young mother's
•ppeal for prayer* for her iitlla
daughter, virtim of tierping sicknc»». hat Iwen answered by a
flood of irttcia from around tha
world.
Two weeks ago that Mrs. Joan
lla.lfii'ld, 24, asked that prayers
he offer* d for her daughter Debbia
Ann, who was stricken with encep­
halitis lari Nov is. she was re­
leased from filling* Hospital April
29, still ina coma, amt is being
cared for In her home in subur­
ban Park Ridge.
Mr*. Hadfield said more torn
1,000 Ictlers from throughout tha
nation and from Canada, Mexico
and European countries have been
received. Shs said all lh# writers
promised prayers for Debbie, who
will be 3 Aug. 3.

County Commission
To Get Complaints
Notire is being given that tha
Board of County Commianera will
meet in the regular adjaursd ses­
sion on July 29 at l p. m. in too
County Commixsiunara room at
the Court House.
The purpose uf the meeting to
to haar complaints and receive
testimony aa to the value of any
rati or personal property fixed
by the County Tax Assessor oo
the 1968 Tax Assessment RolL
They will also receiva testimony
and hear oemplainU aa to the
perfecting, reviewing and equal!x-

tog af toa

iu s u is b I

____
•

*

•

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Weathei*

Shop and Save
In Sanford

F»rtly floods

W a n te d
V
Established 1908

VOLUME X L V I

ij &amp; z m t b

AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER
SAN TOR D, FLORIDA.

9

FRIDAY. JULY 1. 1955

Holiday View

Dixon-Yates
Foes
Car Jams
Foreseen Jubilant As Ike
On Roads Orders Restudy

/fW E B A I. Matthew B. Rldgwwy. outgoing Army Chief of Staff,
Mends with ona arm aroitr.d hi* ycune son, Matthew, 6, aa Preiid*nt Eitanhower honor* him In Waiiiineton for "meritorioua aervlee." The Chief Executive presented the general with the third
oak leaf clutter to hit Distinguished Service Madal, Mr*. Rldgwav ia
In background. (International)

Cop Killer Shot
By Firing Squad
POINT OF THE MOUNTAIN, UUh (/P)— Convicted cop■layer Don Jesse Neal died at sunrise today before the guns
o f a UUh firing squad. He vowed his innocence to the end.
The riflemen fired nt 5:00 s. m. The doctor pronounced
Mm dead two minutes later.
The S6-year-old San Francisco man was convicted of

Purple Carpet
Reception Given
Burma Premier
JtrASKBfGTON (D-Trlmo Mtolitar V Ntt'oT l i n a i got a purple
target reception at the Departmast of Agriculture tarty today
In aharp contrail to a heel-cooling
Incident that left protocol authorltlaa sgiisat.
A
Following «p hia earn partonal
Apology last night to Uts visiting
Aslan 1leader, Secretary of Agritfuur* Benion had everything
ready long before their achedulad
1:45 a m. conftrance.
The meeting waa arranged to
take the-place of ona which failed
to coma off yertarday became
Benson kept U Nu waiting for five
■nlnutaa beyond thalr appointed
hour.
The Burma Prims MlnUtor
stalkad oft then with tbs word*.
all them well set them aome
or time."
’ Beoaon told Atwamen he waa
conferring with » dalagation from
Britain’*—V N sad hla party ar­
riv'd at hla office promptly for
ths 4 o'clock appointment.

a

I

i Aslan jaUpsi
•It is clear that tt is a major
undertaking roqtoriu n i Hi i y i
effort far n long time.to mm *."
ha said in a report to ProeidaAt
KUenhower which ha arranged to
submit personally.

fatally ahooting a Salt Lake City
police aargeant, Owen T. Farley,
on May 23, 1951, after Farley ar­
rested Neal and'hfi companion,
Mrs. Wilma Tully, for Investigation
of a motel robbery at Ogden, UUh.
Sheriff George Bcckitead asked
Neal it ha had anything to say.
Neal replied:
"I am innocent. I have no
malice against anyone."
Beckitead then gave a signal
and Ibe fivo rifles cracked in
unison. Feus bulleta drilled
the black heart • ahapad Uragt
pinned over Neal’a heart. The
fifth rifle cooUinad a blank.
Beekstead laid Ntal spent an
uneasy night in hit prison coll.
Ha twice made phono calls to
members of the Utah Supreme
Court.

Railroad Ordered
To Move Stations

CHICAGO UP-MlUloni of Ameri­
cans were packing sports clothes,
checking tires and studying road
maps today for the long July 4
holiday weekend.
Some 40 million automobiles,
the National Safety Council esti­
mated, will be on the roads during
the three days in the big change
of place. City dwellers will hunt
nut lakes and pastoral retreats.
Rural folk will take lo the city,
attending ball games, horse races
or just seeing the sights.
From among these some VO
motorists and pedestrians will be
killed in the holiday traffic be.
tween S p. m, tonight and mid
night Monday, the Safety Coun­
cil estimated.
This would compare with the 342
who, the Associated Press found
in a nationwide survey, lost their
lives in traffic in tha nonholiday
weekend of June 17-20.

Development Unit
Members Selected
TALLAHASSEE (A - Florida’s
naw State Development Commis­
sion came into legal existence to­
day.
Gov. Collins completed Its make­
up by announcing appointment of
a member from each of tha state's
eight congressional districts to
sarva under Chairman J. Saxton
Lloyd of Daytona Beach.
Newly appointed members are
Ed. C. Roa, Jacksonville, former
advertising commissioner; James
R. Brumby, Miami Daily News;
Wiley Reynolds Jr., Palm Beach
banker; Herman Turner, Braden­
ton, chairman of the old Improve­
ment commission; W. J. Clapp,
St. Petersburg, president of Flor
ids Power; S. T. Dali Jr. Gaines,
villa attorney; A. Cliff Johnson,
Pensacola, f a r m e r advertising
commissioner; and Alex XT Col
lias, Ocala manufacturer.

Eight Pilots Die
A s Planes Crash
During A ir Show
LISBON, Portugal OP) — Eight
stunting Jet planaa ware reported
to have tangled and crashed dur­
ing an air show today, killing all
eight pilota,
A broadcast said tha air festival
at Colmbrs, 110 milaa northeast
of Lisbon, waa canceled and all
planes ordered returned to their
bases,
Mora than 100 Portuguese mil­
itary planea wore taking part hi
she festival to commemorate tha
third anniversary of Portugal's
air force aa an Independent
branch.

TALLAHASSEE (AV-The Flor­
ida Railroad A Public Utilities
Commission today ordered the
Atlantic Coeat Lina Railroad to
move ita passenger and freight
stations from downtown 8L Pet­
ersburg.
The facilities will not have to
h« moved until a hearing on where
they should bo located. Data for
Davy Crockett
that hearing has not bean act.
The railroad waa Instructed to
’ ■uild "new, modern and adequate Game Ends In Boy
eight and passenger depots, caabla of fully meeting the conveni­ Losing Left Eye
ence and necessities of the
MIAMI Ul — Nell Gillespie, S,
public."
lays a kid can get carried away
by this Davy Crockett business.
Natl and a group of playmates,
Prayer Is Urged
■tl wearing eoouakln caps, wars
singing the Davy Croekatt ballad.
For Success O f
When they got lo the part where
Davy "klllad him a b'ar whan ha
Big 4 Meeting
waa only l.H a playmate draw a
GENEVA. Switzerland tft-The bead on Kail with an air rifle and
World Council of Churches today fired away. Tha pellet hit hJm to
Uauad a worldwide *'1111 to pray­ tha lap aye.
er" tor auecesi of the Big Four
Aa emergency operation was
summit conference ia Genova.
performed but doctors say they
Dr. W. A Vlsser’t Hooft, gen­ have tittle hope of saving the eya.
eral secretary of the Council,
BRIDGE TO OPEN
asked member churches to gather
PENSACOLA (A— T h a tug
in prayer m the opening day af
the aummlt meeting on July It, plagued bridge ovar the Intracoast,
which falls on a Monday, or to al Canal at Gulf Beach win be
devote time to it on the preceding opened to automobiles only tomorSunday.

The Foreiga Operations Admin-

H iiM I re-ww
k li ^ktlitil
mwmamswenamw which
re
mvwwwww

dv Its to norths went aut of
B u unco last artdnight tt waa twPscod by the International Cfoparation ArlmtoUtration, operattag within the Mate Department
ASd baadad kg Jsfca B. HaUUtor
M it

at

ip n U

JTriil'dta
TT

I d r lit r

la

Ban On Fireworks Spreads

4th Ain't What
It Used To Be
NEW YORK (A—The small boy
af today doesn’t kaow what ha’s
alrsiag—though hla fatbtr does.
Per lb* Fourth af July aUt*t wbat
it used to be. An Anaerku trsditiOB-dteewoffta—ta anfy a dim but
fond memory in moat to tha
»»y.
'
True tha Mg, ipactaeular _.
piny types af pyrotachuca still can
be aeon to same areas at fairs,
pirates’sad dvfl etoetoetlnsu .

It ra 'feat bs poaaibla.
TUa year has eeu a moo hugs
Industry attain its gloomiest—and
qu.'eW—lavaL

Kith Oaargig Jote'ag tha avermg nabs, ■ fates now has
wbat uu truda tails ^commercial

fire wake."
This is tha ratafl variety, sold to
earner abaft, BDtig stations and
ab turds af please to fas ana tod a ft? enacts puts R» *kMo tram
1 1a a t ”
Use af tha dlulay
to tha Rue af a five-inch aa
toypfcd. to

Other Newsmen
Accused As Reds
Face Questioning
WASHINGTON OP)— Senate
investigator* said today they have
subpoenas rut for two persona
named as onetime Communists and
newsmen and are looking for
other* in an Inquiry into Red in­
fluence! dating back to the late
1030*.
Tha Senate Internal Security
subcommittee. In two day* of pub­
lic hearings, heard Charle* Gretaner, a New York Timea reporter,
and Wiqyton M. Bunlett, a CBS
niwsman, acknowledge they were
Communist* some 16 or mot* year*
ago.
Grutinrr ye»terd»y and Burdett on Wednesday testified they
had Joined the Communist patty a*
reporter* on the now—-defunct
Brooklyn Eagle In 1937 and had
quit it before they went to work
for their present employers—
Grutxner in 1040 and Burdett in
1342.
Two atorie* which Grutrner fil­
ed from Korea as a war correspon­
dent were questioned by Subcom­
mittee Chairman Eastlknd (DMlti) and th* group's chief coun­
sel, J. G. Sourwine.

Senate May Balk
On Proposalrfor
Reapporlionmenf
TALLAHASSEE (A — It waa the
Senate's turn today to act on Gov.
Collins’ recommendations on reapportinnment and Indication* wrrr
that (he body was unlikely to go
along with them.
Colilnt made a personal appeal
to (ha Legislature yesterday to
settle the 4-werk-old deadlock
speedily on the bails of “ what’*
right,” and urged rejection of a
conference committee's proposal
for rcdistriciing tha Senate.
The House voted 40-45 against
accepting a reapportionment plan
to which the governor objected
and followed it up hy rejecting
83-d the entire committee recom­
mendation.

WASHINGTON (/P)-Authority
to draft young men 1SH to 26
for two yeara' active duty in the
armed force* hot boon extended
for four years.
President Elsenhower signed tho
extension into law last night a
few hour* before the old law as­
pired at midnight.
The some act extends for two
years the authority to draft doc,
tors, dentist* and veterinarian*.
Tha upper ago limit we* lowered
from 61 yeara to 46.

15-Year-Term s
For Tam pa Youths
Upheld By Court
TALLAHASSEE OP)— T h e
Florida Supreme Court today up­
held II year prison sentence* for
two Tampa youths for assault
with intent to commit rape on a
10-year-old Tampa Junior high
school girl.
The two are Tony Teruel and
Edwardo Libed.
They were charged with attack*
ing the girt Nov. 6, 1363 In aa
automobile while they were on a
date.
Defense attorneys charged evl.
dcnce against the two was insuffictant to warrant a conviction.
BUiTgTRIKE- START*
BUFFALO. N. Y. Idt-AFL tow
struck early today against
Niagara Frontier Transit Sys­
tem aid halted service for almost
to this axes. ^
itoiiUaB

N o. 222.

Aworiated P r a t leased Wire

PITTSBURGH DTj—Cliffont F. Hoc*!, president c j
United States Steel Corn, anid Udny an agreement hit* been
reached between the I’ lO United Slcel Workers of America
nod the corpointion ct'ling for nn increase Averaging in
excess of 15 cents an hour in rtnndanl hourly wage rales.
The new wnge scales will be effect i\i today. Hood said

I.T. DjkVIli W. IIKI.l, (top) of
Minneapolis and ('apt. Hodgi-n
Montague (bottom) of Jackson,
Miss., are the objects of nn inten*i\« search iti the Pacific
Ocean, approximately 12D mile*
■nutlieast of Tokyo, Two other
Marina Corps airmen were lust
in th* fogbound senrch when a
hrllropter and a fighter crush*
id into the sea. One of the fliers
has been found In the wrveknga
of his plane. (International)

tl,* Inrrease Miiimiiitn to more than
7'x per rent in wage late*.
Steel industry *poke«men *«id:
“ W* will try in resume operations
a* •non as pcMibte, peihups oil the
midnight shift."
The term* nf (lie agreement
provide fur .* flat I t ’ s cent* an
hour wage hike an a half-rent
rprrad between vaiious job classi­
fications.
The half-rent spread 1* esti­
mated to aveiuge 31* rent* per
hour for eath of Big Steel's Kill,(Hid pioductiun and niainlrnancr
employe*.
Terms of the settlement are e\prcled to he speedily accepted b&gt;'
i'5 other basic steel and iron ore
companies arms* the nation. They
had been shut down by ill* neat­
ly )2ti hour walkout.
It I* th* shortest nationwide
steel strike in history.

30 Secretaries
Lose Senate Jobs
After Hot Debate
TALLAHASSEE ip — Soma S8
Rennie secrelarlc* were scheduled
In leave the legislative payroll to­
day aitrr their Imsse* staged a hot
debate climaxing in their dismis­
sal.
The debate had little to do with
Ihe question of whether Ihp cost of
the extraordinary re apportionment
session should lie trimmed hy dis­
charging the seerelarie* but it
wound up in a 26-fl vote to taka
the action.
Firing nf the secretarial will
save sluml $360 a Jay. A fewr of
the senators had discharged their
secretaries rallier in the session.
Tli« senators appeared lo scire
Ihe opportunity lo debate the sec­
retary i*.*un as a means of telling
off steam generated by Gov. Col­
lin* rcapporlionmrnt message tit
the Legislature which rubbed soma
nf Uie lawmakers th* wrong way.

Strike Paralyzes
★ ★ ★
Transit System
Peron Names Four
Body Of 1 In Washington
To New Cabinet

iUENOS AIRES, Argentina,
(J’l— President Juun I). I'ernn'.i
new Cabinet began to taka shape
today »itk tha appointment of

ftfiir new

ministers.' UitaIndiaI

•ourfes said they would bo sworn
in today,
1 ho new ministers aro Oscar Alhrlcu, tuccerdinir Angel Gabriel
Ilorlenghi a* interior minister;
Francisco Marcos Anglada, replac­
ing Armando Mendes San Martin
n* education minister; Jose Marla
I'aatigllonl, surreeding Carlos Ho­
ran a* agriculture minister, and
Alberto J. (turbo, transport min­
ister succeeding Juan Maggl.
The entire 22-member Cabinet
submitted resignations after sup­
pression of the June 10 navy-Maline revolt against Peron »o the
President could revamp hi* ad­
ministration. Poron we* expected,
to reappoint some ef hi* asso­
ciate*.

Ike, Mamie Mark
39th Anniversary

The Senate had recessed before
the House action but hostile re­
marks made by members o f . a
majority bloc regarding the gov
ernor’s speech indicated bit rec­
WASHINGTON IP — President
ommendations would encounter
and Mr*. Eisenhower celebrate
strong opposition.

President Signs
Draft Extension

'

Steel Union
O K s Offer;
Strike Ends

WASHINGTON (fl*)— F.lalod opponents of the DixonYates private power contract today claimed a major and
possibly decisive victory in their yearlong battle lo block
the project.
Cause of their jubil.ition was nn order issued by Presi­
dent Eisenhower last night. It calls
for a new look to determine
Whether tl would he in the interest
of the peoplr in the Tennessee Val­
ley area “ to continue o- to caneel the Dixon-Yale* contract,"
now that the city of Memphis has
decided to build its own plant.
The President asked the Budget
Bureau to confer ••promptly1' on
thr matter with the Atomic En­
ergy Commission and the Trnnei*eo Valley Authority. Budget Di­
rector Rowland It. Hughes said
"a probable result’ may b* that
the Dixon-Yatcs plant won’t be
needed. He promised a recom­
mendation '‘ in ample time" for
consideration by the Senate when
it takes up TVA appropriations,
probably next week.
Sen. Kcfauvcr (D-Tcnn), who
has fought Ihe Dixon-Yatcs pro­
ject frum the beginning, said the
President's action indicated to him
that "they ara thinking very seri­
ously about this and I think the
contract will be canceled.” Sen.
O'Mahonry ;D-Wyo&gt; agreed with
Ketauvrr,
Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of Tex­
as, the Senate Democratic leader,
said he hoped the President's or­
der "is preliminary to cancella­
tion."

their 39th wedding anniversary to­
day with a picnic at their Gettys­
burg, Fa., /arm for iipwar.li of
160 members of the White House
staff and their families.
The picnic will be a private af­
fair. The President arranged to
leave Washington sometime after
lunch after a round of morning
engagements, including a Cabinet
meeting. Mrs. Eisenhower ht*
been st the farm for several weeks.
After the picnic supper the Pres­
ident and his family will go to
Camp David n«ar Thurmont, Md ,
for the Fourth of July weekend.
That ia about ball an hour's drive
from their farm.
White House Press Secretary
James C. Hagerty laid Ibe Eisen­
howers have invited soma personal
friends to help celebrate their an­
niversary and Camp David haa
more apace than the farm homa
lor overnight guests.
Hie President is expected to re­
turn here Monday night.

Witness Fired
A fter Testifying
In Red Inquiry

Lost Flier
Is Found

TOYKO, (&gt;!•)— The body of
one of four missing U. S.
Marine flirt s was found today
in ilm w rcckngn of n jet piano
On Osimn Island C5 miles
etgith of Tokyo.
The Marine Corps tenta­
tively Identified tho body
as that of l,L. Alan Murdock
McAncny, Yonkers, N. Y.
Searchers positively iden

WASHINGTON (JA—Thouxand* of
government worker* rode automo­
biles—or walked—to their Job* today ai a strike of bus and streclt ir operator* paralysed tho cap­
ital's main transll system.
The walkout of 2,400 drtvpr* wa*
signaled at 45 minute* alter the
midnight deadline when Walter J.
llicrwagcn, president of the AFL
Transit Worker* Union, came
away from last-ditch negotiation*
with Capital TTanalt Co. oHiclals
and announced:
"We lrir.1. we tried everything
but failed. Ill* strike i* on now."
Many of th* roughly lit million
people in Ihe Washington area
were affected by the stoppage of
bus and strretrar service.
Capital Transit lines run through­
out the District of Columbia and
into nearby Maryland area*. Still
operating were a number of bn*
companies which run between
Washington and suburban Virginia
ami Maryland areas, but do not
serve Ihe district itself.

lifted the wreckage a* the FJ2
Fury Jet down by McAncny and
which disap]&gt;eared Tuesday in the
search for two other Marine filer*
who vanished In a fog KunJay
night.
McAneny wa* a ann in-law of
Ihe publisher of the Home (N.Y.)
Sentinel.
The plane ua* discovered by Is­
lander* a* the icarch neared Uir
end of ita fifth day for tha first
luo and a helicopter crewman
who was lost Wednesday,
As good w e a t h e r continued
Ihruugh the last three day* of the
vast search, officers laid they
could not explain the absenew of
results. Destroyers and planes
PANAMA CITY (JB-Altorncys
wove an endless pattern over the for a convicted rape slayer who
sea.
waa denied a new trial were non­
committal loday over whether they
will appeal the first degree murder
ronvlction to the state Supreme
Court.
Circuit Judge Clay Lewis Jr, yes­
terday denied Georgo Iaiwell Ev
erett’s motion for a retrial.
Evercll was convicted May 20 of
strangling pretty Mrs. Lm Ellen
MIAMI (Al—Charges of vlolat- Jones in her Panama Clly home.
ing federal wage and hour laws
Mr*. Jones wa* a high school
were filed ytsterday against three band beauty queen at El Reno,
brother* whose films sent out un­ Ukla. in 1951.
entered religious trinket* thiuugh
The defense had contended dial
the mail.
Henry Corbin, a stale prison camp
Charge* of violating rlty regula­ guard, waa disqualified as a Juror
tions also were filed agnliist the because he bad once been com­
trio-Max, Benjamin and Henry muted to a mental hospital and
that he wa* under Indictment fur
Kram.
Max Kram was charged with grand larceny.

Opponenfs Ready
For House Fight
On Reserve Plan
WASHINGTON Ifv-The House
got another abut at President El­
senhower's military reserve pro­
gram today with opponent* primed
lo battle on Iwo main Issue*.
Leaders predicted the House
would pas* a measure dcsignrd
lo encourage a milium teen-ager*
to volunteer, during the next four
years, fur a planned reserve force
nr 2,000,000 men.
17ii* was the .second attempt to
gel llousn approval ot an admin*
latralinn-liaccd bill r i m e d at
strengthening Ihe nation'* military
reserves.
Over a mouth ago Die Hoove
adopted an anlivrgrcg.ition amend,
men!, impelling House leaders to
withdraw llio bill to avert tl* pos­
sible defeat. Earlier this month—
after repeated prodding* from Eltenhower—Dm Hum* Armed Sereire* Committee brouglil out a uete
hill designed In *kirt the segrega­
tion l**uo and oilier sources of
contention.

Convicted Slayer
Denied New Trial

Hoover Gels Ouf
Of Harness Again

Wage, Hour Law
Violations Laid
To Miami Firms

operating without a city occupa­
tional license and hi* brothers
were accused in warrant* of using
“ misleading, deceptive or untrue
advertlxing" in their mail order
huiintis.
Mas operate* Catholie Product!
of America. City charge* againit
Benjamin and Henry Kram, op­
erator! of the Ex-Gl Plastic* Co.,
wera based on literature tent out
with unordrred religious trinkata
such as plastic crosaea.
MEETS TODAY
TALLAHASSEE
fha Consti­
tution Advisory Commission cre­
ated by tha 1156 Legislature meet*
for tha f|nt time today to bagto
Uio Job of drafting recommenda­
tions for revision ot Florida’s much
•amended 70-yeir-oM Constitution.

LOS ANGELES UH —A former
Los Angelas county surveyor told
(he House Un-American Activities
subcommittee that he waa fired
after the group ordered him to ap­
pear aa a witness.
"I lost my Job two day* after
being subpoenaed,•• Mai Nalapaff,
48, told the subcommittee.
He was one of seven persons
VOTED REWARD
named as card-carrying Commu­
WASHINGTON Ifl-T. C. Elliott
nists yesterday by William Kim- of Daytona Beach, credited with
pla, K who told h t waa a Com* saving tha gornnment U million
muni st party msmber for 11 yasra dollars white a federal worker, has
aa a Los Angela* police uad*(cov­
n voted a (16,000 reward by
er
Congress.
e-qgy* ir r"

thrnnrh U*fenf*y

will* K itlrrd sfternnon and
#*eninr ihumtershnw er* # t * e p I
few- nifhl •’’H morning showera,
southeast and m ( central Malta*

House Puts Okay
On $3 Billion
Foreign Aid Bill
WASHINGTON LB — The House
yesterday approved a $3,285,000,000 foreign military and economic
aid program for the year starting
today,
Th* measure, which merely sets
a ceiling for future appropria­
tions, now goes to a Senate-ltousa
committee to adjust differences.
The Senate previously approved
an authorisation 139 million do]lira larger, President Eisenhower
had asked about IV* billions. The
actual appropriation, still to bo
acted on, asay bo trimmad forthor.
Strong Democratic support en­
abled tha Protldonl'a House
bacbort to boat down tt attempt!
to limit tho program, including
proposals to restrict help lor Yu•aulavto M i India.

WASHINGTON OP)— Herbert!
Hoover stepped out of govvrnment
harur-s ogam to&lt;Uv at age of 80,
npplnudrd by the II other mem­
ber* nf Ihr -remit Huovi-c Commixtion for "able, fair MoU palienk
leadership" in dialling its piopmiids fur Roviiumrnt reurganltalion.

The rommisslon, rregted by art
of Congress two years «gu, expired
U»l midiilgM It hud produced 19
it ports containing 316 specific rec­
ommendation* for paring down ifaa
government . slublrehnirni.
The former President'* commitsiun rotteag ir, signed a reiuiutioi*
«f "great appreciation" at a final
meeting last night.

State Board Asks
For Completion
O f Vaccine Shots
JACKSONVILLE W’ i—Tha Flor­
ida State Board of Health today
urged all health department to
complete if at all
possible
second round Balk vaccine injeetiona fur first and aacond grade
School children.
Dr. I- L. Parka, director af the
health agency's Bureau of Pre­
ventable Diseases, said tha Nation­
al Foundation for Infantile Pa*
ralysia haa asked for tha retuxte
of all leftover stock* of vaadn^
It waa supplied fiae by tho found­
ation.
*’Wa realise that a number of
first and aacond grade school ehiL
drsn bare not yet received tha
second injection for various teaanna," Dr. racks oaid* — *

Krrrxnswagy

�0-

9
1 THE S A N F O ^P P R R A I.P )
Page 2
Fri. July 1, 1055,
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WELCHEPEAFTER WHEN
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I ( APOLIES TO ME T O O &gt;1 UNDERSTAND » &gt;—

iPOiTINO handcuffs end prison
gray, Minot r. (Mickey) Jelke
appears In Supreme Court, White
Plains, N.Y. to seek a writ of
hnbees corpus. His attorney was
trying to get him released tram
Bing Bing where the eleo heir
has started aervlng e two-lothree-yesr term for compulsory
prostitution. Action on the ma­
ths eras put off. finiernsttonsl)

JAMESTOWN. Va. A -T la freedom that moat nativa-born Ameri­
cana take for granted will be cele­
brated here Independence Day by
aoma people who know what it
meana—fixat-generation cituena.
From all parte of Virginia and
It'a hoped, from other atatea aa wall
cititena who atarted their Uvea In
other lands will gather on thia
historic ule to give thanks for tha
things July 4 stands for.
Lad by a Richmond dentist who
came to America SI yeara ago “ to
get myself an Indian," these form­
er aUcna will make a solemn pUgrimage to tha spot where the
New World's first permanent Eng­
lish colony was established in 140T.
The dantlat, Dr. Rudolph H.
Brunt, hopes the pUgrlmagn will
make all Americans more con­
scious of thalr heritage of Uberty.
It will be i l l years on Monday
since the Declaration of Independ­
ence waa adopted by tha Conti­
nental Congrats at Philadelphia
July 4. 1T78.
Though tha pilgrimage la the
brain child of foreign-born Amortcans, avtrybody la invited to
make It.
"We think," saya Dr. Brunl.
“ that moat Americans don't fuUy
appreciate the fuU significance of

■ATVISBAT

HOBKIXO
T ot Fittirn
Jnd. Os Parse*
kieeia. Mails**
Pin Tin, Tin, &gt;Jr.
ClreU r fUnch
Wjsky Dink a. Toe
Captain Mllalffct

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M A I » l STOP BLOWINO, t o ICT m
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—A M FAN'S KAMOS*

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MORNINO

fmdon, for after all, thay wars
born lo It. It U diffarant tor many
of those who call UiU thalr now
homo. You mutt romtirbcr that
many ol thaao naturalised ciUxtni
earn# from countries whar* liborty
waa maraly a word."
Dr. Brunt la not a eaaa in point
The Richmond dantlat waa U whan
ha cama to thia country from
Switzerland, another nation with
a hentaia of fraadom. Ho had an
undo and Uiroo brothara in Amtrtea. Hla chUd'a mind waa carrlad
away by tha glamour of tha coun­
try and ha vlauallxad it aa a land

ROMS (It—Chrutlan Democrat
Antonio Segni — granted two days
of Oraee by President Giovanni
Groachi—continued hit quest today
for support aa Italy's next premier.
Segni waa to have reported lut
night after four days of poUtical
soundings whether he could from
a cabinet. Instead ha told Gronchi
he still waa unable to say definitely
and the President gave him until
Saturday.
.
Segni has encountered obstacles
within his own party and the Lib­
eral party. Ha needs the latter to
give hla prospective coallUon gov­
ernment the marginal support

State Nears End
O f'F a irly Good'
Citrus Season
LAKELAND on-Floride U drawlug near tha end of a citrus season
which generally speaking has baen
fairly good.
,
By the end of the week about
a million boxes of oranges and
•oo.ooo boxes of grapefruit will re­
main. The U. I. Department of Ag­
riculture has eitomatad Florida
produced M.MO.OOO boxes of or­
anges and tt million boxss of
grapefruit this season.
The IJOO.OOO boxes of Florida
tangerines played o u t several
weeks age.
Although no final figurei are in,
Uit average orange grower made
monay this season, but not aa
much aa a year ago. Tha grapefruit grower apparently la a little
ahead this Mason, but far baek
of returns received a few year*
ago.
one processor summed up the
situation la hla field by laying
processors didn't make any big
money thia season but didn’t lose
nay big money either.
(KIN DONATED
OKLAHOMA CITY UR — An
aaeaymous white man donated elmeat two square feet of akin
grafted yesterday oa tha body of
Margaret Roae Thomas, a a-yearold Negro girl critically buried
by a stove March t-

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Logoi Notict

'* I h* MstBlnp Sh.w

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neceissry in Parliament. lha
Christian DemocraU alons have
only X I seats of tha MO in t t f
Chamber of DapuUai.
His own party hn pledged sup*
port of Segni, but its right-wing
“ concentration", which forced Pre*
mier Mario gctlba'a resignation
Jana go still objects to forming
a coaUtion with minor parties ol
tha center bloc.
The Rlghtlita want to try a one*
party, Christian Democrat govern­
ment. while Segni believes only a
coalition is practieabla.
e
The Liberals are hesitant to Join
Ssgni's government because they
consider his advocacy of expropri­
ation of land from big owners tan
advanced.
Tha Social Democrats tnd As.
pubUcana have indicated they will
go along with Segai aa premier.
They are the other two center per*
lias slated for the coalition.

Bring T est O f
Shoplifting Law
JACKSONVILLE LT—It’s hoped
Florida's new anti-ihopUfting law
will put a crimp In such thlavery
but the first arrest under It prob­
ably will result in a teat e a s «
eaya David U. Tualii. special a F
Ha told mtrchanla at a chamber
of commerce sponsored meeting
they shouldn't be too quick to use
the law. “ Let's be IM per eent
sure that we’va got a thief before
we stick our necki out," be ad­
vised.
Tumln warned that professional
shoplifters may deliberately cause
a false arrest in order to bring tu ff
and collect damages.
The law which goes Into affect
tomorrow, provides that a mer­
chant or his employe mar taka a

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�Wundar School

CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH
Rev 3 W Parham, pastor.
Car. FoarteeaU St, Oak 4 ? i '
Sunday School 9:45 a. m.
Morning Worahip Seryito 11:00
a. m
Training Union &lt;:30'p. m. U’l a
family affair.
Evening Worship 7:30 p. m.
“ Coma thou with ua and we wfl]
y do the* good.”
THE CBlUtm OP GOB
«f PROPHECY
IMS Elm At*.
I Bishop A. W. Stayer, Paatar
9:43 a.ra. Sunday Schoel.
11 a.m. Morning Worship. Ser­
mon by A. W Stover.
7:45 p. m Evangelistic Hour.
7:45 p. m. Tuesday Evening Ser­
vice, Prayer Meeting
7:45 p m. Thrusday Young Paopie nieeL
.1)
Everyone welcome.
THE CHRISTIAN AND MISSION
ARY ALLIANCE CHURCH
Park Ave. at roorteewth St,
Pastor, David B. Caraeftg
Sunday School and Morning
Worship Combined Service 9:45 a.
in to 11:30 a. m. “ Worship Period
begini at 10:40 a. m."
Alliance Youth Fellowship 9:30
p. m.
Evening Service 7:45 p. m.
|| Wednesday Mid-Week B i b l e
Etudv 7:45 p m
THE PREE METHODIST
CHURCH
Cor. Hr. Fourth SL laurel Ave.
G. Elrfan Kliae, Minister
Sunday School 9:45 a m.
Morning Worahip 10:45 a. m.
11:00 a m. Worship Servira.
9.00 p.m. Worship Servlet.
Evening Worahip 7:30 p. m.
Prayer Matting Thursday 7:30
UPSALA COMMUNITY
p m
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
■ev. C. C. While, Minister
ST. PAUL'S LOTH BRAN
Mrs. Clover Mirra, Plaalat
■l
SL Luka’s Lutheran—la Llavia
Alfred Erlraon
(near Oviede) tha Rat. Star hen
Saperiateadenl
of rharcb Schoel
M. Tuhy. pallor. Morning warahip
Genre* retold
S.30 a.m. Radia Mission broadcast
leader af Mid Week Servient
Church School &gt;10 a.m.
Worahip 11 a.m.
Young People 7 p.m.
Evening aerviee 7.30 » m.
Wednesday Evening 7:30 p m.
Everybody invited to attend all
aur service*.
GENEVA BAPTIST CHURCH
Geneva
Bar. Samuel Stewart Paatar
Sunday School in: oo a. m.
Chutch Service 11:00 a. m.
Training Union Ttoo p. m.
Evening Worahip Service 9:00
p. m.

CHULUOTA BAPTIST CHURCH

Waller A. Routh Jr.. Faster
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Morniog Worship Service 11 a.m
Sermon by tha pastor.
Evening Worship Service 7:30
p.m. Sermon by the pastor.
Prayer Meeting Wednesday 1:30
p.m.
LAKE MART BAPTIST
CHAPEL
Lake Mary, Fla.
Taster — Rav. H. A. Frith Jr.
Sunday School 9:46 a.m.
Morning Worahip 11:00.
Training Union 6:"0 p.m.
Evening Worahip 7:30.
Prayer Matting Wed. 7:30 p.m.

Ruth F Arrhrr. Dlrrrior of Moilf
“ We've Saved A Place For Ymi"
Parly Morning Worship 8:45 a. m.
S n on
W. P, Brooks. Jr.
Siimliy School
9:45 a. m.
“ Pome With Your Family to
Sunday School. We Provide For
Every Member of The Family*
Lira the Baby."
Morning Wor«hip
11:00 a m.
of this service.
Sermon
\V. P, Brooks. Jr.
Training Union
fi:45 p. m.
Unions for Fvrrv Member of The
Family. Nursery fur the smalt

0 15 a. m.'

Mominr Worship
10:45 a. m.
W. Y, P. ?.
6:45 p. m.
F.vening Worship
7:30 p. m.
Frnyrimeeling Wednesday 7:30 p.
m.
Cottar* pra.vermaatinf at home
of Htnry Taylor —* Fnday, 7:30
P. m.
Daily Vacation Bible School 9:00
11:00 a. ni. July 5*16

FI itST r u m e n n r t h e

n a z a h e .s e
“ Sanford'a binging ChuttH"
Corner of Second and Unpl#
R. H. Spear Jr.,
You art invited to attend the
following aervicea:
Sunday School at 9:30, George
Tittard, Supt.
Morning Worahip at 10:45, Strmon by tha pastor.
Evening Kvangrliitie at 7:30,
Singing by Johnny Carter.
Bible Ttaming Groups meat
each Sunday at 6:15 p* m. There
is a Group for each age where
HtLLCREST BAPTIST CHURCH God s Word it taught.
Geneva
Prayemeeting ia held each Wed*
Cheater W. Plank, Paatar
needay at 7:45 p. m.
Sunday morning services;
Courteou* usher* will assist you.
10 a.m. Sunday School.
The
sanctuary is nicely air-cooled.
1 1 a m. Morning Worship.
A nursery ia open at all limea.
Sunday evening services:
4:15 p.m. Training Union.
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
7:30 p.m. Evening Worship.
.Milton It. Wyatt, Minister
Wednesday 7:30 p.m. Prayer
9:43 a ni. Church School. A Class
meeting.

Mr, Mclnnis

|

g o o d

/

T H E S A N F O n n n E n A T .D

Fri. July t, 133S

Nursery open .it alt services,
V clcomc

v e a r

FHE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
OP OVIEDO

Rev. Louis Hay, Minister

9:45 a.m. Sunday School.
SOUTH SIDE R A m S T
CHURCH
Robert K. Lunsford
Pastor
William U Stephen*
Associate
Mil inn ItiRcenboiham S S SupL
Sunday School
IP 00 a. m.
Morning Worship
11:00 a. m.
Evening tvorvhip
8 no p, m
Ptayer Meeting Wed.
8.00 p. in.
ELDER SPRINGS BAPTIST
CHAPEL
Elder Spring*
Sponsored hr First Baptist Chutch
Sanford, Fla.
Sunday School
10:00 a. m.
W. O. Stanscll,
Superintendent
Preaching
11:00 a. m.
Dr. !1. H. Marlin,
Preacher
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH

M ID - S U M M E R

4

. *f

1407 Senford Ave.
Sunday School
9:43 a. m.
Morning Worship Service 11:00 a.

1

Saturday
anre —

:

l

Sacrament of Pen

CHICK THESI SALK PRICES
Super-Cushion Block Sidewalls
TIM
SIZE
*601 IS
* 40 i II
*70.11
7.10. II
*.*0. 1*
7*0. II

R**&lt;lt.f M
TnJ. &gt;.
Pile* •
(14.79
I7JI
11.70
70.70
77.7*
77Al

inti rates**

■ Hk Trade-In
11171
14.IS
14.71

in. so

SIZE
*.00.1*
*.70. II
M 0 .lt
*.*0 ■1*
7*0. II
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Fam ous G O O D /V E A K

Super-Cushion

IT.**

in.2*
Super-Cushien White Sidewall*
tike

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llffp** vntir rJtAnfp

M tf with MfrlY* &lt;'liPrlt raiir

lift* low S M I P R 11 I s on all tirrt uf Isondtrar*i
Ic^ulir fto
*«u raici**
f .itiutni SupFf- ISithfon. T h is lirr fcaturri r\t'|tinvp)
Lid# in
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Me* •
Aind tier *4,rtiP Slop Not»li lir.n l d tH p i R u t rjiio*
tta.4i
tio.to
no A m r iif .it ftiirt* I "I "i I i am \ Du r a n i lour whrn
ta.es
77.70
y n i rlinsor a.tlrr S u | h t’Cutlttom at tlirst lad u A lly
icduttd pficri.
JO.SS
11.71
JJ.1I
77.11
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N0W * * • 0f f l *
iwt te,
ed ieT/ppeU
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At LOW At $ 1.13 Wftkly fOf TWO llftll
••flu
lea w
end
••e-afp-Wi. !•

Mk

More Peoplo Rida On G oody ea r Tiros Than On A n y Other Kindt

ITyee went te keep the new engine und dm hood dam at it
la today, tun that great new So per-ReAe OuITno-nox —tin
tkmmiarni*x gaaoluw . . . and ita auj m i n d teammate,
amr fluifpode HJJ. Select Motor OiL

IS T H E W O R L D ’S
MOST P O P U L A R T E L E V IS IO N

***'*niumiM||||i3

metier how high

thaoctane, will 1*4youraegiae
deliver hill power performance
mrieaftermile—uafcMitburnedaa*.
That's why it peya to atwayi urn
WWWNONOX. Gulf NO-NOX it tha
ciaan-buraing ftml that gtvm you
full wortiagoctanedayis, dayouL

jupffitfinad gas-oil team- NewGulf NoNaxGan!ineand

W E E K LY

113 S. PARK
SANFORD

S
D IST R IB U T O R

e r v i c e

^s

t o r e

Page .1

children.
Evening Worship
8:00'p. m.
An Evening of Song.
Fellowship Hour after the Even­
ing Service sponsored by trm
Visual Aids Committee. Tho
film “ The Prodigal Son" will
be shown.
Wednesday Evening Service 7,37

PHONE 222 — 223

�H A t BOYLE

Kentucky Celebrates
A hot dog akin atuffod with turkey and a
lollipop shaped mold of frozen ground chick­

en meat impaled on a stick are two delect*
ablea hesitantly hovering on the edge of the
food market. And well they may hesitate.
"Turkey hots” , and "chick sticks” may
prove to be succulent as anything but the
vision of licking a lollyp'*PPcd chicken for
Sunday dinner or drawing a chair up to a
wiener shaped turkey at Thanksgiving
seems somehow deflating. The whole project
ta baffling. No hot dog addict is going to be
fooled for one moment. Turkey is far too
digestible to replace the wiener. And per­
sonally wouldn't you rather see kids wanderin« around with startling green tongues
than to watch them licking a ground-up
cWekenJcg?
HThat'« the point of all this confusing of
Jasuesf Shouldn't a hot dog look like a hot
dog and turkey like turkey? And a lollipup
like an honest-to-goodnes* lollipop?
Aren’t Molotov and how do you apell
Khrttihchev and other foreign issues confualotf enough without thus adding chaos on
the domestic scene?
__________

The Sanford Herald

"Forgotten American*” wna a name
jrivnn a generation or two ago to the South­
ern mountaineer*. Far from railroads and
isolated by bad roada and distance from
large settlement*, the mountain dwellers o f
Kentucky, Tennessee and adjoining atatea
were a community apart. Their speech often
preserved term* and phrases once used in
Elizabethan England, but long since disused
there. Their song* and cuatoma kept the
uaage o f England centuries before. Off the
beaten track, the mountaineer* were noticed
by their fellow-citizen* only when intermit­
tent warfare arose between ” moonahinera**
and ” ri venuerr.”
Now the barrier* ara broken down.
Partly due to the rise of the automobile,
which haa brought better highway*, and to
radio A n d television. The change comes even
more from schools such as Berea Collage in
Kentucky, established to educate mountain
children, and now celebrating its 100th
birthday. Us bead, Dr. Francis S. Hutchins,
succeeded his father in tho post. A brother,
Robert M. Hutcnina, headed the University
of Chicago and Is now associate director of
the Ford Foundation.

Safe And Sane

TODAY* M B U

VBRKt

Worship the Lord in the beauty o f hot!gMU.— Panlm T9:2.— Love to the source o f
§M beauty and harmony. If we knew the Infinite Father w* could not fall to love him.

The day* juut before and after the
Fourth of July used to mean an epidemic
of and accident* Involvlnr youngster*, and
occasionally adults, who were careless in the
use of firecrackers and other explosive*. Natlonnt educational campaigns have reduced
the number of such accidents and most com­
munities n o w have regulations on tb« use
and sale of fireworks.
In many cities and town* civic and pa­
triotic organization* sponsor public display*
w h e r e fireworks are set o ff safely and effec­
tively by peraons trained for the job. Every­
one has a good time and no one gets hurL
Die-hards argue that something o f the
color and excitement o f the Fourth to missing
in communities where sale and use o f fire­
works if restricted. Granting that what they
aey is 'MJr one thing that to true, one thing
that to also missing to a list o f maimed end
dead from treed’*** accidents with fireworks.
For this we can all be thankful
___

JAMES MARLOW

Federal Power Is Big Question
VABWNOTON ur—Bm Morsel) Slate Carp-. Indicated.
Merest! did ate aey outright to
1- HI* group recommended to his St. Louis tpaoch what hit task
tf1/* JJL '!? !" ! ^orc•', rvcomjnemtolkoa would be.
Neverthekaa, hart are gem* of
the cmwluetate ta reid be derived
telb tap* *a water * * * * * sod
llUilhilVm wga II U1MIS Vwh I CTV QUUV, at:
atatea or local communities.
1. No sew federal sower pro­
I The Hoover CummJirion Itself jects should bo tedM. Three k m
present or prospective good far
federal power activltisi.
r Stedret Hoover. The teak forte,
egg up ta November IMS, handed
t- It It unfair to aty lodorol
power plants era a yardtOk for
go Mte-page report to tho comBatten an March II, ifte.
tbs electric rats* private utilltire
should charge since the govern-

ire opened a bag of tom cels.
■* to d retired admiral gad «b*lr-

W H TW H A Vr A llS THAW?

NEW YORK UR - Most new
houses being built today have a
recreation room. What tbeyfreally
need is a medicine room.
Every home today ta a small
drugstore.
It overflow! with scorn of tubes
and bottles end jara of medica­
ments, lotion* end cosmetics which
the average human being now
feels he needs to keep himself
physically fit and socially accept
able.
The American people never have
been mote healthy—and never
have taken more medicine. Some
people now get their mala exercise
simply by the muacular effort ex*
pended la taking tha medicines to
keep themselves feeling welt—or
applying tha toiletry aids which
they hape will maka them look less
creepy.
A man's social status today ta

More Good Times Seen In Fall
NEW YORK &lt;te — Prosperity
teem* act oa sticking arawed far
awhile. It may suffer a link from
the heat. And serious labor strife
could frighten it away for a time.
Busin***, however, enter* lbs
second half of the year tomarrow,
foreseeing tat a mild asm mar
stump — and that only in the Hi m
whore it alweye appears — to fee
chased away la the fall by more
good Umax.
The theory at tho oaaAdoof
ones: The whole economy hoe
moved up a notch to • "now
plateau." There likely wttt be. M
always, tome up* and downs (few
indeed boUevo the buateoae cycto

V m m era rkteg. Take-home
ay U at a record high. And the
roarers for M 0or wage icako
pipe* lad Id terras is. This woted
wee mere spending money far
tetart, da kag as factories eresue ea busy acheduk*.
It afre moose higher coats he

manufacturers and supplies of
bsilc malarial*. And at midyear
tha big debate ta buxine** la bow
much of tbit greater coil will ba
passed state !■ higher priest.
The east of living neverthekaa,
la expected to show lilUe change
in the next six month*. The price
of food may ease a little more
to offset say rite in manufactured
good*.
PmdurHvlty k expected to keep
ot rUlag in the second half of tho
year — that it, new equipment ta
modem plants will continue to
mesa more goods lin ed out per
man hour, offsetting costlier labor,
at kait in part.
InduitrialliU report plana to ex.
pend plant* further, to hire more
workmen, to turn out more goods.
Retell epokaomen estimate aalet
will total a record m billion
dollars this year, a gala of « per
cent ever lfM. Together these spell
out: a rising standard of Itvtng
Cor Asterka'e growing population.
The s e a tu r n e r will decide
whither this eomei about on
schedule. He has mar* money to

RE TELLING ME!

liis S s

Mem. rheas mermurto#
arete, of stems, drive km

— will determine how good tho
oocond half will bo for business.
All strike threats tee didn't pats
with tho auto union pact.
Profit*, blossoming to tho tpring
with the gain in sales volume may
fed tome of the withering effects
of rising labor and material coats
this fall.
New orders on the books teem
to spell prosperity la maay basic
industries for tom* time. A sum­
mer slowdown la looked for, howover, in auto, tied, textile*, chem­
ical*. lumber and copper fabricat­
ing. lut the pocnatka, trantportstkn, food processing, cement,
VOtal asking and furniture twduttiiee talk eesfldently at gates this
summer.
boosing boom and ether
building activity coted *low teaion ally with the approach at winter. Yef total eenitrwctfon expen­
ditures far the year are predicted
to hk a record U billion dollar*
a gala of 11 per rent over 1N4.
■tetang coda may tech up a bn,
b«* tk# pries of aoreo alder house*
may dip.

you got a peek into hit bathroom
medicine cabinet
The trouble la that no medicine
cabinet b large enough any longer
to hold the jumbled drug hoards
of a civilised family.
I can remember aa a boy when
the old-fachlxud until bathroom
medicine cabinet in our homo wai
rul.e ample. It held a jar of vtaaline, a tuba of toothpaste, a box of
baking soda, a rater a cake of
tiuvirg soap, a botik of iodine, a
package of absorbent cotton, a can
of talcum, a roll of ganae and
some boric a d d aolutioa and a
sin all tin of aspirin tablets.
This small stock served tho
health needs of a family of seven.
It enabled one to bandage a cut or
cate a headache.
But in those simple days, when
you got your vitamins from gro­
ceries instead of from a druggist,
health waa taken at s matter of
foct. H hadn't become either a
hobby or an industry- You didn't
worry yourself tick over Utc ques­
tion of whether you were heiitby.
Today tha ordinary home eon*
tains enough medical and toiletry
supplies to furnish the diale of a
generation age.
They overflow the bathroom Into
every room la the house and down
into the basement. A modem man
never throws away unused medi­
cine after an Olnett. He limply
puta K away somewhere, like a
squirrel hiding an acorn, against
a future emergency.
Tha other day 1 opened my
crowded medicine cabinet. A bottle
U Kilp lotion I bought In London
in 1M4 tumbled out and bruited
my bead. The British druggist had
assured me it waa good for falling
hair" end it wait Everytlmo 1

a n home tin’t luiteJ to atom
them. For example »upposa you
have a bottle that n yi, "keep la
a cool dark plica.” Where do you
pot itr la tho refrlgeraUr, natu­
rally.
But what happen! when you
open the refrigerator to too if tho
medtcina la beeping cod? The
light flaibca cn, and you eaa ti­
me;! ic* tha tattle abudd'-r aa it
cowers in aeareh of a dart Nero.
The old-faihhned tigkUesa tecbox
waa mere prcctieaL
No, in trtnsing tha drugrtore In­
to the home we have only gone
halt way. What wo noed now la a
foil-sited mom tpccially built to
give everything from throat iotengei to high-fidelity vitamin* and
true-blue akin hermcoe cream
exactly the tight living condition*
they should havo.

Clearance Salt

ces finally found it in tha medicine
cabinet in HER bathroom, hidden
behind a Jar of fare cream and
the eye lotion guaranteed to re-

tie after bottk, aad die without
finding tho cm ho needed—particu­
larly if hk wife weren't there to
help him.
Also modem medietas* are
changing, and the eo-callad mod-

NR&amp; APPLEBY! "LITTLE" RESTAURANT—
IM B. PARK AVE. — WILL CLOSE SAT. JULY Tnd,
t:09 P. M. UNTIL MON. JULY 11th, 4:43 A. M. FOR
REMODELING.
For your convenience, MRS. APPLEBY! "BIG"
RESTAURANT at tho VALDES WILL BE OPEN.

MoreoUk ip*orb. this teams to be
bla philotepby; the ailkn'i tax­
payer# is general ahoulduT have
to bear the coats for the benefits
received by local eooenmere in
ream particular adre of the eooOfm n w t
1 far aerial
of strictly

Every Home Is Small Drugstore

YOU ALL COME AND SEE U8I

STATEMENT OF CONDITION

ILOftlDA STATE BAMft
SANFORD, FLORIDA

IWOOS ORd Discount*
----- —
iaakteg Houee, Furniture, fixtures

Comparative
Statamant O f Condition
Florida State
Banof Sanford

E*nWng Notm , FwnJton S fixture#

�1

SoxuaL fcvonhu

Miller-Baron
Wedding Party
iven Supper
A rehearsal supper was given
honor of tha Miller-Baron wad­
ding party last night at 9:90 In
tha home of Dr. and Mrs. Harry
Woodruff on 110 Elliott Ava. by
Mrs. Christine Woodruff, aunt of
the bride-elect
The home was beautifully de­
canted with bouquets of spring
placed in appropriate
about tha rooms,
all the guests had arrived
buffet style supper was served
from the dining room table which
was centered with a lovely cre­
ation of gladioli, carnations and
baby statice encircled by natural
greenery Mrs. Woodruff was as­
sisted during the course by Mrs.
Harry Woodruff and bar daugh­
ter, Elisabeth.
The guests were stated at indi­
vidual tables covered with white
cut-work eloths. Bridal place
cards marked tha Individual pla­
in eourwu of event!
and Mr. Baron prqto members at tha
rty.
Those present to enjoy the delicioui meat were Mist Jaanne
Lena Miller, bride-elect; Donald
Baron, groom-elect; Mr. and Mrs.
John L. Millar, parents of the
bride; David and Jaclde Miller.
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Stoudenmlre,
Dr. and Mr*. W. P. Brooks Jr.,
Mrs. Charles Mulrhead, Dr. and
Mrs. Harry Woodruff. Mlu Elisa­
beth Woodruff, Mist Sandra Dunn,
Miss Patsy Collins, Miss Peggy
Wright Bob Wills, Joe Douthltt,
Miss Norma Harvey and the hoatcaa Mrs. Christina Woodruff.

PERSY

★

★

★

★

★

★

Shirley Perry, Donald Cook
Are Planning July Wedding
. .
Mrs. Myrtle Perrv. 12S West Center St., Medina. N. Y. has anQbouncsd the engagement of her daughter. Shirlev M. Perry to Donald
P. Cook, son of Mr. and Mrs. Irvine 0. Cook. 920 Gsrinn St.. Medina.
Mlaa Parry, was horn in Weathersfiald, N. Y. but made her home
In Sanford in 1047 after tinvejing all orer the United States with her
family. She attended schools in
Sanford during this tima and
graduated from Ssmlnols High 24 Girls Arrive
School with the class of 1982 as For Miss Dixie
an honor studanL She was a mem­
ber of tha band for four years Beauty Contest
and was head of tha Percussion
DAYTONA BEACH IE -Twenty
department She la employed in four of the South'a loveliest young
Medina as a private secretary to woman—each a beauty contact
Vincent D. Cardine, an attorney. winner-arrived here today for the
.Mr. Cook was bom In M^lna toth annual Mist Dixie contest
and la a graduate of tha Medina
The belles, ranging in age from
High School Ha aeiwed In the
United States Navy for three and 17 to » . registered this morning
one half yearn. He Is employed and apent the afternoon posing for
by the Village of Medina Fire press photographers.
Preliminary events, talent showi,
Department.
The wedding will take place July Interviews, etc. wlU take up the
11 at the Firet Baptist Church of next three day*. Then, on Monday
night they’ll appear in bathing
t Medina.
suite Ibr the (Inals.
To gain the crown of Miss Dial*
IMS, the winner will have to beat
out the others in these divisions:
talent, peraooalily and poise,
beauty and appearanea In bath­
ing suit and evening dreis.
Jo Ann CeudlH of Louisville, ICy.,
Miss Dixie 1964, will crown the
new queen who will receive a
A Students tailmats that tha pops. HJN scholarship and a number
Ratio* of the world was fairly sta­ of merchandise prises.
ble at 600 million between tha
Florida has the moat entries,
seven. They are Joan Faye Brown.
U, Winter Haven; Durlane John
eon, If. Safety Haifcor; Beverly
Laurent, ||, Bartow; Franeee Leyton, 14 Jacksonville; Joann Bob
arts 19, Vero Beach; Kay Stacey,
19, Sarasota; Sandra Walton, It,
Orlando.
Row about a little more scrub­
bing along with the ■plashing,
splashli
whan Junior’s enjoying his daily
bath* Use toweling to make
pair of loose mittens with a draw■trlag at aach wrist. Then, when
ha Caps hla hands around, ha'a
eure to gat something clean.

T h at Couldn't Be
Claudette Colbert
Riding A Horse?
HOLLYWOOD UTt— Teu pro­
bably never expected to see Claud­
ette Celbert galloping through the
aage brush In a movie Western.
But that’s what she’s doing these
days. Wlut’a more, she’s having
the time of her life.
The French-born sophistical* I*
starring in “Texas Lady", bar Drat
Hollywood film In four ysaro. She
left the local scene to collect some
loot on the 18-month overaene ton
benefits alnce rescinded. Bine# her
rotQrn, aha has been laboring In
TV.
•
“This la net • Western,** she
corrected ae aha exited from a
tense scene with Barry Sullivan.
“This la ■ good drama ngainat •
Western background .**
Okay, ae H ian’t a Western. Any­
way, it’s got n lot ef horast and
guns and a bad guy tryiag to run
tha stranger Sullivan cut ef town.
Mias Colbert isi antinn
an.lnnocsnt by
stander, having inherited the ham­
let’* newspaper.
“ I came from New Orleans/*
■he explained, and that halpe fit
her Qallle tons* into the story.
“Because I’ve always wanted to
de one,” ah* replied. “ Ail the man
get to de them—Jimmy Stewart
and Gary Cooper and even Spencer
Tracy. Why should they have all
the fun?**
Claudette admitted she wasn’t
ae sura it was going to he fun when
she had to ride horseback la a

TTIE SANFORD II ERA I,D
Frl. July 1. 1955
rage 5

Miss Jan Baggett
Stanley Brumley,
Plan Fall Rites

Dance To Be Held
In Honor Of W
Tonight By CPO's

Mm. J. L. Baggett of Crqaa
City announces tht angagment of
her daughter Jan Irene, to Stan­
ley Lehm^kfBrumley, aon of Mr.
and Mrs. W. 8. Brumley ef this
city.
Tha wedding will take place in
September with complete plana
to be announced at n later date.

There will be s dsnes In honor
of the Fourth of July at the CPO
Club tonight it II p. m. on the
T r y 77ns O n e Sanford Naval Auxiliary Air
Station.
Decorations for th* dance will
FAMILY DINNER
be done by the CPO wives Club
Here's a sweet sml spicy des­ in red whit* and blue. Ther* will

sert made "ith frozen squash.
Meat lx&gt;af
Raked Potatoes
Green Beans and Tomatoes
Salad
Bread Tray
New England Custard
Beverage

FRIDAY
The First Bapliit Vacation Bi­
ble School will begin at 9:30 a. m.
for those age three through 19

years
The First Baptlat Vacation Bi­
ble School Commencement pro­
gram will begin at • p. ra.
in the Church Auditorium. The
Exhibits wQl be open to tha pub­
lic at 7:10 p. m.
TUESDAY
A board meeting of tha WSCS
of the First Methodist Church
will be bald at 9 a-m. to be fol­
lowed by the general masting at
9:46 a. m. In McKinley Hall.
The Daughter* of Wesley Sun­
day School Class af the First
Methodist Church will have the
regular business and social msat­
ing in Me Klnlsy Hall at S p. m.
The Intermediate Royal Ambas­
sadors will mast at the First
Baptist Church at 7 p. m.
The First Baptist Church Bus
will leave at 8:30 p. ra. to earry
the msn of the Brotherhood to the
Associations! mealing In the
First Baptist Church, Deleon
Springs.
The CPO Wlvee Club will hold
a social at 8 p. m. in tho CFO
Club on the Naval Auaillary Air
Station. Refreshments will be serv­
ed.
Th# Sanford Tourist and Shuffleboard Club will have a covered
dish supper at S p. m. In the
club. Gaines will follow,
t WEDNESDAY
A plcnle supper honoring the
Rev. and Mrs. Milton H. Wyatt
will be sponsored by the WSCS
of the First Methodist Church.
Members will meet at Rosk
Springs and supper will be served
it 1 p. m. Each family will take
a plncnie supper and table service.
Drinks will be provided by the
WSCS.
The First Baptist Junior G. A*s
will meet a* the Church at 1:80
p- m.
The First Baptlat Sunda} School
Worker’s Council will begin at 7
p. m. with n covered dish aupper.
Th* First Baptist Prayer Meet­
ing service will begin at 7:30 p.
m- Bring your Bibles.
The Flra?B*|riftt*^unler G. A’*
will meet at tha church at 1:10
p.

m*

Tha firet Baptlat Intermediate
O. A’a wlil meet at tha church
at 4 y. ra.
The First Baptist Junior B»yal
Ambeseadort wiU meet at the
atrorob at T p. m.
_
. ,
The Firet Baptist Church ehelr
will held rehearsal at 1:80 p. m.

NEW ENGLAND CUSTARD
Ingredients; 1 package (12
ounces) frozen winter squash, 2
eggs, 1H cups milk, 4* cup firmly
packed light brown sugar, 4r tea­
spoon salt, H ti'ns|H&gt;on nutmeg,
*» teaspoon ginger, 1 teaspoon

cinnamon.

[

A pineapple, If it’s green, should
he wrapped In paper for 34 hours
or longer and It will then ripen
nnturaliy. If It's ripe, one of th*
Herns can bo pulled out easily
Swcetnesi It the final test.

Mrthnd: Allow squash to stand
at room temperature several hours
to thaw. Beat eggs in a largo mix­
ing bowl until yolks and whites
are combined. Add milk and beat
to combine. Add thawed aquaah,
broivn sugar, salt, nutmeg, ginger
A T V e w te n A
ami cinnamon: bent to combine.
I adle inlo ti custard rups. Place
cups in baking pan; fill pan with
BAGGETT
(I’hnln hy Raymond Rludln) ladling water so water comes at
Irast half way up custard mix­
ture. Ilaks In a moderate (350
In 132?. C o !o rs
degrees) nvri 1 hour—until metal
THE COLOR YOU WANT
rnko tester or small knife Insert­
WHEN YOU W A N T IT
ed in center comes out clean. Place
IN
ALL FINISHES.
custards In pan of cold water Im­
mediately so cooking will stop.
Chill, Serve In custard cups or
turn out. Theie will be a little
of the egg-milk mixture that has
407 W. FIRST ST.
separated front the squash at the
bottom of each custard cup. Makes
FREE PARKING
II servings.
I

CHOOSE &amp; USE

MI88 JAN

fis A A o m th
Jimmy Wright, son of Mr. and
Mrs. J. A. Wright, Sr., 443 Elliott
Av*. is registered to attend Tlui
Baylor School for Roys at Chat­
tanooga, Tenn. in September.
Mrs. Harold Appleby attended
a luncheon and meeting of tho
Board of Directors of the Central
Florida Chapter of Crippled Child­
ren at the Eola Plaza Thursday.

PAINTS 0

SANFORD
P A I N T CO.

Happy Birthday
July I

Friends of Mrs. Sidney Ives III
Wayne Tetera
will be glad to learn that she is
horn# with her family after being
hospitalized for a few days in on account of tha death of her
sister.
Winston Salem, N. C.
Th* friend* of J. A. BUtllnc
will be glsd to know that ho is
responding satisfactorily aftsr a
rather savers heart attack. He
la In the Winter Park Hospital.

Friends of Mrs. Porter Lansing
Jr. will be sorry to learn that she
is in Orange Memorial Hospital,
Orlando where slin underwent
surgery.

Th* many friends of Mrs. I).

Ronald Taylor Is attending ROT-

*•»

DOORS OPEN

*.J *n |i

DAILY

Kitz T h e .itre
t

• • • »i*V&lt;| * •«!&gt;

12:45

.i

NOW SHOWING

B. Middleton will regret to know C summer camp for six weeks in
that sha was called to Alabama Fl Henning, Ga.

HtAWra herself named winner
*4 th* Ml** Philadelphia crown.
Oingar Stein, 10. Temple Uni­
versity senior, smile* and hurries
to th* spotlight. On th* way, alio
peases Bandra Pouts, who was
the unlucky number 13. blue
•toin, who was crowned Mias
National College Queen a year
ago. will represent Philadelphia
fa 0m Mias America pageant in
d llid ie City. (InleraoikmoiJ

* ? -* ■ * ■ » — «

HMOIH

S

h

It CikiU

o

t c

RBBF YOUB KfTCHBN
IN TUB PINK
Flak's tha proper aoto is tha
kiteheat Ta ha really up-to-data.
your pink aceaaaoriea should toclads a ptnk-palated metal dis­
penser u. hold both paper toweli
sad wasad paaar, piaa a shelf for
leap* and atoauart. Attach H
to tha kiteben wall aad ft’s ai
pretty as a picture.

u

m

M * MWC...TK SOW HAS Him MBDIBU1I

*muiuiM
AU4» MTOIf

STARTS

Rilz T h e a tre

SUNDAY
✓

FOX FIRE AT
1:28 — 8:24 — 4:24

7:26 — 9:26

tara Nobody will have to urge
yes to beep to*** ptak pretties
class and sanitary— far Just a
gotog-over with s avday sloth or
spoage wffl hasp them at their

SCI]' I

ALSO

RICHARD DENNING

“I hadn’t ridden a be roe for
about It yeats.” aba said. “That
Double life far you lettuce was had aneugh—but to hava to
basket when not In use. Turn it ride in oaa of these straight JackThere’S alee a pink bread boa
Into • container for a pot of ivy •tat Whan I started to get on. I
or growing kitchen herbs,
told them I waen’t sa aura I was with built-in cutting board, and
a whole line-up af pink aaaiawall or celling.
going *• make H. But I did."

Good Howefcceptaf O b Wheel*

bo attendance prizes and th* mulls
will h* furnished by th* Melotones, the rinchilla Country Club Or­
chestra. Dancing will be enjoyed
from 9 until 12:30. This dance ta
being sponsored by the CPO
Club. CPO’* ami their guests are
invited to attend.

'

'

" " "

\

*1 don’t care what
they call you!
j
I only know that
you’re all man...

PAC BO N K N IT

Daeroo halt mar gtgssb If h o g
up while water-lades. Far boat reifflu, Slida, rinse sad rod Dacron
twits to a towel before hanging up
to dry. Or elm lay them flat to
dry, as you would a wool
When you bring toad
rtoa home from the market, dump
them out of their containers Into a
flat container where each berry
Wil Have plenty of room. Cover
with waxed paper and gUgg ti flit
refrigerator. Do not w ag gp bull
the berries until you art roady to
net them. Don’t alien and sugar
toam either, until shortly

NOTICE

•»

The Sanford Herald
Business Office
Will Be Closed
WAV

All Day Monday
OUR SUMMER BPECIAUI
For Julj Only!

July 4th, In

| !I .N U I I w r D M T « k W a T 9

with t a n Inal NrwtraHaer— $10.00
9IS.M T rtr* Super L u

•1MB I sm ! Ihtw Cwt
N&lt;

0

B h o ta g A g j i t Mm

= p

Observance O f

• g f l a f c g Hmtntmm

HARgS m i ^ A U T Y NOOIl
M E M

A m ** f

****

■ H

m

S it

JA N E RUSSELL
JE F F CHANDLER
J=

ro x J^

ii

/ / / O 'r .’ V

DAN D U R Y E A

Independence Day.
PARAMOUNT NRWR
COLOR CARTOON
h

�Cards To Play
The Sanford Cardinals have a
Dtw set of owners and a six game
winning streak today but they re­
main in sixth place in the Florida
Stale League, 18 games behind the
leading Orlando Flyers.
The Cardinals got only ore hit
but look advantage nf Gainesville
errors and beat the G-Men 2-1 last
night. Orlando smothered St.

Petersburg 1M. Cocoa mod two
unearned runs In beat Lakeland
4-1 and keep second place while
Weat Palm Be* eh broke a »ev#n
game losing streak with a 4-1 vic­
tory over Daytona Rearh.
The Cardinals will play the GMen again tonight at Memorial
Stadium.
Rob Reed pitched Gsinesvine's

Tonight

-Men

walks from a pair of St. Petersburg
pitchers for an easy victory. The
highlight of the Flyers' attack was
a homerun by rookie catcher Choo
Chuo Coleman, playing hia second
professional game.
Cocoa couldn't score after the
second inning but four runs In the
first two proved enough the way
Orlindo combined 11 hits and 14 relief pitcher Joe Draeh cheeked

one hitler In a losing cause. The
only Sanford hit was a single by
Manager Red Mauriello in the
eighth. Rut the Cardinals had
scored in the second on a walk,
error and wild pitch and in the
fourth on an error, passed ball and
sacrifice fly. Charles Langford
gave Gainesville only three hits.

the Lakeland attack. Inocencia
Rodrigues' sacrifice fly drove in
what proved the winning run.
Carl Medley’s bates loaded tri­
ple in the eighth provided the West
Palm Reach Indiins Iheir margin
of victory over Daytona Beach and
handed Orlando Pens his third loss
against 10 wins. Claude Raymond,
the winning pitcher; and Bill Boy­

ette: who relieved him in the'
eighth slopped Daytona Beach
with four'hit*.s '
'
Sanford dr*V a crowd of 138 for
the new owners beaded by C. R.
Dawson who tgld till ghxip’bopea
to keep baseball' in Sanford the
re»t, of the season. Sanford Enter­
prise! Inc. 'gave up the franchise
because of poor attendance—aver

aging about 350.
| of Ihe new group and It. L. And
Crowds in other cities last night res, «ec retsry-t rcn urtr. They were
were 415 at West Palm Beach. 407 elec ted 'at * meeting of sjockhold.
at Orlando and 332 at Lakeland. era pieccding last night a game,
Th# new owners of the Cardin­ i. vim .m ills:
als, Sanford Baseball Ctuh Inr., pr.-e r&gt;
raised fresh rapital by selling 17 .’ l»n4-a 4*
&lt;S
$100 shares of stock ami getting iinmiotrt
l-it.n ro rt
p i r . l « &gt; Hi
pledge* for three more shales.
.

Bill A gora$|os I* vlr* president

\V&gt;»tt Ch
K n lx lit It

K-.i-l r
Ri»&lt;1 o

American League Settles Down To Hopeful Grind

/

•-

m ron u

Next 10 Days M a y Decide
By ED WILKS
The Associated Presi
The nrxt 10 days—from nnw until
the All-Star Gam# break—msy de­
cide the American League pennant
race. And R looks as If the best
thing the four challengers lo the
New York Yankee* can do ia pray
for rain.
If the Yinka, ahead by 514
games, don't come out amelllng
like rotes, one of the four con­
tenders, at least, figure* tn wind
up a bit groggy. Th* presaure ia

on rhicago, Cleveland, Detroit and
Boston.
Ths sehedul# tell* the story.
New York plays 10 game* In the
10 days, with two days off. Eight
of the garnet art with Washington
and Baltimore, Ihe seventh and
eighth-place dubs the Yanks have
beaten 17 nut of Zt limes thus far,
Boston it th# only tnughl* lmmediately ahead for ths Yanks.
The Red So*, whose liva-game
winning streak was cut hy Wash­
ington J-Z yesterday have lost sis

By Alan Mavtr

BIG ONE AHEAD

of eight to New York but are
much stronger now. And Ted Wil­
liams probably will he back *n
service for the Fourth of July
double-header at Yankee Stadium.
herond-ptare Chicago, dropping
Its fifth straight yesterday lo Dr
irolt 3-1, play* 11 games In thr
10 days, with only one day ,if
rest. Seven are with third-place
Cleveland, just Ilk garnet behind
toe While Soa,
After a three-game set with Ihe
Indiana that opens tonight, Chicago
splits It* olhsr four game* he'ween sixth-place Kansas City and
persistent Det.--&gt;'t
In addition to the seven games
With Chirago the Tribe has three
scheduled wllh Kvntaa City and
two wllh Detroit.
The Tigers play eight of Uifi­
nes! II games against the A'a
whom they've healen in five of
eight meetings. Thr Red Sox hive
It ramrs on tap—toe two at New
York and nine against Washington
and Rallimnre.
I'elroit wrapper, up a twerp cf

" t HeTs ANFORDHERALD
Page fi
Frl, July t, 1955
ill'HtffKfNT'
M ifiS fU l
TttFMfe o *
trench n u *

NAPE HIM OHii
THE StCOHO *

--&lt;

AHtf‘CAM

w m ■**

TldlCt !M)J

m et a
M
fro m

T O N Y.
,

JAMJAR?

TRABERT
s h o o t in g

M A/,

for

r u e 0/&amp; oN gTMB W/MRliPON
V/Ms l b b t m b - .
m e n M t'P
i
B g r r fR

By GAYLE TALBOT
NEW YORK lit - The biggest

w/H IF J

F t MoF t * To

i

'bnm ancb m
*■
APPEAL FOP /MB
fP O * W * WINTER.

Wm

W

7

r

to n ?

11U 06F P

M * WAV

TO iO
9 TPA/OMT
TOURNEY WAN*
VNTtU N f WA*
0EATEN tN ,

0fFMAN/,

Trabert, Nielson
To Clash Today
By TOM OCtnLTBEI
WIMBLEDON. England UR Tony Trabert and Kurt Noilten,
two hlsst-away players or great
ieor, bombard each other an
imh’edun'i center court today
for ths men's single* title in lbs
All-England T e -n n ls Champion­
i n ’Either Trabert, - th* swoiemo
American, or Nlelaan, the dsn
joroui Da m . will wglk off tha
court rvcognised gl urn unofficial
But UAooubted world'a amateur
champion.
For M b mm this ta their k gi
lost day ta towtls. For th* specta­
&amp;N1tors
■ tha battls premia** booming
•entire*, stinging voltaya &gt; a
end
I ■' tactics tailing for attack sad miare

C

semifinal match.
The men's double* title match
tomorrow will be between torn Aus­
tralian toama with Ross wall and
Naala Fraser meeting Lew Head
and Ret Hartwlg.
Rosewatl and Fraser eliminated
M , yesterday.

mistake Paul Richard* made when

ha took over Ih* Baltimore Orioles
was hie failure lo insist thst his
new employers also hire Frank
frank
Lane, the shrewd bargainer who
had provided him with ballplayer*
in tha previnua four season* while
he was building ■ reputation as
• mauler tactician with Ih* Chi­
cago White Sox.
We are not doubling Paul wlill
knows as much as any man living
about directing a dub on ths field.
We hear even rival managers are
reading his new (took, "Inside
BaaabaU," and grunting now and
then in agreement with Its con­
tents. All we aay Is the man from
Waxahacbie ahould never have ta­
ken off that uniform, even at night
We have aal.1 something of the
kind before, and R Isn't m though
we haven't been given lump* by
Oriole fans for saying It. They
varied from highly indignant In
merely hurt that Richards wasn't
being given a fair chine* to prov&gt;
hia genius aa a trader. At •at,

Iho latter have been urging, give
tha man time. One wrote: "At
least they're huitling for him,"
WnU. Ih* Orioles have Just left
this town after being plueked
clean In a four-game set with the
Yankee*. During the viait Rich­
ards' collection of over-age hoebeena, minor league star* and bo­
nus beys five of them impressed

its three-ganA set wllh the Wh.le
Sox as Ray Be .n» pumped ■ tworun homer In the eighth to over­
haul a 3-Z Chicago lead. It waa
victory No. 8 for Sleven Grnmck,
who was tapped for a 450-foot home
run hy Minnie Minoto with a man
on In Ihe sixth
Washington's Sper Shea fanned
Noth Ziuehta with toe bases
loaded in the ninth. Ted Abernathy
gained his first major league vic­
tory for Ihe Nsls, although giving
way to Camilo Pascual and Shea

whin Boston scored ones 1a the
oxth.
In Ihe N a 11 n n a I, first-place
Ar&lt;okIyn came from pehind tnroo
times to beit the New Yotk
Giants 5-5 In tl toning* on George
Shuba'a pinen tingle. Milwaukee
copred second place from Chicago
*i the Bravti scored four un­
earned runs hi the eighth to beat
the Cuba 7-4.
Willie Maya hammered home
runs Nn. 20 with a mate in for
a 5-1 New York lead in ih* 10th,

but toe Dodgers cam* back to thr
with Dull* Snider*i tr.oie and
Jackin Robinson's sacrifice bunt
scoring tha run*. Ed Roebuck won
it ir. relief of.Gun Neweorro-f. Hay
Moniant lint it, becomini tha sixth
Giant pitcher afUr.Manager Lm
Duroebar cent five pitrhc.-f In to
face five Brooklyn batten &gt;■ (lie

Don f
m is s it I
r u m iD A

September Date
Seen Probable
For Title Bout
NEW YORK f/Tj—Tha Rocky Mnrciano-Archi* Moor*
hcnv.vvveight title match that ip top jrnaaip along: Broadway
ami other main stems across the country probably will com#
o ff Monday nijtht, Sept. 19 at New York's Yankee Stadium.
fhlcngy remains In the running for tho big fight and
Houston, Lot Angeles and New
Orleam, In a leaser extent, atlll
hold slim hope*. Rut New York
i* expected to get the fight—figur­
ed now to do about three quarter*
of a million dollara at the gat*.
The two leading principal* at
the moment—the manager*—met
yesterday with Jim Norria, presi­
dent of the promoting International
Boxing Club. At Weill, Marciano'*
bosa, took top billing and Charley
Johnston, Moore's manager, earn*
in second.
According ta statements from all
partial 'only a few rough edge*
remain tn be smoothed out.
"They want me to guarantee
them a rematch in case we win,*
said Johnilon. "1 think wa can ar­
range to put up eome kind of
guarantee."

metropolitan observers as tha vary
worst ball club seen /a the big
leagues since the war years.
It is a weaker, more inept club
than the ooe which lost an even
100 games under Jimmie Dykes
list season and flnishsd seventh.
This one already haa lost 50 with
the campaign yet well short of
halfway, and might easily chal­
lenge the record of lit defeats
suffered by the Athletics of tall.
If it’s a huitling team you couldn't
tell by looking.
Probably Richards haa Iwd aom*
hard luck In hia deals, but the
fact remains that be haa almost
nothing lift to show to the way
of genuine big league talent Rom
bis acqttoriufl trading with the
Yankees and ether*.
Probably the nearest approachea are tint baseman Gus Triando*. and catcher Hal Smith, tha
fermtr Yank farmhands who are
hitting .gar and 4tt, respectively.

. Weill discussed the match tail
night wllh hit undefeated ehamp
who wai in town to make a dinner
appearance. Rocky haa said oH
along that "it'a up to my man­
ager," There seemed to bo no re­
luctance on hi* part to meet Moore,
or any ntbor fighter for that mat­
ter.

Ruisian-American
Showdown Likely
In Royal Regatta
HENLEY ON THAMES, England
up*—A Ruiilan-AmeHcan showdown
In rowing with Britain'! most val­
ued trophy aa tha prise appeared
likely aa the Royal Henley Regat­
ta moved Into the quarter and
semifinal stages today.
The University ef Pennsylvania's
heavyweight crew and Russia'*
Rad Banner Club eight generally
were favored lo survive today’s
semi finals In competition for the
legatta's tis-year-oid Grand Chal­
lenge Cup. Many regard It aa row.
Ing's moat glittering trophy. Hueaia won It last year. Tha last
American crew to held it waa Hervaid in INO.
In their aemlflnal, Penn's heavyweights faced the British Thames
Rowing Club. Thames is a atrjng
craw hiit meet observer* nf per­
formances so far gave the Amartcam an edge.
The rugged Ruaeian earimm
met the Veaeeuver Rowing Clue,
a Canadian outfit which has ant
been tested ta Tha meg wathr. Ih*
Canadians had a little bad huh
with injuries hut taofeed bean m
predict rows.
,

lOch and 11th.
Randy Jack*,n s error op-rned
the galei for me Braves, w.n had
* two-run blavt by Joe Ailcctk
fn the big Inning. Ray Cronin relief, with Hal Jeffcoat Ihe
loser.

STATS

O rlao O *
Co to e

riaytoea BearJi
W. Palm astrh
Oaleesriii*
•ef/ejd
LeketTnw

U iO L I

_____
. . 4* St
174k
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Co*-oe 4, la k e la n d a rtrleed n I f , - « l . P e it re k u r g I
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Oiler*,III* •r.eeefer*

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P e y io n e e l W.- T e lm B le c h
Cevee at- Iw b tla n d sRCnxii H A l . r
(teelereai’e * s b n wei Is r lw S e e i
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OF JULY
WEEKEND
4 Thrilling Programs

BIG

4th

MAHNR &amp; EVENING
SATURDAY JULY 2nd
SPECIAL MATINEE
and EVENING JULY 4th

RACING NIORTLT (except Sunday) at 8:15
M A T !N U B WED. and SAT. at 2
THKU SEPTEMBER 17

N*w Air-Conditioned Clubhouie
• e .7 "

VdlusiaCdunTy
HENNEL ELU B

— A n in n tlU -&lt;•-•* v e .Ilo b *

•rti u e -ir

■ • r ■. •

to PaytoBa B ooch

U llv e e k e e nt n A c I n n a il » n l*M )
— Bu hi i a - i ) . *■ n tn le r is - * ) .-

HI. Iriuln ni (JM oiO —

It.IV xm .lui* ll.ll”

'

Arroyo

. attack.

This should not be i contrail
r abiei.. Both behave la pounding
to ban Raid and’ taking charge
t the net •* m
at possible.
I a dueUiho Ihat 'b* man who
reck* first usually loses the

« • ! * » ia O U C O *
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|

�THE SANFORD HERALD Fri. July 1, 1955

If Itt Worth Anything

ARYMXRB FOR BAI4L

It’s Worth Adrortioiac la

CONCRETE

CLASSIFIED ADS

A

Phone 11H • ft i kP*p5 5 le f" ^ r

General Centraetieg

• Ceomarelal—Custom A Low

R ^ B K r n .G .
Three bedrooms, screened porch,
two lota with trees, garage. An
older home hut the price u only
$$eso with terms.

Robert A. Williams, Realtor

Raymond R. Leedniat Ataedeto
Phone IHI AUenUe Bank Bldg.

lUUaway mmi Baby Bodo
Day.Week er •onA—T«l- 1423-

M A vals Afta. RtflrienrT-

•

424.
FURNISHED A v m a o t . HO Park
Ave.
__________

Furgishtd
________ ^StaM briUhTcowL

•oath City ttette Highway 1T»H.
0 Bedroom Home. H Block from
Southsidt schooL Cell BO.
ICE Seminole RfiHr for Dealr■bit Home# w Apte. Phono 27.
•4# FURNISHED Apt. fh w &gt; 433W.
COOL— B Boon FurnUhed Apart
mtot Front end back screened
porch*/. Garage. Take, on*
child.
Pats. ww
606 m
Palmetto
CJUm. No
WO raui
f l ^ f h y p by appointment

3 Bedroom home located In one
of th* host sections on two lots
on corner. leauUfully tend*
scaped, hardwood floors, strict,
ly modern.

DAILY CROSSWORD

C. A. WH1DDON, S R

Reg. Reel lanfa I n t o
ill a. Perk
Ph. tan

Owl West uth Bt
WILL YOU ACCEPT $40. TRADE
IN ALLOWANCE FOR YOUR
OLD MATTRESS A SPRINGS?
Regardless of make or condi­
tion!
Qmltop Mattress A Box Spring.
Rag. 131.00., Less Trade $09.00
Guaranteed 10 Years.
Royal Comfort Mattress A Box
Sunn* $119.00- —Less Trade —
$ft00. Gueranteed 10 Years
PB gpeeul Mattress &amp; Bax Spring
Reg $99.00 Less Trade -$39 M
Guaranteed io Years.

R will

bedur bmHc or eel

Realtor

Florida State Rank Building
Pboael m

Call HalT

13. Tines
14 Mountain

\

S S i .i .T .4 8 :

*750.00 DOWN

Phone
I Bedroom House. Beautiful loca­
tion. Hardwood floora. Electric
t Bedroom Bungalow completely
Kitchen, Ceramic Bath. P ricefurnished. Phone HH, 311 Pal*
metis.
Par your Rea! Battle needs:
• lI room furalahed, cottage, ntilttlei Cullen gad Heritor, Realtor*
bed. Apply Clark* Tour*
1M N. Perk Ave. Phage 2313.
.. Highway 17*62, 1 block
south city
Ity Umit*.
Bed Room Rouse. Kitchen fur­
niture, space neater, Venetian
t Boom unfurnished Apartment.
b 11a d at Hardwood floors-Ul*
Private Beth. Ill Jaiaamlne
bath: Low down payment Call
Are Phone 160B-M.
nights lT4f-M or see at 1106
Amelia.
^61$
s s W w S f i s a . w s I bedroom borne, comer lot, rea­
sonable down payment. Low
monthly Pigment Ml Roselle

W

Red., Nothing to do —Just
ONE Bedroom furnished apart. B move
In. A-l condition, El. Kit
K b S T
Includes water.
chan, atparate dining room, 2
utility moms, earporte, TV antmaa, trees on 14 lot baek
Beautiful a room furnished apt
Private entrance^ * Private yd. fence, tll.soo. itoi iteUonvilla.
Phene m t-w .
bath. Close In. Plume M J.
LDT ~ TS * 1M on Paved Road
In Plantation Estates. Will sa­
r« * apt.
,A|$o.
t f rmw
&amp;
s
onthly. Ideal crifice for troo oo Apt 1, Mia
Sanford Ave., “ *
couple — I bedroom home
th kitchen equipment $65.
2 bedroom house. 4M
r cent
O monthly. Phone
m ortH " *'*
•dr 1&gt;M

lock

Owa&gt;

t" S p W
jtOfe
On* Furnished

14H

^

e i m
m
n
m r a .
WILL TRADE — Jacksonville
® f c beech a Bedroom Home; Twox US Ft
Ft from
TMENTf
. . bulines*
___,
$11,000. FOR
Can
E in ornear Sanford,
t consider Business Prn!y. W. W. Patterson. 129-Oth
South JecksogvUle Beech,

o*r. l a x * * - Won* A. L.
NICELY

FurnUhed „ Apartment.

iim iSw u£M Qutt* * *

nc

90th Anniversary

•SP E C IA LS
- ' V ........
. z t s...................
i s j r 10.40
Mirror*

Re«. 10 0$ r

Metal
Beg. 24.03 34

le Door
ity Cabinet 13.50

Stel

fe S &amp; i
***&amp;

14J0

SMB
&gt; ......
Chairs

.Foam
— wjiax « g

30.40

tior.s

3 Excla.

’

15 Stylish
16 Ahr*&lt;1
37. Scudle

JP Skm
disorder
51 Cry. s*.
a &lt;TO‘ r ; Mrindy

ECHOLS BEDDING CO.

23. Crt away
56 An alcctor
2? Pile

l slang i

matton
4 TO" ard
3 Hindu
girmrnt
6 Thesawho
callup
spirits
7. Denary
5 Famous
ferest in
Frsncr

53 P»n*n«mr nf
Cbartrs
Lamb
iifwin

with

violcncn

34 Elt'Stcd
train
(short-

rnrdl

frr ftnu-*rp
D.''i»inn
of a city
Apart
Country

ri»y

1

%

22—KLECTCICAL B M V IC 6 »-n

M $-

•1 VARIETIES PANELING
Native and Foreign Woods.
See Them At

M. G. HOI

Sherman Concrete Pip* Cn.
Owt Meet wh st
------------

Service on All Water Pump*Wells Drilled — Pumps
Paata Reed Phan* 7 »

\•V.M* iM ' ''v »*&gt;. 11' p A *. f
( »4( N*.t 4 •1
A 11. A•l ' v. 1
lim

ORLANDO Monmg BamtW Or
taj^o^Eveykg Bter. CeBRelgh

USED PLUMBING FIXTURES

f t t n j U k ll

John Wl‘s B

t

’

FRIGIDAIRE OMllaoMO
and saretea. O.
G. H. High,
High. Oviedo.
Fla. rtoono 4131 or Banted
1642-W after 6 p.m.

( Moslem
com*
muntly)
43 Scatter*,
as
sred
4i Notion

.

A

T“

7~ &amp;

$
i

4&gt;

ef
money'
island

42. Cirrus
(abbr.)

(A m )

1

10

13

_i

IO

4
yIB

11

!&gt;

’A
2o

%
14

21
V/.

r1
A

J*
J4

V/,
/
Jk J i 53

.K)

Xa

%

a; Judge

Phone 331

33. Lixivium
■
•■
■ ----Helps
29- Gam* at
card*
40 A roll

11

35 Pali-

C H E R R Y -P IE

F.ccapucle

1; Excta*
maticn

rv*urc

411 Hi Old
41 A crucifix

Measure
iSitm l

of a

33 Price of
37 upwsrd
curving of
a ship's
planking

tu lid iV i i|i»M
lnxiiagv

11. Division

5* Conflict

Senkarik Giggs and Fatal Cn.

t'i

%
1

M

d
4i
44-

&amp;

4

Randal) Btoctrte Cn.
Bendlx and Crosier AppUtnnm
Youngstom Kitchen.*
Elorirlca) oantracting and rapatrs
112 Magitolta Ave. Phamo 113
“o m C B

417

W I B P lg lft

HAYNES OOce
cn..
Typewriters, adding aacnttwa,

Eilat-RanULi. $14 Mi
lagwolla, Ph.
A J X bU J U L *
17—AITTOI6I
1007 Sanford Ave.
Phone U13
*4— RRAITTT PARLOM -24
wiT. pay YOU to
t« ace
see US
o s beftwe
txfrw*
RANDALL ELECTRIC CO. It yuu
buy. Open Evenings end
For Lovelier Hair
T V SERVICE CENTER
bundays.
GF.T PROFESSIONAL t’AREl
EasUide Trailer BaJee,
s Factory Supervised Service
Eva-Been Beauty Shop
Falstka, Fle* House cells 9 a. m. till I p. na
I'hnnr 463
(All makes and mode!*)
CARS
112 Mag. Ave.
Phone MOO
BOUGHT SOLD TRADED
HARIUK1TR
Roy Reel's Uaed Cara
FHA Financial
BEAUTY
NOOK
Sanlord Ave. A Uth SL
(Air Conditioned Salon.)
e u r s r u R s e e FOR SALE — Must sill ttani- 101 go. Oak A\e. rhonn 171
THE CURIOSITY SHOP
Payments
(erred, will vacate Immediately,
17*63 at Hiawatha. Used A new
8 barman Coocrntn Cn.
luminum trai.
27 ft. aluminum
trailer plus
LAUNDRY BERWICK —75
•furniture, antiques, bric-a-brac. Oet West ilth
Phene 24M
cabana with medal bunk beds. * On* oour • Wain &lt;sa itemp
Come In and brouse around.
Full price for quick sale
Dry
PLUMBING
$1,400.
Mrs. Todd, Sanford,
w
n*&lt;
SAUC POUO VACONI gets a vote nf cnnfWcT.re at eight identutia
YOU don't have to tea the credit Contract sad renttr work. Pro#
'
9132__________________ * one boar % • Wash and Dry
manager to save dollars legttisupport the continuation nf mass Inoculation during the rummer la.
JFold
eettmatee.
R.
L
Harvey.
304
matalv on our GIGANTIC Raan unusual poll In Washington before the House Interstate and For­
* Finished Laundry
IIBOAT* - MQToae
Sanford Ave. f t o u lta .
mnv*' SALE.
* Sanliona Dry Cleaning
eign Commerce subcommittee. Itcp. J. Perry Priest (D-Tenn ) la
ROBSON’S
SPORTING
GOOD'S
ROBINSON MUSIC CO.
Soul held*
shown discussing the vote with Dr. John Paul (cenfer) and Dr.
P. M. CAMPBELL
WILL BE CLOSED JULY 4. 3
$20 N. Orange Ave. Orlande, Pie,
Thomas M. Illvrra (right), of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical
General
A 6 FIELD TESTING EQUIP­
ion Ram mu
“Homaa af DUUnetian'
Research In New York, tturgeon General I^onard A. Schecle and
MENT.
Baby Bed A Mattress . ... $14.00 B-Wey
ll-n
Phene 1447
Basil O'Connor, president nf the National Foundation for Infantile
Good Ktfimer Trunk ........ 6.40
Iff h a ° 6KRT6CK
—St
Paralysis, also reaffirmed their faith in the vaccine. (iiUcnuitiono!)
HOLIDAY SPECIALS
Nice Utility Cabinet ........ 12.00
For Better Runcorn*
L U Sill—Piano TarftnirTTn
Used Outboard Motor
Kitchen Cabinet, as new .... ls.oo
Phono 2164. Route L Sanford
CLEARANCE
Single Bed. Inner Spring..... 33.00
W A K IN G
3.6 Horse
Cabinet Comb. Coffee Table lS.oo
SMALL RUBIN
«
death
Park
$6X50 It you have
SCO
OTT-ATWATER
Late Living Room SulU .... 55.00
a small bualaom In a
6g
50
3
Horse
SEA-BEE
Extra Good, Dlnnetu Set
16.00 Dragline
iragune Iservice, Lakefronts A 6 Hors* WIZARD
secluded part of town and are
79
95
(Hundred* of other llama.)
Estimate* given. Phone
ditching.______
interested In getting customers,
„
_______
.. . 115.00
T«4 Horse
MERCURY
Super Trading Pest
Genera 2464, Orlundo
list the service you offer to Use
Horse FIRESTONE .. 119 50
Open Eveninga. 17-91 South
Buford 3231.
w m n —m r n a n
Clasilllad column of the '
* (* Oeo Smsther*
7H Horse MERCURY .... 100 00
. (Phone 2213-R.)
1110 HILOCVCLES
7idd Quart t-tar
Herald. Call IBtL
FLOOR sending end finishing. 10 Horse
7s 1$ Hire's To Vets
FHII1AT
T
Id 1'rnudly W e Hsll
Wood Caaement W in d o w s , 4
SCOTT-ATWATER
........
100.00
Cleaning, waxing. Serving Semi­
CLAKSIFTED DISPLAY
LI L M IQ
4:00 Church P»rv!ce
lights: fit openings 37 x 50vi A
nole County since 113$. H. M 12 Hvrie ELTO . ........... $9 50
« 00 W nfM At £11
■i.i'd fisnford Cards
22 Hone JOHNSON
IM.00
Gleason, Lake Mary.
T « llt | b t £«n gs
10.10 Midnight silniiter
* &gt;0 s p c f t i
11:60 , \ t » i
(Will pul] Skil* 27 MPHl
A IS &gt;is.,i(tt f t m
11.014 s ig n Off
25
Horse
JOHNSON
...
299
00
Mattress A Bex Springs
7
n r ift in r o n A
, Clftud
USED Gas Refrigerator end Mlac.
N itiD tr
7 is R'.MS
. __ ,r « r. „A L»4 y
Renovated
Furniture. 706 Oak Ave
MORXIXO
H*Trd*llerrl,n ^ ” ®0,U'
7 i t D u l - s r r « r Jiuito
•Tree Estimate"
S
i'll
J
i
m
,
ro
rum
8
**
S:»n
On
,
Hair wUl yoq iwap?
I ,vt l u l l -&gt;!•' For Uu ilo
ECHOLS BEDDING CO.
8 01 Layman • Call T o P r s r e r '
How will you Trade?
SIK
II
M
*
n
t
ITitHutn
R
O
S
Pawn
Brssksra
Corner 2nd A Magnolia Ph. 1232
Your old Motor far a
»;ts L’ nllfit .Villons
»» I«» News
"Red” Bamberger, Mgr.
3 Bedroom Home In Wyn0 III It * nincitmt*
fi lb Mftitsra Jsmoree
Better grade - EVTNgL'DE!
10. JO At H oms With Muiln
* KS Kiwi
Sporting Goods nawood. 3 Yearn Old.
lit SI Kiwi
7
O'clock Club
let Bt
LAWNMOWERd n n a r p e n e d ROBSON
iron
L
i
t
man's
Call
T
o
F
t
A}
sr
: ib K i w i
Eviarude Seles A Service
Bicycle A General Repair.
1
O
h
l
i
m
i
t
*
Sign
Off
Pp*'iti
At A O l i a c i
364
E.
1st
BL
Phone 666 Thin home has Oak Floors,
?—
i T'l siCi&gt;»v’ » Choir#
to r a n ir
Btaater'a Bike Shop
«;
10
Morning
D«vottnn8
MUHMAC
R fP ^ m n r B s n n
15-rt Speed Boat end Tetnee Trai­
Sll E. 4th St TeL 2434
Ceramic Tile Bath, Dining
8i»r. Murcia* M*1j&gt;4irr
« on Elsn cm
uggy horse, bridle, hero
* oh
ler $150 00. Phone 1424 or
At Nino
Layman ■ Call T » Praysr
%n Mdlle Ft Lliifg
buggy. Phone I417-J-3.
Dawn Arssks rs
Area, Large Living Room
ENVELOPES, letterheads, state­ ■ &amp; l ^ &amp; £ i £ m M a n M m m
ft Sft H&gt;ran Tiroo
« in
ments.
invoices,
hand
bills,
and
* ii For LtditR Only #
*«rn J sm b ers*
a it
PUPPIES -» to give ewer. ,4 p r o g r a m a , etc. progressive
s'j *J till
and Kitchen Equipped with
Wuilc Knr T04
s
is
Nsws
weeki eld. Mother dog unable
Htn Club
t «n f i v m O'clock Club
Priam.* Co., Phone 40* — 403 Buy your Furniture at Berry's
to rare for them. Will you give
G.
E.
Appliances*
2•»:20 .\tn|
Kin
«
7:11
Warehouse
Fum„
Co.,
at
801
W,
West
Uth
SL
I
0
:3
\
UliU
Club
v
them a home? Phone lllBR.
*1*0 h rf ri» At A CiUnco
I I H i llrm* Ol Ufilodr V
1st. St. Ail naUonaUy adv. fur­
ams Jnckoy's Ctiulcn
Telephone 131 after 6 P. M.
WorM
A
t
Noon
1M0
niture at warehouse prices.
Siln M&gt;,tn111c I Kt. i.tlnns
For Bale — A.KC. registered FLOOR BANDtWO A Finishing;
AFTKRb OOV
*lli •If.mill ns M -lo ilti,
for appointment to see this
xer ,puppies, brindfi end
Oak floors furnished, laid A fia12 11 JVtttks Fir m DiroBt
9:nd W orld At Nino
in color, six weeks old. Cell
s
Itild Hrrioklyn
ished. In business sine* 1630.
If
1:15 Music F o r Ladies
*:sn MvMn Tim*
3224-J.I.
_______________
227{
lias linn Club
10:»fl N » o ■
Heme for I yard
WANTED:
10:*s l(iin Club
i good condition.
doei, A
lilt'd Childran » Classla Hour
Will a*
Hi.in Va riants
llid Town A* Ccu nlr v
V IT R fc d

RADI O

a&gt;.S3TpV,u‘-^3

BARGAIN!

R
C

v

PERSONAL' TO DOG LOVEU.
Give your dog the f
heat- taating by hi

dogs. “ —

DOG
thUx

r

, n . ag io

Mather o f Sanford
It. I * SL

rxtmina-

pits

jm s

r °p»v*to%Vc

2 Spckm

mir»»

Corner 2nd A Magnolia Ph. 1233
“Bud*' Bamberger. Mgy.
Open Monday's til • p. ra.
Sewing Machine#, end Repairing
BERTS 1*4 8. Perk Phone 1TH.

111-114 Wait 2nd f t

DOWN
1 A crcck

ACR05S
1 Atrial
3 Bntttillkc
par'$ Jssan’s ship
10 Affirm
It Or.rntsl

Sherman Cnucrvte Pipe Co.

Uaed furniture, appliances, roots,
a Bedroom furnished home, tto^oo
COUNTRY HOME!
ate. Bouiht-aold. Larry'* Mart
pet
month. *Phono PM or 74BW. I Bedrooms, furnished, good weait Eut 1st St Pboae 1631.
u^i I4IVUW*
g
after 6:00 p. m.
ter. all modarn eoevaniances.
situated on approx, one acre of
I bedroom house, nicely furnished.
-.u good high land, 3 milts west
h. carport#
and Jarge
large lawn,
Porch.
cai*&lt;Ste_and
lawn.
Corrugated— 2VF* ComigaUd.
of Sanford, total price ii only
[wood, J. R. Grant, Call
Get
*11
Your
roofing
need*
at
Loniwi
$4,100.00, with terms.
HMl
Sherman Concrete Pip* C&lt;t
Pbone 34H
Seminole Realty Out Wear Uth St
" S H S R M . 85?. ffiS! « . DIETRICHS T. W. HERO
AIR
CONDITIONING
rheM r
LARGE. ClMB Ap.rtni,nt Dowo iMi perk Avenue
Room or House
stairs Small one, $35.00 611
a a po pe c o , in c .
AS tN V**JJ5*iSm ho»e m BMk Perk Ave.
Perk Ave.
______
w. Phene 144*
ptac'JeaUy n*^pad,
1*°
t Boom Apt. 200 Avacado.
1 kitchen . f t c\ty onJ f * ten**? 1931 MusUni motorcycle. Good
condition. Phone 341T-J-3.
0 ItOSti Mag. 2 bedroom furnished
apt $45. monthly. Pb. 1673.
...... . Speciel $7J5.
*$*V V au , a*0!? * Footiockm
Paint ........................* $2.40 gel.
New Masonry I bedroom house \
In CaiaelbetTY. $60 per month,
a rm'y ' navy 4T u1
1r PLUS
phona Orlando aiM ._________
p
310 Sanford Ave.
Pbone 1321
104 South Park Ave

P

B y STANLEY

Block. Send. Gravel, Cement
Concrete Pip# to Meet All Quail-

RED-I-Snx CONKRETE
bedroom home, hardwood floors,
Miracle Concrete Co.
tiled bath screened porch and
carportr. Excellent condition 3M Elm Ave.
Price $12,000. Easy tarmi.
TIT FOR A QUEENRubber Mattresaei, InnerThis home hai two large bed­ Foam
S p r i n g Mattresses. Couches.
rooms, separate dining room,
Baby Beds, Ranovating. Uphol­
large utility room, Jalousied
stering ana Slip Cover work.
porch. It Is located on two lots,
nss double ggraga. Priced NIX BEDDING MFG. CO1H1 Banted A n .
$12,000. Kitchen equipped.
— Factory to You —
You should see this lovely lake
Aluminum
front home with M feet of lake
frontage. It has two bedrooms,
Venetian BUsda
2 baths, Florida room, large Enclosed hoed. Sag-proof bottom
living room, closed garage end
rail wUh pise tic ends. Plastic er
storage. Good hosting and fish*
rayon Upas. Cotton or ayW*
ing end bathing beach.
cords.

Furnished cottare for couple, or
with baby. B14 Elm Avenue.

I M

TO N VN

ae,U°0fcPMme 1400

Osier • Welter Romes, Inc.

w. ra ti at.

H O M E

C mtfmmf Reedy Mixed Concrete. CancreU

J U l

ims. A. a Deudney. Lend Bur
veyor.

iu

THE O L D

Page 7

Phage I*T
AVON offers excellent opportuni­
ty for ladles tired tit long hours,

Recif/e For A
" N w W ook ^n (]
Stop In tad pick up the
meUriel■ you need for
thst h o m* Improvement
you’va been thinking of—
atw bookshelf, s l i d i n g
door doMt. built-in desk,
corner cupboard. Do it
now and you’ll be all eet
to Bdd tbit new touch to
your homo thia weekend.

H IL L LUM BER
b SU P P LY Y A R D
tit W M

M.

I t U

TILE

1*:M
tilt*

BY

lj:*n
in
4i»d
41ex
S ;Kd
IlfiO

D ICK M APES

«.d
Ti#l&gt;

FURNISHED AND INSTALLED

GENERAL TILE 'CONTRACTOR
TEL. 2195-W ’

AFTUUMMtV
W orld At Neon
Srsdln Farm P ls r s t
Itrooklyn D odfars
H,r Non* Itsnch
N» * 1
tin# rtub
The Itliylbrn Hour
World Al Hi*

cv cM sa
* t* Twlllxbt Songs
* Id

T:JS

7 Jd
7d
10.45
iii4o
in Id

aports Book
Musical P r m .
Drifting
On A Cloud
Iftl
eundsy Scbool Liana
Juke Bos M L Night
.ssr.forrt Cards
At llom* w nh Uujlo
N llh t Edition
Lsvmsn s Call To rrsysr
_______

tlitlti Sign Off
ir v n ir

at nit M M .
k
Blgn On
*
Musical Pgtn
Hymn Tims
Muslesl Pgm.
tiundsy Morning Musical*
J

L Cel*

World At Nine
Symrbnnstte
Nur.dsy Morning Musical*
Oospsl Singers
Church Service
fcundsy Pereesde
m u tx o a v
Brooklyn Dodges*
Quest Editor

Forward Starch

wer,eEr « ! j lafsif F*m
1 Serenad* In Sl«e

More Self-Rule
For Tunisia Gets
French Approval

PATHS !Fi—AsrcemenU to give
Tunisia greater self-rule were ap­
proved today by the National A*«
sembly’s Foreign Affairs Commit­
tee. The vote was 20-5, with 13
abstentions.
Undar pressure from Premlar
Edgar Faure, the l u l l Assembly
is axpected to rstily the agree,
ments next v»eek.
Tunisia is one of France's North
Africa protectorate* where Nation­
alist* demands lor ladependeno
hive flared Into open rebellion ia
recent months Morocco is another.
Uprisings alio have developed In
Algeria, technically a part of the
French homeland.

U. S. men have a higher death
rat* Iron haart disease than those
in roost othar countries, although
the death rate for U. 8. worasa
heart disease ia about avtr-

�I

Pig* 4

FrL July 1 , 1955 THE BANTORP HERALD

County Personals

J
By VIRGINIA P. ANDERSON
F Mr. and Mr*. Georg* Dodson
11 and family have moved to Fern
. Park where he It employed.
Mr. and Mr*. Li J. Schad have
* rented the Mark William* house
r across from the Natarene ChurchHe it with the Navy and stationed
at NAAS, Sanford.
4
.The Rev. and Sirs. C. C. Whit*
„ ere home again, after attending
Synod and Synodical Held this
p»*t week In Winter Haven. They
represented the Uptela Church of
which he is psstor. .
Mr and JVr*. R. R. Blizxerd end
sons, who have been visiting her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Brastngton, returned to tjielr home in
Cincinnati, 0.. Saturday.
Paymond M. Ball, enrout* from
South America to his home In
. New York, spent the Fathers
*• Day weekend with hls parents,
r Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Ball.
......... Burke entertained
a group of her daughter, Geyl* •
friend*, with a slumber party,
June 21, In honor of the latter*
twelfth hir’ hdey. For supper they
enjoyrd h*mburK*r», hot do**,
potato sated, baked been#, ire
1 1e e m
an* assorted cookie#
Mr. and Mr*. Chester Truslow
and »on% Chf*tcr L*o ind Donald
ef Fredericksburg. Va. ar* th*
guests of tier parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Lampert.
Friday. L E. McConaghy of
Mobile. Ala. and hls uncle, Lawrenre Pease of Ocala were the
guests nf Mr and Mr*. P. D. An­
derson. Mr. McConaghy Is a bro­
ther-in-law of Mr. Anderson and
hat visited In Lake Mary on num­
erous occasions.
Th# Friendship CUss of the
Presoyterian Church met Friday
evening at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. C. R. Bon*. Tha old and re­
vised plan* for tha new Educa­
tional Building of the church were
shown and dlsrusafdt Following
the business sesilfiti, tlmblss,
home mad* tea cream and a birth­
day cake, honoring Mrs. Eilleen
Willard and Nancy Bona were
served.
Those attending were Mr. and
Mr*. Marshall Smith, Gara and
Lynn, Mr. and Mrs- Richard
Keogh, Mr. and Mra. Ralph Keogh
e f Walterboro, S. C.. Mrs. Willard,
Mra. Ted Brooklyn and Busan,
Mr. and Mra. Birger WesUr, tha
Ktv. and hire. L. W. Scott, Mra.
J R, Williams and Melanie, Mr.
and Mrs. Bone and daughters,
Melania and Nancy -&lt;■

Sunday evening, Mrs. Id a
Keogh entertained with a family
jupper, spread plenlf style down
by the lake, honoring hat daugh­
ter, Mrs. Eilleen Willard, who was
celebrating a birthday. The menu
consisted of potato chips, mrat
loaf, tossed salad, chicken salad,
rolls, deviled eggs, pickles, tea,
coffee and birthday cake.
Beside* Mi* Keogh ann the hon­
ors* were Mr. and Mrs. Mile*
Keogh and I'aughlers, Brenda and
lynn of Orlando, Mr. and Mr*,
kalph Keogh end Mel of Waiterboro, S. C-, Kathy Willard, Mr.
and Mra. Richard Keogh and aons,
Crag and Keith.
Friend* of Mr*. J. E. Green
will be sorry to hear of the death
nt her mothrr, Mr*. Alice E. Cubhedge which occurred Friday
evening in Falatka. The Green
family are remaining theie for the
funeral, which wa* held on Mon­
day.
Mr. and Mr*. P. H. Stalling* and
lamlly of Sanford have bought the
Vaughn house near Little Venice
on the Country Club Road and have
moved In.
Fred Cummings and daughter,
Patricia Anr of Commerce, Okla.
were the guest* of hi* uncle and
cunt, Mr. end Mr*. J. R Reaves,
over the weekend.
Friend* of Mr. end Mr* Frank
McBride will be interested to hear
that his son cante down and ac­
companied them to their former
home in Camden, N. J., June 25.
Mr. McBride continues ill.
Mr. and Mr*. W. E. Order*
nevj purchased the II. H. Grier
house on Fifth Street. He Is em­
ployed by a Sanford construction
company and »he will be remem­
bered as the former Virginia
Hawkins of Lake Monro*.
Mr. and Mr*. David 8&lt;ott have
purchased a home in Little Venice
and will be moving In aoon. He Is
being transferred from the Naval
Air Station, Jacksonville to NA­
AS Sanford.
Mr. and Mr*. A. A. Green have
rented the Betty Million house.
Friend* of Mr*. Irving Hauser
will be glad to hear that she ha*
sufficlantly recovered to be mov­
ed, June 2ft, from the Florida San­
itarium in Orlando to her aon’e
home In DeLand.
Mr. and Mra. H. M. Cochran
war* called to Telham, Georgia
over the part weekend, to attend
the funeral of the mother-in-law
of her brother, Cecil Sinnquefleld.
P. D. Anderson Jr. and his aon,
P. D. Ill of Miami, were the guests'
of the fomier’a parent*, 5!r. and
Mr*. P. D. Anderson, Monday.
Friend* of Mr. and Mra. Albert
Burlto, former residents of Lake
Mary, wdll bs sorry to hear that he
suffered a heart attack In Fort
Laudardala Tuesday and passed away. She la taking tha body to thalr

funner home In Utica. N. Y., for
burial.
Mr. and Mr*. James Howard h*ve
rented the Clay Smith house. Ha
work* with Mr. Smith in Orlando.
Mr. and Mr* Janie* Howard have
(.eraburg are announcing the birth
of a ion. Richard Wilbui on June
20. Thi yourg man weighed In at
ft lb*.. 13 ox. Georg* Lea will re­
membered a&gt; tha aon of Mr. and
Mr*. Franklin Lee of Lake Mary.
Mi** Lita Lippincott of Plain*
field. N. J arrived Sunday, by
plane to apcnd mm* time with her
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mra.
Eugene Seaman.
Friend* of Mra. Z. E. Smith will
he xorry to hear that »b« I* con­
fined to the Fernald Laughton
Memorial Hospital with pneum­
onia. She i* aome better and it ia
hoped that *ha may aoon be
brought home.

Longwood
By MRS. BEVERLY EATON
Mrs. George Otto, Mra. Violet
Faint end Mr*. Vincent Meteckl
of the Longwood Home Demon­
stration club have left to attend
the .list annual meeting of the
Florida Stale Council of Home
Demonstration Work at the Univarsity of Florida to be held
July 11-15.
Mrs. 5laxin* McGrath and Blrs.
W. Drmorrett and children were
luncheon guerts of Mra. Charlra
Searcy Jr. on Tuesday at the home
of Mr. and Mr*. Charles Searcy
Er.
••Pete" Blanchsrd left by plen*
for Main* to apend hls vacation
with hi* grandparents, Sir. and
Mr*. Frod BUnchard and 51r. and
Mrs. Clyde Wheeler. His parents,
Mr. and Mr*. W. Blanchard will
follow later to spend thalr vaca­
tion In Maina alto.
W* are very happy to report
that J. A. Bistline la showing im­
provement after suffering a heart
attack.
Henry Ptleffar hat relumed
from Dayton. O., after being call­
ed thera by tha serious illness of
hia father, Hmry Phlaffar Sr. who
ia still vary ill.
James Robert McGrath It spend­
ing a weak with hia slater, Mrs.
Neal Gilbert In Eau Galli*.
Mra. Bette Lockley and daugh­
ter, Sendra, and Mlaa Irene Mill*
of Webster, N. Y „ arrived on
Thursday to spend their vacation
with tha formera parent’*, Mr.
and Mrs, Claud# Layo.

W all the natural ice on earth
wore to malt, It would release tnough water to rale* tha level of
th# oceans about 100 foot, aays
tha National OaorgrayIhe Society.
Vatican In
once. They

t

ITXOrsiB

lory's, of course, but I don't like
the Idea ef neetera moving in on
the range any better than you do.
Only I try to look at both aides.
These farmer* think they've got
the law on their tide. And you'll
admit we could ua* a little more
lew out here, won't you ?"
Christie couldn't argue that
point: it waa one ahr had mad*
too often herself. When Cameron
had taken hie leave, aoon after,
tha regarded her father thoughtfull y.
"You don’t like hint, do you,
dad?"
"I'm getlin* old, honay. Reckon.
Ume a man geta to my age, he
geta cantankerous. But I never did
trust a poker-faced man that's got
a good anewer for everything!1'
,

ltot&gt; M sllo rj hod hoped hie foster» , j K t u y Id onU n. would s n t l* down
now. wed Ih rlr neighboring mother.
Christie ToUnd. take o\tr Ihe menagemeat of Broke* t*pur. whlth Mallory
had built into a T e u a cattle empire
But there wan a wild elreak la the boy
which d ro it him oft on drinking • preen.
Into the arm s of Ihe earthy L i l t Dawtoo. It wee botouae of L it e (hat C h ris­
tie had brokra with Kerry sad had
turned her attrntloa to Wayne Camiro n , an Iry.eyed etrangcr. Trouble la
tha area hed long tbrnetened. for farm ­
ers h id begun to nest oa (ho land,
d e p u tes as la righta tad boundaries
arose, end ranee war seemed Inevitable.
At a local dance, pbyeleai violence
flared sharply. when Tim Larrsbee.
fanner, and Kerry R lordes rancher,
fought for the favor of beautiful,
earthy L I U . And when Mallory Immed
of this latent "meea" Involving hie boy
with L ila . h« whipped the led roundly,
wounding his pride, driving him from
Broken Spur la queet of adventure. But
adventure was brooking right bsro on
Broken Spur,
ftnmenna had dared
stretrh a wire fence across port ef Mailory’s land, and one of Broken Ppur*s
row hands had beta killed la tha raeulag dispute

0 * 0

Rob wasn't worrying seriously
about any threat Larrabe* could
offer to Broken Bpur. But once
the first shock at outrage bad
passed, he didn't blame the neater
too much for trying to take what
he thought be could get away
with. In Larrmbce'a shoes, he ac­
knowledged. he'd probably have
don* the earn* thing.
No. it wasn’t anger that kept
him sleepless. But something—
maybw the unaccustomed amotion
he'd let himself show that after­
noon—had shaken him. towered
bars in hi* mind that were usually
kept up, and tha thoughts that
crowded through didn’t make for
sleep. Thoughts o f tha peat he had
deliberately cut away when he
came to this wild, raw country.
Lieutenant Robert Mallory, late of
the U. B. Cavalry, brokea out of
the service for conduct unbecom­
ing an officer! Nobody in Texas
knew that chapter of his history, i

CHAPTER ELEVEN
BANDY sucked in hia breath, and
Christie's knuckles whitened on
the reins. Both of them looked at
Rob, waiting for the explosion of
violence that would certainly fol­
low this blasphemy. But he sat
aUtue-atlU, and hls voice, when he
broke the electric silence, waa low
and level, although It grated.
*
"I've been expecting some Idiot
to try this play sooner or later.
Bure, between all the different gov­
ernments Texas has had In the
last hundred years, moat ef the
Spanish grants are cloudy enough
so a smart lawyer could find holes
In them If he was paid to look. But
Broken Spur's mine! My title’*
all tha year* of my life I sweated
blond to build It up—and It’U take
more than a lawyer or a law-quot­
ing sod buster to get It way from
ma! I'U give you Just-twenty-four
hours to get your barbed wire off
my place—If it’s still standing this
time tomorrow, my men’ll rip It

o

w

tng it up, till be stood today a bv»
trig legend, ooa of tha richest mm
ta Texas, a asm* to conjure with
all over tha Bouthweot, feared, t o

Auto Industry T o Feel Effect O f Steel Strike
DETROIT lit—The halt In steel
production will affect the au(o in­
dustry U it laiU as much aa a
tingle week.
Mott of tha car maker* have
stockpile* of iteel ranging from
th* need* of a couple of week*
to as much ss 45 dsys. But they
are concerned about their suppliers* raw malarial* inventories.
Isek of steel at tha supplier
level c o u l d stop car production
over night.
General Motors and Chrysler ap­
parently are somewhat better po­
sitioned right now with respect to
steel stockpiles than Is Ford. Al­
though Fond has its own blast
furnaces and produces about 50
per cant of tha steel It requires,

...................

Until recently It was believed
that only leguminous plant* can
fig nitrogen from the air but n
recent discovery Indicates that a
species of elder tree can da iL '

It we* long believed that the
Tory newspaper, the Royal Amer­
ican. suspended publication-In New
York City Aug. 1, 1713, but tha
Now York Historical Sociaty has
acquired what It says la th* only
known copy of oa issue published
Aug. T, 1173.

20 YEARS
A C H IE V E M E N T
Ia IMS when wo started thd first Mutual Insur­
ance Agency in Sanford, there war* only a few mutual*
operating in Florida with agenta in nine citiea. Thia
typo of inauranco waa unfamliar to moat Flordiana at
that tima.
Our ambition haa been to furnish our euatomera—
Ioauranca At A Saving—for their HOME— AUTOMO­
BILE and BUSINESS. The fact that we have paid to
our cuatomara over $225,000.00-in dividends the paft
SO year* would indicate we have to aome extent ae&gt;

m ra was Nov. 18, 1981. ($41,596.50 including ioas of
wRome) w m laaured in mutual companies. Thia losa waa
adjusted and paid through our agency.
Wa have not been unmindful of the fact that paytag daimi ia tha moat, Important part of the insurance

:

OARY L NOUN, 23, Kansas City, Mo. who fell from tha top of 1MM
foot water tank to a narrow catwalk 20 feet below is lowered t».
safety-—tied to a short Udder—In Grandview, Mo. Tha daring 1
rescue, requiring four hours, was performed by firemen of Grand-1
view Air F ora Baas. Nolen had a broken arm and back Injuries^

Planning
To Remodel?

No Need Is Seen
For Alarm Over
Soviet A ir Power
SUN VALLEY. Idaho (JB - Sen.
Welker (R-ldaho) says ha doesn’t
"see any gnat point In becoming
loo alarmed over recent report*
of lucreutd Soviet capability In
the air."
"We do know enough about the
Runlan air force, however," he
tald, "to lay that tha United
States has not lost superiority in
the air and will not losa It so long
as wa retain an Intelligent atti­
tude towards providing for this vi­
tal defense force."
"Because tha Ruailana showed
• number of lata modal aircraft
at a Moscow fly-by thera Is no
valid reason to believe that they
now outstrip us In sir production
and training," ha laid.
He said Ruula praients a far
greater threat In tha political, economle scientific and psychologies!
Balds.
Welker addressed the InternaUonsl Circulation Managers Assn,
yesterday.

MAYORBO

H u -N ic k S u m n e r ;

�Weather

Slop and Save
In Sanford
y m S fim r m

STh*

^ m tfo rfc

■

Established 1908

AN INDEPENDENT DAILY
SANFORD. FLORIDA,

No*, long ago, according to Mort
Weialnger io "Thia - Week,*' the
pcerlaia Weighing and Vending
Jtaehinea Corp. of Long Ialand,
Jf. Y. whoie icalea diipcme the
date, your weight and character
lor one cent, advertised for e
teles executive to head its Exit
Coail staff.
a One applicant stated In his let*
«er: “ I am intelligent, diplomatic,
tactful, loyal, enterprising, perse­
vering, resourceful, trustworthy
and ambitious." Ha clinched the
fob by enclosing ten Peerless
cards attesting to these virtues
aa hla evidence.

By TEE ASSOCIATED PBESS
The United States today cele­
brates ita moat important aummertimt holiday, the lltth anniversary
the Declaration of Independ-

henier-Designafe

Winds Up Efforts /
BOMB (ft — Premier-designate
Antonio Itgni embarked today on
the final phase of hla weaklong
efforts to form l government for
crisis-ridden Italy. Kit chances of
Ticceii were termed good.
Told by President Giovanni
Gronchl to report by tomorrow
whether he can gtcfc ■ cabinet to
•ucceed Premier Mario 8celba’i
government which collapsed 11
days ego, l e g n l arranged meet­
ings with Liberal party leaders to
bargain lor tbflr backing.
The liberal! have posed the
main threat to the left-of-center
ri*Uaq Democrat’s etforta to orniae * four-party cabinet.

«Host Still Squirms

Way Into Old Earth
DOWNEY, Calif. tlt-George Dl
Faso's green plastic hose is still
squirming ita way mysteriously in­
to the earth—at the rate of three
Inches an hour.
f i t ' * been doing It at about the
same rate for lour days. No one
known why.
But bnadmda af curious eeraona
flock to the Di Peso front yard
at all howe of the day and night
%to watch. And the sleep of the
Di Pasea and their throe young*
•tors kaa boon interrupted re­
peatedly by long-distance talephone tafia flea newsmen and
others ashing details af the myA cvuple af times the boa has
Mapped eft an ahapUca tugged. DI
Face baa patttod what remains
•boon ground af the 18-foot length
BAIN
TOKYO IN Heavy rain lashed
Sakha Ida, Japan's northern main
Island Inst night and today, laavlag funr parsons dud, two miss^ag^end five Injured. Morn that

Prosperity O f Bank Senator Johnson
Is Shown In Report Said Seriously III
Prosperity and progress seem to be the two key words
for the Florida State Bank as reports show steady increase
in deposits. The bank made an all high in deposits of 8.5
million which is approximately one and n quarter million
WASHINGTON m — A sfrioui
heart attack suffered by Senate
ahead of last year.
T. E. Tucker, president, stated that the first half of Democratic Loader LyndoO B.

After Heart Attack

Seven Navy Fliers
Burned In Bomber
ReslJnHospital

Tfl?
OAKLAND Calif. (N — Seven
Navy fliers burned and wounded
in a Neptune patrol bomber
downed by Russian MIGs over the
Bering Sea June 23 rested today
in Oak Knoll Naval Hospital.
Wives of three were waiting at
Alameda Naval Air Station when
their hoapita) transport plane land
ed yesterday from Anchorage,
Alaska.
Mrs. Nellie Janke, of Alimeds,
burst into tern when aha aaw the
bandages swathing her husband,
Chief Electronics Technician El­
mer R. Janke.
Aviation Machinist's Mate Thad.
deua Malars, of Oakland, propped
himself up un hia stretcher to
look for the first time at hla 5weekt-old son Thad Jr.
Aviation Ordnanceman Martin
E. Berg, of Alameda, hugged his
wife firmly despite heavily ban­
daged handi.

DeSapio Expresses
Views For '56 Race
In T V Interview
WASHINGTON iP -C i rmin# De
Sapio, close political ally of Gov,
Averell Hardman of New York,
say* be doesn't believe the 1K8
Democratic presidential nomina­
tion ia "in the bag for anybody,"
In an NBC-TV Interview. De
Sapio yesterday Hated both Hard­
man and Adlai Stevenson as
among Iba possible candidates.
DeSapio, New York secretary
af state and a Democratic national
committeeman, w o u I d n’t say
whether he'd prefer Hardman. But
ho expressed confidence the New
York delegation would support the
state's governor.
In New York, Sen. Murray (DMont) forecast on ardving front
Europe the Stevenson win again
gat the nomination and will win
the election.

1065 earnings were ' ‘Rood'* and
that the hank ha* transferred
fifty thousand dollars to the sur­
plus account.
“ Bank activities show evidence
that 1955 will be the biggest year
In the city of Sanford," he said,
C. It. McNulty, head of the Mc­
Nulty group of banks, present for
the monthly director* meeting
made the following statement*;
“ The ft rat 4 halt of 1DSS la
above the predietiona of the econ­
omists. The economic outlook for
the balanco of this year it optim­
istic. The cattle market is up
two to three per cent and industry
has gone ahead".
He also said that “‘ Merchandis­
ing is four billion dollars ahead
of last year and tha steel in­
dustry fs estimated to operate at
60 per cent capacity and at the
first half ot this year it operated
at a Ot percent capacity."
“ Consumer* credit is growing
rapidly" he went on. “ The popu­
lation will grow thiee million an­
nually plus seven hundred incusand new families will be »• emu­
lated. Florida is a leader in the
nation In increasing in popula­
tion and the economic outlook for
1055 is good."
Tucker added that “Our bank
activities in construction loans
fill in with tha policy to 'help San­
ford grow' ",
“ We anticipate to make one
and one-half million to two mil­
lion in construction loans," it was
pointed out.
Officers of the Florida State
Bank ara C. H. McNulty, chair­
man of the board; T. E. Tucker,
president; W. J. Peacock Jr.,
Cashier; Mary Lynd Douglas, as­
sistant cashier; Ralph W. Peaold
assistant cashier; Dallas E. Loop,
manager personal Joan depart­
ment; directors: Andrew Carraway, C. R. Clonta. C. H. McNulty,
W. A. Patrick and T. E. Tucker.

by Harold E. SUatea, gave Lade-

Johnson was generally regarded
today is unlikely to have -much
effect on Congress' accomplish­
ments for the rest of the session.
Johnson, stricken late Saturday,
was described by the Bclhcada
(Md.) Naval Hospital as "serious­
ly ill." It ssltl his condition “ has
not changed significantly"—ttyat is,
tint he was "comfortabb* and
somewhat mura liable, b)it (till

MONDAY. JULY 4, 1855

A ssociat'd Press leased W irs

ORLANDO (.1*—Three Florida
firm* were accused of violating
the Fair Labor Standards Act in
complaint* filed in federal court
by the U S. Department ot Labor
last week.
The department asked restrain­
ing orders against Southern Fruit
Distributors Inc., Orlando; Ohio
Farmer* Ine., Zell wood; and Lib­
by. McNeill k Libby, Ocala.
Southern Fruit and Libby were
charged with failing to pay some
workers the minimum 75 cents an
hour and lime and a halt for hours
over to a week as required for
employes engaged in interstate
commerce.
Roth plants process citrus. The
action against Southern Fruit was
filed here and the Libby caso in
Ocala,
Ohio Farmers was accused of
violating the child labor and rec­
ord keeping provisions of the art.
The complaint, filed here said the
firm used several children under
16 on its Orango County farm
where it grow'* and packs radishes
and ulhcr products.

Imperial Farmer's
Predictions Appear
To Turn Out Wrong

Six W e e k s ' Strike
Idling British Ships
Has High Price Tag
LONDON (AP)— Britain’.* 18.000 waterfront striker.*
streamed Lack to the docks today after a stonpiiRe that idled
hundreds of ships for tdz week; and cost the nation millions
of pounds in trade.
The striker? hml gntiinl virtually nothing’ from lliulr

Washington Strike
In Transit System
Begins Fourth Day
WASHINGTON UP—Washington’ *
citywide tr.iu*it strike was in it*
fourth day today with federal me­
diator* making new effort* to ar­
range a bargaining session be­
tween AFL striker* and the firm
that operate* the capital'* street­
car* and buses.
AJier a meeting yrslrnlay of
District of Columbia commission­
ers and top official* of tho Capital
Transit Co., Commissioner Samuel
Spencer laid there was no pros­
pect ot a settlement before tomor­
row.
In Ip* Angeles, U. S. marshals
were preparing to subpoena lands
E. Wolfson, board chairman of Ihe
transit firm, for ■ Thursday ap­
pearance at a Senate hearing.
Wolfson'* testimony was sought
on a bill by Sen. Morse (D-Ore)
to revoke Capital Transit's fran­
chise, Wolfson recently lost a bid
to take over control ot Montgomcrcry Ward A Co.
Some 2.400 AFL etreelrar and
bu* drivers ualkrd out early Fri­
day in a wage dispute.

Airman Apparently
Shows Unconcern

Countess Of Mayo
Is Back From Cave

inet resigned last night to glva him
a free band to choose his own gov­
ernment.
The National Assembly has des­
ignated Arias to finish out the term
of assassinated President Jose
Antonio Remon. The term ends
Oct. 31. Arias is expected to name
Ms new ministers tomorrow.

Repeating a previous statement

Ha now bolds that post under able and conscientious men to
tha now International Cooperation reach dlffarept conclusions," Ben­
Administration, successor to FOA son wrote Carlson:
a part ad tha Stole Depart- ", . * To emphasise our feeling
that the previous security decision
i*i new action waa an- made tor thia department should
. to a letter to Sen. Carlson not coalman to bo permanently ef­
(R-Xan), who had asked the sec­ fective, and particularly since Mr.
retary far general information on Lwfajtoaky ia aa employe ad an­
the Agriculture Department's am- other agency, 1 hare given Instruc­
tions that tha memorandum record
Carlson, serving an a Sonata ad too declaim aad too press re­
Ciwfl Sec vine Subcommittee which lease ad Doc. a which announced
la .Issfctorf l*to tha security pro­ it Mfe bo canceled to that our
gram. mads ton letter gnhUe lata record wifi not show Mr. LadeJiaafcjr aa g anenrity risk."
Saturday. ’

Virginian Leaders
Discuss Problems

Suspenson Bridge
Is Fatal For Two

CHEROKEE. N. C. IP - A suspension foot bridge tore loose
from Its mooring* near here yes­
terday. hurling more than So per­
sons inti the shallow waters of
the Ocontluftee River, 20 feel be­
low.
Two women died of Injuries.
Of the 48 persons Injured. 18
were hospitalized at nearby Sylva
and Bryson City. Mr*. Hrnry T.
Halle Jr., IS, of Daisy, Tenn., died
en route to a hospital. She struck
her head on a rock. Sirs, Law­
rence Rainwater, 31, of Atlanta.
Ga„ died in the Sylva Hospital
of internal injuries.
Thr ISofool-long bridge Is a
tourist attraction at U&gt;' Cherokee
Indian Reservation.

TRADE AGREED UPON
TOKYO un—Japan and Sweden
agreed today on a trade formula
for the real of this year, the For­
eign Office announced. Japan
plans to import from Sweden 3U
million dollars worth of goods and
to export five million until the end
of this year.

walkout. They went hack m lull
force this morning, but many were
bewildered and angry as a result
of Ihe factoin.il squabble* that
marked Ihc strike.
Docker* quickly formed up into
gangs to dear some 170 ship* ly­
ing idle at London, Hull, Man­
chester, Liverpool, Birkenhead,
Rochester and Garshin.
Rut the rift between the North­
ern and Southern strike factions
in tin* National Amalgamated
Stevedores and Docker* Union re­
mained.
In the t/indon area the strikers
had voted earlier to return it the
Northern groups del likewise. Not
until last night did ih* Northern
ports agiee.
The strike began a* a Jurisdic­
tional struggle hy docker* union to
gain equal bargaining rights on the
waterfront* with the big Transport
and General Workers Union.
At the height of tha strike more
than 20000 men were out but mem­
bers of TGWU, which opposed Die
strike, stayed on (lie Jolt.

"

*

l)

Japanese Divers
Plunge Into Second
Da/ Of Ship Probe
YOKOHAMA, Japan i.W-SprInkting rice and wine In Tokyo Hay
to consult the spirits ot lung-dead
American sailors, Japanese diver*
today plunged into their second
day of salvage work on the wreck
of the IISS Oneida.
I,cgrnd say* tho 158-foot gun­
boat had |loo,OCX) worth of Jap­
anese gold aboard when slip took
117 men to the bottom 65 years
ago.

U.S. naval records show two offics’ rs and 57 men were saved.
Veslerday a 20 man Japanese
salvage tram began raking sand
and aeaweed away from her wood­
en hulk, which has lain in !5u feet
of water since she collided wllh
tho British steamer Bombay in
1870.
Salvage host llisato Takeshlma
say* he has been scouting the
wreck since 1031.

Byrd Says Congress
May Get Additional
Control Next Year

WASHINGTON UP — Sen. Byrd
(D-Va) laid today Congress may
gain some added control over fed­
eral spending next year 1/ the Ei­
senhower administration adopts a
proposed change in submitting its
budget.
Byrd discioacd lhat ftecretary of
Iho Treasury Humphrey recently
told the Senate Finance Commit­
tee in a closed session the ad­
ministration is working on a plan
to return to a system of annual
review of appropriations by Congrris.
As Byrd explained it, this would
involve abandonment of the pres­
ent system under which Congress
lias piled up around ftn billion dol­
lars in unspent appropriation* tu
and mud wall crumbled and The move was ordered by the be u*ed by the executive depart­
cruihcd a home, pollco said.
Jemalcan Banana Board.
ment* lu the next acveral years.

Bananas Will Get
Plastic Covering

Cabinet Resigns
For Panama Head

u » ■ » '» £ o m S I K JInsky security clearance and hired that on ‘ security questions "it is
Africultara Dspsrtmst swards him to work on land reform to in- possible for two equally reason-'
fiwwfcrtfc wti aa( sbnsr Waif

SfC

9

EL CENTRO, Calif. *jn—A year
ago an Imperial Valley farmer
said;
"1 think the wetback* who haw
been carted off will ho back before
long. They’ve had these drive* be­
fore. The wets will always come
bark."
It apf-cnr* today (lint the farmer
serious."
was wrong and Operation Wet
President Eisenhower expressed back, conducted by the U.S. Bor'
"deep regret*." From many of dcr Patrol, was a success.
Johnson's colleagues, both Demo­
in previous years there had been
crats and Republicans, came ex­ a flood of wetbacks—the term ap
pressions of regret.
hy usd o swim h Rlhhttcttrtrctcct
Ills position as majority leader, plied to illegal Immigrants from
in charge of steering legislation Mexico stemming from days when
through the Senate, will be filled they used In swim the Riu Grande
by Sen. Clements (D-Ky), assist■ into Texas.
ant leader. Clement* filled in for
In the Border Patrol’* El Pa*n
Johnson earlier this year when sector which cover* most of the
GALVESTON, Tex. UP-A huskr
the latter underwent a kidney CaUfornia-Mrxico and Arizonastone operation ami was absrnt Mexicu border, 416,657 wetbacks airman—&lt;o terrified of being cap­
from the Senate for more than were apprehended In the year tured for being AWOL, ho said,
that he killed three persons—sot
six weeks.
ended June 30, 1054.
in his rrll today, apparently un­
concerned about tho triple slaying
charge* against him.
Me freely told officer* and newsnun dclads of killing Mrs. Ruby
RICHMOND, Va. UP -Virginia McPherson, 42; her mother Mr*.
officialdom pondered ihc school Zola Norman, At; and her son
problem today with toinn new and Georg*’, 12, in Uieir home In Dickin­
LONDON Its—The Countess ot different food for thought-tho son, Tex , near here June 22.
Mayo, once famed as a Mayfair endorsement by a maRir school
Tlie airman Ellis Euclid Lauhostess is back in circulation aft­ division of the principle of integra­ hon Jr., 2ii. told officers ha was
er spending two month* in a tion.
trying to reach Japan, where, he
Himalayan cave.
Thr enforcement came from the said, hr ha* a Japanese wife. He
The 5t-year-old counicii, who re­ school board of Norfolk, the state's ex;ierled to sail in a ahip from
lumed to London this weekend, largest city, and represented a soma Mox lean port.
told reporter* *he had gone to sitatde crack in the solid wall of
Rithlkeih, northern India, to itudy official opposition to anything that
the rayitic Swaml sect whoso mem­ would mix the races in Virginia
ber* dwell in cave*.
public school*,
"We intend, without mental
She laid she was the only woman
reservation, to uphold and abide
in the whole colony,
WASHINGTON UP-Now they're
*’ My cave wa* somewhat sim­ by the law of Ihe land," said the pulling skins on bananas.
Norfolk
board’s
weekend
state­
pler than the 21-room house I kept
The Department of Agriculture
up before the war," she said. ment. "We bcileva In the public
"There was no furniture and I school ayrtem and pledge our ef­ said today all bananas exported
had a boulder and some wire net­ fort* tu its continuation in this from Jamaica to the United King­
dom soon will be encases! in poly­
city."
ting to keep out monkeys.
ethylene film, a plastic substance.
"All I had to cat was fruit and
Tho department did not explain
WALL CRUMBLES
potatoes. The swaniis offered me
SEOUI, ip—Four smell children the advantage* or tho move, but
curry, but it was too but."
were killed end four injured list presumably the bananas will keep
PANAMA (N—President Ricardo
night when a rain-soakrd stone better.
Arias Espinosa's eight-man Cab-

Ladejinsky Is _ Not Seen As Risk
**? s s S t i!y r K u gfe.

N EW SPAPER

Florida Firms
Are Accused
Ot Violation

U. S. Celebrating
flost Important
Summer Holiday

A
K

if m t U t

No. 221.

Waterfront Groups
Are Back On Docks

S t r o llin g
In Sanford

Many of the saUon'a elllieaa enfcy the holiday at baachea and
WO parts, at picnic grounds or
m shady yards at home.
Others gather for parades and
• p a e c h a s commemorating the
Pounding of American freedom by
« congress of eoloelai leaders In
the sweltering city of Philadelphia
la 1178.
By evening, la eltiea and towns
rougbout the tend, milllona will
•athcr for patriotic firework dia* ya like the big one at the Washton Monument grounda in the
nation's capital.
Around crowded centers like
New York, the IMiday is expected
to bring traffic Jama and crowds
like those that dogged highways
aad filled parts and baachca to
capacity yesterday.

Wear tn p» rt]y cloudy ttrnocfc
Tuesday with widely »cattqr*d
afternoon showers nr thunder­
showers; also few nltht and earIt morning ahowrrs Invar rail
mail.

Bolt Of Lightning
Kills Ohio Mother,
Her Three Children
COLUMBUS. Ohio UP—A holt of
lightning ran down a tali o.ik and
kilted a young mother and her
Hirer rhildrrn who W’.’re on a FieriIdnv picnic nutlli of here yester­
day.’
Duly surviving member of the
family today is 27-yr.ir-old Quido
ItosM-tlt, of Columbus. Rossetti and
hi* wife Kda. also 27, and children
had taken refuge beneath a quill
under llu- Iree when a thunder­
storm struck.
Dead with Mrs. Rns»rti were
daughters Julia, IS months, and
Debbie 4, amt son John, 6
Witnesses among several huntiled person* at the picnic ground*
said the Imil produced a blinding
while flash that seemed tn engulf
tha whole area. They said the vic­
tims were hurled as far as 50 feet
from tti*' tree.
Rossetti escaped with flash
burn* on his legs. Also suffering
severe shock, he is in fair condi­
tion at University Hospital, Colum­
bus,

’HI

Foreigners Given
Glimpse Of Jets
MOSCOW up — Russia gave for­
eigners Ihrir first glimpse of her
new supersonic jet fighters yester­
day In » spectacular Air Forco
Day show featuring a wide rang*
of war and transport craft.
Weeteni observers watched In­
tently at the pride of llu*sir's air
arm-fighters, bombers, transport*
and liugfl helicopters- passed over
.Moscow's Tuihimi Airfield.
The high spot of the allow- earns
when 46 supersonic single-let
fighters flashed past. Most of tho
other aircraft had been seen in
rehearsal flights over ktnscow,
hut these jets wine new.
Another freah sight Hint brought
cheers from some inn.non Musco­
vites thronging Ihe flag-brderkrd
field was a sleek new twin-engined
Jet transport.

Officials Take Poll
Of Summer School
OKLAHOMA CITY IP — School
officials link a poll hero to find
out why high school students go
to summer school.
Of the 32.1 questioned, 103 re­
plied they were attending to make
up subjects they faded. The other*
are attending simply to atudy ex­
tra subjects—apparently to maka
it easier In future tcrmi.
Rome of Ihe answers received
were revealing. Fur instance:
One 17-year-old stated simply,
"I goofcif."
Hie students whn failed subjects
were asked to give their rca»on.
Teachers were blamed in soma
instances. In other lepiies, students
refused to pas* the buck.
"I went tn sleep in elasi," a
17-year-old boy said.
"Kicked out!" was another can­
did answer.

Forces Virtually
Abandon All Hope
TOKYO IP—The U S Navy amt
Air Force today virtually aban­
doned hope of finding two Marion
f l i e r s whose Jet plane vanished
over tlif l'anltc near Tokyo eight
days ago.
The Navy said it is dissolving
its 10-ship search force and th '
Air Force sakl that from now on
search planes will check only
mountain peaks, islands and eoaaU
linos for signs uf wreckage.
Dozens of planes and ship* have
searched tome &gt;3.000 square mile*
uf water in a vain hunt (or Bin
fliers' emergency rafts. The aearch
extended aa far aa 300 mile* eaat
of the Japanese eoaat.

At TRESS RECUPERATING
SANTA MONICA, Calif. &lt;*_
Actress Barbara Stanwyck ia re­
cuperating at borne after tor*#
days of hospital treatment for back
injuries auffcivd to a fall last
Wednesday.
Mill Stanwyck, 47, trippad M
some atep* at borne and fell. Sh*
waa treated for *ev*r« bruiaee ot
tb# aaerailiac area.

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�Shop and Save
In Sanford

#aitfnr&amp; I t tm ib

■

V OLU M E X L V I

AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER_________ M _______________________________
L eased W ire
Associated
T H U R S D A Y . J U N E 30, 19SS
SA N PO RD . F L O R ID A ,

E stab lish ed 1908

CpI. Dunn Given
Eight-Year Term
For Aiding Enemy

Richards Predicts
House. Will Okay
Foreign Aid Bill

FLIGHT LIEUTENANT Chris­
topher Blount, 30, ha* been es­
corting P r I n « • ■* Margaret
■round London recently, giving
rumor monger* a new K ent to
follgw. Shown In hie uniform,
Blount Is an aviator and equerry
to the Queen ae was P*t*r
Towniend, reportedly atill top
man with tha rrincesa despite
hit two-year exile to Belgium.
(International)

Vaccine
Priority
Is Set
JACKSONVILLE OB-Whra Salk
vaccina become* avallabla for
commercial distribution In Florida,
children aget 8 to • will have first
chance at Inoculation against polio.
An eaUmaUd 340,000 are in that
priority a f t group, cl which !».ooo have received at leaat ana (hot
In Hie National Polio Foundation
diitrfliutlon Vi flrit and aecond
gn d ert. The number who received
a tacond ehot ia not known yet
dace makeup ellnkea (till are in
progress In aome countle(.
The lin t priority wa» estab­
lished on a voluntary baiii ycaterday by tha Btw Florida advlaory
committed o r la lk Vneot90. lt will
Oct other prioritle( later.
Dr. Richard G. Skinner Jr.,
Jackaonvilia physician who hcidt
the (tata polio planning committea, also waa named chairman of
the new advlaory committee. Oth­
er member* ate Or. John D. Mil­
ton, Miami, preildent of the Flor­
ida Medical Assn.; Dr. Wilaon T.
Sowder, Jackaonvilia state health
officer, and R. Q. Richards. Fort
Myers, secretary of the Florida
State Pharmaceutical Aaan.

WASHINGTON UB-Rep. Rich­
ards (D-SC) predicted the House
will approve today "without any
drastic cuts" a bill to permit new
foreign aid spending of more than
3 tt billion dollars.
The bill would authorise a total
of 83,283,000,000 f o r military and
economic aid for the year begintng tomorrow This merely lets a
ceding—139 million dollars lower
than that voted by the Senate—
with the actual appropriations to
be voted later.
President Eiicnhower had asked
for about 313 billions.
The House yeiterdsy upheld a
House Foreign Affairs Committee
reduction o( 143 million dollars in
global arms aid and tentatively
approved military fund* totaling
81,133,000,000. Richards said Ihe re­
duction eliminates a reserve fund
requested by the administration.
By voice vote, t h e House
defested a proposal by Rep. Ful­
ton (R-Pa) to withhold late-model
jet aircraft from Yugoslavia until
all requirements for such planes
are filled In this country and In
nations with which it baa mutual
defense pacta,
s

Red Cross Plans
To Offer Course
In Lifesaving
A senior lifesaving course for
water safety will be offered by
Ihe Seminole County Red Cross
chapter at tha Municipal Pool be­
ginning at 7 p. m. July I. The
course will be given from 7 to 10
p. m. each Wednesday and Fri­
day.
BUI Fleming will be tha {natruc(or and Mrs. F, D. Scott will as­
sist
Eligible for the course arc
those who have passed their lttb
birthday or are students in or
abovo the 11th grade and who
are tn sound condition. The course
will require a minimum of 17
hours. .

3li .ftur.KH of the Wage Policy Committee of the CIO Steelworker*
Union are shown with David J. McDonald, union president, shortly
after authorising him to call a strike at midnight tonight if no wage
agreement is reached with the basic steel industry. At the meeting
in Pittsburgh. Pa- are (I. to r.): Charles FiHon of Massachusetts
District I. Local 4335; McDonald, and Edward Zeuch of Cincinnati,
0-, Distrirt 25, Aluminum Local 310. (Internationa! Soundphoto)

★

★

★

e a s e

David J. McDonald, president of the strike—threatening
CIO Steelworker*, was closeted with John A. Stephens, prin­

cipal bargainer for U, S. Steel
Corp.
Stephen* had hinted that Rig
Steel was preparing a new money
offer.
■ a ■ ■ A ■*
Ita
McDonald already ha* rejected
^
an average 10-rent an hour pay
'raise proposal for the union’* &lt;100,000 member* In the basic alvei
Industry. They now average $2.33
per hour.
Major ateel mill* were gradual­
ly being shut down. They begun
JACKSONVILLE W -«tx
icemen seers held today aa mem­ well In advance of the atrtke dead­
bers of what police called a bandit line, eooling off furnacee and
ring whose operations reached Into draining them of hot metal. Rome
two states and netted about $1,400 worker* already were reported off
the Job due to the gradual cur­
the past five weeks.
Detective Sgta. Fred W. Murray tailment.
and N. R. Sikes said tha gang had It has been three year* since
staged fore robberies, and had sto­ the last industrywide steel strike.
len two Jacksonville automobiles. Mill* were shut down early two
Three of the prisoners were cap­ months In the summer of 1032
tured yesterday after an auto when the late union president
chase tallowing ttw holdup of a Philip Murray hold out for a union
faikston, oa. metal Thay ware shop arrangement, hut finally

Six Servicemen

At Jacksonville

. . '« *
£ '
W ?;T —

■to*1

agreed on a compromise.

It waa reliably reported that
Stephen* did not come up with
the prospective new eelllrm rnt
proposal at a two-hour session late
last night with USW President
David J. McDonald and the union's
Negro Convicted chief counsel Arthur J, GoldbergMcDonald, In pointing out that
In Holdup Starts
the rejected 10-cent offer wns only
half of the recent auto Industry
15-Year Sentence settlement, seemed to lie shooting
MOBILE, Ala. UB-Abraham Lin­ to equal or better the 20-rent set­
coln Pierce, 34, convicted of the tlement claimed by President Waldaytime holdup of ihe Farmers t.-r Reuther of the CIO United
Exchange of McCullough, Ala., has Auto Worker*.
started serving a 15-ycar federal McDonald has hinted that his
union may vary from it* past
sentence.
The Pensacola, Fla. Negro tav­ practice of striking all basic steel
ern operator gave himself up to producer* at once and invoke a
the U.S. marshal’s office yester­ "selective" strike of only some of
day after ha had failed to follow the half-dosen major firm*.

Republican Congress
1s t
Needed, Bridges Says
*

Two softball games are
tonight at the F t Mellon
WUson-MaJer will play
Seed Cb. at T:M and
___
Sporting Goods will lake on H at-1
1 WASHINGTON m-Sen. Bridge*
Me Roberts at %
(R-NH) said today Democrats are
'tM K uilratlng the need for elecFOAMING MKNACK
M s ed a Republican Congress next
CHAMBEBSBURO, Pa. (M-O-D,
by opposing parts of Presitha pet parakeet of John Gibbons,
hower*s program,
A glass of
who heads the Senate
beer eashbt Ma tsary. He perched
Policy Committee, said
an the vCL dtpaed Me beak Into
that fresh criticism
On foam lor a alp and fail tote Use
t by Sea. Lyndon
(D-Tex) "shows the
Gibbons rescued the drenched
up in their true colors."
Mrd but D-D was found dead on
not reslly for the
fig f le e af M i M 018M $ i
r j a datptin the

★

PITTSBURGH (iip)— The ateel industry drifted today
tow ard an ecnnom y-cruahine m id n ig h t strike with negotia­
tors m ain tain in g a tig h t aecrecy lid on final peace efforts.

WASHINGTON (A-Gen. MaxweU D. Taylor a battlefield vet­
eran of two wart, takes over today
as Army chief of staff.
Ha succeeds Gen. Matthew B.
Ridgway, an outspoken critic of
administration plans to cut Army
strength. Ridgway is retiring after
38 years of service to become
board chairman of tha Mellon In­
"4
stitute of Industrisl Research at
through on his notice of appeal.
Pittsburgh.
The army said goodby to Ridg He had been free under $10,000
wsy yesterday in a special review bond.
held in his honor at nearby Ft.
and Mrs. Win. T.TJonJon Myer. The Air Force joined in the Steel Shortage
of 1807 East Second SL have re­ tribute.
turned from a two months ab­
Warning Sounded
sence spent In Wisconsin and 1111NEW YORK UT—The Wall Street
noia. They report they had cold, William Colbert
Journal
said today that a steel
rainy windy waather nearly the
A entire time and are most happy
strike, threatened for midnight to­
Taken
By
Death
to be hack In our beloved Sunny
M. Colbert Ir.. 78, died night, would leave major eonState at Florida and tha friendly atWilliam
his home at t a. m. this morn­ sumtrs critically short of steel "In
little d ty of Sanford.
ing at his residence on 310 E. II 48 days or lass."
# • * *
Street.
"Detroit’s auto makers, who con­
Dr. R*th C. Haynes of 314 Mag*
nolle Are., Sanford, baa been ap­ Born Nov. M, UTI ia Freder­ sume soma » per cent of Urn na­
pointed Instructor In Anaesthesia icksburg, Va. ha had been in ill tion’! steel output, sap flatly they
a t the Harvard Medical School. health for the past three years, lie haven't been able to stockpile,”
Dr. Haynaa will be associated was a member of the First Pres­ said tha Journal. "Present Inven­
with tha Massachusetts General byterian Church here in Sanford. tories they figure, would last from
Survivors include his widow, 14 to 48 days and in some esses
Hospital which has bean affiliated
with the Medical School aince till. two daughters, Mrs. Bovaid Tom­ a n already considered below nor­
#. * e *
linson, Miami Springs; Mrs. Wil­ m al"
Mis. R P. WWiner, Jr. was liam Wade, Sanford; one grand­
caQad to TaOahefsea Tuesday on daughter. Nancy Alica Tomlinson,
FROPOMLB REJECTED
account of tha iBnass of her fath­ MiamlSprings; and two sisters,
WASHINGTON &lt;*- The House
Mrs.
Beatrice
PhilipfcauakJ
and
er, F. G Byrd. Mr. Byrd, a memAppropriations Coramitto today
be* of the pioneer fsmltes of that Mrs. Elma M. White, both of turned down proposals for pay
erne, passed away Wednesday California.
ralsta for congressional employes
evening. Funeral service* will be
Funeral services wUI be held and extra allowances for members
conducted on Friday. .
at 10 a. m. Friday In (ha Bris- In recommending $66JI0,t78 to
e • e e
son Funeral Horaa with tha Rev. finance the legislative department
The regular meeting rf-Camp­ A. O. Mclnnis officiating.
—exclusive of the Senate—In the
bell Lowing post S3 which was
Burial will b* in the Evergreen new flacal year beginning to­
scheduled tor Monday evening Cemetery.
morrow.
July 4 has bean poetpunad to
July 1L

Strolling
In Sanford

★

Steel Industry
Drifts Toward
Strike T onig

ter by eailing tha Bed Cross of. tdeutiflad sat Ffc- Linton Crosby,
II, of Macon, Ga.; Pvt. Hirvay C.
flea at 10 or Mt-M.
Kilpatrick, II. of Jacksonville; and
8. Sgt. Miner Peyton Roberaon, 25,
of Jacksonville Ga.

Taylor Assumes
Army Chief Job

★

$26,000 Damage
Caused As Train,
Transport Collide
JACKSONVH-LE (J3—n»m*E* es­
timated at $36,000 was caused yes­
terday when a Seaboard Airline
Railroad train and an automobile
transport trailer collided at a
crossing.
The transport overturned with
ita four new Butch automobiles
and a passing automobile was hit.
Fuel from the vehicles Ignited and
two of the new cars, the auto
transport and the passing passen­
ger car were destroyed.

Repatriation Set
For 3 Turncoats
NEW DELHI. India tet-Indian
Red Cross officials said today
three turncoat American soldiers
who now want to leave Red China
probably will be repatriated in the
next few days.
The official* made ihl* predic­
tion after announcing Washington
has agreed to permit the throe to
return to the United States and
has Imtructed the U. 8. cumulate
general in Hong Kong to prepare
the neccseary travel documents.

'W ’c a t K e ?
TtrU ? tlaedv through F r iiij
* tth tciitored ahno-erx and tiua
der itftT frs la afternoons tad cre­
ator* except few nlsht and moroinj
showers n f ir southeast tad fti)

central coast.

No. 221.

U. S. And Bonn
Sign Aid Pact

NEW YORK &gt; * - CpI. Harold
M. Dunn, once given .* hero'* wel­
come by his native Baldwins* die.
N. Y.,-has been sentenced to eight
year* at hard labor for aiding the
Communist enemy while a prison­
er in North Korea.
A seven-man court-martial which
pronounced tlx sentrnce yesterday
also ordered a dishonorable dis­
charge for tha 26-j -ar-old soldier
and forfeiture of all pay and al
lowanrcs.
Dunn, a heivr-.'e' tall m m , look
the icntenc* eatmlv He mipped
to a smart »alute and wordlessly
returned tn his seat. Out his young,
broad face showed strain.
BONN, Germany LT)— The
Moments before Ihe sentencing
United States and U rst tierbe told the court that his conduct
many today signed a military
in North Korea "was a tragic mis
assistance agreement under
take for which I sin sorry."
which tho Germans will re­
"It did not lake me long to
WASHINGTON i/Pl— Victor Wcingartcn, Plenuntitvlllo, ceive hundreds of millions of
realire as soon as l was rep.itri
a led that t had been wrong in N. Y . publicity ninn, swore todny lio has not boon a Commun­ dollars of American equip­
what I had done ss a prisoner " ist since 11&gt;I0 but declined to answer other questions from ment for t heir new armed
He interrupted the trial Tuesday Senate investigators about communism or former associates, forces.
to plead guilty to the charges of lie wa sthreatoned with contempt action.
The agreement calls for the
writing articles praising the Red
WeiiiKartoii told be Senate Internal Security snbeom- United Stales t n provide
enemy and making broadcasts
■■ — — 1
1
inittee that "I'm wilting l" testify |oquipmcnl. material* and service*
from North Korea urging Ameri­ ■
o'l about myself sinec 1910 but t* help West Germany build up
can "moms and dads" lu end Ihe
not shout others.”
the 50ii,Pt o-pian force promised to
war.
I Ht was told by J. O. Sourwine, -tic Atlantic Allwnre.
'the snbeommiltee’s counsel, that
West Germany in turn pledged
he had "no right to prolert others" t ist it will e»e American aid lo
$15,000 Needed
jueder his Fifth Amendment privl- promote "an integrated defense ef
1 go against possible seif-lncrim* tie North Atlantic area in aeeerdTo Keep Red Tide
i ration.
anee with defense plans fermtt| Finally Sen. Eastlsnd |D-Mis».1, lited’ by the North Atlantis
Station Going
Tie subcommittee chairman, told ,Irm ly Organisation.
ST. PETERSBURG UP-Dr. Rob
jWeingartrn that unless ha *nU. S. Ambassador James R,
ert F. Hutton say* $IS,«nrt Is need
TOKYO M3—The search tor four j*ered| Sourwine’a question he
ed to keep the University of Flor Marine airmen down in the Pacific j„„uid recommend that ho he cited Conant and West German Foreign
Minister Heinrich von Rrrntano
Ids'* red tide field atatlon here went Into its fifth day a* dense , or contempt of th* Senate,
figned the agreenirnt,
from closing.
fog rlosed In again Thursday night. Conviction for contempt carries j In other action today, the West
Dr. Ifullon, station director, hi*
An Air Force spokesman said a ', po»,ib|» penalty of a $1,000 fine iCerruan govern men l today accept,
written Gov. Collins asking tin t voice signal—so weak "it was bn-jand a year in Jail.
the money be supplied from the possible lo determine Just what Welngarten waa the first of 'el a Moscow proposal to discuss
establishment of diplomatic rela­
state's contingency fund.
was said”—was heard about 4:30
Tho director said a legislative p.m. lie said that was the last and several persona tha suhcommilteo tion* hetwren the llnnn Republifl
commlltea studying Ihe problem only report Ihe Air Fore* has had called for questioning today about and Soviet Russia.
testimony by Winston M. Rurdett, Rut whether Chancellor Konrad
recommended that the atale give ■hire 3:40 a.m.
$120,000 to thp University of Mi­ "It Just wasn’t audible enough now a Columbia Broadcasting Sys­ Adenauer will go to 3toirow re­
ami marine laboratory for reJ tide In make out." said Maj. William tem newsmen, nsming them as trained in question. A general areptance of the invitation extended
rcseach and *15.000 to t h e Uni­ James, deputy public Information Communists. in the 1930*.
by the Kremlin June 7 for talks
versity of Florida project.
officer for F ir East Air Force*.
oq Ihe normaliilng of diplomatic,
He said the Legislature vo**d
Darkness once again turned the
trad* »nd cultural relations earr*
to give the University of Miami search into a blind game of drop­ Jacksonville Gets
in a not* relayed through lha Eethe full $120,000 but cut off the ping flares and listening for radio
New Radar System viet Embassy in Tari*.
University of Florida with nothing. signals that did not come.
Dr. Hutton blamed "political
The missing airmen are:
p:e»surv exerted tiq certain memCapt. llodgtn P. Montagus, Jack- To T ra ck Storms
h-iT* (d th? Legislature-to* th* ma­ son. Ml**., pitot of * M arti* Sky
JACKSONVILLE CA-A »ew ra ­
rina laboratory nf the University Knight Jet which ran out of gas dar system tor tricking tropical
of Miami, a private institution white lost In fog Sunday.
storm* within 200 mile* of Jack­
which evidently seek* to monop­ Second U . David Winton Ret!, sonville goes into operation it
olise stale funds for salt water of Waysota, Minn., hi* ordnsnee Jacksonville Navil Air Station toresearch , , . "
mor.ow.
officer.
Commenting on the reference to
Unlike th* radar aystem mod to
Lt.
Alan
Murdock
MeAneny
Jr.,
political pressure, Dr. F. O Wal­
guide planes Into a landing, which
of
Yonkers.
N.Y.,
whose
Marine
ton Smith, director of the 3liami
seeks to block out weather rendi­ TALLAHASSEE 'jv_r.ov Collin*
laboratory, said "the University of Fury Jet vanished Tuesday night tions and fix on the plant, the said today he will vein tin* con­
in
Ihe
search.
Miami lias no interest In reducing
new system primarily gives a pic­ ference comm III rc recommenda­
A slill -unidentified crewman of ture of the wsaltier.
activities of oilier institutions ami
tion for rrapporlinnnirnt of tins
a
Marine
helicopter
which
trashed
will do everything in its power to
It Ignores fleecy clouds but picks Senate if the lawmaker* should
at
sea
In
tha
search
yesterday.
cooperate with them."
pasx the legislation to pul it in ef­
Three fellow crewmen srere re­ up rain-laden itorm clouds. Lt. fect.
John
M.
Hartman,
serological
of­
scued.
ficer, aald It will be operated 34 Collins addressed a Mint ic-ilon
Needy Disabled
hour* a day.
of thp House and Senate to gun
his views on Ilia problem which
Aid Applications
has kept the t^glxlature dead­
locked since. June 6.
J.
Clark
Named
To Be Accepted
•a
a a
re s ts
He said ia a prepared speech ha
ORLANDO trt—Applications for ^
could not accept the bill recom­
Chief Of Navy
aid to the needy disahied will he
mended by tha conference com­
accepted at state welfare offices
mittee which would give their ov n
starting tomorrow, Charles O, An­ WASHINGTON bn-The House Af Boy's State
senators to Bay and 'Io n roe coun­
whisked
through
by
volee
vote
to­
drews Jr., chairman of tha Slate
John Clark of Sanford has been
day the year’s biggest money bill— elected Commissioner of Navy ties but which would lease popu­
Welfare Board, said yesterday.
Applicants must tx physically nearly 32 billion dollars to run the County at Uia 1933 Florida Boys’ lous Manatee and Sarasoii sha-mg
disabled to a degree where they armed forces for Lhc year begin State held on the campus of Flo­ a senator white smaller districts
have aenitors of their own.
can’t earn a living and the dis­ ning tomorrow.
rida State University this week.
"If the House should concur in
ability must be medically deter­ llmiso passaga- sent the huge
Tha 438 high school student!
compromise measure to Uia Senate from every section of Florida who tha pending Senile amendment tn
mined permanent.
Andrew* said federal funds have which was axperted to send it are attending this year’a Boys’ House Bill 9X, I will promptly veto
been approved to matrh tho Legis­ quirkly to the While House for Stale are being sponsored by the measure and take auch steps
lature’* appropriation of 2ik mil­ President Elsenhower'S signature. American Legion Posts and civic as are authorized under Hie Con­
stitution to keep you In was ion onThe final package earmarks
lion dollars for the new program.
IT,329.933.non for ihe Army, $9,118,- organisation* throughout Florida. til an adequate reapporl hutment
linys’ Slat* divides Itself Into 8 it provided," ho said.
119.330 for tha Navy and $14,730,703,170 for (ha Air Force, including mythical "count]**’’ with two
Cocoa Man Named an extra 338 million dollars tacked "cltiea" to th« county, which
at Secretary of Defense Wil­ make a mythical 49th state, in
To Racing Group on
son's request to speed tha output order 4o giv* tha youths practi­
cal experience in Ihe way govern­
TALLAHASSEE tet-Gov. Collins ol 1152 Jet bombers.
ment operates.
today appointed C. Sweet Smith Jr.,
of Cocoa to the State Racing ComBOYD APPOINTED
mission.
TALLAHASSEE ur£Gov. Collin*
Smllh succeeds J. 5*xton Lloyd tixlsy apjMiinted Aten S. Royd, Mi­ Ball Takes Job
BUFFALO, N. Y tfi-F our m*n
of Daytona Reach who rcslgmxl lo ami attorney, to the Florida Rail­
in an automobile shot at Jii.-tira
become chairman of the new Stale road and Public Utilities Commis­ In New Orleans
Hamilton Ward of Stale Supreme
Development Commission.
sion.
Alton T. Ball, who has been In Court last night as he drove along
the mechanical department of The a highway near here. The jurist
SanLcd Herald for over 20 jr a r f wa* nul injured.
and superintendent of that depart­ The 80-year-old Ward told re­
ment for the past 10 years, re­ porters that the ahuotmg might
signed recently lo accept ■ pnii- have stemmed from fail sentence*
tlon with the New Orleans Tlmca- he has given Juvenile delinquent!
Pfcayune
recently.
Mr. Bail was presented with a
The shooting occurred shortly
token of appreciation by mem­ after 11 p m. as Ward was driving
bers of The Herald staff.
southwest on Route 20 toward hia
Mrs. Ball, a Southern Bell Tele­ summer cottage on Lake Eria.
phone Company amploye f o r
over six years will remain in
Sanford until her husband has Candidate Filing
established their residence in
New Orleans.

Publicity Man
Facing Action
In Red Inquiry

West Germany's
New Armed Forces
lo Gel Equipment

New Radio Signal
From Lost Fliers
Reported Heard

Reapportionnicni
Plan Attacked
By Gov. Collins

Quick Okay Given

The Americana are Lewie W.
Griggs of Jacksonville. Tex.; O.
G. Bell of Olympia, Wash.; and
William A. Cowart of Dalton, Ga.
All ware U. 8. Army corporals
raptured by the Rods in the
noise they keva made about sup­ Korean War,
porting it," Bridges said. "They
■re only for such parte of that
program as they believe can be Advisory Group
amended or changed to meet the
desires of Democrats of aU shades To Meet Friday
of opiates.
TALLAHASSEE (A-The Const!"All af tkte demonstrates Wat tutlflU Advitory G oM lfdoo
if Prssideat Elssnhowm is to got Us first meeting Here tomorrow
Ms program reacted ia the way with ell former governors invited
ha has proposed it. be must have to attend.
WADE, right, waa IneUltad as imw president of (ha Hanford
a Republican Congress and that Racommaadattons approved by
Lion* Club at tha annua! (retaliation eartmonr last night. Handing
is what we e^ o ct tn ftvu Mm Urn coamteskm well be submitted over
tha gaval to Wad* is Jack Stamper, outgoing pm idant. (Jame­
to ISM."
to the 1MI ItepU tur*.
son PhaUJ

Four Men In Car
Fire Ai Justice

Fee Challenged

TALLAHASSEE W» -H rpubliran
Rep. Fred C. Peterson of Pmeilas
James Marr Quits County recommended today that
the Republlcen State Executive
Job With Jaycees
Committee chaUcngc validity of a
LAKELAND UR-Jemes Y. Marr 1933 law giving political parties
Jr. ia resigning as executive direc­ th* 3 per rent,candidate tilling
tor of th* Florida Junior Chamber fee* which had been going to the

of Commerce to operate a travel state.
agency ht Ocala.
Petersen said the Republics*
Marr, who has held (he Jayeee Party in Florida would be unable
poet two yean, aald ha srill etay to qualify for tha fees under the
oa until his successor ia ehoaen formula aet out iw the law and
probably whan state jayoea execu­ that tha law w*j therefore dtete ttU te to A m K
1

�THE SANFORD HERALD

P$t* 2 Tfiow. JuBt 30, 1355

Advisory Committee Takes Issue
W ith Eisenhower Road Program
on all major issues. Sens. Morse
(D-Ore) and Humphrey (d-Minn)
contributed most of the dissents,
and Mnrsa ended by filing a gen*
eral distent.
As a ‘‘constitutional liberal,” the
Oregonian said, he feels the re­
port ’’goes too fsr in playing down
the doctrine of federal sovereign­
ty." Still, he paid high tribute to
the "very sincere, thorough end
studious work" done by the com­
mission. He said Keitnbaum mer­
ited "ipedal commendation."
Kestnbaum took over the chair­
manship following resignation of
Clarence E. Manion. former dean
of the Notre Dame University Law
School. Manion had been criticized
by some members of Congress for
some fields.
Today’s report was considered
certain to disappoint such groups
as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce
which have been urging wholesale
withdrawal of tha federal govern­
ment from aid programs The
chamber contends that federal
grants carry with them excessive
government control of local affairs.
The commission slso rejected
Ihe proposal of the Conference of
Governors that the government re­
linquish the fedarsl gasoline tax,
letting the states increase their
own g ii teres is a source of rev­
enue for highway department.
Eight rnm m isaionm Joined in
dissents on this point. They in
eluded Gov. Allan Shivers of Texes
and four former governors • Alfred
E. Driscoll of New Jersey, John
S, Bstlle of Virginia, Sum H.
Jones of LoulsUne, and Den

•WASHINGTON LPi—The Commis­
sion on Intergovernmental Rela­
tions took issue today with Presld in t Eisenhower’s highway financ­
ing program and called on hi*
administration to assume full comm ind of civil defense.
The is-member commission, erested by Congress two years ago
to recomlnend boundary lines for
overlapping taxes and encroaching
governmental authority, filed with
the President a JU-page document
proposing:
J. Withdrawal of the federal government from some fields of tax­
ation—leaving them to the states
and cities—as rapidly as tax re­
duction becomes possible It named
no ipeofic taxes,
2. Federal '’piymiiiU in lieu of
taxes" cities and states, in com­
pensation for real estste stricken
irons their tax rolls because of
federal ownership,.
3. Increased federal appropria,llon* for a stepped-up. stste-sdm lnlitersd highway construction
program to be finsneed on a "pay*
ei-you-hulld" basis, not by borrow­
in'
,u u u i by Congress to transfer
ie.pooiibillty for civil defense to
Washington from tha states and
cities--which tha commission said
a re ill-equipped financially and
otherwise to carry ihe burden.
a. Continuance with some im­
portant changea and curtailments,
____________________
a t federal granta-in-aid,. undtr
u ..::
which more than two billion dol­
lars annually ts furnished to stales
and local governments. Tho federal
grant, the report n id "has be­
come a fully matured device of Thorn ion ef Golrado.
cooperative government."
Tha report lent support to con­

Iba commission headed by Uey«r Kestnbaum of Chicago, president of tha Hart. Schaffner A
Marx clothing concern, emphaaired this view:
"A fundamental objective of our
system of government should be
to keep- centralisation to e mini­
mum end state-local responsibility
to a maximum."
It called on the government to
exercise "forbearance" in en­
croaching on tha Jurisdiction of
aietas. counties and citias, but em­
phasised that the stataa must mod­
ernise their constitutions and tax
eystama and reorganise their ad­
ministrative machinery to serve
the public better. It proposed that
each state launch "a searching re­
appraisal of its fiscal pollciaa."
While the cities and stalei arc
at a disadvantage In competing
with the federal government la the
same Hekla of tax collection, the
commission said, "substantial po­
tential for more revenue exists la
almost all, If not all, states."
It concluded that complete elimi­
nation of tax over-lapping "la not
feasible" while an large a part of
national income la being taken by
taxes, but went on:
"The best chance of reducing tax
overlapping probably lias In a ma­
jor reduction ef the over-si] level
of tu itio n since this may result
U the fall repeal U certain taxes
bp one Jurisdiction or another.
", . . Tax overlapping can best
be reduced by actioo of tha na­
tional government, . . When furth­
e r tax reduction la possible, Use
it the Congress to
re Use to the proburns of tax overlapping."
The report. Although sprinkled
with dilioats, mustered a majority

Legal Notice
ap&amp; L t.t, h . l r . , ft .v ia * , i. l u a
s r s r i t e t , eradU Srs. e r I s s t l ri
s i n t t u v e e . e x # • a lt p arso n s cl
t n a by, through or u n i t e i
a n a sack * f t h lm i a n d el™ s*
a t v i i g o r CUM SIU ! • . Sava
n x h i , lit i s e r l a u r a a t la th a

gressional critics of Eisenhower's
plan to finance part of a 10-year
highway program through long •
term borrowings. The senate has
already rejected this provision in
favor of a democatlc plan for big­
ger annual appropriations; the
house has not acted.
"The rommiiilon recommends,"
the report declared, "that the ex­
panded highway program be finan­
ced substantially on a piy-as-you
go basis and the congress provide
additions I revenues for this pur­
pose, primarily from increased
motor fuel taxes."
The report alio urged that "no
federal aid be given for any toll
road."
Two administration officials on
lha Commission-Secretary of Wel­
fare Hobby and Undersecretary of
the Treasury Marion B. Folsom •
stood by the Eisenhower plan.
Weaknesses In Civilian Defense
—eopeedtd officially altar tha re­
cant h-bomb alert exercise across
the country—were attributed by
commission largely to diffusion of
responsibility among the 41 states
and 90-odd critical target areas.
The Kestnbaum commission call­
ed on Congress to "Uberthte" appetitions tor Civil Defense, and
vest primary raapooilbUity In

r

tiy-flick Sumer h
navtr had h« shut himself to grim ­

l hoped his teeter. ly away tram erveryono around
. would seal* dew s h im , nor been m quick to flash exit
L ightens* m a tte r.
Christie f eiesa. 1 m o te r the e u se c a - in anew at tha moat trifling provo­
a st at * ro te s Kir. which Ueliory cation. Uaad aa the crow wwa to
id bout 1st* * sees cattle em pire thair boss's unprodietabla tamper,
nt th a n was a ' 14 (tree s la the t e r
which d ra t* him i__________
1oa drtaklax ip rec e Sandy bad naadad all hla diploma­
llJ u le D e w .
tsio the i n u of the earthy
•oa. It was becauMi a t {.tie
U t - th at Chrts- cy to kaap tham pacified.
Ha hlmaaU hadn’t eacapad the
tie had b r a te s with Karr; end had
Caa- whiplash of Rob'* tongue, but ha
tu n e d t e r stta n u m to w . . we
_______
area, oa ler-e rM ttro aso r. Trouble ut
the arae hod loag thraofoaod, for form- took it philoaophteally, aura lor
ora h a d , bogus to aost oa tha lone. onca that ha know what lay be­
Disputes os to rlth te and boundaries
eraea. sa d r u s e w ar saamad taariiabla. hind It. Hob hadn’t mentloaad Har­
At a local dates, physical Tlol.nc. ry tinea the night tha boy had
flarad sharply, whan Tim L am b**, aaddlad up and riddan away. Nofarm tr, and Kerry Rlordaa m n rh tr.
fausht for the rarer of beautiful, one aver knew the reaeo n for hit
a a rth r XJU. And whan Mallory I-a read leaving, though there had been
of thte latest “maos" ta ro lrts s hla hoy plenty of gueat-work In tha bunk-

states end localities retaining an
important supporting role ”
Congress should authorize also
direct dealings between the federal
government and the target cities,
it was staled, Instead of routing
the lines of responsbihty through
the slate capitals

E

Navy Blacklists
Schlesinger's
Uniform Cap Firm
WASHINGTON up — The Navy
yesterday blacklisted Sol Schlesingei’s Ideal Uniform Cap. Co., of
Freeport, N Y , because he refused to give senators his re­
cords.
Schicsinger on June 23 declined
to let Ihe Senate Investigations
subcommittee see the company’s
books and records. It h id sough:
them in its search for evidence
of graft in the purchase of arm ­
ed forces uniforms
Schlesinger pleaded (hit the re ­
cords contained information which
"might tend to incriminate me."
But he insisted he had paid no
bribes to get government cen­
tre d !.
The Navy said it was canceling
Schltsinger’s contract to msnufactjre SO.000 blue sailor caps
TIED DISCRIMINATION
HOUSTON, Tex. (JP) — The
Duval Sulphur A Potash Co. has
n rote: no women employes. Thu
Kerman Land A Cattle Co. alio
has a nitei only radheada hired.

house, but Sandy, ateallng hit
covert glancaa at tha arrogant,
handsome hawk face and vailed
black eyes, knew that Rob's pri­
vate devil was riding him hard.
Hla musings ware broken in on
by the tight of a rider coming to­
ward them at an aaay lope—a rid­
er who eat slim and straight Us
the saddle, hat pushed back and
ellver-blonda hair whipping in tha
light braes*.
"Hello, Rob! Hi. Sandy:” She
rained In beside them, ‘"thought
I’d stop by and aaa how you ware
ehiplng up for the drive. Oun
started yesterday.”
For just a few aeoonda her eyas
■ought Bandy's—just long enough
tar a shake at tha grlxalad head
that meant. “No newt,” bafora aha
turned away and want an with her
talk about tha drive, tha assy Sow
of her volet covering up Rob’s
moody silence. She had pride, this
handsome Ally! Catch her letting
on that Kerry's going off without
a good by meant anything In her
young Ufa.
"Hava you been having Meter
trouble, Rob?"
Rob shook hla head curtly. "Not
yat."
‘•You're expecting It?”
"You can always aspect it. We’re
overdue for It, I guess."
"Why can’t people tat each other
alone?" tha girl descended. "The
country! big enough for rafllamen
and farmers, isn’t It?”

ON KJS ABOVAt at Gmoord. H.H , » r m l ^ * l w d w « n r to met by
Jjarry Alan Elliot, B, who wea selected aa “Little Mr. New Hamp­
shire." The boy shaken the President's hand aa hla mother and others
look on. Inter, the President dropped another t e a » about hla plana
tn seek a second term when he addressed the New Hampshire Legis­
lature on the State House Plaaa before e «owd of 15,000 persons.
p — iiiMit tisenhower la an a tour of New England. (Iatrrnoiionaij

Nehru Arriving
For Week's Visit
In Yugoslavia
BELGRADE, YU«0Slavle iff Tndii’t green, white and gold flag
waved over Belgrade today in
honor of Prime Minister Nehru,
arriving for a work's slate visit.
The Indian leader and his party
were flying in from Austria on a
lour which already h is liken them

Spur with u s untliwhipg eteM
tenge"You put that fence up, L nm bu?”

1 did.”
“Gat tt down.” Rob’s voice laid
down a Bet command.
Tim flung the answer heck a t
him. “We’ro not takln’ our order* i
from you, Mellory."
"You’re on my lend—”
“Hie ban ere *rel“
Rob’s eteel-hrtght g ts a d raka*
the younger nun, then turned to
the father. "Bee this boy of yeun
gone off hla heed, Lam bs* ?“
“No, Hr. Mellory.” For ell hla
unshaven cheaka and patch ad.
aweet-itelnad danlma, the M iter
wean’t without dignity. “When wo
heard you were claiming our farms
were on your property, acme of us
got a lawyer to And out Jurt where
we stood. He found out eomo rent j
interacting things, Mr. Mattery.
Your UUe’a no good. The eld Kegthat sold It to yeu didn’t have t t .
to Mil. The rightful owners of this |
land dl«* out yean ago, and It’s .
gone hack to free tenge. And I’m ,
filing on thin piece ef tt.”

(To Bo CotUlmuti}
UU. hr Kick Sumner. Distributee by Kies :reetane flswdirate.

Cool Air Spreads
Over Western U.S.

Education Board
Discusses Policy
r
'
1
|
B
1»
■
1 - 1

■OUliyiD WITH RABY BUPPUW. Gordon Kcfth fW t). » . of Win.
dom, Minn., end pilot Gordon WhittleId proper* to leave Naw York
for Gander, Newfoundland, whore Keith will Join hla wife and their
triplets, Whitfield also piloted the plane on which Mrs. Keith, returntng from Oslo, developed labor pains. Ho outncod the stork to
Gander, w hen tha triplets w e n boro. Whitfield took special Interest

BT THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
• Coo' Pacific air spread over
most of Ihe western third of the
nation today but warm weather
prevaUfd in most other sections.
Heavy showers accompanied the
push of cooler air into tha western
Dakotas. A funnel cloud was
sighted about midnight over Mar­
tin, in aouthweiteri South Dakota
M ar the Nebraska border.
Salt Laka City had an early
morning tampanUro- of 41 da-

DAYTONA BEACH UP - Memben of the Southern Regional Ed­
ucation Board are discussing pol­
icy at a series of closed commit­
tee meetings here.
Tha organisation was set up
atven years ago to help tha 14
Southern states collaborate on an
late ratals program for higher ed­
ucation. Under the program,
states whose universities do not
furnish certain instruction may
send students Into other aUtei
fee professional courses.
Gov. Frank Clements of TonnesMe presided at yesterday’s meet­
ing attended by educator mem­
bers who took up the need! for
graduate eouries In various fields.
Govs. Collina of Florida and
James Folsom of Alabama are
expected to arrive tomorrow. Al­
so expteted to Join in the discusaions which end Saturday are itate
legislators from Alabama, Ark­
ansas, Louisiana and Mississippi,

•TABBING
CHARLES DRAKE
•iM — 11:19
______
PLUS

Columbus established tha first
Spanish colony on the mainland
of tha Nsw World in whet ie now
Panama in 160J.
In the lest csntAry ladles often
fastened bay leaves to their plL
lows on Valentina's Day eve t«
indue# dream# About thair sweet,
hearts.

Students ballon that many chil­
dren's counting rhymes a n survi­
vals of formulae used by the anci­
ent Droids far choosing human
aaertfteea.

•TEN WANTED
MEN*

gross M below tha n reading
at the same hour yesterday,
America’s Boston la named a f t
er a town in England.
A taxicab driver la one of the
lecturers at New York University,
■peaking to a class which la stu*
dying occupations.

Raymond M . BaJIt
AGENT
M M Am

, RANDOLPH°tC0TT
•rib Only
CARTOON — NBWB

$ 4 ja v iJ fc t f f S .il
itfault

Only Studnhakw gives you

SANFORD

%

1

�Negro Sentenced To Chair
JFor 'Lover's Lane' Slaying
WACO, Tex.
A Negro aoldier itranger appeared, pulled a gun girl." and said the man replied.
“ Yet 1 am ."
chewed gum without • flicker of and demanded Poole hand over hit
“ Over my dead body," the quo­
expression a* a jury ruled before money. Then ahe aaid, he ordered ted Poole at retorting. She laid
dawn today he m utt die In the them into the wooda and told her he grabbed a tree limb from the
ground and Jumped the robber and
electric chair for the "lover's lane" to undrets.
The girl aaid Poole told the man: that, ai they grappled, Poole wax
piitol alaying of an airman.
ahot.
The all-white, all-male Jury con­ “You are not going to rape that
victed M.Sgt. Marion Waihlngton,
Ft. Hood, of murder in the
Tommy Manville
eath of A.l.C. Henry Poole 21,
To Pay $260,000
of Spartanburg, S.C. Poole wat
ahot the night of April 2 while re­
To Ninth Wife
portedly defending hit fiancee from
NEW YORK tW—Tammy Man
a atranger oho loomed out of the
villa has agreed to settle $260,000
ahadowt and vowed to rape her.
on his estranged n nlh wife Anita
Poole and the girl were parked
Roddy-Eden Manville.
on a lonely road.
In Stale Supreme Court yester­
WASHINGTON IP -A t le n t two
Tha verdict at 12:50 a. m. came
day,
the 60-year-old M a n v i l l e
after 1 h o u r and 20 minuter of propoaali to curtail aid to Yugo- promised lo pay his 32-year-old
deliberation. Defemt attorney. alavla come up for Houte decision wife $140,000 in cash plus $12,000
Tfred Finch, of Dallai, indicated he today along with a number of other a year for the next 10 years.
move i to revise Preildent Eitenwould file an appeal.
The agreement free* Mrs, Man­
Waihlngton went on trial Mon­ howcr'i foreign aid program for ville to go to Nevada or Florida
day morning. M itt Dorothy Papen- next year.
Hep. Edna F. Kelly (D NY), said to nhlain a divorce. However, her
fdorf, Waco aecretary who pointed
attorney Amos S. Basel, said she
a finger at Waihlngton at the man aha will propose eliminating all aid "has no immediate plans."
who ahot Poole, waa not pretent to Marshal Tito’a Communist gov­
The Manville. were married
ernment. Rep. Fulton (R-PA), is
when the verdict‘came,
July 10, 1932. They separated 12
tponsorlng
an
amendment
to
bar
Waihlngton told croti-exim lneri
days later.
|
he "never pointed a gun at any­ ahlpment of latest model Jet planet
one in my life." Atked whether to Yugoslavia until American and
I.ead Is the end product of sev­
i £ • ahot Poole, he replied, “ No." He other Allied air forcer are com
aaid he waa In the D allii-Fort pletely equipped with them. The eral types of radioactive decay.
Worth area when the (laying oc­ administration hat opposed auch
curbs on aid to Tito.
curred.
The Foreign Affairs Committee
The House resumes debate on has proposed eliminating this pro­
Miti Papendorf, 20, said that ai
ahe and Pool# were parked a the $3,2115,000,000 foreign aid meas­ vision of current law for surplus
ure before considering amend­ agricultural products.
ments later In the afternoon. A fi­ Chairman Richards (D SC) of the
nal vote on the bill it not expected Foreign Affairs Committee urged
until tomorrow.
th« House yesterday to continue
Yugoslavia has become a main the aid program because he said
target since Tito’s agreement with "the enormous investment which
Kremlin leaders on some major we have made in providing to
aspects of International relations. other nations la beginning to pay
It la earmarked for 40&gt;i million off."
dollars In economic help, plus un­ As for Yugoslavia. Richards ex­
specified military funds, for the pressed belief that ’’.Marshal Tilo
year starting Friday.
is merely following his own sclChairman Bonner (D-NC) says fish interrsti will take action that
the House Merchant Marine Com­ will benefit the United Slates.”
mittee will fight to require that This would result, ho said, if the
half at all government aid goods Yugoslavs did no more than de­
$430 down 24 months to pay be shipped on American vessels. fend their strategic land in war.

$1295

4j S3 PLYMOUTH Hard Top

$1195

Thurs. June .10, 10.V* I'ticc .1

MOSCOW (di—Pravda ha* de­
nounced the American film "Car­
men Jonc*." What seem, to shock
tho organ of the Soviet Communi-t
party more Ilian anything el*e i&lt;
the fact that this version of the
B ird opera Is played by an allNegro cast.
"The entire dramatis personae
consists of Negroes." the paper
remarks and then goes on to g \ &gt;•
a resume of the plot as il was
revised to be set in the American
South.
"We see before us standard
music," I’ravda remarks. "How
can such cheap tra«h be combined
with the deep artistic and realist.c
music of Hirer*
,
"Why vsas it necessary to turn

House Considers
Move To Curtail
U.S. Aid To Tito

USED CAR
S A LE

TTIK SANFORD ITERALT) '

Pravda Attacks
American Film

Harry S. Truman, addressing
a tenth anniversary session of the United Nations
General Assembly In San Francisco, said that the
U-N. la a “beacon of hope to a world that has no
choice but to live together or die together." The
- U, S. Chlef*Exrcutivp received thunderous

----------------T---------------------------

Police Clean-Up
Ordered In Miami
MIAMI i n - City Manager K. A.
Evans has been told to elean up
the Miami Police Department by
Ju* 20 or give up his job.
The ultimatum was delivered
yesterday by Mayor Abe Aronovltx who spoke for a majority of
the five-man city commission.
Arqnovitx told Evans that he Is

the chief of police that should he
done," Aronovitz told Evans.
One policeman was Jailed last
week on charges of being the
brains behind a burglar gang and
two others stand accused of taking
bribes in a gambling payoff.

Refrigerator denlers in Alaska
say thnr sales are growing rapidty because food costs arc high rind
residents find they can »a.e mon­
ey by owning permanent food
storage facilities.
Tin* fir-t house was built in
Boston’s Beacon Hill section aliout 1(121.

For Sale

ovations both before and after he spoke to some
600 delegate* and sevrral thousand spectators.
Even Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov
(arrow) arose to his feet with alt the others and
clapped hands. He left immediately after Truman
had descended from the rostrum. (International)

being held directly rr.pon.ible for
cleaning up the department, re­
cently rocked by scandals.
■Only Commissioner H. I-Oslle
Quigg, a former police chief, re­
fused to go along with the com­
missioners.
The ultimatum carried a hint
that Evans should prefer removal
charges against Police Chief Wal­
ter K. Headley.
"They (a majority) feel if it is
necessary to bring charges against

Spaniards into Negroes? A torea­
dor into a boxer? The lovely fas­
cinating Carim-n into a prostitnte,
its deep drama into a cheap de­
tective lias?
"Such is the ’ac-tlictics’ of
American imperialism."
The opera "Carmen" is givrn
in Russian in Moscow. The atmo­
sphere of the production is ahnut
as French as Magnctogorsk and ai
Spanish as Petropovlask.

Coco C ola
N a tion a l

Vendor

Cash. R e g i s t e r

FOR SERVICE STATION
MAC’S OIL COMPANY

There have been more than B0
major eruption, of Mt. E'nn in
Sicily in recorded history, says
the National Geographic Society.

202 N. LAUREL AVK.
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la freak little lift Unit comes through
JW O , A n t U O T Which paid *M JO hi h r a a s t a r n and $12 30 In
h artal hecwrlty loot year, looks T. Coleman Andrews, Commissioner
•C Inti— i Brnnu*. aquuw In tha ey* during us “Interview" In
W MUagtsa, Jo-Jo wants a refund m Mu grounds that at $613
---- i advertising, ha had $U in deductibl* travel^ ^ 1 ■ lljharitabl# contribution, dropping hit taxabta

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�*

Food In Russia

In V’50 Nikita Khrushchev, now the

Com m unist pitrly’i First Secretary, headed

a jirograin merging amall farms into collec­
tive farms.
Last winter in the face of large livestock
losses end inefficient management, 30,000
of the 00,000 directors «f collective farms
were fired.
This aprinr the Soviet farm planning
eystem tigidly directing planting and quotas
was abandoned and farmers were ordered to
plan for themseivea.
Last week without admitting tha collec­
tive plar failure, Khrushchev suggested that
■ome of the collective farms be broken up.
Obviously the ailuatiun needs organiza­
tion and leadership of the sort it is not re. celving. The Soviet press has scored agricul­
tural leaders for offering general directives
instead of practical help and advice, But it
teems apparent the crisis has caught Soviet
traders without the power to give either
Unless s plan replacing the inadequate col­
lective farms is presented soon, a serious
imbalance in the rigidly planned atatc econ­
omy will be created.
Khrushchev, who appears to be most
directly responsible, seems to Westerners to
be occupying a delicate position as the Com*
muniat boss Food shortage is a perilously
weak link in the chain, and his popularity
may not survive such a weakening. This is
especially true when hunger and starvation
might dangerously Hull the appetites of the

'

paopls far the andleig feait of empty wonl«|
they are continuously aerved.

e rr

.

-...t,-k-nl gas

U iir llila i

Dulles Ripped In Velvet Prose
WASHINGTON IA - AUaa W. aiodal orgnUuUoa ef Its kind."
DuOti, bou of the meit huih-huah The report suggested two things
American apy agency against t o (1) He should get himself a top
HuaeUss, has just been ripped In assistant tc take some ef the every­
proas. «• velvety you have le leek day details off his hands sad (l)
twice to He t o wounds.
the CIA seeds aa evsrhauliag from
DuUeg, brother of Secretary of t o laslde.
stats Dulles, Is d!rooter o t t o Cee
TIM CUrtt group also look a
tral laMUgoare
lla m a Agency. The yreM swipe at Seerotary Dulles' Mala
waa ta a
Department,
which has
t, whleh
k ll t o,
v ei« cto ial____________
•sUeetlai foreign pub•d by retired Qea. Mark Clark
which Javeatigotod t o U J. totel
Ugeaca setup.
etga sp in la this oeuatry, OA was
•ei up la IHV is this soustry’i
auperaay outfit cveriMi, and m n
tlcularty te find tut what t o M nwunlit* m M ag hehiad to Irea
Cur
Kwther,
I l« lupeesed te miB
f, CIA
together sD the ijateUlfMee
n t o ___ _ laJM*
Biatleu ebUlaed by more Utaa M

Ucatkmi and srientitle ialeUlgeaeo.
Thai Job, t o Clark group said
should be turned ever entirely to
CIA. And it complained that some
ysepia la the State Dtps dm eat ire
r,too conservative'1 ebeut totolliaeaee work ia lereiga eeuatrtee.
That attitude, t o CUM group said,
has worked "aflea te t o dstrtment
ef vlaareue sad ttincly a e to i to
t o field,"

Treating Kidney Dl

I f MHMH&gt;

VSff1

M m tK

govyratoat 1.

sit.

NEW YORK UV-The summer
city ef the world ssyi hello and
welcome.
New York City Is officially at
hind to the visitor.
1 don’t intend to tell you about
the official program of entertain*
mint that has been arranged tor
you. If you want that program.
Just writs ■ letter asking for it
and addraai It: "To lha k^ayor,
New York City."
lie'll attend to It, nr we'll get a
new mayor who will. He'll tell
you all tha 1,001 special attraclions that make this particular
summer the greatest In New York
City's history,
They've gone In a lot of trouble
to prove that this la a wonderful
place-to visit—after all. you don't
have to live here—but if you have
a sense or adventure you can
throw away tha program.
You never need a program to
•ajoy New York. I live her* and
I know thia—and, if you believe
me, you ran take my word for it

The Future Of Cool

JAMES MARLOW

wh«t t o r t ! w«m igsta it far-

World's Summer City Says Hello

Tha United State* should not he acernful
of other nations nor dictate to them bacauaa
we need alliea, says Admiral Arthur \V. Rad­
ford. Chuiman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
He told the House Foreign Affairs Commit*
tee that wc cannot match lha numbers of
Soviet ground troops, We must cuunt on
the other free nations to fill out our frltOI*
This muk«s it important that we uv nut
abandon the foreign aid program.
Many peuple think that wa possess an
eml-war-quick weapon which will make
soldiera of minor importance, and do away
with apecial effort. Thua la not tha case, If
there is such a weapon, tha Ruialana ara as
likely to possess it as wa ourealvaa, And It
is silly tu believe that we can do without air
bases on Allied soil or the aid o f Allied
troops. Nor can we rotrea* behind sumo lm*
pregnable barrier. France thought that aha
could do thin with her ,u»gliiol Line. Ami
whnl huppenud to France 7

Electric utilities hava been using coat for
mu . -i s in nicrcaamg quantities, It may
■*,I b«b Saak Ilk*. soon be possible for the utilities to extract
nui'iv more chemicals than are now taken
frm coal. They could then sell these chemi­
VkB ffa ra lk la • a ia a ik ** a t I k t I w r t l l i k C raa*
"fcU k la r e lH It C esa Jw a O rlr Ik Ik * a ** Ik t C feeW leecals tor aa much as the coat originally cost
&lt;••• k k k ll tka la r a l M » , v r la t f C Ik Ik la M a i f i H f .
them and thb charred residua of tha coal
■—&gt;
ra g e 4
Thursday, June 10, 1935 could ba hurned for fuel in powar plants.
Thua they would bs getting thalr fuel at no
TO DAY* BIBLE VERSE
coat.
, • ,
Though the coal industry ia having Ita
. He that cometh to God must believe that
he is, and that he in a rewnrder of them that troubles It continues to invest money in re­
diligently aeek him.—licb. 11:6.—Faith in search. Out of this research are emerging
more that) mere credutty. Faith graapa and new uses for coal and a brighter future for
appropriates the Love of God.
the Industry.
_____
U B .e r e l

HAL BOY IK

BA STAfiHtT

We Need Help, Too

Not long ago the coal induetry waa al­
most given up for dead. But it aeems to be
recovering from ita alump, and there ere
signs that it will make a come-back despite
the competition of other fuels.
The key to this about-face ia research,
which is finding new uses for coal. But an­
other major factor in the revival of this In­
dustry is the availability of coal. Known re­
Tha Sanford Herald
serves if petroleum and natural gaa are
n t i u t H tails • • w i h h n » f i M eeeCer
fast
being depleted but this country baa
it.
enough coal rezorvea to last an estimated
tke t i l 2,000 year.
Consequently, a number of oil compan
ies are experiment!)' with conversion of
coal hi to liquid fuel. Cost o! this process is
still high, yet there are hopes that It can
■oaicMirrioN hath *
U t P*r w»»k
On* Miifk
Cl.ee be reduced enough to make it commercially
O b * Iv o r
practical. Kqually promising and dcfinitily
• II M
r«**la|l**( aas practical is production of a coal gas as paw
NN •» rotates
4 i h IWh n im

Tf&amp;m

gtverumeat eftttleli are told
Whet they seed le Imew,
Clark id We greu* isM t o y
«re

sgAW saws
apy ty stem Im l feed enough.

. Urn report am DuUesiit...
to tolaa hard) "Wa (sued to
CU to be tadus*
iisUe

SAM DAWSON

Business Boom Hits New Heights
Editor's Mete — The buibaeaa
boom rolled on to new heights the
first sis months of 1S&amp;I. le the
following article, first of two, Ram
Dawson, AP buainass news an*
alyst, reviews t o first half ef the
year and tells what developments
brought about an historic high in
prosperity.
NEW YORK iA—This Is the year
good times flabbergasted the cau­
tious. The economy has hit its
peacetime stride. Record! topple
aa business becomes “ almost too
good to be true."
At midyear businessmen are re­
vising thalr prediction*—on ‘he upride, Just ga they were a year ago.
Then, tha recoislM waa proving
te be mu«b ahtllowur than many
had Hired earlier. Now, the re­
covery ia proving to be much more
vigorous than most had dared to
hope, Only the fear of crippling
atrikee or of future inflation cloudi
the prospects.
Last year the stock market outpaged business. Thia ygar industry
forge* ahead falter than stock
prices. Soturitiea have advanced
lines t o first of t o year, but
often hesitantly and wtU avar.aU
gains only about half aa Heap as
last year.
This has, bean a "big ticket"
year, with, lha consumer QMtMS*
tionibly In central. Ha b |i boon
buying, and going into debt te buy,
t o hard wares af peaee—autoe In
record numbers, TV eels, froeiers,
automatic waahen. He continue a
to buy new homea and thalr fur■iahinta at an astounding rate.
Re t o mabora ad durable goods
and suppliers af the materials hava
boon having a field dap.

Consumer buying has sent the
grass national product-tho dollar
volume of all the goods and serv­
ices the nation produce* and sells—
to sn sU lima high of ITS billion
dollars.
In the previous peak—SSI bil­
lions in Ilia—It was government
spending for defame that furnished
the spirit.
And now, at midyear, business
itself is about to goad the economy
to a still faster pace with its plana
for spending more for new plant
and equipment.
Industrial output hit an all time
high in May. Rebuilding of inven­
tories il looked upon aa a likely
bolstering influence for ■ while.
Large numbers af the public
have more income. Wages have
risen more thia year than last.
Factory houri have lengthened.
More peraoni are on payrolls. Fed­
eral tases are a little lighter. Divi­
dend payments are higher.
And lha public has responded in
three ways: buying more goods
and choosing m o r e expensive
items | pledging more of expectable
future ineeme in mortgages and
imtaUmant debt, and living a
smaller percentage or Income.
During the six months the c u t
of living has stayed remarkably
liable. Ike voit of soma indus­
trial materials, notably metals,
hag risen, Most foods have eased
in Price if anything. Rent and
•touting Rave changed Utile.
Tataf debt continues to rise.
Washington frets about what would
happen to Installment and mort­
gage payments U Internal should
drop. Rtork margins ara hiked to
bring trading nearer to a cash ba­
sin—aa a warning against runaway

speculation.
Senators look at tha stock mar­
ket and giva il a case of carve*.
But corporate profit*, rising stead­
ily and impressively this year, and
more generous dividend payments
offset the Jolts to confidence.
The auto industry's pledge to
add something to whet slates pay
out to laid off workers renews
Ulk of inflation. Rut its greatest
Im mediate effect waa to liy the
flir t of costly strikes—in th it on*
industry at lesst.
Mainly it's a year ef prosperity.
Temarrew: Whet Uea ahead?

6 Yugoslavs Due
To Join Russians
In Obsarvanct
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia [A —
Rix officers ef t o Yugoslav air
fore* will Join the Russians In
observing Soviet air force day next
Sunday in Moicow.
Yugopresa, t o eemlofficlat news
•ganar reported today that the
Yugeriav airman w in Invited by
Soviet Defense Minister deergi K.
Zhukov. Headed by t o air force
commander, Gen, Edenho inepic;
they will leave Belgrade Friday
for a today itay ia Rassia.
Only ,«na par tent ef the etudento
whe eeacentrnto on English, hittore er toclal atlencit In callage
will pa into eareere In that* field*,
a atu-1
-----J -*
'
Jdy
made
at ‘r
the **
University
ef Xlehlgaa indicates.
About M mlloa above the earth,
the air to bet—about 1T0 degree*
Fahrenheit,

Certainly New York gels hoi on
some day*. Il ha* a heat that can
build up restleainrss and die.
comfort, but usually within five
days at most that heal will blow
away.
It's a changeable town In al­
most every way. But no one man
ever owned it or bought ft. And If
you bring a fcel.ng In it that
matches ita rite it will also en­
large you.
They say it isn't Amtrici, bu'
‘t is the most American city ip
the United States. The Statue of
Liberty Isn't In another port- It

My New York
RY MEL HEIMER
NEW YURK — I caught up with
Win Min Than the other day and
sftei 1 wa* through talking with
her I felt like taking hrr press
agent aside and laying, “ Hey —
*yuu belter brief this dolt."
tblust actors, you must under­
stand, are briefed by then publici­
ty p, opto before being turned loose
for interview!. If the newspaper­
man specialties in writing about
New York, they're told to gush.
“Oh I love New York," and if
they're being quiued by ■ rooking*
page editor, they're coached to
took demure, eppeer in an apron
and say they Just love tha kitchen.
Mias Win Min Than (somebody
turn off that record, hey?) is a
tall, Il-ycai-old Burmese beaut
who plays opposite Gregory Pec
tn The Purple Plain, which was
made recently In Burma and will
he released shortly. Tact ia not
Win'* middle name.
For instance: Miss Than had
been the night before, to the Ibet
ter to see the musical Stlk Stock­
ings. Critics have applauded it to
g man. Your average movie act
l e s s , not wanting to ilep on toei,
would say," I thought It a darling
show." Did Miss Than like it? Miaa
Then eyed me candidly. “No."
she said. Why not? "I thought it in
had taste, poking such fun at the
Russian*." said Mlsa Than, who
appears on the humor!*** side.
-"Frankly, 1 was surprised. I eg.
peeled more le America."
Did Mist Than realise that pro­
bably in Russia, such fun was be­
ing poked at Americans? "Probab­
ly," she slid, “but you don't have
to behava ac they do, do you?"
Iho shook her hied.
"Ivo boon told" — Oh, then the
hid baas brlafcd — "that 1 should­
n't coy such things, but I don't
ccra," cho want on. "I hava no po­
llute! leenlngs, anyway." t askad
Mill Thin whit eha thought of Cole
Portor'e .music.
"Vary lUUa," tha UcUaie Miss
Than aakd. "1 thought it vary modi
ocra."
Well, Mara wasn't any pareenUga along Utoia lines. 1 switched
■ltd asked Win what aba thought
ef American man.
“They draio tan loudly," Me

Try and Stop Mo | YOU'RE TELLING

lift* its torch hare.
New York City 1* fun. adventure
and opportunity. It is aLo akyscrcpers, culture and cruelty. But“
it is neither more cultured nor
cruel than what you're looking for.
I: 1» you magnified, many, many
times.
Whatever you seek and don't
find at homa is piobably heie nr
may be — and many things you
aren't even looking for at ail.
The higher Rome, the aspiration
that made Athens a symbol, the
sin of Babylon without Its Babel,
the stolid durability of London, the $
pride of Paris—they are all here.
Never the same, shrugging off
her 300-year history, it is the on*
mighty metropolis on earth that
still bases its appeal on the
glamour of youth and doesn’t ask
to be admired or respected merely
because it's old.
It is a city of endless growth
»nd fresh glamour and never in.
Vital strangers In come hare to M
fed strange and he sad.
•
End adv for PMS Thur* June !»
said "I don't tare for bright
eiothes In men Perhaps it's be­
cause I lived in London for a while
and got used In the somher clothes
there Too many mature man dress
like boys, tn this country."
She wasn't through swinging, by
a long shot. I asked her how it was ^
•o act opposite Gregory Peck She w
looked out the'window thoughtfully
and then shrugged delicately, "it
was hard to get used tn," she said.
■I acted better tn the wall." The
wall?
'
“Oh, he Is a nice fellow," she
added, ''but I learned my lines
by going off In a corner and talk­
ing to the wall, and when I had tn
say them into his fact, It waa diffi­
cult."
f
Alias Than, who acted for the
first time in her life In The Purple
Plain, was negative, toe, about her
ehancea of heeoming a great movie
ater. "I could play only Oriental
parts," she said, with no great en­
thusiasm, "and there aren't many
af those."
I learned further, as the morning
wore on, that the pities Western
women - thinks to y pay too high
for their equality, “ Burmese wo-M
men tike to remember that they
are the weaker sex," was her view,
"No Burmese men would drexm of
making a date to meet out In the
street or on a corner. They alwayi
pick a girl up at her house and re­
turn her afterward,"
To lump t o wst of It together,
she feela Western people de not
loom
havo faith la themselves—
"they try to draw their Inspira­
tion from aourcei outside them-M
solves" and that Burmese
cJo'He* are more feminine and at­
tractive than ouri.
I'» aay thle fog her — ehe's a
brave one. Only somebody bad Just
better brief her, le ell.

to

Japanese Industrie* produced
to,745,000 worth of ermemonta for
U. S, troopa il) Jgp«H during ISM,
moro than M per cent ef it am­
munition.

-B y B IN N IT T C I R h
ARCH KmDMAN ef Uw Indian* AUtUtid Cemmiulon to ll
7 * about n light-heavyweight whn atopped a terrific uppercu
with hlg law and plopped to the caavM, After tha count of "ton,"
El* manager held aomo aro­
matic apirlta of ammonia undor hi* boy’a noetriU.
“Spe»k to no)" Blatdad tha
worriad manager. "Ara you
all ii|M T" Tha loear’a ayao
rolled weakly, but hit volet
canto through clear with,
"You tw o mn ftftocn bucka."
The manager let go the flght•r'a head and esgured tha
Commiaolanar. "I know ho
waa O .K .r
a • a
News from Ketktoa Falla, totayae hr Both Buabyi Kid to
attuh gndaisp here wia iMad
ta define "outoWefraphy." Anewaead, "Aa autobiography le t o Me
------- --------------- W . . , Bipleeivee plant evei
‘
, Wg, togger, and where t o 1
•I toe ben ce
• Rid.*

Clearance Sale

Nttfiiasr

si is;
. de’ton musk ...

B .tim uaMed m

1* d«)n^ASdeeUThsvi
There M e a

SSifcdB
lb !
rw ,

have

WE WILL BE OUNBD
ALL NEXT WEEK
FOE VXCATION!

"Making
Paint Hiatt

------#
*•

i

t ■: TsSS’iiV

U to

W t tJKCUl OUR PRHKM AND CUSTOMERS
m nova CAREFULLY a n d m ake t h is a
SAFI AMR SANS HO|JDAY * • •

WARNERS | Remflet &amp; Aedanae
Drag Star*

S U V IC i

Nicholson
Brick Co.

ST A T IO N

H M toi IMS * BIN
&lt;■

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it-iA V

-tKy** -*:f

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�S o jc ia L fcv &amp; n Jb u

Members Initiated
In Brief Ceremony

Mrs. Ida Fletcher
Otis Sjoblom,

Mr*. H. F- Adair and Mr*. D E.
Huskin were initiated into the
Anna Miller Circle to Ihe Elks
Club at their recent meeting.
Mrs. James Blankenship presii
dent, presided over tho ceremony
and busings* session. Mr*. S. P.
Griffin was transferred from Waycross. Gs., and was welcomed into
the circle,
Delicious refreshment* were serv­
ed hy hostes«e* Mrs. Larry Bennett.
Mrs. ti H. Bedlam and Mra K. W
Cassube,
Tho*e present were Mr*. Pete
Bukttr, Mrs. S. P. Griffin, Mr*. A.
P. Bowersox, Mr*. H, F. Adair,
Mrs. I) K. Huskin, Mrs. Irving
Feinberg, Mr*. J. W. Orildre. Mrs.
Henry Thurston, Mr*. Boy Brown,
Mr*. Esther Barber, Mr*. H. S
Billhimer, Mrs. Ralph It. Wight
II, Mr*. R. W. CasMiho, Sir*.
I arry Bennett, Mts. It, II. Beck­
ham. Mrs Hiehard Mapcs, Mrs.
E .1. Mrughlon Jr., Mr*. Marie
David. Mrs. Jam es, Blankenship,
Mrs Harold Ka-tnrr. Mr*. Har­
ry Kent, Mr*, (i. Kinlaw Mrs.
Marie Stafford, Mrs. I.ee Flllnton,
and Mrs. J. M. Cameron.

Are Given Shower

Saturday evening * prntin nf
T..vk«* Mnrv friend* entertains)
at the home of Mr anil Mrs. C.
Girls Are Adamant
S. Donaldson, honoring Mr*. Ida
9j
Mae Fletcher amt Otis Stnbtnm
About Big Wedding
with n mi*rel!*ncou* *hower.
Susan McCall Is visiting her They have act Julv 2 a* the date
To Relief Of Pop aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. for their wedding.
The party room* were derorRumor ha* It that more than Harks X. Hunter in Uainridge,
nted with arrangement* of while
one father has offered to pay hit La. for 10 days.
cladioli, and white tennia* in
darling daughter to elope when he
rrv*tnl howl*. The refreshment
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Herman
Jacobson,
investigates the rost of a wedding.
table was overlaid with a lace
hava
returned
home
after
spend-1
Hut these days the girls are ada­
cloth and the crystal punch howl
mant. They want a big wedding ing the week-end In Miami tin at one end wa* balanced with a
with bridesmaids, seven * tiered a buying trip for their store.
Ihrcc-tlcrcd cake at the other, sur­
-c a k e s, father's worried look not
mounted with * minialuurr bride
Mrs. Orvilte W. Touchton has and groom. While taper* In crys­
^"withstanding. Most fathers love
Ihc idea loo, even If they must heen removed from the I'ernald tal hnlrtrc* ea*t a toft clow over
mortgage the old family home­ Liughlon Hospital to th* home the scene. Mra. H. H. Grier ser­
stead to walk daughter down the of Mrs. H. 4J. Touchton on Bit ved Ihe punch during the evening.
Hark Ave.
aisle in style.
The various Rift* were on a cof­
fee table along with Ihe Rift of
Hour-months before the big
the host* and hostesses. Hrior to
event smart girls start planning
wedding dresses, bridesmaids, Ann Genovese Has Ihc picscntation of the gift.*,
games were played on Ihe lawn
invitations, flowers. Parents at
JOANNI GtltCTT, 23, film itirleC and Amgbtw of onw* writer Ray
this point are reconciled to the Made 'Big Time'
Invited to he with the honoreea
Gilbert, U shown wilh her husband, Danny Arnold, 30. Hollywood
were Mr. and Mrs. W. Bennett,
whole idea and enter into the
acroen writer, after their marring* ha I-aa Vegas, Nc*. They are
As Polio Singer
honeymooning in the rcoort town, _ ( ia h n u lto a il Scmndphoto)
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Brooklyn, Mr.
•sp irit ol it.
and Mr*. D. L, Hendricks, Ed
Ona group of glrla queried at
fly JANET VALLUM
Brooklyn. Mr. and Mrs. Jake Jathe University of California on
Syrarasc Herald-Journal
roht Byron Tills, Mi** Barbara
the questioi of what type of wed­
SYRACUSE, N. Y. Wv-Anni Ma­ Humphrey, Mr. and Mra. J. A,
ding they would plan if they were
planning one, confirmed the wild­ rie Genovese hss made the big Hcekham, Mr. and Mrs, Kart
time — singing from her wheel Toney. Mr. and Mr*. Bobby Tilli*.
est suspicions of any father,
chsir. She hss been psrxlyrcd by Mr*. Krrd Wcrfelntan, Mr. and
Said Jonl Mann!*, woman’e edi­ polio since she wss a year old.
Mr* n L. Howell. Mr. amt Mrs
tor of The Daily Trojans "l want
Mir* Dorothy Elisabeth Bradley o f Atlanta. G*.. daughter of Mr.
She hss been singing in and H. M Gleason, Mr. and Mr*. It
\ huge wedding when I get mar­
and Mr*. Frank Eugrin- Bradley of (ireenviho, S. C., former residents
ried—a big old fashioned affair around Syracuse since she was a W. Keogh, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph if Sanford, txvame the bride of William Evan* Richeson, so n o f Mrs.
in a real pretty church. And I youngster and hss just recorded Keogh, of Walterboro, S. C,; Mr I.ancclot Minor Richeson and the late Mr. Kirhrann of Wiivnesvllle,
a.*d Mr* Oliver Sjoblom. Mrs. S’. C. on Saturday, June 25. st 5:30 o m. in Chti*l Epi.rnpnl Church
' "want a nice reception afterwards." her first album, a prompt hit.
"Downbeat" magaslne, the Bihle Ruby Mitchell, Mr. and Mra. in Gtecnrill*.
That ought to be enough to make
of the music trade, recommends A. L. Omcy.
any parent's wallet wiggle.
The Rev. Caper* Satterlre. rrr- jn n„ rr|age. She
Ml. and Mr*. Itogrr Cmckrr, for nf the Church .of the Advent in marriage. Phr wore a gown
Terry Fait, a freshman frel* tha the album, giving It a four-slar
,,
**- ♦ , *
* aI
‘of‘ "white
u r t r iAlettenn
»in n
lave
iiiiw ■
over
■* t r i*"ii
satin,
i "*" ■
earn* way and adds that the rating, the highest usually attained Mr. and Mrs. J, R. Reaves, Mr. m Spartanburg, officiated at the
„ ,,otlirr f , , hioned with
Decora- an
... illusion
........
......
...
.
,____
.____
wants "Iota of bridesmaids and by a popular recording, and lays and Mrs. D. C. Spires, Mr, and double-ring ceremony.
yoke mul long sleeve*
Mr*. A. E. Crocker, Mr. and Huns included while gladioli, car­
ushers, and tha whole works." Per- of Anna Marie:
and a full skirt ending in a court
Mrs.
L
C,
Tillls,
Mr.
and
Mr*.
"She
has
felt
empathy
with
s
nations, slock, find** daisies, can- (tain. Her diamond eairing* were
apiring d id !
II. Skcwcs, Mr. and Mr*. H. &lt;\
Dolnrrs Holzman, a first yrar number of modem jars artist*, Hugh, Mr. and Mrs. J. R Wil­ dc’nbm and palm*.
n gift of the bridegroom, ami a
Dr. W. Lilt Day Smith Jr., wn* fingeitip veil nf illuvuin was
law- student a t USC is a sister like Sarah Vaughan. She has a liams, Mr and Mr*. R. H. Goble,
good
full
voire,
with
a
serviceable
an.l vocalist* were h rank i might to a Juliet rap of tare.
under the akin. She wants a big
Mr. and Mrs, Julian Yarn and organist,
Eugene Bradley Jr. brother of .the Her
q;hurch wedding “nice and fancy." ear and a muaieian’a way of phras­ Mr and Mr*. W. O. Mill*.
bouquet* wa*
wliito
rntna■
** *»- *
*of
' I
»'«** *■
a
&lt;1 E l l Eging.
The
album
is
pleasant
listen­
One junior, Donna Ohio of San
bride, and Mi*a Joy Hatcher, her ,j„n, butterfly nr&lt;-|,s,|* and stepThose
fc»pon»ible
for
thi*
very
ing
as
Is
and
I*
rertainly
quit*
Diego wants to get married in the
h.-tnoti* centered with a white or­
entertainment were Mr. cousin
•“church of our parish, hy the superior to most female vocalis­ lovely
John M. Riehe*on of Martins­ chid.
and
Mr*.
C.
S.
Donaldson,
Mr.
ing
these
day*."
priest I’ve known all my life."
Mrs. Bradley, mother of Ihe
Mrs. M. II. Bice,
Mr. and ville, Ya., brother of the bride­
"Interlude wilh Anna Mark*" In­ and
The girle all have definite ideas,
Mr*
Kit
Zimmerman.
Mr. and groom, served as best mnn, ami bride, wore mauve silk with
and even Susanna Lund, sopho­ clude* come of the ballad-lvpe Mr*.
u*hers
were
Dr,
Janie*
K.
Stringmatching arrensnrfc* and * pur­
BiH Brown and
Mr. and
more, who wants nothing more long* *he like* to do best. It's Mr*. H It. Grier of Sanford.
field, brother-in-law of the bride­ ple orchid coisage; Mr*. Richeson,
aonga
are:
than a "medium sire wedding with
groom. Robert S. Millar Edward mother nf the bridegroom, wore
•'It Could Happen to You:"
ju st her favorite people and close
H. Hot ini, Boyce Wa*heeheek, Cy­ blue late over taffeta with match­
friends" might change her mind “Thest Foolish Tiling*;" "I.ova
ril W. Minelt, ami Robott J- Slrp- ing arresiuiic* and a pink orchid
C U T - A W A Y SLACK • F IT ­
after seeing soma of tha splashier i* Here to Stay;" "Willow, Weep
hensn.n III.
rorsagr.
TING JA CKET completes a
4kvcdiilngs. Or sophomore Hetty for Me:" I'm Glad There'* You;"
Maid nf honor wn* Mis* Mary ^ Afire the ceremony, a rrerp- suit of beige worsted from Hen
Martin who'd like "a small af­ “What More Can a Woman Do?;"
Bussell Eleazer, of CUnison, who j....
ion was held at the Woman's 7.ork trm an's collection. Kohl*
fair in a chapel. Maybe with just "Luluaby of the Leaves," and
THURSDAY
wore a wait* length gown of while
soften the wide collar, rounding
the family and a few friends."
"Interlude."
The Junior Royal Ambassadors tulle and lace, with ahrvg of tulle.
ot.t from a yellow and whilo,
For
traveling
on
svrdtllnjr
trip
Every girl should keep in mind
Anna Marie lay* ahe ran’t read will niret at Ilia First Baptist S h e r.rrn-d a bouquet of red car- t
, .clean*. Mr*. Itirhrffon s tu p e d surah oearf, f
the lovely wonder of this very mu*ic or play the piano. She'* church at 7 p. m.
nations, anil wore a nn*e veil ol W ore n t on st pilk plmnltint? puit
Special day before she decides on never had any formal musical
The First Baptist Church Choir while silk illusion attached to a
Ami th«* Her malernat grandparent* wore
with brier arfi’pYfit
• hurry-up marriage. It is a day training. But she makes her oprn will hold rehearsal at 7.30 p. in. I'oaodeno nf whilo *atin.
whiti
orchid
from
her
wedding Mr. mid Airs. K. C. Echols of .^anto cherish for ever, and even if arrangements—"mostly as I go
FRIDAY
Bridesmaid* were Mrs. Edward
ford,
family can't manage a big wed­ ■long."
The First Baptist Vacation Bi­ Halterson ftllry Jr. of tireenvilln bouquet.
ding, the smaller more Intimate
Mr, Richecon wrt* graduated
Mrs. Richeson t» a graduate nf
The album was recorded hy s ble Srhool will begin at 8:30 a. m. [and Marnn. Ga,, "hd Mr*. T.
reception can be a lovely exper- new local corporslion hraded by for those ago three through Hi Clyde O'DonticH who were dress- New Hanover High .Srhool, Wil­ from Waynervillt* High School and
dtenee.
r&lt;l as Mi** Eleazer and ruiiicd mington, N. C., attended Mereilith Ihe Univer*ily of North CiuoIiuh
Maury Goldberg who alio arts a* years
If Dad and Mom are strapped Anna Marie's agent. Uacking her
College in Raleigh. N. C. and tiro wilh a Imrhetor of srieora degiew
The First Baptist Vacation Bi­ bouquet* similar to hers.
* for cash, the little family wedding up for the album was the trio n( ble School Cnmmcnrrmrnt pro­ Mr. Bradley gave hi* daughter Judith K’iot Srhool of Drama in in litisrne** adminisluitioii. He is
with a good alxe wedding caka Billy RubenMcin, pianist; Wally gram will begin at a p. m.
New Yoik City, .She i* a foriner a**oeiated in busirir** in Atlanta,
t made in the kitchen) and a lovely
inrmhvr of Pilot International ami where he I* a member of Elk
in
Ihe
Church
Auditorium,
The
bouquet for the bride ran live for­ Melnirk, bass and Buddy Habsl, Exhibits will be open to Uie pub
Ihe Spartunliui g Spinster* Club, Lodge 7H. The couple will reside
drummer.
ever a* the moat wonderful day in
aril is a member of Alpha Eta at LU SUmlmh Ave., N. W,, in
lie at 7 3o p. m.
Anna
Marie,
now
21.
won
the
i the world. The point la to share
Chapter of Epsilon Sigma Alpha Atlanta.
TUESDAY
this day with the people you love Ted Mack Amatrur contest when
Those from Snnforrl allemting
business sorority. She for met ly
A
hoard
nircting
of
Ihe
WSCS
best, even If they can't give you »hc was Id and later »ang for three of the First Methodist Church
held a position with a local tele­ the wedding were Mr*. I- K. G ai­
month* at Tony Pa*tnr’» and the
vision station ami i* now assist­ ner. Mr*. D. k. Mr Nab. Mr* V.
will he held at B am . to he fol­
Hotel Edison in New York City.
ant mrrlia director nf an Atlanta I . Messenger and Miss Faye Garlowed hy the general inerting al
She shir* away from the rurrenl 0:45 a. ni. In McKinley Hall,
advertising agency.
ly popular "Shake, Rallle and Roll
The Daughter* of Wesley Sun­
'em " song* and call* them "Corny day Srhool Class of tho First
harsh and loud—not good music.’ Methodist Church will hnvo Ihe
She says she will continue with regular business and social Hirel­
her melanrholy ballads about the ing in Me Kinlt-y Hall al 8 p. nt.
murh-drbated subject of love.
WEDNESDAY
A picnic supper honoring the
tha kind of wedding you'd tike to Rev. and Mr*. Milton II. Wyatt
-A asaw wdl P • Ww« way have.
will he sponsored hy the WSCS
to aava his fnc*. A worn** ja *
^
Mother and Dad look forward to of tha First Methodist Church.
coca u tk* in ia U n ."
your wedding day so give them a Members will niert at Rock
Spring* and supper will ba served
break.
From breakfast tn jm n rr, anil ctcvt mintiln
at 7 p. m. Each family will taka
ki hrtwem, youll want tho curving magic of tin*
a pinenic supper and table srrvlre.
Drinks will be provided hy tho
dream of i bra. Th* fbttrrm s
Beauty Care on the Highway
WSCS.
diffcrener is rtfihl ibrre m tho tie.-tae-too
amcJted p in eb . , . that fire
Three hundred mile* of highway, from mom till night, can taka
NOTICE
a lot af tha aparklt nut of your tyae—unless you follow carefully
your fignrr the swret lifted

pBJl&amp;OWdA

Former Sanford Girl , Dorothy
Bradley,WedsWilUam Richeson

•

Talent Situation
In Film Capital
At Critical Stage

THE FANTORD HERALD
T htir*. Ju n e .70, If).17 Pnffe S

Noble Grands Club
Revises By-Laws

Th« Past Noble Grand* Club
HOLLYWOOD!**- The star i»b met with Mr*. Minnie Ewan Tue*.
enl situation ha* reached the crtli- day evening with Mrs. Mae Myers,
Mrs. May Rubow, anil Mr*. Mar­
cal S’age in Hollywood.
Docs that sound drastic' Not if jorie Howard being appointed to
you talk to some producer* and revise the by-law*.
theater men. They will tell you An Interesting program *r*»
.that the number of star* who given hy Mr*. K«*ie Col,- a**i;tcd
really mean something at Ihe box | by Mr*. Virginia Anderson.
office has dwindled to a dozen or- Twelve member* wrre present.
two, Notable among these are John Mrs. Elizabeth liannum received
Wayne. Gary Cooper, .lame* Stew- ith e attendance prize. Delieiout re­
art. Alan Ladd. Bing Crosby, Clark freshment* vve-e served and a
Gable. Humphrey Bo;art and a racial hour enjoyed.
few others.
m i . Y ES—SEARS!
You'll note that most of these
LONDON i.ft—A hritish airtin*
star* are middle-aged, A few
passengers in n ques­
younger player* have joined that asked
stellar position — Marlon Brando, tionnaire: ' Are yotj in favor of
Marilyn Monroe. Marlin and l/'wis backward or forward facing
and possibly a handful of others. seats
Nearly half replied: "Yes."
A major reason for the decline
is the breakdown of new talent
programs at the major studio*.
Many of Ihe nylon nei-stiffcnlnt
Only one lot stilt maintains an petticoal* can make hash out of a
extensive training for future *lsrs. pair of ilorkinga.
ITi.il i* Universal-International.
T
studio is rven expanding Us
activities under the direction of
Jess Kim met, veteran of TV and
stage associate of Jose Ferrer.
'Hie U-t training, which ha*
LAST TIME TODAY
helped produce such name* a*
Tony Curtis, Bock Hudson and Jeff
Chandler, ha* become so well
known that outsiders have tried to
pay for the program. The studio
has declined, limiting the curricula |
vista isioh iTttwteaM
*t
to it* own young players.
3__
Where do they come from? Many
S T A R T S TOMORROW
merely rome to the studio themuniat
n mi
selves. Tho
~
b rrr-1"
KAtDEH *Dt CARLO
by agent*, and that’s how the
stiu Iin prefer* to deal.
i^ 's e o r r
The young hopefuls gel *ome
h»*tc training In the eIs*vie*. They
learn body movement by vlaiirmg,
get horseback ruling lesson* ami
some fencing, although Kiminell
feels llul it tends to create an
attitude of poong
"I've found that tuning lessons
are excellent for actors," he add­
ed "When they get in the ring,
they lose tln-ir inhibitions and be­
come aggressive "
COININGU k a o w n t ^ H T
A large pail of the training ts
the d.n in. day out reading of
STARTING SUNDAY
part* Ktnimel Iwlieves m having
the player* tiudy separately. Then
they'll play the scenes over and
over again with different students.
Annually Ihcy produce their own
vhow. "Inside II I "
Some flunk out, others may
' J ----DIN B1IRVF4
start thr perilous path to stardom

THE FAR
HORIZONS
V

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•WieOld

I dreamed I went to dinner in

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Etude bra

Aha "highway beauty care" routine. So, If you're going to make ■
'long trip by ear this summer, it will pay you to remember a few
detail* that will help you arrive foaling and looking fresh.
I L Bo sure to have cleansing
cream on hand at all Umea. Ap­ handy after a full day'a drive to
ply liberally to' tha fare and restore eye freshness. Sunburn
.threat at each atop to keep Use lotion, loo—oooner or later you
will sunburn tha tip of your noae,
dirt from becoming Imbedded.
1 *- I w y avoniag altar you re­ tho bach of your neck or your
left forearm.
*- Soap, shampoo, talcum and
deodorant are .“must* " But you
needn't load yourself like on
army mule. Replenish them along
the road. Several cosmetics Arms
offer travel hits that contain tho
I\
thing! you'll need and ttore's
much lota chance of breakage, t
l Wear comfortable shoe* and
clothes, and change Into dean
clothe* often — they keep you
feeling, a* well as iwkleg fresh.
7. Never oat heavy meals dur­
V
ing tha day —they make you
drowsy. It's better to tat a short
ali
■nick every few hours. .Malta
■*/
breakfast and dinner the most
•ubetantia) meals.
•• Moat Important: Get a good
___
night's sleep every night on the
move the day's
uffMM ad trip It helps your appearance.
m grime from your fare —
It’s a safety fortor. too,' four re­
apply night cream to
flexes will to quicker and ___
tho drawing affects aI wteffaaS Aren't drawee at the wheel
*
nun.
•L Carry twenty or thirty dol­
• a. Good aunataama Ire a i
lars In cash and th* rest in Amorit driving
They maka
loan Express Travelers Cheques.)
aafrr and protect your ores from ■rend them meet anywhere and.)
Scorching brightness, as wall
H MU happen to loss them, you
pgainst dust and grit. too.
fto h ly get ysur.

A ll Calendar
L is tin g And
Society N ew s
A re Requested
By 5 p. m. The
D ay Preceding
Publication

lin e * , th e T o u lh tu l

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r THE SHIRT—casual In atylo.
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M l CNUMrtial

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ORLANDO HIGHWAY

PHONO ZEIS
-{

MEN'SSANFORD
W EAI’HONE
R 122C-J

306 EAST FIRST

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their way out as they dropped
By F.D WllJtS
their fourth straight to Detroit S 3
The Aisoeleted Press
The way things are going these yesterday. And Cleveland suffered
days, the Chicago While Sox and another Jolt in ■ 12-4 pasting by
Ihr Cleveland Indians look like Kansu City.
ihey're smack dab between the New York, meanwhile, clobbered
NEW YORK (gw-Rocky Mir- devil and the deep blue sea in Ibc Baltimore Uice 3 2 and 7-3, while
els ho was axpteled lo agree today American League race.
Boston continued its ateady victory
or perhaps tomorrow to place his The White Sox looked lo be on diet with a e-3 success at Washing­
heavyweight boxing crown on Ihe
line against Archie Moore In Sep­
KING OF THE WB.TER3
tember but on* UUng accrued cer­
tain—the fight likely will not be
held on the West Coast.
Boxing promoter Cal Eaton of
Lot Angeles offered yesterday to
guarantee It* million dollars for
the heavyweight title scrap If the
International Boxing Club would
stage It either In Ix&gt;» Angeles
Memorial Coliseum or in the Rose
■owl at Pasadena.
But Truman Gibson, secretary
of lit* IRC, Immediately threw
cold water on the offer by saying
thl IBC "U not too Interested"
In promoting a heavyweight title
fight on the Weal Coast.
Jim Norris, president of th# IBC,
eould not be reached for commefit but It wat believed ha would
be In New York today for a con­
ference with Al Weill. Marciano's
manager, and Charley Johnston,
Who pilots Moore, the veteran light
beavywalght ehamplon.
The conference could well result
in form el announcement of the
fight but the det* and tile prob•bly would not be forthcoming for
several days. Both Weill and
Johnston have said they prefer
New York probibly In mld-Scptember either at the Polo Grounds
C A fiM tN
W $ M
or the Yankee Stadium.
Chicago, New Orleans, Huuslon

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NEW YORK UD- Brooklyn
Dodgara* eatchar Roy Campanula
questioned for three hours yesterda. In ■ State Liquor Authority
bribery probe, aeld: ‘Tv* been
eider from the word 'go'."
Campanelia waa called by the
effiee of State Investigation Com­
missioner J- Irwin Shapiro in conftectloa with the transfer of his
liquor (lore* license from Queens
to- Harlem. Authorities contand
that many auch transfers wrra
possible only through bribery of
liquor authority agents.
“ I e n u r e you than waa
uothiag under the table," CamP«m LU told newsmen aa be
emerged beaming after the ques­
tioning. "I cm truthfully aay that
thare'9 nothing to be aihimed of.
My'books are on th* up end up."
Shapiro hlmielf declined to alacue* Campioelia'a cate.

O f A c -n o H , g o r g e * t o r
D ie * r o f * r o p t a y o * - m e

ViROHB BfYMOQT

Bud Smith Hopes
Gypsy Days Over
BOSTON in — Wallace (Bud)
Smith, master of the short, slash­
ing left hook, hoped his “ Gypsy"
days were over today a the new
lightweight champion of th* world.
Smith, the 20 ye«r-old Cincinnati
Negro gave Jimmy Carter the
worst baiting of his career lest
night at Boston Garden but bail
no easy time in gaining a split
dacLlun In 13 blood-splattered
rounds. It was the third time Car­
ter hai lout th*-lightweight crown.
"I want to be a fighting cham­
pion," Smith said afterward.
No ona could recall Carter ever
being cut up aa badly In hia 99bout profaiaional Ilf*. Tha U-yearold New Yorkar r e q u i r e d IS
■fitches—nine over hie right eye
and all over hia left—after ap-

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Naihvlll* baseball fM i addicted
to numerology (or erapabootlng)
could chortle plenty today over an
Impressive eat gf lucky number*
that cropped up Igat night la the
Vol's 19-1 victory over Memphis,
the Southern Asia. League leader.
Tha home club began its Sulphur
Dell bom* atey by tending it men
to tbo put* la th* flrit toning.
Seven scored and sevao hit lately
to send lefthander Don Qroas winglag toward hia aoventh victory.
DaaplU the defeat, Memphis kept
Me slender, one game lead' over
Blrminjhim when th* second
e* Baron* toll to New Orleans
la IS Imilngi. Chattanooga
Jotoed Naw Orieana to picking up
oo th* leaden by downing
Utile Bock 4-1. and the skidding
Atlanta Crackers bowed to Mobil*
W amid rumors that Georgt MeQuine may net be piloting th*
mumping defending chaajptona

B

" to A M , H i m VMCA And ■
MS ftff Bs scheduled here and
tewed mb bfteana* of snow. The
* * " &lt; * * ,• « to haw Mftttorod
•bite cootetti to m f t Umto trail
BaMp IBrnoami el tb* Breves
Mft Io n to Glasgow, Scotland,
tori now toftbM Ua home to MIL

•«9 Licansa — Fishing License

pairing in his llth title fight.
The only time Carter ever was
stopped was due to an eye cut
In 1947 In a fight with Charley
Lewis la Hartford, Conn,
S m i t h ........................
three
■filches over hit left aye.
Smith's manager Carmen Orallano and Willie Ketrhum, Car­
ter's bon, plan to fulfill in agree­
ment for a rematch.
Smith, had sweet revenge for
hia 19-round loss by decision to
Jimmy In hia home town five years
ago. Since then Smith hai been
fighting welters as well aa light­
weights for small purses waiting
for tha first title shot, which he
made (he most of last night.
"Wu. caught Carter aa he started
on the downgrade," Qrailano aaid.
Though Carter had the better of
the early rounds as he made Smith
m in wild punches while aeoriag,
Smith tagged him enough to open
e cut over hia left eye. In the
middle rounds he absorbed all the
punishment Carter could dish out
and kept up the left attack.
The third pheae to th* lato
stage a found Smith, a 4-1 under­
dog. stowing down Carter with tail­
ing blows though the gam* eham­
plon never let up hia efforts.
Referee Mel Manning caltod It
147-140 for Smith. Judge Jo* Helrty
had It 143-144 for Smith while
Judge John Glynn dieaented, 144143 for Garter.
Smith weighed 134 and Carter
134(4.
Predecessor! of the American
Bowling Asia., formed to New
York to W l, and too American
Amateur Bowling Union, termed
to 1190 when tha NBA waa diaolved. The ABC started to UM.

ton.
Tht Yanka, who have won 10
of their leat 11 (only half of them
agalnat the second division), now
are five games up on the secondplace White Soa and seven ahead
of the Trine. Detroit re omy three
behind the Indiana, and the Red
Sox, who here won II of U, are

In the A’s
barrage agalnri
loier Bob Feller and three rellrt
era. Bobby Shantt won it with htffe
from Tom Gorman.
The Yanka rolled on at Bob Turt
Icy became the fourth AL pitcher
to win 10 thia aeaaon in the opener.
Gil McDougald got a four-run
aeventh under way with a tworun triple In the nightcap, won by
Tom Morgan.
Boaton breezed agalnat the Nila,
getting IS hlta in aupport of Ike
Delock, who went all the way
hia sixth victory after being iiiR
almoat a month with a aora ihoul*
der. Billy Goodman tripled, dou.
bled and tingled in the Botoi at­
tack.
A tingle and two home runt by
Maya—one hit first major league
grand tlammer — shook up the
Dodgers, who got only three hita
off Ruben Gome*.
Hank Aaron belted two horn*
runt and Ed Mathewa and j K
Adcock one each at Milwaukee
and Lew Burdette downed the
Cuba. Hank Sauer homered for the
lone Chicago run. Howie Pollet suf­
fered hit first defeat.
Muaial'a mlle-poat hit wat one
of three Cardinal home runt off
loser Rudy Sllnarcln. A five-run
eighth inning won It for Fnank
Smith, alxth Cardinal pitcher.
Sixth place Sanford, although 16 gamea behind the The Phils defeated the Buct wt^i
leader, la becoming a team to watch in the Florida State a five-run second Inning that got
its drive from Roy Smaliey’a
By GAYLE TALBOT
League.
NEW YORK lit — Men about
Last night’a 7*2 triumph over Weat Palm Beach was baaet-loaded triple.
Broadway who know of such things their fifth straight. Their previous longest string was three.
Mure than 30 flamingoes are ex­
say that the title bout between
And, with their finnneial worries almost ovpr, the Curds pected to be hatched at Hialeah
Rocky Marciano and Archie Moore
race track this spring. The birds
in September will be the greatest have set their sights on e first
live on an Island in the 31-acre
betting event since the second Joe division berth.
infield lake at the Florida track.
Louis-Billy Conn fight back in 194ft. The Gainesville G-Men play hare
The high rollers around the coun­ tonight
Bill White, 11-year old firvft
try already are pouring il in at West Palm's defeat waa the
baseman for Dallas In the Teafc
the prevailing odds of 13-3 against 10th in the last 11 games for the
League, ia a premedical student
ancisnt Archie, even before agree­ fourth placers. Don Pray led the
at Hiram, Ohio, Collegt during
ment has been reached either on
O
rlaudo
i
t
i
l
41 I t
the off-season.
the data or site of the scrap. Those 10-hit Cardinal attack with S for Cocos
n a H*arh
44 I I
who ilka Moore’s chances agatnit 3, a double and two singles that tllsl .y tu
1'sln i U s s th
1* IT
Ted Kluaiewikl, National Lea­
IT IS
tha Rock are In a hurry, for Ihcy ballad in four runs. John Rartek Us Insuvlll*
a* u
gue homo run champion In 1934,
are convinced that such a long allowed seven hits and pitched ■■■(■r*
U iu M liS
II
IS
shutout ball after the first Inning t l 1’s la ra b u re
hit 49 homers but none with Uift
prica will not last.
14 41
baaea loaded.
14IIS ! L I 'S Y K k T K K D A Y
Just over e week ago, before to pick up the decision. The at- &lt;JalD«avll)f
t , L a k rlu n d 1
Archie bleated Bobo Olson back tendance at Sanford was 417.
O rlando 11, Ml. I’rta ra h u r* I
a t b a r to n *
iiaacli
iKitiLTS T K ir o e n tr
into the middleweight drawer with Leading Orlando outlasted St. Cocoa
ra in
M llw auksa .14. C hicago t
Iwo terrific blows It would have Patershuig in an 11-9 slugfast and
New York s. B rooklyn I
DAMKa
TODAY
a t a r i today
f
beea difficult to credit the quan­ Gainesville downed Lakeland 3-L Bt. F a ta rrb u re a t u rla n d e
Naw York a t B rooklyn — H a a ra
la r a a tila a l l a n i a r d
tity of steam already being gen­ Cocoa at Dayton* Beach waa uDaaytona
( M i *a N aw rom b ( l l ' u
Uaach a l W, P a lm 1
C hios*# »t M ilw aukee — H a ck ee
Cocoa a t la k e la n d
erated over thli one, If you want rained out.
( l- 4 j ve C o ld e r (&gt;-*)
llll'O X U H A L F
to believe everything you hear, it Dyke Wilsun’e batesloeded triple
off Uanpar del Monte In the alxth B aafur*
wee the blow for, Orlando which b a r tu n a
rlando
also collected three more nine In O
Cocoa
the eame Inning. The Flyara had It lias lit*
Does Your Horn*
P s ta
trailed 3-8 up te that point. The Ml.
i.akH anri
game at 8t. Petersburg drew 413
N eed R epairs Or
despite earlier showers.
Lso Slmsrd and Raleigh Hughe*
Y ork
4o 14 . sts
M odernizing?
combined to hold LakeUnd to elx CNsw
hlceao
41 i s
,411
hits white their Qalnoevflle metes c ls v s ia n *
41 J* .111
lro ll
IT I t
.444
collected ten off Jack Hoy, Her­ IX
• FH A Im provem ent
tin, tnn
IS 14 .414
man Pisxaro led th* O-men with Kansas Clip
I I 41
4oS
14 41 ,141
four hlta ia five trips,. including Washinatua
L oons available
Itatllmnr#
lu la .its
one double.
KKkLLTS T K ST im O A V
Detroit
4.
Ctilcaso
1
W B aT PALM BBACM
A t Low C oal
Huston T, Washington 1
Kansas City tl. Cleveland I
D are lb
Naw
Y
ork
t-T.
Baltimore
1-1
• FA ST SERV 1CI
O arrlrt cf
UAM Ki TODAY
C u rtrle b t If
Hustun a t W ashington — B re w tr
Hobart* lb
f 1-7 J vs M ab arin u lt l*-l&gt;

Just half a game farther back.
In the National, crippled Brook­
lyn waa shattered by a revived
Willie Mays as the New York
Giants reclaimed fourth place with
a «-l victory. Maya, shaking his
slump, drove in all six runs
agalnat the first-place codgers,
who have lost power guy Roy

Campanula with a knee injury.
Milwaukee drew to within halt
a game of second-place Chicago
by pelting the Cubs 14-1. Phila­
delphia beat Pittsburgh 11-3 and St.
Louis rapped Cincinnati B-S as Stan
Muilal reached the t,SOO-hit mark.
The Tigers smacked the White
Sox quick and hard to win their

fifth game In tlx starts. Five
straight hits Including A1 Kaline's
three-run homer, made for a fiverun first inning that chased Harry
Byrd and got Billy Hoeft started
on hts eighth victory.
Cleveland lost its fourth in six
games as Gus Zemial and Harry
Simpson homered home four runs

Sanford Becoming
A Team To Watch
Musial At
2,500-Hit
Milestone
IT. LOUIS l«l — Stan (Tht Man&gt;
Muilal, whose neme la Inscribed
In most of baiebtU'i batting rec­
ords, hai reached the 3,300-hlt mileatone In hia brilliant career and
then K t bis lights on BOO more.
The St. Louis Cardinals' veteran
oulllekier-tofitlder slammed a sin­
gle end two-run homer last night
off Cincinnati pitcher Rudy Mlnarcin for hits No. 14M and 1300.
Stan, now in his 13lh full sea­
son with tha Cardinals, before the
game had said quietly to a photog­
rapher:
“ I'm going to do it tonight."
Only 3ft obier major league play­
ers have pasted tha S,S00-hit mirk
during their careers and there
ha !• been only seven who'vt made
il peat the number 1000.
“The last BOO wiU be the tough­
est,” Muilal said, Indicating he
hai that goal in mind. The 34year-old Muilal, who draws down
a salary of fftu.ooo-a-year, acknowl­
edged he la running out of time
aa a top-flight player.
“1 should get another 100 hlta
tha aeaaon," he said, and added
that if be etn average about 110
bits tha next three years tha 1,000goal will be retched.
Muriel's homtr also put him in
• tie for 10th place with Al Sim­
mons In the all-time major league
home run derby with K7. He start­
ed the season in llth place behind
Rogers Hornsby's 302.
Those still in front of him are
Bab* Ruth 714, Jimmy Fox 114,
Mel Ott 111, Lou Gehrig 413, Tad
Williams 377 Ralph Klntr Mi, Joe
DlMaggio Ml, Johnny Mis* 33ft end
Hank Greenberg 311.
The select seven who'va carved
out 3,000 or more hlta Includes Ty
Cobb 4,191, Trie Speaker 3,113, Honua Wagner 1,430, Eddie Collins,
3,313 Napoleon Lajoio 3,131; Paul
Winer 1,133 end Adrian Anson 3,-

4 American Girls
To Play Today
A t Wimbledon
WIMBLEDON, England (JB-Four
American glria—the world's great­
est amateur tennis players of their
sen—sort themselves out on Wim­
bledon's famed center court to­
day to mo whnU play Saturday
for the cheriahad All-England singlis title.
The only thing certain about ft
all ia that tho ultimate champion
wiU be from too United BtateaJuat a* in the Uat 11 years. AU
four moved Into today's semifinals

G-Men To Play
Here Tonight

M edlar rt
A lvarsa ss
D ubois o .
e -C oopar r f
Clops III
M illar a
U arcla p
T o ta ls
■ANPOHO

U a tro lt a t C h lra e o — ll rurask
1 7 -4 ) V* Y u rn lslst | l —14
Only gam es schrdulad.

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W oof F*lm Om &gt;4 „ i u f s **•—a
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K—O nydsr g. C a r tr i f h t t . A lv ar#*. R— b a r s , O s rrie . B u tltr, « ny-

_ Bja Hogan waa the first former
U. BaOpcn golf champion te file ("oak Schmitt. IB— rlnoa. Butttr,
hU entry for the l i u event act ftohmltL Jfray, It—CortTleht, Msufor Jure lft-tft to Sen Francisco, rU iU , D P— Cl##*, H « n * rn and

p u h a l* . A lvar**, bar* an*
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tl. un-off— Muter «. Bartak T.

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TTTK SANFORD HERALD Thurs. June 30, 1955 Paga T

Bird-Killing Owl
Shot By Shaffer
Ily CLAUDE ROSE
A killer met violent death early
Saturday morning on Magnolia
Avenue.
Charlei Shaffer, 1204 Palmetto
Avenue, shot a hoot owl which
had been killing small birds in the
vicinity of Palmetto and 12th for
the past few months. A story
about Mr. and Mrs. Shaffer and
the 20 pairs of Purple Martins
which live in their yard appeared
in Friday's edition of The Herald.
Sirs. Shaffer was awakened
Just before dswn Saturday by the
incessant chattering of birds In
her yard. She knew by Instinct
that they wrre In trouble so she
woke up her husband and then
went out to see what was wrong.
Spotting the owl, she told her
husband and he ahot it from its
perrh high in a tree near tl 4
Shaffer horns.
The Shaffer* had placed a floodlight in their yard to keep the
•UCWTAVT or nan John Foeter M Bcs frtgtit) M «re«M by 1 owl away from the homes of their
Vederwrelery •* Slate Herbert Hoover J r, on hla return to Wash­
pet Martins after three famlliea
ington from Baa Franctaco. Dulluu declared be wee "gratified" at
had been wiped out earlier this
Rueeta's official expression of regret ever the shooting down of an
summer. Since all the young Mar­
American plena oft Alaska He added, however, that the Soviet reply
tins are now out of the nest nnd
wee "wot whet we asked for."
fletereetioMl Sowadphoto),
none of the birds stay in their
houses at mght now, Mr. Shaffer
had not turned on the light for
the past few nights. "That must
have been the reason ho canio
hack," snya Sir, Shaffer.
Some 61) or 40 birds of ninny
diffeient aperies were attacking
Ihs owl when the Shaffers found
it. Since daylight was approaching

a u n n iii

New Records Set
By Auto Industry

IKTt« ■ AILKr

'M

W. W. Wharton Dies In Orlando

At

William Watta Wharton, Sr.,
•1, of 111 EUwoofl St. Orlando,
died at hla residence June 26
after a lingering Illness.
Mr. Wharton was a member
of tha First Baptist Church. He
wai a graduate of the University
of South Carolina In ISIS. He

NOTICE
TO ALL REALTORS
Itaa Kelly hone* k u been with­
draw* from tha Market

was a member of tha Masonic
Temple, Knights of Templar and
Shriner of Egypt Temple. Mr.
Wharton came to Florida In 1916
where he entered the automobile
business except when he served
overseas In 1916-1911. Ha wai an
Oldsmobile dealer here aeveral
years ago. He married Mary
Adcle Hill, Crosa Hill, t. C. June
16, 1021.
Surviving Mr. Miarton are
his wife Mrs. Mary Hill Whar­
ton; mother, Mrs. Napcy Whar­
ton; one daughter, Mr*. Robert
Eugene Smythe, Orlando; two

sons, Mr. William Watta Whar­
ton, Jr., Longwood, Fla., Mr.
Mason HUJ Wharton, Sanford,
Fla.; one brother, Mr. John Bee
Wharton,
Crawfordsvllla, Ga.;
two listers, Miss Kittle Wharton,
Orlando, Mrs. C. D, Kirk, Sr.,
Orlando; e i g h t grandchildren,
Diane Wharton, William Watta
Wharton, III, John C. Wharton,
Sandra Wharton, Maion Hill
Wharton, Jr., Candoyi Marla
Wharton, Lillian Wharton and Ro­
bin Adeie Smythe.
Palrchlld Funeral Home, Or­
lando, la la charge of arrangementa,"

MERCURY HITS IT
TOKYO IjP)—Thermometers bit
•S.T degress here today, bettoet
day of tba year for the J&gt;» n lee
Capital,
The children of ancient

Rome
end
ispseotch in moth the seme fens
as the gem ti used by
children.
ilayed merblea, Jarkatonee

Technically, oranges are
rite.
to o l a y s t o a ^ u m r f
ROBSON'S SPORTING GOOD'S
WILL BE CLOSED JULY 4, »
A 6 FIELD TESTING BQUIFMINT.

"...w e mutually
pledge to each
other our Lives,
our Fortunes
and our Sacred
Honor."

DETROIT OB—1The auto industry
M ay winds up the biggest six
months in Its history. Doiens of
new records set since Jsn. 1 attest
to the hottest competitive effort
ia production and sales the csr
makers ever have known.
Final figures will show s January-June output of close to Hi
million passenger cart. Retail deUvtriee art estimated at more
than JH million. Dealer Inven­
tories now are estimated at around
*60.600 cars.
Retell iliac, of eourte, Include
pert af the &gt;50,000 cart on hand
Jan. 1, Something like 155,000 units
ot this yssr't output were shipped
to foreign markets.
■asides new records in assem­
bly volume, retail sates and dealer
Stocks, new high marks were made
by most Individual car makers
both In output and retail deliv­
eries.
Aside from record smashing
production, the outstanding single
development of this year's first
six months obviously was the job­
less pay program agreed upon
between toe CIO United Auto
Workers end Ford end General
Motors.
The history making program
expected to be extended within the
•ext month to Chrysler Corp, un­
doubtedly averted a strike that
could hava been more paralysing
than were the alt-downs of nearly
two decades ago.
Also marking the first half of
IMS were announcement of expan­
sion programs involving addition­
al expendltares of H I million
doBere by Ford Motor Co. and
900 mUtioa dollars by Oeneral
Motors, and substantial progress
by Chrysler in Ha aoo-mllllondollar comeback program.
For Ford toe additional expan­
sion fond brought Ha total pertwar
investment for this purpose to
|g,M3,000,000; the GM addition
brought its postwar total to four
billion. Chrysler which took slight­
ly less than 19 per cent of the
IMS car market has boosted this
b an eatlnaeted 1 per cent so far

Ahead of the Industry now lies
a virtually certain full year record
in production — and probably in
sales, too. Fewer than 2ii million
more car completion* are needed
in the next six months to set e
new full yesr record.
Industry experts say only a
complete collapse ran prevent the
production of another three million
cars this year.
Not quite so easy la the pros­
pect for the Industry's 42.000 or
more new car retailers. Through
the peak of their selling season
Ihey had to slash prices to achieve
wlume; some have sold new- ear*,
at only a nominal markup, to used
car dealers to ease the pressure
of huge inventories; others have
given unprecedented allowances
on used cars offered as down pay­
ment on new ones.
Some sources say that despite
Indicated Increases In wholesale
prices the retailers will have to
continue high tradeln allowances
and price discounting to keep up
with factory output during the
coming ail monthi.

M

t .

Vacation Time

Comfort — Appear* nc*
8 Color*— •I0-95

IVEY'S

of our Forefathers
is a Priceless Possession. May we ever
The

Heritage

be prouc/ of it and appreciate it.

S t. $olui5 /v\athj. donxpany
r ilO N E 1129

OUR FLA G !

ia 1956,

&amp;

Ihe owl was slightly handicapped)
The birds would fly up and taks
nlpi at him but wera too fa it foi
him to eatch.
“ When I shot him, they even
took swipes at him as ha tumbled
out of the tree,” said Mr. Shaffer
"And then they started following
me home as 1 carried the owl tc
the house. But they must havs
sensed that ha was dead becauil
they soon went away."
"I was expecting to find Just
a little scresch owl," he said, "be.
causa I never heard of a hoot
owl coming into tha city like this."

aH
th

The Glorious
Symbol Of A
FREE NATION

-

||r ;

w

•mdotKaf words ot the DwUnttoa •t Im&gt;
dopmdwee show the ffraataaa* of iplrit tad of
faith that characterised Rig fonndon a t m t
•ountry. To them w* owe g tramradeoa debt for
•rM tinf our America* war of lift. Lot as afl
brio# this game cooperative aplrit fate the build*
inf of our community.

a

r

Let Us A lw ays RESPECT
and D EFEN D IT1

M A K E IN D EPEN D EN C E D AY
A SA FE D RIVIN G H O LID AY

• ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------•
%
HERE SINCE 1920
auldM
BkJtdM
UMi'
*■MV V
iw
i i yhM
m
u iiiii

Through I s f r iu Barlac 1
to Ilf,M B

Celery G ty P R IN TIN G Company
111 South P ark A venue

Phone M0

�Page 8 Thant. June 30, 1955 H R SANFORD HERALD
"

M E BACK'THAT SOUND
KAPtNO ON MY NPtVf S.1
„
W EAK- MUSI o n TO
P r f y k e y b o a r d ... to w ipe
puh OUT/HEIP M E /

0&gt; 0M M 8A C *nexe/.
Ton.__

rm1 J v Q S rja S g H

,id(^
IB 2 rr3 V sJI
a n( | i ^ 9 L ^ n U
/ j CNte M IN K

raCUJii

IIA S U K H

*O f&gt;r?Y,

b u t

u tr

‘■S7CAHT U A v r YOU TO /OUnrrY
ZU &amp; A 3 7UC tSfcV/5

FOBMffi HttHOCMT Harry 8. Truman receives a | i , M check and tha
IBil American Citizen Award from the Junior Order of the United
American Mechanics. The presentation is made by Gurney P. Hood,
Raleigh, N,C„ shortly after the former President had addreaeod the
United Nation* In San Francisco. The money Will go toward tho
building of tbs Harry S. Truroao Library in Independent^ Mo.
fX 'A C S ? N O . . I H A V E N 'T S E E N O N »
[ H E R S IN W 1TCK9 t

-i s o r e 7 i 'a\ u ^ t - u ------------------r

HT HANC7Y AT \

V

CKlNNlN' *TH5A\ , 1 ^
E

c it t e k s c o w

-*I/ ,

w aau —

i p arr

—&gt;

Heroux Given
Life Sentence

wou&gt; AM1CMw m TUfM
k in p c w C it y M r w a .

_

membecr of the previous coali
Ion. The Qld Cabinet resigned be
ause tins General Zionists re

_________
_______
mn Mapal (Labor) party, one IJb-

ANCHORAGE, Alaska W-The
Navy Neptune shot down by Rus­
sian attacker* over the Bering Sea
last week was over International
water* and two Ruaalan MIGs
took part, crew members say.
First interview* allowed with the
aeven painfully burned and wound­
ed fliers yesterday bore out, with
colorful detail, the terse State De­
partment description of the Inters
national Incident a week ago. Their
crippled plane crash-landed and
burned on St. Lawrence Island a
week ago yesterday and the 11
•board scrambled to safety, with
four toon returning to duty.
Ena. David (5. Essard, Terrymtlle, Conn., the navigator who
ehartad the plane's course on its
routine mission, put it:
"I know damned well we waran’t

rral Progressive and two members
of tha Religious Orthodox Worker**
party. Tha four Cabinet posla pre­
viously held by tne General Zion­
ists were distributed among Hit
remaining ministers.
The new grouping can count on
tha support of at least M deputies
in the 120-seat Parliament, de­
spite the dropping of the Genera)
Zionist*. Ttiia faction Is the second
largest party in Parliament hold­
ing 20 seats. Tb* ' Mapal has 47.
snd no other group hai more than

Income Tax Cut
Set In Canada

lliusc paid In the United Statei.
They estimate, for example, that
a tingle mart earning 13.000 a year
in Canada will pay $720 in fed­
eral inrtime lax Ibis year, while
his American counterpart will pay

General Zionists' abstention but
Xhirclt said their action was
"against all the principles nf our
coalition, the baits or which Ii
collective responiibtlity."
The Premier presented his rosIgnition to President Ishak Rentvi,
who Immediately asked him to
form a new government.
The no-confidence motion* which
ltd to the crisis were presented
by the right-wing llcruth party
and the Communisli. They were
In connection with the government’a appekl nf a recant decision

snipping lev
reduces tax
earners to t
Federal ai
keep Canadl

A married man wmi two chitd u n , making (lie same money, will
pay MHO In Canada and $304 in
the United States. Roth figures Inrliidc old age security charges.
Tlie position of Canadian and
Amrrican taxpayers is not strictly
comparable because Canadians
pay hidden sales and excise taxes
on consumer goons.
On llir other hand, many Amer­
icans pay double taxes—lo both
federal and state governments.
Ttirre is no double personal Income
lax in Canada except In Quebec
province. There Ihc federal gov­
ernment allows taxpayers a deduc­
tion from federal levies which In
most cases Is roughly equivalent
to the provincial levy.
So, summing op, federal author­
ities say Canadian taxpayers gen­
erally pay less than those in the
United State*, except for married
persons making $10,000 a year or
more.

$IK)2.

by the Jen.
which Impli
Kaatner, hei
cua Commit
Ing the Nai
laborated w
Kaatner,
member, ha
collaborated.

LAKE M n x r.n , Fia. t*x—nard,
dangerous George A. Ilrmux Jr.
23, ha* bren sentenced lo »pmd
the rest of his life in Florida State
Prison, where he killed the assistanl superintendent in an attcmplcd
break.
A 12-man Jury conviclcd him ol
first-degree murder yesterday but
recommended mercy. The Male
had sought hit death for the killing
of J. C. Godwin, 30, last April.
Three witnesses, including one
• two guards wounded by Heroux
in the shooting, testified that Her­
oux, ran down Godwin and killed
him.
Heroux, under 30 years sentence
for two Kansas bank robberies and
for kidnaping two Miami police­
men, had been placed in solitary
confinement by Godwin two weeks
earlier.
tlcnmx** gun. a .23-calibcr pis­
tol, had been smuggLxi in to him
by his former wife Ruth and her
husband Raymond Staffs. They arc
awaiting sentence upon their pleas
of guilty to aiding and abclling
an attempted escape.
Hcmux’ attorney, John E. Santor* Jr, of Jacksonville said there
would he no appeal or no motion
for a new trial.
Heroux, 23, who attempted a
new escape at the noon recess,
.seemed dared as the verdict was
retd. He told Circuit Judge George
L. Paltrn he had nothing to say.
Sheriff John Whitehead and R. P.
McLendon, prison identification of­
ficer, truisnl him up with handtuffa and a chain, hustled him

•aw Heroux come into me corridor
near Chapman’s offica and called
to Godwin to run because "He'd
made threats to Mr- Godwin."
Godwin ran with Heroux In pur­
suit, according to testimony of
Guard L, L. Walnwright who was
wounded; and trusly Harry Hoff­
man. Hoffman said Heroux shot
Godwin, that Godwin staggered
Into an office and closed the door,
that Heroux broke open tha door
and fired again.
The convict was recaptured by
unarmed guards a few momenta
later. Guard Mack 'Sweat was
wounded helping aubdus him.
Santora told the jury, in closing
arguments, that the state had not
proved premeditation. Ha asked a
second degree verdict
When the panel was being seat­
ed Monday two members admitted
rpialma at the death penalty, T. L.
Dukes, a Lake Butler electrician;
and J. W. OStcen a storekeeper
at Providence, laid they did not
like capital punishment but would
recommend It If the evidence war*
ranted. State Atty. T. E. Duacaa
allowed them ‘to be seated.
The Jury deliberated oim hour
and nine minutes.

within Russian bounds when we
were fired upon."
Aviation Ordnantcman Donald E.
Sonnck, Minnesota Lake, Minn.,
said:
"I was looking out of one of lire
two windows in the aft station
when I suddenly saw this Russian
plane. It was firing tracer*. Sure,
I knew right off It was a Russian
plane.”
He had no time to shout a warn*
Ing before a bullet ripped into the
ship.
"There had to be another MIG,”
he said, "because the bullets canto
from a different side than where
I saw the plane firing tho tracers."
He admitted, however, he aaw
only one Russian plane.
The seven men, talking from
wheel chairs and their beds at
the Air Force base hospital here,
gave high praise to Lt. Richard
H. Fischer, Pittsburgh, Pa., and
Aviation Machinist Mate Thaddeus
Maxiarx, Oakland Calif.
Maxian. who fed fuel to the one
good engine from leaking and
burning gas tanks to bring the
crippled ship in for the crash*
landing, had little to say.
"My first thoughts when we were
hit were. *lf I could only get a
chance to get at one of our
guna . , , ," he said. "But ho
knew he was reeded on tha fuel
line.
The seven men will be flown to
the States for further medical
treatment.

. . WITII ’
QUALIFIED CAKE

•f Weal Germany la ahawn as he
•cMreaaad a wear* conference In
Washington composed of nearly
1,004 eoereapoadents and other
snort*. Ho Mid ha will ‘‘prob­
ably** go to Moscow, but Joined
President Wsawhowir In an a«U
ranee reject*** ad any deal with
the Soviet Unlaw that would
neutralist hla country in return
for unification, (Inlereasioast J

Tha wonder druta won’t work
mlraclea for vou untesa pre­
scribed specifically for your
needs. See vour doclor first;
bring his prescriptfbn to usl

F aust's D rug Store
Near P.*0 .

Only ISoibriee
tofhe
spoonful

outside to a ear, and immediately
act off for state prison.
He got out of his cell April 4 by
pulling a gun on a guard and de­
manding to ba taken lo tha office
cl Supt. I-. F. Chapman. En route
to the prison office he made hos­
tages out of two other guards and
two trusties.
Guard C. 8. Overstreet said be

AMERICAN FREEDOM

TO WED
LOS ANGELES cr-Hlehan! *&gt;

C liu S V S L

p JW fU V U

D b A sU w sL ih s L b u d fa d a if.
o f*

o w l

The Port of Naw York authori­
ty axil mates that there will ba
two million' helicopter passengcra
a year In the city area by 1M0,

Q n d Q p ts n d fin a L ,

fa f U A J)S L n u i f i o f f
J th jL A a m sL S p
m a d sL

fit ilia. U, adopted son of film pro­
ducer Cecil B. de Malle, and Mrs.
Margaret Belgrano van Kosscn, 30,
obtained a marriage license yea-

Q ju

a

/ » / .,

ir it Jth a L

, fo u n th q *

F R E E !
; _ ALL OF US AT HOLLER'S HOPE YOU'LL ENJOY A HJ
! HOLIDAY . . . YOU W ILL IF YOU DRIVE CAREFULLY
SAVE
MAY BE
YOUR
OWN)
.._ ' • # * • *
7
' ‘

The Spirit o f 7 6 vivid ly portrays th e purpose
fo r which w e've been banded together fo r
en eration s— dedication to freedom ! Let us
eep alfye, alw ays, th e real m eaning o f In-

f

■^F ■ -g
1. * 11 L 1 1
*H / W a .
1^Jf ’• w g J
*

Th. 103

�“

1
I

THE SANVq h D IIKHALI) Thurs. Junr ."0,
If I t ’* W o rth A n y th I n t
I t ’* W o rth A d v e rtis in g l a

CLASSIFIED ADS
—1
ro a E rv r
!= .
WELaKA A P A S n n afT B : ro o m ,
private bath*. 114 W. First S t

i

R ollaw ay a n d B a b y B ed s
Say, Week or month—T el 1425.
F sndtore Center l i t Wee* First
. Thone
Avalos Apia.
423.
FURNISHED Apartm ent 300 Park
__________
Ave.
Furnished Kitchenette apta. Air
Conditioned. Slumberland Court
South City limits Highway 17-92.
3 Bednxvn Home. *4 Block from
Southside school. Call 2541.___
SEE Seminole Realty (or Desir­
able Homes and Apts. Phone 27.
FURNISHED A pt Phone 432-W.
COOL- 5 Room Furnished Apart­
ment Front and back screened
porches- Garage. Take one
child. N&lt;&gt; Pet*.
Palmetto
Ave Sh
by appointment
Phone 2
Furnithei' . . . .
tor couple, or
with baby. 814 Elm Avenue.____
2 Bedroom (urnlshed house. UW no
per month. Phone 998 or 74J-W.
alter 8:00 p. m.
2 bedroom housp, nicely furnished.
Porch, carportc and lam e lawn.
Longwood, J . R. G ran t Call
283692._____________
UNFURNISHED 4 Room House
wllh 2 Bedrooms. Phono 1326-J.
LARGE. Clean A partm ent Downstairs Small one, 335.00 611
Park Ave.
KICK Bedroom, Private entrance
and bath. Pboon MB9-W.
2 Room A p t I N Avacado.
1703H Mag. 2 bndroom furnished
a p t 355. monthly. Ph. 1673.
New Masonry 2 bndroom house
in Casselberry. 180 per month.
Phone Orlando 321IE
3 rooms furnished apt., Private
bath. Screened porch, Private
entrance. Window exhaust fan.
Electricity, Hot 4c Cold w atrr
furnished. Walking distance to
the Base. Near shooping ren­
ter. Phone 1709, or ato-w. after
S p. m., 247S Palmetto Avenue.
Navy couple only, 3 room apt.
furnished. Desirable location
Phone 2969-J.
2 Bedroom Bungalow completely
furnished. Phone 2392, 313 Pal­
metto.
2 Rooms, m Elm. 2SC3-W.
2 room furnished cottage, utilities
furnished. Apply Clarks Tour­
ist Ci. Highway 17-92, 1 block
south city limits.
2 Room unfurnished Apartm ent
Private Bath. 118 Jassamlne
Ave. Phone 1G09-M.
APARTMENT. Downstairs. Well
furnished. Garage, Water and
Lights furnished. Phone 208.
FURNISHED 3 Bedroom House.
Closa in. 819 West a t St. Phone
616.

I

irga 3 bedroom unfurnished
hemo Osteen. 345. llos-W-3.
ONE Bedroom furnished apart­
m ent 345.00. Includes water.
Phone 1393.
Beautiful 3 room furnished apt.
Private entrance 4 Prlvalo
hath. Close In. Phone 322-J.
Furnished P bedroom apt. 333.
monthly. Also 1 bedroom fur­
nished apt. $30. monthly. Ideal
for couple _ a bedroom homo
with kitchen equipment 383.
monthly. Phono 1673.
FURNISHED Home. See Jock
Hsy. Jr. at 104 W. loth St. own­
er, Mrs. A. R. Flower
FURNISHED 2 and 4 Room Apart­
ments. Adults. 113 X. Jagsa
mine.
On* Unfurnished 6 Room Apart­
ment., On* furnished $ Room
nt. Call 1494.

U 1 K U 9 FOE SALK
2 Bedroom home located In one Trade in wash machines 310 no
Each. Firestone Store. I ll E.
of the best sections on two lots
1st St.
on corner. Beautifully land­
scaped. hardwood Boors, strict­
RED-l-MIX CONKRETE
ly modern.
Miracle Concrete Co.
Pbeae 1223
3 bedroom home, hardwood floors, 3M Elm Ave.
tiled bath screened porch and
FOR A QUEENcarportc. Excellent condition. Foam FIT
Rubber Mattresses. InnerPrice $12,000. Easy terms.
S p r i n g Mattresses. Couches,
Babv Beds, Renovating, Uphol­
This home has two large bed­
stering and Slip Cover work.
rooms, separate dining room,
large utility room, .jalousied NIX BEDDING MFC.- COThone 5*4-J.
porch. It Is located on two lots, 1381 Sanford Ave.
has double garage. Priced Good used inner tubes 66c. Good
312 000. Kitchen equipped.
foe s w i m tubes. Firestone
Stores, i l l E. 1st St.
You should see this lovely laka
front home with 96 feet of lska
— factory to Tan —
frontage. It has two bedrooms,
Ala min am
2 baths, Florida room, large
V en atio n B U ain
livim room, closed garage and
storage. Good boating and fish­ Earloeed head. Sag-proof
rati with plaetie cons. Plastic, or
ing and bathing beach.
rayon tape*. Cotton or oyUa
C. A. WHIDDON, SR.
Reg. Real EiU ’a Broker
UJ S. Park
Ph. I2EI S en k o rlk G lu o i a d P a in t Cn.
1U-U4 Watt 2nd I t
Phone 331
Three bedrooms, screened porch,
two lots with trees, garage. An fit V A R IE T IE S P A N E L IN G
older home but tho price is only
NaUvo and Foreign Woods.
36950 with terms.
See Them At
I—REAL SffTATW FOE 641 ■ »

THE OLD HOME TOW N

DAILY CROSSW ORD
ACROSS
1. Stylish
t Pltcca
where w a ttr
it shallow
11. •’-----and

matinn
14 Steal
15. Board of
ordnance
&lt;»bbr.)

19. Desert
(X fr )
22 Republic
occupying
moat of
Ireland
23. Paarshaped

' Ont West 124b 6L
Phooe 2409
Used furniture, appliances, mol*,
etc. Bought-sold. Larry’s Mart.
321 E ist 1st St. Phnne 1831.
Console Radio with Automatic
Record Player 349.95. Firestone
Stores. I l l E. 1st St.
METAL ROOFING
New In Stock. S-V Crimp_y-l'A"
Corrugated— 2 S " Corrugated.
Get all Your roofing needs at

30 r e p r i ­
manded
32. Comply

35 Escaped,
as w ater
34 Lair
37. Catherine

b a c k -r o a d
COUNTRY H O M E !
2 Bedrooms, furnished, good wa­ Sherman Concrete Pipe Co.
fer. a’l modem conveniances. Out West 13th SL
Phone 2t8*
M tu a trd on a p p ro x , one aero of
Hundreds
of
Misc.
Items
on our
good high land. 3 miles west
close out tables at very—very
of Sanford, to ta l prieo ia only
low prices. Firestone Stores. Id A n n . r WANTED (female) 1*.\
$4,900.00, w ith terms.
I ll E 1st St.
LA DIE? — Sparc time can be
Seminole Realty
AIR CONDITIONING
dollar time when you're busy
W. DIETRICHS
T. W. HERO
selling Avon Cosmetics. Open­
Room or House
1981 Park Arcana
Pham *T
ings (or sincere women. Mrs.
R. 3. POPE CO, INC.
Juanita
Russell, P. O. Box 975,
RAYMOND i . BALL, RROKXR me Scath Park Ave. PfcoM 1448
Orlando
S. D. Higbleyman. Associate
104 South Park Ave
Pbooe n o Very good used bike $29 00. Fire­
WORK WANTED
-II
stone Store. Ill E. 1st SL
U 1750.00 DOWN
HIGH SCHOOL ROY with Power
Mower wants mowing. Phone
2 Bedroom House. Beautiful loca­ 1951 Mustang motorcycle. Good
condition. Phone 2417-J-3.
718 41-4
tion. Hardwood floors. Electric
Kitchen, Crcamic Bath. P ric e - Fontlockeis ............ Special $7.93.
12 BUHNERS OPPORTUNITIES 12
39,850.
Paint ........................... $2 50 gal.
For your Real Estate needs:
All sues tarpoulins.
Why Ruck
Cullen and Harkev, Realtors
ARMY-NAVY SURPLUS
The
Tide?
104 N Park Ave. Phone 2313.
Thone 1321 LFI will Pre-cut to customer's
310 Sanford Ave.
own plans anil specifications.
2 Bed Room House. Kitchen fur­ 1950 Ford Auto Radio $15.00. Fire­
This ’’custom” service gives
niture. spare hratrr, Venetian
stone Stores. Ill E. 1st St.
the builder exactly what he
b l i n d s ; Hardwood floors-tile
wants in a house package that
bath: Low down payment. Call
THE CURIOSITY SHOP
meets the individual require­
nights 1743-M or see at 2108 17-92 at Hiawatha. Used &amp; new
ments of his own locality. It
Amelia.
furniture, antiques, bric-a-brac.
presents an unusual opportuni­
Come in and brousc around.
3 bedroom home, corner lot, rea­
ty for builder-dealers and quali­
sonable down payment. Low New *i H.P. Mitchell air condi­
fied persons interested in be­
monthly paym ent 101 Rosalia
coming faclorv-representatives.
tioners *188.00. Firestone Stores.
DrUe.
Write
Lumber Fabricators. Inr.,
I ll E. 1st St.
Fort Payne. Ala., for complete
3 Bed., Nothing to do —Just 2 lightweight Bikes 325.00 Each.
details.
move In. A-l condition, El. Kit­
Firestone Store. I ll E. 1st St.
14— g p g n a t HERTmcH a
chen. separata dining room. 2
utility rooms, eanorte. TV an­ YOU don't have to see the credit ^ rlS m W a « . E m rtv lleataag
tenna, tree* on. 144 lot. back
manager to save dollar* legiti­
M. G. HODGES
yd. fence, $12,500. 1104 Mellonmately on our GIGANTIC Re­
S erver on All Watrr Pumps—
vllie. Phone 21M-'
move' SALE.
Writs Drilled — Pumps
ROBINSON MUSIC CO.
Piala Raad P lo w 788
REAL ESTATE WANTED
228 N. Orange Ave. Orlande, Fla.
IRLA.VDO Morning SenUart. O r
FLORIDA PROPERTY DESIR­
Undo Evening Star. Call Ralph
ED’ Direct from owner choice Used Portable Radio *10.00. Fire­
stone
Store.
I
ll
E.
1st
SI.
Ray. 1183-J.
Real Estate $15,000 up. What
have you to sell? Business, Baby Red 4c Mattress . . . . *14.no
Homes, Motel*. Trailer Courta, Good Strsm er Trunk ......... fl.SO USED PLUMBING FIXTURES
Apartments, Hotels, Ranches, Nice Utility Cabinet ........ 12.00
A c r e a g e , Sub-Divisions, etc. Kitchen
Cabinet, as new . . . . lS.oo
Giva price, locaUon. descrip­ Single Bed.
Inner Spring ... 35.00
tion R. RICHIE, 1921 Fig SL, Cabinet Comb.
Collet Table 15.no
Kenner. ‘La.
Late Living Room Suite __ 55 00 10C7 Sanford Ave.
ilia
Extra Good, Dinnette Set .. 16.00
ABTKXBB m a M i x
(Hundreds of other Items.)
RANDALL
ELECTRIC
CO.
Sneer Trading Pest
50th A nniversary
T V SERVICE CENTER
Open Evenings. 17-92 South
• Factory Supervised Service
(Phone 2212-R.)
• House call* 9 a. m. till I p . n
Casement W i n d o w s , 4
(All makes and models)
Reg. 3.95 Folding Grills ....1.00 Wood
lights: fit openings 37 x 50*, A 112 Mag. Ave.
Phone 2400
Reg. 4.95 Jumbo Hassocks
37 X 37; Screens to match. Call
Choice of Colors .. 2.25
2086-51
after
3
p.
m.
FHA Financing
Reg. 5 95 Metal
Pee Remodeling and repairs.
Porch Chairs . . . . 3.U 1 Sofa bed in usable condition.
Nothing Down—Small Monthly
Reg. 9.95 9x12
Payment*
Linoleum Rugs . . . . 6.50
Reg. 10.95 Plastic Covered
Shaman CoacroU Ca
„
_ Cocktail Chairs . . . . 7JO
Pbeae 2409
'nea* Ont Wert 134k
Reg. 27JO Maple Chest
paid for ueed furniture Cell 968.
.
of Drawers ......... 19.50
PLUMBING
Furniture Co. I l l
Sing a Hollywood Bed Complete Wilson-Malar
E. lit S t____________________ Contract and repair work. Free
with Plastic Covered Headeibm ita*. R. L Harvey. 294
_ b o a rd .....................................33.95 7— Pe8»4JreeUeb-He&gt;alfae —7
Saoford Ate. Phone 1X29.
Reg. 18.30 IP e Dinette Suite
F O R S A L J C ^ ^ J ^ ^ T a t* ? saddle
Choice of Colors .. 38.30
P. M. CAMPBELL
4 Buggy hone, bridle, herseaa
General O rtracto r
and buggy. Phone B41T-J-3
M ather o f Sanford
“Homo* of DUttoetton“
W 4 4 E. 1st 04.
Phase W PUPPIES — to giva away. 4 B-Way
ay IT-91
Phase 1447
weeks old. Mother dog unable
Cempteto
TELEVISION
SERVICE
VENETIAN BUNDS
to care for them . Will you give
(NaUosaUy Adv. RaUa-Haag)
an all makea and model*.
them a home? Phode 1319-R.
Manufactured to SaM rt
S A N F O R D E L E C T R IC CO.
Sale — A.K.C. registered 116 MagnaRe Aon.
«miB#ls Vamattoa H m C a For
,Phane 442
Boxer
puppies,
brindli
sod
&lt;20 Wart 3rd fit
isun color, six weeks old. Call
For Batter Plunrotag
2325-J.3.
See or CaU
Good Used Gas Benge. $19.00
Firestone Store*. I l l E. l i t St.
W. J. KINO
Park
i, both tn good condition.
make fine witch decs and
“Your
j*U . Phone J . H. Nicholson
Maytig~Wa*har*
U l MagaaMa A r c
PERSONAL! TO DOG LOVERS.
USED TRACTORS
Give your dog tha food chosen
SrMt TraeOm Cn
bast- lasting by hundreds of
ll- r t S e a *
Pa
doe*. New. Improved PURINA
DOG CHOW. Contains every­
Used power mower. 31000. r tn thing normal dogs need to main­
stone Stores. I l l E. 1st SL
tain sturdy vigor and they love
CONCRETE
Come in and let’s talk over
SlRipaoR F o rm S u p p ly
Ready. Mixed Concrete.
your needs. W hither it’a
Block, Sand, Gravel, Cement
Concrete Pipe to Mart AH Quo*whit*
pine for bookshelves
fleattons.

0

—
111
112 N. Park Are.
(* W 1 LL B. O U E *
U r n lass

SB *"© * JS* Sam*
Will as-

.

r r « n • *» m i u m

SPECIALS

Shi

CmuraU Pips Cm,

Oo4 Wert 1Mb SL
lontrspring Mattress. Boa Spring

and Brautlfui Headboard $48.50
-2 Pc. Sectional Safa PLUS Carnar Table. . ................... $14228

E C R &amp; L S B E D D IN G ( S *

Women
aggroslve, well-groom‘Borough knowed *10-43 with thorough
ledge and experience
___ me* In recruitling and managing
m
log, training
w n im *- direct* M
selling
35,000 - LOOP yearly '
M M iK
____
with *6d4ni m
merchandise
erchant ma;-------—.
iaential. WM.
thnds. Car—eaaenual.
Wire—colW
et giving name, address,
lacL
phone number to T. N. Rogers-

(•OIJI iM If.'-►J i s l *■o *.C t
I'H O n i b "
A II A f J 7 *C f U ’.s K

S E S k is f h J V S r iw
_ $ H.P. Outboard 382 00.
ttm ia o m Stores. I l l E. l i t 1L

y

s

a

b t m
Maas. F ree

r a s
Sample 4

SIS Waat 3rd SI.

n .1 3

•IcMce

(0 Priest of
a mosque
41 Comment
46. R u c r ( F r I
47 Gas**
n**dly

1 4 - R R A U T T PARIAMUI

1
11

(Air Conditioned Salon.)
185 So. Oak Ave. Phan# 971
LAUNDRY BERWICK
• Ona boor • Wash a id Damp
Dry
o One hour 44 - Waah and Dry
Fold
• Finished laundry
a Sanilnnn Dry Cleaning

11—AUTOMOBIUCA TRAIIJtRW
It wll*. nay YOU to aee US before
yinj buy. Open Evenings and
Sundays.
Sonlhrtde Lanndr— I
EasUide Trailer Sale*,
d4n r « 4 a s r t
Palalka, Fla.
198 Earn 254k m.
CARS
77—
FUnrO BKRV1C1C
-77
BOUGHT SOLI) TRADED
Roy Reel'a I 'M Cara
E ^T ^^m ^Punn
Tcehnirian
Saniord Ava. 4 Utk SL
Phona 2164. Routo 1. Sanford
FOR SALE — Must sell trans­ Tha Want Ad Department is
ferred. will vacate immediately, open (mm 8:50 a. m. until 5:50 p.
27 ft aluminum trailer plus m. each business dav except Satrabana with medal bunk beds. arday afternoon. Deadline fnr
Full price for quick sale week-day insertions u 2:0n p. m.
*1.500. M n. Todd, Sanford, tha day preceding publication.
Phone 9232.
____________7 Anv ads coming in later than
2.00 p. m. will ho published under
18EOATB w o r o a p
—19 Too La to To Classify.

HOLIDAY SPECIALS

Sporting

Goode

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M tt MIID84D WAl$H. 41. Imlds h e r 15th chit ! 7-lvund tO-ounce
Maureen, born at the In n n Island College lln-ndst, Ilro.'ktvn. N.Y.
On hand to greet the newest mrmticr of the V ' j U i !.irmly u,- m u **
Margaret Iloehlr and E1i/.ilirlh tlitwon. Maureen, whose d.ul,
Thomas, is a welder, is Ihc couple's Ir n th daughter. They also have
five boys. The WuLbcs live in a seven-room bozement a p a rtm e n t

GET PROFESSIONAL t ’AREI
Phone 543

ROBSON

l u i r r l i i 'i A aio tr
the
alphabet
37 Teel
73 Affix
33 Distant
31. kharp. hud 4! Sslent
matalli:
42 Part of
sounds
to be ’
32. Smells
43 Sc on! m »dt
33. Basque,
bv a cat
like cap
43 Masurium
34. H alf an in
i sym t

-8 4

For lAvelirr Ilair

HARRIETTS
BEAUTY NOOK

Used Outboard Motor
CLEARANCE
3.6 H one
SCOTT-ATWATER
. 568 50
5 Harta SEA-BEE ...
. ASM
6 Horse WIZARD . . . . . 79 95
744 Horse MERCURY . . . 313M
7&lt;* Horse FIRESTONE .. 129 50
7V, Hors# MERCURY . . . . 100 00
10 Horse
6COTT.ATWATER ......... lonno
12 Herte ELTO
............ io 50
22 Horse JOHNSON
125 00
(Will pull Ski is V MPH t
23 Hirso JOHNSON . . . . . . 29!) no
Headquarters tor —Boats, klotors,
Trailer*.
How will yo« ewap?
How will sea Trade?
Your eld Motor fnr a
Bettor grade — EVIN1UDE!

of

43 Merganser

Eva-Bcsn Beauty Shop

BARGAIN!
3 Bedroom Home In Wynnewood. 2 Years Old.
Thlx home has Oak Floors,
Ceramic Tile Bath, Dining
Area, Large Living Room
and Kitchen Equipped with
G. E. AppliancesTelephone 131 after 6 P . M .
far aspaistm est to sea this

Xvtnrada Sales 4 Service
284 E. 104 SL
P hew M i

TELEVISION
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11.3 i Cast $ &lt;*»?
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F rid a y

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P .ffia t

M iuntto

B ar N or*
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SUPPLY CO.

39 Cooling

KlATB • MOTORS
-u i
RPR4TAI SERVICES -1 4
d llo a l aqca Tea.ire TralDragline aervire, Lakefrents 4 irrr
ler Sl.vioo. Phone 1424 or
ditching. Estimates given. Phone
291 J. M. Blythe.
Geneva 2484. Orlando 52504.
Sanford 2221.
For Sfclr. 1’scd Evinnidr outbuari'. $20on Firrstonn Slurrs.
FM)OR (ending and finishing,
Ill E 1st St
('leaning, waxing. Srrvtng Semi­
nole County since 1923. H. M 18 • FURNITURE- 7 'Im M G
Gleason. Lake Miry.
Buv yoitr Furniture at itrrr.vV
Warehouse Eiirn., Co., at not W.
Mattress 4 Box Springs
1st. St. All nationally adv. furlirnovated
niiurr
al warrhnusr prirrs.
•‘Free Estimate”
ECHOLS BEDDING CO.
22—EI.ECTKICAI. SMt VICES—
Corner 2(:d A Magnolia Ph. 1232
“ Bud” Rambrrxer. Mgr.
SEE Your Grnrral Elrrtric dealer
Open Monday (it 9 p. m.
for TV and Annliaorra
S a n fo rd K le rtrte C a.
LAWN-MOWERS s h a r p e n e d
118 Magartia Ave.
PhM* 4Ct
Bieycle &amp; General Repair.
Stanley’* Bike Shop
EKItilDAIKK apollancrs
aalra
310 E. 4th St. Tel. 2434
and acrviee. G. II. High, Ovirdo.
Fla. Phnne 4131 or Sanford
ENVELOPES, leltrrhrad*. state­
184J-W after 8 d m
ments. invoices, hand bills, and
( i r n r r a m s , etc. Progressive
R an d all F le e tr k Ca.
Printing Co., phone 408 — 403
and Croairy Applixece#
West 131h SI.
Youngitorr. Kitchen"
FLOOR SAND trio * Finishing; Ktoctnr«l rm lracllng and rrpalr*
Oak floors tunUsbed, laid 4 L i 112 Magnolia Ave. Phnne HR
Mhed. In business sinre 19?o.
OFFTCK RgtnFMKNT
E E. Stevens: Route 2, Box 227;
Call 716 R-4 before 7 i . m. or
HAYNES
Office Machine Ca.,
after 6 p m
writeri, adding machine*.
14-1
u c : Rental*. 214 Magnolia. Ph

o r psasUnf for th a t extra
room, we’ll help you figure
the materials so there’s no
waste. If you’d like to look
over literature or plans,
call S3 and let us know.

HILL LUMBER fr

——. 6th
wife of
llen rv VIU
34 Gold i l l r r I

w . m*wu&gt; moot* &gt; u * n r

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Insurance

fo l k s

out

27. Vex
2S L etter

20. l l a l l !

fruits
25 Encounters
26 City (New
York)

P A W , a c c e p t a io
S U B S T T I T U - T E - ----------------

tha
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10. Incline
If. Rub out
18. Measure
(Chin.)
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DOWN
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12 tvv&gt;r

Robert A. Williams, Realtor • Sherman Concrete Pipe Co.
Riymoed E. Londqulst. Associate
Phono 1673 Atlantic Bank Bldg.
FOR SALE — 3 Seamom Home,
li Block from South Side school.
Call 2541.
R will
Whether baying or
pay you to see:
J. W. HALL, REALTOR
lorida S U taB ank Building
Florida
Phono 1791
‘CallI Hall"

p.^e

By STANLEY

l i e v s i U 1 M m BMm

LUMBER:

AND B U / l OtND W E E D S ^

S H ER M A N CONCRETE
P IP E CO.
Ovt W « i UUi SL
2489

ai
ft. a V Na%
• :3ft Otrry
10.4)11 Oarry

Moor*

Moor*
&lt;«atry Moor*

lo.jo Mink* It Bird
11:0ft Vftlitrt X*rtfty
11;!* L«nvto Of Llfto
1ti3ft ffaarrh To r T r o w
11:43

It’a So Easy
To Place A Want Ad
Just Call 1821 and ask for
th» Want Ad department
Sanford Herald

G u id ir r Liftit
Vftf IllftOO *

13 oft Kltchtoo Show

IS.2ft
} -on ^#lc OT*t#ra
t.ttrU
1:3ft 14out*part v
3;Oft Blc Payoff

SMALL BUSIN Eka
U you have a small boalneai tn a

3 3ft BoU Cro4hy
3 Oft H rtfh tar rftay

secluded part of town and ara
loteresled In getting customer*,
list the Mrvie* you offer la tha

I l k £*tr*t Storm
lif t lin Tour i r r n u a t
4 oft

4 U
4 lift

Bead Of Lift
fgftrry Mo«r%

H arry

Moor*

444 Op«A Uftisftft

ji

ft

Oaaubed rrtum a af ike gaatorfi

&lt;JL SAfc.

�»

*’*» *i •

f

k

•. .1

i

INSPECT THE SPECIAL
OF THESE HOMES

RH*

FEATURES

M W OLD
J

616 W est Sarita Drive
625 W est Sarita Drive
f

Of French Avenue

i

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                    <text>I

K

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NVeflVfier

Shop and Save
In Sanford
fe rs s

-----------------

® ta »
Established 1908

Firtlr rlnadr thronsh T)"t*r?i*
with scattered mn«ll* afternoon
•ml evening lhiind'r»hn«rri, (•*
•Uhl iM Fitly morning shower*
•enthrall (nut.

AN IN D E PE N D E N T D A IL Y
SAN FORD, FLORIDA.

NEW SPAPER

-J-l-Mi *

W E D N E SD A Y , JUNK 20. 1955

Annortalrd P ress I .eased W ire

Ives Says Demos New Group Russia's Molotov
Trying To Climb
W ill Keep Has Great Time .
On Ike Bandwagon Team Here During U.S. Visit

Nn. 220.

Steel Firms
Getting Ready
For Shutdown

WASHINGTON '.ff-Srn. Hr* (RUNITED NATIONS V Y 'ff H look* l-k« Sanford will re­
N’Y ) accused Democrats today of
Comrade tourist V. M Molotov
main
in
the
Florida
State
League.
"trytoK to climb on the Eisenhow­
At a meeting last night 12-S »up- bad a wonderful time in ihe Untied
er bandwagon" with claims that
-Stale*. He wants to make another
they are supporting the Presi­ porters agreed lo form s nr\r or­ visit sometime
ganization to take over when the
dent's programs in Congress.
The Soviet f o r e i g n minister
Ives said in an interview he re­ present owner* give up the club
hooked pa*»aje homeward today
gards a statement yesterday hy on June .W
League President John Ernier aboard the liner Queer* Elizahelh,
Sen. Lyndon R. Johnson &lt;-Tex&gt;
alter traveling In San Frannsro
as Indicating the Democrats have estimated Ihe new group would
an I back by tram. He looked hap­
need
only
&gt;2.000
new
capital
to
fin­
concluded Eiscuhower will be re­
pier than whim he reached this
ish
the
season.
He
»ant
15
persons
elected next year and have de­
TMTTRBrnGH f/P;— The United Slate* Steel rorp.,'
country two week* ago for the tilth
cided to concentrate on efforts to already have promised to buy a
threatened
with mi industry wipe strike nt midnight tnmnr.
anniversary
celebration
nf
the
&gt;100 share of stock each, leaving
retain thejr control of Congfess.
United Nations
row, nnnnmited il would atari banking it* furnaces before
Johnson,' the. Senate Democratic five shares lo lie told.
The fij year-old Rolahrvtk might Timm totbiy.
Sanford Enterprises In r, the
trader, said in a statement the
lo have hern happy.
{
A Hig Steel spokesman said the company cspriled tn
Senate's record In this session dis­ prcscnl owner, plan* to give up
He wa- the lion nf the hour atj
complete the huge rpei alien heproves Eisenhower's contention the club because il£^.not a pay­ parties in Sm Franetsro. Once,
fon- tbr (TO United Steelwork*
during the campaign last October ing venture. However, It. J. Bau­
a
middle-aged
lady
surprised
even
cj • *ti ike dead line.
that Democratic control of Con­ man, president said the club will
jg PRIEST ADMINISTERS last ritet ■■ a doctor and police work vainly to *avr the live* of Am-el
Molotov by how mg amt kissing hi*
Employe* - f other r&lt;vwpvnte* in
gress would result in "a cold war be even financially or a lilllc hand at the reception given by
Mato* and hi* playmate, John Cotton. The 11-vear-otd boy* died of suffocation under a landslide that
Ihr mxmmo'ti bn-ir *-'e| industry
ahead by the end of Ihe month.
buried them while they were playing in an eieht-foot-dern excavation in Quern*. N. Y. Two other of partisan politics."
hue been alerted lo begin nuterThe Sanford p lie r s responded Secretary n( Slate Dulles,
tth», one 11 and the other 5, were reacucd by paasenby. who dug them out with their hand*,
I rout
Alter Iha Democrat! did win
He got a 10-gallon hat at Chey­
ly shutdown*.
temational)
________________________________ _ control, Eisenhower told a news to the good news last night hy
.Ski
enne W in, a* a souvenir of Ihe
Ranking of the riant btvt fur*
conference the words he used were running their winning string tn Wild West. Thai hat. loo small
n.iie* i* * giadua! proie**, slowed
loo strong for what he had in mind. four straight—longed of the *rs- for him, is in his baggage en route
to pi event damage m the cooling
Ives said a l i s t as John­ son—by shutting out West Palm to Moscow, tie wa* *s tickled as
pi pri'st.
son said reprocnl Ihe character Beach 4 0.
a boy getting his first Davy CrockThe CIO United Sleelwntkera
of the current legislative program
rtt hat.
mapped showdown talks «ith tho
showed the Democrats art "facing
He walked and talked in Sanproducer* in last-minute efforts to
in two directions."
Eianeisro with art air of assur­
pet a wage higher than picsently
Ha noted that Johnson, shortly
ance helying report* ha Is on th*
offered.
alter issuing his statement, ral­
way out.
U, S. Steel, which employ* 150.*
lied Democratic forces lo defeat
lie appear* to be going hack to
(xx) of tha USW’s flixkixxi members,
a GOP attempt to authorise ihe
the dark room* of the Krrmlm
held firm to 11* original offer of
WASHINGTON (/P)— Senate Democrats nnnk Presi­ atomic peace ship Eisenhower bos
much the heller for btcilhing good
W a s h in g t o n gt—President e i slightly mure than 10 cents sn
proposed.
American air.
aenhower laid today he was sure dent Eisenhower’* atomic peace ship project by one vote
hour.
the Russians' (hooting down of a yesterday after all Republican senators voting rallied to the
Baiie steelworker* now average
%].&amp;. Navy plana waa a local occur­ chief executive.
&gt;2.33 an hour.
. . . . .
rence and not a matter of policy.
While the industry prepared fop
TOKYO Iff—A Marine helicopter
Sen. Anderson (D-NM) said today in an interview tho
a po»»ible Mrikv, gov eminent me­
searching for two downed Marine
The Preaidcnt'a atatement wa*
42-41 vota mrnt tho plan wa*
diators in Washington krpt a dose
pilots drifting helplessly In Ihe Pa­
made at a new a conference at
dead, lie said "there will be
watch on the situation.
cific morn than 72 hour*, cravhrd
which he aluo chided the Demo*
prompt development" of an econ­
in the sea today and out of its
crsUc-controlled Congress for leav­
Msfor producer* following Rig
omically feasible atomic engine for
NEW YnnK tjff-A Camp HIM,
ing undone, aa he put it, a long Hat
Steel's lead in ottering about 1(1
crewmen
la,
missing,
tha
Navy
A general discussion of local
large ships.
of him legislative proposals—some
rent* an hour Include Inland. Re­
said. Three "other* were rescued. Pa., grandmother won Jlit.ooo last
soil and water conservation pro­
public Steel Corp., Bethlehem Sti"l
okthrm, he declared, vital to the
The vast armada of searching night for naming seven'of Joseph'*
Republicans had tried to put In­ blems featured a meeting last
11 brother* on the CBS-TV show,
Corp., Jones ft LatighUn and
ration.
to an atomic energy construction night of the board of supervisors planes and ships continued hunt­
Youngstown Sheet A Tube.
ing the first two raft-borne pilots. "&gt;04,000 Question."
In’ discutilng the plana Incident,
bill 21 million dollars to build aa of the Seminole Soil Conserva­
She had chosen the Bible as the
Clifford Hood, president of U. S.
Contacr wa* lost, however, with
Eisenhower went somewhat fur­
atomic reactor for tho demonstra­ tion District.
tourro of her questioning.
Sled said in a statement la-t
their feeble radio.
ther than did Secretary of Stale
tion vessel proposed by Elsenhow­
Among topics discussed were
Mr*. Catherine Krritzcrt, *t,
night the industry is threatened
luist night a Marine fury dis­
Dulles who had said yesterday that
tha needs and value of a District
WASHINGTON Iff - Tho Air er.
appeared in- Uie search and Its who has six sons and nine grand­ MUft. PATRICIA UOLFIXDT- with "a w h o l l y unnecessary
be believed no deliberala Soviet
The President bad urged his nursery In trying out pew grasses pilot, Lt. Alau M. McAm-ny ol children had Ihe choir* of taking
strike."
Force »ay* it h*s In the B52 the
policy was involved.
congressional lenders to fight for and legumes which would be bet­ Yonkers, N.Y., Is missing also.
tiie &gt;8,000 she won last week or LUND, 28, lie* In Ms Iron lung
-----------------------4,
best
bomber
"in
the
world
today,”
Eiicnhower said K la very en­
on
her
arrival
in
New
Yoik
ter adapted lo local soli and cli­
his
propusal,
and
they
put
up
a
In tha 20,000-squsre-inilo search going for &gt;16,000 on a dvmble-or- after a flight from Peru, Flie
couraging to note the attitude has fighters ready to move any­ stout argument for it. Democrats matic conditions. Another topic
nothing basis.
taken by Iha Soviet government where on Iha globo and 1* making railed it a "smokestacklees wond­ that received considerable dis­ area, a bright June sun burned
She discussed the matter with w*ts stricken with polio Iasi
away Uie fog that repeatedly ha*
which haa expressed regret for the advance* in developing contlncnt- er" and "the floating museum."
cussion
was
the
services
of
a
her
sons and their wives during February v-hlle accompanying
closed In and prevented rescues
UBident and offered to pay half to-eontinenl missiles.
Minority Leader Knowland (R- Farm Forester which will bn aval- attar planes glimpsed Uie bobbing the week. When sha appeared on her husband, an Oslo business­
The outline of air strength wa* 0*1 if) pleaded with tha Benatu
the damage,
tha show last night, aha remarked man. in Lima. Mra. llolftldl*
The United lu te s -h to * » e t ac­ contained In Iha Defense Depart­ "not to- tffpurfUW* tha Preaidant.
t;»t "the M.ouo looks like 4 lot lurnd win be c*r*d for at-a N«w * - W U ■» K " W V
ment semiannual report released
cepted the Soviet otter.
All votes again*! tha ahlp war* u n its lions beginning in October kicked up a heavier, moru dan- of money," and then asked for Yoi k hospital before leaving for
yesterday. It appeared coincident- east by Demnersta.. A lone Demo­
her home in Norway. Shown
of this year. Tha services of
the &gt;16,000 question.
gcixwa sea.
ally with a demand from a Demo­ crat, Sen. Thurmond o f So uth
with her Is lJr. Christine Amun­
Farm Forester were recently
cratic senator to Secretary of De­ Carolina, voted with tho Republi­ made available by the looal
dsen, « polio ex pep t fiom Nor­
fense Wilson to answer a dozen can!.
way. ( International)
county commfaaioncri,
WASHINGTON iff—Sen. Hump­
questions dealing with the quality
hrey (l)-Minn) said today I’ reri*
Eight
conservation
farm
plans
and quantity of Russian planes and
itent Ei-enhower should urge So­
were worked out with eoaperators
missiles.
il et Itu-xla In "tiring piessure"
of the District during June. A
Tha brief air section of the re­
on Communist China for release
conservation farm plan |* a writ­
port, covering a six-month period
of all American Peiping holds.
ten plan of operations where-by
ending last Dec. 31 was written
STRING FIELD, M». tfv-A fire­
each acre of land on a farm will
JACKSONVILLE
hff-Cily
polire
Should that fad. he said in an
by Secretary Harold Talbott. He
be used to produce the crop* work* dtaplay In a retail slorr rarly today shot up a otolen ear
Interview, tlx* United State* should
said the program In build to a 137blew
up
yesterday,
rausing
tho
LIVE OAK Iff—A bill collector tie prepared to lake (hr mailer up
ing and treated according to Ik*
;ind ruptured a bandit gang of
wing Air Force (from a present
a: arrested and polled &gt;1,000
that It Is beat capable of produc- death* of three shopper*.
The monthly Coffee Club meet­ strength of 121 wings) has not been
The exploding firecracker* and Ihrrr Marines who had robbed a txind today in llte e»-r of a Negro directly with Red Chins.
needs for protection and improve­
lie vaiil the United Stale* should
ing for Chamber of Commerce changed, although "It must con­
skyrocket* s c a t t e r e d flamrs Folk-ton, Us., motel.
woman who claimed she was beat­ prrs* Russian leader* .it Iho July
ment,
A
detailed
survey
of
the
Jailed
on
armril
robbery
charges
■nembers and new businessmen stantly be revalualed in the light
land up to a depth of 60 inches, through tha one-story stroctur*. wrre three men from the Marine en.
18 Big Four Xiimm.t ronferenro
will be held tomorrow morning of growing Communist capabili­
NEW YORK tn-The name of by a trained soils scientist, la uied Tha building was destroyed.
lie Is Henry MeUighrrn of Willis- to me their influence toward free*
barracks at the Naval Air Station;
fee Iha U.li.O. building.
ties."
Tha
three
shopper*
perished
!n
Roy Campaneila. star catcher of ai the bails for Uie plan
ton who wa* charged, however, mg II US. airmen held in Com­
i—
• • • •
a restroom where they had fled Pfc, Linton Wilson Croxby, 10, who
tha Brrt&gt;klyn Dodgers, entered a
The plan consist* of an aerial tn escape the flame*. They were was shot In the rslf nf the right leg only with breaking xml entering munist jail* ami a number of
•■The many friends of Mr. and
State Liquor Authority investiga­ photograph showing the various
the home of Mary Atm Brown, 18. civilian* detained in China.
Mr*. Margaret Click, SO, and two during Ihe wild chave; S.Sgt. Miner who sari ha treat her in a dispute
flfra. Muon Wharton will regret
tion today.
types of soil on Ihe farm, a land
Peyton
Rnbersnn
25;
Pvt,
Harvey
Without mentioning the prisoner
sisters, Mary Williams. Jl, and
lo learn of tha death of Mr. Whar­
over a bill.
The New York Journal-Ameri­ use map showing what each field
Carlton Kilpatrick,18.
issue, Secretary of Stale Dulle*
Linda
Kay Williams 7.
ton** father, W. W. Wharton, In
The
case
was
Investigated
by
the
will
be
uted
for,
and
a
set
of
writ­
can said Campaneila, owner of a
The three were traveling In a
told a nows conference yc-ierday
It- was not known what touched
Orlando Tuesday.
Harlem liquor store, would be ten Instruction as to Ihe best me­ off tho firework*. An employe of 1055 Oldsmobile that was stolen Suwannee County grand Jury yes­ he doe* not rule out the possibility
• • a a
terday slung with 111* rave of Rich­ of direct talk* with Bed China on
questioned by investigators who thods jf carrying out the plan
the store was overcome by smoke tier* last night and were wanted
T. W. Freeman, Atlantia Coast
WASHINGTON off-Trime Minis­ contend SLA agents took bribes of operations. Any land owner but 14 other employe* and four for the &gt;201 robhery altout 3 i . m. ard Cooke, 35, Negro father of nine some matters.
Una Section Master at Lake
ter U Nu of Burma arrive* todsy from owners of bars and package can obtain a plan for hit farm by customers eiespcd injury.
at the Georgian Motel. (Tiarltnn rhildren who said a band nf men
Mary, was tha recipient Saturday
—
applying to one of the local super­
to discuss Far East tensions with stores.
County
Sheriff J. O.'Sikes Aid in best him several weeks ago.
Mayor Warren Turner called a
•f an emblem pin in recognition President Eisenhower and Secre­
visors or to tho work unit office special meeting of the City Council an alarm to Jacksonville dotecUvr
The
newspaper
said
Campaneila
•f twenty-five years' service with
tary of State Dulles,
will be called before J, Erwin in the Atlantic Bank Building. today to consider s resolution to bureau.
the railroad. Presentation was
4
The scholarly Prime Minister, Shapiro, stale Investigation com­ These services are provided free ban sal* of fireworks In tlw city.
u d i by Roadmaster J, K. Lew­
of
cost
lo
the
farmer
by
iha
Dis­
Clarence Wlieeter en-owner of
is at Coast Una General Office* who has offered tn help bridge tha missioner and asked to produce trict.
gulf between Communist China his book.
the (lore, estimated damage at
la Sanford.
and the United States, arranged
Present last night w en Bonner &gt;273,000.
e a s e
"They are not investigating m e"
BUENOS AIRES Iff-A second
.'1
Any our laterested In getting a to meet with Dulles and Elsen­ the newspaper quoted Catnpanelle Carter, BUI West, W. W. Linz,
CHARLESTON, W. V*. 'Jff- Un­ top aula of Argentine President
TALI-AIIASSEE Uff-Th# House
free hit box, may drop by B. L. hower shortly after his arrival by a* saying, "They are investigating, Jim Sargent, C. A. Wales, Ralph
of Representatives now has only ion representatives counted vole* Juan I). Peron reportedly ha* tiethe liquor board and ila employes. Hammond, H e n r y Wight, AI
Perkin* k Son and pick up one. sir from New York.
74 employes and la expected to today to determine if th* Hi-state cided to itep out m live aftermath
He will remain m Washington Thank God, I’ve got a good, clean Swarix, and Ben Wiggins, Sail
until
Sunday.
hive even lewer as tha eitra- strike nf some 725 Atlantic Grey­ of thf June IR revolt. It** iv Vnqel
business. I borrowed money from Conservationist.
There seamed to be eome doubt
Dulles pointedly opened the way the ball club and mortgaged my
ordinary reapportionment session hound bus drivers would be on or Gabriel Riirlcnglil, who a* Interior
....»
In the mind* of the Klwanlene
off.
minister played » major role in
wears on.
assembled at Ibe Yacht Club this for any proposals U Nu may have borne to buy it."
The ballot* were marked ye«- Ilia government'* anlirhureh cam­
by
saying
at
his
news
conference
Speaker
David
said
the
dwin­
Investigators termed the SLA
boon at their regular aweekly
CHICAGO tff—A July 4 weekend dling payroll amounts to n 50 per ler.lay and last night hy drivers paign.
when Ed Lane, In 'making yesterday be looked forward tn the "roUen from top to bottom."
automobile traffic death loll nf 380 rent drop In employes since start in the system stretching from Puts-,
r ioting
Reliable Jilliroe« said lad s iT t
Asian
leader's
visit.
He
said
he
presentation to Oncer M. Hamwaa forecast loday by the National of Uie extraordinary session June burgh to Jacksonville, Fla.
that Burlenghi, 49. has decided In
WASHINGTON (jff — Legisla­ Safety Council.
gen, the retiring Amt. Postmast­ expected to discuss problems deal­
They were expected lo favor ac­ retire from public life "because
6,
tion to extend the regular draft
er of Sanford, wag talking to and ing with relaxation of tensions In
The estimate covers Ihe period
ceptance of the tentative contract nf ill health " The informants said
the
Far
East.
and the doctors draft —both of from 6 pm . Friday until midnight
about the right mew for Oscar
signed early Monday morning hy he told visitors yesterday lie would
which otherwise would expire at Monday and takes into account
kept saying, “ No thai'a not right".
representatives of ihe company and soon make a trip abroad.
midnight tomorrow —went to the only Immediate deaths and nut
The crowd got « big kick out of
division 1493 o? Iho API. Motor
The repmts ot Burlenghi'* ie.
LAKE CITY (I*—A Denver, Colo., President today for signature.
Oscar'* differing with ' Ed and
those occurring later from injuries
Coach Employes Union.
tlrcmrnt
came a day after Eduardo
riindncresitzig
firm
went
to
work
also enjoyed 0 . P. Heradoa'a an­
And Ihe President’* disputed suffered over Iho weekend.
Tie union set a lime of 1 p m. Vulelich, secretary genrral of Iho
todsv on a contract lo boost the military reserve program, In a
James
5.
William*
Sr.,
father
nf
swer* to qulim uter Charlie Morri­
(E.ST* to begin tallying the votes powerful General Confederation of
More than 40 million car* will
rainfall in to North Florida coun­ new and modified form, was rea­
son's question*. In fart,, Charlie
be on the move over the holiday, James S. William* Jr., this City, at union meetings here, in Roan­ Labor, w»* said to have stepped
TITUSVILLE (ff— Fir* yesterday
dird
suddenly
in
Palatfca
Monday,
ire 0 . P. a silver dollar eentri- leveled the Nevins Fruit Co. citrus ties and 2 In South Georgia.
dy for House consideration, possi­ a factor that the eouned said will
oke and Portsmouth Va,, Winston- down in favor of In* a Distant,
Approximately &gt;41 million acres bly in a few days.
ited by Eari Higginbotham, to packing bouse here with damage
produce an added travel hazard. Funeral service* were held today Salem, Charlotte, Raleigh and Hector Hugo tie Pietro. Vuletich
at
v
p.
ni
in
Palatka.
t dow n and not
Asheville, N. C., Columbia, S.C.,
estimated at U million dollars. The of farm and Umberiand are in­
bay more.
Mr Williams will be remem­ Atlanta, Ga., and Jacksonville. • also wa* active in the light against
plant, one of the largest on the cluded in tha program. Water Re­
the Roman Catholic Church.
a , a, a . a.
bered, be hi* many friends, for
sources Development Cocp. agreed
The Seminole County Iserte- asst coast, had closed down opera­ to the undertaking for MAOO,
ihe part he played in th* organiz­
Wien’ i Association will hold Warn- tions for tha season.
ing and developing of Industrial
Fire Chief Walter P. Giles slightly lass than a cent an acte
oual election of officer* it l g. a
for
a
year's
coverage.
Insurance throughout the state.
Thursday ’ at the Court Houest * Warned lightning for Ihe. blaze that
Marled as an electrical and rain
DORTMUND, Germany iff
FORT LAUDERDALE kff-Mr*.
arm passed over.
BIG QUESTION
BONN, West Germany Off—A new ed debate In the Bundestag (lower
Edna Saunders, 29, was found in­ Billy Graham trained his sight*
IDAHO
FALLS,
Idaho
(/P)-T
h.
delay In putting the first West Ger­ bouse). Government sources said
Idaho Falla Chamber of Commerce nocent today of charges Uiat she on the Netherlands today alter
mans into uniform was seen today
BTRIXR ENDS
winding up s six-city revival tour
new propoeala would be readied touriet aid aervic* didn't have tha shot her husband lo deslh.
aa the lower house of Parliament
l
.TON (IV—A three-day strike
A Jury returned th* verdlrt after of West Germany.
answer to one question yesterday.
TAMPA
Iff—
Union
workers
but
there
was
considerable
doubt
at
sen•
bill
to
call
up
the
first
vol
work assignment at the 23
The American evangelist rioted
OSLO, Norway IP — Norway'*
An unidentified woman touriit more than eight hours of debate.
it
dollar Escambia B a y the Coronet Phosphate -plant at unteers tn committees lor re­ that the legislators could prepare ■•eking Information of Yellow- Fua psychiatrists testified that his wreklnng German crusade Iasi
-V i king Haskon VII M l today ai
Plant
City
bava
ashed
that
tha
and pass another hill before Ihe
writing.
Co. plant aite ended when
Mrs. Ssundirs could have been night, preaching tn a rrntvd of
bhmke a thigh hone.
court order restraining them from
Although stilt approving rearma­ start of their scheduled summer re­ stona National Park askad: When under emotional stress at th* time 23.000 in thia industrial Ruhr eityv
workers went back to picketing be dieeoired.
The M-year-old monarch was
do
they
turn
on
Old
Faithfull"
ment In principle, many of Chan­ cess July ll.
yesterday.
Ha speak* in Rotterdam tomor­
the man, Fred Saunders, 4), was
Moved Immediately to a boepita!.
Local &gt;7 of tha International cellor Konrad Adenauer's own sup­ Tb* Chancellor had wanted the
killed.
row, In Oslo, Norway, July 2. and
Is a commnalqss, the hospital
Chemical Workers Union AFL porter* complained that th* meas­ enlistment of volunteers under way
W ORKER K ILLED
in Gotcberg, Sweden'* second
Mid hi* condition I* satisfactory
DIES
aought to dismiss tha ban liaued ure contained no guarantee* of ci­ quickly lo givn th* free world and
WEBT PALM BE A O ! Jff-Jam e*
largest eity, July 3.
HEADS
FIRM
M d that so complication* hive
Dr. Michael Price the Smith-Douglas* Co , the day vilian control over the military and th* Russians additional evidence Scott, M, wes helping install a
He alto has scheduled a revival
MIAMI BEACH Uff-BertSn Sri
anted eye specialist, after t striker was shot and • oould lead to n resurgence of Ger­ before the atari of the Big Four new elevator In a 14-story building
toe of Key West is the new presi­ meeting tn Geneva, Switzerland,
on the
In the veterans ad- deputy beaten eutakte the pfaot man militarism.
summit taka next month that West when he leaned Into the adjoining dent ef th* Boutheartam Fisheries July IT, on the «ve of th* opening
sumortr m a rt
ital of a heart Coronet D owned by SmMs-DoaIha sharp blow to Adenauerta Ger nany is determined lo rebuild shaft retlxrday. An elevator tsk* Asen, succeeding Louie Fischer there nf the Big Four summit
•Una came last night aftar a b u t- Ue anted atnngtfc.
lag « pustogar down em bed him. of Coeoe.
•oolmeoce.
t
I
f
■t
‘

Downing Of Plane
local Occurrence,
Eisenhower Feels

Peace Ship Plan
Loses By 1 Vote

Soil And Water
Plans Discussed...

B52 Best Bomber
In World Today,
Air Force Claims

Copter Searching
For Missing Men
Crashes In Sea

$16,000 Is Won
By Grandmother
On Quiz Program

Humphrey Urges
Pressure On Reds
To Free Airmen

S tr o llin g
1n Sanford

Fireworks Blast
Kills 3 Shoppers
In Retail Store

Roy Campanula's
Name Is Injected
Into Liquor Case

Bandits Captured
At Jacksonville x \-

Bill Collector
Is Arrested In
Beating O f Woman

Prime Minister
O f Burma Arrives
In Washington

Greyhound Bus/'
State House Has 1 Strike Vote Is *
Counted By Union
Only 74 Employes

s

D raft Bill Goes
V
To Eisenhower

Titusville Plant
Leveled By Fire

Second Top Aide
Of Peron Quits

380 Road Deaths
Predicted For
July 4 Weekend

Rain-Making Firm
Starts To Work

James Williams
Taken By Death

S

German Enlistments
Strike Another Snag

I

King Htfokon VII
Injured In Fall

Union Seeks End
To Picketing Ban

Woman Acquitted
In Shooting Case

Billy Graham T/)
Visit Netherlan Js

�1
f T * E feAjfTOID HTRALP
F af t 2
Wed. June 29, 1955

M l SCHKKNOII, ■ New York
e*pfn*ker, denir* In a Renata inNUlliating aubeommiUe*, la
gVkihinrtnn. that ha paid off
thtae government offlejala, in­
cluding an Army colonel, with,
RlM.OOO on a *1.000,0*1 contract.
JfO'Invnkpd the 5th Amendmrnt
whfn the group nbpoenaed hto
VMerda and asked about hi*
(JntenKttoul)

$64,000 Question
'Hottest TV Show
t

New Army Chief, Gen. Taylor, Has Led Exciting Life
TOKYO UP- Somebody oncel ernment employe Tom. 20, la
asked Gen Maxwell D. Taylor, plebe at Wett Point.
Taylor, who haa a considerable
the Army's new chief el staff, why
reputation as a scholar, went back
he chose to be a paratrooper.
"I never knew why I picked Ihst to the Military Academy in 1927
outfit." the lesn. blue-eyed gener­ as an instructor in French and
al replied, "until one day when Spanish. He acquired another lan­
I was talking to a private in Nor­ guage in 1935 whf.n he was as­
signed to Jipcn. Years later, while
mandy."
Taylor explained that when he leading hia Far East armies, he
was commanding general of the kept up with the news by reading
JOlst Airborne, he railed-on re- Tokyo newspapers.
After his first hitch m Japan,
cruil* whenever possible and welcorned these new man into the di­ Taylor did a lour ol duty in Pei­
vision Among the questions he ping. Then it was back to the
usually asked was "How do you States and when America entered
World War II, he was artillery
like being a parachutist?"
"1 don't." a newcomer shot hack. rnmma*der of the B2nd Airborne
"I don't like jumping out of air­ Division.
After the war ended. Taylor be­
planes."
"If you don't tike jumping out came superintendent of West Point
ol airplanes, then u-hal are. you followed by tours at chief of staff
doing as a parachutist?" Taylor at European Command Headquar­
ters; military commsndrr in Ber­
asked
"firciuse I like being with men lin !; end then assistant chief of
who like Jumping out of air­ staff.
In February. 1953, Gen. James
planes."
•Tor gosh sake put 'er there," A. Van Fleet, weary and bitter,
Taylor exclaimed, shaking the retired as commander of the Bth
young recruit's hand. "That'* the Army.
News of Van Fleet's retirement
way I feel loo but 1 never re allied
was followed by a series of con­
it before.”
Taylor haa made seven Jumps, troversial accounts of the conflict
two of them in combat In Nor­ us Korea. Van Fleet himself said
mandy end Holland ha Jumped he could have driven the reds out
with his division the famed 101st of North Korea if he had been
that held firm at Bastogna when given the men and supplies he
German Pinrers hammered every asked.
Back in Washington, Taylor put
other outfit ground them out of
away hia dress uniforms and again
the line.
He stand* e trim, six feet and buckled on the old Army .45, He
tipe the aeal* as its pounds, whlrh had been named to succeed Van
he ealla hia "fighting weight.” He Fleet.
Taylor's privatn life, like that
plays tennis three or four times
of mas’ professional soldiers, is
every week.
Probably because of his own marked by a regularity of habits
He gels up about 8 o'clock every
age, be prefers young officers on
his Staff. At 53 ha is on* of the morning.
He likes a light lunch with a
youngest chiefs of staff the Army
clear soup, no potatoes and very
ever had.
Taylor was bom at Xeyteaville, little starch.
His social friends know that he
Mo., Aug. SB, 1901. In 1925. three
yearn after being graduated from takes on highball before dinner. He
West Point, he married Lydia has a light supper and by 10:30
Gardner Hapoer. They have two la on hli way to bed unless it la
John, 21, Is a civilian gov- a very special occasion.

Legal Notice
jsoyecs: o r applicatio n
TAX IIKEII
N pficR
is HBnEitr aivpnr.
Thri -.1 ll. Clrant Ilia holdar nf (ha
/otufwinc certified* (&gt;a* rilad i » m
rarllOrate fur tax deed to ba l«Abarann. Tha cariltleata ntimtueg
er.and year of laauanra, the rteacrlfltifin of tha property, and Ihi
Haiti In whlrh It waa atataaril
Are* a# follow*!
Msrtitliala No JM Tair of lal u i ju Julia J&gt;. A n. ISIS
neat n im n x nr mopkirtti
II of I,nI 11 P of ChulUalA
__ , ll.au 8l*ta Udl
C.fi a. l.ea'a Klr»t Addition To
I Owl
ado ft
rial nook X Paaa 111
iwtadn
Nana
.vie■■a In which aaaeaard D. D
»*&gt;&lt;J
7i*n’
&lt;I
d ir id
aa!d proparly belnx In
A)l“
of a
tha'
a' rtuudly
vtounty of Uamlimli. Htat* ol
yioeida
Uniats
auch certifies!*
l'ftd*
t
fShall
hall ,. ba r*d»*mad arrordina a*.
I"' to* prurarlv daarrlbrd IB tioli
arilfp il» will ba told In tlia bit i
car
•al
M al th* w
. _I door of tlia
at I'llKar
front
g* ml in'I* I'oiinty Cuurt llmiaa ri
Ha&gt;i|n|il. Plnrlda. on the (Irat Slim
day,la tha month i&gt;f Aunut, 1P*.V
wbjtli U Iba lal day of August
1»U
this Ilia day at Jun*.
. .* Oi ’ lP
H'rndnn
a a b
r kl a * t . , l l
Clark
Circuit JCourt, i■amiOi.la County; Florida
fClffleial Clerk* tienl)
Xii'A2l i(P API*lIs'ATHSg POM
tj[ s
.■•WriCK IH HUIlKBr CIV UN
'I
t J H (Irani
holdar of tlia
Orant lha holder
liir
7oliWNln*
eortlfli ala has riled aalc
m u ll' *(• lot lax daad lo ba itauril thrrann. Th* r*rllflcata nmn.
bn nhi' )*ar n| laauanca, tha ■)*
erlitfidu of Ilia propa'ly, and (lit
n*.oa •in which it waa aasaaaau
ar »'• follow $■.
. j . ' B ' i f : : : X J U T ,tr of u i h '*.uck f li t Book 1 Pag** 1
ly t
In whlrh asaaaaad Bank
01 * ,'lbari
jrrs.
1 *i j M proparly tialnp In tha
C
■( Uamlnolr. (dala of Pl„.
afi a |Hi*** aush cartllkata ah*ll
h* * .--i.ird anurdlng to taw 11.,
1* &gt; ( daacribad in auch cartlriill ba
ba auld
aold th
i l M th*
k i hlgL
hlshaatI
f. *4 **11
U. a,- at‘ tha -----(roat d«or or llir
h&lt; a .ola County Court Hnua*I at
h^ i«uiii
Florida, on tha flrat
Muiwioy in th* month of
l»,L i-iiUh ia lha tat dap ofTup-

•I

ARF'd Fur* Canest4

GRAPE
JUICE

12 25 c
Far Coeklitf A teledi

Boned Turkey

WESSON
OIL

SULTANA large ar Small

Stuffed CHHres

Pint

FICKLE FATCH Fr*»h Kashee .'

29c r

Botil*

D ill P ickle*
|RITTER'S Mtxlcala

'

Butter Beans

KINGANS Corned

DEUCIA Crisp

HASH

Sugar W afers
MARCAl White

,1-lb.

19c

Can

99c

Cxllf. Large

* Expert Watch Repairing
* Jewelry Repairing
* All types o f Engraving

Cantaloupes

25c
Tomatoes LB- 19c
Firm Rod Rip*

• Expertly done at Frink Noell'g

Freih Green

Cabbage

Free Estimate* Gladly Given on All Jobs,

Beans

FRANK. NOELL, Jeweler
m W .lt lS i.

LB. 5 c

Pol*

. For Expert Watch Repairs V isit. . . *

Ip • • • • * .
" JACK I
weight champions whoee matchee made ring history, meet to New
York. They am shown on elthar Bid* at Thomas r . Baay, chief
.Itabben (chaplain) o l Madinah Temple, of Chicago. They confirmed
a date to tie m eant at tha National Shrine Convention at Soldier

LB.

19C

lb.

19c

Fresh

P h on e 1294

Okra

S M A R T S H O P P S E S S A L U T 1 A t P ' a S P U N D ID VMUUITY O P

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lb. 45c

Hormel Cooked Canned

a2.i4.nL’
Average

49c

_

£7

— r.F -------- -----

Chuck Roost

*

43c

‘'Super-Right* Lean Meaty

• to I ’l

SPARE RIBS

lb. 35c

“ Super-Right* All Meal

H AM S
4 lb. ca n S 3 5 9
FRANKS
. lb. 39c
Herman's Oliver Fickle k Pimento, Macaroni k Cheese B O LO G N A
19c
ANN PAGE WCH - CREAMYJTAIT. - SWKT, '

I

summer

s ta c k

MENS' SHOES GREATLY
, REDUCED FOR QUICK
CLEARANCE. . .

WOMENS' &amp; GIRLS'
VALUES To $14.95

*3.00

Now

1 TABLE

J5.oo

Fair

OTHERS: * 6 .8 5 - * 7 .8 5
l ♦ V&gt;. Is

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Qm Mf
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It «• 2 ^

-ins

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PARKS*

i

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’£■’ Z3d *

TTiwa lBltr ““

SUNSHINI

CAKE

1 TABLE

1 URGE TABLE
CHILDREN'S SANDALS
3.95 to 4.95

fl

,rt.

•#

ICE
COLD

th- T. ivlhir cartitlrals has fUad
•ai t arutkei* la r js a daad la ha
I* &gt;
1 maun. Tha cart Ideal*
kitd &gt;aar
»itr of
o( iMuoiic#,
lib 1 &lt;i ami
laauaaee, th»
USi ----------llM
an In which
lolluwti
•U
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m

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smart shoppers salute A*P for

Paper Napkins

l
( lark circuit Caurt. M
i.i..* Couniy. Tlai'
lorldA
fflfjjltlal i'lark'a ntalt
arufuli . ‘ V APPLICATION FOB
-.fix. iI&gt;|___
.1:11

. ilS M

TALLAHASSEE 6P)— T w o
Tampa girl* beaded up rival poli­
tical parties which will function
during girls state this week.
Betty Lou Loucks was elected
chairman of tha Nsllonat-Aj
Party and Louise Ellis wes natyjD
chairmen of the Federelist
During their stey her* the 270
girls divided into political parties,
organize maka-believa eity, coun­
ty and stata governments, hold
mock legislative sessions and in­
augurate a governor.

*

NIW YORK (JV- CBS’*
Quaatlon, hottiwt new show in TV,
•o lucky on having intore Ming
Ktanta it might appear they
carefully acreeoed—and they

lamia G. Cowan, who own* the
bav, and executive producer
Itcv* Carlin make no aerrat about
tai. But they say fconteatant* ere
chosen for their human Interest
kith rather than on the baaia of
.wfccttwr they're likely to be able
in answer a lot of difficult qua*,
ttonlk
The ptory nf the contestant u
' aa important ai the amount et
tocaiy they’re trying for, they aay.
Thus H waa that the first big
winner, Redmnnd O'Hanlon, was
quite a story himself. He'a a New
York City poliocman, a shake*
apelfean scholar, holder of a mas­
ter of arts degree and the father
of five children.
lip quK wilh tlft.noo rather than
risk It trying for $J2,noo.
■ Contestant* are chosen from two
sources—tetter* pent to the pro­
gram and cards distributed among
the studio audience. Those picked
fraid ,1he audience won’t be on the
i night the choice ii made. U they
l p a n the srrarntag, they are
I broo^it on later. R » 9 —

I

In military bearing and disci­
pline. he is as demtndlng as Gen.
Douglas MacArtbur. the first bold­
er of the top Fer East command.
There were no unshined shoes or
wrinkled uniforms around the
headquarters of either general.
He wes awarded the Distin­
guished Service Cross for hi* role
in the Normandy invasion. The
citation notgd that he landed in
the face of intense enemy fire and
personally led an attack that
cleared en important ceuaewey
and permitted seaborne unite to
advance.

Two Tampa Girls
To Head Parties
A t Girls' State

JM *.

*&gt;JP'

i f 33c .■ 79c in* ruw saw cm,
19e BREAD
l^i lb. leaf 20c
Jane Parker Frankfurter or

•£ 19c SANDWICH ROLLS
_

I8e
■

�V

1

CLOSED ALL DAY
MON. JULY .1th

BODE DARLING

WtMkrfil

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16-oz

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Quantity Rights Reserved

E .'

Prices flood Thru Sat., July I

FRENCH’S

MUSTARD
MIX PICKLES
GRAPE JELLY
P-Nut BUTTER
P’appBe JUICE

1S C

9 -o x Jar

ECHO SWEET

22 or Jar

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KOOL AID 6 - 25 °
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BRIQUETS 10 — *V°

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SIZE

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Chunk MJGNIi
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�—r

I throei of a grett movement towards the
c . t . s . t i ft vciiom of the individual. Peron
Thfe «triiir(rl«' in Argentine is not primari­ Is only une of tiie doomed despots. Ha is
ly. rrlijr'ous, Religion has to do with gentle­ smaller than he thinks.
ness sell-control, brother'y love, with union,
with Povvtr all-wise and all-undcrstandinf.
The Peron business is a struggle for ungodly
Some men never seem to have enough,
power.
it was pot sufficient for Sir Edmund Hillary
)’chin has been emrayed for many years ;o he the first to ascend Mt. Everest, the
in im effort to increase his personal power world's highest peak, which had defied
over the Argentines. Step by step he has put scores of skilful mountaineers. He is now
down
any effort at democracy.
the announced as the probable head of a New
-------------------------- He aided ...
Hitler forces, hoping, apparently, to sllfle- - ^ ea{(inii expedition to the Antarctic,
into authority over all Louth America on
interest in the Antarctic is becoming
|those coat-tails. Failing that, he seems to more Ivelv Russia, Argentina, Great Bri­
be aping the methods of Russian commun­ tain and the United States are each taking
ism. Suppression of the newspapers, one a hand at mapping lilts icy laud. The Bri­
aftei anMher. notably the great La Prensa, tish hope to make, in 1957-8, the first land
which tried to oppose his methods, were crossing of the Antarctic continent. New
among his moves toward depotism.
Zealand lias long been accused of showing
The church was the only force left which a lack of interest in tlie fro/.cn South,
could bar him from tj runny. It tried to am&amp;’.ing for a country which of all civilized
prevent complete enslavement of his people, regions is loiated nearest it. The New Zea­
and for that he has fought it. of late, with landers me now trying to wipe away this
desperation The expulsion of the two re­ reproach by rtouting for the British, finding
lates was merely the Iasi step and the one for them In advance a route to the South
which has made international news.
Pole, with depots of fuel and supplies every
The recent rebellion failed. Peron has 250 mile*-: or thereabouts.
had. up In now, a firm grip on the military
Hillary may have thought it bleak and
forces, and has a "Pretninn guard” of his cold enough on the top of Ml. Everest, but
own for his own protection. But it will not his Antarctic venture should far surpass the
be the In1 revolt. Eventually this dictator­ other in cx’ romes of privation.
ship will fall That is Inevitable, and is only
•c quesl’on of time. "Sic semper tyrannls” .
the Romans used to cry. "Thus is it always
Oddly enough, the complete w o r k s of
■with tyrants” The whol* world is in the
many famous writers have never been
#*T“----- -----------------bruughl together. Our own historians should
bang their heads, bciauso till lately there
rahil.tird «•"» •••■•ri
#ad
has been no attempt to publish a complete
set n , . i r im *(.
edition of the writings of Lincoln, Jefferson,
r » l , r H a*
r l n a w a t lr r n . u b , r St. I t l l at
Madison ami other revered figures of our
Ik *
u t i l .# nf ta a la r d . I 'la r lt a , iiad rr Ik# k r t
nf t a p a r t .. #f tlarrfc 1. talk
history.
M it .it r e n h i w . i;d it» # # * h r a v iu k # #
This failure i« true of authors elsewhere,
■JA C K k L T I i r m .A M I . I la a a a la * M i l a ,
loo. One long felt want ha.v been a complete
edition of the writings of Dr. Samuel John,
it H »i.nirrios s u r . i
U , C arr It r
a ir y tr aarrk
Ua# aaaalk
H w
inn. The eoinpiling of Ids work is now under
I k r t * Mnalk#
t i l H aalk#
t»a# 1 t a r
way at Yale University. Johnson was the
•.can
as.ts
All to
most remarkable figure of the British liter­
XII o k lla a r r a «ttr «# , » * r d » a t tkaak#, r ta a la t la a i aaA
B a ft.#
# a l# r la l* m # * l t#r tk » r a r * # .# at r a L la g
ary
scene in the latter 18th century. A poor
f u a d . Mill li# .h a z a r d tnr at m a l a r a d i# r fl# la * ra tta
bov, diseased and unnttrartivc in appearance
H r y r r tta ltd
.V a ila a a ll,
t&gt;r
u rarral
V d i.r t l-i.a
with cmrse manners, h* yet became the
■ # r « lr » ,
la c . *al
O r a ,| l i
a a ila a a
Saak
B id e,
leader of the London literary world, so mu£h
t
A lla a ta C .#a ,*l*
so that his era lias ever since been known as
T k a II# ,a id la a airm fcrr at Ik# %caa#lal#d I’ r r n
"The Age of Johnson." This year witnesses
cth lrk I# r a l l l l r d t i r l a a l t r l r la Ik# ua# (■# r#i&gt;afcllrallie 200th anniversary of his greatest work,
tla a 'a a a ll Ik* Im at a# n a a r la lt d la tk lc a v n a * * * # ,.
his EnvrlDh dictionary, which far surpassed
Page 1
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2D, 1955 its predecessors and set the standard for the
future.
TODAY'S lUBI.B VERSK
The life of Johnson by his admirer* James
To the Lord our God belong mercies and Boswell, is often thought the best English
forgiveness, tho we have rebelled against biograpiiv. Yale has Already undertaken the
him.— Dan. 9:9.—God nnrbora no rq^enl- publication of Roswell’s writings. It is ap­
ment, he kor.wet 11 mir frame he remember- propriate that it should now do the same for
cth thnt w-e are dust
Johnson.

?-ApfAiure6UBA(3Cul

Riots In Argentina

Clothing lndusti*3s Optimistic

Busy A t The Pole

Major Literary Task

The Sanford Herald

I f

JAMES MARLOW

Reds-Touch Off Guessing Game
WASH ING TON
- a ties sing
-why the flusslanx have rhanged
from growl to grin has become
‘ a kind of international parlor game
which anyone can play, with or
without facts. A little wishful
thinking helps.
[ Latest guesser is Gen. Carlos
iTV Itnmuln nf the Philllpines. At
the United Nations' anniversary In
6an Francisco last week, during
!* television Interview, he said: The
Kremlin leaders are having trou­
ble among themselves and want
• breather.
, ThU was hardly an original con­
tribution. It's a guess that's made
whenever there's a major change
tn Moscow, like the demotion of
fieorgl Malenkov from the pro
ptlerahlp. There baa be*# no evldsnee to support It. Then or laltr.
There's been no breakup.
The Russians themselves have
given a more plausible reason,
without saying so, for their sud­
den air of sweet reasonableneii,
Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov
(minted to It again in Baa Franflaw;
Tht Russians want tha Weal to

disarm,

. For ytara In one way or another,
mostly a tough way they have
desperately tried to break up the
F’asilrn Alliance, prevent We»t
Germany’s rearmament and dis­

PRICKLY bant la s common
: summertime complaint of both
I children nstd adults.
This rod akin r u b develops
•ban you ratal profusely and
, tha sweat duets become blocked
by horny p in s . rreguenUy tt
i lichee. The r u b Is moat likely te
‘ break out wberd you perspire
’ freely, such u tha bands of your
Jolbowa, your waistline and the
,f n n t and aldee sf your cheat.

HAL BOYLE

of durable goods—autos, househ-i!I
appliances and the like—who was
gott.ns the gravy from tho busi­
ness boom. But'now textile execu­
tives think men and women are
bent on replenishing their ward­
robe* and will have more money
for that purpose this fall.

Copper Companies
Seek To Head Off
Looming Strikes

Some Things Hard To Understand
NEW YORK
Same things in
x\erase man finds hard to undurstand;
Why pretty girls wear junglxst.es
to work on cloudy rlajs? (l)n they
really think anybody w.ll mistake
them (nr vlxiting movie stars?)
People who stud their boring
conversations with the expression,
“ you know what I mean?" It
keeps waking you up .
Women who can't stand a dog in
the house—then gel themselves a
pel monkey,
Shott stout ladies who weir hlg
floppy summer hats on crowded
buses.
Sports fans by haartsy
Guys
who knflw all the statistics in the
baseball record books, but never
take the trouble to go end watch
e live game.
Men who root for the Brooklyn
DuJgcrx merely because they
think it Is a quaint aign of in­
tellectual superiority.
Bermuda short!. (Yes, even In
Bermuda.)
Wives who keep teHing a fat
husband he looks slimmer in a
single • hrrasted suit, when he
knows better.
Girls who wear no stockings In
the summer, and girls who wear
stocktngi so thin you can't tell
for sura even after looking twice
—whether they am bare-legged.
Girls who paint lhc.r toenail*
a pearl color.
How anyone with • sans# of fit­
ness and proportion can eal a hot
dog without mustard*
How anyone can eat pig's
knuckle at all?
Whatever h a p p e n e d to the
wonderful game of marblea? They
•till have a national tournament,
but you rarely sec city kids lugg.ng
a sack of marblea—now that most
playgrounds arc paved.
People who think television Is
a waste of Umo—but not gin rum­
my.
Folks whose ancestors went west
In covered wagons but now think
life isn't worth living without air
conditioning.
How poison Ivy and (he common
rold manage to survive in a world
in which everyone y-u ■"••• knows
10 sure ways to cure them?

Try and Stop M e

Don't Gel1 Panicky About Mumps

Y O U 'R E T E L L IN G M E!

BUICK

NOTICE
City nf Sanford Civil Service Examinations wtH bo
held in the CHy Hall at 2:30 P. M. Saturday July 23,
195S, or as noon as ponnibte thereafter, (o establish
an eligible Hat for the clatw of Patrolman, Truck
Driver, Utility Man, Malnlenanca Man and Fireman

Clearance Sale
U

Saab

I

i

4

,

m

$ 225

Cl***

B*lck •#*## l l d n ,
,1 m * .
* * # l* * * d

fa ll,

m
J)

g g e
g | 0

1

FIREMAN
REQUIREMENT*! A,pllr»nU (nr IK, Fir, S&lt;rvl«
must ho at least 21 yearn of age and not over 30; bo
at least V7” tall and weigh not leaa than 123—41
pounds. Excellent pension plan-

POLICE PATROLMAN

C l# * * . r * t i ,
C * * lp * « d _
I I

B *kb

#|

Cl***, r a iir

REQUIREMENTS! Experience aa a truck driver!
poaeeeelon of a Florida driven license; come exper#
if nee in making minor repain on a truck. Aga limit
21 to 45 yeara.

-------

.

Halrit

S*da#

t

a * *

^

W O

$1060

*a*#r

H ard

rail, • :* * i * ,# a .
# I # * *,
S t*
T l r r , __________

T „.

*:,&lt;/.

$1336,,

D ad *# *#daa C a ra * ! O , , # ■aali*. I m a.1). m a g g g
***•, cim *
IB w

V

S*l#a » »* il* l Bad** 14X#

*#a * a i y

«**r*ai**d

am*

#&gt;!«*■

$ 600

DIOCOl'XT

M U

ltd

U k*

Jloa

$1100
DllCOt-XT

U T IL IT Y M A N

E

S -d r

■ I
«*#rl*l
V I *#daa rally
C « a l , H ____

e

TRUCK DRIVER

$ 790"

t* # # l* l

M#4»—d

REQUIREMENTS? Applieanla for the Police Service
must ho 21 yean of aga and not over 34; he at least
5* 9” tall and weigh not ieaa than 154 pounds. Good
working conditions and excellent pension plan.

REQUIREMENTS Some experience In electrical, car#
try. painting, concrete, and masonry work. Ago
It 21 to 45.

! U you’re bad prlakly beat pre.wtoualy. you should take apodal
-farauiliiui against getting tt
Stgaln. In warm weather wear

T rad e-In s

Malrfc * -d r.

L

Proper Rest and Diet
W ard Off Prickly Heat
'• r N M M N l L

So when all the textile and cloth
in; workers get back fiom vacs
turn next month the productioi
pace is expected to be stepM
up. Some makers of uonteffr
dresses here report early ordrrt
are up by 40 per cent. Orders foi
sportswear are even heavier.
The C l o t h i n g Manufacturer)
Assn, of the U.S A. reports that
heavier early orders of men's r#g.
ular weight suits, overcoats sne
topcoats “ means (hat retailer!
have low Inventories in the*e cat.
egories and Uyt they hav# ful]
confidence in good fall bu*inr-&gt;H
The clothing industry isn't jt™
sitting back and waiting, however.
The American Institute of Men's
&amp; Boys' War. Inc. is launching a
R.v THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Negotiations stepped up on four drive tn make the American male
Western fronts today as represent­ more conscious of his appearance.
atives nf the “ Big Four" copper
producing companies sought to Wage Policy Committee to deter­
avoid threatened strikes that might mine whether a nationwide xtrtki*
cripple industry throughout the of the nonferrous melaU industry
should be called Friday. The strike
nation.
Separate contracts with the firm* would be contingent upon s e t t v
are being negotiated by local of­ ment of new wage contracts by
ficer* of the Independent Interna­ midnight June 30.
Results nf that poll have not
tional Union of Mine. Mill A Smel­
ler Workers. The pacts expire at been tabulated, said a spokesman
for the'uninn, which was expelled
midnight tomorrow-.
The union, which has headquart­ from the CIO in 19M for alleged
ers in Denver, says between 50.000 Communist domination.
and 80000 members are affected.
Meanwh.le, negotiations contin­
Though separate strikes are ued at Butte, Mont.; Douglas
schools
for
women
and
so
frw
for
Why, ilnte parking spacss have
strong possibilities, the union has Ari*.; Salt Lake City; and San
become so valuable in this civiLis- men? It the male sex just nalunl- asked members of its national Francisco.
lion they aren't made hereditary
so someime could leave you one
m his will?
Where can a father tell a
DON'T GET
INSIDE
3 30 It doesn't give as lasting an Im­ drawn.
second • hand (levy Crockett hat? (Advance for tanday June 28)
munity as an actual rase nf
Among Its activities, corlison*
The cat has taken to slreping in
SYRACUSE N Y. OP)— If little mumps. If a child is healthy and
is
an anii-inflammaticn agent. But
Johnny's playmate comes down not run down, it probably would be
Die one in our house.
it has other, nonspecific, proper­
with
the
mumps,
don't
get
panicky
a
good
thing
for
him
to
have
the
Cashiers who, when you hand
and lock yuur child indoors. And
ties. II li known to reduce fever
them a IS hill, count out change don’t demand that the family disease.”
The effects of mumps range and it instill* ■ sense of well
walk away and forget the other 14. doctor come up with some miracle from (he simple puffing of thrj
•
Why many movie houses still that will keep him from catching parotid glands—that makes you' being in the patient.
Mumps-meningitis, caused by
look like a chipmunk—through nau­
go on showing double feature pro­ mumps.
Because nf the dangerous poten­ seous pain to rare eases of sterili­ tha virus. Isn't directly rotated In
grams after all these yeara?
Hasn't science found a better way tial it holds for adults, doctors ty, blindness, deafness, paralysis the disease commonly known as
spinal meningitis. That is caused
to solve the problem of insomnia? agret it is better to have mumps and. very seldom, death.
Although the use of cortisone by germs or bacteria attacking
How airplane stewardesses man­ as • child and get it over with.
A . pediatrician sard “ Mumps for mumps has been discussed in the central nervous system. Peni­
ege to s l a y looking so cool and
neat during a long flight, when gives a fairly lasting Immunity. medical journals, doctors feel that cillin or sulpha drugs provide a
the passengers always reach their Then ii an anti-mumps vacrine much more testing must be done deadly knockout punch to those
destinations feeling weary and but I wouldn't give it to a child. before any conclusions can be bsclerla.
"No one should die these dav*
rumpled?
from
'spinal' meningitis," one d o #
Whether a fortune couldn't be
tor said, adding:
made if someone found a method
"But there la no established
of making cataup in different
— ly WIIUAM «tTT—
weapon
against the mumps virus.
colon? At present all It goes with
Central P rtu Writer
The disease just has to run its
is a red necktie.
ORIOLES prefer to nest in ter be encountered In Bologna, course. And 1 have a healthy re­
Why there are vo many charm
treea and not tn the collar and Italy, ami the chile sauce la spect for mumps In an adult."
ly more charming?
that's a scientific fact—no matter Chili T
If the v im gets a foothold in
what Ua standing of that Balti­
the meninges, ft can work its way
. l i t
MAIL GOES TllllHL'Cll
more baseball team may lead one
Wonder if that /adieu chief to, the spinal cord, a condition
CHARLESTON, W. V*. (/Pi — to beliiva.
irke equipped his teepee with a known as aimyelitis. Or it cm
In xdidtion to being undeterred by
I I !
freer* set Matches any programs attack the brain, creating inflai^
idect or ituiut of night, the couri­
At a commencement fir Rhode other than western motlcs.
matory pressures on vital tenlc™
ers of the U. S. Post Office have
Island only one student was gradcontrolling
sight,
bearing
rr
I I I
also managed tn deliver a letter waled. Ifovw exclusive ran a school
breathing. This la known as
from someon* In Syria to tho g et/
An odlt*r suggests femlllas
mumps-encephalitis.
.State Conservation Department.
sh*uld coriiribut* fS or a* fa po­
I t 1
The letter, Inquiring about vaca­
....rush#* and Mikayan, Soviet ll!ItoI campaigns. He’s right—they
In cltle* where it la customary
tion cabins, wax addieased: “ Holly bigwigs, engaged In a friendly got at l*oit that mush ont*rtalnto take a siesta nap ii eustuninry
River, 1602 acres near Webster wresiling maids. Probably lotting m*ni aul af 'am.
afternoon, the people often get up
Springs, Webster County, 3 cab­ •a too If either was toeing hit grip.
! I 1
very early and itxy up Utc, with
ins, U. S. A.”
I l f
Ten old Roman coins* vanished
ferformancca at the theater oftco
—
•
A writer aaya he's off in Ger­ from a museum at Eton school
starting at 11 p. ns.
In 1050, there waa one U. S. au­ many to sea how frankfurters in England, following an alumni
to for every three pcruont over
tost* tn Frankfurt and hamburg­ gathering there. Now don't tell
13 yeara old and tha Twentieth er* la Hamburg. Why alop there ? ua some old grad turned out to
Century fund estimates that by — why not chock on the boloney b« just an old grab!
1067 there will be one for every
two to two and a half peoplo ii
that aga group.
NEW y 6 r K iP — Optimism Is
growing tod») in both the men's
and women's clothing industries,
tf orders, production and sales ire
Any tndicAlion, the American lam*
sly It going to spruce up iti look,
this fall.
And so the textile industry is
Idling ready to take off on Us
annual vacation period in a cheer­
ful mood.
Women's apparel manufacturers
here report that orders hy stores
are marked heavier than last year
The men's clothing Industry ran
at IS per cent of capacity In May,
complied with 71 per cent a year
ago.
And the makers of men’a .shirts,
pajamas, sp: .swear (including
walking shorts) say good business
is Indicated into next spring and
summer.
Optimism It hased primarily on
Increased ordering by retail out­
lets. But the textile industry has
growing belief that the American
consumer is due to make another
shift in his buying habits. For
some lima now it was the maker

courage the building of American |slon by Russia. The lest of Iti
air basei In friendly countries earnestness lies ahead.
around Russia.
Tha Russlanl and tin West have
They failed in all three. The last, been dickering for years about dis­
great hope they had was In keep armament but the R u a a 1 a n a
West Germany disarmeJ. It was haven't yet bacn willing to agree
only after the Allies gave Ger­ to the Allies' idea of a disarma­
many the go-ahead this year— ment system which would let each
that the Russians changed their side check thoroughly on the other
attitude. They've been pleasant to be sure.
ever a:nce.
Nothing more could* be accom­
plished by threats or toughness.
Tha female phalaropo fa amall
They couldn't lose hy a twist in
shore bird) does tho courting, but
taetirs. Indeed , they might ac­
after laying the eggs, »h« leaves
complish mar* with sounds of
and tho nisi* incubates tho 4gga
peace than they ever achieved
and bring* up the young.
with belligerency,
CORA, Wye. IP—A prosperous
Molotov spelled out preclicly
what the Russians want: the Amer­ rancher went beritrk sod (hot and
ican air baaea dismantled, the killed his wife, daughter and pa
Western Alliance broken up and ranta-indaw four days bofora their
tha AUlas to dtiarm. Since the bodies were found at their home
Waal la realistic, tha Russian do- north of here. Sublette County of
sire bears a price tag.
--------------------- B y B I N N I T T C I R F ---------------------fleers said today.
Tha Allies, knowing that ones
Coroner Francis Tanner, sum­
UCIUS BEEBE, elegant bon vivant who edits hix Nevada
their alliance was broken up and moned by a foreat ranger who
newspaper from a private railroad car today, was once the
they had disarmed they might nev­ made the grim discovery termed
freshman member of the drama department of a New York
er again be a match for Russia, the tleyings ''murder-suicide—It
would noed tome Iron guarantees couldn't have been anything elaa." 'dally. Not one to avoid a
tough assignment, the bud#
that Russia would disarm to the
Tha victims, their bodies pierced
point where it couldn't be a man- by bullets from a hoavy 30,Qg rifle,
ding journalist sought an in#
ace.
terviaw with testy Alexander
•wera Lawrence fJack) Alexander,
Molotov talked of Russian will­ 43; his wlfa Patricia, 40; their
WoollootL A. W. wouldn't
ingness tn disarm and prohibit the daughter Grace, •; and Mrs. Alex­
have any part of him.
use of atomic weapons. This ander's parents, Mr. and Mra.
Asked later why he had
sounds like a tremendous conces- F. X. O’Brien, of Miami, ria.,
been so disagreeable, Wooll#
visiting hero.
eott Inquired idly, “ Who’s
■ Sheriff Morris Horton waa unBeebe anyhow? I thought he
abta to offar any motive for tho
waa on tha bottom of tha
tragedy. He said the Alexanders
ocean somewhere!"
had been married about IS yaara.
• • •
Alexander's
body, tha rifle
The red-faeed motorcycle cop
cradled la his arma, was found
Mat alcohol. Soft your doctor wfll beiido that of his only child on 'glared at Use young lady in Use
fancy, lew-dung convertible and
prescribe tho proper medication the back porch of the family home
demanded. "Whv did — ■-----v
tor your Individual case.
seven milci north of here. He had going attar I Whistled?" "Tout! have U forgive boo. officer." « td Um '
CnulMha
a bullet wound under hit chin.
young lady airily. “My friends tell see I'm pretty deaf," •Hmphh.'*
Gaol baUu may also bo sooth­
Mr*. Alexander a bullet through anoetod the cop, obviously uaconvtacod. “Omit tet Uwt worry you,
ing. Than are aovoral ways of bar neck, waa found lying near jmim. You'll got your hearlag tn tho storming!”
thMK, Mix t cup of the body of her father la the bach
A tp B m a e M ta t Ws»H&gt;uted Ig KMt f hd em irodfcqio)
starch or oatmeal tn a yard.
•
of wo ter. o r boil a pound of
starch la two «narta of water.
Add a teaapoonful of o » per coat
alcoholic solution of menthol

Wealthy Rancher
Kills 4, Self

SAM DAWSON

(H I
M u .
K « a I * a • d. O al,
HUM. t a * a l g

rally
4X U

XHSCOt'hT

An applicant* mast reside with In the
City limits of Hanford, bo of good moral character
ana physical fitness, and hard had ai Uaat a gram#
mar ackasi educsiioa. Opportaatty far advaacemeai
baaed on merit, efficiency, Industry and chancier.
Far farther details aoa Um eiamlaer it the City
CIVIL SERVICE BOARD
Mack N. Uevtiaad, Jr« Secretary
If. Oi Garner,

Nicholson
Bui&lt;k Co.
1034
2 ti Magnolia Avo*
A I Day

*

i *- t;
i y.0#^*!** O n

W
*

.
;- -

o' :■ -y

a. 4

y .V " V 1*

4

�S o c ia L fcvfw h u
(poAAonah
Mr*, t i ll Dcpfrr, Mr. *nd Mrs.
Harry Bunch, ami nephew* \V, H,
Walker Jr. artJ Johnny Walker
have returned to Saraxot* after
visiting Mr. and Mr*. C. E. Walk­
er.
Friend* of Roy f . Wiley will be
glad to learn that he is improving
nicely after an operation at the
Fernald Laughton Memorial Hos­
pital.
Mr* R I. Gillespie and daugh­
ter Terry of Melbourne are visit­
ing Mrs. Ituy C. Wiley
Mr*. Chatle* Holland, Miami
!• visiting; her parents, Mr. and
Mr». W. L. Claik on 207 French
Ave.
Mr*. Elisabeth Lynch and ton
Justin of Miomi, are visiting Mr.
and Mrs. J. S. Thoip on Camer­
on Ave .
Mr* Evelyn C Thompson wilt
enter the Orangp Memorial Hosp­
ital In Orlando to undergo surg­
ery.
Mti H C Deigman and child­
ren of Gainesville are visiting
for a week with Mr. and Mrs.
A Michels and family.
Mr and Mr*. D. R. Watkins
and childrrn, David. Michael and
Nancy, left this morning for
Fahekrn where they will make
their future home. Mr. Watkins
i- associated with the Charles T.
Niblick interest* there.
Hanging Blooms: Using a soft
enrd or fiber plant binders, at­
tach narcissus rr othrr bulbs to
a large sponge covered with peal
moss ravailable at any florist).
Hang the ball in a sunny window
and keep it moist with warm wa­
ter. The bulbs will sprout and la­
ter hloom just as though planted
Jn a howl.

Mrs. V. Mitchell
Visits College
For Alumnae Day

House Plants Need
Plenty Rain Water
For Good Health

CEIL CHAPMAN'8 beguiling
young afternoon drras la black
and white checked iilk taffeta.
The bodice I* softly fathered
ever the bosom and marked
with narrow bands of velvet.
It h u a email white pique cot*.
Ur.

the

apot-llfht,

•tag*

OUR SUMMER SPECIALS
For July Only!

‘ 7 ,* ^ " *

"»■

T * « fnewoal

f 15.00 I,a Maur Duo Tonic Wave
with Super Seal Neutralizer— $ 1 0 .0 0
112.50 Zotoo Super Lanolin—
&lt; 0 kh
*10.00 Donat Show Curl Cream
Neutralizer— $ d . j U
• Includes Shaping &amp; Styling
• 3 Senior Operators

HARRIETT’S BEAUTY NOOK
(Air-ConditioneJ Salon)

103 8. Oak A t*,

Three Hostesses
Fete J. M iller
At Collins Home

Jeanne M iller
Is Honored
At Bridal Party

Mis* Jeanne Lane Miller, who
will be married Saturday even­
ing lo Donald Baron of Phoenix,
Arts wav honor guest Monday
evening at a miscellaneous sho­
Mu. Velma Stewart Mitchell wer given by Mrs, H. M. Pearce
visited Georgia State College for and Mr*. Donald Reagan at the
Women at the recent Alumnae home of the former on East Se­
Day weekend. Sixteen graduating cond St.
rlasses hrld reunion* a* the col­
Thc home was decorated for
lege celebrated the largest such the occasion with lovely arrange­
Alumnae Day in Its history.
ment* of vvhite gladioli, an array
A rrpurt on the first annual of wedding bell*, and a bride doll
Alumnae Loyalty Fund was pre­ cent* red on the mantel in the
sented hv Mr*. Helen Race Thom­ living room.
pson. Atlanta, fund chairman.
The dining tabic was overlaid
.New officers for the Alumnae with a white linen elolh and renAssociation were elected at the terrd with a crystal bowl of gladannual busine** meeting. Selected loti balanced on cither side by
were president Mr*. Bonnie Burge crystal candelabra (tolling white
John«on. Fitzgerald;
first vice tapers A miniature bride and
president Mr*. Moyle Skinner groom under a wedding hell com­
Wilson Atlanta: second virc pre- pleted the table decoration*. Or­
'ideiil Mrs. Dot Hendrix Mullins, ange sherbccl punch, weddingSavannah, secretary B l a n c h e bell cakes, nut* and mints were
Hamby, Atlanta: and treasurer, served by candlelight with Mr*.
Mrs. Beth Morrison MeElroy, Lorraine Graham presiding al the
Atlanta
punch bowl. Also assisting the
Miss Sara Brthrl is the Alum­ imvtrsvr* in serving was Mrs.
nae executive secretary.
W R Willi*
Mr*. Lrland Rudd directrd ap­
propriate game*, and Mrs C. R.
Jones Miss Margaret Jones, and
Mrs. Lavinla llimrs were awardrd prircs. Mr* R, T. Thomas alvo
received a prire (or being thr
THUUSDAT
The F'.rst Baptist Vacation Bi lucky holder of the marked plate.
The shower gift* were prcscled
ble School will begin at B:30 a. m.
Tlie Junior Royal Ambassadors In the honor guest in a large dcwill meet a! the First Baptist mralrd basket roverrd with beau­
tiful flowers in many color*.
church at 7 p m.
Those invited to he with Miss
The First Baptist Cliurrh Choir
will hold rehearsal at 7:30 p m. Miller were Mr*. John I. Miller.
The {.notes Auxiliary of the Mr* Christine Woodruff, Mrs. W.
til,l' and K will meet with Mrs. I. Sluudcnmirc, Mr*. J. 1* lloltzNan Forlorn at It n. in. for jls 1 claw, Mr*. Roger Schmidt, Mrs.
monthly business meeting and R. T Thoma*. Mr*. A L, Thomas,
Mrs. Lorraine Graham, Mr*. W.
covered dish luncheon.
R. Willi*. Mrs D. K. McNab,
FRIDAY
The First Baptist Vacation Bi­ Mrs. Lavinia Himes, Mrs. Joe
ble School will brgin at 8; 3o ». m Welts, Mr*. H E. Cordell, Mrs.
for those age three through 1G V. C Bollinger.
Mrs. Jeanette Renton, Mr* n
years
The First Baptist Vacation Ri N. Ulaekwclder, Mr*. O P. Wade.
b!o School Commencement pro Mrs Brtty Alexander, Mrs. Mil­
gram will begin at 8 p. m. ton Hannar. Mrs. R. E. Soderin the Church Auditorium. The hlum Mi*. R. L. John*on, Mr*.
Exhibit* will be open to the pub C W. Ffrgle, Mr*. R L. Beard.
Mr* J T. Hardy, Mr*. J. A. Callie at 7-3&lt;) p. m.
hnun, Mr*. W. A Krai/ert. Mrs.
Homer Lillie, Mr* C. R. .tone*,
Mrs Lcland Rudd, Mrs. L. F.
Garner. Mr*. Verne Messenger,
Mr* I.. A Phillip*, Mis* Martha
Grogan. Mr*. Ruby Brown and
Mrs Lula Miller of Orlando.
Watering house plants with rain
water is suggested lohomemaker*.
SWITCH FnoM IM.AY
if there is sodium in the household
TO IX) IT-YOURSELF
water i* suggested homemaker*,
If y &lt;ur little girl is as old as
era, *ay* Myrtle Wilson, ftome eight and has hern washing hrr
Demnnstiallnn Agent, Many com­ doll*' clothes for several year*,
mercial florist establishment' have now'* a good time to begin mak­
cistern* for catching rain water to ing the switch from play to pracu»e in watering their stock. In tical Her good grooming and
tin* way florist make Hurt theie prcttlnes* later will depend In a
is no auli-tancr that might injuir great extent on her ease in caring
plants will nrriitntilato in the soil for hrr own rlnlhrs.
from lap wntrr.
Give her a "personal’* supply
Waicr-joftming system* that
of
soap, perhaps kept In a special
make all washing job* easier may
lie haid on house plant*. New York plastic container that’s just for
hrr. She’ll find it’s easy and fun
State floriculturist* recently exrUined'lhat“hourehotd wit r e a 'f u I !" ‘I'’ h.cr ow" unrtics:
J* ,he
enei j nftci, remove the calcium •
^
,0 hr ' ?
from water by replacing it with ‘ PMMble for elolhing care, the
sodium. While .odium ia good for rouUne wU1 be
U* Sr*ntcdstopping hard soap curd in washing
and i* nrcrasaty fnr human nut­
Here’* nne more u*c for the
rition it i* poisonous to plant*. A* family hot water bottle: fill tl
*oil i* watered, the plant* take up half full of tepid water and pul
the water and Iravn (he *0 hum. It on the boitom of the bathtub
Before long, enough aodium may for a young child to til on during
accumulate to kill the plant*. This hi* bath. It keep* him from skid­
may happen Iti a few day* with
ding around, and makci a nice
potted plant*. Calcium found in toft, warm aeal.
hard water before (he softening
process rarely hurls plants, re*
gardlrai of its concentration.
To avoid thi* trouble with hoU»c
plant*, the New York Stale *eienlist* suggest using rain water,
a* many florist* do, nr changing
the plumbing *0 that outside taps,
and perhaps ona basement Up,
draw straight from the well or
-*— tr
main without going through the
softener.
*1f you want t«
•**

Thone 971

Mt*s Jeanne Lane Miller. July
J hride-eleet, » s , honored last
night with a bridal party given
hv Miss Palsy Collins, Miss Peggy
Wright, ami Mia* Samira Dunn
at the Collins' home on W. ISth
Si. at 8 p. m.
A green amt white theme was
carried out sstth flower* and de­
coration* Tie guests sseir seat­
ed at individual card tables cover­
ed with gtr n and while rover*.
I'he mantel aimse the brick firelace was centered with an ar*
tangemrnl of white gladioli inter-perceil ssiih natural greenery in
a gieen vn&gt;e. On the televiMon
wa* another arrangement of gieen
and while in a while bowl of
Florida gardenia*. This creation
was accented by a bra**, candlehot.h-r hearing green taper*.
On tlie coffee table a variety of
pastel hibiscus were artanged m
a white \a*e and oil the table op­
puff . . . It's a half Thi* womterfu! tun hat Is the handiest fashion posite the fireplace, lo add a hit
Item, introduced in nitny a lummer and, according to fashion fore-1 of rotor, was a beautiful bouquet
casters, will be a vacation headliner. It inflates with .* "puff" and dc-j
date* hack to purse *i:e in a jiffy. Deigned lo protect milady from the of pink hydrangea*. In the din­
scorching tun at the scaiheic. in the garden, in the mountains or ing room, which connects with the
jutt plain walking down city streets, the puff hat fou rs in on* tire living room, were mini spring
to fit every feminine brad.
. flowers placed in crystal bowls.
&gt;
It it really a pietute hat that compactly fit* a purse, can be Above the arch wti* suspended a
slipped out at a moment’* notice and inflated by Mowing gmtl&gt; into large pleated wedding hell. On the
a tiny valve until hat assume* full tue a* shown hv model in picture.
|, a ,-tvital camil*dvohlcr
When it ha* reached full-britnnird proportion*—tin* take* n few ls|,le
second* and little breath—von bend the valve over and luck it out holding two whit, tapers.
of tight into a slit. To deflate merely remove plug, let out air and
During the evening gatnrs were
fold into a tmall package.
enjoyed wiih prizes going lo Ml'*
Thit amazing, new item come* in eight high-' i-hion, tunf.vat
eolort—four print* and four solid*—it non-inflammable, scuff resist* Nancy Rountree Miss Ellen Lyon
and the honoree, Miss Miller.
ant and can be purchaird in variety and drug itoie* everywhere.
Mint, and unis along with
grn n lemonade were SCI w’ll dm■UK •"•»#*
n'rt‘ • *'■' —
course was served afterward*
along with rot fee.
A gta'* coffee maker wax
Recent additions to thr shelve*
of the Sanford Puhllr 1 llnaiy are, pres ruled to the honor guest
Fahre, "Insert World’ ; Wells, by the thief hostesses.
Wn.il a treat it this delirious
1 he ho-te*sea were arsislrd by
fruit! It grow* altno*! statewide ■Road in Shnlinmi” ; Ekvnll. "Ti•and you’ll not find a tastier fruit Itrtan Skylines"; llarhtn "Pliuno Mrs. Roy Wright and Mrs. A L.
anywhere Begin to look now for logy": Fndiman. "Party of One"; i-„||in*.
Those prevent to »njuv the
them in the market and holier Fh—rh, "Why Johnny Can't Rend.’'
yet get yourself a tree and better Lindbergh, "Gift from the Sea'’ ; event were Mi * Miller, honoree,
you can grow your own Thr hi- Brown, ‘ ‘Bolder Jumper* ’ ; Field, Mi* John I.. Miller, niothrr n( the
"Rawhide Rider"; \rd, "II ,Ills a Uneit, Mtv I'tiristirie Woodruff.
quat prividr* variety for the (am
r ily ;’* Nolan, “ Sudden Sq'inll’*; Mi* .lark Frierson, Mm. I mini*
i!y dinner table, aildrd nutrition
Van Iter Post, "Flamingo Fciilli- Sti-ti*lrum. Mrs. W R Howard.
I
and lots of eve appeal.
er"; Marsh, "Scales of Justice ”;
Loipiat* fresh are elegant, a Frnisnng, "Widntt's Plight ’; Mil­ Mr*. Calvin Wlight. Mis* Jom
Saunders, Mia* Nancy Rountree,
real fancy df*scrt. Wa h freshly ter, "Be«*l
In View";
Sli'ltn,
pit'krd fruit that is full ripe, hut ! "Monnmilk and Murder"; Wine- M'*s Paulelli Cason.
Mi&gt;s FUen Lynn. Mis* Maltha
yet firm. Remove stem and hlns- hell, "Hinges of Hell"; llogan,
Own, Mi*» Jeanette Cleveland.
*f.m cud. Cut and remove need "Abingdon Parly Parade;**
Mi-* Rosemary Garner, Mi**
or leave whole Peel or leave .skin
Bonner, " E x c e l s i o r Taylor.
on. Place in bowl and sprinkle Neitar in \ Sieve. ' I,re, "1’ iairie Gram Marie Stineeiphrr. Miss
with sugar, not loo much now Vcengpanee," McDonald, "Onions in Carrie Rrdfirhl. Mr* Collins, Mi*.
Chill and serve with cream or lop
ytru"; \v,.|rh, "Nurso Curol" \\light, and the hnstr.se*, &gt; '**
milk This is a wonderful dessert Knrkrr, "Innennnal i’ag.
Ncu- Collins, Miss Wright and « " •
for any meal.
luner, "Tim Man to Marry;" Dunn.
Try fresh loquat* mashed or a n d O'Mnre, "lw-tter From Annsieved in slicrberts re ice creams, rite."
Ilava each nicinb, r of thr family
make them a wrleome ingredient
use a different colored prticil to
A
real
h.vlh
artist
makes
sure
in youi fruit salads, They are an
In leave Ihe wa'hclolh, sponge, oral V their activities on a raextra tsMr teaser when served
hnrly
brush, amt thr tub itself a- trader A quirk glance will thru
a* an appetizer — chilled and
clean after llir bath as Ihry were lel| Mother who need* tiaiiporgolden.
tntiou. a speciat dres* ironed, etc.
at Ihe start.
Wild* In season remember to
save some for later They may lie
eannrd, frozen, and made into de­
licious jellies and jams.
F'rozen l.oquats: Wash well.rip­
ened fruit*. Remove Mem anil
blossom end. Remove seed. Drop
into a cold sugar syrup made of
1 eup water to I cup sugar. Pack
age. cover with the ayrup Seat
and freeit at O’ F. Frozen lo
quals are a* delirious a* tlie
fresh and may he used in the
'l i s t wry. They will keep a year
in a freezer at O’ F.
Canned l-oquats: Pick front
the tree when well ripe hut not
soft and mushy. Remove stem,
hln'som end, and seed or can
with seed left in Pre cook 2 to
4 minute* in light or mrdium sy­
rup made by cooking 1 cup of
water with 1 eup of tugar for,
medium, and 2 rupi water to I j
cup zugar for light. Pack in Jars,'
rover with ayrup, proeea* quarts
70 minutes, pints 15 minutes In
Chiath log
a water hath.
Lnquat Jelly; Selerl slightly un­
der ripe fruit only. Wash and seed
Ih# fruit. Cnvec with water and
rook until lenrtrr. Strain through
Warm weather bring* forth • this inarctirlde, one of the new
Jelly bag. The jelly point of horda of inaeet*, a* any horn* member* of the chlorinated hy*
lnquat* I* around 22.V4 degrees gardener know*. If* easy to m « drncarhon family, kill* insertj J
surface prsta that chew on they cat, breathe or touch it. I .
F., if you hav&lt; a randy thermo­ th*
green gras* and foliage, but errThe new bug killer ia available
meter. Use I cups pugar lo 3 tomnlogisti toy that insect larva*
in several forms, all of which can
cup* of Juire, When jelly drop* in th* ami also ran it* aeriou* be
applied easily by tha homefrom tpoon in sheet It it done. If damage by rating Ilia tnola of owner to turf_or_ omamcoUl
grass
and
shrub*.
«
loquats are the sweet variety add
plant*.'
I-awn and garden expert* *rw
2 teasoonn* lenmn juice to the nrging
homeowner* lo treat early
Oioona mitabte formulation'
julte before adding »ugac.
in the Season to avoid the ravage*
It’*
np to tho gardener to
of the insect “wrecking crew."
On* way to g e l rid of hungry rhnoxe the formulation best suited
bug* and grub* that rat the to his need*. Hr should rpnr.d It
NOTICE
beauty out of your turf and orna- over the entire lawn, making sure
mental* i* to apply dirldrin, a not to miMrarra*. The insecticide
All Calendar
ean he applied anytime, hut after
lawn tnaecitude (Jut Uata a king application
turf should be matrn d
Listings And
to soak the uisacticrd* into Uro
La* 1« for y*ar* fn *oH
soil. , _■
Society News
Hi th* toil, dirldrin actually " Formulatioci*’'n f dtrldrfr*‘ ’ar*
irovide* protection against insect prepared and sold hy IradAig inAre Requested
arva* fog yearn. On the surface, trrtieid* manufacturers under
(hi* tnaeetirrde is effective for their own brand names, »nrh a*
By 5 p. m. The
weeka. Cutworma, ants, lawn Ortho, Arm*. Real-Kill, (aiwntrnl.
moth*, chinch bug*, white grubs, Black Leaf and other*. These
Day Preceding:
and even mooquiloea, chiggera product* ran he purchased al
and flea* that lira in grata ami most garden supply store*, hard­
shrubbery, are eontrolled by diel- ware stores and . insecticide
Publication
druv. Entomologist* aaptaio that (irjlrn. t

Recent Library
Let's Look For
Loquats; New Fruit Additions Told
Grown In Florida

SPECIAL
LADIES' DENIM SHORTS
R ef. 91,41 VpIm

• BROWN
• BLACK
• fiK K V

10

-

20

COMPANY SUFFER
Chicken Fie
Salad Bowl
Roll*
Banana Cream Cake
Bes rrn ge
Banana Cream CsV«
IngredienU: C etips *ifted ftmrr,
1 lea-pnon double, nrting baking
powder, I teaspoon baking soda,
's teaspoon salt, 'x rup ( ',
pound 1 rrtich. d margarine, I S
r'.ps sugar. 2 eggs, 1 nip Slashed
ripe banana (2 or -7 nnMium-tised
bananas mashed fine on a p!ato
with a fork will make 1 cup),
run buttermilk, 2 3 eup coarsely
CT.OSELY draped *°ng boly chopped walnut j , I tahletpoon
Tine la marked by * line of liny
bows in Col Chapman's mint flour.
Method: Preheat ov»-n to 350 dr.
Julep &lt;cool pale green) colored
silk rcau dc sane dresa for grres Imoderate). Grease the holsprang 1055. From the hipHne tem and tide* of Iwo round layer
the skirt falls away In a wide*- rale pan* fenrh S by I1, inches';
line bottom* wilh wav'd paper;
hvg flare of deep soft Dleah
grease paper. Sift together the 2
cups flour, baking powder, bak­
ing soda and salt, (‘ ream margarrAREFl’ L WASIlINt;
idr and sugar thoroughly; beat
CR IM E S IIEIItEOOMS
You never know whet her or not In egyr* one at a time. Stir mash­
a hit iff apparel might heroine an ed h.-mann and buttermilk togeth­
heirloom, but you ran be zcavon- er. Stir sifPd drv ingredients, in
ahly sure that when it i* given four a iqirioo* and cPernately
TE C . (lender, loving earn it with banana mixture, into cream­
stand* a good chanee of remain­ ed mixture; begin and end with
ing in tlie family for years and flour; «tir just until blended each
time, To»s walnuts wilh I laldeyears.
-pnnn Pour and fold in Turn Into
Kor example, halo's rhrhlrn- prepared pan* and bake in moder­
Ing rites* If vmi rarrfuliy hind ate (loft drgrees) oven 3S to 40
launder Ihe fragile Inile garment minutes or uni 11 cake tester inill warm soapsuds alter every •rrtrd in renter rome* out rlran.
use. and keep il wrapped in blue |Turn out at mire on Cooling racks;
paper to p m mi it from yellow strip off paper. Cool,
ing, il ean be p-med on from l ilting. Frosting and Garnl»hingi
generation to generation, with
Beat I eup heavy rrcam until it
each pasviiig year enchanting its
begin* to thicken; bent in 2 table­
beauty and personal value.
spoon* eon fret loner*’ sugar and
So il is wilh many other pre­ ’•j teaspoon vanilla until cream
cious possessions v011 may have— holds Its shape. Spread cream hctreat them with kindness and they Iwr.-n layers and over top (hut
may end up as heirlooms!
not aides) of rake. Refrigerate.
At serving time, peel a hannna
Now- f.,nry pillows rome with­ ,,nd draw the sharp tines of a
*ruk lengthwise down it to flutet
out piPmv rase*, thanks lo a very
slim thin.
practical nrw pillow (hai Wl]|
wilt, sag, or mai It’ s made of
Japan produced a record tfl,Darron— that wonderful wash (t’t.t.iWO ton* of cement in 11*54.
able filler —inside and outside
In place of a pillow slip, the miles
P orlrn lt*
Ft»r flood
surface is printed in a dainty
sralliTing n( ro.clmds. And isnT
.InnicSon Studio
ll nice to know Dial all tin*
sleepy lime pii-||fness is siidsahle
by hand nr in the washing niaI’h.ine 3I!)S
1»8 N. I’ark Ac*.
rhtnr.

CLEARANCE
SALE
DRESSES
One rack of dresses. Ileduelions tip In . .

50 %
50 T-SHIRTS
Im litilcx kn it ninl lo rry rlttllt.
Iti’R iilnr priccg up to | 3.t&gt;5

$ | .0 0
each

SKIRTS
Small troop of akirh m.irVod
to orijrinally Roll for
tip to 8.35

NOW

5495

- l REGULAR W EIG HT BLANKETS
j&lt;^SV
DRY CLEANED &amp; M O TH PROOFED
W IT H FAMOUS SAN EX SYSTEM

Fur the warm nummer ahead,
be aure to take advantage of
this wonderful buy. In colors
of

SIZES

Try This One

T

^ t h o f U U L V

• WHITE
• PINK
• BLUE

t THE HANFORD HERALD
Wnl. Jitiie 2R, 1955

TWIZ-BAIUC plea tad belg*
■ilk organdie elaborated with
beige r«-«mbrold*r*d laew la an
evening drum wan designed by
OeU Chapman. IY t high curving
bodJoo la MtaeUud over a anug
mtdrtff and walal U a lu e d
aklrt.

Reg. Price
Plastic Bag
Total Value

$1.00
*15
$1.15

SPECIAL riUCE

T IIU U

89

HEAVIER WEIGHTS REDUCED ALSO

JULY

9

• ArrredilH
Charge Account*
Wdcomed.

�He’s Become Boston Red Sox 'Mound Ace 'Almost Overnight

Sullivan Is Beating Sophomore Jinx
« , p p vnLKM
|fo the are of the Bouton Red Bos'pushed Into a starting Job to toll year and baa a string of M icnro-l wound up bis first full major
The Associated Prese
mound staff almost overnight.
the gap left when Mel Parnell I less Inning* working while holding league season with a 13-18 record.
Prank Sullivan looks like one1A year ago, the iS-year-old rightsuffered a broken wrist. Now he's the No. 1 spot for the Boson.
And while ether freshman stand■rnl who's making a bum nut of hander was just a .nuecu...... .. one of only three American League
That's where SuiUvan M H end outs of lB34-aucb as Wally Moon.
the sophomore Jinx developing in- pulled out of the bullpen and | pitchers to have won to games Uilal weighing «U, left off in 1834.He |Bob Grim and Art ro lle r-h a v e

fallen off, Sullivan's still In their
pitching — effectively. He's been
beaten all times.
He kept the still-hot Red Sox
sliding last night with hia second

straight shutout, a three-hit Job
on Washington for a 4-0 victory
in the first game of a twi-nlghter.
His last time out, he blanked De­
troit on Just two hits. He got the

Cardinals Play W. Palm Again Tonight
Sanford's Cardinals ran their
winning airing to four straighttheir longest of the Florida State
League season — by blanking
West Palm Reach, 4-0, here last
night.
Terry Terrell's double and Ron
HARNESS

Schmidt's single produced the!
first run In the second. Don Pray
homered with none aboard In the
third and two unearned runs came
In the fourth.
•
Roger Cook went all the way
to pick up the derision on a fourB y A la n M a v a r

H O T -S H O T

SCOTT
'opos-oN
fiAMPieroH/AtJi
favorits

FROM
OkMORM/A,

'B * O B R I E N
CANAP/AN-BORN
TRA/NBR-PRlVBR
o f ru e co lt
PROM P tL M a r ,
CAL IF., ALSO
OUT F O R
F t* F/RST
W / F rt r u e s
CL A A B IC .
CAM PtmHO
/HTH e BASF p r e p a r a t o r y

I to TRYfria 70 BOCAL
Vic to ry o f R tf
CALIFORNIA.N,
W APS.

TWB KENTUCKY P E R C Y
f e u o k e q u tta

Standings
rLOSHOA ITSTB I.K MU I
W S.

IS
U
It
31
ss
ni
li
ss

Orlande

Cui'oa

puyinna Brin It

W, I’MIlit lltMI'h
Oalnaavllla

kelang
PripMhiiri

ss
SI
St
SS
aa
is
is
M

SSKsll|.Tl TRSTKIIIUV
Lakeland jr. iJalnMsvili.- I
Cocoa
oroa I, Day lona llew.li
rd I, IV. I'elm llearh e
Su?;*Pater»bura
.Imre 7. YYrlaiiiln S
lit u r .a T tm a v
nde ai Hi. relai.liura
• at Daytona Hn&gt;h
isavlll* at Lakeland
s a r o s n ssai w

W
s
l
a
s
s

lopa
afar#

i

L
i
a
s
t

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.ass
.SSI
.sis
•tan
.sir
,I»S
.Sir

DIDNT GKT AWAY
BLACK8TONK, V a. UP) —
Henry Boyd got • terrific strike
on his beta popping hug and in#
trader hroka where it Joined the
fly
line. The hate weighed
9 pounda 4 ounces.
Boyd knowa Ihr weight heeauae ha caught tha fish by a
annirwhat unusual method. The
big fiah leaped In an effort to
shake the hook. Rut he didn’t
land in tha pond, ilia Iran took
him into a four-foot spillway.
Ilnyd al»n leaped Into the spillway. r— ' * the loader and land­
ed tha fieh
•Y'U,'

Bn.lon it Washlnelnn (NY —Rrawrr (S-f Y »a f'aarual (S-IY
PpI
llalllmnra at N.w York It) —
.sts Pallia c -T i and llnauvln IY-IY va
“ '
IS-I) and K urh a IS-lj

.Ill
.Son
SITIOMh i,s:«»re;
,Sim
w s. n t
,1110 Brooklyn
at is .TSi
in is .III
I'hlraan
V llu a .iW
Cincinnati
tl IS .SSI
paw Turk
at. tain;.
50 sr .SYS
It ss .4 0
I'hllariallilils
.ait I'lltahurati
H
51 41 .SIS
aTKNIMY
P titta W
Itt.tiiirak a-t
.ass rtnrlnnall
mialt &gt;, HI. l-uuli
aula t
•1ST Uruukl)
n a, Near Y■&gt;rlr
kirn
urk 4•
.sis
OAMI'.S T o il i t
York at ttrnnklya (NY —
.1*4

is;

a n m caa
York
‘

sasn en
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IS

Si

as

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Ji i’ i\\ mw.jfizi
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■rai-LTa -------_r

talon
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laltlmnra
Imnre
■

THU S A N F O R D H E R A L D
Page 6
Wad. June 29, 1955

Sports
Roundup

FROST.
c t/ R R e ir

Mraei.

hitter before 374 fans. He struck
out 14 and walked 7.
In other action, last-plare St.
Petersburg enjoyed a 7-1 Triumph
over leading Orlando; Lakeland
beat Rainesvtlis 7-1; and Cocoa
whipped Daytona Beach 4-t,

it

------

*i
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Oavaland T, Kanaaa r
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toast na 4-S. W'aahlnali
. IUMKS TOD ST
ireji at ^ h lcs g o — Haali (T-l&gt;

i l - l j va Newrutnba ( l l - l )
n» (l-IY

By CAYLK TALBOT
NEW YORK UB—Did you know
that tha first formal rulea of base­
ball drawn up by Alexander Cart­
wright in 1813 aald that a ball
caught on first bounce was an out?
Or Diet lor one season, IBIS, It
wat permissible to flatten tha bat
on one aldeT Or that only in 1117
did a basa on ball# count aa a
base hit?
We didn't either until, looking
up something else In the late lly
Turkin'a "Baseball Almanac" for
IMS, wa ran into a aectlon listing
all the important niiea change#
WIMBLEDON England UT-Tony
mad# alnce the game took aomeLhlng resembling Ha present form Trabert meets Budge Patty In the
and spent a happy and fascinated highlight All • American match of
half-hour getting a few thing# today's Wimbledon singlet semi­
final with veteran Gardner Mulloy
straightened out.
For example, we have heard and warning:
"That match could taka the edge
teen written many time# that when
Hugh Duffy of Boaton aet hia all- off Trabert'a game."
time batting record of .438 In 1894 Ren Roaewall, Australia's M
many of his "hits" were, actually, year-old iter, tackles Kurt Niel­
only walks. Well, evidently this sen, u n a e e d e d Dane whe wai
simply wasn't true if the rule was Wimbledon runnerup la 1981, in the
in effect only Uie one year, 1117, other aemifiasL
Trabert and Roaewall now era
Tall you what the great Duffy
did hive going for him, though. Joint betting favorite#.
"I think Trabert will defeat PatIt wasn't until the year after hit
Horn arte feat In IMS, that a foul B," said MuBoy who la here for
s ninth Wimbledon tournament,'
tip became a strike, and not until
1901 did tha National League rule "But ft probably will be • tough
that ball# which fall safely outside match and a hard one could lire
the foul lines were strikee. The Trabert for the final."
"I fancy Roaewall te win the
American League didn't follow suit
tills," the 40 • year-old Miami
until 1903.
Beich, Fla., attorney added. “ He
From 1871 until 1MT the better la sharp and ai quick aa a cat. Ha
was permitted to demand that the should not have much Double de­
pitcher give him either ■ Ugh or feating Nielsen. Patty may g(*w
a low ball to bH at, but ft wai Trabart a tot af trouble. Patty wiB
not until 1114, nearly SO years aft­ prata Trabert and may tiro Urn
er the first rulea were formulated, before the fla il."
Dial pitchers were allowed to fir a. MuUoy to eomethlng of an eldar
overhanded. Not until 1M1 was I* statesman among town tennis fans
permissible to send In a lubatltut ' at Wlmbladca. Ha got tha nickafter the fourth Inning.
nama of "grandpappy" after playEvidence that tha bean ball haa teg here nine time#, reaching the
been with ua for some time la seen Amttflnala twice gad tha doubles
in an IM1 ordinance declaring that
limes.
a pitcher shall be fined "for hit­
ting a batter deliberately." They
Michigan Mate baa had a
must have found ft a very thorny re tentative on ovary United
matter In those days too for tha Steles Olympic track lean
rule lasted only one season.

Trabert, Patty
To Meet Today.

Carter To Defend
Lightweight Title
In Fight Tonight
BOSTON Oft— Adaptable Jimmy
Carter pita hit varird styles
against hard-hitting Wallace (Bud)
Smith tonight In defense of his
world lightweight boxing cham
plonihlp at Boston Garden.
The scheduled 13-rounder la the
11th title right for Carter—the only
man in history to bold the same
crown three times.
Carter, who earrlei a wallop
himself and can be very elusive,
U a 4-1 favorite.
The bout will be broadcast
(ABC) and telecast (ABC) with
New England blacked out on the
video.
It'* listed to start at 8 p.m.
EST.
Ringside observers, conceding
Smith la a sound fighter, general­
ly agree hell be after an early
knoexout If posaiblt. He’s got a
particularly sharp left book. But
Smith, getting a title (hot at Car­
ter after losing a 10-round decision
to the lightweight king in hit home­
town of Cincinnati five yaan ago,
knowa how strong the durable
Carter ean be In the late round*.
Carter carries a knockout punch
himself. He'i kayed 18 opponents
while running up TO victoria*, 18
defeats and • draws. Smith’ s rec­
ord la &gt;1-11-3, Including 18 knock­
outs.
Ilia major factor In a champion­
ship fight la the ability to go the
route and in Mi 11 title bouts
Carter haa fought II rounds six
time*. Smith never haa traveled
18 rounds though be haa fought 11
rounds three times.
The thamp has i rlb-brutelng
Mat la tolling a* hit
body attack
atta
O fp lo M te the late stage*.

Cities Bidding
For i itlo Bout
By MURRAY ROSE
NEW YORK om—A half doxen
cities still are in the running for
the purposed heavyweight cham­
pionship fight between Rocky Mar­
ciano and Arehlt Moore—but the
two haven't signed for the battle
yet.
"We expect to get an agreement
for Uie fight by Friday or maybe
even tomorrow," said H a r r y
Mtrkton, managing director of the
International Boxing Club.
The word Is out that Marciano
will defend his title Sept. 22 in
Ysnke* Stadium here.
"Of course we expect to sign
the two for a September b o u t,"
Mark sun In a shocked tone. “ Rut
as to the site and date, Ihrre't a
lot that haa to ba settled."
New York, Chicago, New Or­
leans, Houston, Los Angeles and
Milwaukee among eltiei, are in
the running, said Markton. He
said he preferred New York him­
self.
Charley Johnston, manager of
Moore, said ha favors New York.
AI Weill, manager of Marciann,
also baa Indicated a leaning lo
Gotham,
If the fight is held In New York,
Markton Indicated that it might
be held in the middle of the month.
The Polo Oroundi, home of the
New York Giants, will be avail­
able from Sept. 12 to 13, Monday
through Thursday.
Later In the month, the Yankees
leave the Stadium Sept. 18 and
don't return unleil they get in
the World Series ■ strong possi­
bility right now, It la possible that
President Dan Topping of the
Yankees might not want to have

the field torn up for a fight with
the Series coming up toor .Here­
after.
In Chicago, meanwhile, James
H. Galely, president of the Chicago
Park Board, said that mammoth
Soldier Field was available to the
1BC If it wanted it.
Another huge arena, Lot An­
geles’ Memorial Coliseum, also
could b* made available for the
fight, said Bill Nicholas, general
manager of the coliseum.
Ray and Roy Mantle, twin
brothers of the Yankeea' Mick­
ey, play for Monroe, La.,of the
Clan C Cotton States League.
.They play left and right field for
the Ysnke* (arm club.

Sm okey Saya:
cum

Every

nfMODIH DESKNS
W tnrau IN MIND!
to put extra value tn the low Plymouthprice!

An

,T

headlights, tote then's a tot al difa*
**c* hi the foalwraa af a ear teat add
ap la v-a-l-a-a. Kan an just a few of
Plymouth's features that will add I*
yeur eoaafort tad your eowvaniaaom
b dm tow-price I, you'll lad team
aaly la Plymouth!

CENTRAL FLORIDA QUICK
w
„ . ANOBTORAOl COL

LOCKER P L A N T

...J B S g ta u » ° « T A a .
THRMC PKICKH EFFECTIVE TRUER . F1L

n E 'T E W

W m B E lM I • f t

fee mete dlrasf pJffawtef m HBR
Plyawtrth asaeata th* leaf er-etrak*

N tff

hack, tap and h*ttam (net hettam

only)* to* hotter, safer teste*

FLA. GRADE A — IHRECT FROM LOCAL f AIMS

Pn

55c

RHnsrclB

Cocoa's victory, before a Day­
tona audtence of TM, broke the lalanders' winning streak at five
games and gava tha Indians sec­
ond place. John Ivory Smith of
Daytona allowed only four hit# but
the Indiana didn't mill them too
much ea their first two runs came
in on mixture of walks, error# and
passed balls. Jot Patrtello limited
the Islanders to six safeties.
Lakelsnd's Dave Exter put
Gainesville down on four hits. He
walked only one man, struck out
five and had a shutout until tha
ninth when Herman Pltsaro hom­
ered. Tha attendance at Lakeland
wat 348.
Rookie Marshall Renfros stopped
a budding Orlando rally in the
eighth to give St. Petersburg its
victory. The Flyers hid chased
Ronnie Gingtehoff with three runs
in the seventh and Ronnit Boult
opened the eighth by walking tiro
men which brought on Renfroe.
The Rookie fanned four of the ill
men he faced. A SL Pete crowd
of 443 turned out for the action.
Tha Cardinal* play West Palm
Bearh again tonight. Gama lima
a ■ o'clock.

runs be needed on last nljht
homers by Jackie Jensen and Fiy*
Throneberry, stfU subbing for th*
ailing Ted Williama.
In the nightcap, the Sox were
held scorelea# by Bob Porterfield
for eight Innings, then broke nut
for eight runt—touched off by
N'orb Zsuchin'l two-run homer—
to sweep the Senators 8-2.
The tiro victories moved Bostrrw
whin a halg game of Hse fourth
(Aeec Detroit Tigers, who whacked
the Chicago While Sox 5-4 in ig
1 r n i n g a. Cleveland, meanwhile,
mo/cd to within two games of
Chicago by defeating Kanin City
7-3.
New York and Baltimore were
Idle.
In th* National, flrst-ptac* Brook­
lyn pushed tha New York Glints
into fifth place 8-5 while the scA
ond-place Chicago Cubs beat tha
threatening Milwaukee Braves t-j.
Cincinnati replaced tha Giants in
fourth place by rapping St. Louii
9-1. And Pittsburgh beat Philadel­
phia 7-5 in 10 innings after tha
Phils nailed the wrapup of a sus­
pended April 14 gam* 3-0.
The White Sox. now 3*t behind
the Yanks, battled back from a
4-0 deficit against the Tigers only
to lose it as Frank House singl#|
the winning run across with Iso
out in tea 10th. Frank Lary won
it in relief while Millard Howell
took the defeat.
Cleveland smacked the A'* for
six runs in the second inning, three
of them coming on a homer by
Larry Doby, as Mike Garcia won
hia fourth.
Duke Snider whacked a homer,
good for Brooklyn's deciding run
in tha eighth, and took the mift\
league home run laid with 21. Sal
MsiHs, who hid won eight straight
wai th* loser while Kiri Spooner
won his second with relief help
from Ed Boebuck.
The Cuba went on a homer binga
aa Emit Banka and Jim King each
hit a pair behind Bam Jones'
seven-bit pitching. Banks hit hia
first with two on In the opening
frame off loser Warren Spahn,
Johnny Temple and Joe Nuxhd)
carried the Redlegs. Temple drove
in five run* with four hits and
Nuxhail extended his scoreless in­
ning string to 24 before giving up
to th* Card run in Mm icvemn.
Four singles were good for throe
10th-Inning runs for Iht Pirates
an4 wore enough to cover Phil­
adelphia'* single marker in Ui*
bottom half of the tram* in tha
regularly scheduled gam*. The
Phils added a run to their 2-4 leJJ
in final Inning e&lt; tha suspended
game.

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PARK AVE. AT 25th ST. SANFORD ,
OPEN U N TIL 1:30 FRIDAY and SAT. I ,

�;

Tire sAVFonn ireRAT.n
ra g e 8

Wed. June 29, 1953

wtieetD/THEsrs l o t s
op l if e IN THIS OLO
ZALCN CARCASS,

BUDDY
WORKtN' OUT AT SHORT3TOR
OZARK /
i" T W

tw,

yet/

JBeave AN
OUTFIELD
FED TO THE

Pl a t e o n
A LlNf.
but aim
YOURTHROW
TO HIT THE
CATCHER'S
MITT ON
A BOUNCE,
TO PREVENT
overthrowing
your ,
m ark/

THAT W A S

f w a s j c r / ty

it)r

WOW *

.

p p y VPU CHASED L A S r ^ y D ) 0 H C G O OH, MOW
je r
TTEPPiFICALLV mgmt r o o sTA/euG c= rH ^
WONDEPfUL/ ---- - - S S O L A T T jffiS J lL PBOPtLLEO'
tVAir TILLDAD
HEAPS/

fWANK ME
ID TELL HERO
than*

v VtJO fJ &amp; M

the c o a c h s a w
HIM CUNNING a n d

VOU MEAN FOP

SIGNED MlM LP
.FOC TRACK TEAM

CHASMS HIM t

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YDU GO WIGHT HACK
-f UPSTAIRS A N D
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W 'W KV, THAT EAR?

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JUST MV LUCK SHE
HAD TO INSPECT r -

TME ONE - — - — '
I DIDN'T )
WASH kC

— 9

PRHIDENT Elsenhower takes |
time out lo do some trout fishing
Hi rumnre Brook near Rutland,
Vt.. after attending the Dairy t
Festival. He caught two flngrrlings In the first IS minutes, but
threw them back. At the festival,
he told a crowd of 25,000 thst the
United States will alwaya hold
out the "olive branch" of pearo
to any nation that wilt arrcpl It
wdth •’ho’ncaty and integrity."

t x

-I

L

( HEY/ THIS
\ ( DORR FRRL

KILLED BY CAR
JACKSONVILLE UT - Pamela
Turner, 7. was struck and killed
by an auto yesterday as she ran
Intn Its path while returning home
from playing in a park.

" X 1&gt;

Among talking birds, male* us.
ually are better talker* than fcmales.

new

GAINESVILLE &lt;T— An English
murder rilher than New England
hmtnry was the baata for "The
Scarlet Letter," a university pro­
fessor says.
Dr. Alfred S. field aajia hr made
the discovery while reading a
group of books Nathaniel flawLhnrnc Is known to have read. Sev­
eral contained accounts of the
poisoning in 1613 of Sir Thomas
Overbury, a slaying which involved
child marriage, adultery, witch­
craft hanging and a dying con­
fession.
Importance of the discovery prin­
cipally is a clarification of Haw­
thorne's creative methods, says
Dr. Itcid who gives a detailed an­
alysis of the turning of the real
life action into fiction In "The
Yellow Huff and the Scarlet Lcltrr" which the University of Flor­
ida Tress is publishing Wednes­
day.
Dr. Reid, 30, former Instructor
in English at Trinity College in
Connecticut and recently appointed
to the faculty at Furman Univer­
sity, Greenville, S. C., is a native
of Orlando, received his A. B. at
the University of Miami in 1946
and hia Masters and Th.D. at Flor­
ida in 1950 and 1033.
“ The Scarlet Letter” was pub­
lished in 1630. It was Hawthorne's
first major work and it estabtiahed
for him an all-time reputation.
lie wrote the first draft while he
was surveyor of the customs house
at Salem, Mass. But he thought it
so somber he gave It lo publisher
James Fields of Boston with a
suggestion it be printed with some
sketches of a lighter vein.
Fields, however, was an im*
he asked Uawthorna

Frances Howard, 13, and Robert
Dcbcreux, If. Earl of Essex, mar­
ried them In 1006. But Essex was
dremed too young to live with his
wife and ha waa sent traveling.
During hia absence, ahe and one
Robert Carr, a favorite of King
Juries, started an affair. Ovrrbury
aided them in their clandestine
meetings.
When Essex returned his wife
went to Anne Turner, a witch who
invented the ruff, neckpiece so
typical of the dress of that time.
Frances got love potions for Carr
and frigid potions for her husband,
then got a divorce on groundi of
Impotence.
Carr and Frances decided to be
married but when Ovcrbury heard
this he objected because he thought
it dishonorable. So the lovers per­
suaded King James to throw him
in the Tower of London and while
there they poisoned him.
At the trial, the witch was sen
teneed lo hang in her yellow niff;

Carr and his mistres: were con­
victed and imprisoned but a short
time later were pardoned. It was
all over by 1613
Dr. Harry n. Warfet, professor
of English it Florida and former
chairman of (he American litera­
ture group of the Modern Langu­
age Assn- says ' ‘discovery of Urn
sources of 'The Scarlet Letter' is
doubtless one of the major feats
of American scholarship."
CHALLENGE ACCEPTED
CONCORD, N. II. &lt;/P) - I’ crley
I. Fitts, New Hampshire agricul­
ture commission, has accepted Ver­
mont's challenge to participate in
a milking contest at the Vermont
State Dairy Festival at Rutland
June 22. Hr wi&lt;* undaunted by the
fart he would have to milk a Ver­
mont cow,
“ I'll just milk her a* we would
milk a New Hampshire cow," ha
said.

lo

revise and elaborate it. This Haw­
thorne did.
Held said he found in the Ovcrhury account the broad outline of
Ihe letter's plot, the unity of intro­
duction, the clement* of witchcraft
and magic the moralizing lone and
precise details of the characterisa­
tions such aa Hester Prynn's skill
at needlework and Ihe humped
back of Roger ChUlingworth.
Hr found three accounts of Ihe
Overhury case, one a prose version,
one poetic and one the official
proceedings of the trial.
It started when Ihe parenla of

MAJOR JOHN RMMNOWIR, am of theMYesIdent, receive* hia
diploma from Brig. O a . William F. Train aa a graduate from tha
A rm y’e Commend and General Stall College at Fort Leavenworth,
Kansas. H a Praaident graduated from Um same college 26 years ago.

S to ck sip w ith p le n ty o f R C fo r rite h o R d a y w e e k e n d

TOO,/

where m r

w ufioear

COME BACK HERE/... HELP
MI.' YOU'RE UNDER MV
. tm t.. YOU CAN'T 6 0/

A§ JUZBEAU SFF
the ary. atom*

CONCH-LAE SMU.
OhhhfMv tort

Bernard BernsonReady To Observe 90th Birthday

Uvea Ilka a ltth century gentleman
with a loth century outlook.
Ha works daily on a new edition
of hi* “ Italian Painter* of the
Renaluance” and maintain* a
lively interest in world events. 11a
corresponds with friend* all over
the world, Hia visitors range from
young aludenta to the less accessi­
ble of tha world's great.

**A doctor itudiea for nine years,
a lawyer for five, all protessioni
—and some wa never even consid­
ered as professions—require lime
spent in learning—except artists.
Men now seem to thing tint all
they need to do la alap a brushful
of paint across a canvas, glVa it
a fanciful UUa and run to a dealer
Hurricane* ere most apt to oc­
to sell It. That is not art. Where cur In September, although there
la the technique?"
are many of them in othar months.
Here in bis beautiful 4ft-room
What of postwar writer* and house, surrounded by devoted Californio has added more than
friends and servants and a collar- 1-3 million Inhabitants to Its pop-’
pa Inters?
“ Inspiration through dissipation tiod of art treasures, Bareaaoa
seems to bn the modern motto.
1 doat' kka H."
Bareaaoa biaaaelf la n devotee at
artiste end actors he baa mat to
recent yearn, be went ea:

ea a whole and not aa atngta,
nationalistic states.
“ ! am not Ilka anma Ameri­
cans whe bacon* patridietlc—that
word I Mined—about acme UUla
part of Europe. They develop an
•itrame patstoe far tome little
spot apd can see no other. Of
course, t love Maty, hut I love H
aa a European and as an Ameri­
can. Because 1 am bait, X lorn
all of Europe."

**•*•*• • »W n *• ren acres* families where TV and radio
wmaHwow reason*—oom* a problem. AeartiMat-dwaR.
,ln* u u mnlag,u*# ef TV ond
K r_3*5“ *
M oooular aa a tomcat *r a heck fence. FemU

Fishiag License — Fisfiinj

assfe

gb—dahana
r o cemactiaaa.
.* ta r J l s„“irA
*3 !)iL lr jr s f 7*t
■

v .M U lM d W W w A r
IW floa ln f July: 1st, IM S

J tiS i

• ■ ■: .

• ’

?v*

■

f

»l* VdynlJ/V 1
#t*r«l, ‘ ■ /i*J
ft*

^ T b a me ef headphone connactions will .allow, one ap mem
dtoeaere'aa operate e receiver without disturbing etUra la the
t o y m o . to nlea allow a liotoser with JmeZ^dtorartM. t#

npalaynl
to M o d i
iitoftnlr

'| M i Ka d W eola ie no Cvdy, aa
Raaty. a# completely flavorfu). Na
tofar ask la aa m m k fan to it t ik !
Nc attar.' t m Fnurtli put RC fin t oa yoar
I UtRto r n ; A s p fiif laod. And p t a gooj supply.'

fj

�Business Leader,
75, Not Thinking
01 Retirement
MIDDLETOWN. Ohio. &lt; *- H
usually tisuras that a man racdj
to observe his 7Mh birthday, and
who has risen from a $2 a wecl
office boy to become one ol the
nation's leaders In his bu-tnei* l&gt;
beginning to think about retire
ment.
But that sort of figuring doc*
not apply ti&gt; Charles R. Hook,
chairman of the board of the Arm.
co Steel Corp.. who will be 75 on
July ’ 2.
Hook, whose energy and appear­
ance belie his 75 years and the
fact he has worked to make his
own way ever since he was a stu­
dent In Cincinnati’s Walnut Hills
High School, chuckled when asked
If he had any thoughts of retlreInC,Not at long as the board (of
Armco&gt; wants me to stay, he
•aid “ and to far they have indicat
e&lt;t they want me here And be
aides, too often a man loses his en
ergy and his Interest in life when
he retired."
.
There certainly is no indication
of any decline in Charles Hook s
" t o * addition to hit duties with
Armco. he is a director of several
other corporations. active , ln. ,®0&gt;
Scout work the Jun.or Achevc
ment youth program, the Nation^
Council of Churches of t hrts» in
the U S A . the National Assn of
Manufacturers and other business
and engineering groups. Since 10
v.e has had almost a continuous
record'd service with various gov­
ernment agencies covering indus­
try. labor-management problems,
wartime slcel production and for­
eign industrial problems
At present, he is working as
chairman of the committee on bus­
iness organisation of the Depart­
ment of Defease for the Hoover
Commission.
Onlv a few weeks ago. the Iron
•rid Steel Institute honored him
for outstanding contributions to the
steel industry.
„ .,
..
The atory of Charles Hook s rise
from office boy In a tinplate plant
to hi* position as one of the leaders
In the atel Industry, is also that of
Armco. a firm which b» rel&gt; "**
slaying ahead of the sheriffJ&gt;nd Utmpaid bills when he joined it In
1B|t now la the nation’ * seventh
largest producer of steel with 30,ooo employes scattered over the

* H™k took that offiee boy’a job
in 1SW—and uted his first money
to take a correspondence our**
In engineering. The company—the
Cincinnati Rolling Mill and Tin
plate Co.—wa* taken over by the
American Tinplate Co. Hook
worked for that firm In Chicago
and New York and then, at hi* own
urging, went to work in Its ateel
mill at Gai City. Ind.
Then eame an offer to Join Armeo, e struggling litUe concern with
only m employe*. He received
|100 e month as a night tuperin-

B y -ftic k

Reapportionment
Compromise Plan
Being Prepared

t u t X uu ap u aijn e jo qm qr or q u a
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; j * j ; * u i v s * o a -mouh j.u op i „
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.f u iu * r * u ui.i *rq9u tty..
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a j.n u t a jjq w t . l t q j , .
Mill op 111)1 I.u ts 1 ftq oa rou MON ■auou ‘a.ua. afi 'JOJ not qoo|
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t joj ta u ou i ja q a .v tf i -aoutp
p u t ajn ttaS aqr m m
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ru ju ioui aqr t* m a 'q j t a t Iiq U|
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aqr a.vtq l.u p ’ H aq pu* 'q o n o| ft;i
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p a d d ijg ttn f p,*q J*qt*q.w jo ‘tt am •t| T3"t q m u i p tq JtAtU p.aq m q
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p jt A u a a t a m t ra.vau its* a n
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j.. pajw p t j ja v f
or auios|ajw uo qoot aqr pajaqiuatuaj Xjj.&gt;&gt;|
m t t t a x “ I M|t tp o q .fu * n*AV..
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n o t p in '«J * a t A'lUawi |?b | am
joj ituiop ua.-i a.v.l ai|i| Tt agpuaq
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reqr qn.w a iq n o ji a' us uo f u u n f q
I usb w JndR u a q o jg not p|o| [
j je w a Sub i n dn Jtr*—op or Sui.vu
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‘ jitnbq aq i jo pvajia aqt uaaq
pBt| rt pappiap aq
os Pac.B.1
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pauai)OB aja.w «ajnilia| auiujuiva
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It ruauimu b j o j -iuiq ta.vo Sui
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p a q a a n tpiB|d vnojaqunaJI v
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t j f u t aja.w a ia q x Jt»aui a st.w aanj
ttq .waiiq aq piq ^ iq itt o d r t paw
.a dn J|a.ui|q paUVap p tq a||

sjaa d mqt
•tmtput a .,M|| rn aqi ppioa aq a ju o
j o j |tqi adnq i . u ib S u padnq aq piq
‘dn ||n* bum q o n Avnuq put ‘ Su|
•iunq dtUB| aqi uaaa puq aq Mop
•ut.w aqr q S iu u q x ‘atnoq aqr o|u|
t | « i 0 |rnnj liaeiup) rai .uiH H M

3NIN 1I3X.IV IU

A MtlPINC HAND Is given by Sister Josephine ft.irr. of O r a n g e v i l l e ,
Ontario, C«n.iil», whose deft lingers translate n seiimrn from ear­
phone into slpn language for the ilr.-if. This gracious net tqnk place
at the convention of Jehovah's Witnesiiea In Chicago. (International)
I a’

t*

r) :^ r i

yV

Y O U W IN EVERY D A Y ....
W H EN Y O U SHOP THE TIP
&lt;JA. nr F L A . f i K A i m

PRftlOINT IIIINHOWIR Is shown
•a be spoke at the dedication
rrremonlet for the Armed Porree
Institute of Pathology at the
Walter Heed Hospital In Wash­
ington. D.C. The President dedi­
cated-the structure to the con­
quest of disease that mankind
ran advance more surely toward
world peare. The new building la
equipped with the latest research
faculties.
(Jnternallonalj
D e te r io r a t io n

T»n
'iDmnuq |« joani •«!! j"j
j
*4#t( U tJ Uk|»IO|l|
JU» »
t|&lt;jn ft i»*u 4
*4 L J J V* J uiir

E d u c a tio n

O f

R ap p ed

B y P s y c h o lo g is t
l.OS ANC.ELES IP — A Stan
ford p-ychnloglst today charged
that education in the lavl decade
has deteriorated despite more
•|4t|5
*Jn l'» tfnBx»q k’-to u *"* public Interest, more money spent
•M«n u ri awh»»
;•&gt; tuin tm o.ui and m.-vc teachers.
•tkjifd «uii|UU|&gt; uo j;o Ui|«x i.tviu utoito
In an address prepared for the
Xo&lt;| M|| tn Xitdia |t'.i4i « hr « 4it*|| jun
‘tjfflait tuitj
• ojui innq jtktj convention of Ihe American Assn,
X4'*||t|« i* MU* itJrt uvioJil jo 1U4UI
of University Women. Dr. l.nis M.
•tEva mu tin ItAfi **(«i T # t |0 1
J»t|iU»l htl|j&lt;VJt|9|»a 41*11 fit* ‘ Aott
Stol/ laid much of the blame on
■
# |n-»k p | D O * UV|&lt;Jo|)| * l l i j |
nog
wliat she called ''authoritarian­
-J»|fOj *|q pa,loq p * q .(Joqvjy q n y
ism.'" She listed nlher causes
c is j o n m
as ''inflation and population intliown in 1U remarkable ilrike-lree despite the development of aubsti- new product*,'' ho said. “ Steel goes creases "
However, she spoke bluntly on
into everything either dirertly or
history.
tutc products.
And this veteran of the ateel In­
"The history of the ateel indus­ indirectly and It is the cheapest the “ advent of authoritarianism
in the life of nur nation ”
dustry la optimistic about ita future try la shown in its development of product yuu can buy.
tl jII-'I'M* |Dj|mAI|i|

j &gt;UV|i ID-'O| *

if

J||||||P#UI |' &lt;UJ 1 •- Jk to i d l l t l fa*;to •»*■ Ik

Vj|4k|tutiuq |JUt e 1 (I 4&gt;| bV Js»inUa 1|
J»u»| S&gt;1|| uo )«tu Ol ui\ft(| |'«4
•UiltoJ JOJ ‘ |MUA|I t'lfll Euoi |&gt;LL| » -Jt «l||
UI kmnoit ’jtfttiujM i»*C&gt;
it«• *uojD
-U11J ktiA«A\ o| uoi)it»))» 4&gt;t| p*uin|
|iki| puv AJJkji laid* uaijojq pki4 tit

*

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Stan

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tmdeat

Armco grew by developing prod•cti which were not common in
the ateel industry. It hooked up
with Weetlnghouse by developing
a batter electrical steel It devel­
oped n new fence wire end began
—aMac mire pig trim. It created
the eeWaBUPO* mtefeod of rolling
ctect
. .
ft* yw trw to the labor rela­
tione laid got a Mg boost when
Hook tetkwd the union Into naming
M employe representative com­
mittee to meet with him to discuss
their mutual problem*.
It leek two delta from the anion
vieo pooaldeut before the men
would agree to ouch an unheard
thing of having a company superbstandewt appear at a union meet­
ing.
“ Wo lait, ttougb," Hook said,
“ that Ike men would understand
Management's problems better and
we'd understand their problems.
«H woa easy to show them that
If we tap! each other Informed wc
could do n hotter Job and there
wauM ht more money and mere
Jobe tor n l ol to ."
l t o enceaai of Armco’* plan

TOURNEY OPENS
KNOXVILLE. Tcnn. OP - Tha
second 18-hole qualifying round of
the National Collegiate NCAA
Coif Tournament got under way
here today with hopefuls taking
aim at the amailng slx-under-par
TALLAHASSEE i.r-A 10-man f&gt;6 irl yesterday hv University of
conference c o m m i t t e e which I owa sophomore John MarschaU.
slatted to work in a spirit of op­
timism said It hoped tc. have a
compromivo reapportionment plan pie on an emergency constitutional
ready for consideration when the amendment increasing the num­
l-oCislaturc rciurns t.iii afternoon. ber of senators from M to so.
The plan also called for increai*
The committee wa« as-uned the
Job of trying to work out a plan ing the number of House lasts
which would break the deadlock from 95 to 13S and provided that
between Senate and Home and in 1963 the Legislature by a bill
bring an end to a cost], special or resolution could increase the
session now more than three number of Senat* seats to 67.
Johnson and Rep. Dickinson af
weeks old.
When it began its merting last Palm Reach County said it was
night behind dosed doors, the coni mcoming increasingly evident that
UHI before
Uiiuir it a
m proposal
iiuyu^. the
. . . . deadlock
____ ___ would have to he
mittee had
by Sen. Johnson of Quincy calling broken with a constitutional amendfor an immediate vole o. Ihe peo- ment proposal.

S u m er

fpaniiUHOd *g »X)

THE SANFORD HERALD
&gt;\ed. June 29. 1935 rage 9

6 CAN
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99'

15c

NO. 2 '/j

PORK &amp; BEANS

Meal or Grits
Fancy Blue Rose
DEL MONTE FRUIT

6 OZ.

1V4 i-n s .

s MIS.

17c
39c

U. S. NO. 1

Cocktail

25c POTATOES’0.35c

WE ARE NOW AIR CONDITIONED
FOR YOUR SHOPPING COMFORT

i m, Cm* pk* * *a a. aw ptw* taFt**, MIcMbba. »*• C*.iT»t.Oh*a*. *
O n i . i w a H r t i i W « a t o m y t o h W y n w o — a n d uBlI

BTEAUNG THE THUNDER FROM THE HIGH-PRICED CARS!

T/P

LAKELAND

HOLLER MOTOR SALES

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C l ft TS

. 'M M ( D

ItW M I

�H o o v e r G ro u p

TIH! RANFORD HERALD
Page 10 Wed. Jon* 20, 195S

E x p ir e s T o m o r r o w

WASHINGTON or— Fur former ough study any government ever improvement _everywhere. ^
J t i l : , i i r r h e r t H o o v e r the U»t hid.
They turned up the fact thil the
n_ rhalrman
of. nation ha* commitment* and other
public service i* done
. Hoover'* eflort*
,
, ..
On Thursdav, June 30 the Hoover; the Commission on Organization of obligations of 240 billion dollar*
Commission, implacable foe of sov- the Executive Branch of the Gov. above and beyond the 277 billions
rmmcnl watie and bungling, will; ernment hava not been an unquali- technically included in public debt.
While many of the commission's
eaplre. Thrn Hoover, its rhurm in, fieri luccess.
lor eight years. at »1 and with 41! In some plates. Hoover Corn- recommendations will never again
years of almo-t constant public mission ivcommendations have see the light of day, Hoover can
aervico behind him. wilt rrlira to bten greeted w.th complacence and say there has been considerable
private life
inertia: in other* with suspicion improvement in day-to-day effici.
The 31st president leaves for eon- and hostility. ITvere i»n t even ency.
For his efforts Hoover has been
aidcration by lire public, t oppress; ayreement on the commission itaccused of trying to turn back the
nd the President some two million] telf.
clock to pre New Deal days fhen
.
tin
n i l i n n 't
d iU ’w rB .
1.1 any rase, teams of eommis
l.s
facts
about tthe
nation's govern
ment, cleaned in the most thor- non inve.tigalor* found room fori the function of government was
.

conceived to be *o preserve order,
provide defense and atay out of the
private butlnesi of Its citizens.
One great trouble with the pres*
ent government, he says, is that
the men in the top civil service
Jobs "sre not good enough—they
got there by seniority and red
tape.”
That doesn’t mean, he says, that
they should be eliminated. But they
should be moved to jobs more com­
mensurate with their abilities.
Hoover thinkr there are about
S OOO managerial Jobs in the government which should contain

promise of “ prestige and advance­
HE’ S A
ment" and which should be filled
above a certain grade on tho bails
FEARLESS
of merit.
It was Sept. 29, 1947, that Hoover
took over the first commission,
FELLA’
organized under President Truman
to check government efficiency.
The second commission formed un­
der President Eisenhower, had the
added Job of looking Into policy
fields and decisions.
The commission figures about 70
per cent of its recommendations
for improving government efficien­
cy have been accepted In some
degree or completely. At present
there are some 26 bills baaed on
commission studies before Con­
gress.
ew.osj:
When the first commission went
to work, there were 75 separate
bureaus with authority in the field
of transportation. t04 on govern­
w ith a
ment lending. 37 In foreign trade,
64 dealing with business relations,
Faithful
22 with insurant" and 44 with agricultura. Consolidations, in whole
Fricndor in part, have been effected In
all.
Congress and the present ad­
ministration both have shown a
curious indifference to recommen­
dations of the second commission.
fleccommcndations for turning
Keep your oyo open
the parcel post service over to
private enterprise, 'o liquidate the
for a junior version of
postal savings system, • to close
America's favorite here]
down military dry-cleaning plants,
to close down post exchanges and
commissaries where they clmpote
with private enterprise have been
greeted with almost total silence.
co m in g soon
Proposals to shut down the TVA'S
[v
|u
fertilizer plant and to seh the gov
ernment’s 286-plant “ industrial re­
P W A lt DISNIY'S
serve" have become involved In
enormous controversy. So has the
recommendation to curtail the ru­
TWO SOVtrr MIO-TYri HOHTIRJ attacked and set Arc to a U. S. Navy
ral electrification program.
Neptune patrol plena (of the type shown at top) which was cruising
comic strip
Perhaps one of its most Important
over Internationa) waters between Alaska and Siberia, Uie U. S.
achievements was the revision of Government announced. The plane was forced to crash-land on Use
In tho
the government's system of budget­ tip of St Lawrence Island, about 40 mile* from Russian Siberia.
Seven of the eleven crewmen on tho American plane were Injured.
ing snd accounting and an amended
Four of the airmen are: Ensign David G. Assart (top, left), navi­
unification law for l^o armed serv­
ices to give the secretary of de­ gator, Terryville, Calif.; Aviation Technician Edward Benko (top,
fense authority to issue direct or­ right), Chicago, 111.; Lt. Richard IL Fischer (bottom, left), pilot,
Pa., and Lt. David M. Lockhart (bottom, right), pilot,
ders, instead of merely advising Pittsburgh,
Alameda, Calif, president Elsenhower was said Is feel that the
the President that he do so.
shooting down of the American plane by Soviet MIGi need not etuse
The commission can pinpoint $1,- any complications for the Geneva Dig Four meeting next month.1
244,OM 000 in savings, though its
hopes to save more were shattered
Although strand* of dogwood
hy the cold war and the Korean
are classed as splsshes of beauty
War.
by many nature lovers, the trees
Yes! Dividend* from 15-35?* oh
In some countries where salt Is are regarded as a pest by forestry
Fire-Wind-Homeownera
Insurance
scarce, bars of it itill are used as experts.

I I ’L DAVY

New York City's
Explorers Club
Is Unique Place
NEW YORK, (iT)— On* night
about four year* ago thieve*
broke Into the Explorer! Llub In
Manhattan, picked their way past
rara tusks, fossils, war drums,
anakc skins, spears and arrow*,
and swiped the club's least valued
possession—its television set.
Had the thieves tried they might
have gotten the set just by lik ­
ing. Nobody watched it, anyway.
Nobody bas misted it since Theic
It no thought to replace It.
Such indifference In civiliration'a newest escape hatch i&lt; quite
understandable. The Explorers
Club la one place that hi* no need
ef canned entertainment, souped
■p, synthetic adventure or vlrarleus living. These boys live what
the rest of us read and dream
about.
Members hive earned the eltib
flag 24.000 fret up the Himalayas,
3,000 feet under tha ocean in a
bathysphere, over both pole*,
across every desert, into every
Jungle, and on the soil of every
■ation of the world.

II’L DAVY

MICKEY MOUSE.

SANFORD
HERALD

PglftV MNtrm Jawahartal Nehru of India and
F’rtmisr Nikolai A. Bulganin (right) of the Govlet
Union alga a Joint statement in Moaeov declaring
their mutual alma. Directly behind Nehru la hia
daughter, lira. Indira Gandhi, who accompanied
her father an hit 13-day visit to Russia. In Urn
Robert K. Peary, Adm. Richard
E. Byrd, Theodora Roosevelt, Sir
Edmund ' Hillary. Bern! Balcbon,
Boy Chapman Andzwws, Sir Hubert
Wilkins, William Beebe, Lowell
Thomas,; Vihjslinur Slefansson,
Thor Heyerdahl, CapL Bob Bart*
lalt, Hugo Kckener, l.inrolu Klla

If man's first expedition to tbe|*orth, Halt Henson and Peter
znoon reach"* there without an Fmichcn.
Kaplorti* Club flag, j aifa. Might
Farmed la ipo* to promote telshock tha nirmberihty" lirte’ w enUfie exploration and to give ex­
year's mourning. Their flag al­ plorers both a social and profes­
ready has soared higher than any sional clearing house, the club now
human, having travelled 216 milts has nearly 1,000 membera and as­
abova tha earth In a V2 rocket.
sociate members. Among them you
In all, the club Bag has traveled can meet auch colorful rovers as
an more than 170 expeditions tn Pater Vieuchen, Arnold If. Hav* Half century—all duly rtrordrd »rela and Chief of Clannfhcarghuwith lacks on a big map in the la.
clubhouse. At this writing, there
Frrucheu. lisa old arctic travel­
are seven flagbeartng expeditions ler, 1s a big, husky man with an
in the field.
impressive beard, a peg leg and
Prints Peter of Greece and a blunt, grulf manner toward
Denmark is studying tha distri­ younger explorer* who rom« back
bution of races along tha border with Mini In which they can't
of Tibet, I-ouis AgaUion is In Identify every list animal.
Alaska looking for a male to a
Yean ago up in Hudson's Bay,
rara type ef white bear be caught
previously. EifU Knuth Is mapp­ fatigue overcame Preucben and
ing the northern part ef “ Peary he fell kaleep in a snow storm.
l&lt;endM In Greenland, and othara Awakening, he found his left foot
are In the north Australian Jung­ frozen tad gangrene moving In.
le India, tha tipper Artie gnd the Freuchea removed his own toes
with pllan end a hammer. Later,
Tlbcitl Mountains cfiAfrlaa.
The club’s roster of past and a doctor amputated the foot at the
present member* Includes Adm. ankle. It haa not hurt Freucben’s
eensa ef humor.
Ifaverlee. an expert on Lapland
■ad a far from melancholy Dane,
is lha devilish expert who has made
some of tha club'* dinner menus
famous for their eccentricity. He'a
th« man who drglaes auch hors
d'oucvraa as R f P katanga 4*rmiles, fresh atligitor eggs or “ Koo
Tiki specials’' composed of assort'
«d raw shirk, tuna, octopus and
tea 'snake,

CHOOSE &amp; USE

A
W M B U ftjU U
PAINTS 0

In 1322 Colors

THE COLOR YOU WANT
WHEN YOU W A N T IT
IN ALL FINISHES.

SANFORD
P A I N T COm?

w. ro a r RT.
FREE PARKING

WELL DRILLING
Howard C. L oa f
Phono
in a.

388

dormant, the two Hattons catted for peaceful satis­
faction of Communist China's "legitimate rights*
In regard to Formosa, admission of Red Chine to
the U.N, and other points on which both nations
have previously taken similar stands. Later, Nehru
left for Europe. _. f lateral HoneI KndlophotoJ

Special Films Can
Look Inside Atoms
R O C H E S T E R , N.Y. M V - In the universe.
This Is tho homo of eyes that can
They can in effect look inside
see the smallest -nd farthest tilings atoms. They can see distant milky

Such things are not entirely a
gag. Apparently an explorer will
laate anything recommended by
another explorer. Thus recent
tasters at tha club sampled fried
ants from the Belgian Congo,
hakad worms. from Mexico and
fried grasshoppers from Japan.
Thera wars no casualties.
Chief of dannfhcarghuis, ■ map
maker, who la said to be descended
from 171 Scottish kings, Including
Macbeth, favors, kilts and a thin,
waxey mustache. A veteran of
Khyber Pass and other bloody en­
gagements in India, the chief la
an outspoken toe of hunter* who
hunt purely for sport.
On* of the club’s most valued
possessions—for which It would
gladly trade 1.0M TV sets—has
Men mysteriously missing recent­
ly. This was a dinosaur egg, one
of few brought back from outer
.Mongolia by Roy Chapman An
draws. But there’s still much to
see:
The tusk ef ■ -mammoth, 54,000
year-old ancestor of lha elephant;
the skin or an anacoodt snake,
shot in Brasil, hanging 30 feet
from celling to floor; the hell from
the cutter which carried Adm. Byrd
to tha Botuh Felt; an ancient ta­
ble In the library whieh la said to
have been owned 600 yean ego
by Prince Henry of Portugal (it
wna tha chief who acquired tha
table but, as to how, he remained
silent beyond the single comment,
“ I’m probably related to the origi­
nal owners, anyway ")
Out In the main room, In a spa­
tial case reserved for their dearest
possessions, the explorers main
solera parrot, who used to be* the
club’e mascot Tha bird, who
died of a cold caught from
ef the club's windier members, re­
putedly could swear la tight ar
ten templates.

waya or galaxies containing bil­
lions of stars, snd they can see
strange markings on nearby plan­
ets.
These ryes are telling scientists
things which may someday change
your world or your way of life.
Tho eyes are special films, or
photographic plates, able to see
and record things the human eye
could never perceive.
Making them ia primarily a sera
Ice to science by Eastman Kodak
Co. Sevaral thousand dozen of the
films or plates go each year to
atomic scientists, physicists and
astronomers from the department
beaded by Dr. John Spence. Some
plates or films ar* custom mad*
to mett the special needs of sci­
entists for soma particular bit ef
research.
One main kind of eye is the nu­
clear film or emulsion, one of the
principal scientific tools to explore
the inside* ef atoms. These are

SAVING IN COST

currency.

lar Identifying footprint through
the emulsion.
These emulsions are sent aloft
in high altitude balloons, or placed
near the target end of atom smash­
ing machines which fire atomic
bullets into other atoms at nearly
the speed of light. The films re­
cord whatever comes out of these
atomic explosions, to add to knowl­
edge of what atoms are made of,
Special films or plates for as­
tronomy—103 different types—ere
exploring the universe as the eyes
tor telescopes. Astronomers need,
films which under the conditions
of exposure are much more sendlive than ordinary film to gather
ji distant starlight, and to record
galazies millions of tight jreari
away. A light year Is the distance
light travels In a year, at a speed
of 136,000 miles per second.
For soma studies, they use films
sensitive Just to certain color* ef
light, or mainly aensitlva to cer­
tain color*. Special infra-rad plate*
can capture starlight that elude*
ordinary plate*.
Spectroscopic film* help tell what
stars are made of, by recording
the light from the different
chemical elements which make up
star*.

hstping to answer auch questions

as what ere eosmic rays, and what
holds the nucleus ef an atom to­
gether, i
Cosmic rays; mesons and the
protons found tn the cores of atoms
are much too tiny over to hava
thrir pictures taken. But tha
dal films captor* their footprints
to tell what happens when bite of
atoms smash Into lha cores of
atoms, or collide with other bits of
atoms.
tn the nuclear emulsions, speed­
ing atomic particles leave their
own Identifying trail by striking
and altering the silver halide
grains. When tho film is developed,
tber* is e trail or track of the
electron or proton or meson or oth­
er particle which
through the emulsion, Koch
Each type
of atomic particle team a partial-

BARGAIN!
S M

iw h

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m

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a e w o o A I Y e a n OM.

Thin h*M haa Oak noon,
Coraatic TUo ffofh, Dialac
Ana, Largo Liviag Room
tad Kltchoa Rgalggod with
G. R

Telenheae lit after • P. It
fee

MIMEOGRAPH PRINTING - TYPING
CREDIT INVESTIGATIONS MAM
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FOREIGN COUNTRIES

CREDIT BUREAU OF SANFORD

B O Y D -W A L L A C E

When he first was a candidate
for the Virginia House o f Burges,
ses, George Washington was de­
feated.

.

TOUR

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Tha United Statea use* more
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WADES
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2806 PARK A V E .-G U A N ITY RIGHTS RESERVED

We Specialize In Q u ality M eats
FLA. or GA. GRADE A— DAD

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LBS.
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PEANUT BUTTER 18 ox. Jar 49c
*303 Can 19c
GARDEN PEAS
80 Count
PAPER NAPKINS
10c
VIENNA SAUSAGE &amp; 2 •* 29c
UPTON TEA
}A Ik Pkg. 3 5 C
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-6

THE OLD HOME TOWN

r ^ i w u x VMwtomo

By STANLEY

DAILY CROS SWORD

Innerspring Mattress. Box Spring
W. IL "B B T STEMFEE
It’s Worth Advertising In
and Beautiful Headboard $15.50
■ Realtor — General Insurance
2 Pc. Sectional Sofa PLUS Cor­
Gertrude B. Dtagfrider Assoclala
ner Tilde........... .......... $149.95
Phone 2122
112 N. Park Ave.
Dsy or Nighter Sofa. Platform
Rocker. TV Chair (choice of
LOWELL E. OZIER
covering.) ........... ........ *99.50
Builder - Phene 1J5»
ECHOLS BEDDING CO.
Custom Homes and Florida
Builder low eost homes
Corner 2nd A Magnolia Ph. 1232
"Bod” Bamberger, Mgr.
Since I5t'j We Have Built in San*
Open Monday tfi » p. m.
ford Homes for over l.ono peo­
ple! We have the home for you
—In Wynne wood — or Dream wold 5e«ing Machines, and Repairing
—Loch Arbor, 3 and 4 bedrooms, BERT'S 1M 8. Park Phone 1762.
1 A ? Baths, Large Lots, Full
FIT FOR A QUEENTile Baths —Large Kitchens —
Screened porches — Gar ace or Foam Rubber Mattresses, InnerS p r i n g Mattresses, Couches.
Carports. Best Possible Finan­
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cing No Down Payment Clos­
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ing Costs Only.

ACROSS

DOWN
1. A liquid
to apply
northern
to the skin
Scandi­
2 Beard
navia
6 Greek poet
3. A fastener
11. Bay window 4. Wooden pine
5 Smooth
12. Rub out .
anil shtny
13. Slight color
6 Cut. as
J4. Young
wood
woman
7. Com
13 Fart of
ISwed t
"to be"
8. A cloak
16 Stitch
ISp. Am.)
18 Chinese
9 Fire
ptgode
10 Restate
19 A Sioux
old
Indian
argu­
living in
ments
Musourl
IT. Charming
51 Abducts
20. Gold (Her.)
54- AramaUr
plant
V Born
A.
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27. Whit ?
28, Ascrmts
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33. Volcanle
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37. Huts (Am.
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Phene M4-J.

Phone ISM
Sales Office on corner Osceola Dr Good used inner tubes 66c. Good
far s w i m tubes. Firestone
and Mohawk Ave in Dreamwold.
Stares. I ll E. 1st St.
WKLAKA APARTMENTS: rooms,
prlvata baths. U« W. First St.

St

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Aluminum
Phone 112&gt; * A. B. Petenon,Broker
Vcsetlmn Blinds
RoQaway and Baby Beds
Associates - A B. Peterson Jr..
P. J. Chesterson. Garfield Wil- Enclosed h u d. Sag-proof bottom
Day, Week or month—TeL 1423.
rail with pteetic ends. Plastic or
f l r s l t i n Caster 111 West First j IttU. John Meisch. R, W. Wilrayon tapes. Cotton or nylon
llama. A C. Doudney, Land Sur­
cords.
Avalon Apia. Efficiency. Phone
veyor.
__________
Senkmrik Glass sad Pslnt Co.
425.
Phone 32*
Oiler - Weller Romes, Inc. 112-114 West 2nd St
BURNISHED Apartment. 500 Park
General Contracting
• Commercial—Custom m Low •1 VARIETIES PANELING
Ave.__________________
Cost Homes _
Native and Foreign Woods.
Burnished Kitchenette apta. Air isaa Mellonvilla Ave. Phase 1991
See Them At
Conditioned. Slumberlana Court.
South City limits Highway 17 92. Three bedrooms, screened porch, Shaman Concrete Pips Co.
two lots with trees, garage. An
S Bedroom Home. H Block from I older home but the price Is only Ont West 13th SL
Phone : « l
Soulhslde
Call 2541.
I $6950 with terms.
IWWUlnww school.
____
Used furniture, appliances, tools,
ate. Bought-sold. Larry's Mart.
BEE Seminole Beatty for Deslr- R obert " a " W ilii.—
121 East 1st SL Phone 1631.
■ b » Horn., .nd A ,u . P I ,.,. n .
S S S S f
BIJ.
Phone 1673 Atlantic Bank Bldg.
BURNISHED
ApL
Phono
432-W,
$
Console Radio with Automatic
FOR SALE - 3 Bedroom Home.
Record Player 119.55. Firestone 1#A HELP WANTED ( fe m a le ) H it
COOL— S Room Furnished Apart'
Vi Block from South Side school.
Stores. Ill E. 1st St.
ment. Front and back screened
Call 2541.
DISTRICT MANA’GER
porches- Garage. Take one
Woman, aggresive, well-groomMETAL ROOFING
child. No Pets. 606 Palmetto Whether baying or telling, tt will
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Now In Stock. S-V Crimp —1U "
pay you to see:
Ave. Shown by appointment
ledge and experience in recruit­
Corrugated— 2V»” Corrugated.
'J.* W. HALL, REALTOR
Phone 276-J.___________
ing, training and managing
Get all Your roofing needs at
Florida State Bank Building
women in direct selling work.
Burnished cottage for couple, or ‘ Cell llall
Phone 173 Sherman Concrete Pips Co.
$5,000
—*8.000 yearly income powith baby. »14 Elm Avenue.
Out West 13th SL
Phone 2489
tential
National organization
COUNTRY
HOME!
S Bedroom furnished house. Mo oo 12 Bedrooms, furnished, good wa
wilh modern merchandize me­
Hundreds
at
Misc.
Items
on
our
per month. Phone 999 or 743-W.
thods. Car essential. Wire rnlter. all modern conveniences,
close out tables at very—very
after 6:00 p. m._________
lecL giving name, address,
situated on approx, one acre of
low prices. Firestone Stores.
phone number to T. N. Rogers
good high land. 5 miles west
S bedroom house, nicely furnished.
I ll E. 1st St.
Empire C r a f t s Corporation
of Sanford, total price is only
Porch, carporte and large lawn.
Newark. New York Slate. Sc.
$4,600.00, with terms.
Longwood, J. R. Grant, Call
lected applications will bo in­
AIR CONDITIONING
terviewed immediately.
Room or House
H. R POPE CO* INC.
T. W. MERO
W. DIETRICHS
WANTED — Lady with Grocery
SMlh Park Ave. Phene 144#
Phone ST
INI Perk Avcnse
experience. To work in store in
Sanford. I’ lcase answer this ad
LARGE, Clean Apartment. Down‘
"" —
-----------Very
good
used
bike
*29.00,
Fire­
stairs. Small one, $35.00 611 RAYMOND M. BALL. BBOKRR
in your own handwriting stat­
stone Store. Ill E. 1st St.
Park Ave.____________________
8- D. Uighleyrasa, Associate
ing age, education and refer• - - 204 South Park Ave.
Phone M0
enccs. Reply to Sanford Herald,
SUPER DUI'ER SPECIALS Box A. B.
Apartment, 2 rooms completely
*750.00
DOWN
For Friday A Saturday
furnished. 1400 Park Avenue.
2 Bedroom House. Beautiful loca­ Ladies rayon A cotton slips.. .59 ••*20 00 Dally, Sell Luminous Door
NICE Bedroom, Private entrance
tion. Hardwood floors, Eleetric Dresses, values to 8.95 ........ 1.00
Plater. Write Reeves. Attle­
and bath. Phone 2029-W.
Kitchen, Ceramic Bath. Price— Children's ssndels all sizes 69c pr
boro, Mass. Free Sample A
$9 650.
Details."
Girl's
playsulls
sites
6-10
..
.69
S Room ApL 200 Avecado.
For yo«r Beal Estate needs:
Men's shirts, full cut ............... 95
Any thing you buy in our store is LADIEF — Spare time ran he
dollar time when you're busy
a real bargain.
selling Avon Cosmetic*. Open­
The Bargain Center.
ings (or sincere women. Mrs.
1105 W. 20th SL 2 bedroom furu- 2 Bed Boom House. Kitchen fur­
30T Sanford Ave
Juanita
Russell, I’ . O. Box 975,
niture, space heater, Venetian
nished home. *95 monthly. 2101
Orlando
b l i n d s ; Hardwood floors-tile 1951 Mustang motorcycle. Good
Meg. furnished 2 bedroom apt.
condition. Phone 241T-J-3.
bath: Low down payment. Call
$55. monthly. Also 1 bedroom
WANTED____ —It
nights 1749-M or see at ftlto
furnished apt. $50. monthly.
Foot lockers ............ Spaelal $7.95. HIGH SCHOOL BOY with Power
Ideal for couple — 2 bedroom
Amelia.
Paint .....................
$2.50 gsl.
heme with kitchen • equipment
Mower wants mowing. 1’bone
Al! sizes larpoulins.
3 bedroom home, corner lot, rea­
$65. monthly. Phone 1673.
716-M-4.
ARMY-NAVY
SURPLUS
sonable down payment. Low
Phone 1321 School gIrl wants work. 913 lllemonthly paymenL Ml Rosalia 310 Sanford Ave.
^Bedroom furnished house. Ml
k o jy ^ venue.
_______
Drive,______________________ _
1950 Ford Auto Radio $15.00. Fire­
Mew Masonry 1 bedroom house |g _ SEAL ESTATE WANTED
IS BUSINESS o r r o R TirNITIKS 12
stone Stores. Ill E. 1st St.
in Casselberry. 6*0 per month.
“
Why Ruck
THE CURIOSITY SHOP
Phone Orlando 32196.
FLORIDA PROPERTY DESIR
The Tide?
ED- Direct from owner choice 17-93 at Hiawatha. Used A new
1 rooms furnished apL, Private
Real Estate 615.000 up. What
furniture, antiques, bric-i-brae. LFI will Pre-eot in customer’s
bath. Screened porch. Private
own plans ami specifications.
have you to sell? Business,
Come in end brouse around.
Window exhaust fin,
This "custom" service gives
Homes, Motels. Trailer Courts,
S trance.
eetrieity, Hot 4s Cold water
the builder exactly whit be
Apartments, Hotels. Ranches, New *» H.P. Mitchell air condi­
furnished. Walking distance to
tioners $186.00. Firestone Stores.
wants in a house package that
A c r e a g e , Sub-Divisions, etc.
the Base. Near shopping cen­
I ll E. 1st St.
*
meets the individual require­
Give price, loci lion, descrip­
ter. Phone 1701, nr 2M-W. after
ments of his own locality. It
tion R. RICHIE, 1628 Fig SL,
2
lightweight
Bikes
625.00
Each.
$ p. m., 2471 Palmetto Avenue.
presents an unusual opporluniKenner. La.________;__________
Firestone Store. I ll E. 1st St.
iy (or builder-dealers and quailARTICLES FOR SALE
fled persons interested in be­
FH1LCO refrigerator: good condi­
coming
factory-representatives.
tion. Phone 221S-X-W.
Phone MBWrite Lumber Fabricator*. Inc.,
50th
Anniversary
Fort rsyne, Ala., far complete
YOU don’t hsveto s « t o e credit
I Bedroom Bungalow completely
detain.
furnished. Phone 2322, 313 P a l-1
m*Vriv* on °yp*f GIGANTIC Remetto.
Reg. 3.95 Folding Grills . .1.00
^ 1 TMISCELLANEOUS
=31
I Booms, 112 Elm. 2963-W.
O M g "give
give away.
Reg. 4.95 Jumbo Hassocks
CaP 7U.
225 gH N, Orange Ave. Oritsee*
of Colors
I m m furnished cottage, utilities Beg, $.15Choice
‘A
MeUl
Porch Chairs ... 1JI Used Portable Radio 610.00. Fire­
»» He*flag
Reg. 9.95 9X11
stone Store, lit E. 1st St.
south city limits.
6.50
Linoleum Rugs ..
M. G. HODGES
Baby Bed A Mattress . . . . $14.00
MOUSE — I Bedroom Unfurnish Reg. 10.95 Plastic Covered
Samoa on All Water l’ umps—
7.50 Good Stesaier Trunk ......... 6.50
Cocktail Chalra ..
ed except Kitchen. $50.00 pet
Nice
Utility
Cabinet
:
.
.
.
.
.
12.00
Reg.
27.50
Maple
Chest
Meats/ T/8gL
Dewey McEl
%
of Drawers . . . . . . 19.50 Kitchen Cabinet, as new . . . . 15.00
Single Hollywood Bed Complete Single Bed, Inner Spring . . . . 35.00 ORLANDO Mi
Unde Eves
with Plastic Covered Head- Cabinet Comb. Coffee Table 15.00
Ray. U dU
S Room tmfujnlshed Apartment. I board ..................................29.95 Late Living Room Suite .*... 55no
_ __
Jasiamina |Reg. 11.50 8Pc Dinette Suits
Extra Good, Dinnette Set .. 1600
Private
USED
PLUMBING FIXTURES
190S-M.
|
Choice of Colors .. M M
(Hundreds of other items.)
Ave
Saner Trading Feet
Mather o f Sanford
AFAR
Downstairs. Well
Open Evenings. 17-92 South
www. usrage. Water and
E. It* SL
127
(Phone 2212-R.)
its furnished, fthone 206
Wood Casement W i n d o w s , 4
VENETIAN
BLINDS
FURNISHED 2 Bedroom House. (Nationally Adv. RoUa-Rtad)
lights; fit openings 37 x 50)4 A tom
liil
Close in. I l l West 1st St. Phone
37 x 37: Screens to match. Call
Minufertured Is Sanford
Ssalasls VamsUsa M
Ob ^MJLMjjrfterB!^ £ m.
Phase I
Lora* * bedros* unfurnished ■20 West 3rd at
»m a m
m u m
borne Osteen, an. nas-W-a,
Good Used Gas Range. $19.00 Highest CARR. TRADE-IN prices
ONE Badraon
apartFirestone Stores. Ill E. 1st St.
paid for used furniture Cali 95&gt;.
H $45.00.
water.
Wilson-Malar Furniture Co. i l l
E. 1st SL
M u SUM * room fu n iik ei
Maytag Washers
Binoculars — tt-T. Box 274, Lake
Private entrance " * j f b i
Am
Helen. Fla.
______________
bath. Ooes in. Phoso m i

Seminole Realty

S “t,J

\

*1M f

SPECIALS

ass

40.

14-

SPECIAL SERVICES

tost?

W 4 RosM
SB
Used power mower. I10.M. Firs*
stone Stores. Ill E. 1st St

CONCRETE
Beady Mixed Concrete. Concrete
. Block. Sand. Gravel, Cemest
goncreta Pipe to Meet All Quail-

rty, ■esy-to-feed,&lt; contains
everything normal '
•p malnliin
2?f l BMd

Dog chow at dr v**or* Get

8i«pssa F im Supply
Fhiwe 1:|4M

119 w led IL

Phase 2499

_ Coucret# Pips Cb FOB SALE — one S gated saddle
(M Weal U4b SL
A Buggy horse, bridle, harness
is wash machines, 110DO
Firestone Store 111 E.

IX CONKRETE
Ce.

Tell us whtt you want In
building- materials or lum­
ber and wa'U sea that you
gat it promptly . . . whan
you want It and where you
want IL If you haven't or­
dered lumber or materials
from us lately, why not
call on your next order. Ramember 83 Is where you're
the boss.

—14

MOATS • MOTORS

-II

RANDALL ELECTRIC CO. 15 ft Speed Boat and Teenee Trai­
ler 5150.00. l'honc
1121 or
T V SERVICE CENTER
2!)( J. M. Blythe.

FHA

or Sale — A JtC. regtsUred
Boxer puppies, brindJe and
faun eokr* fix weeks old. Call

HILL LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY YARD
213 W. 3rd SL

83

39 O n e in d if ­
fe r e n t t o f

pleasure'
or p a i n v

43 A
EiblimT
name ( D p

46 Hattt
4 7 . I’ e r m l t I,
49 . M a t u r e
5

%

64

m
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i
SI

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57

IS.

17

it

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u

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m
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4t

41
i

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Com (Peru)

41. Man's
nickname
i i . Greek
leUcr
44. Behold!
45.1’crfcct
48. Kgg-shspcd
objects
ftfl Go away
$1. Chararlrr in
•■Olhcllo1’
( poss )
S3. Ant
63. Suitable for
chewing
tcolloq.

1

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4b

41

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&gt;r

sa

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U. 8 )

HOLIDAY SPECIALS

rinazsdsr

For Remodeling and re palm.
Nothing Down—Small Monthly
Payments

Sherm an Concrete) C o.

Out Weal lllk

Phowe 2489

PLUMBING
Contract and repair work. Free
estimates. R. L. Harvey. JM
Hanford Ave. Phone 162S.

P. M. CAMPBELL

General Contractor
"Homes of Distinction"
Ill-Way 17 93
Phone 1447
Complete TELEVISION SERVICE

on all make* and models.

SANFORD ELECTRIC CO.

116 Magnolia Ave.

Phone 441

For Better I'lumomg
See or Call

I'srd Oulboaril Viator
CLEARANCE
3.6 Horse
JikS.50
Hl'OTT-ATWATEIt
tut
5 Horse SEA-HKE ....
« Horse WIZARD
73 95
115 (HI
7'* Horse MKIHTIRY
7 ', Horse FIRESTONE
129 50
7 ', Horse MERCURY .
100 00
10 Hor»e
100, IK)
Sion-ATW ATER ...
12 Hi.Tie EI.TO
83.50
22 Hnr»e JOHNSON
123.1X1
(Will pull Hkiis 27 Mi'll 1
25 Horse JOHNSON
20300
Headquarters for —Boats, Motors,
Trailers.
Ilow will you swan?
How will sou Trade?
Your old Motor for a
Better grade — KYIMtllDr.!

ROBSON

Sporting

Boutin

Kvinrude Salea A Service
TOI E. 1st St.
Phone 93H

W. J. KING
2606 South Park Fhoaa to

to - FURNITURE- I 'bold Good. Ml

Dragline aerviee, Lakefronts A Bur your Furniture al Berrv'*
ditching Estimates given. Phone
Warehouse Furn., Co , at 901 W.
1st, St. All nationally adv. furGeneva 2(64, Orlando 52304,
jiilure at warehouse prires
Hanford 2221.

MfMBIRt Of TMI ADVANCt OUAtO of the fTovIrt delegation to the
Inth anniversary meeting of Ihn United Nations seem n lilt omfuicri
on their arrival by plane In San Fr.mei.irn Itceatise: (t) No one was',
on hand to meet them; ( 2) the * 100,000 ]|iltitiornur.h mansion
rrnted for the occaiton was not ready. Aftrr considerable confusion,
airport police helped them get to a hotel in San Mateo, Calif. They
received the best accommodations. They were Identified ns Rasxadin,
Cruilia (with briefcase), Mindcv and Kuulikov.
(Intcmalioual)

FLOOR sanding end finishing. gg-RUCCTRICAL SF.BVIfT.i4-n
Cleaning, waatng. Serving Semi­
nole County since 1625. H. M SEE Your Grneral Electric dealer
tor TV and Annlianres.
Gleason. Lake Mery.
____

Hanford Etortrte Co.

Mattress A Box Springs
Renovated
"Free F.stimite”

Ill MagoaUa Ava.

ECHOLS BEDDING CO.
Comer 2nd A Magnolia Ph. ID?
"Red” Bamberger, Mgr.
Open Monday til 9 p. m.

P k m 642

FKIGIDAIHB apoUaneea, aaloa
and earvica. G. II. High, Oviedo.
Fla. Pbona 415t or Sanford
J64J-W after a p.m.
Randall Electric Co.
Baadla and Crosier Appliance*
Youngitnrr Kiteheor
E)ertrte«l eantraeting and repair*

LAWNMOWERS n n a r p e n e d
Uieyclc A General Repair.
SlBJiley'B Bike Shop
310 E. 4th SL TeL 3434
112 MajpioUa Arc. Phone 113
ENVELOPES. letterheads, state,
o r p i c g notnrM Kim —«
mrnts. Invoices, hand bills, and
n r o c r a ms. etc. Progressiva HAYNES omen Machine Ce..
Printing Co , Pbona 406 — 403
Typewriters, adding maeiunr*,
Wist 13th SL
Sale#-Rea tela, M l Magnolia, Pb
FLOOR RANDOM! * Finishing;
Oak Boors furnished, laid A fin­
BEAUTY PARLORS —24
ished. In business slnra 1920.
E. F. Stevens; Route 2, Box 227;
For lidvelier Hair
Call 716-R-4 baton 7 a. m. or
GET PROFESSIONAL CARE!
E va-B cM Beauty Shop
Phone 363

HARRIETTS
BEAUTY NOOK
(Air Conditioned Salem.)
116 So. Oak Ave. Phone &gt;71
l— IJ4UNDRT SERVVlCE - a
• One sour • WalB and Damp
Dry
• One hour 4A • Wash and Dry
Fold
• Finished Laundry
B Sanitnne Dry Cleaning
SMa Fendmart Bldg.
IM F.e«t 3S4h KL
91—
PUmO SERVICE
-ST
lUT&amp;MOBILKB-TRAHJt—
IT—Al
Techmnan
fiw B ! pay VftU u aeo Us bJ m .
you buy. Open Evesiaga aad
Pbona &lt;164. Route L Sanford
Sundays.
The
Want Ad Department Is
Eaatalto Tralee _
open from 1:30 a. m. until 5:30 p.
. Palatka. Fla.
m. each business day except Sat­
CARS
urday afternoon. Deadline for
waak-dsy insertions is 2:00 p m
BOUGHT SOU) TRADED
the day prereding publication.
Roy Raal'a Uaaa Can
Aay ads earning In later than
An. * uth at
. «n. will b« published under
K &gt;(Lata
To Classify.

!
L

LU M B EH ]
AND 8 U / / D / N O N E E D S ^

and buggy. Phone 241T-J-3.

UPPIE8 — to give away. 4
weeks eld. Mother dog usable
to care tor them. Will you give
them s ssmsT Fhese in M L

Y t t l r r d t ) '* X t n « » r

• Factory Supervised Service
• House calls 9 a. m. till 9 p. m. For Side. Used Kvinrude out­
(All makes and modelst
board. *20.00, Firestone Stoic*.
112 Mag. Ave.
Pbona 2400
111 K. 1st HI

pstsasr1 w , “',r

USED TRACTORS
RrtW Tractar Cs.

THE SANFORD IIKKALD Wed. June 2D, 1953 PaKe I I

SHERMAN CONCRETE
PIPE CO.
O at W aat I2 lh SL

248*

TELEVISION

R a d io

w i m n M i n M i, a
ttllU X IH l
U I I I M A I I %V

t IlM) It II in \i I l.ft

s na A#!vtoTt**iPto With L'nrJ* w»u
l»up«f in in
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R
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1. 1*1
7 lift
V ftd
ft ini
ft 1 »
M» ft**
1* 30
n oft
n r.
12,12

Newt-Wax i
"|»Ar*a
John Daly N«to»
Ait IHV*
ftnhur i#r)ilfiF&gt;* Ar K*lend*
1» #♦»* * 1r»r*«l
ftv#*in* si j \ Ntaiit ri||lit*
IniluitM
1*4r«iills
Tha MilUnn.n:r
I v#» ijn* A
N# w
i #,- Kp rr**W*«i1 11 fir
rarllliK'ht ThvnIro
Mgn-uff
TMI I IM H V
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rp'RPBrn FtPhUniM
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ItoltoM ij l-. totfi
Mini Par •
111IT Payoff
lirtri Croibv Hhftw
2 iU “ 31r. $»Ml Mrs."
3 r. Hwrin Pl**fm
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ASTUIXUUX

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Tho l(U.tilt ft Hour
World At , \
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on Yniir Account
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H u ll (Tinl»

MAN SAYS GOODBY,
JUMPS INTO (KEEK
SAVANNAH, Tenn. (,V» - ' We
i.rre *i}llng there fishing," Murel
Copeland told police. “ lie got up
told mo goodtiy and jumped into
t)i« rtrek. lie never came up.The body of Raymond White,
48. m il recovered from Indian
Creek yesterday. Coroner 1*. M.
Wade Sr., ruled the death a sui­
cide.
YOUTHS ARE THIRSTY'
LOUISVILLE. Ky. Wft — Pollc#
last night nabbed four storrhoui#
breakers who were boldly drink­
ing Cokes just outsida the seen#
of their crime.
They readily confessed they
broka into Union Ha!!, snitched
some Cokes and left damage es­
timated at 6500.
Tha ringleader was 6, his Ileia-

tenant &amp;

fhtig accoatpjjfiu 4
»

�£

SOMETHING MEW
SOMETHING DIFFERENT

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Is

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SOMETHING NEVER
SEEN B E FO R E ...

INSPECT THE SPECIAL FEATURES
OF THESE HOM ES
\

DREAMWOLD

V-

• 616 W e s t Santa Drive

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In Jbreamwold

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Shop and Save
In Sanford
■

VOLUME XLVI

AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER__________ M ____________________________________

SANPORD. FLORIDA,

Established 1908

CpI. Dunn Given
Eight-Year Term
For Aiding Enemy

Richards Predicts
House. Will Okay
Foreign Aid Bill

FLIGHT LIEUTENANT Chris­
topher Blount, 30, ha* been es­
corting P r I n « • ■ * Margaret
■round London recently, giving
rumor monger* a new Kent to
follgw. Shown In hie uniform,
Blount Is an aviator and equerry
to the Queen ae was P*t*r
Towniend, reportedly atill top
man with tha rrincesa despite
hit two-year exile to Belgium.
(International)

Vaccine
Priority
Is Set
JACKSONVILLE OB-Whra Salk
vaccina become* avallabla for
commercial distribution In Florida,
children aget 8 to • will have first
chance at Inoculation against polio.
An eaUmaUd 340,000 are in that
priority a ft group, cl which !» .ooo have received at leaat ana (hot
In Hie National Polio Foundation
diitrfliutlon Vi flrit and aecond
gndert. The number who received
a tacond ehot ia not known yet
dace makeup ellnkea (till are in
progress In aome countle(.
The lint priority wa» estab­
lished on a voluntary baiii ycaterday by tha Btw Florida advlaory
committed o r la lk Vneot90. lt will
Oct other prioritle( later.
Dr. Richard G. Skinner Jr.,
Jackaonvilia physician who hcidt
the (tata polio planning committea, also waa named chairman of
the new advlaory committee. Oth­
er member* ate Or. John D. Mil­
ton, Miami, preildent of the Flor­
ida Medical Assn.; Dr. Wilaon T.
Sowder, Jackaonvilia state health
officer, and R. Q. Richards. Fort
Myers, secretary of the Florida
State Pharmaceutical Aaan.

"4

WASHINGTON UB-Rep. Rich­
ards (D-SC) predicted the House
will approve today "without any
drastic cuts" a bill to permit new
foreign aid spending of more than
3tt billion dollars.
The bill would authorise a total
of 83,283,000,000 f o r military and
economic aid for the year begintng tomorrow This merely lets a
ceding—139 million dollars lower
than that voted by the Senate—
with the actual appropriations to
be voted later.
President Eiicnhower had asked
for about 313 billions.
The House yeiterdsy upheld a
House Foreign Affairs Committee
reduction o( 143 million dollars in
global arms aid and tentatively
approved military fund* totaling
81,133,000,000. Richards said Ihe re­
duction eliminates a reserve fund
requested by the administration.
By voice vote, t h e House
defested a proposal by Rep. Ful­
ton (R-Pa) to withhold late-model
jet aircraft from Yugoslavia until
all requirements for such planes
are filled In this country and In
nations with which it baa mutual
defense pacta,
s

Red Cross Plans
To Offer Course
In Lifesaving
A senior lifesaving course for
water safety will be offered by
Ihe Seminole County Red Cross
chapter at tha Municipal Pool be­
ginning at 7 p. m. July I. The
course will be given from 7 to 10
p. m. each Wednesday and Fri­
day.
BUI Fleming will be tha {natruc(or and Mrs. F, D. Scott will as­
sist
Eligible for the course arc
those who have passed their lttb
birthday or are students in or
abovo the 11th grade and who
are tn sound condition. The course
will require a minimum of 17
hours. .

3li .ftur.KH of the Wage Policy Committee of the CIO Steelworker*
Union are shown with David J. McDonald, union president, shortly
after authorising him to call a strike at midnight tonight if no wage
agreement is reached with the basic steel industry. At the meeting
in Pittsburgh. Pa- are (I. to r.): Charles FiHon of Massachusetts
District I. Local 4335; McDonald, and Edward Zeuch of Cincinnati,
0-, Distrirt 25, Aluminum Local 310. (Internationa! Soundphoto)

★

★

★

cipal bargainer for U, S. Steel
Corp.
Stephen* had hinted that Rig
Steel was preparing a new money
offer.
■a ■ ■ A ■*
Ita
McDonald already ha* rejected
^
an average 10-rent an hour pay
'raise proposal for the union’* &lt;100,000 member* In the basic alvei
Industry. They now average $2.33
per hour.
Major ateel mill* were gradual­
ly being shut down. They begun
JACKSONVILLE W-«tx
icemen seers held today aa mem­ well In advance of the atrtke dead­
bers of what police called a bandit line, eooling off furnacee and
ring whose operations reached Into draining them of hot metal. Rome
two states and netted about $1,400 worker* already were reported off
the Job due to the gradual cur­
the past five weeks.
Detective Sgta. Fred W. Murray tailment.
and N. R. Sikes said tha gang had It has been three year* since
staged fore robberies, and had sto­ the last industrywide steel strike.
len two Jacksonville automobiles. Mill* were shut down early two
Three of the prisoners were cap­ months In the summer of 1032
tured yesterday after an auto when the late union president
chase tallowing ttw holdup of a Philip Murray hold out for a union
faikston, oa. metal Thay ware shop arrangement, hut finally

Six Servicemen

At Jacksonville

. . '« *
£ '
W ?;-

T —

■to*1

agreed on a compromise.

It waa reliably reported that
Stephen* did not come up with
the prospective new eelllrmrnt
proposal at a two-hour session late
last night with USW President
David J. McDonald and the union's
chief counsel Arthur J, GoldbergMcDonald, In pointing out that
the rejected 10-cent offer wns only
half of the recent auto Industry
settlement, seemed to lie shooting
MOBILE, Ala. UB-Abraham Lin­ to equal or better the 20-rent set­
coln Pierce, 34, convicted of the tlement claimed by President Waldaytime holdup of ihe Farmers t.-r Reuther of the CIO United
Exchange of McCullough, Ala., has Auto Worker*.
started serving a 15-ycar federal McDonald has hinted that his
union may vary from it* past
sentence.
The Pensacola, Fla. Negro tav­ practice of striking all basic steel
ern operator gave himself up to producer* at once and invoke a
the U.S. marshal’s office yester­ "selective" strike of only some of
day after ha had failed to follow the half-dosen major firm*.

Negro Convicted
In Holdup Starts
15-Year Sentence

William Colbert
Taken By Death

1st

★

David J. McDonald, president of the strike— threatening
CIO Steelworker*, was closeted with John A. Stephens, prin­

Steel Shortage
Warning Sounded

A

★

PITTSBURGH (iip)— The ateel industry drifted today
toward an ecnnomy-cruahine midnight strike with negotia­
tors maintaining a tight aecrecy lid on final peace efforts.

WASHINGTON (A-Gen. MaxweU D. Taylor a battlefield vet­
eran of two wart, takes over today
as Army chief of staff.
Ha succeeds Gen. Matthew B.
Ridgway, an outspoken critic of
administration plans to cut Army
strength. Ridgway is retiring after
38 years of service to become
board chairman of tha Mellon In­
stitute of Industrisl Research at
through on his notice of appeal.
Pittsburgh.
The army said goodby to Ridg He had been free under $10,000
wsy yesterday in a special review bond.
held in his honor at nearby Ft.
and Mrs. Win. T.TJonJon Myer. The Air Force joined in the
of 1807 East Second SL have re­ tribute.
turned from a two months ab­
sence spent In Wisconsin and 1111NEW YORK UT—The Wall Street
noia. They report they had cold,
Journal
said today that a steel
rainy windy waather nearly the
strike, threatened for midnight to­
entire time and are most happy
to be hack In our beloved Sunny
William M. Colbert Ir.. 78, died night, would leave major eonState at Florida and tha friendly at his home at t a. m. this morn­ sumtrs critically short of steel "In
little dty of Sanford.
ing at his residence on 310 E. II 48 days or lass."
# • * *
Street.
"Detroit’s auto makers, who con­
Dr. R*th C. Haynes of 314 Mag*
Born Nov. M, UTI ia Freder­ sume soma » per cent of Urn na­
nolle Are., Sanford, baa been ap­
pointed Instructor In Anaesthesia icksburg, Va. ha had been in ill tion’! steel output, sap flatly they
at the Harvard Medical School. health for the past three years, lie haven't been able to stockpile,”
Dr. Haynaa will be associated was a member of the First Pres­ said tha Journal. "Present Inven­
with tha Massachusetts General byterian Church here in Sanford. tories they figure, would last from
Survivors include his widow, 14 to 48 days and in some esses
Hospital which has bean affiliated
with the Medical School aince till. two daughters, Mrs. Bovaid Tom­ an already considered below nor­
#. * e *
linson, Miami Springs; Mrs. Wil­ mal"
Mis. R P. WWiner, Jr. was liam Wade, Sanford; one grand­
caQad to TaOahefsea Tuesday on daughter. Nancy Alica Tomlinson,
FROPOMLB REJECTED
account of tha iBnass of her fath­ MiamlSprings; and two sisters,
WASHINGTON &lt; *- The House
Mrs.
Beatrice
PhilipfcauakJ
and
er, F. G Byrd. Mr. Byrd, a memAppropriations Coramitto today
be* of the pioneer fsmltes of that Mrs. Elma M. White, both of turned down proposals for pay
erne, passed away Wednesday California.
ralsta for congressional employes
evening. Funeral service* will be
Funeral services wUI be held and extra allowances for members
conducted on Friday. .
at 10 a. m. Friday In (ha Bris- In recommending $66JI0,t78 to
e • e e
son Funeral Horaa with tha Rev. finance the legislative department
The regular meeting rf-Camp­ A. O. Mclnnis officiating.
—exclusive of the Senate—In the
bell Lowing post S3 which was
Burial will b* in the Evergreen new flacal year beginning to­
scheduled tor Monday evening Cemetery.
morrow.
July 4 has bean poetpunad to
July 1L
e a s e
*
Two softball games are
tonight at the F t Mellon
WUson-MaJer will play
Seed Cb. at T:M and
___
Sporting Goods will lake on Hat-1
1 WASHINGTON m-Sen. Bridge* noise they keva made about sup­
Me Roberts at %
(R-NH) said today Democrats are porting it," Bridges said. "They
'tMKuilratlng the need for elec- ■re only for such parte of that
FOAMING M KNACK
M s ed a Republican Congress next program as they believe can be
CHAMBEBSBURO, Pa. (M-O-D,
by opposing parts of Presi- amended or changed to meet the
tha pet parakeet of John Gibbons,
hower*s program,
desires of Democrats of aU shades
A glass of
who heads the Senate of opiates.
beer eashbt Ma tsary. He perched
Policy Committee, said "All af tkte demonstrates Wat
an the vCL dtpaed Me beak Into
that fresh criticism if Prssideat Elssnhowm is to got
On foam lor a alp and fail tote Use
t by Sea. Lyndon Ms program reacted ia the way
(D-Tex) "shows the ha has proposed it. be must have
Gibbons rescued the drenched
up in their true colors." a Republican Congress and that
Mrd but D-D was found dead on
not reslly for the is what we e ^ oct tn ftvu Mm
fig fle e af Mi M018M$ i
rja datptin the to ISM."

Strolling
In Sanford

★

Steel Industry
Drifts Toward
Strike T onig

ter by eailing tha Bed Cross of. tdeutiflad sat Ffc- Linton Crosby,
II, of Macon, Ga.; Pvt. Hirvay C.
flea at 10 or Mt-M.
Kilpatrick, II. of Jacksonville; and
8. Sgt. Miner Peyton Roberaon, 25,
of Jacksonville Ga.

Taylor Assumes
Army Chief Job

THURSDAY. JUNE 30, 19SS

Republican Congress
Needed, Bridges Says

$26,000 Damage
Caused As Train,
Transport Collide
JACKSONVH-LE (J3—n»m*E* es­
timated at $36,000 was caused yes­
terday when a Seaboard Airline
Railroad train and an automobile
transport trailer collided at a
crossing.
The transport overturned with
ita four new Butch automobiles
and a passing automobile was hit.
Fuel from the vehicles Ignited and
two of the new cars, the auto
transport and the passing passen­
ger car were destroyed.

Repatriation Set
For 3 Turncoats
NEW DELHI. India tet-Indian
Red Cross officials said today
three turncoat American soldiers
who now want to leave Red China
probably will be repatriated in the
next few days.
The official* made ihl* predic­
tion after announcing Washington
has agreed to permit the throe to
return to the United States and
has Imtructed the U. 8. cumulate
general in Hong Kong to prepare
the neccseary travel documents.
The Americana are Lewie W.
Griggs of Jacksonville. Tex.; O.
G. Bell of Olympia, Wash.; and
William A. Cowart of Dalton, Ga.
All ware U. 8. Army corporals
raptured by the Rods in the
Korean War,

Associated

Leased Wire

'W’ca tK e ?
TtrU? tlaedv through F riiij
*tth tciitored ahno-erx and tiua
der itftTfrs la afternoons tad cre­
ator* except few nlsht and moroinj
showers n fir southeast tad fti)

central coast.

No. 221.

U. S. And Bonn
Sign Aid Pact

NEW YORK &gt; * - CpI. Harold
M. Dunn, once given .* hero'* wel­
come by his native Baldwins* die.
N. Y.,-has been sentenced to eight
year* at hard labor for aiding the
Communist enemy while a prison­
er in North Korea.
A seven-man court-martial which
pronounced tlx sentrnce yesterday
also ordered a dishonorable dis­
charge for tha 26-j -ar-old soldier
and forfeiture of all pay and al
lowanrcs.
Dunn, a heivr-.'e' tall mm, look
the icntenc* eatmlv He mipped
to a smart »alute and wordlessly
returned tn his seat. Out his young,
broad face showed strain.
BONN, Germany LT)— The
Moments before Ihe sentencing
United States and Urst tierbe told the court that his conduct
many today signed a military
in North Korea "was a tragic mis
assistance agreement under
take for which I sin sorry."
which tho Germans will re­
"It did not lake me long to
WASHINGTON i/Pl— Victor Wcingartcn, Plenuntitvlllo, ceive hundreds of millions of
realire as soon as l was rep.itri
aled that t had been wrong in N. Y . publicity ninn, swore todny lio has not boon a Commun­ dollars of American equip­
what I had done ss a prisoner " ist since 11&gt;I0 but declined to answer other questions from ment for t heir new armed
He interrupted the trial Tuesday Senate investigators about communism or former associates, forces.
to plead guilty to the charges of lie wa sthreatoned with contempt action.
The agreement calls for the
writing articles praising the Red
WeiiiKartoii told be Senate Internal Security snbeom- United Stales t n provide
enemy and making broadcasts
■■
—— 1
1
inittee that "I'm wilting l" testify |oquipmcnl. material* and service*
from North Korea urging Ameri­ ■
o'l about myself sinec 1910 but t* help West Germany build up
can "moms and dads" lu end Ihe
not shout others.”
the 50ii,Pt o-pian force promised to
war.
I Ht was told by J. O. Sourwine, -tic Atlantic Allwnre.
'the snbeommiltee’s counsel, that
West Germany in turn pledged
he had "no right to prolert others" t ist it will e»e American aid lo
jueder his Fifth Amendment privl- promote "an integrated defense ef
1 go against possible seif-lncrim* tie North Atlantic area in aeeerdi ration.
anee with defense plans fermtt| Finally Sen. Eastlsnd |D-Mis».1, lited’ by the North Atlantis
Tie subcommittee chairman, told ,Irm ly Organisation.
ST. PETERSBURG UP-Dr. Rob
jWeingartrn that unless ha *nU. S. Ambassador James R,
ert F. Hutton say* $IS,«nrt Is need
TOKYO M3—The search tor four j*ered| Sourwine’a question he
ed to keep the University of Flor Marine airmen down in the Pacific j „ „ uid recommend that ho he cited Conant and West German Foreign
Minister Heinrich von Rrrntano
Ids'* red tide field atatlon here went Into its fifth day a* dense , or contempt of th* Senate,
figned the agreenirnt,
from closing.
fog rlosed In again Thursday night. Conviction for contempt carries j In other action today, the West
Dr. Ifullon, station director, hi*
An Air Force spokesman said a ', po»,ib|» penalty of a $1,000 fine iCerruan govern men l today accept,
written Gov. Collins asking tint voice signal—so weak "it was bn-jand a year in Jail.
'el a Moscow proposal to discuss
the money be supplied from the possible lo determine Just what
Welngarten waa the first of establishment of diplomatic rela­
state's contingency fund.
was said” —was heard about 4:30 several persona tha suhcommilteo tion* hetwren the llnnn Republifl
Tho director said a legislative p.m. lie said that was the last and
for questioning today about and Soviet Russia.
commlltea studying Ihe problem only report Ihe Air Fore* has had called
testimony by Winston M. Rurdett,
Rut whether Chancellor Konrad
recommended that the atale give ■hire 3:40 a.m.
now a Columbia Broadcasting Sys­ Adenauer will go to 3toirow re­
$120,000 to thp University of Mi­
"It Just wasn’t audible enough
ami marine laboratory for reJ tide In make out." said Maj. William tem newsmen, nsming them as trained in question. A general areptance of the invitation extended
rcseach and *15.000 to t h e Uni­ James, deputy public Information Communists. in the 1930*.
by the Kremlin June 7 for talks
versity of Florida project.
officer for F ir East Air Force*.
oq Ihe normaliilng of diplomatic,
He said the Legislature vo**d
Darkness once again turned the
trad* »nd cultural relations earr*
to give the University of Miami search into a blind game of drop­
in a not* relayed through lha Eethe full $120,000 but cut off the ping flares and listening for radio
viet Embassy in Tari*.
University of Florida with nothing. signals that did not come.
Dr. Hutton blamed "political
The missing airmen are:
p:e»surv exerted tiq certain memCapt. llodgtn P. Montagus, Jackh-iT* (d th? Legislature-to* th* ma­ son. Ml**., pitot of * Marti* Sky
JACKSONVILLE CA-A »ew ra­
rina laboratory nf the University Knight Jet which ran out of gas dar system tor tricking tropical
of Miami, a private institution white lost In fog Sunday.
storm* within 200 mile* of Jack­
which evidently seek* to monop­
Second U. David Winton Ret!, sonville goes into operation it
olise stale funds for salt water of Waysota, Minn., hi* ordnsnee Jacksonville Navil Air Station toresearch , , . "
mor.ow.
officer.
Commenting on the reference to
Unlike th* radar aystem mod to
Lt.
Alan
Murdock
MeAneny
Jr.,
political pressure, Dr. F. O Wal­
guide planes Into a landing, which
of
Yonkers.
N.Y.,
whose
Marine
ton Smith, director of the 3liami
seeks to block out weather rendi­ TALLAHASSEE 'jv_r.ov Collin*
laboratory, said "the University of Fury Jet vanished Tuesday night tions and fix on the plant, the said today he will vein tin* con­
in
Ihe
search.
Miami lias no interest In reducing
new system primarily gives a pic­ ference comm IIIrc recommenda­
A slill -unidentified crewman of ture of the wsaltier.
activities of oilier institutions ami
tion for rrapporlinnnirnt of tins
a
Marine
helicopter
which
trashed
will do everything in its power to
It Ignores fleecy clouds but picks Senate if the lawmaker* should
at
sea
In
tha
search
yesterday.
cooperate with them."
pasx the legislation to pul it in ef­
Three fellow crewmen srere re­ up rain-laden itorm clouds. Lt.
fect.
John
M.
Hartman,
serological
of­
scued.
ficer, aald It will be operated 34
Collins addressed a Mint ic-ilon
hour* a day.
of thp House and Senate to gun
his views on Ilia problem which
has kept the t^glxlature dead­
locked since. June 6.
•a
aa
rests
He said ia a prepared speech ha
ORLANDO trt—Applications for ^
could not accept the bill recom­
aid to the needy disahied will he
mended by tha conference com­
accepted at state welfare offices
mittee which would give their ov n
WASHINGTON bn-The House
starting tomorrow, Charles O, An­
senators to Bay and 'Ionroe coun­
whisked
through
by
volee
vote
to­
drews Jr., chairman of tha Slate
John Clark of Sanford has been
day the year’s biggest money bill— elected Commissioner of Navy ties but which would lease popu­
Welfare Board, said yesterday.
Applicants must tx physically nearly 32 billion dollars to run the County at Uia 1933 Florida Boys’ lous Manatee and Sarasoii sha-mg
disabled to a degree where they armed forces for Lhc year begin State held on the campus of Flo­ a senator white smaller districts
have aenitors of their own.
can’t earn a living and the dis­ ning tomorrow.
rida State University this week.
"If the House should concur in
llmiso passaga- sent the huge
ability must be medically deter­
Tha 438 high school student!
compromise measure to Uia Senate from every section of Florida who tha pending Senile amendment tn
mined permanent.
Andrew* said federal funds have which was axperted to send it are attending this year’a Boys’ House Bill 9X, I will promptly veto
been approved to matrh tho Legis­ quirkly to the While House for Stale are being sponsored by the measure and take auch steps
lature’* appropriation of 2ik mil­ President Elsenhower'S signature. American Legion Posts and civic as are authorized under Hie Con­
stitution to keep you In was ion onThe final package earmarks
lion dollars for the new program.
IT,329.933.non for ihe Army, $9,118,- organisation* throughout Florida. til an adequate reapporl hutment
linys’ Slat* divides Itself Into 8 it provided," ho said.
119.330 for tha Navy and $14,730,703,170 for (ha Air Force, including mythical "count]**’ ’ with two
an extra 338 million dollars tacked "cltiea" to th« county, which
on at Secretary of Defense Wil­ make a mythical 49th state, in
son's request to speed tha output order 4o giv* tha youths practi­
cal experience in Ihe way govern­
TALLAHASSEE tet-Gov. Collins ol 1152 Jet bombers.
ment operates.
today appointed C. Sweet Smith Jr.,
of Cocoa to the State Racing ComBOYD APPOINTED
mission.
TALLAHASSEE ur£Gov. Collin*
Smllh succeeds J. 5*xton Lloyd tixlsy apjMiinted Aten S. Royd, Mi­
BUFFALO, N. Y tfi-Four m*n
of Daytona Reach who rcslgmxl lo ami attorney, to the Florida Rail­
in an automobile shot at Jii.-tira
become chairman of the new Stale road and Public Utilities Commis­
Hamilton Ward of Stale Supreme
Development Commission.
sion.
Alton T. Ball, who has been In Court last night as he drove along
the mechanical department of The a highway near here. The jurist
SanLcd Herald for over 20 jrarf wa* nul injured.
and superintendent of that depart­
The 80-year-old Ward told re­
ment for the past 10 years, re­ porters that the ahuotmg might
signed recently lo accept ■ pnii- have stemmed from fail sentence*
tlon with the New Orleans Tlmca- he has given Juvenile delinquent!
Pfcayune
recently.
Mr. Bail was presented with a
The shooting occurred shortly
token of appreciation by mem­ after 11 p m. as Ward was driving
bers of The Herald staff.
southwest on Route 20 toward hia
Mrs. Ball, a Southern Bell Tele­ summer cottage on Lake Eria.
phone Company amploye f o r
over six years will remain in
Sanford until her husband has
established their residence in
New Orleans.

Publicity Man
Facing Action
In Red Inquiry

$15,000 Needed
To Keep Red Tide
Station Going

lo Gel Equipment

New Radio Signal
From Lost Fliers
Reported Heard

Jacksonville Gets
New Radar System
To Track Storms

Needy Disabled
Aid Applications
To Be Accepted

West Germany's
New Armed Forces

Quick Okay Given

J. Clark Named
Chief O f Navy
A f Boy's State

Cocoa Man Named
To Racing Group

Advisory Group
To M eet Friday
TALLAHASSEE (A-The Const!tutlflU Advitory G oM lfdoo
Us first meeting Here tomorrow
with ell former governors invited
to attend.
right, waa IneUltad as i m w president of (ha Hanford
Racommaadattons approved by Lion* WADE,
Club at tha annua! (retaliation eartmonr last night. Handing
Urn coamteskm well be submitted over tha gaval to Wad* is Jack Stamper, outgoing pmidant. (Jame­
to the 1MI ItepUtur*.
son PhaUJ

Reapportionnicni
Plan Attacked
By Gov. Collins

Ball Takes Job
In New Orleans

Four Men In Car
Fire Ai Justice

Candidate Filing
Fee Challenged

TALLAHASSEE W» -Hrpubliran
Rep. Fred C. Peterson of Pmeilas
County recommended today that
the Republlcen State Executive
Committee chaUcngc validity of a
LAKELAND UR-Jemes Y. Marr 1933 law giving political parties
Jr. ia resigning as executive direc­ th* 3 per rent,candidate tilling
tor of th* Florida Junior Chamber fee* which had been going to the

James M arr Quits
Job With Jaycees

of Commerce to operate a travel state.
agency ht Ocala.
Petersen said the Republics*
Marr, who has held (he Jayeee Party in Florida would be unable
poet two yean, aald ha srill etay to qualify for tha fees under the
oa until his successor ia ehoaen formula aet out iw the law and
probably whan state jayoea execu­ that tha law w*j therefore dtete ttUteto A m K
1

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                <text>Original 14-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;, June 29, 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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                <text>Sanford, Florida</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="http://www.mysanfordherald.com/" target="_blank"&gt;&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                    <text>m .*

'

AND DADS/V.

. .. \ J t o S T A / M O -U
«*T$Y''T AND Sir IN
f f f v ? ) TVEPAOtrO
AND TALK

TO
GET MADP i EO
m add en
m am a

ff5t&gt;eT*« EV E N IN G
W AS O V£P o x c o v
~-r PPOPOSED AND
•» v -* W E D E C ID E D
^ Yl V I,
TO G E T
? rr jZ t M A P C E O

w« cojldnt go cxr;
---- ------ f W E J U S T Hf A

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SA2GE,: THINK THAT
PAINT you GA'/E *•*£
^ -7 P3R the
r— 2 IS TVS " 7----IMPOSSIBLE’
I GOT THAT an
.“ 72; WRON3
: p.COUOR
CA PAINT FROM
THE SUPPLY

G E E , C O O K IE - IT V M S
LUGO / POP VOU THAT
«— ( IT RA IN ED THAT r
v---- - NIGHT |----

6S?N3 IT H=ce
AND LET ME
SEE IT.
-

rORIJ HERALD
*— U TTL» WurTa
003 ANSV.ER.V3

C A BEPU Lf
I T S STILL

I WET. v -

Shoplifting Game
To Become Harder

. OFFICES. r "

L00□
U nder p» n's
SPELL, OM.E TUSS
TOE HE AW POPE*
TOE GIANT BELL
P f i l S OUT A

NOW. MV C M P ' PUU. TVS
A D TUNED UP MS
CCPD A».D SET VOIR EELOVED CAM eMJOV TVS
SOUND CP PAPTUPCUI
HASH TO RINGING THE
3t TONCR BELLS.'
m u s ic /
j

*

10UD, ECHOING
TONE THAT
SHRIEKS IN

,

HASH’S EARS'

TVtg BOWERPUL
SOUNDVIBRATIONS
SEND HIM
SWINGING TOWARD
ACLUSTEROP HIGH
PITCHEDBELLS/
i r N me c a n j u s t
PCf lE P O V ~ A C U B
g it t h is l a s t m a n
BATTER t r i p l e d
WITH TlSO OUT IN
OUT,AT L E A S T H E L L
TH* LAST IN N IN ’ T 1
Bu s t u p h s n o IITTUM,

Apprehension, detention and ar­
rest will be easier under the new
law, spupsored In the recent Leg­
islature by the Florida Stato Re­
tailers Assn
Larceny penalties
will apply, .maximum* being im ­
prisonment for five years and
fines of tl.OOO.
The very existence of the new
law will cut Florida's losses in
half, the association says.
It explajied "most shoplifters,
especially professionals, will think
twice before risking the new handi­
caps. And amateurs soon will learn
their pilfering suddenly has be­
come much nure haiardota.'*
The new law permit* a peace
officer, merchant or merchant's
employe-to take i suspected shop­
lifter Ints custody in a reasonable
manner for a reasonable time and,
if necessary, to cause arrest, without being civilly or criminally
liable for (also arrest, false im ­
prisonment or unlawful detention.
Heretofore, the retailers group
aavt, shr pliftcr* thrived on the
willingness of reta‘lers to accept
Uie ios; .if their mc.chandlse

HVlEFIRST
- tu a t

Jockey tam m y Boulmatla wfll
be trying for hit third Capital
Handicap victory on April It ,
opening day at Laurel race track.
BoulmeUi won oa Suleiman In
1IS1 and Algasir in 1#M.

ORLANDO UP—Shoplifters, who
nave been costing Florida mer­
chants mure than 4*4 million dol­
lar* a year, will find their game
harder after July 1.
On that date a new state law,
seriously cramping their varied
styles of operation, becomes e f­
fective

&amp; X I-S D P 5 E P C E D M V H A M A
r o v r o . H O tY / L I 7 7 P V 7 T 3 ,
V G V &amp; S . t - t— B --------

' WITH HIS HEARING '

Three S o u t h e a a t Conference
schools — Alabama, Georgia Tech
and Tennessee — have played
twice in the annual Cotton Bowl
football game. Each has won and
lost.

Phone 417

DID

YOU

K N O W ? ...........

W e Serve Breakfast In Informal, Air-Conditioned
Dining Rooms.
HOT CAKES. W AFF LE S , HAM, BACON, SAUSAGE.
EGGS as you like ’em . . . fresh from a local farm.
Come In For A Snack Or A Meal
You’re Always Welcome at

MRS. APPLEBY'S R ESTA U RA N TS
Valdes Hotel

I

• A. M. T il

|

106 S. Park A t *.

4:tS A. M. TU

G eneral Insurance
AMOS ALONZO HAOO, K , Ar­
rives In Chicago from California
for the 90th anniversary eelebraUon of his 10OS championship
fnotbeU and track teams at tha
U n iversity o f Chicago. Tha
“ grand old man of football” was
accompanied by hi* wifa, Stella,
to tha acana o f his former tri­
umph*. Stars coached at tha
unhrarrity from ISM to IMS.

a

JAMES GUT

AGENCY

SIS EAST FIRST STREET
PHONE 78

IN N IN G

j|

BEARS
S P E C IA L
ATTENTION
AS A
DANGEROUS
T H R E A T-A

cue “

RUNNER
ON THIRD

ISTRYIK? &lt;

• T • STEAL

HOME/

PiTC-ER

sh o u ld m a k e

AN E X T R A
ir P O R T T O
R E T IR E THIS
BA TTER/

l Twouswr you wreewr

Legal Notice
. A’ AT U*K
IS M E R K R T . G I V E N
that «■* ar e c n y r t a d In h u a ln o e at
l t i C m i t i h Pi., Sanford. Fie rie.
* - » lin liiA u p name of
• H U T T F -It BCCJ PTl.’ DIOP a n * that
w * Inlr'id in r » ( H i a r aald nama
with
Ih*
Clark nf tha - Clrault
Court, 8-mlnMa County, Florida.
In accordance with the prnvlylnn
o f tha r !-U t lo u »
Natna
Clalula,
loiw ll
M H t F lo rid a 81 a-

ju t«» I

l_
.

Joe T.

»*'

M

Lumpkin

___ a .

TO

SHE GAVE ME SUCH
AN AQ G U M EN f — .
W H AT COULD FTtii
s^ -v I D O ' X
[

LETTING ETTA GO TO THE
D ANCE I I SEE SWE
&lt;
7\TW ISTED M X ) A C o o N O
j S — , . N E « F IN G E C / X

..
uJ
ILL HOP INTO A
D&lt;?6SS FOa THE
jam HOP-'y—-i-l
y ip p e e

Lum pkin

A P P P.AN

JSk.

Biaa Ptraat, Bochaatar. N. T.
A Cworo Complaint batlna baan
riled acainat you in ma circuit
!*ourt In and for gamlnoU County.
Florida. In Chancary, for Plvorro.
ha ahort title or atld ocilon ba­
in* FflANK A. THOMAP. Plaintiff,
raT JEfBIE LEE THOMAS. Daraadant. thooe ,praaaaia ara ta

A 1,672-fnnt televlalon tower at
Almont the entire world'a sup­
Oklahoma City ia claimed a» the ply o f Mexican jumping bean* is
world's talleat structure by
its grown at Alomos in southern So­
users, comparing It with the 1,472- nora, Mexico, taya the National
foot Emplra State Building.
Geographic Society.
cauaa and require you te file your
w ritten dafanaaa. I f any, to tha
Complaint filed
herein, and ta
» n « a copy thereof upon Plainll f f'a at lo rn ay on or before tha
t l r d day of July, t a i l , oiharwlaa
a P » c r » a Pro Confaaao w il l be antarad agalnat you and tha cauaa
or&lt;* ceil a * parla.
W I T V K S * my hand and o ff ic ia l
Vaal al Hanford. Hamlnnta County,
Ihla l i r a day of Juno. ta il .
/a/ O- F. Harndon
Clark at tha rTroult Court
baminola County, Florid a
Oo*rdon
A tlo rn ay

Tag, hide-and-seek and blind •
man's bluff aria children'* gam ei
which are known
all ever the
world, saye the National Geogra­
phic Society.

LAST TIME TONIGHT
l m x a a n a n en w ru o u a a*—

to bum clean
N o p aoliae, bo matter bow high the octane,
cut keep on giving you full power from your
engine uatec* it bums dees.
That'i why New Gulf NO-NOX U your beat
fuoline buy. In nuking new NO-NOX, Gulf
refines out thewdirty-burning tail-end"ofguo*
baa, the No. 1 troublemaker in today's high*

- STARTS 7:45
LEAVE HER TO
HEAVEN"
S U r r la g

Frcdarlck
for ria ln tltf

a ^ FU U II wUTAUOT o

4 North Pork Avonuo

£

s.-ea — it :»

o. no« ta n
a ford. Florida

Cornea Wilde
Gene Tierney
•*60 Only

CARTOON

RATURDAY ONLY— STARTS 7:41

"BaWItANtfe ON i

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SUNDAY 5

MONDAY 5

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Shop and Save
In Sanlord

SHi? H anford i&amp; etalh
Ah

lb fa M h t lw J

VO LU M E X L V I

Geneva Parley

.Likely To Get
Disarming Plan
Bv JOHN ,M. H IGHTOW ER

W ASHINGTON (.Pj— 'The United States. Britain and
France probably will prupo.xe at next month’s Big Four sum­
mit talks that Russlu consider a formula for reversing the
w arms raca in Europe.
The idea is one which Secretary of States Dulles con­

Airman Is Sought
For Questioning
, In Slaying 013

sidered with British Foreign Secn-tary
Harold
Macmillan
and
French Foreign Minister Antoine
I’inay during the past 10 days at
New York and San Francisco.
Dulles relumed yesterday from
the United Nations 10th anniver­
sary ceremonies at San Francisco
lie said he was gratified at
Soviet Foreign Minister V. M
Molotov's response to American
demands for compensation in the
case of a U. S. Navy patrol plane
shot down by Soviet jet fighter*
between Alaska and Siberia last
Wednesday.
Landing on an Island, the plane
burned. Seven of the 11 crewmen
suffered burnt or injuries.
The State Department made
public yesterday a note Molotov
handed Dulles just before both
men left Stn Francisco Saturday.
The Soviets said the airplane had
violated Russia'* "state frontier."
The Ameiican government aaid
Soviet MIGs blasted it in a sur­
prise assault over international
waters. The State Department
said yesterday there was "no
possibility c f error” as to the
U. S. planes location.
Molotov also said there was an
“ exchange" o f gunfire, but the
United States said the U. S. plane
did not fire.
However, Molotov expressed re­
gret at the incident and offered
to pay one half the damage— an
unprecedented offer in such casts.
" I t it gratifying that he ex­
pressed regret," Dulles comment­
ed, "and at least expressed w ill­
ingness to mak* some reparation,
but it is not what we asked for.”
Apparently he Intends to discuss
with President Elsenhower wheth­
■nd'KSte
prees a oemanu
demand
»er
r ana;
n°*r te
io press

D ICKINSO N, Tex., bPi— The
search fo r a tall, young 100pound airman officers believe
may have killed three persons
here turned to California today.
The airman, described as about
55. i i wanted fo r questioning
In the slaying* o f Mr*. Ruby C.
McPheron. 44; her son, George
Richard McPherson. 12; and Mrs.
. Zola Norman, about 05, the mo* ther o f Mrs. McPherson.
A ll were found shot to death
Saturday night In the pine-shaded
McPherson home near the tra­
ffic heavy Houaton-Galveaton Gulf
Freeway.
Mrs. McPherson’s 105.1 automobile was missing, but police
said nothing apparently had been
taken from the home, and Texas
Ranger Johnny Klevenhagen said
there was no evidence o f a sex
crime.
Early today, Los Angeles po­
lice were checking on a vehicle,
described as "almost matching"
the teletyped decription of the
supposed slay’er* car, the M053
Fonl stolen from the McPherson
home.
R. E. Plummer o f the Los An­
geles detective force said tha
automobile vraa found parked on
| an Inglewood street, its engine
■till hot.
Local and tt a U .p e llc b oth -aid ,
lu ^
they
T i e BWlatedatt, despite Its modthey could find no ntotlve fo r
the slayings, believed to have crate tone, sought to place blame
occurred late Wednesday or early for the incident on this country,
saying the United States had not
Thursday.
taken atep* which Russia had
urged previously to prevent "a
repetition of undesirable Inci­
dents.”

S tro llin g
In Sanford

Past president o f the Sanford
Rotary Club Georgs A. Stina was
quite surprised at tha
weekly
meeting o f the club at the Yacht
Club this noon just as he was In(pi troduced as tha speaker o f the
day by program chairman J. Ed
Best. As tha applause subsided,
a member o f the club called at­
tention to the fact that today was
George's birthday, a fact that
was trying to keep a secret de»pita the fact that he admitted to
being "39". A fter the
club sang
"happy birthday"
to him, Mr.
Stina proceeded to give a comprehensive and factual report of the
• proceedings at the 50th Annivsrsary o f Rotary International held
recently In Chicago which he and
"M om " 8 tins attended. In fact,
Georgs admitted that
the nice
acrap-book was “ Mom’s”
handi­
work and not hip- •
• • • .*
Tha Sanford Tourist and Shuffclboard d o b will not have Ibe
covered dish supper at 6:30 in
^ tha Club housa this Tuesday.

Stale Accidents
Claim 10 Lives

Students Visit
Sanford Herald
The Third Year Junltra o f the
Methodist Church Bible 8chool
enjoyed a trip through tha San­
ford
Herald
Friday
morning
watching, with interest the var­
ious processes o f making up a
newspaper.
The group comprised the fo l­
lowing: Suianne Jones, Rosemary
Southward, Evie Dossy, Rebecca
Massey, Leslie Jones, Margaret
Jones, Jud Burtchaetl, Vicki Forguson, Buddy Kirk and Duana
Uocmbell. Their teacher, Mrs. C.
R. Jones and Mra. Ray Herron,
superintendent o f the Junior De­
partment acted as chaperones.

Firemen Answer
Fruit Co. Alarm
The Sanford Fire Department
today answered an alarm at 11:05
from the Patrick Fruit Co. loca­
ted on French Ave, between 12
and 13tb Streets.
The cause of the blase was an
electric rutting torch in the North
wing. Chief Cleveland stated that
there was only alight damage.

190K

Maine Governor
Due To Welcome
Eisenhower Today
PARM ACHENEE LAK E , Maine
41—President Elsenhower, happy
over a successful weekend of fish­
ing, gets an official welcome late
today to traditionally Republican
Maine from Democratic Gav. Ed­
mund S. Muikie.
The governor, the first Demo­
crat to be elected the state a chief
executive in 20 years, will greet
the President at Skowhegan, home
of Republican Sen. Margaret Chase
Smith of Maine. Muskie and Ei­
senhower will attend a clambake
at Sirs. Smith's home.
A few hours later Eisenhower
will fly back to Washington, end­
ing a six-day tour of northern New
England, and go to a late evening
White House conference with Sec­
retary o( State Dulles on the shoot­
ing down of a U.S. Navy palrol
plane by Soviet aircraft.
After Dulles had reached Elsen­
hower by telephone here Saturday
night, the State Department s.ud
the secretary had "iccepted with
satisfaction the Soviet govern­
ment's expressions of regret," but
felt Russia's offer "fe ll short of
whst he hsd requested . . . in
the light of the Information he hsd
received."

IN D fC P K N D E N T

I

_

/ I V%J|

D A IL T

NEW SPAPER

R A N E O R O . F L O R ID A . M O N D A Y , J U N K

r »r t ly

cloudy

Ihroorh

with local i f l n o i m

Tuesday

and evening

Ihundrrshn* rra.

^

27, 1955

A m o r U ltd

P ra m

W ir t

N o . 2 1 *.

Last Ditch Fight Set
To Keep Baseball Club
Two Persons Die
In Desert Ordeal

T W E N T Y N IN E PA LM S , Calif. (/Ft— Murderous heal, walking
sarglt and shivering nights were a grim memory todav for a survivor
of a desert jeep ride that .daimrd two lives. •
•'It'* the worst thing I've been through in 20 veats on the desert.”
said Chester Bunker, 67, Inoat real estate promoter, lie recalled watch------------------------------------------“ “ ling one man walk to his death and
another die o f exposure on the
blistering desert when their jeep
|nroke dow n on an outing last
Wednesday.
Bunker, recovering in a hospital
here, told this story:
He and three others set out In
the jeep to inspect the Amazon
Valley aiea, which Bunker describThey carried water hut no food
ed as “ ripe fo r development."
for the half-tiny journey.
Elsenhower fisheJ for about six
The jeep sank In drifting sand
A Sanford man was shot at a
hours yesterday and caught two tavern her# early Saturday and in Amnion Canyon, about .'10 miles
salmon and a mess of trout in the
lid the differential
another Sanford man wa* later
^ere, a
Magalloway River at Little Boy
nightfall, Calvert Wilson,
Falls. One of the salmon was an arrested In Dcl.and In cnm.ce- ™
18-incher w e i g h i n g about two lion with the shooting, Constable t'J, prominent southern California
pounds. The other was under the
Q. (Slim ) Galloway reported. Democratic politician, set out on
legal "keeping" size of M inches
Galloway, who Investigated the foot for the highway about 15
and the President threw It back.
rase, said Mose Holts, about SO, miles away.
His aun-tdackened body was
was picked up by police at the found by seatcher* two days later
Ill-Land bus station following the b|,out five miles from the jeep,
shooting of Woodrow
Simpson, where he had died o f exposure anil
29. Dcl.and police had been alert- thirst,
cd by Galloway.
Bunker; James Thompson, 75,
Galluway said Simpson was rrtiied Joshua tree businessman;
shot in the right side with a 32- ..nd Lyle W. Robertson, 4'J, lorad
calibcr pistol during an argu­ hardwnre store owner, remained
By C LAU D E ROHE
ment at Ozcll Vickers' tavern on rloscr to the jeep.
Sunken treasure has started men
Their water, ran out the next
West 18th St. Holts shot Simpson
dreaming for centuries and In raas Simpson argued with Willie B. day. The temperature hit 120 de­
cent years a lot o f those dreams
Holts, Hose’s brother, the officer grees. Bunker and Robertson lay
hava coma trus o ff Florida coasts.
said.
The shooting occurred about on the desert and covered their
Remains o f an old vessel were
heads with their shirt*.
brought up rotfff Vero Beach
Beaeh lata
late 1:30 a. m. Saturday.
Holla -ftrd tha •scene, G el.1
Thompson got W W to rn
• « * * * tom pkln o f The
aid, and was taken to the &gt;'• » nd aUrtcd ruhnlrig In drtlea,
Herald was on hand to cover the loway said
DcLand bus station by another Bunker aatd. He died a few hours
story.
brother,
Albert Holts, who was tatar.
Twrenty-one-ysar old R o g a r
King o f Vero Beach, on leave from later arrested on a charge of es­
the U. 8, Arm y In Alaska, called cape. When arrested, Mose had a
on veteran treasure h lit e r Art ticket to Fitzgerald, Ga . In his
McKee Jr., to help him bring up possession, Galloway said.
Mosa lx being held In the V o­
the remalna o f w-hat Is believed
to be a Spanish vessel which was lusia County Jail at Del.and on
a concealed weapons charge, the
wrecked around 1658.
No treasuta has been found so officer said, pending the outcome
condition.
Albert
far but 13 cannons, each weighing uf Simpson's
2000.3000 pounds, have b e e n Holts is being held in Jail here
brought up. They hoped to find under $500 bond, Galloway con­
MIAMI 41 —A young uniformed
tha brass bow and stem chasers tinued.
motorcycle policeman, arrested
over the weekend. I f they were
fur Investigation of a series of
successful, it we.s believed they
holdups, has denied he was the
would establish the name o f the
brains of a gang of four men.
ship and substantiate their claimi
Peter V. Raima, 27. was called
concerning the date of the wreck.
in by Police Chief Walter Headley
Believed to have washed up on
and suspended. Then he was ar­
a reef during a hurricane the re­
rested by Police Capt.
Chester
mains are in about 20 feet o f
J A C K S O N V IL L E (/II— Reprcwater a mile o ff shore. Nothing is rentatives of the Jacksonville Dis­ Eldrcdge Saturday night.
Police also arrested Gerald Casleft o f the wooden hull o f the trict Corps o f Eingineert and the
sclll, 42, on the same charge.
vostel: only the cannons and the
Central 'and
Southern
Florida
The arrests followed the stigy of
anchor remain.
Flood Control District today be­
MrKee, who Is a professional gan an inspection to find trouble a third man, l^ n o y Horne, now in
treasure hunter, will go after spots that rould develop during the state prison at Haiford.
Horne told Jane Wood, a Miami
even bigger gam* In mid-July coming hurricane season.
Daily News
reporter, and Elwhen he starts work o ff Plantation
Edwin W. Eden Jr„ Anthony
dredge that Raima was tha brains
Key on tha first o f eight ” plate"
Nard and Charles Wirsenfield re­
o f a gang which pulled four hold
ships which went down in the year
present tha engineer*. They are
1733 with thousand* o f dollars
upi last year.
accompanied by B. Arnold and
worth o f illr e r aboard.
Ills story also named another
other operating personnel o f the
A fleet o f 21 ships left Vera ftood control district.
policeman, I.cwj» Womack who
Crux early In 1733 bound for
was killed in an unexpected boat
The field party will Inspect
Spain. In July they replenished
explosion last year. Eldrcdge said
flood-control works In the Lake
in Havana and a fttr leaving there
two other men have been orderd
Okeechobee • Everglades • Lower
they ran Into a hurricane which
arrested but said they were not
Eaat
Coast
area
fo
r
possible
dan­
claimed eight o f them.
now In town.
ger If unusual rainfall conditions
Balma, after his arrest, said the
should aria*.
charges were "lie s ".

Local Man
Is Shot
At Tavern

Sunken Treasure
Makes Men Dream

Policeman Denies
Charge 01 Being
Brains For Gang

Flood Control
Experts Seeking
Trouble Spots

. By T H E ASSO C IATED PRESS
At least 10 parsons met death
la Florida accidentally and vio­
lently during the weekend n sur­
vey early today showed
m Traffic victims included Mrs.
'^ M a y B. Boll insen, 74, o f Fort Lau­
derdale, Matthew I. Donohue. 40,
M iam i; and Mrs. Virginia Savage,
gs, Panama City.
TWo persons drowned on a fish­
ing trip at Stuart Saturday. Little
Tom m y Hightower. 11, M l Into
the St. Lucie River. D ie’ father,
John T. Hightower, 61, plunged in
to save him. Both .drowned.
Donald Barringer, 32, of Largo,
fd ro w n o d yesterday while water
skiing at Lake Tarpon near Tar­
pon Springs. Ho apparently be­
came tangled in the tow rope,
it pilots
killed
Friday tight when
when ti
their training
■teat era shad hi tha Atlantic
b e ta a. They w e n Ena. Charles
E. Dkkaraoa, tt, Frrnkitetou, N.
C-, aad L L (j.g .) R. F Rtsdclph,
0. Philadelphia.
- - Miami Electrician James Yalta,
X aB L t r u accidentally electrocuted I f U m i * 0 AM A N C IE N T CAMHOM aboard a w re;k *r are Rower Kin# (righ t), member o f a salvage
expedition which uncovered I I cannons In tho wrocuoc* o f a Spanish galleon o ff F t. P la n t and tha
A win. d riv tf aftkawittkaa, Otfcai i w a i m m ha taps a * Mm y m . U M * w ------________

X^eaffi’er’

Evans, Nashville
Publisher, Dies
FO RT W ORTH. Tex. f/V&gt;— Silllman Evans the N'ashvi'lc Tennes­
sean president-publisher aim was
called a key politic si figure, was
found dead In ii.s bed yesterday,
victim of ■ heart attark.
Tha body, will be flown to Nashvilla tonight after resting at a
funeral home here.
Evans, 61, died In his sleep
Sutunity night a few hour* after
attending the funrral o f hit old
friend and former employer Anion
G. Carter, publisher of the Fort
Worth, 8t*r-Telegram, who died
Thursday.

Contest Judges
Prefer Blondes
M IAM I BEACH 4) — Contest
judges prefer blondes in Florida.
The two wlnnen and the two
runnert-up in the M in Florida
and M in Miami Beach contrit to
ehooia M in Univena rrpreianta tivci all ware honey blondet. #
M arteli C enter, 20, of Tallah an ee won the itate conteit and
will be in Long Beach, Calif., In
July when tha M lu Universe con

V

p S T lA W

M N C E

A last-ditch effort lo keep
I lie hnneliall club in Sanford
will be made at a meeting at
7 :.'10 p. m. tomorrow at City
Hall.
Members of n local group
which i.s intores toil iu takinyr
over the irnnclmc from tho
present nrjraniznlinn will be
oil bund anil the .situation

,

will lie fully discussed.
If enough public enthusiasm it
shown, there is a possibility tha
TH IS M A I' show* tha Bering Strait where two Russian MIG fighter |* ^olinal* v.*11 continue to play
planes made an "unprovoked attack" on a II. 8. Nnvv P tiol plane o ff kero after June .10, the deadline
Alaska fmeing the American d a ft to crash-land iu flames on St, set by the present baseball organi.awrem-e Island (arrow s), -to mile* fiom Russian Sibrrin. Seven of ration headed by It. J. Bauman,
the II rrew members aboard the plum were injured. (In tn m itiom ill
Florida Stale League president
John hrider exhibited optimism
and pointed out tint) other cities
. ii the league have been confront­
ed with siItiitinr difficulties and
have in most cases worked then*
out satisfactorily.
Sanford
has played in the
league every year since 193(5 with
with the exception of 11*54 Kridcr
said. "W e have never failed to
W A S II I N G T O N l/Pi— The
finish a season," he added.
Elsenhower administration report­
If the other local group lake*
edly has decided to go along with a
oxer the franchise and continues
Demorrutir-sponsorrd proposal fot
a hipaitisnn commission to study l T o ll It INC,TON, Wyo i.tl-Cloud playing for the remainder o f the
the controversial federal employe I burst* which dumped up to 20 season, Sanford can probably get
aeeurity program.
j indies ol rain and halt on south- bark in the league next year.
The nieasute, sponsored by Hen-1 t.a&gt;(t.rn Wyoming caused hundreds Kridcr emphasized. I f Hnnfonl
does not finish the season, he said,
ntor* Humphry
(D-Mm ni and I
,
. , „
professional baseball is doomed
Biennia &lt;I)-M!*i|. wax scheduled " l
for Hinale debate today with nil. &lt;"
beet wops in the North here.
*ii:nn
Bauman ami other members o f
sign* pointing to ovvi whclmiitK HnMu \ alloy last night.
Towns Mini
uays were flood the present organization have ex*
passage.
As the Ronate. took op the mut­ rd. rommuuicatiun* were rut oil, ptciacd their willingness to turn
ter, informed souicea reported the ami in.inv motorists were stranded over the franchise to another
administration — a f t e r several as Die storms moved through j 75 group and lo lend their help in
weeks of apparent indecision— hut mile wide area.
currying out the baseball progtuin.
decided to suppolt the proposal,
No (Iciilhs o f serious injuries
Up to now, President Eisenhow­ w ise reported.
er and A lly . Grn. Brownell have
'Mu- National Guard was ralted
indicated they felt there was no out at Turrington as travel was
need for such a study.
ciil olf miiiIIi ami west of Die city.
The proposed 12-meinhcr com­ The North I’ lalte received thou
mission would make recommenda­ sands of second leet of water from
tions to improve the functioning ereeKx and Irrigation ditches.
of the security program,
Similar conditions were reported
A House committee already has 1( j.,,,.,
|„.,ram|,.
Liugle ami
approved a companion mens*, re
Guernsey, farther north in Die
• ponsored by Hep. Walter (D -I'a.l Valjey.
SAN FRANCISCO 41 — Russia
Sen. Mundt (It-K D ), who with­
and the Western Powers wei#
Tile
rain
and
hail
fell
for
right
held his vote on the proposal
agreed today that the U.N.’s Itl'h
when tha Government Operations hours. It stopped about an hour
anniversary session had been well
Committee approved it 10 0 last after midnight.
•
Shortly
after.
Dm Wyoming worthwhile.
week, said in an Interview he now
Roth acknowledged
Pi.it tha
ter bail receded on U. S. 26 &gt;o
knows of no opposition.
weeklong meetings had pruvhted
" I'm going to support it on the Highway Patrol re;&gt;orH-tl the waan excellent opportunity for diplo.
basis that we ran never he too c a i s rould move from Fort Lara­
malic contacts ami that th? big
cautious or inrrful in making cer­ mie into Turrington, which had
power speeches had given e ir li
tain that tho federal security ma­ facilities to accomodate them.
side a better understanding of
chinery i« functioning effective­
what lo expect at the summit talks
ly," he said.
in Geneva next month
The anniversary session ended
yesteiday—Just 10 years after thf
signing of Hie U N Charter—with
a declaration by its president. Dr.
Kelco N. Van Kleffens, reaffirming
V IE N N A ,
— Indian Prime
WEST PALM REACH 41 — A the determination of the 60 na­
Minister Neliru saw the sight* of small (Mini of blood found on Die
tions "to save succeeding genera­
Vienna today ns he continued his
paveinenl of a rood tourlied off tions from the sceurgu of w ar."
European tour.
an intensive searrli near hero yes­
Thousands of
Australn* lined
The declaration also pledged
terday, County Investigator John
lliu U.N. to pros* forw ird with
the road lu cheer the Aslan leader Hiatt said.
on his arrival yesterday
from
disarmament efforts which have
The deputy sheriff, who Is work­ Just icrcntly begun to make pro­
Warsaw aboard a ipcrial Soviet
ing on tho dissappeuranre of gress.
plane.
Nehru leaves the Austrian cap­ Judge E. E. Chiliingwortli and hi,
The session had a le v rough
ital lute tonight for Sulrhurg io wife, look 18 offirers and two m o m e n t a , when the president
preside at a conference there ol bloodhounds lo jtlie scene- a few wielded the gavel ami cautioned
Indian diplomatic envoys in Eu­ miles northwesr of Boca Raton restraint, but behind thc-iceuc re*
They searched an area one le lliii* between Itus-ia and Ilia
rope.
•
fourth mile square hut found noth­ Wcx'crn Rowers were unu.uxlly
ing that would u«count lor the cordial
blond, Hiatt said. About hall a
an isolated urea west of Die YaIIUKNOS AIIIE.S f/P&gt;— Argen- ruii was splashed oil the road at
(ins today relca.md IU loaders of malu community, Hiatt said the
the Radical party who had Iicon slain was no mure than two days
detained since the June 16 revolt old.
against President Junn Ii. Peron'a
regime. Four other parly mem­
A propno-d resolution to pro*
bers were still held.
vent any niw construction along
Simultaneously, |«)llcc al Eva
the propose,: right-of-way for Ini*
Peron. in Buenos Aires province
provemrnt o ' Highway 17-t»2 will
In eastern Argentina, announced
R a At IMOIIK OPi — A mother lo- discussed 1 hursday night at a
the arrest of two persons identi­ kangaroo broke loose from its meeting at the Ameiican Legion
fied at Communists and two handleix after a television appear- hut at P ia iiic Lake. The meeting
Radical
p a rty
mrmlirr*
on ance and went bouncing about the will lu-gin at 7 o'clock.
charges o f spreading rumors. The city for a full hour last night.
John Fox, county right-of-way
nature o f tha rumor* was nut dis­
Once she rh-ared the hood o f an agent, said interested persons will
closed.
*
automobile with a beautiful leap. he given an oppoitunity to spealc
Everywhere she went traffic was their mind* on the Issue.
disrupted. Children leaned goggleFox pointed out that additional
eyed out o f car windows. Women right-of-way for four-laning o f
screamed.
17-92 will not be needed in tha
Three attendant* from tho too, thickly-built up commercial area
RO ANO KE, Va. f/ P )- Tha folk*
at a Roanoke theater don’t know well past th* age for sprinting, south of Casselberry, through
who stole their property Saturday were in valiant pursuit. They were Cassclhciry. or from Onorn St*
north to Flench Ave. her*.
night but they’re pretty sure it joined by six policemen.
was 1 male and t no child.
ROSE ELECTED
R T Itlh R C O N TIN U E S
The atoli n property was a
TAM PA 41 — Herbert Rote o l
LOS A N G E LE S (A l— Th* Los
seven-foot cardboard picture, o f
ifarilyn Monroe, skirts a-flying, Angeles Transit Lines atrikr, a f­ St. Petersburg was elected com*
which had be*n set In the lobby to fecting about a million riders, mandaat of the Marine Corpa
advertise her newest film.
moved Into its second week and leagu e of Florida yesterday. Mra.
Nearby was an equally hlg pic­ police planned today to combat Margaret Uaodlry, ala* of S t
ture o f Davy Crockett. It was ever-inrrratiny tra ffic problems In Petersburg, wa* alerted
af teacarp
s' au
xiliary.
Ignored by Um thief.
tha downtown ares.

■

..1 ^

1

Ike's Regime Set Wyoming
To Go Along With
Hard Hit
Security Study

By Floods

United Nations
Session Hailed
As Big Success

Sights Of Vienna
Viewed By Nehru

Blood Sets Off
New Hunt In Case
Of Missing Pair

Argentina Frees
19 Party Members

Meeting Slated
On Right-Of-Way
For U.S. 17-92

Kangaroo Bounces
Around Baltimore

Dovy Crockett's
Popularity Fails

J

�M

I

Committee Okays
Request For Jump
To Debt Limit

TTTE SANFORD HERALD
fBANOCCS
THE
HOSPITAL/ HE GOT
BAMGCO UOSJ AM
1
AOClDEMr.' LETS G O A

TW CUB T
RUMAttt ■
ISC 3U T AT
THT PLATC,
TRVIMT TO
» B T tA L
HOWE /

* B tA T A

A O O eS TF D
r o ta *

- S O THEM THE K
A M B U LA N C e CAME
AMO HAULED ME &gt;
c r r . ? r ---------------

C O N Q tA T U L A T lO N S .i
UERAYf VO uW f A
PORN B A U . P l AVUH

w hat

f t M EAN. IT S
^
/U j A IN S T T 7H 0 1 A W
TVte f
SCEM F O F A M

to le a v e

r W

oovou

S T IL L MATE
BASEBALL,

WASHINGTON (Jt-The Houte
Ways and Means Committee today
quickly approved an admlniatration request to Increase tho na- #
t;onal debt limit to M l bUllon dotlara lor another year.
Committee members said the
croup acted by voice vote In a
brief closed sessir , with no dla»
sents heard. The action came after
Secretary of the Treasury Hum­
phrey asked for a continuation of
the present “ temporary" to M Ibllllon-dollar ceUini—etx billions
above that allowed in the perma­
nent law.
*
“ It will be a tight squeeze but
we will try to live within it,"
Humphrey told the committee.
“ We may be back a year from
now. Wa may be back o u t Janu­
ary if the least thing goes wrong,"
be said. “ It's that tight."
The renewed one-year Increase
in the ceiling Is expected to win
Congress' passage within • matter
of days. The present law permit­
ting the higher ceiling Is due t o L
explrc next Thursday.
Humphrey foresaw a sharp cut
in a 2li-bllllon-dollar deficit pre­
dicted for the government in tho
coming fiscal year, or perhaps
even a balanced budget.

I 6 AWTW LAST INMING/VOU

i \

sjO-mit
P lT C H U N ,
t W IT H a 4
ONE-HlTTCW
M MS F ifiV
L IT T L E
LEAGUE
» GAME

INo

AtATTtS •
HOW WELL
VOU Hlf..

RgMCMBCIt
VOU A n t

h e l p in g
thc

OPPOSING
PITCHER

WHEN VOJ
SWING
AT HIS

CBONN HUNCI Constantine, 18, o f Greece, recently awarded the
revived title o f the Duke o f Sparta, la shown shut-putting at Ana*
vryia, a private aehool near Athena. The Duke has reportedly dis­
tinguished himself ns an all-around athlete.
ffnlematlonof)

TH^OWt/

Bevan Elected To Party Cabinet
LONDON if)—Left-wing Labohlc
Ancurin Bevan has been electad
tu the party's new shadow cabinet,
His selection came 14 months afte r ho quit tba old group in protest
against party chief Clement AltIce's stand on International affairs.
The fiery
Welsh
rebel was
among 12 top Socialists elected
last night to the body,' which dccldcs lhe party's stand on legislatlon before Parliament. It would
take over at the regular Cabinet
should tba ruling Conservativas be
turned out of office and the Laboritas succeed is forming a govern-

co N p cS m

ment.
Along with Bavan,
m e m b e r s in Parll
named bis chief lieutei
Wilson. Wilson, a fo
mlnlatar, took over B
on the old ahadow ei
nis leader walked oi
1054.
----------------Thtra are varying 1
bout the origin o f 8L
Day — that it grew
old Roman festival, c&lt;
e* a third-cantury i
marka the data o f th
mating o f all birds.

JACKSONVILLE i * - A man sus­
pected of the torture slaying of an
elderly Fort I-a-derdale woman
has been traced to Jacksonville
but the trail ends here, police re­
ported.
The vletipi. Mrs. Jane Barley,
81, was repeatedly atabbed where
at her Fort Laudaidaie home where
she lived alone. She lived long
enough to give a description of her
assailant whom she knew only as
“ Mr. Parker."*
Police Capt. H. T. Fowiar said
the description fit that of a man
who regiatered In a Fort Laudardale motel as Robert Wilson of
Baltimore, Md.
Investigation
showed,
Fowler
said, that Wilson oo June S took ■
taxi from near Mr*. Ballty’i house
to a motel, called another taxi and
asked to be taken to Jacksonville.
When the dri-er refuted. Wilson
want to a railroad station and
bought a train ticket.
Two Fort Lauderdale datcctives
carat here and combed the area
atreet by street without finding
him.
Dairy products supply about 30
Wilson w ai described as about per cent o f Americana' protein
SS, S feet g, 1U pounds, fair com- diet.
plexioned with dark, unruly hslr.
He has slouched shoulders and
walks in a fast but loose jointed
manner.
REVIEW DENIED
TALLAHASSEE IA - The Supreme Court ha* declined to re­
view a Circuit Court ruling that
the children of Allan Plait have
the right to attend white schools.
Lake County Circuit Judge Tru­
man G. Futch ruled the Platt chil­
dren had won the right by default
because of fsllure of the Lake
County school board to fllo an an­
swer In the esse within the re­
quired time.
Platt had sued for his children's
admittance to the white schools
from which they had been barred
on lhe ground they had Negro
blood The fsfher ask! they actu­
ally are of Irlsh-Indlan descent.
The school bosrd now Is expected
to appeal In the Supreme Court
from the order entered by Judge
Futch In favor of PlaU.

LAST TIME TONIGHT
•Start* 7:45

“BustsBunny**
A L L CARTOON
REVUE

7:51 — 10:83
PLU S

Vera Cruz
STAR R IN G
G A R Y COOPER
B U R T LA N C A S T E R

It's Norm al for Child
To Destroy His Toys
Bf HUMAN N. BUNMSIN, M.I.
D p jrr punish your baby for

A few simple toys

4e &amp; g g s z s

sassu s

.

w
*■ *tolch toe learna. I f y#l er your tot with tej
were a eem al child-and I ’m pg| arm. Put m&amp;t o

s

BM SU&amp; U!

.

llg h i Etod « f Toyi
ef those be already hi
at
• Nov UP Important that your U w bam Floy
w‘ Infant gets the right kind • ( toys,
Tour baby learna i
Thing* auch aa large rubber dollg fm n hu play. Ha wt
£ &lt;Fft • " »
a boyj, rattles, mere out bf playtime

"s s ra s s s :

x

Aa year youngster beging fo to last too long. As f a
.... walk ypu cap give him g foy that will taka hUtoya apt
he ca« pull after him.
d tlL
w‘ I^ t me caution you right hare q p is t im im&lt; ju n v i
• r ;n o t to giro your bapy foe many
*

tm *. t f vat* mtum Mu m alt U aim

— *., ATS molCS OI

afreet * ^ ‘ 1 sad hoonhtng to Ruenoe Alree during the attempted
coup to overthrow the Government nf President Juan Peron. Tha
g e llir ft t m a t - 1- r r 1*111—
— a »♦ u « a s a—
in a
nationwide broadcast, Peror claimed victory while blaming the Reds
tor attacks an tho Catholic thurebae.
fln ttn a t k m l Jtodtnphota)
I f all the cars and trucks exThere are town* named •'Valen­
tried fr o m . New York Harbor tina" in Nabrmsks, Texas, Arkan­
a yepr were placed end fo fnd sas and A risen * and one named
from Manhat­ "Valentlnea" In Vlrgtnja. says foe
National Gee graphic Society.
tan to Indianapolis, lad.

SAVING IN CO ST
Ygal Dividends from 15-357* on

Flre-Wlnd-Homcownrra Inguranca
bettie May M.

B O Y D -W A L L A C E

■erg allacbed to the motlooi
L
fo
d
fo
y
. It. til rgm
m
ttU
d
mental hospital in lndiiaa fo
gad his wife Bertha, 70, IP*
Ml tola guardian. Llndlly i i a
id. Inifong school tggchir.

foe pm Asm* ft fo* Ufodfoy
kputiei Bob Wooten
t

"■*

A
W Wi d
W

A Aft.
yvwvf*

Swadea reports that a rocord
3U,TW nen-BcandinavUns visited
then fo 1M4, moat from Weston
Oermany (103^48) with Amart f

MMSOGRAPHPRINTING—TYPING
CREDITINVESTIGATIONSMADE.
ANYWHEREINUNITEDSTATESOR
FOREIGNCOUNTRIES
CREDIT BUREAU OF SANFORD

«W

"\TOU (dropthe tide windows flownon thk

X «ry beauty of « Buiok witlj tho solid
■tesl roof-«ndit*auwideopenm i Convartp
Ihle, with no osotcr posts to mar your view.
That** what makes It s hardtop.
But what makaa it a vary spaeial kind of
hardtop la tho fact that it hu f $ u r doors
insteadof two.
Cheers? Brother!-they’re realiy rolling
out for Bukk's 4*Door Riviera!
Now.youaai,youcanhavethatTsmsndausly
popular styilal ofa fnt# hardtao aembinad

ArtittMk*MvMr**wkiwisiMr
W M •• W » wkb thii *w rw l-« m &gt;
Urtrtbrtybuilttowfcrtyawrtmrtunl
8*ItMi*Ilk*SuhfcVteait*a*ia-

b e a n o the 4&gt;Dopr Riviera I s V a S S E S f
•ensation across the nation.
It s rolling o f tha assembly lines In volume

numbers to meet the demand—|nthe hiahe1

RFWered C en tu ry Series, and in tho

*&lt;

**P«w EMwfc ’VbwTl tea

AflENOT

m am

■ • \—-~
1
\

£ X

♦

./ATill

�1
TT. i m

S ojcIoL fcvojnhu
Joy Ruth Class
Helps Families
By Giving Clothes

(P &amp; A A o n a h
Mrs. J. C. Rills and S. P. Smith
have started toward their summer
home, Rcrgennes, Vt. They will
stop for ten day* *t their esmp
In Hendersonville, N. C. where Mr.
and Mrs. John Rills will later
bring their family.

Th* Joy Ruth C la n of the First
Baptist Church met at the home
o f Mra. J. C. Newsome on I-ahe
Markham recently with Mr*. J. W.
Carter, president, presiding.
The devotional «a a Riven hy
Friends o f K. E. Walker will be
Mia. Melvyn Dekle after which
glad to Irani that he is Improving
monthly reporta were R iven and but Ms atill confined to the Fernthe viiitation w ai read. Clothea aid Laughton Memorial Hospital.
were aorted for nredv families.
Mr. and Mr*. Ben
Berry ol
During the aoclal hour the
hostess had the cueati make hats Cincinnati, Ohio have been the
from paper plates and napkini. guests for the past two weeks of
Refreshment* o f nuts, cookies, Mr. and Mrs. James Blanken­
randy and punch were served. As ship on Beardall Ave. Mrs. Ber­
an added surprise rookie hata ry is s cousin of Mrs. Blanken­
were served to the fuesta.
ship and niece of Mrs. Whitcomb
Those prasent were Mrs. (.eland who makes her home with her
Rudd, Mra. A. J. Teterson. Mrs. daughter, Mrs. Blankenship.
Bennie Austin, Mrs. Calvin A.
Mrs. C. M. Erson, and Carole
W right, Mrs. Charles Mm Ran and
Jimmy, Mra. J. W. Carter, Mrs. or Hattslield, N. J. are the guests
W.
R.
Howard, Mr*.
Robert of Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Maffett
HodRea, Mra. Melvyn Dekle, Mra. and Mr and Mrs. Charles Hamit
Vernon Hasty and Mrs. J. C. New* Mr* Erson is the sister of Mrs.
Maffett and Mra. llamll.
tome.
Mra. Sidney Ives of North Elloitt Ave. who entered BownanGray Hospital in Winston Salem,
N, C thia past week, has Im­
proved greatly and will return
to Sanford next week.
Friend* of Judge J. G. Sharon
will he glad to learn that he will
U hark in his office tomorrow
after a six week* absence as the
icsult of an opeiation.

Try This One
!.ike to make tart*? Then try
r this easy delectable recipe.
Turkey Tctrattini
Green Peas
Salad
Hot Rlsrult*
Spiced Teach Tarts
ReveraR*
SPICED PEACH T A R T S
Ingredients: Rich pie dough
(based on 1V4 cups flour) U cup
firm ly packed light brown sugar,
1 teaspoon cornstarch, dash of
, aalt, V4 teaspoon nutmeg, 6 can# tied d in g peach halves (thorough­
ly drained).
Method: Roll out pastry and fit
into S tart pan* (each 3 Inches
across top) or into muffin pans.
M U brown sugar, cornstarch, salt
and nutmeg. Put half the mixture
into ths pastry-lined tart pans or
it'Uffin cups. Place a peach half in
each tart pan; if muffin cups
whose top diameter Is less, than 3
^ m inches are used cut p e a c h
* halves In two and fit two peach
pieces Into tach muffin cup. Sprin­
kle remaining sugar mixture over
peaches. Bake In hot (426 degrees)
oven 26 to 30 minutes or until
* pcstry Is lightly browned. Makes
C servings.

Rebeah Lodge
4 Meets Thursday
The Semlnola Rebekah Lodge
No. - 41 met in the IOOF hall
Thursday night with Noble Grand,
Mrs. Mabel Brown presiding.
After* routine
business
and
draping o f the Charter fo r a dr.
, ceased member, Mrs, Katherine
McKay, and draping the A ltar
for the late Grand Master J. C.
Conally o f Jacksonville the meet­
ing was turned over to Mrs.
ftR lan rh e Parmetsr. Mrs. Parmeter, district deputy president of
No. 10 held a school o f Instruction
A program o f Bibls pictures
Used in the Rebekah work was
shown on the screen by Mrs.
Em ily Jamsson,
The hall was beautifully da• enrated in (he president's colors,
pink and green. Refreshmenta
were served te SO members and
2A visiter*.

Male Ankles Now
Are Whistle Bait
With Bright Colors
This is the year that the L'.S.
male come* Into hi* own.
Now his well-turned ankles, ex­
posed hy shorter trousrrs ami
lower-cut ahoe* and glorified by
dassling socks, rate whistle* from
the girls.
Sock* fo r spring and summer
are being turned out In every
conceivable color,
pattern and
knit— all for the greater glory
of the male ankle. Some of the
untraditional color* that will be
plainly visible this summer In­
clude: hellio, shrimp, burnt or­
ange, fla m in g o , lemon, lima and
champagne pink.
It seems the men are huying
them, too. Since the first con­
servative mala was won over to •
pink ahlrt, all bara aecm to be
down.
The vlved tint* are used In
various w ay*—aa a discret aeback­
cent against a neutral
ground or a* a traffic-stopping
blase o f color In. a hold pattern.
Yarn* uaed in the new aocka
rover a
wide
range—dacron,
nylon, wool-and-nylon, orlon-andnylon, as well as the more fam il­
iar wool, cotton and silk.
Other new wrinkles In ths sock
lineup are the stretch-to-fit sock
and the built-in garter support.

Miss J. Miller
Reveals Plans
O f July 2 Rites

For the past six week* swim­
ming lessons have been given at
the Sanford pool, for Brownies
and Girl Scouts, Kigbty-scvrn
girls took part in these lessons.
The rlassrs were for beginners, in­
termediate, advance and junior life
saving.
The following girls passed their
Junior l.ife Saving Trata: Misses
-''andra MrKinney, Patricia Clark,
Sally Robb, Marilyn McDaniel,
Janet Glenn. Melinda Mc.Muriay,
and Judy Brown.
The classes were rnndurted hy
Mr*. Deva Clark, Mr*. I. J. But­
ler Jr., Mis* France* Wilson, M i*.
I.. A, Olson and Miss Frances
Cobb.

Commander's Wife
Is Entertained
Mrs. Taul R. Rupert entertained
at hrr homo nn W illow T en ace,
Norfolk, Va. June 23 In honor of
Mr*. Date Iwon Scott Jr., w ho will
he leaving in the near future for
Port Lyantev, Krcnrh Morocco to
Join hrr husband, l.t. Cmdr. Dale
Scott,
Mr*. E. F. Sundcrman served
coffee and tea from a table anpointed in white and pale pink.
About 30 gurala were present.

MONDAY
By AI.ICK (TtO M ARTIK
gsrntshed whh whipped cream ay
The First Baptist Vacation Bi­
F.itenslon Nutritionist
ble School will be from 8:10 to
top and a cherry for party fare
11:30 a. m. for those age 2 thiu
A gelling together of the “ gsng" Seer* Wl cold glasses (put them
Id years.
usually means "eats” . Why not
In refrigerator or frearer for sew
make thrir ''snacks” peck S kit
TU E S D A Y
real hour* before).
of
food
value
at
well
a
tart*
Tb# First Baptist Varstloa Bibto School will begin at 8:30 a. m. good?
The Inlet mediate Royal Ambas­
Teen-ager* hi fheh* "growlngA fri*nd hv need ta a new
sador* will meet at th* First lisp- up process' should get a quart trav*4 ironing hoard that foldl
list Church at 7:00 p. m.
or more of milk a day. Milk con­ to 9 by 16 inehes, weight Jn*t
The Past Noble Grand Club of tains protein for cell tissue build­ 30 ounce*. When yo-i need to Ire*
(h# Semlnola Rebekah Lodge will ing, thrre important R vitamins something in a hurry, thia handy
meet with Mi*. Mamie Ewan, 1205! for growth and developmasit and board can be attached
to any
Elm Ave., at 8 p. m.
calcium for sound bones and good chair nr drawer — without m ar­
The I'nity Clast will meet In muscle action.
ring ihe furnithre. This makes
tb* Valdes Hotel at 7:45 p. m.
Frw Iren i g m , especially our i* ea»y in keep your clotha freshly
with Jerry Meacham a* learner. young ladies, get enough nnlk laundered and ironed with a mini­
The putitic i* Invited.
lo take care of their rapid devel­ mum of trouble, whether you'i*
TH U R S D A Y
opment. Don't preach lo them stopping at a hotel or motel or
The First Baptist Vacation Bi­ about it though, that won't help visiting friends.
ble School will begin at 8:10 a. m. a bit. Try instead having plenty
The Junior Royal Ambassadors of rnld milk I any kind) on hand.
will nirrt at the First Baptist Dry skimmilk is low in ealories
rhurrh at 7 p m.
and nukes
Into
d e lic io u s
Mrs. Fay L. Leo of Enterprise
The First Bapti«l Church Choir ‘ •shakes” . Resides, It Is very in­
entertained on Wednesday night
will hold rehearsal at 7:30 p. m. expensive to use. Keep on hand
with a buffet supper.
The Lailirs Auxiliaiy of the some •'fixings” for milk drink*,
Mrs. Lee had at her guerts, Mr.
III.F and K will meet with Mi*. loo, besides several simple reeland Mrs. Walter H. Trapp, Mrs.
Nan Fortnci at t l a. m. for its pes lefi conveniently near Ihe
Mary Larson. Mr. I joc. Mrs. Iren*
monthly business meeting and "lixings” ! A quart fruit Jar with
Watt, Mrs. F.ffte Mirlke, Joyc*
coveted dish luncheon.
Below are some recipes your teen­ Miclkc and Pain Mielke.
FRID AY
ager will enjoy making up and
The First Baptist Vacation Bi­ a tiih l lid makes a fineshakcr.
ble School will begin at R 31) a. in serving to the crowd. They'll he
for those age thire through 16 »o rxellei; over how good It is,,
years.
and you can hr sure Ihry are get­
The First Baptist Varatimi Bi­ ting much needeil protein, vita-'
ble School Cnmmcnrrnirnt pro­ nuns and calcium!
N O W .SHOWING
gram
will
begin
at k p ni Peppermint
Smash; Allow 7 3
in the Church Auditorium The cup cold milk for each person In
/TT
Exhibits will be open to tho pub he served. Pour into shaker. Put
(I'hiiln hy Cos) lie *t 7 30 p in.
one generous scoop of vanilla ire
------------------------- ‘Ut,
cream into shaker for rarh 2,3
cup milk. Add a tjhlnpnoa (fo r |
7 servings) of crushed peppermint j
eanily. Shake
Pour in chilled &gt;
glas.es. Sprinkle with m&gt;wa crushed peppermint amt serve at once

Supper Is Given ' ,1

Swimming Classes
Are Completed
,

★

MRS. RO BERT E R N E ST M cKKK

★

★

★

★

★

Rehearsal Supper
Betty Brisson, Robert M cKee
Given Couple,
Have Beautiful Ceremony Sunday Saturday Evening

Apricot Fooler:
Into shaker
1 lie Smithson • Meek rehenrIn a beautiful setting of palms, gladioli sin! pom poms against an
altar hanked with natural greenery Miss llettv .lean Briason, daughter , snl supper was given Sato day poor .3 4 cup milk for each per- i
of Mr. and Mra. Ituaarll Gordon Brisson was wed to Robert Ernest |evening hy Mr. and Mis William son lo be served. Add N cup of J
McKee, son of Elder and Mrs. A. D. McKee of Greenrville. Trim Sun- | Under Meek, patents o f the Iniilc- canned apricot nocloc for each :
3 I cup milk. Shako Put a scoop]
■lay, June 26 at 8 p. m. in I'm Seventh-day Adventist Church with the groom, at their lovely home.
of ice t-scani in each glass. Pour
Elder A. D. McKee officiating.
I
“
Mixed flowers, artistically araprirni milk over ice rream. ser­
Organist for the candlelight Loom*,
&gt;aiiged, w er« placed at points of
ve with straw and ire lea spoons.
reirmony *wns Mrs. D a r r e l I j ^ floral arrangement centered interest throughout tb* home.
RcPrr live tail glasses!
Grirme. Selections played were " I |h„ bride's table and was surGuest, enjoying this a ffair with I
lo v e You Truly’*, ind *'Of Perfect ' round** t |,y rrystnl rntullMtirks. A
Banana Shake: Allow S a well
the popular roupla ini linli-d tho
Love” .
'crystal punch bowl was used for
each rtip.
Rev. and Mis. George fa illo n , Mt. ripcord banana fur
The bride, given in marriage the punch and a tiered wedding
and Mrs. P. M. Smithson, Miss Mash wilh a fork or alretrir mix­
by her father was lovely In a cake wa* cut by the couple,
I’leasy Jean Smithson, Mr. and er until smiMiih Pour into shaker
l-allerina length traditional white
Mrs. Frank W oodruff kept the Mra. K, J. Estes, Mr. and Mis. with niilk. Or add nulk lo mixer.
gown o f crystallelte taffeta ac­ bride's book and Miss Patricia Merritt Staley, Mr*, ho/ Clouts, Add 2 teaspoon* sugar and dash
cented with a round neckline. In­ Bell, Mi** Camle Buckner served Jr., Stephen Clonl*.
of nutmeg for each serv ing. Shake
serts were used at intervals. A lace punch. Mis. Carter Warren rut
Mr*. Ruby Combs, Alls* Alice with several ire rubes. Pout in
jacket featuring a mandaiin rollnr the rake.
Lea Combs, Mis. M aiy Niclmls, cold glasses and serve.
and three quarter length sleeves
Hostesses were Mra. T. B. Mid­ Mr*. Alice Thomas, Miss Lynn
Mm-ah Swish: Mix I tablespoon
wa* also worn by the radiant dleton ami Mi*. It. S. Bate*.,
Thomas, Mis. James l-Teoch, Mira chocolate m i op with S rup milk
bride. She rarried a rasrade bou­
Mr*. McKee wore for l-%r wed­ Shirley Jones, Misa Leona Hint, Dissolve I teaspoon instant cof­
quet o f while rnmalion* centered
Thelma
Ramti.i, Johnny fee in |/4 cup hot water. Add
ding
trip to Callinbutg, Trim, a Miss
by a white orchid with a purple
biege duster and rltraa with Jones, liny Beasley and Mr. and rlmcolate milk. Add a scoop of
throat.
cream anil
shake ]
brown accessories. She wore the Mis. Melvin Reed, th* latter of vanilla ire
Mis* Constance Ludwig, maid of white orrhid from her bridal bou­ Sanfoid.
This makes one serving. Maybe I
honor, was gowned in a tmquoise quet.
•
rrystalette taffeta dresa and cargpsewa. iin M a u e i . m e n s n u i i s u
The ronpla will reside after their
lied a cascad# bouquet o f yellow
trip In Tampa.
carnation*.
Out-of-town guest* Inrlmled: Mr.
Bridesmaid. Mlaa Celia You- and Mr*. M any Stephenson, Mr,
nans, o f Tallahassee, wore an and Mr*. J. S. I’otta, Tampa; Mr.
identical decs* to that of the maid and Mr*. K. It. Swain, Cullegedalr,
of honor and also rarried yellow Trnn.: Mr. and Mr*. D. It. Itriscarnation*.
aon, Daytons Bcarh; Mr. and Mra.
Morris Swinson, Tamp*, serv­ L, n. N'irhol*. Casselberry, Mr*.
ed a* bent nian and Jim Cochran, A. I.. Tollman*. Tallahasaee and
Ft. Myera and Robert Brisson Misa Lynne Jrnsrn, Nashville,
A L W A Y S
F I R S T
Q U A L I T Y ! : '
brother of th* bride, acted as ush- Tenn.
The bride wa* (torn in Sanford
•r*.
Little Rebecca Patterson was and attended Knirat l ake Acad­
flower girl, Th* bride'* mother emy Maitland, and Southern Miawore a dress o f rose lara with a slonary College in Collrgi-dule,
Tenn. She I* presently employed
corsage of white carnation*.
The giomn'a mother chose a aa icrrelaty hy the Ninth A m eiiia
blue rose dieaa and pinned a cor­ Companir* in Tampa.
Mr, McKee was born in Hattie*sage o f white rarnations on hrr
left shoulder.
burg, Misa. and attended school in
A irreption wa* held Immediate- North Carolina and also K. M.C. in
ly after the rerrmony in the home Collcgrdalc, Tenn. Ho is attending
o f thr bride’s parents. Brides flow ­ the Tampa lluainess College ma­
er* wrre used throughout the joring in areounting.

I'KATUUI'-v

P e n n e y ’s

*v;

v-

Excitingly New!

^ Mr. and Mr*. II. E. T affer, 003
Catalina Drive, announce the birth
of a fl III. 7 os daughter, June 20
in the Pcrnild Laughton Memoiial
Hospital. The young lady haa been
named Barbara Jane.

Today
Grorga A. Stina
Good n tw i In gloves:
knitv
made of a bland of fibers that
Includes that luxury fiber, Vicara. Theta new glovea a rt resist­
ant to both moths and mlldaw.
and are so soft, so smart, and
so ta fe'y washable.

M ilk Refreshm ent! F o rT e e n - A gers
C arry Food V a lu e ! And T a ste Good

Final plana are bring announc­
ed today for the wedding of Mi**
Jeanne l.*ne Miller, daughter of
the Rev. and Mr*. John I- Miller
ar.d Donald Itsron, son of Mr,
and Mrs. D. (). Olson of Phoenix,
Arts.
The wedding will he held at
the First Baptist Chinch on Satunlay evening, July 3 at R
o clock with the Itev, W. P,
IItook* Jr. officiating.
Misa Millei hat chosen as her
maid of honor,
Miss Sandra
Dunn, and bridesmaids. Miss Pat­
sy
Collins
and
Mist
Peggy
Wright.
Jackie Miller, brother of the
bride-elect, will serve ss heat man,
and ushrr-groomsmrn will he Hob
Wills, Joe Douthitt and Troy Ray
Jr.
Soloist will l&gt;e Miss Norma
Faye Harvey, and organist will
be Misa Margaret Davis, who has
been music teacher of Miss Miller
since early childhood.
All friends and relative* are In­
vited to the wedding, and recep­
tion which will be held immediate­
ly afterward in tho Memorial
Educational Building.

BIRTHS

Happy Birthday '

THE LITTLE

m ake som eth in g v ^ n d e rfu l\ w itt»

GAYMODE®

fit.

WITH

.m

« ■ up

.o

o d

/

y e a k

THE BIG
S-T-R-E-T-C-H!

SALE
k l.

ALL
STRAW HATS

w hat
T W i wdy t o

1»ou»o . . . ihoco's m

?

W ILL NOT M O

1

AT ANKUS

TMnk of m y r n a i to

I® f St29^44^l^(7( 49^(^f
w W » . , . m k K turn to cwl a n d
A m i W$ so M a y to
6^ ^
1o r u s a** M U O vaig ^ 6 aa
A lr fo M t b f M t o y a r A cared,

L I V I N G

W tU NOT M O
. AT JCNUi

1

Priec

Also ready cut chair pads, throar pfl.
lowa (in round or aquara shape).
Mattress pads, shredded foam flake*
in 18 o*- packages.

MAMS N IVIR TWIST*
N IVIR TURN

Glamour-sheer nylons that cling to the shape
of your lega.afil as if made for you alon£.

101 VOWM0 ■046CMAR6IS

%

~ Papr ?

Store closed all day Wednesday Juno
29th, In order to taka inventory.

VAOft
“ cuAoai maim? P t i M f 'i t W r
! stretchable Caywode arlw u avoid U jour Up.*
fallow every curve ana boUow like a socood
akia. Seam* stay to pU co. . . never twist, never
turn. And (bees Cayavodsa ato (Uaaorosuly
akeer, too. Find tkeai to Cals, a wonderfully
u J . soft shade, Siaa* Midaa, Norm ami L o s *

1 Batter'tksa

I

.

�m-

-------- .------------------ r

Dominican Enterprise
The Dr.tninicun Republic in constructing
« huge shipj’arrt and a free |&gt;ort, two projects
that are being closely scrutinized in the
United States.
The shipyard, located on one of the
world’s busiest sea routes, has a significance
beyond the Caribbean. U. S. shipbuilders see
this project as a possible threat to the de­
clining Hast Coust industry. They fear they
will be unable to compete with the Domini­
can shipyard, where lubor costs will be far
lower than in the United States.
The Dominican shipyard will have five
floating docks, the hugest 1,105 feet long
and 145 feet wide. This dry dock is de­
signed to handle the huge tankers ‘and ore
carriers now in use, but it also will be large
enough to lift uircraft carriers of the Forrestul cluss us well us liners like the Queen
Mary and the United States.
These new facilities are expected to pro­
vide 6,000 jobs for Dominican workers. In
addition, a considerable volume of new busi­
ness will be created. As a result of this pro­
ject, pluns are being considered for un ela­
borate retail shopping center, where the
growing number of tourists from the United
States and South America might purchase
duty-free gifts from nil parts of the world.
Despite tho possible competition that
may ensue, this project is commendable. It
shows that no nation Is too small to solve
Its economic problems, fcrtstn lv tf ovnon**|lnn&gt; for tbn« " e'nlrpl* ni(|lnrltil|»p
Domlnlrlsn
Republic
will
ronn maior

The Sanford Herald
P i MI.Ii H S«'1&gt; .*«■#♦&gt;• • « ! • « ( « »
•H * &gt; . , r lr .I it.

Mmm4af

Kalrre4 •• M r*,&lt; rleae matter Orltktt XT. (BIB at
I t , Past OtOre « f Baafer4. M arie., aaSrr the Set
af Caaeraaa at Harah S. lata
PRP.D p r n a is s . K4tier aa« rafcllafcaa
JACK StlTHKHI.Sail. Maaaalaa KSItar

benefits that will make It one o f the most
important countries in tte Caribbean.

Park* are generally taken
granted.
They are used and enjoyed. But few* people
stop to think how they were created. Still
fewer think of their future.
Yet the public pnrks, on the national,
state and local levela, are in a tight squeeze.
The population Is growing. Cities and towns
are being built up rapidly. But the public
parks remain static. Some indeed, are
sacrificed as building sites for “ improve­
ments” . And without adequate planning,
many communities have grown up without
ademiate provision for narks.
C. MrKim Norton. Vice President o f the
Regional Plnn Association of New York City,
recently discussed the squeeze-piny on the
natlon'n parks Ip a talk entitled “ Disappear­
ing Countryside.” He warned thnt unless
corrective measures are *aken, New York
City, for Instance, would become a "continu­
ous tight-packed urban area” requiring nn
overnight's drive to renrh the country. "W e
need to set aside areas," he urged, "that
nro just a piece o f country, Informally kept
and informnllv used." This Is true of other
cities, also. What are we going to do here?
Joseph Prendergnst, executive director
o f the National Recreation Association, went
ao far a s to propose a countrv-wide confer­
ence to be railed by resident Klsenhower In
195(1 to alert the nation t.i Its need for parks
and open spaces The need for such areas be­
comes more Important as the population
grows larger and t h e work week g r o w s
shorter. The nntionnl pnrks. which hnve
sufficient facilities for 25.000,000 people an­
nually, were visited by 43,000,000 last year.
This Indicutes the need.
The problem o f providing adequate parka
and playgrounds for a growing population
ought not lie ignored. Y et little will tie done
unless citizens demnnd it.

an asm tP T tn n r « t s i
par tvreS
Oaa meats
at.ee
a ll tt.atSa
Oaetear
-r»
an aa
ft should cost $10.00 to throw candy
at ISaaka, raealallaaa aat
tar the parpaae at ralalaa
wrappors or newspapers on New York City
tee at rewalar aStertlUea rate*

Trash Tossers

NaIlea. Ilf Sf General t l i r r l t . l a ,
eat (Jearala aa rlaaa Baafc alia,
Atlaata oaarala
the Aaaartaleti Preaa
tSe aaa far rapaSIleala tsta aawapapae.

Monday, June 27, 195S

rtlDAY’H niRI.B

VKRHK

Have faith in Ood.— Mark 11:22.— We
cannot make the world a better place, but
we can make one little enrnor better. laiave
the rest to God, he is well aide to uphold his
universe and bring about hia own enda at

streets or sidewalks, claims Chief Magis­
trate John M. Murtagh, who has jurisdiction
over these violations. He would collect the
$10.00 without fail and allow it to be done
by mail.
Throwing unwanted papera or other
trash on the streets does not strike careless
people es being much o f an offense. But
when many people do It dally, no amount of
street-cleaning apparatus can keep up with
the debris.
An ill-kept community inspires no civic
pride. Army officers say that to make good
soldiers they must first be taught care In
dress end hearing. That might be true fo r
cltiee and towns as walk

JAMES MARLOW

New Plan Has Built-In Protection
WASHINGTON UR - Ford and
Oatwral Motor* didn’t slm thalr
livts away Thalr agreement to pay
latd-o(f workers has built-in protoetkxu. Roadblock- must ba over­
come. And theirs Is not a trua
guaranteed wage at all.

Tha roadblocks:
1. Tho plan dies unless the fedoral government lata the com­
panies tresl as deductible ex­
penses on their Income taxes th#
contributions they put Into
fuods for totd-ott workers.
I. Tha plan dies unless states
containing two thirds oi Ford and
GM workers say they can, if laid
«0, collect both the pay from the
companies and the full unemploy­
ment Insurance given by the states,
The deedMoe far approves la June

1, my,

Most, If not all, states have rules
«w laws, varying from aUU to
atata, agalnet giving an unem­
ployed wether any state Insurance,
•e In aerne cases M l state kuur-

* &gt;U#ctln* 9*ymmA»

torn his aU company.
IMAM workers eeet•M H tear mors than M states.
CM has iso,oae workers In even
steles.
In'

trust funds • cools on tick hour’s
work done by their employes until,
u the esse of Ford, the fund
reaches AS million dollars, and, In
the ease of CM, ISO million dollars.
In case of' layoffs, thsy’U pay
their unemployed workers out of
those funds, reducing their pay­
ments by M per cent tf the fundi
drop to 11 per cent of the mailmum level and stopping payments
altogether tf the funds drop te 4
per cent.
A true guaranteed wage plan
assures workers either steady em­
ployment or approximately fuM
pay tor as miwh as a yssr If they
lose their Jobs. Tha Ford and OM
plana do nalther.
Company officials have described
their agreement as a auppka anUl
pay plan.
They’ll give their
tween $a and $2S lor a maximum
ot M weeks. How muck
worker gets from them
on hoe much he earned _____
Job, bow tong be worked at R and
what atata he lives te
AU states pay
Insurance but (bay vaiy in
and duration gome give tha Insuranea for 1C weeks; none gives

agree to pay their unemployed
people for no mors than M weeks.
They state their eaae tMo way:
Thalr unemployment pay, added
te the state unemployment Insur­
ance a worker gets, could give him
up to W to as per cenj of hti
take-home pay whan ha waa work-

lng.

Moet of the prom t resident*
of Haiti are descendants af tka
■lava* Imported from Africa by
early Franck settlers.
When bird* o f epoeiee which
can be taught to talk nro reined la
pair* or groups they

-/0A/D A/OHf,
. F O O T .fW # ',

You Can't Act Out Your Dreams
NEW YORK lit—Curbstone re
flections of a Pavement Plato:
One trouble,with life is a fallow,
gets too old to feel at ease while
wearing a Davy Crockett h it in
public. He no longer can openly
act out hi* daydreams.
So his fantasies go underground
in his mind. And they stay there,
Itching him mentaUy. for years
and year*.
In time they yridualiy grow
smaller and sm allsr' in scale,
Haven't youn? Can’t you remainbar when maybe you dreamed of
running into a burning building
and rescuing a beautiful IsdyT Or
of finding 1100,000 in the slreetT
street?
Today none of those daydreams
flicker through your head. They
don't even make sense as day^
dreams after 40.
If the lovliest woman In the
world leaned her head out the
wrindow of a flaming dwelling, I'd
merely stand there on the pave­
ment and help her yell "H e lp !"
1 know my limitations. I wouldn’t
run up a flight of steps now to
rescue anything except my social
security card—and It would have
to be In terrible peril at that

In middle age a man no longer
pictures himself In his daydreams
si a great hero or a great rascal.
Ha realises he no longer *has the
desire—or energy—to be either.
His dreams of glory corns down
to small dally dramas In wtdek
he sees himself mastering some
ordinary social situation that has
always frustrated him before.
For example, he has Just got i
haircut The barber holds up i
perfunctory mirror and says
“ Okay?"
For BOO 11 m a s la a row It tha
last ' K yean tho. victim has
meekly murmured, "Uh
and paid, But in hia daydream
he suddenly rebels sad sayst
"No, It eertalnly isn't okay,
Tony. You got R parted wi
There are at toast • haln too
tong on the right side. And I told
you to life the sideburns, and you
didn’t Want mo to look like a
sheepdog? Now get out
scissors and de the Job right—
for onesI"
The abaahed barber bends anew
to hia task. When ho to
r Uttto

with a crisp, "That's better I " As
ht swaggers from the shop the
other customer* break into ad
miring applause.
*
Or suppose you are on a bus
making the long voyage home and
the driver says, ‘PleezmoovebackInnabus, movetoackinnabus," and
you try to. And a fat lady says,
"Who you shovin', Garganlua?"
Instead of subsiding in mumbling
apologetic apology, you sing out
loud and d ear:
"Out of my way, fat lady. I ’ m
going to get to tha back of the
bus tf I have to carve my way
through a wall of living flesh—
end I do mean your flesh !"
WeH, the driver stop* the bus.
Tears streaming down his cheeks
be comes back, shakes your hand,
and mutters, "P a l, pal—after all
these years, somebody dine it at
least. Somebody moved uplnnabackuhduhbuea."

In the other I go with a guest
into one ot the velvet rope
restaurants, and when the beadwaiter snootily asks if I h iv e a
resesvatlon, I tell him:
"M e have a reservation? Look,
mister, I don't even own en
Indian. Now quit stalling, and
show us a table."
Overcome by this bit of swift
repartee, the humbled beadwalter
drops his velvet rope and steers
us to the best seats in the place.
In another variation of this day­
dream I merely take out ■ Boy
Scout knife, hack the rope in two,
and stalk right by the headwaiter
as nearby f r e t s look up and ask,
"Who Is he? Who is he?"
But, of course, this is probably
the average man's most common
daydream: He wakes up to find
hls house Is finally paid for and
ijpeni't need any repairs, his ear
is paid for and there Isn't even a
knock in the motor. Ito sits down
to breakfast and neither Ms f i f e
nor the kids hit him for money.
He reaches In his pocket and Is
pleasantly dated t find be still
has |10 left—and It's only two days
till payday.
Man,
that’s real
dreaming)
Wbo'd rather be Davy Crockett?

v:

atlons o f It* own examiners and
denied new T V license*" to two
"prominent people" who support
ed Adlal E. Stsvenson for the
presidency In 1953.
a
a
a
e
. Great Debate— There apparent­
ly is a bit of confusion in o ffi
eial Washington as to th* admin­
istration's policy on exporting
A m e r i c a n farm surpluses. It
sesmed aa if Agriculture Secre­
tary E ire T a ft Benson had kill
ed o ff any thought of trading
surpluses with the Communist bloc
when he said several weeks ago
that he didn’t see any possibil­
ity o f conditions developing to the
point where such trade would
be advisable.
However, shortly after Beruon’a
statement, a lesser Commerci de­
partment official told a congres­
sional committee that th* matter
was still under consideration at
the policy-making level. Some
confusion is probably understand­
able s'.nce there are so many In­
terest! to be reconciled.
Th# deciding factor In th# case
of exporting to the free world
probably will be whether any
larga deliveries o f surpluses can
be mad* overseas without severe­
ly damaging th# sconomlea of
other friendly countries.
Th* State department la firm ly
against doing anything that would
hurt any of this country’s allies,
many o f whom are economically
dependent on agricultural export*.
However, ths administration is
facing soma congressional pres­
sure to increase exports o f United
States farm surplus**.
Some officials, but certainly not
all, evidently feel that selling a
limited amount o f agricultural ex­
ports behind the Iron Curtain
might b* an answer.
*

*

*

I have two simple daydreams
myself, la one I am eashlng my
paveberk and the bank teller
•she, "D o you have any IdentifiesU-m with you?" Instead of fum­
bling throuMi my pockats, I mere­
ly fix him with a pair of steal
blue eyes and tall him coldly, "m y
face to my identification In this
man’s town, sonny.” He takes one
H alf tha housewives who live
hurried look — and cashes the In cltlaa can frulta or vegetable*
check pronto.
in thslr own homes.

th* country what lad them to veto
as they did in congressional tlsclions.
Lubell said aom* told him they
voted for a certain congressman
because he gave them a shopping
bag. Ha also said another answer
ha got waa " I voted for this
man because I got a latter from
him once."
i

B U IC K
Trade-Ins
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a a.
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allease — _
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•

Election Tip*— Members o f a
Senate subcommittee considering
election law reform picked up
some possible tip i on how to get
themselves re-elected recently.
Samuel t.ubell, a political an­
alyst, testified that he has aaksd
many people in varioua parts of

%

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n » » i »

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om
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AU Day Saturday

ITrades
IVEY'S
It stands alone in the world today—

lur T
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Amoco-Gas
The present epidemic of octane claims inbased on laboratory
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4k took
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c

W A S H IN G TO N —I-ook
for an
increase In Democratic sniping at
auch federal regulatory agencies
aa the Federal Communication*
commliilnn aa the big political
year o f 196S draw* closer. Theae
agencies are now run, o f course,
by President Eisenhower’s ap­
pointees
and
Democrats
will
charge they are no longer bi­
partisan or quasijudlclal.
For instance, Democratic N at­
ional Chairman Paul M. Butter
recently complained about remarks
made by FCC Chairman George C.
McConnaughey. Butler quoted Me.
Connaughey as urging membars
o f the National Association
of
Radio and Television Broadcasters
at their annual convention to
"bend every effort to have Presi­
dent Eisenhower address you for
the next succeeding five years.”
Th* Democratic ehalrman then
pointed out that the broadcastera
“ cannot stay in business without
th* licenses granted
by
the
commission. Mr. McConnaughsy
heads.”
Butler
complained
that
tha
FCC "bypassed the recommend-

HAL BO YLE

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u

P ^

n

ampty, people weren't wo ta Oam*ron and Christ!* Her eyre
fuaay about boundaries. 1 doubt If travelled around the room, resting
•J^dtibortot fwachsr, the old Dor who cold me the land fot a few second* on Kerry and
*»k» ortm 0 » U M f t - could hare said himself exactly Lite, then going over and past
K
okH Spur, which Mallory
them, with ns sign of feeling dis­
Ho • T a lk * c «ttl« amplra. where his claim ended."
•# * wild it took la th* boy
Bo that eras that but Kerry turbing their blue serenity. Sud­
didn’t feel aa relieved aa he should denly It came over him that bring­
have. A rumor, true or false ing Lite here had been a foot kid's
A M W f c R a T K f t dropped Into the aneasy peace of trick.
the eotmly, could be a spark
BIU struck ap Red River YsfJrv,
ia rao i bar atlm tloo to W w n - —
drappeu In dry grass, setting a and Christie moved out onto til*
mtm. m Ww-ar*d Hraaf .
blase that once started might dance floor In Cameron's arm * At
spread out of ah proportion to It* Lite's tug on hie sleeve, Kerry
Kerry HwSrd Mo trifling cause— end watching Rob’s turned impatiently, resenting hnr
r'a Im p tr u a aallor fees acroe* the table, he suspected warm, possessive touch.
tew* studied Mm waathor. be wasn't alone In his thoughts,
"Don’t you want to dance, Ker­
'W M a, batfwuf IMrotark Mm maal,
s e e
ry T" She looked and sounded Hke
| M krok* Mm Mianco with a T u t
The ochoothouse eras pretty wefl a disappointed child. Bh* wasn’t
kid," Kerry n a anf.
crowded when Kerry and Lila ar­ to blam* for ths way he felt. He
[*d to opoa a toerived. Old BIU Haggerty was mak made himself smile at her. "Sure,
___ _______ R*b called him
tng
his Addle sing, and the center honey. Just getting my wind."
6 aawally moant ha we* m
He kept his attention conscien­
of thr floor was a shifting pattern
to aatfrAtoff good mood—at least,
tiously on her, but th* salt had
of
colors—
men's
bright
shirts
and
IMOt Mad at klaa- Ha called him
red bandannas, women's assorted gone out of the evening. The tun*
'"MM* whoa ha area pirawed with
finery. Older people, mostly wom­ ended to a spatter of applause.
hi ikrt momenta
en, filled the benches along the Rill, protesting, "Too folks don't
n to rccllis fiddlin'* thirsty
walla, the straight Una of them
___ KMMthbic down at the broken by Mttle clumps of stand work," stepped down to where
____ today." It hadn’t been a fortng men who' hadn't' yet found half-a-doxen bottles were being
tomato bactaatng, ha realised. Rob partner*.
sordidly extended.
OuM looked at him tmder lowered
"Hello, Rlordan." R was CamR all looked festive and ipno*
M
and a id nothing. "Something cent enough, but Kerry wee aware, eron'a voice, casudly friendly. Just
I flgurad yoa ought to know with a Ungle ta his nerves, of ten as casually, Kerry turned around.
•bout," ha ftoacd ahead. “ Tlirrt'i slon underlying the gaiety. Ths
"Howdy. Lite, rd Uke to mak*
talk going a r n u l among the Heat­ posters were drawn together In yoa acquainted with Wayne Cam­
ers that you'ra laying claim to tight, distinct bunches, and the eron. Miss Dawson."
that land they’re cu." U there waa looks they sent la th* direction of
A pleasure. Miss Dawson."
• flicker ad capn acloa tm the the cattlemen were anything but Cameron smiled with Just th* right
kandeoma, toapaaalv* feat urea, ha friendly.
amount of respectful Interest. Lita,
couldn’t Make It out "Wen," he
At the center of on* at three Kerry couldn’t help noticing, waa
demanded MlMatflr , "are youT"
group* stood Tim Imrrabre and showing considerable more thaa
"Nice to haw* yoa totoraatod,” the two Cullen boy*, Fred and that What waa R about this rawRob drawled. K a r a knew yoa to Young Mata. AH their faces were boned k o m b n that got th*
g R aa atirr*fl up about Brokea red and hot, suggesting more than
ameaT
•par’* kaalaaaa before."And I reckon yoa know Miss
a scupls of drinks. Tim, with his
“W e*. If MMre’a going ta be head thrust forward and his eyos Toland, LltaT"
'trouble, m be la It won’t IT But like hot coals andrr the bristling
" D o n 't b 'lie ve I d o ."
poa might tet ate know about Itt" brows, reminded Kerry of a bull
"1 Haven't had th* pleasure."
Neither girl offered to shake
1 might" Rok agreed drily, "V about to charge. He was talk
I a o M ewer And you when thing* whra he caught sight of Lite, and hand* M was a distinct relief
•re M fV e e h f. Who told yoa hs broke off with his mouth open. when the music started ap again.
Ih U r
"May 1 have this one, Mias DawTh* whole of his big frame stiff­
" J ob t a r r a b e e ."
b T*
ened, and Kerry's own muscles
"Why, K Kerry don’t mind—"
“A mA wkara’d ha • * Ma tofc*. went tens* with an apprehension
amtioar
"No, eur* go ahead."
that ths young neater was going
"Ha — t — my."
Cameron guided LJU oat among
to jump him right them Hut Fred
" t a m h a i’a got m m , fo r a Cullen touched his arm an&lt;^ mur­ th* dancer* Kerry looked nt
______ awted. “He wouldn’t mured something to hie ear, and Christie— “
:«■ to Ju a t a n y b o d y '*
Bh* stepped Into Vie circle of
he slowly subsided.
"Let’s dance, honey r Kerry pat his tentatively extended arm. They
“T h *a that’* a l R t o - j w t taR T an arm around Lite's waist and made a couple of turns In silence,
Vhat’a what I told him, but— swung her out onto the floor. She then, "She’s very pretty, Kerry."
“Thanks."
"If | R i g h t they ware oa my waa worth Ttm'e stare, and all the
tond, yea reehea r d wait Are years ethers that were being Irea ob­
Silence again. V Mien* was any­
ta mom them s6T They're n ot aa viously laid on her. Bpe was taatn- thing more to be said between
flay ag I know, Thoae old gpaalR ksing and beautiful.
them, k was too muck to say with
»*t aaactly eurWhile BUI wee tualng up tor the this crowd around then*
opea to 1st
(T o Bo OonHaasdf
Would MUI* down

term

t

Little Rock Gets
Y O U 'R E T E L L IN G
Another Manager
— by W ill! AM ROT—
Central /rasa W riter

With attendance well below the
bretk-evea point and aa laapt ball
club bopatouly
mired In the
Southern Asm. cellar, Little Rock
baseball officials turned today to
• new manager with only a flicker
o f hope that tha fallow can twitch
directloni tor flit "wrong wayr
Travelers.
Bob M a rk quit a i Trsv skipper
yesterday and eallad tha woes of
managing w eb a taim "unbear­
able." Tha Rocks dropped both
halvas ad • donblabaadar to Nashvilla 74 and M to fall M games
o ff tha poca and U t i behind sevonth place Mobile. The Sunday
twin bill attracted # 4 customers.
General Manager Ra* W --*»&lt;•
who triad to talk Mavis out et
quitting, promised a new p .a j.i
manager far tonight's encounter
with tha V olf. Ha said he would
, be someone not presently with tha
flfub.
Birmingham breathed on tha
n o d * o f pact setting Memphis today after a M Baron victory over
tho Atlanta Crackers. Memphis
and Chattanooga w ar* rained out
o f a dovbieheadar. Birmingham's
vietoty 1*6 tha young Barons only
haM n gam# out o t t n t place.

$

•O N J A DAHNK. who was G*rmany's entry In tha "Mia* Eu­
rope" beauty contest staged In
Helsinki, rInland, has gray hair.
How, declares Orandpappy Jen­
kins, thee* beauty contests -are
beginning to mak* sens *
t I I
§ 00) 0 , really a Monde, dyed her
hair pray. However, oho w a n t
ruled out /or compefinp under
false n o coloro.
I I t
VatonMaasaa
IP^^WIWfmvv ^^Rfww a*
HP 166
IVY W®
greet at Thermal, Calif. Thought
yaw'd Ilka ta knew. Might make

I f t
Russian athletes, are rood, era
making strenuous efforts* to get
Jato the beat possible coodltloa

M E!

for th# 1PM Olympic Gamas In
Australia. Th* Red runner* ap­
parently, hop* la wind kg qa top
Down Under.
I t t
gedoh Dumkopf waadera tf
those striking British frantlf
u orklr* shouldn't have o theme
eong: " I'm not working eu Ike
raUraedf"
t t I
Alr*h Key la warrled ut to* **•
tlblllile* that the tog leader* at
that Big Pewr cawfarawsa may wind
wg Mewing their summit *
I I I
Marine scientist* after a eurway, predict a booming tuns Ash­
ing Industry for Texas’ gulf abaat
Tha true T a n a * no doubt, would
acorn hook and line and simply
laaaoo the bigger one*

Don Bisplinghoff
Wins Slate Open

Rotarians
Set Plans
For Year
Members of the incoming Ro­
tary Club board o f directors for
11)55-5(1 met with committee chair­
men and officer* at the home of
incoming president William Rush
Jr. Thursday night.
Plan* for the new administra­
tion were discussed and Ru*h an­
nounced thi* list o f directors, o f­
ficers and committee chairmen and
members.
Board of director*— Bush, Clar­
ence Redding, Charles Persons,
Karl Turner. A. W. Epps Jr., Gene
Tucker, R. J. Itaumen, Jack Ratigan and 11. !!. Coleman.
Club officers— Rush, president;
Hr. R. W. Ruprccht, secretary;
the Rrv. I.iirian Scott, sergeantat-arms, and W alter M. Haynes,
treasurer.
Club servlre— Gene Tucker, dir­
ector in charge.
Community service— Dr, Epps
Jr., director in rhaige.
P ro gra m
committee— W. C.
Hutchison Jr., chairman; T. E.
Tueker, C. L. Redding, Charles
S. Morrison. Harry W eir, Milton
I). Ladd, Fred Perkins, Tommy
Mero and C. L. Park Jr.
Attendance committee— Lloyd J.
Lowe, chairman; Frank Noell, P.
J. Westgate, Robert Cornell, R. A.
Newman Jr„ end John Payne.
Fellowship
committee— M.
I«
Raborn, chairman; Henry Simpaon, Frank Evans. Ed Best, Gor­
don Bradlry and Charles Wagner.
Momberahlp committee — Cl a rrnre
Holding, chairman; Jack
Ratigan, W. A. L effler, H. II.
Pope, and Randall Chase.
Public Information committee—
Myron Beck, chairman; and Fred
Perktna.
Rotary Information committee—
Georg* Stine, chairman; Jack Ra­
tigan, W alter Haynes, B. 1- Per­
kins Jr., and George W. Touhy.
Classification committee— K, A.
Moughton Jr., chairman; A. C.
8tlne, and Orville Touehton.
Magatln* committee— B. I* rcrklns Jr., chairman; B. I,. Perkins
Sr., W. B. Nicholson. William E.
Rader and W. C. Hutchison Sr.
Club activities committee— AI
Lee, chairman; F. E. Iloumlllal
Sr., F. E. Roumlllat Jr., James
Holtadaw, Tom
B ro w * T o m
Jones and Earl Turner.
Music
committee— Charles
P
Morrison, chairmen; Harry Kudell
and C. W. Baker.
Youth committee—John Pope
chairman; JoHft Morgan, Roy Hol­
ler, Sonny Powell, Ben Wiggins.
Orville Touehton, F. D. Scott and
Charles Vodoplch.
Community project committee—
Lowell Otler, chairman; Fred W il­
liams, th* Rev. If. L. Zimmerman,
Orville Barks, and Dr. Epps Jr,
Student loan committee— Robert
True, chairman; Leroy Anderson
and Bill Kirk.
Club history committee— Walter
H aynti, chairman; Dr A. W. Epps
Sr. and Dr. C. L Parke Sr.
International service committee

Mon. June 27. lO.’ S
Pnpe 3
i m SA.NKOKl) IIK K ALD

Jackso n, Slade
To M eet To nig ht
In Return Fight

FORT LAU D ERD ALE .t'-Chabby Don Bisplinghoff won the Flor­
ida Stale Open clump.on&gt;hip yes
torday.
Tommy Jackson, the heavy,
After defeating nro Llovd Wadkins by one stroke lii-plmchoff weight hurricane who blew him*
sai\l he would com m ie in the Colo­ ; *r!f out. will try and stir up a stiff
nial Invittatinnal in Mrmpms July [ breeze tonight in a return IB
A
j rounder with Jimmv Slade, the ring
• He said he would continuj with "cu tie" from New York.
other tournaments this summer
It was Slade who halted Ja.'band then take a crai'k at the na­ t &lt;on’s meteoric rise 14 months ago.
tional amateur title a: Chicago’ s i The veteran 28 - year old whipped
Tam O'Shanter.
the strapping, 23-y»»r old farksnn
He finished the 12 hole Florida | in a in - rounder. The defeat came
Open with a total of ZH after aftei Jackson had &lt;ntind!y trounced
matching par 72 on the final round. Bex l.aync, Clarence Henry and
Wadktns had 289
Dan Itueceroni and appeared head­
Bisplinghoff'* v c lo ry depended ed for a shot at the title.
on whether Wadkins sank a sixNino Valdes further defeated
foot putt at the I8th and final no!e Jackson by stopping him in th*
Wadkins failed by too inches.
! second round three months later.
It was the second straight year Since then the 191 - pound, fi-2'k
an amateur has whipped the field Jarkson has won five straight over
of professionals. Ilm McCoy t-1 mediocre opposition lie is rated
Lake Worth did it list year but he the fourth contender.
came in 15th with a scorJ of 507
Slade, onetime conqueror of Don
thw ;&gt;eur.
Corkell, is on the downgrade. He
W.,( kms, as high professional,
has lost four of his last five. Thia
won -.'.00 of flic $2,(XV iffered ihc
looks like a good ipo! for Jackson
ptvu ssionals. The amateur., spilt
to gain revenge.
11 ii si worth of merchandise
The bout at New York’ s 8t.
ll--nry Cas.illo id Tampa was
ti.r&lt;1 with 293. amateur Ray T er­ Nicholas Arena will he telecast
ry oi Cocoa md Jim P'3&lt;* of Or- (DuMont-TV, 9 p m . F.ST),
Lightweight Champion Jimmy
lando tied for four'h with 7*M« and
Stev" W.irga of M u m »a * »i&gt;ih Carter is a 3-1 choice to ratain his
title in a 15-rounder wlih Cincin­
* ilb 215.
nati's Wallace (Bud) Smith at tha
Boston Garden Wednesday night.
Tile bout will be broadcast am!
telecast i ARC-TV and radio, 8 p.
m., KST)’ with New England
blacked out of the TV.
Hus is the 11th ti'le fight for tha
PLAN T C ITY fl—Prospects for 31-year-old New Yorker, only fightsettlement of the phosphate area qr to win a title three times An
strike affecting 3,mo union work­ in anJ-outcr, Carter was beaten in
ers appeared a little brighter to­ his last start by Orlando Zulucta
on April 20 Smith, 2&lt;V was held to
day.
Union official* said they had ac­ a to round draw hv Johnny Gon­
cepted an invitation from William salves on Jan. H, the challenger s
S Pierce, regional director of the most recrnl outing.
Federal Mediation and Concilia­
tion Service, to moot in Atlanta Workers Union (A F L ) t» striking
for “ lop level exploratory talks." over contract differences. Tha
They said they understood top union wants 8' t cents more in
executives of the phosphate com­ wages sm! benefits. The industry
panies nl«o had accepted.
has offered about 4 1 cents. Th#
Talks will he held tomorrow and wages now run from $1 St to $2 27.
Sunday
Seven phosphate firms operating
The International C h e m i c a l in Folk County and eastern Hills­
borough County are strikebound.
ner could possibly nice; Ken Rose- The area is the largest producing
one in the world.
wall of Australia &lt;n tho finals.

j

ITHT TOOOCD out for the occasion, Christine Oirl-ty
pneee prettily after she was rhosen to reign as queen over the Vet­
erans of Foreign Wars 30th Annual Stale Kneampment In New York.
Her majesty t» an honorary "palntrd-on" sergeant, ffaterMftoaal)

Tony Trabert May Have Golden Y/eek
W IMBLEDON, England (Jx-Thi*
could be a golden week for the
globe-trotting Tony Trabert. Just
three matches against a handful
of the world's lop tennis artists
separate him from a title which
Is almost a prerequisite for turn­
ing professional.
L ist year a cluster of blisters
on his racquet hand ended his
chances of pulling off the title.
This year he's feeling line, no
blisters bother him an ilhe’s playIng well enough to w'n the Wimble— If.
If. Coleman director In
charge; Robert P. Lainont chair­
man; Randall Chase, G. A. Speer
Jr., and I - T. Sheppard.
Vocational aervlc* committee—
C. I „ Persons, director in charge;
C. I- Persons, chairman; It. J,
Bauman, Jack L Green* and Har­
ry la** Jr.

don title Th* title would surely
lead to tcmpt.ng otters to Join pro
ranks,
Trabert. who so far I : «r.’ i lost
a set in iho three m.V'hes lie’s
played, has said of'-'it lie wouldn't
look down his nose at an; otter.
Since the war lhr*s men wh
won the Wimbledon have turned
pro. They were Vvon Petra of
France, winner in 1946, Jack Kra­
mer, United States, 1917; and
Frank Sedgrman, Austral) i, 1US2
Trabert tangles with Jaroslav
Drobny, the current title holder,
today. He shouldn't have much dif­
ficulty if hr plays as he's been
doing so far.
Budge Patty of Los Angele*. Is
also In Trabert’ s half o( the draw,
but he first comes up against Lew
Hoad in tho quarterfinals today.
Odds are oil Trihert meeting
lluad in tlio semifinals. The w.n

Phosphate Strike
Settlem ent Hopes
Become Brighter

A W A K E o r A S L E E P , N IG H T o r D A Y ..t!

Humphrey Sees Sharp Decrease

WASHINGTON UV-Secretary of
the Treasury Humphrey foresaw
today a sharp cut in a Stt-Mllioadollar deficit predicted for the gov*
ernment In the coming fiscal year,
or even perhaps a b a l a n c e d
budget.
Humphrey disclosed the government’s Improved finsneial outlook
New Orisons beat Mobile t-a fat for the bookkeeping year beginning
(ho windup of a impended contest a week hence in testimony pre­
a l lMay R, but to* Bear* trounced pared tor th* Manat Way* and

Means Committee. “ We hope and
believe,” be aald, “ that the govern­
ment can get slung on a temporary one-year extension of tha pub­
lic debt limit at its present R1
billion-dollar level."
Humphrey said "our present
promising business and interna
tional outlook" la the foundation
o f hie optimism that there ie no
need fo r a more permanent higher

H A P P IE R FLO RID A LIVIN G *-

1Mto Re regularly

to *

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The V. 6

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Cal tin Lwtobflv N am bar

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'83'
%

WILL DRILLING

a

Far

UmUm Sarrk*

H IL L LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY YARD

W ta tw it's air-conditioned comfort, radio and TV entertainment and news, ooftuifdintf
fighting for oorly morning and lo ti evening chores, or any of his other Sumhint
Sorvkos...Reddy Kilowatt works round the-dock to help you produce ond process for
ta riffe d form p ro fits.jo help you enjoy better, more comfortable living. And don't
forgetJUddy works for penny wages.

A ll*.

SIS W. T I M SC
'L i

i'

PAINTS

F L O R ID A P O W E R A L IO H T
to. St. d el— ■. M&gt;, ■ ( ! ,

S*

�Cardinals Take Two Games From Cocoa
By T1IK ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Florid* State leagu e played
baseball in only ono city yesterday
but that program at Santord was
enough to make up for wlut was

and dragged on until alter mid-J This may he the last week for |Thursday.
rained out elsewhere.
The Cardinal* chased Cocoa’ s j
The afternoon game of the .p lit| Di" h ,#
_
Sanford in Ihe league although a
. ...
.
. „
. . . j , , . , I Sanford swept both games over group is trying to get backing to Joe Petriello in four innings of
doubleheader went off speedily ,n I Cocoa 6 4 and 8-2 oefire the mea take over the franchise and keep Ihe first game,-'banging him for!
just under two hours, but th* night Rrr crowd* of 111 in the aflcinoon the team there when tne present nine hits and fivo runs. Then they
owners turn over the franchise |cut off a late Cocoa rally. In the
game started late because (if rain |and ( I at night.

T IIK B A V FO R I) H E R A LD ,
TaRe 6
Mon- June 27, 10f»5 I

Sports
Roundup
By G A YLE TAI.BOT
NEW YO R K i t —Comrmssbner
Ford Frirk is extremely pleased
with the response his office is get­
ting to questionnaires inviting the
country’s fans and sports wliters
to tell him how baseball can he
improved.
"W e are gelling a fine response
from every quartrr.” ne said to­
day. "and from what I've seen I
think there are going to be some
big surprises when the final re­
mit is tallied. I belicvj Ihe club
owners will profit from it.
Without rlahurating on the sur­
prise* in stnrc, he seemed to
mnke it clear a* h« went along
that he was hearing a great deal
about the length of lo.lny i big
league games. Or perhaps It waj
only that we drew him nut nn thr
subject, it being this long suffer­
ing critic’s pet peeve.
"O f course they aro running too
long," he said. "Everybody mu»t
know it by this time. What you
ray about the mantger* slowing
things down with all lhe:r pitching
changes is true, but Ihr pitchers
and batter* are Just
s guilty
Too many pitcher* won’t come in
there with that bail, which u
what they're out thiro to dn, and
the hatters keep alepomg out of
the box lust as the pitchers finally
•tart their delivery.
" I f I bad any say about^ the
playing rules, which I don't. I
think 1 would make it so Inal a
batter atop* out at his own peril
once he take* his stance. If a
strike came over af'er lie stepped
out, that's what it would be.
“ I think we've Inst something in
having the bullpen* clear out in
the country the way they are in
most park* now. It seems In lane
a pitcher an hour to w uk In. Most
bullpen* used to tie rinse to tbn
aland* where yuu could watch
them warming up, and ( always
UkcNl that,"

Standings
r i'O I I I I U

STATIC I.H S IIIK
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rn

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lakrlubil at i ii la min. |i|nl rain
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rain
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HI I'eliialiuia al Dayliitia llea.h
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1-4. K m Vlirk n-3
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.................lalll
Kansas l.'ll'r
1-3. Ilalllmuia aBustuu t-s. I'hliaai. 3-3
K im :*

Players Eye National League 'Rookie O f The Year Award

Ry JOK RKICItl.KR
The Assoelated Pres*
If St.Louis outfielder Rill Virdon
doesn’t 'win Uit National league
Rookie of the Year award, hii
teammate, pitcher Luis Arroyo,
will. Anyway, it's almost a c.nch
to be in the Cardinal family.
Virdon was the whoie snow yes­
terday as the Cardinals swept both
end* of a double-header for the
first time this year, walloping the
New York (iianta 8-2 and 7-2 The
bespectacled center fielder balled
in six runs with a single, two
doubles, a triple and home run to

PORTI.AND, Ore. t e - D r . Cary
Middlecoff headed for hi* Mem­
phis, Tcnn., home today fur a
three-week rest after pocketing
the $2,400 top money In Ihe 32nd
'annual Western Open here.
The golfing dentist ram r from
behind with a dramatic 29-34-81
in the final round yesterday to
overtake Mike Souchak, husky
Durham, N.C., pro, who nad led
him by four strokes after 34 hole*.
Middlecoff, at 272, was IS itrokrs
under par for the four day, 72hole event.
lit tied the Portland Golf Club
roursr'a 18 hole record, dubbing
out nine birdies.
Souchak battled hard to catch
Middlrcoff, who plays nut of Kiemesha Lake, N.Y. Souchak ended
the first nine hole*-in 34 to find
that the dentist was ona stroke
ahead of him.
But Ihe powerful Souchak'* ap­
proaches and putts were no*, sharp
enough. He finished with 34-35-09
fur a total of 274.
Gene LitUer,
Palm t Spring*,
Calif., and Rob Rnshiirg, Ran
Francisco, tied for third at 27$.
Litllcr, an ex-national amateur
champion, cpme in with 13.14-87
for the round. Rosburg shot 3832 68.
Souchak won tl.800. Litllcr and
Rosburg each took away 113,00.
Middlecoff launched bia assault
on the fasl, straight 8,604-yard par72 layout at the third bote. There,
lie got his first birdie with a long
approach shot and an 18-Inch putt.
At the end of nine he was 8
under par. That’s whe* moat of
the crowd e alien ated at 3,000

.334

Blistered Blonde
Claims Ski Crown
After Sea Voyage
NASSAU, Bahamas !.R—A bllstered blonde laid claim lo the long­
distance salt water ski crown to­
day after completing ■ 100-mlle
sea voyage riding only one ekl.
Delores Kipple, w . managed lo
stay on the ski for 16 hours and
23 minutes yesterday while mak­
ing this windy crossing from Mi­
ami to Nassau. She was buffeted
and battered by waves at high as
eight feet. At least twice, bar .fa­
ther, a professional skier riding
In the tow boat, thought of calling
off th# trip.
The exhausted |lrl collapsed In
the surf when Ihe long trip was
over and asked for “ a glass of
water and a rubdowa."
Her hand* ware rut and bar
legs blistered by salt water.
She surpassed by four miles the
record set by Bruce Parker and
Evi# Wolford la 1031. The team
made their 188-alla trip oa the
usual two skis.

$

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In f ala
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Mmirlwflo c
Miller 5h
Terrell If
liuiler rf
Mrhmldl rf
Mnyder ••

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1 1
1 •
2 2
2 1 1
4 1 1
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M I I IT 14
Tttfala
a -Oroiinilrd oui for Perrlllo In Ith
I .H-HH
IU* •*» ' 03— 4 " *
UMlnrl ......... 131 I** l « » — •« •
K I'.UI. It I'mr. I
3. SihP'Irtt. Ijinaforil. It lllll*r D4'ook ili.ruttr*. MaurUllo. &lt;.r**nhill. It'll— iU u rl*ll«. HrlimM*. H.
i'it..W f*r,d-r. C ltn*rl*'i»*. Ilutler,
&lt;:..n««l*. 311— n.itl»r. ‘ lo"**l*».,V l
10 victory ovpr Jim IViWnn of. nightcap.
l:...lri«u.« ilrei-nhlll. I lll—-SchmMt
-I. Iti&gt;drl«u»*. -1—D.
Dy
Ksltimnrc. Joe Astroth doubled in
After Ferri* Fain'* p.nrh hit HI!
- M jim -r. i'r«r. ljn xford. n.
the sixth and scored nn Kellner's t singln drove In the tying run in Cni.k, I'rav; Gontal**. I- K w l .i. I.efl—C'nco* 4, Mnfoid 3,
single. Gu\ Zermal doubled in the j the ninth, Detroit sew ed up the tu
lt|l-..ff__ U n ifi.n l 3, l'»lrl*lli» 4,
sixth and scored on Kellner'st game in the 10th on Al Kaltne'a Hii-I*y— I', irirllo 4. |jin#fi&gt;rd 3,.
singlp. Gu* Zcrnial hit his lO th'walk and hits by Jack Phillips i ; r \In 3 HO l'»1rltl*o _* l*_4_ Ifi;
■tins- llbrvln * In 4 Innlnvs 77* KH
four-bagger snd Hector Lopes had land Bay B o o n e . Washington
I'-irli lln S-S. I5»rvln l-l, U n t» perfect three for three, including! smashed eight extra-base hits in rn,d 4-4, iv i’ - . ,-J" ’rf " r&lt;] . D*1}1” *
three runs, as Bay Herbert Rain-.’d the nightcap, Includiiig a pair of j
(;J1Ic »'io i « o a n»7c
hi* first win of the year in tnc|two-nm triples by Boy Siever*. • r —i :*t A—us.
_____

in the opener for the fled Sox w ith
a ba&gt;r*-losdrd
double in liic
eighth that broke up s 2 2 dead­
lock. Jackie Jensen too* charge
in the second gamp, driving in
three run* with hi* 15th homer
and two single*.
Southpaw Alrx Krlinor turned
in * brilliant nnc-hilirr and drove
in the only run in the Athletic-*'

m

AVA1ABU
r AS7SCA1

So MUCHTiineafso LOWa Price
SALE

LANQHORNE, Pa. I«t - Jimmy
Bryan, Phoenix, Aril., has captornd hla second sucesslve IM • mile
National AAA racing ear chain
pionship.

Bryan successfully defended hli
ckamptooship yesterday at the
Longhorn* Speedway whan hr cov

1 0 %

$

Cash Discount

r.

Bryan Captures
Second Straight
Racing Car Title

ON

BOTH

FORD

FARTS

AND

LABOR

When Work On Ford Products
la Dono In Our Shop

TUESDAY-THRU-THURSDAY
★

★

TO BE

A

★

★

★

HAPPIER IN

T O HAVE
VACATIO N

MORE
TRIP,

★

-

dr

MONEY FO R
HAVE YOUR

YOUR
FORD

10 ao.»imdi ah*id oi
fating about
al
Bob few* ikert, wlnnsr of to# classic
n e t was run an two Bundaya
tha Orst raee wa&lt; atop pod
of rain. Bryan picked jp

$ $ B A R G A IN S A L E ! $ $

Urn race

i wag far tbn m
N&lt; m drat
paid*

W

YOUR FO R D ‘ AND

REPAIRED DURING TH IS SEN SA TIO N A L
TUESDAY THRU THURSDAY

m d the IN miles In «J:«g.TI. flo-

m

%

.|U3
111

- li e u u la d

sr^ st:

flrevn h ilt If

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We Offer

.ii ■

Ils h u r s l. 3-1, I'lilr a g ii l-S
i- t

)

Sillier rf
A IM rd ■■

TUESDAY-THRU-THURSDAY

Tr*
,*i.

m Lo u ie lieS-T.n s :N* i *r i mT uerkr
g a m ra

switched from other favorites such
as Sam Snead and Souchak to
swell
Middlecoff’* gallery and
cheer him on.
Snead disappointed his usual hig
gallery by taking a 74 to wind
up in a lie with five others for
10th at 283.
Fifth place and f t .000 went to
Julius Boros, II iJ Tinea, N.C.,
with 278.

Indians 2-0 behlnff Whltey Ford’s
four-hitter in the nightcap. Early
Wynn furnished th* Indians with
their only victory &gt;n ‘.he four-game
set with a nifty three-hit 5-0 per­
formance in the opener.
Score worked five relief Innings
in the nightcap and pitched bril­
liantly. He permitted only one hit,
walkeJ two and strjck out nine
in five innings to boost Ins strike­
out lead lo 120.
The Yankees picked up a full
game nn the runner up Chicago
While Sox, who saw their fivegame winning streak go up in
smoke al*cr (using Iw j gxmea to
Boston 5 2 and 8-2.
Kansas City handed Baltimore
its sixth and seventh straight
defeats with 1-0 and 3-2 triumphs.
Washington snapped Its nino-game
losing streak with a smashing 12-4
victory over Detroit after the
Tigers had come from behind to
win tne opener ff-« in iu inning*.
The R ro x lv n
Dodger*
huge
first-place lead In the Nation*!
League was cut slightly when Mil
waukee shut them out 4-0 behind
Bub Buhl'* five-hitter. T h * runnrrup Chicago Cubs advanced to
within I2Mi games of the Brooks,
splitting tiiiir dotible-h tader -vith
Pittsburgh. The Pirates won the
opener 3-4 but the Cuoi ununee.1
hark with a 2-1 victory to retain
a half game lead over tne third
place Braves
Cincinnati climbed to within one
percentage point of the fourthplace Giants, knocking off the
Philadelphia Phillies twice 18-5
and 3-0. The Reds made short work
of Robin Robert* with three run
rallied in the first and second
innings.
Ih e Cardinals moved past the
Phillies into siath place as-llarvey
Haddlx turned la his fifth success
and rookie Larry Jackson his
third. Stan Muslal chipped In with
his 14th home run.
Eddie Mathews made N easy
for Buhl to register hla filth
triumph, smashing hla !7tn homer
o f the seaion with two mates
aboard In the eighth.
Vern Law pitched and hatted
the Pirates to victory with a home
run and single that drove In three
runs. Clyde McCullough singled in
both Chicago runs in tha second
gam * as Bob Rush outpitched
Lino Do no»o despite the Pitts­
burgh rookie's three-hitter.
Wynn, sidelined the first throe
weeks o f too season because of
sickness, notched hla 10th triumph
■gainst two losses with hla threehitter against toe Yankees. Ralph
Klner’ a loth homer was all he
needed.
WUlerd Nixon won HI* own game

T-T-T

rn
W I.
Irnnklyn
3a li .tt:UilraXH
3* 33 ,14r
Milwaukee
37 31
law Vink
&gt;3 34 .its
Bki'll.liatll
31 34 ,4i:
f l lan.lr
3S 33
•ailadrltilil*
*» 31 .in
hllaliulkli
S3 It .311
MKStJ.Tfl TK STKN II4V
Cincinnati 10-8. T'tillailaliilila »-*
Milwaukee I, Ilioiiklyti •
Ne

boost his average to .324.
Saturday night, Arroyo whipped
the Giant* for hi* ninth victory
against two losses (both by onerun margins). TTie Puerto Rlran
southpaw leads all N a t i o n a l
League burlers with • brilliant 2.01
earned run average.
A couple of American leagu e
rookies — New York's Els'^sn
Howard and Cleveland's
Herb
Score — boosted their stock p i
the Yankees incriated their Uralpi»ca lead to three game* with a
■plit against the Indians. Howard
singled and scored Ihr insurance
run a* Ihe Yankee* shut out the

Middlecoff W ins
W estern Tourney

T im e r

1.(3*411

' header* for lonighl at Orlando.]
,-,h
Gainesville and Daytona Beach.
&lt;ion*»l»* an
| i*. Itdrttt rf
COCOA
J 1*411 Jh

It's Likely To Go To Virdon Or Arroyo

Ne aanisa ai hntul.il
X A T III1 3 I.

second game. P id Miller hi* *
grand slam home run while Bnl.tpd Manlredi hand ruffe,I Cocoa
with six hits.
Postponements
of
Ihe
other
scheduled game* set up double-

•v

IF ire s fo n e

STRKKLAND-MORRISON, lac

stores

111 K. U t S t

Plant 12^
,*z

-•

*

i

.

.

.

�aW Ava

If It’s Worth Anything
It's Worth Advertising In

. CLASSIFIED ADS

THE O L D H O M E T O W N

RAlJk—«

fob

Three bedrooms, screened porch,
two lots with trees, garage. An
older home but the price is only
$6950 with terms.

By STAN LEY

SUPER DUPKR SPECIALS

daily

For Friday A Satunlay
Ladies rayon L cotton slips.. .59
Dresser, values to 8 93 ...... 1.00
Robert A. William*. Realtor Children’ s sandels all sites 69c pr
Raymond E. LaodqaUt. Associate Girl's plirsuits sites 6-10 .. .69
rhona 1673
Atlantic Bank Bldg. Men’ s shirts, full cut ...............95
Any thing you buy in our store Is
a rent bsrgaln.
FOR SALE — 3 Beflrnom Home.
The Bargain Centrr.
V4 Block from South Side school.
307 Sanford Ave
CaU 2541.

THE CURIOSITY SHOP

17-92 at Hiawatha. Used A new
furniture, antiques, bric-a-brac.
Immediate possession on one of
the most spacious, nearly new,
Come in and brnu-c around.
3 bedroom homes we have evrr
offered Priced at $11,600, this Single bed and box springs, $5.
Phoni 1111-R. 2121 Magnolia.
Is a dandy buy.

Seminole Realty
W. DIETRICHS
19*1 Park A reawe

way aad Baby Beds
te Soils
Kouav

Wash * r awath—T c i 142$.
I l l West U ral
Apt*.

H O d ea ey.

FU RNISH ED Apartm ent 500 Park
Ava.
Furnished Kitchenette apt*. Air
raarllUrmiil Slumbartend Court
South City Ilm lU Highway 17-93.
Bedroom Roma. V4 Block from
Southaida school. Call I54L
SEE Seminole Bealtr for Desirib lr Home* and Apt*. Phone 27.
FURNISHED A p t

springs.

T. W. HERO
Phono 27 NEW LOAD — Used Furniture,
Fancy Desks, Hat Racks. Wash
Stands and Chests. The Curio­
RAYMOND
ID M. BALL, BROKER
sity Shop.
S. D Highlaymaa. Associate
Phone 888
804 Southi Park Ave.
2 PARAKEETS and Nice Cage.
Thonc 2218.
For your Real Estate needs:
Cullen and Harkey, Realtors 15-ft Speed Ilnat and Teener T ra i­
ler
$150.00.
Phona
1424 or
106 N. Park Ave. Phone 2312.
291. J. M. Blythe.
3 bedroom home, corner lot. rea­ PHILCO refrigerator; good rondl
sonable down payment. Lnw
lion. Phone 2213-X-W.
monthly payment. 801 Rosalia
Drive.
YOU don’t have to sec the credit
manager to save dollars legiti­
mately on your GIGANTIC Re
O p en H o u se
mova’ KALE.
Sunday June 28
ROBINSON MUSIC CO.
Lovely 3 bedroom stucco home In
nice neighborhood. Hardwood 220 N, Orange Ave. Orlando, Wa,
floors, extra targe living room,
ARTICLES WANTED
—4
separate dining mom, Kitchen 6fully
equipped. On
beautiful
73’ x 117’ lot with shade trees. High eat CASR. TR AD E -IN price*
paid for need furniture CaU *68.
31,000 Down, monthly payments
Wilson-Malar Furniture Co. 311
less than rent. May be seen at
E. 1st SL
an earlier date by appointment.
(Follow the amalll arrows from
f - N atlm tarl
Park A 22nd St. to location)
eat Really
T in s NEW FOOD
________ _
i A ve DOGS
l ’hone LOVE
18
Watch your dog dive Into his
tA R T I O M POW BALE
-»
maal wilh enjoyment, when you
feed PU R IN A
DOC. CHOW.
Thrifty, eaiy-to-fced,
contains
everything normal dogs need
to maintain sturdy vigor. Gel
DOG CHOW at
Simpson Farm Supply
Reg. 3.95 Folding Grills .
1.00
Reg. 4.95 Jumbo Hassocks
I t * W 2nd St.
Phone Its*
Choice of Colors
2.23
Reg. 3.93 Metal
1*A H E L P W ANTED (Fansala) |*A
Porch Chairs ...
3.81
Reg. 9.95 e x it
“ 320.00 Daily, Sell Luminous Door
Linoleum Rugs ..
6.50
Plater. Write
Reeves.
Attic
Reg. 10.95 Plastie Covered
boro. Mass. Free
Sample l
Cocktail Chairs ..
7.50
Details.”
Reg. 27.50 Maple Chest
or Drawsri ......... is.ao
19.50
THREE WOMEN
Single Hollywood Bed Complete (between 30 and $3) for outside
with
PJaitic
Covered Headsurvey work in Sanford. Exb o a rd ................................. gg gy
parlance not necessary. Must
Reg. 88.50 8Pc Dinclle Suite
be neat In appearance, .have a
Choice of Colors .. 58.50
pleasing personality, ana a de­
sire to serve the public. Perma
nent work. Short hours, *1 . 5
283-68 E. 1st Si.
Phene 127
days a week. *30.00 a week to
start. Write qualifications and
Phone number to Box ItL c/o
VENETIAN BLINDS
Herald.
(Nationally Adv.
R ollaR ead)
Manufactured te Sanford

W R L a R A A P A R TM E N TS : rooms,
private bath*. I l l W. First St.

A valos
US.

2 Bunk beds with link
Phone 418-M.

Pbooa 43J-W.

COOL— • Room Furnished Apartrnent Front and back screened
porches.
Garage.
Take
0,Je
child. No Pet*. 606 Palmetto
Ihown *■"
" "
^ ^hon
^
*P ,&gt;0*ntmeflk
IT W .

M

50th A nniversary

SP EC IA LS

| Bedroom furnished house. PjO M
per month. Phono 998 or 743-W.
after 6:00 p. m.
»

room apartment- IHWund floorcompletely
furnished, * Hot A
Cold water Included. Fhona
2392,
(Jilt, dl*
312 fPalmetto.
auiiaiwi.

% bedroom house, nicely furnished.
Porch, carportc and large lawn.
Longwood, J. R.
G rant Call
263892.
llN FU R N ISH E D 4 Room House
with 2 Bedrooms. Phone 1326-J.
LAR G E . Clean Apartment. Down­
stairs. Small one, $35.00 611
Park Ave.

M ath er o f San ford

Apartm ent 3 rooms completely
furnished. 1400 Park Avenue.
t f f t C E Bedroom, Private entrance
and bath. Piione 3029-W.

Seminole Venetian B M Cm

170314 lla g . 3 bedroom furnlahed
ap t $55. monthly. Ph. 1673.
1105 W. 20th St. 2_ bedroom furumonthly. 1101
nlshed home.
Mag. furnished 2 badroom ept.
$55. monthly. Also 1 bed room
. furnished apt. $50. monthly.
mot
&lt; Ideal for couple — 2 bedroom
s home wilh kitchen cguipm
1 ent‘
$65. monthly. Phone
4 Bedroom furnished house. 801
Park.
N ew Masonry 8 bedroom house
in Casselberry. $60 per month.
Phone Orlando 32198.
-

BEACH R E N T ALB

-

IB

H atekiew OCEAN FR O N T Apartmeat*. 138 loath Atlantic Dav
tona Beach. Fla. Phone 2374-W.

IF IT n REAL

Siy

-■ ft® F o r Rent: D e a im h l* upaowa of­
fice apaea.
Two bedroom FURNISHED home.
■ 12 minute* from base, will
LE A S E to N avy Coupte with
9 im ali child.

J

Phone 883

rayee Use*. M b*

* $ g s &amp; .t s u s

s X f t O M i m i IP R b tO fc
Priced to sell — owner leaving 113-114 V a t M i St
D AY, week — Housework. 701
town —two bedroom. C l , mod­
Cypress.
ern home to city. $1085, Down, I t VARIETIES PANELING
#oo. moot*.
Nadva a id Foreign Woods.
BABY
SITTING _ Housework.
Wi
chsJ Micks, ?h . 1MI-J. TO*

BkmuncJmtniUWye On.

PLUM BING

FIX TU R E S

1x23

1081

L

• Factory Supervised Service

• House calls 8 a. a . till • p- m
(All makes and models)
113 Mag.

Damp

Ave.

FHA

17—A tm *!

Phone 2400 It Wii: pay YOU U
&gt;»mi buy Open
Sunday*.
V
Eaatalda Trailer
sad repejrr
Palatka, Fla.

24t9

P L U M B IN G
1953— DUO 42 ft. Hnuso TVallcr.
Contract and reavlr work. Free
Air conditioner. TV.
watt to
asbaatoa. R. L Harvey, 804
watt carpeting. Must Sell. $3,000.
Sanford Are. Phona '
I’ll Orbtigi* City, Spring, 44-332.
Orange City Mobile Home Park.
P . M. C A M P B E L L
FOB
SALK ~ 1*31 Chavrnlel
General CaWrartev
Pirk-up Truck. Good condition.
“ Homes of Distinction**
3oa Kim Avo
■t Way 17-82
Phana 1441 ----------m i ------------------------H BOATS
m O TO M
-U
Oaagicte TELEVISIO N SERVICE jg j^ _
on ail makes and models
6 H P SCOTT ATW ATKR 68 50
SANFORI) ELECTRIC CO. 5 3Horse
SCOTT-ATWATER 89.00
I I * Magnalia Ave.
Phane 4«2 5 Horse SKA RKK
61.50
6 Horse VVIZAnn
79.05
For Belter Plumnmr
llow will you swap*
See or Call
llow will you Trade?
W. J. KING
Your old Motor far a
BOO Sente Park Phone 38
Belter grade _ KVINRUDKI

W hy Buck

U
Sill—Plana
Technician
Phona 2184. Route L. Sanford

It'a Bo Enay
To Place A Want Ad
Juat Call 1821 and aak for
tha Want Ad department
Sanford Herald

The Want Ad Department la
•pan from 1:30 a. m. unlit 1:30 p.
m. each business day except Saterday
afternoon.
Deadline for
week-day insertion* is 2:0i) p. m.
the day preceding publication.
Any ads coming In later than
1:00 p. m. vnU ho published andur
Too Itola To Claasify-

• u li to t
m ttto to*

F iS
t&amp; xls
A Jirsxii
.
a U r u M to ^

M

m ss&amp;.»

w

m

m m ^vjxsm

datives,
tors- Inc.,
r i ' , Ala., for aoaptete
ec

BARGAIN!
24-

R EAU TY P A R U y g

-2 4

For livelier Hair
G ET PROFESSIONAL CAREt

En-Bwa Beauty Shop
3A3

I

S’ (■ p d

L u m b e r 1

Tha Tide?

K W iW w n iB P s a

etc.
321

FLOOR SAND DVD m Finishing;
Oak Cooes famished, laid 4 fto
ixhad. to business store 1*20.
E. r . Elevens; Rout* 2, Box 227;
Can 716-R-4 M a r a I a. ■ . or
after I * $ . ___________________

“ Of course, t h a t f t n e e
n*ed« mending . . . and my
wift hta been after m e to
put up another ahelf in the
kitchen. Then too, I've been
promising to mako the
youngatcr a desk. Maybe I
better call 88 today—guess
X DO need lumbar."

SAN FO R D !
M OST
MODI
B EAU TY SALON. _
Spaciallaing
in
alt
pnai
■uly ________
Culture
------- ^Jtaaes o f Beaul,
including Gyrolator Reducing
and TrcatmanU by R E G U T E R ED Manuesr.

HARRIETTS
BEAUTY NOOK

ACROSS
1. Manila
lump
6. Doctrine
U. False faces
to. Exchange
12. Append
13. Tibetan
priest
11. Spawn
of fish
15. Unauthor­
ized
17. Actinium
isym.)
18 Kill
19. Unit of
Weight
2). Take on
again
56. Projecting
roof edges
58. Vats lor
curing
fodder
29..A stewing
'chicken
31. Money
Ihumoroua)
$2. Technical
labbr I
34. Music note
35. lie had an
adventure
with Forty
Thieves
30. Place

fetor . W&lt;

A lt

&amp; SUPPLY YARD

O O N D m O N IN O

jL jLFQFTI CoTtNC.
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T t o R

M

213 W . 3 r « S t .
N

P h . 82

as

4

11
1V

1

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in

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%

S Bedroom Homt'in Wynnewood. 2 Years Old.
Thto home has Oak Floors,
Ceramic Tito Bath, Dining
Area, Large Living Room
and Kitchen Equipped with
G. E. Appliance*.
Telephone 131 after 8 P. M.
fa r appetolaant to aaa this

(A ir C a f it h a M I
1H 9a. Oak A re. pbara fT L

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S H ER M A N CONCRETE
PIPE CO.
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5. Cut with
Ihr teeth
3. Biblical
mine
4. Man s
name
3. A squared
stone
6 Little Island
7. Booty
Islsngl
* Mother
9 Places for
automobile*
It. A good
friend

4ti

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4

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24*

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4:04

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42iil«llriff l.lg li l
K UcIi*n Show
ArTKMkUUK
W #tc* T ' %» r ■

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7:00

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1'iogram
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11:13

MOMMY

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tl'tllH H IIIT
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N e w s - W e a l her-fiporle
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sou r it— a i v K i i i u i
I4UO KH .IID S i l.u a

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K lh e l A Albert
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Ford Theatre
i*i»a Ju st Ira
la so A n Hael*

bho«r

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Voice • ( r ir e s t s a *

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44

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A d v s r t u r s with Vnela W a l t
ftsm ar Of (hs J u n * l »

41.

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MriV.a. It Tilth
Valiant J «l v
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John D aly Ne ws
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(.1 hr I l i All** r f
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16:00 lu«J p j i h a m
10:1 k . I n r o n f id bill l « V
Narnc'i T h «
11:00 N » m i Ac Wea the r
11:1k I.atK Hhow*
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of red
42. A ladder In
a slocking

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39. A shade

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A rrc N M M i*

12:34
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134
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37. Metal
38. Wager a

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TELEVISION

llilk
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1. An
absolute
ruler

11:Jo

shaped
figure

p art

45

ft 30
7; ort
l;00
y.ts
&gt;30
10: Jo
111oo
11:1 k

36 . C re s c e n t-

30 itelutes by
evidence
tiled ill soap- 33. Island in
Ray of
,*
luat.ilig
Naples
18 Merganser
20. Had!
Question
•

NDIRtiO

myruiaa otUHraS

16. B ub lan cet

DOWN

A to

HCIMNU

p r o p e r tie s
57. Bristle-like

WUBO TV C l l i S l i K L a
MUMMY

■

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'd

44. Submerges

4:4J

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2b

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31

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of tree*
45. H a lf ema

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40. Certain

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41. Ascend
43. A sandpiper
41. Main
sir ms

.04

H ILL LUMBER

3

DAILY C R O SSW O R D

W A N T AD
RATES

CARS
BOUGHT S O U ) TRAD ED
Koy Kttrl’a Uaae Itora
Sanford Ava. 4 Ulb SL

C o.
Out Waal 131b

and

J

Dn

PtaM O

RANDALL ELECTRIC C
O
.
T VSERVICECENTER

D o

OniINMiMbSL
Maneiaa
RUM-MIX CONKRETE
f t * » *b_(k
m M b Aft.

1

45. Rascal
46 Forearm
bones
ian.it t
47. t.eg joints
4S Flat pieces
of chair
backs

V ® iit fa

■
t— W
W
WWWW

Colng business —community gro.
. eery and attractive two bed­
room home eoa b ia td
•8300. Reason — s l c t a t s s . ^ ^

S^crSfS if

USED

W a a and
Om bm
Dry
• Ooo boa
Warn
Fold
n Finis had Lanadry
n Sanilooa Dry Cleaning
S on (hid da
I
HMa Faaitmart
1*8 Baal tu b « L

•

Woman, aggreslvc, well-groom
ed. 30-45 with thorough know­
CaU ua about oar osulncaa rates.
ledge and experience in recruit­
Small Dining Room Suite, Bad
ing,
training and managing
A Uttia spaa* like this aril) get
with springs also good buy in
women in direct selling work
your r a c in g * before our a o r *
other miscellaneous furniture.
35,000 —38.000 yearly income po­
thin 10.000 reader*. Tell 'em to
Phona 712-W. 233* Palmetto Ave!
tential.
National
organitation
day I Pisoo* U 2I.
with modern merchandize me­
thod*. Car essential. Wire colp d lg A * above 4-Hna _ c m b * run
•‘ Your w est
ret, giving
name,
address,
lect.
I full days for aaly
eeJy $8.40,
$1.40, 8 days
t
Maytag Wa
ihone number to T. N. Rogersfer only $1 JO and an* day tar The
11$ Magnalia Ava.
1717
impire C .r a
- -f t s- Corporation.
Corporation
Newark. New York State. S*. Dragline eervire, Lakefronts A
HUDSON Sporting Goods
USED TRACTORS
lected applications will be toKvinrude Sales 4 Service
djtrtung Estimates given. Phone
Rr(H T r iagar C*.
tervtewad immediately
r k g g jm
Genovs
2484, Orlando 32504. 301 E .J a^ H *.
tree i
Sanford 8221.
W ANTED — Lady with Grocery
t e ^ F U R N p jU R R - f’W m
CONCRETE
exparieoca. To work to itora in FLOOR sanding and finishing Roy your rumRura at flarry’ a
Ready Mixed Concrete. Concrete
Sanford. Tlcaae answer this ad
Cleaning, waxing. Serving Semi
Warehouse Furn., ito., at 801 w .
Block, Sand. Gravel, Cement , jn your own handwriting stat
not* County since 1823. 1L M
1st St. All naUonatly adv. furConcrete Pipn to Meat All Quali­
ing age, education and referGleason,
Lake
Mary.
^
«
to r y ^ w a M h o u s e jjr ie «
fies tions.
•nets. Reply to Sanford Herald
Box A. B.
a —K L E C n tlC A L
Mattress A Box Springs
Sherman Generate Pipe Cm
Renovated
SKK Your G e n e ra l__
1PB— IA L E IM E N WANTED -1 0 B
’ ’ Free Estimate”
On* Heat 1Mb BL
for TV and Annltea----ECHOLS BEDDING CO.
Mot
S n n fn rd E to e tH e On.
A
D
B
O
O
K
M
A
T
C
H
E
S
Comer 2nd 4 Magnolia Ph. 1232 l i t Magnate A aw.
and
a ra cs rvah ah ub
P te te
Ball Full or Part Tima
“ • • 4 ” Bamberger, Mgr.
C A L L 1821
• * ! . « man — Custo m ar Premium
Open Monday tfl 8 f . a .
FK IG ID AIR R
L fv .te
peal PLUS F R E E Powerhouse
and aarvten. G.
LAWNMOWERS
n n a rp en ed
Railing Outfit bring fa it is le .
________Etm tNRm i
Fla. Pbooa 4131 ar
Bicycle 4 General Repair.
If pan bam a small kminaaa te a
2L(L.d,,y
. . f&lt;?m,,v ,8ho» noI84X-W after 8 m l
S t a n le y '*
B ik e
S h op
ZENR of Styles including Gla­
aad
u
ded
part of town and ar*
‘ EC&amp;ftia M D D D id &lt; &amp; *
mour Girl*, COLORAMA, Hill31* R. 4th St. T fL 3434
interested In getting customers,
On.
u a
hlllJfi, ate. Popular size*; go's,
list tha service you offer to the
Av ADOilkAMS
^ 4 0 ’' . I W lO N L A lE L l'W r it e ENVELOPES, letterheads. state­
Classified column af the Bastard
K tte b S ^ ^
• 9m i
TODAY far F R E E 1*61 Master
ment*, invoices, hand bills, and
Herald. C a U ---ng and r a n k s
Outftt. SUPERIOR WATCH 08.,
p r o g r a m s , etc. Progressive
- Fi
6a Tan —
A
n
.
P
I
m
m
1
1
1
MT0 8. Greenwood, Chicago 18,
Printing Co., Phona 408 — 403
West 13th SL
820 West 8rd S t

t Room Apt. 200 Avacado.

H

DISTRICT MANAGER

ORLANDO
Undo Era
Bay, 11884.

B E R W IC K

Audi
mcc
Con­
sumed
23 Pierce
with
n
d igger
2.1. Employ
26 Body
of
Vesltrdsi's A m u
water
35. Metal
Brown
36 A n y o f
in the sun
aaveral
29 Hateful
plums
31 God of
3S Not empty
I he skv
39 Girl's name
i Rabyl I
40 llegone!
33 Residue of
41. Short fn*
burned
There;.*
papers
34 Table uten rot 43 Hint

DOWN
1 Fellow
2 Circle of
light
3 Goddess
of discord
iGr.1
4 A manorial
court
3 Forget­
fulness
fi Bureau
7. Slack
fi Shield
9 Measuring
stick
lit Sharp
16 Property
it. &gt;
19 Lager
29 Friar's
title

w eight

IA U N M T

Page 7

c r o s s w o r d

ACUOSS
1 NippcrUbo
organ
6 Retail
silcsmsn
It Women's
quarters
in an
On»ntal
pxlare
12 T h e ----- .
Netherlands
'13 Foreign
14. Expatriate
15 Placards
17. Jspxneac
coin
IS Uristlclike part
20 lt.inqueta
24 Stiong
blxst of
wind
29 Shabby
i slang i
29 Biblical
prophet
3(1 Scope
31 Islands
including
the
Cyclades
32. Coins
I Rum 1
34. A fruit
37. Not subject
to fading
in sunlight
42 Spinachlike
plant
41 L'mt of

Foollockets .......... Special $7.95.
Whether buying ar seOiag. tt will Paint ........................... *2.50 gal.
pay you to sea:
All sires tarpnuUnc.
J. W. n A L L REALTO R
ARM Y-NAVY SURPLUS
Florida S U le B a a h Building
310 Sanford Ave.
Phone 1321
Phonoi 1738
Call Hall'

HEAR THIS!

THE 8ANFOKI) HERALD Mon. June 27. 1055

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News

Mev an O'clock Club
K an e
Pporle A t A Glance
J a c k e t 's Cholco
M .. m in e (levo llnne
Xlornlnk Xlelodlea
W o rld A t Nine
Muele F o r Ladles
llt r o n T im e
For Ladles Only
jdueie F o r T o *

*400 Club

t o n News
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A C TSISX O O K
Jledlo r u n n ig e il
Tuesday Statlue*
News
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World A' T lirea
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D A IS Y VOU
SH O U LD B E
ASH A M ED .

S T O P W CPPYIH G.
P U P S ’ H ECE SH E
. CO M ES DOWN •
THE STREET

T H I S IS A?
T E R R IB L E - ,
‘WO A M AND
; a is v 5 n o t
HOME Y E T t

'

w o r r y in g

,y o u r f a m i l y
--Y 1 LIK E THIS

THE SANTORP TnHlAT.D

1 W ISH I CO U LD HEAfT
THE E Y C U S E SH E H A S
t M IG H T B E A B L E J - 7 TO U S E l T »—
/

SO'^ETiME,2,

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TH EY SU R E
GROW UP r
NOW, 1

n ev er w ant to
s e e y o u a s a n ; ; ------ r

Y.VAT A J IT'S GO ’ 13 1*1
K T T— T S A 3 G S G V—'
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OVER

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^ B EU TLU f i
I TOLD TOM
TO STAY Af/AV
OFROM THE
1 OFFICE
.

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PATROLMAN Pet* Zedra stnnda
on a crate to direct cars that am
willing to gamble on chanrcs of
getting across the flood waters
swirling about him on a main
street in Las Vegas, Nev. In this
American Monte Carlo, a rou­
tine rain storm quickly turned
Into a cloudburst, with huge
hailstones breaking windows and
pelting roof*. This time Las
Vegas was the million-dollar
loser, f international Sound photo )
Feb. 21, 1045, the 1J. 8. Air
Forces dropped
.1.000 tons of
bombs on the Neumberg marshall­
ing yards — the largest weight
o f bomba ever to be dropped on
any single target.

HtlPlCSOiV, HASH SWi*G3

W

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Bu t,
AMNN i E

' By ALTON L. tlt.AKESLEK
|smoke or its components when
Associated I’ rrss Science Reporter taken into the mouth •* body.
NEW YORK LB —Take nothing,
Most of the latte from tmoke
divide it into smaller bits of noth­
comet from solid particles in the
ing, and you get a better band­
tmoke, less from gases, rk'iearchage.
ers find.
This is what one research team
Radioactive carbon is one very
did to come up with plastic ad­
hesive bindages that won’t leave useful atom for the tracing work.
your skm whitened and wrinkled Tobacco grown in special green­
houses can be exposed to radio­
after 24 hours.
active carbon dioxide, and the plant
The nothing !* holes In the plastic
takes up some of the radio-carbon.
strip, over the gauze pad of the
Hydrogen also can be introduced
banaage. The holes let air In, and
permit evaporation ot water from into the plant, to aid in tracing
some components that contain
ins do.
Two holes, or even fou», in the hydrogen. Tobacco contains sugar,
and radioactive sugar can be add­
bandage, didn’t ventile very eftied to tobacco. Then, as the tobacco
clon’ lv, hence skin brneith would
bums, smoke can be traced to
turn wh.te and macerated if you
loam where it goes In the body.
got the bandage wet while wearing
Radioactive flax can show how
it.
much of the smoke comes from
The answer was to divide the
cigarette paper.
two ho'es into 20 little holes or
vents. The 20 little holes arc no
In early-day New YoTk City,
larger in total area than the two
large ones on tho older style bind- theater scats wers not reserved
and those who bought tickets often
age.
A mathematician assisted In th“ sent their servants to the theater
research conduced by a manu­ early to hold seats for them.
facturer of surgical dressings,
Johnson L Johmon, New Bruns­
wick. N.J. Employes wore band­
ages with the different arrange­
ments of ventilating holes to learn
which best prevented the whiten­
ing effect

...LC T US S t t HOW MUCH JO T l i t
IS GIVING TO MT PEO PIC / THEY &lt;
GATHER UKE BEES WHENEVER
THE BEUS ARE SOUNDED/ COME
CUT OH THE BALCONY TO SEE A
. fO R Y O U R S O F/

•

■ &lt; « » i 11 « 41I 'l l T , N IN T H
d l l l l l l SI.
I'I H V I’ TT, IN
4 N il
FO I I K U I N n U I r i l l l s T f . F L O -

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N OTH** TO nKF^N*l»**‘, * " ,

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tules nf 1(41 and Chapter tIOM
•'f I t t l . nollce la hereby given of

an •lertlnn In ha held on July IZ.
t a i l for the .U . lion „ ( I n n ( I )

euparvlarre for farms of four ( 4)
n r » each,
oiling I'larefn)
Offl&lt; • of flrmlnnle County Chamhar of Commarea Hanford, F lo r i­
da
IKrledo Maxell Kioto
Oviedo. Florida
Gardners Mora
L e k a Monroe. F lo rid a
Lym an High pchonl
l.nncwuod. Florida
ro llin g placets) w ill ne open haIMran ll.a hours ot Site A St. and

f

rostm ee.
la r H .a illa . w'aahlngion,
VO\T AKI5 IIU H U H t ' .N O TIFIK n
that a rr.m plalnl for Divorca haa
ea*a filed agulaat gou. and sou
a r t ra iu iia d i« ,ar«« a copy ,.i s.oo p, si.
A ll qualified
eteetore
roaldlng
our Aasw ar or D ead lng * lo lha
omplalnl on lha p la in tiff# a lte r.
M r . J , h t .* S * i:L L * iir m N g H r ite
h o rlh Slain Uiraal. Orlando. F lo ­
rida, and Ilia Ih f original Anawar
O. D. Farrell 310 K. First
er Pla-inirg« In lha office ot the
n a r k of lha C ircu it Court on or
For 10 trtare this store has
M o r e the dib day af July, i l l s
consistently observed the fo l­
If you fall 10 do an. Judnptanl h&gt;
lowing hours:
la fa u ll w ill be taken agalnat y.iu
for .lh a relief dams ad ad la the
Week day* t a. m. fe BtlS g. m.
Som flalat.

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BUYING
A CAR?

tian

V.’SJ'F- Florida.

Outboard M otorboats
P. S.— We also write Home Owners Policies
Phone 409

Board

BOOTS

• O O P O R IV B R S D R I V I 1 A F R L T I

Arcade

LffSJi-sJLi
L
t J* 1 fr j

Package

A iu m tx u i

Although drafts
and chilling
may reduce your body resistance a
and make you susceptible to catch­
ing cold, they ar« not ths actual
causa of the cold, experts say.

Automobile

Baturday unUI B a. ns. Moo.

«

LONDON in — T he Duke of
Edinburgh, thinning on top at
31, Is trying out a new hair
grower. Barber Charles Topper,
who has clipped royal lock* at
Buckingham Palace
most of
this century, laid the lotion -Is
“ light and nongreaiy, specially
blended with a little oil.”

Bonds

Closed from TiM p. m,
. m

Duke Trying Out
New Hair Grower

Fire

W H A -'ff WHERE IS
EVERYONE T MV C1TV
. is m r r r r / ^

lila to vole jn Ihla alacllon.
•
#l«&lt;’Joe aa dtflnad
In lha Florida Poll Conservation
Art Includra any parson qnallflrd
to vola In ganaral alacllona undar
tha Conatliullnn and Niaiutaa af
this ataie who la alto a landow ntr
In lha haraln named dlatrlct.

The radioactivity research It be.
•ns conducted by the American
Tobacco Co. At part of itt prog
the company save the medical col­
lege of Virginia $&gt;20 000 for a spe­
cial atomic giccnbouse to grow
radioactive tobacco.

G EN ER A L IN S U R A N C E

Radioactive atoms art going to
work In Richmond, Va., to give
you more pleasing cigarettes.
The goal is to trace the chemi­
cals that give its flavor and taste
bark to the origins in the tobacco
leaf. Then strains of tobacco might
be developed which yielded the
maximum amount of the chemi­
cals which people like in their
smoke.
Radioactive atoms can be traced
wherever they go, and the specific
components that form the smoke
can be traced back. The tracing
also can show what happens to

Hslurdsys • a. m. te 7:30 g. m.

t s s je

-M a

C A R R A W A Y &amp; M cKIBBIN

..WHILE, HIS HEAR)NO AO
n/BNEo u p r u u TUT,
THE PEAUNG CLANGOR
S H R IE K S IN HIS E A R S /

Legal Notice

- j &gt;

^ - / N O T M l!
I'M BATINO A
PIECE O P
r APPLE P E I

AH, AtY CCAR /
&gt; / •e%ADIROe —
A tiC A u m u . CONCERT
TO R E M IN D
FOR ALL MY PEOPLE
THEM TH A T
TO H E A R ...
&gt; L RESISTAN C E
j V l S USELESS'

FLOW BUL TO e i l l IN rAH’S
TOWER. SHAKEN TO MIS t.CRVETICS BY THE HXSID VIBRATIONS/

COME, MYDCAR/ WHILE
flA S H KEEPS THE
BEAUTIFUL TOWCK
BELLS R INGING ... L *

^ —1
Oi\rv ceocxgTrl
( vnS5 &amp; "rue wiup rkcktib-*!

GAUGE?
V.h a t 's
7 COME

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A u n t M in n ie m a d a b o u t
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. . . A N D T H E WJCY I r C T U

I U s v /a t
IT VdTW tm :

D A -A -A v y c s a c K g r r i

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M YSELF

TOSS ME UP IN V i f AIR J
r LIKE YOU USED TO WHEN
. I WAS A LITTLE |---- &lt;
V -— I KID ? /-—- V
O

TH EPES
A WAGP

AVON

114 N. Park A to,

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VVeoffier

Shop and Save
In Sanford

P ir t lr
with

E s ln b lta h c d

pi F R IE S T A D M IN IS T E R S J***. rite* a* ■ doctor and police
M ato* and hi* playmate. John Cotton. The 11-vcar-old l&gt;oy*
buried them while they were claying in an eight-foot-deep
youths, one It and tho other 5, were rescued by paisersby,
in tern a tion a l)

Strolling
1n Sanford
The monthly Coffee Club meet­
ing for Chamber of Commerce
■lem beri and new businessmen
Will be held tomorrow morning
la the U.S.O. building.
• • • •
«,T h e many friend* of Mr. and
IPrs. Mason Wharton will regret
lo learn of the death of Mr. Whir•on’* father, W. W. Wharton, In
Orlando Tuesday.
• • • •
T. W. Freeman, Atlantic Coast
Lina Section
M atter at
Lake
M ary, waa the recipient Saturday
• f an emblem pin in recognition
• f twenty-five years’ service with
the railroad.
Presentation
was
de by Roadmasler J. F. Lewat Coast Line General Offices
In Sanford.
e • • •
Any oae Interested In getting a
free hat box, may drop by B. L.
Perkin* k Son and pick up one.

SANFORD. FLORIDA, WEDNESDAY, JUNK 2H. HWS

1D0R

work vainly to save the live* o f Amrel
Hied o f suffix alinn under a landslide that
excavation in Queens, N. Y . Two other
who duir them out with their hand*,

Peace Ship Plan
Loses By 1 V ote
W A S H IN G TO N (/P&gt;— Senate Demccrnta snnk PresIdent Eisenhower's atomic peneo ship project by one vote
yesterday after all Republican eenntors voting rallied to the
chief executive.
Sen. Anderson (D -N M ) said today In nn Interview tho

B52 Best Bomber
In World Today,
Air Force Claims
WASHINGTON UP — The Air
Force says it has in the 1)52 the
best bomber ” in the world today,"
has fighters ready to move any­
where on tha globe and Is making
advances in developing continent
to-continent missiles.
The outline of air strength was
contained In the Defense Depart­
ment semiannual report released
yesterday. It appeared coincident­
ally with a demand from a Demo­
cratic senator to Secretary of De­
fense Wilson to answer a dozen
questions dealing with the quality
and quantity of Russian planes and
missiles.
The brief air section of tho re­
port, covering a aix-month period
ending last Dee. 31 was written
by Secretary Harold Talbott. He
■aid Uie program to build to a 137wing Air Force (from a present
strength o f 121 wings) has not been
changed, although " it must con­
stantly be revaluated in the light
of growing Communist capabili
tics.”
v ___

Prime Minister
O f Burma Arrives
In Washington

WASHINGTON U P-Prim e Minis­
try U Nu of Burma arrives today
to discuss Far East tensions with
President Eisenhower and Secre­
tary of State Dulles.
The scholarly Prim e Minister,
who has offered to help bridge the
gulf between Communist China
at&gt;J the United Statea, arranged
to meet with Dullea and Eiaenbower ihortly after his arrival by
air from New York.
He will remain in Washington
until Sunday.
There aliened to be come doubt
Dulles pointedly opened the way
h i the minds of the Klwanians
for
any proposals U Nu may have
assembled at the Yacht Club this
by saying at his news conference
boon at thslr regular weekly
yesterday he looked forward to the
ioting when Ed Lane, in making
presentation to Oscar M. Ifarrl- Asian leader’s visit. He said he
Oon, tha retiring Asst. Postmast­expected to discuss problems deal
e r of Sanford, waa talking lo and lng with relaxation of tensions in
■bout the righ t aaa&gt; fo r Oscar the Far East.

r

r

saying, "N o that’s not right” .
crowd go t « big kick out of
Oscar’s diffaring with
Ed and
■loo enjoyed 0 . P. Herndon's an­
swers to quixmaater Charlie Morri­
son's questions. In ffeft,. Charlie
are O. P. a .silver dollar eontrlpted by Earl HlggfnbetiinM, to
i t down and not embarran him
b a y more.
*
•»
e o. e . a;
The Seminole County fc e e fc .
■ten’ s Association w ill hold It a g * .
■ual election o f officers at • p, n .
Thursday at the Court Houser •

W

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|

*
:

King Hrfokon VII
injured In Foil

Titusville Plant
Leveled By Fire
TITU SV ILLE on— Fire yesterday
leveled the Nevins Fruit Co. citrus
packing house here with damage
estimated at V* million dollars. The
plant, one of the largest on the
east coast, had closed down opera­
tions for the season.
Fire Chief Walter P. Glle*
blamed lightning for the blare that
Started at an elrctrical and rain
Storm passed over.
fg
*

STRIKE ENDS
I M ILTO N On—A three-day strike
i-work assignment at the 23
OSLO, Norway (f) — Norway's
dollar Escambia n a y
'R i n g Haakon V O frO today and
Co. plant site ended when
■broke a thigh bone.
workers went back to
The n-ycar-old moaarck was
yesterday.
M oved immediately to a hospital,
l a a communique, the hospital
•aid his condition la aatiafaetory
DIES
■Bd that m complications have
Dr. Mtehael Price
drisen.
I
■oted eye specialist,
He slipped on the bathroom
the veterans adMmat lo hi* summer retort
tal of a heart

W ASHINGTON 'P -S c n . lv r* (R N Y ) accused IVm ocrat* today of
"trym s to climb on the Eisenhow­
er bandwagon” with claims that
they ar* supporting the Presi­
dent’ s programs in Congress.
Ives said in an Interview he re­
gard* a statement yesterday by
Sen. Lyndon R. Johnson (-Tcx&gt;
ai Indicating the Democrats have
concluded Eisenhower will be re­
flected next year and have de­
cided to concentrate on efforts to
retain their control of Congress.
Johnson.’ the. Senate Democratic
leader, said in a statement tht
Senate’s record in this session dis­
proves
Eisenhower’s
contention
during the campaign last October
that Democratic control o f Con­
gress would result in " a cold war
of partisan politics.”
After the Democrats did win
control, Eisenhower told a news
conference the words he used were
loo strong for what he had in mind.
Ives said a l i s t
aa John­
son said represent the character
of the current legislative program
showed the Democrat* are "facing
in two directions.”
He noted that Johnson, shortly
after issuing his statement, ral­
lied Democratic forces to defeat
a GOP attempt to authorise the
atomic peace ship Eisenhower has
proposed.

Soil And Water
Plans Discussed...

42-41 vote mrnt the plan waa
•lead. He aaid "there will be
prompt development” o f an econ­
omically feasible atomic engine fo r
A general discussion o f local
large ships.
soil and water conservation pro­
Republicans had tried to put In­ blems featured a meeting last
to an atomic energy construction night o f the board o f supervisors
bill 21 million dollar* to build an of the Seminole Soil Conserva­
atomic reactor fo r the demonitra- tion District.
tion vessel proposed by Eisenhow­
Among topics discussed were
er.
Ihe needs and value o f a District
The President had urged hi* nursery In trying out new grasses
congressional leaders to fig h t fo r and legumes which would be bet­
his proposal, and they put up a ter adapted to local soil aod cli­
stout argument fo r it. Democrats matic conditions. Another topic
railed it a "smoketUckleaa wood
that received
considerable ’dis­
•r” and "the floating museum."
cussion was the services o f a
M inority Leader Knowland (R
Farm Forester which will be avalO ellf) pleaded with tha Senate
"Adt to* repudiate” tha President.
A ll vote* against tha ahtp warn Sanitation* beginning In October
east by Damocrnta,. A lone Demo­ of this year. The services o f a
crat, Sen. Thurmond o f So uth Farm
Forester were
recently
Carolina, voted with tha Republi­ made available by the looal
cans.
county commissioners.
Eight conservation farm plans
were worked out with cooperator*
of the District during June. A
conservation farm plan I* a writ­
ten plan o f operations where-hy
each acre of land on a farm will
be used to produce the crop*
ing and treated according to Its
that it Is best rapable of producneeds for protection and Improve­
ment. A detailed survey of the
land up to a depth of 60 Inches,
N E W Y O R K UP—The name o f by a trained lolls scientist, Is used
Roy Campanula, star catcher of as the baiia for Uie plan.
tha Br*»iklyn Dodgers, entered a
The plan consists of an aerial
State Liquor Authority investiga­ photograph showing the various
tion today.
type* of soil on the farm, a land
The New York Journal-Ameii- use map showing what each field
can said Campanclla, owner of a will be uied for, and a act e f writ­
Harlem liquor store, would be ten instruction as to the best me­
questioned by Investigators who thods j f carrying out the plan
contend SLA agents took bribes o f operations. Any land owner
from owners of bars and package can obtain a plan for his farm by
(tores.
applying to one of the loeal superThe newspaper said Campanula visois or to the work unit office
Building.
will be called before J. Erwin in the Atlantic Bank
Shapiro, state Investigation com­ These services are prnvidrd free
missioner and asked to produce of cost lo the farm er by the DiaLrict.
his book.

A*wnriatrd Prwci l / w d Wire

»ff»rBV&gt;g

Roy Campanella's
Name Is Injected
Into Liquor Case

“ They are not investigating m e”
the newspaper quoted Campanula
as saying. "T h ey are investigating,
the liquor board and Ua employes.
Thank God, I ’ve got a good, clean
business. I borrowed money from
the ball club and mortgaged my
borne to buy it.”
Investigator* termed the SLA
"rotten from top to bottom.”

Rain-Making Firm
Starts To Work
LA K E C IT Y U P-A Denver. Colo.,
r*in-increasing firm went to work
today on a contract lo boost the
rainfall in 30 North Florida coun­
ties and 3 in South Georgia.
Approximately i n million acres
of farm and Umberiaod are in­
cluded in tha program. Water Re­
sources Development Corp. agreed
to the undertaking for M l,300,
slightly less than a cent an acre
for a year’s coverage.

Union Seeks End
To Picketing Ban
T A M P A UP— Union workers at
the Coronet rhosphata -plant at
Plant CUy bava asked that tha
court order restraining them from
picketing be dissolved.
Local 37 c f the International
Chemical Workers Union A r L
sought lo dismiss the ban issued
the Smlth-DongUss Co , the day
after a striker was shot and a
deputy beaten outside tha plant
Coronet 1* owned b y Smith-Doo-

■■ —

Present last night were Bonner
Carter, Bill Weal, W. W. U n i,
Jim Sarecnt, C. A. Wales, Ralph
Hammond, H e n r y
Wight,
AI
Swartz, and Ben Wiggins, Bod
Conservationist.

Draft Bill Goes
To Eisenhower

V.

WASHINGTON &lt;MI — L eg liletion to attend Ihe regular draft
and the doctors draft — both of
which otherwise would expire at
midnight tomorrow — went to the
President today for signature.
And the Prrsldrn t'i
disputed
military reserve program, in a
new and modified form, was rea­
dy for House consideration, possi­
bly In a few daya.

UNITED NATIONS N Y »P It look* ) Vo Sanford will rrComrade tourist V. M Molotov
mun in the Florida State League.
At a meeting 1**1 night 125 sup­ |had * wonderful time in the United
porters sgreed to form * new or­ Stale*, lie wants to make another
ganization to take over when the |visit sometime.
The Soviet f o r e i g n minister
present owners give up the cluh
booked p.v*«age homeward today
on June 30
League President John Knder aboard Ihr liner Queen Elizabeth,
estimated the now group would after traveling lo San Francisco
need only 32.000 new capital to fin­ an I back by train. Hr looked hap-1
ish the season. He »*.&lt;! IS person* pier than wlnn he reached this
TMTTSni’ RGU f.T&gt;— The United Slate* Steel O rr.,’
already have promised to buy a country two week* ago for Ihe loth J
threatened
with nn industrywide at tike et midnight fnninr.
anniversary
celebration
of
the
*100 share of stock each, leaving
United Nation*.
raivv, nnnoumed it would atari hanking it* furnace* hefnro
five shares to be sold.
The 65 year old Bolshevik ought noon today.
Sanford Enterprise* lne , the
/
present owner, plan* lo give up lo have been happy.
A llix Steel .spokesman said Ihe company evperled tp
He wa« the lion of the hour sty — 1 1 — ■- the cluh because it ^ ^ n o t a pay­
---------- riimplete Ihe hmre opetsliorv he.
ing venture. However, It. J. Bau­ parties in Sin Francisro. Oner,
fore the CIO United Steelwork,
a
middle-aged
lady
surprised
even
man, president said the club will
cl* *11 ike ili-iol line.
be even financially or a M ile Molotov bv bowing and kissing hi*
Employe* , f n!Hrr tnmponlc* in
hand at Ihe reeeplmn given by
ahead by the end of the month.
Ihe mammoth hn-ie *'-&lt;l industry
Tho Sanford pl.w rr* responded Seerctary of Stale Dulles.
hive hern alt-riel lo h-’gin older*
He got a 10 gallon hat at Chey­
to the good news last night by
ly shutdown*
enne
W
v
o
,
a*
a
souvenir
of
the
running their winning string to
Bank me of (he giai-i h'att furfour straight—longest of the sea­ Wild West. That hat. loo small
nuee l* a g ’ atiual pence*«, slowed
son—by shutting out West Palm for him. is in his baggage rn route
lo pi event damage m Ihe cooling
to Moscow. Hr wa* a* tirkle.1 a*
B e ac h 4-0.
pi ores*.
» boy getting his first Davy Crock­
The I 'l l ) fo ile d Slt-c'n o tk e n
ett hat.
mapped show dow n talks with the
He walked and talked in Sanproducer* in last-minute effotts lo
Francisro with an air of assur­
gel a wage higher ihwn presently
ance belying report* he is on the
ol feted.
way out.
U. S. Steel, which employ* I.W.*
He api&gt;ear* to he going hark In
non of the USW's 600.000 members.
tlie dark rooma of Ihe Kremlin
heM firm to il« original offer of
much Hie (letter for breathing good
slightly more than 10 cents ail
American air.
hour.
Basic sleclworkrrs now average
&gt;2.31 an hour.
TO KYO ID—A Marine hcliroptcr
While the industry piepared for
in i rolling for two downed Marine
s possible slrikf, government me.
pilot* drifting helplessly In Ui* Pa
diators in Washington kept a close
cific moro than 72 hours, crashed
watch on the situation
in the sea today and on* of it
Mskir producer* following Big
NEW YO R K UP-A Camp Hill.
crewmen la, missing, the Navy
Sterl's trail in offering about in
said. Three other* were rescued Pa., grandmother won *1(1,000 last
rents an hour include Inland, Re­
The vast armada of searching night for naming seven'of Joseph’ *
public Steel Corp , Bethlehem Sti—1
planes and ships continued hunt 11 brothers on the CBS-TV ahow,
Corp., Jones A
Laughlm anil
lng the first two raft-borne pilots "*(14.000 Question."
Youngstown Sheet A Tube.
She had rhosrn the Bible as the
Contact wa* lost, however, with
Clifford Hood, president of V. S.
source of her questioning.
their feeble radio.
Steel said in a statement l.v-t
Mr*. Catherine Krritzcrl, St,
la s t night a Marine fury dia
night the industry is threatened
appeared In- the search and it* who has six sons and nine grand­
wholly
unnecessary
with " *
MRS.
P
A
T
R
IC
IA
U
O
LF
E
LD
Tstrike.”
pilot, LL Alan M. M cAnm y of children had the choice of taking
I.U N I), 28, lies in Ah Iron lung
the *8,000 slw won last work or
Yonkers, N .Y ., I* missing also.
---------------------- - * S
on her arrival in New Y oik
In the 20,000-sqiiarc-mila search going for *10,000 on a double-oraflep
•
flight
from
Peru,
She
area, a bright Jiuia sun burned oothing basis.
w a s ' alrickun with polio ln&lt;l
She discussed the matter with
away Uie fog that repeatedly has
February while accompanying
her
sons
ami
their
wives
during
closed in and prevented rescues
her husband, an Oslo business,
after planes glimpsed Uie bobbiui; the week. When she appeared on
tint), in Lima. Mrs, Holfsldl*
the show last night, she ramar
Remarked
Inind w ill he cared fo r at a New
that "(h e *8,ouo looks liae a lot
York hospital before leaving fo r
o
f
money,’
’
and
then
asked
for
kicked up a heavier, moro dan
her home in Norway. Shown
Ihe *16,000 question.
gcious sea.
with her is Dr. Christine Amtm-

Copier Searching
For Missing Men
Crashes In Sea

$16,000 Is Won
By Grandmother
On Quiz Program

Fireworks Blast
Kills 3 Shoppers
In Retail Store
S P R IN G F IE L D , Mo. U P-A fire
work* display in a retail atorr
blew up yesterday, canting the
deaths of three shoppers.
The exploding f.recracker* snd
skyrocket* s c a t t e r e d
flame*
through the one-story structure
The building was destroyed.
The three shopper* perished In
a restroom where they had fled
to escape the flame*. They were
Mr*. Margaret Click, 50, and two
sister*, Mary Williams. 11, and
Linda Kay Williams 7.
It' was not known what touched
off the fireworks. An employe of
the store was overcome by »moke
but 14 other employe* and four
customers escaped injury.
Mayor Warren Turner called
apodal meeting of the City Council
today to ronsidrr a resolution to
ban sale of fireworks in Hie city
Clarence Wheeler co-owner of
the (tore, estimated damage at
3273,000.

JACKSONVILLE UP-City police
early today shot up a stolen car
and captured a bandit gang of
three Marines who had robbed a
Folkvtun, Ga., motel.
Jailed on armril robbery ehargrs
were three men from the Marine
li.irr.n-K* at the Naval Air Station
Pfc. Linton Wilson Crosby, 19. who
was shot in the ralf of the right leg
during the wild chase; S Sgt. Miner
Prylon Roberson 25; P vL Harvey
Carlton Kilpatnrk.lS.
The three were traveling In a
1T..&gt; ohl*mobile that was stolen
hero la«t night and were wanted
for the *201 robbery *ln&gt;ut 3 a. m.
at tlie Georgian Motel, Charlton
County Sheriff J. O.* Sikes A id in
an alarm to Jacksonville dotecUvr
bureau.
*

Bill Collector
Is Arrested In
Beating O f Woman
LIV E OAK UP-A hill eollertor
»r. arrested snd posted *1 000
bond today in tlie ea-e of a Negro
woman who claimed she was beat­
en
He is Henry McCaghren of Williston who wa* charged, however,
only with breaking and rnlcring
tlie homo of Mary Aqp Broun, 18,
who *aid ha Ircal her m a dispute
over a bill.
The ras* was investigated by the
Suwannca County grand Jury yes­
terday slung witli (lie rase of Rich­
ard Cooke, 35, Negro father of nine
children who said a band of men
beat him several weeks ago.

Greyhound Bus f 4
State House Has ^ Strike Vote Is V
Counted By Union
Only 74 Employes

TA LLAH ASSE E UD-The l!ou*e
of Representative* now has only
74 employes and I* expected to
have even fewer a* Ihe eitraordinary reapportionment session
wears on.
Speaker David said the dwin­
CHICAGO (J*—A July 4 weekend
dling payroll amounts to a 50 per
automobile traffic death loll of 380
cent drop In employes since start
was forecast today by Ihe National
of the extraordinary aession June
Safety Council.
6
The estimate covers the period
from 6 p.m. Friday until midnight
Monday and takes into account
only immediate deaths and not
those occurring later from injuries
suffrroJ over tho weekend.
James R. William* Sr., father of
More than 40 million cars will
be on the move over the holiday, James S. William* Jr., thl* City,
* factor that the council aaid will died suddenly in Palatka Monday.
produce an added travel hazard. Funeral service* were held today
at * p. m in Palatka.
Mr Williams will he remrmhered, by hi* many friend*, for
Ihe part he played In the organiz­
ing and developing of Industrial
Insurance Uiroughout the state.

380 Road Deaths
Predicted For
July 4 Weekend

.

James Williams
Taken By Death

'd debate In the Bundestag (low er
bouse). Government sources aaid
new proposala would be readied
but there was considerable doubt
that the legislators could prepare
and pass another hill before the
itart of Iheir scheduled summer re­
cess July 13.
The Chancellor had wanted the
enlistment of volunteer* under way
quickly lo give the free world and
the Rustless additional evidence
before the start o f the Big Four
tummK ta k e nest month that West
Germany la determ in ad to rebuild
ita armed eUeogth.

dren, a polio expcit from N or.
way. (International)

Bandils Captured
At Jacksonville y

German Enlistments
Another Snag
BONN, Wert Germany UP—A new
delay In putting the first West Ger­
mans into uniform was seen today
aa the lower house of Parliament
sen. a bill lo call up the first vol­
unteers to committees for re­
writing.
Although itill approving rearma­
ment In principle, many o f Chaneellor Konrad Adenauer’ s own tupporteri complained that the meas­
ure contained no guarantees of c i­
vilian control over the military and
could lead to a resurgence of Car­
men militarism.
I h e sharp blow to Adenauer Is
BUa * came U u sight altar s l u t ­

Nn. 2?ft.

Steel Firms
Getting Ready
For Shutdown

- f t * « f c w a t r t 'it is a r .d

3

m.

T V ir r * ) *

mostls-

AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER

Ives Says Demos NewGroup!tesiJ'sM#lol°'
Trying To Climb Will Keep iHas Great Time
On Ike Bandwagon Team Here During U.S. Visil

W a s h i n g t o n u p -rroiM cn t E l­
senhower said today he was *ure
the Russians' shooting down of a
U.S. Navy plane was a local occur­
rence and not a matter of policy.
The President'* statement wa*
n o d e at a new* conference at
which he also chided the DemoeraUc-controlled Congress for leav­
ing undonr, as he pul it, a long list
e f his legislative proposals—some
cA th rm , he declared, vital to the
■at ion.
In discussing the plane Incident,
Eisenhower went somewhat fur­
ther than did Secretary of State
Du lie* who had saM yesterday that
be believed no deliberate Soviet
policy wa* Involved.
Elsenhower said R U very en­
couraging to note the attitude
taken by the Soviet government
which has expressed regret for the
IV id cn t and offered to pay half
the damage,
The United States hat aot ac­
cepted the Soviet otter,'
&gt;
••
1 ■ ■

thronrh

• ed fifn in c Ihundershosrf n ( few
n'shi sod early m om ini showers
ftonthrasl rosvt.

VOLUME X LV I

Downing Of Plane
Local Occurrence,
Eisenhower Feels

flood*scattered

BIG Q U E STIO N
ID AH O F A L L S , Idaho f/P)-The
Idaho Falla Chamber o f Commerce
tourist aid service didn’t have the
answer to nn* queitlon yesterday.
An unidentified woman tourist
ecking information or
Yellow ,
stone National Park asked: When
do they turn on Old Faithful I ”
W O RKER K IL L E D
W EST P A LM BEACH UP-Jamea
Scott, 34, ssaa helping install a
new elevator la a 14-story building
whon ho loaned Into tho odjolning
•haft yesterday. An olevator taktog « BM MOfar down cmahod him.

Humphrey Urges
Pressure On Reds
To Free Airmen

WASHINGTON’ tp_Sen. Humphrey (D-Minn) said Imlay Pre«i.
dent Eisenhower should urge So­
viet Itu-sia lo "bring pleasure'*
mi Communist China for reles.e
of ail American I'eiping ho!d&gt;
Should that fail, he aaid in an
interview, (I k* United States should
be prepared to take tlie matter up
directly with Red China.
He said the Unit.-d Slates sltnuM
press Russian leaders at the July
18 Big Four summit conference
to use tlietr influence toward free,
ing II US. airmen ht-ld m Com­
munist jails and a number of
civilians detained to China.
Without mentioning the piisonep
issue, Secretary ot Stale Dullet
told a new* conference yc-terday
hn doe* not rule out tlie possibility
of direct talks with Red China on
soma matters.

Second Top Aide
Of Peron Quits
BUENOS AIRES t P - A second
top aid* of Argentine President
Juan I). Peron rc|&gt;ort',dly has de­
cided to step out in the aftermath
of tht June Ifl revolt, lie i« Vn;i 1
Gabriel Borlcnghi. who as interior
minister played a mayor role in
the government's antirhurdi cam*

CHARLESTON, W. Va. U P- Un­
ion representatives rounted vote*
today to determine if the to state
strike of some 725 Atlantic Grey­
hound bus drivers mould be on or
off.
Ih e ballot* were marked yes­
terday and lavt night hy drivers
in the system stretching from Pitts­
burgh to Jacksonville, Fla.
They were rxpcrlrd lo favor ac­
ceptance of the tentative contract
signed early .Monday morning hy
representatives of the company and
division 1493 of tlm A FI. Motor
Coach Employe* Union.
The union set a tune of 1 p m.
(E S T » to begin tallying the vote*
at union meetings here, in Roan­
oke and Portsmouth Va., WinstonSalem. Charlotte,
Itateigli and
Asheville, N. C., Columbia. S.C.,
Atlanta, Ga., and Jacksonville,

Reliable sourivs said Ijst ni.l t
that Borlcnghi, 49, has derided t &gt;
retire from public lift* "b e c jii»o
of ill health." The informants said
he told visitors yesterday he would
soon make a trip abroad.
Tho reports of Uorlenghi's re.
tirement rame a «fav after Eduardo
Vuletich, secretary general of tho
powerful General Confederation of
Labor, was said to have stepped
down in favor of hi* assistant.
Hector Hugo de Pietro. Vuletirh
also wa* active in Ihe tight against
Uie Roman Catholic Church.

Woman Acquitted
In Shooting Case

Billy Graham T fi
Visit Netherlan js

paign.

DORTMUND, Germany IP
Billy Graham trained hi* aights
on the Nethcrland* today alter
winding up a six-city revival tour
of West Germany.
The American evangelist cloved
hi* wecklong German crusade last
night, preaching to a crowd of
25.000 in Ihi* industrial Ruhr cityfc
II* speak* in Rotterdam tnmorrowr, in Oslo, Norway, July 3, and
in Gotcberg,
Sweden’ s second
largest city, July 5
READS FIRM
M IAM I BEACH OP-Berlin Kef
He also has scheduled a revival
ton o f Key Wert 1* the new presi­ meeting In Geneva, Switzerland.
d e d e f the Bootheertem Fisheries July IT, on the eve o f the opening
A * * n . succeeding Louse Fischer there of the B ig Four summit
•oafertnee.
Of
•
i
FO R T LAU D ERD ALE UP-Mrs.
Edna Saunders, 29, was found in­
nocent today of charges that site
shot her husband to death.
A Jury returned the verdirt after
more than eight hours of debate.
Five psychiatrists testified thst
Mrs. Saunders could have been
under emotional slreai at the time
the man, Fred Saunders, 4), waa
killed.

�J

D A IS Y VOU
SH O U LD B E
ASH A M ED .

S T O P W CPPYIH G.
P U P S ’ H ECE SH E
. CO M ES DOWN •
THE STREET

T H I S IS A?
T E R R IB L E - ,
‘WO A M AND
; a is v 5 n o t
HOME Y E T t

'

w o r r y in g

,y o u r f a m i l y
--Y 1 LIK E THIS

THE SANTORP TnHlAT.D

1 W ISH I CO U LD HEAfT
THE E Y C U S E SH E H A S
t M IG H T B E A B L E J - 7 TO U S E l T »—
/

SO'^ETiME,2,

f

TH EY SU R E
GROW UP r

Au n
NOW, 1

n ev er w ant to
s e e y o u a s a n ; ; ------ r

Y.VAT A J IT'S GO ’ 13 1*1
K T T— T S A 3 G S G V—'
- ir
\ V/IHDCVI J —

• f r i Boo*?

I

OVER

A

VOU?

^ B EU TLU f i
I TOLD TOM
TO STAY Af/AV
OFROM THE

u

OFFICE

I

t

M in n ie

m ad about

\JJ~J-------- ~X

—■

SCHAETHUMg?

.

i

.1___ V i r / a w
v r x io m x v t a x y w o
7f/ecASJ/, t v e l t B &amp; A P i e ^ ,
i c . i z &lt; r" ^ / d ^ / J T T il

TVM»tr

PATROLMAN Pet* Zedra stnnda
on a crate to direct cars that am
willing to gamble on chanrcs of
getting across the flood waters
swirling about him on a main
street in Las Vegas, Nev. In this
American Monte Carlo, a rou­
tine rain storm quickly turned
Into a cloudburst, with huge
hailstones breaking windows and
pelting roof*. This time Las
Vegas was the million-dollar
loser, f international Sound photo )
Feb. 21, 1045, the 1J. 8. Air
Forces dropped
.1.000 tons of
bombs on the Neumberg marshall­
ing yards — the largest weight
o f bomba ever to be dropped on
any single target.

HtlPlCSOiV, HASH SWi*G3

W

J
Bu t,
AMNN i E

' By ALTON L. tlt.AKESLEK
|smoke or its components when
Associated I’ rrss Science Reporter taken into the mouth •* body.
NEW YORK LB —Take nothing,
Most of the latte from tmoke
divide it into smaller bits of noth­
comet from solid particles in the
ing, and you get a better band­
tmoke, less from gases, rk'iearchage.
ers find.
This is what one research team
Radioactive carbon is one very
did to come up with plastic ad­
hesive bindages that won’t leave useful atom for the tracing work.
your skm whitened and wrinkled Tobacco grown in special green­
houses can be exposed to radio­
after 24 hours.
active carbon dioxide, and the plant
The nothing !* holes In the plastic
takes up some of the radio-carbon.
strip, over the gauze pad of the
Hydrogen also can be introduced
banaage. The holes let air In, and
permit evaporation ot water from into the plant, to aid in tracing
some components that contain
ins do.
Two holes, or even fou», in the hydrogen. Tobacco contains sugar,
and radioactive sugar can be add­
bandage, didn’t ventile very eftied to tobacco. Then, as the tobacco
clon’ lv, hence skin brneith would
bums, smoke can be traced to
turn wh.te and macerated if you
loam where it goes In the body.
got the bandage wet while wearing
Radioactive flax can show how
it.
much of the smoke comes from
The answer was to divide the
cigarette paper.
two ho'es into 20 little holes or
vents. The 20 little holes arc no
In early-day New YoTk City,
larger in total area than the two
large ones on tho older style bind- theater scats wers not reserved
and those who bought tickets often
age.
A mathematician assisted In th“ sent their servants to the theater
research conduced by a manu­ early to hold seats for them.
facturer of surgical dressings,
Johnson L Johmon, New Bruns­
wick. N.J. Employes wore band­
ages with the different arrange­
ments of ventilating holes to learn
which best prevented the whiten­
ing effect

...LC T US S t t HOW MUCH JO T l i t
IS GIVING TO MT PEO PIC / THEY &lt;
GATHER UKE BEES WHENEVER
THE BEUS ARE SOUNDED/ COME
CUT OH THE BALCONY TO SEE A
. fO R Y O U R S O F/

•

■ &lt; « » i 11 « 41I 'l l T , N IN T H
d l l l l l l SI.
I'I H V I’ TT, IN
4 N il
FO I I K U I N n U I r i l l l s T f . F L O -

uannr

n

ck

- i «.

N OTH** TO nKF^N*l»**‘, * " ,

V S ?

tules nf 1(41 and Chapter tIOM
•'f I t t l . nollce la hereby given of

an •lertlnn In ha held on July IZ.
t a i l for the .U . lion „ ( I n n ( I )

euparvlarre for farms of four ( 4)
n r » each,
oiling I'larefn)
Offl&lt; • of flrmlnnle County Chamhar of Commarea Hanford, F lo r i­
da
IKrledo Maxell Kioto
Oviedo. Florida
Gardners Mora
L e k a Monroe. F lo rid a
Lym an High pchonl
l.nncwuod. Florida
ro llin g placets) w ill ne open haIMran ll.a hours ot Site A St. and

f

rostm ee.
la r H .a illa . w'aahlngion,
VO\T AKI5 IIU H U H t ' .N O TIFIK n
that a rr.m plalnl for Divorca haa
ea*a filed agulaat gou. and sou
a r t ra iu iia d i« ,ar«« a copy ,.i s.oo p, si.
A ll qualified
eteetore
roaldlng
our Aasw ar or D ead lng * lo lha
omplalnl on lha p la in tiff# a lte r.
M r . J , h t .* S * i:L L * iir m N g H r ite
h o rlh Slain Uiraal. Orlando. F lo ­
rida, and Ilia Ih f original Anawar
O. D. Farrell
310 K. First
er Pla-inirg« In lha office ot the
n a r k of lha C ircu it Court on or
For 10 trtare this store has
M o r e the dib day af July, i l l s
consistently observed the fo l­
If you fall 10 do an. Judnptanl h&gt;
lowing hours:
la fa u ll w ill be taken agalnat y.iu
for .lh a relief dams ad ad la the
Week day* t a. m. fe BtlS g. m.
Som flalat.

f

BUYING
A CAR?

tian

m

V.’SJ'F- Florida.

Outboard M otorboats
P. S.— We also write Home Owners Policies
Phone 409

Board

BOOTS

• O O P O R IV B R S D R I V I 1 A F R L T I

Arcade

LffSJi-sJLi
L
t J* 1 fr j

Package

A iu m tx u i

Although drafts
and chilling
may reduce your body resistance a
and make you susceptible to catch­
ing cold, they ar« not ths actual
causa of the cold, experts say.

Automobile

Baturday unUI B a. ns. Moo.

«

LONDON in — T he Duke of
Edinburgh, thinning on top at
31, Is trying out a new hair
grower. Barber Charles Topper,
who has clipped royal lock* at
Buckingham Palace
most of
this century, laid the lotion -Is
“ light and nongreaiy, specially
blended with a little oil.”

Bonds

Closed from TiM p. m,
.

Duke Trying Out
New Hair Grower

Fire

W H A -'ff WHERE IS
EVERYONE T MV C1TV
. is m r r r r / ^

lila to vole jn Ihla alacllon.
•
#l«&lt;’Joe aa dtflnad
In lha Florida Poll Conservation
Art Includra any parson qnallflrd
to vola In ganaral alacllona undar
tha Conatliullnn and Niaiutaa af
this ataie who la alto a landow ntr
In lha haraln named dlatrlct.

The radioactivity research It be.
•ns conducted by the American
Tobacco Co. At part of itt prog
the company save the medical col­
lege of Virginia $&gt;20 000 for a spe­
cial atomic giccnbouse to grow
radioactive tobacco.

G EN ER A L IN S U R A N C E

Radioactive atoms art going to
work In Richmond, Va., to give
you more pleasing cigarettes.
The goal is to trace the chemi­
cals that give its flavor and taste
bark to the origins in the tobacco
leaf. Then strains of tobacco might
be developed which yielded the
maximum amount of the chemi­
cals which people like in their
smoke.
Radioactive atoms can be traced
wherever they go, and the specific
components that form the smoke
can be traced back. The tracing
also can show what happens to

Hslurdsys • a. m. te 7:30 g. m.

t s s je

-M a

C A R R A W A Y &amp; M cKIBBIN

..WHILE, HIS HEAR)NO AO
n/BNEo u p r u u TUT,
THE PEAUNG CLANGOR
S H R IE K S IN HIS E A R S /

Legal Notice

- j &gt;

^ - / N O T M l!
I'M BATINO A
PIECE O P
r APPLE P E I

AH, AtY CCAR /
&gt; / •e%ADIROe —
A tiC A u m u . CONCERT
TO R E M IN D
FOR ALL MY PEOPLE
THEM TH A T
TO H E A R ...
&gt; L RESISTAN C E
j V l S USELESS'

FLOW BUL TO e i l l IN rAH’S
TOWER. SHAKEN TO MIS t.CRVETICS BY THE HXSID VIBRATIONS/

COME, MYDCAR/ WHILE
flA S H KEEPS THE
BEAUTIFUL TOWCK
BELLS R INGING ... L *

^ —1
Oi\rv ceocxgTrl
( vnS5 &amp; "rue wiup rkcktib-*!

GAUGE?
V.h a t 's
7 COME

•M
. MERE|

1

-

. . . A N D T H E WJCY I r C T U

I U s v /a t
IT VdTW tm :

D A -A -A v y c s a c K g r r i

\

/
/

M YSELF

TOSS ME UP IN V i f AIR J
r LIKE YOU USED TO WHEN
. I WAS A LITTLE |---- &lt;
V -— I KID ? /-—- V
O

TH EPES
A WAGP

AVON

114 N. Park A to,

�. ur

VVeoffier

Shop and Save
In Sanford

P ir t lr
with

E s ln b lta h c d

pi F R IE S T A D M IN IS T E R S J***. rite* a* ■ doctor and police
M ato* and hi* playmate. John Cotton. The 11-vcar-old l&gt;oy*
buried them while they were claying in an eight-foot-deep
youths, one It and tho other 5, were rescued by paisersby,
in tern a tion a l)

Strolling
1n Sanford
The monthly Coffee Club meet­
ing for Chamber of Commerce
■lem beri and new businessmen
Will be held tomorrow morning
la the U.S.O. building.
• • • •
«,T h e many friend* of Mr. and
IPrs. Mason Wharton will regret
lo learn of the death of Mr. Whir•on’* father, W. W. Wharton, In
Orlando Tuesday.
• • • •
T. W. Freeman, Atlantic Coast
Lina Section
M atter at
Lake
M ary, waa the recipient Saturday
• f an emblem pin in recognition
• f twenty-five years’ service with
the railroad.
Presentation
was
de by Roadmasler J. F. Lewat Coast Line General Offices
In Sanford.
e • • •
Any oae Interested In getting a
free hat box, may drop by B. L.
Perkin* k Son and pick up one.

SANFORD. FLORIDA, WEDNESDAY, JUNK 2H. HWS

1D0R

work vainly to save the live* o f Amrel
Hied o f suffix alinn under a landslide that
excavation in Queens, N. Y . Two other
who duir them out with their hand*,

Peace Ship Plan
Loses By 1 V ote
W A S H IN G TO N (/P&gt;— Senate Demccrnta snnk PresIdent Eisenhower's atomic peneo ship project by one vote
yesterday after all Republican eenntors voting rallied to the
chief executive.
Sen. Anderson (D -N M ) said today In nn Interview tho

B52 Best Bomber
In World Today,
Air Force Claims
WASHINGTON UP — The Air
Force says it has in the 1)52 the
best bomber ” in the world today,"
has fighters ready to move any­
where on tha globe and Is making
advances in developing continent
to-continent missiles.
The outline of air strength was
contained In the Defense Depart­
ment semiannual report released
yesterday. It appeared coincident­
ally with a demand from a Demo­
cratic senator to Secretary of De­
fense Wilson to answer a dozen
questions dealing with the quality
and quantity of Russian planes and
missiles.
The brief air section of tho re­
port, covering a aix-month period
ending last Dee. 31 was written
by Secretary Harold Talbott. He
■aid Uie program to build to a 137wing Air Force (from a present
strength o f 121 wings) has not been
changed, although " it must con­
stantly be revaluated in the light
of growing Communist capabili
tics.”
v ___

Prime Minister
O f Burma Arrives
In Washington

WASHINGTON U P-Prim e Minis­
try U Nu of Burma arrives today
to discuss Far East tensions with
President Eisenhower and Secre­
tary of State Dulles.
The scholarly Prim e Minister,
who has offered to help bridge the
gulf between Communist China
at&gt;J the United Statea, arranged
to meet with Dullea and Eiaenbower ihortly after his arrival by
air from New York.
He will remain in Washington
until Sunday.
There aliened to be come doubt
Dulles pointedly opened the way
h i the minds of the Klwanians
for
any proposals U Nu may have
assembled at the Yacht Club this
by saying at his news conference
boon at thslr regular weekly
yesterday he looked forward to the
ioting when Ed Lane, in making
presentation to Oscar M. Ifarrl- Asian leader’s visit. He said he
Oon, tha retiring Asst. Postmast­expected to discuss problems deal
e r of Sanford, waa talking lo and lng with relaxation of tensions in
■bout the righ t aaa&gt; fo r Oscar the Far East.

r

r

saying, "N o that’s not right” .
crowd go t « big kick out of
Oscar’s diffaring with
Ed and
■loo enjoyed 0 . P. Herndon's an­
swers to quixmaater Charlie Morri­
son's questions. In ffeft,. Charlie
are O. P. a .silver dollar eontrlpted by Earl HlggfnbetiinM, to
i t down and not embarran him
b a y more.
*
•»
e o. e . a;
The Seminole County fc e e fc .
■ten’ s Association w ill hold It a g * .
■ual election o f officers at • p, n .
Thursday at the Court Houser •

W

I)
|

*
:

King Hrfokon V II
injured In Foil

Titusville Plant
Leveled By Fire
TITU SV ILLE on— Fire yesterday
leveled the Nevins Fruit Co. citrus
packing house here with damage
estimated at V* million dollars. The
plant, one of the largest on the
east coast, had closed down opera­
tions for the season.
Fire Chief Walter P. Glle*
blamed lightning for the blare that
Started at an elrctrical and rain
Storm passed over.
fg
*

STRIKE ENDS
I M ILTO N On—A three-day strike
i-work assignment at the 23
O S LO , Norway (f) — Norway's
dollar Escambia n a y
'R i n g Haakon V O frO today and
Co. plant site ended when
■broke a thigh bone.
workers went back to
The n-ycar-old moaarck was
yesterday.
M oved immediately to a hospital,
l a a communique, the hospital
•aid his condition la aatiafaetory
DIES
■Bd that m complications have
Dr. Mtehael Price
drisen.
I
■oted eye specialist,
He slipped on the bathroom
the veterans adMmat lo hi* summer retort
tal of a heart

W ASHINGTON 'P -S c n . lv r* (R N Y ) accused IVm ocrat* today of
"trym s to climb on the Eisenhow­
er bandwagon” with claims that
they ar* supporting the Presi­
dent’ s programs in Congress.
Ives said in an Interview he re­
gard* a statement yesterday by
Sen. Lyndon R. Johnson (-Tcx&gt;
ai Indicating the Democrats have
concluded Eisenhower will be re­
flected next year and have de­
cided to concentrate on efforts to
retain their control of Congress.
Johnson.’ the. Senate Democratic
leader, said in a statement tht
Senate’s record in this session dis­
proves
Eisenhower’s
contention
during the campaign last October
that Democratic control o f Con­
gress would result in " a cold war
of partisan politics.”
After the Democrats did win
control, Eisenhower told a news
conference the words he used were
loo strong for what he had in mind.
Ives said a l i s t
aa John­
son said represent the character
of the current legislative program
showed the Democrat* are "facing
in two directions.”
He noted that Johnson, shortly
after issuing his statement, ral­
lied Democratic forces to defeat
a GOP attempt to authorise the
atomic peace ship Eisenhower has
proposed.

Soil And Water
Plans Discussed...

42-41 vote mrnt the plan waa
•lead. He aaid "there will be
prompt development” o f an econ­
omically feasible atomic engine fo r
A general discussion o f local
large ships.
soil and water conservation pro­
Republicans had tried to put In­ blems featured a meeting last
to an atomic energy construction night o f the board o f supervisors
bill 21 million dollar* to build an of the Seminole Soil Conserva­
atomic reactor fo r the demonitra- tion District.
tion vessel proposed by Eisenhow­
Among topics discussed were
er.
Ihe needs and value o f a District
The President had urged hi* nursery In trying out new grasses
congressional leaders to fig h t fo r and legumes which would be bet­
his proposal, and they put up a ter adapted to local soil aod cli­
stout argument fo r it. Democrats matic conditions. Another topic
railed it a "smoketUckleaa wood
that received
considerable ’dis­
•r” and "the floating museum."
cussion was the services o f a
M inority Leader Knowland (R
Farm Forester which will be avalO ellf) pleaded with tha Senate
"Adt to* repudiate” tha President.
A ll vote* against tha ahtp warn Sanitation* beginning In October
east by Damocrnta,. A lone Demo­ of this year. The services o f a
crat, Sen. Thurmond o f So uth Farm
Forester were
recently
Carolina, voted with tha Republi­ made available by the looal
cans.
county commissioners.
Eight conservation farm plans
were worked out with cooperator*
of the District during June. A
conservation farm plan I* a writ­
ten plan o f operations where-hy
each acre of land on a farm will
be used to produce the crop*
ing and treated according to Its
that it Is best rapable of producneeds for protection and Improve­
ment. A detailed survey of the
land up to a depth of 60 Inches,
N E W Y O R K UP—The name o f by a trained lolls scientist, Is used
Roy Campanula, star catcher of as the baiia for Uie plan.
tha Br*»iklyn Dodgers, entered a
The plan consists of an aerial
State Liquor Authority investiga­ photograph showing the various
tion today.
type* of soil on the farm, a land
The New York Journal-Ameii- use map showing what each field
can said Campanclla, owner of a will be uied for, and a act e f writ­
Harlem liquor store, would be ten instruction as to the best me­
questioned by Investigators who thods j f carrying out the plan
contend SLA agents took bribes o f operations. Any land owner
from owners of bars and package can obtain a plan for his farm by
(tores.
applying to one of the loeal superThe newspaper said Campanula visois or to the work unit office
Building.
will be called before J. Erwin in the Atlantic Bank
Shapiro, state Investigation com­ These services are prnvidrd free
missioner and asked to produce of cost lo the farm er by the DiaLrict.
his book.

A*wnriatrd Prw ci l / w d

»ff»rBV&gt;g

Roy Campanella's
Name Is Injected
Into Liquor Case

“ They are not investigating m e”
the newspaper quoted Campanula
as saying. "T h ey are investigating,
the liquor board and Ua employes.
Thank God, I ’ve got a good, clean
business. I borrowed money from
the ball club and mortgaged my
borne to buy it.”
Investigator* termed the SLA
"rotten from top to bottom.”

Rain-Making Firm
Starts To Work
LA K E C IT Y U P-A Denver. Colo.,
r*in-increasing firm went to work
today on a contract lo boost the
rainfall in 30 North Florida coun­
ties and 3 in South Georgia.
Approximately i n million acres
of farm and Umberiaod are in­
cluded in tha program. Water Re­
sources Development Corp. agreed
to the undertaking for M l,300,
slightly less than a cent an acre
for a year’s coverage.

Union Seeks End
To Picketing Ban
T A M P A UP— Union workers at
the Coronet rhosphata -plant at
Plant CUy bava asked that tha
court order restraining them from
picketing be dissolved.
Local 37 c f the International
Chemical Workers Union A r L
sought lo dismiss the ban issued
the Smlth-DongUss Co , the day
after a striker was shot and a
deputy beaten outside tha plant
Coronet 1* owned b y Smith-Doo-

■■ —

Present last night were Bonner
Carter, Bill Weal, W. W. U n i,
Jim Sarecnt, C. A. Wales, Ralph
Hammond, H e n r y
Wight,
AI
Swartz, and Ben Wiggins, Bod
Conservationist.

Draft Bill Goes
To Eisenhower

V.

WASHINGTON &lt;MI — L eg liletion to attend Ihe regular draft
and the doctors draft — both of
which otherwise would expire at
midnight tomorrow — went to the
President today for signature.
And the Prrsldrn t'i
disputed
military reserve program, in a
new and modified form, was rea­
dy for House consideration, possi­
bly In a few daya.

Steel Firms
Getting Ready
For Shutdown

UNITED NATIONS N Y »P It look* ) Vo Sanford will rrComrade tourist V. M Molotov
mun in the Florida State League.
At a meeting 1**1 night 125 sup­ |had * wonderful time in the United
porters sgreed to form * new or­ Stale*, lie wants to make another
ganization to take over when the |visit sometime.
The Soviet f o r e i g n minister
present owners give up the cluh
booked p.v*«age homeward today
on June 30
League President John Knder aboard Ihr liner Queen Elizabeth,
estimated the now group would after traveling lo San Francisco
need only 32.000 new capital to fin­ an I back by train. Hr looked hap-1
ish the season. He »*.&lt;! IS person* pier than wlnn he reached this
TMTTSni’ RGU f.T&gt;— The United Slate* Steel O rr.,’
already have promised to buy a country two week* ago for Ihe loth J
threatened
with nn industrywide at tike et midnight fnninr.
anniversary
celebration
of
the
*100 share of stock each, leaving
United Nation*.
raivv, nnnoumed it would atari hanking it* furnace* hefnro
five shares to be sold.
The 65 year old Bolshevik ought noon today.
Sanford Enterprise* lne , the
/
present owner, plan* lo give up lo have been happy.
A llix Steel .spokesman said Ihe company evperled tp
He wa« the lion of the hour sty — 1 1 — ■- the cluh because it ^ ^ n o t a pay­
---------- riimplete Ihe hmre opetsliorv he.
ing venture. However, It. J. Bau­ parties in Sin Francisro. Oner,
fore the CIO United Steelwork,
a
middle-aged
lady
surprised
even
man, president said the club will
cl* *11 ike ili-iol line.
be even financially or a M ile Molotov bv bowing and kissing hi*
Employe* , f n!Hrr tnmponlc* in
hand at Ihe reeeplmn given by
ahead by the end of the month.
Ihe mammoth hn-ie *'-&lt;l industry
Tho Sanford pl.w rr* responded Seerctary of Stale Dulles.
hive hern alt-riel lo h-’gin older*
He got a 10 gallon hat at Chey­
to the good news last night by
ly shutdown*
enne
W
v
o
,
a*
a
souvenir
of
the
running their winning string to
Bank me of (he giai-i h'att furfour straight—longest of the sea­ Wild West. That hat. loo small
nuee l* a g ’ atiual pence*«, slowed
son—by shutting out West Palm for him. is in his baggage rn route
lo pi event damage m Ihe cooling
to Moscow. Hr wa* a* tirkle.1 a*
Beach 4-0.
pi ores*.
» boy getting his first Davy Crock­
The I 'l l ) fo ile d Slt-c'n o tk e n
ett hat.
mapped show dow n talks with the
He walked and talked in Sanproducer* in last-minute effotts lo
Francisro with an air of assur­
gel a wage higher ihwn presently
ance belying report* he is on the
ol feted.
way out.
U. S. Steel, which employ* I.W.*
He api&gt;ear* to he going hark In
non of the USW's 600.000 members.
tlie dark rooma of Ihe Kremlin
heM firm to il« original offer of
much Hie (letter for breathing good
slightly more than 10 cents ail
American air.
hour.
Basic sleclworkrrs now average
&gt;2.31 an hour.
TO KYO ID—A Marine hcliroptcr
While the industry piepared for
in i rolling for two downed Marine
s possible slrikf, government me.
pilot* drifting helplessly In Ui* Pa
diators in Washington kept a close
cific moro than 72 hours, crashed
watch on the situation
in the sea today and on* of it
Mskir producer* following Big
NEW YO R K UP-A Camp Hill.
crewmen la, missing, the Navy
Sterl's trail in offering about in
said. Three other* were rescued Pa., grandmother won *1(1,000 last
rents an hour include Inland, Re­
The vast armada of searching night for naming seven'of Joseph’ *
public Steel Corp , Bethlehem Sti—1
planes and ships continued hunt 11 brothers on the CBS-TV ahow,
Corp., Jones A
Laughlm anil
lng the first two raft-borne pilots "*(14.000 Question."
Youngstown Sheet A Tube.
She had rhosrn the Bible as the
Contact wa* lost, however, with
Clifford Hood, president of V. S.
source of her questioning.
their feeble radio.
Steel said in a statement l.v-t
Mr*. Catherine Krritzcrl, St,
la s t night a Marine fury dia
night the industry is threatened
appeared In- the search and it* who has six sons and nine grand­
wholly
unnecessary
with " *
MRS.
P
A
T
R
IC
IA
U
O
LF
E
LD
Tstrike.”
pilot, LL Alan M. M cAnm y of children had the choice of taking
I.U N I), 28, lies in Ah Iron lung
the *8,000 slw won last work or
Yonkers, N .Y ., I* missing also.
--------------------- * S
on her arrival in New Y oik
In the 20,000-sqiiarc-mila search going for *10,000 on a double-oraflep
•
flight
from
Peru,
She
area, a bright Jiuia sun burned oothing basis.
w a s ' alrickun with polio ln&lt;l
She discussed the matter with
away Uie fog that repeatedly has
February while accompanying
her
sons
ami
their
wives
during
closed in and prevented rescues
her husband, an Oslo business,
after planes glimpsed Uie bobbiui; the week. When she appeared on
tint), in Lima. Mrs, Holfsldl*
the show last night, she ramar
Remarked
Inind w ill he cared fo r at a New
that "(h e *8,ouo looks liae a lot
York hospital before leaving fo r
o
f
money,’
’
and
then
asked
for
kicked up a heavier, moro dan
her home in Norway. Shown
Ihe *16,000 question.
gcious sea.
with her is Dr. Christine Amtm-

Copier Searching
For Missing Men
Crashes In Sea

$16,000 Is Won
By Grandmother
On Quiz Program

Fireworks Blast
Kills 3 Shoppers
In Retail Store
S P R IN G F IE L D , Mo. U P-A fire
work* display in a retail atorr
blew up yesterday, canting the
deaths of three shoppers.
The exploding f.recracker* snd
skyrocket* s c a t t e r e d
flame*
through the one-story structure
The building was destroyed.
The three shopper* perished In
a restroom where they had fled
to escape the flame*. They were
Mr*. Margaret Click, 50, and two
sister*, Mary Williams. 11, and
Linda Kay Williams 7.
It' was not known what touched
off the fireworks. An employe of
the store was overcome by »moke
but 14 other employe* and four
customers escaped injury.
Mayor Warren Turner called
apodal meeting of the City Council
today to ronsidrr a resolution to
ban sale of fireworks in Hie city
Clarence Wheeler co-owner of
the (tore, estimated damage at
3273,000.

JACKSONVILLE UP-City police
early today shot up a stolen car
and captured a bandit gang of
three Marines who had robbed a
Folkvtun, Ga., motel.
Jailed on armril robbery ehargrs
were three men from the Marine
li.irr.n-K* at the Naval Air Station
Pfc. Linton Wilson Crosby, 19. who
was shot in the ralf of the right leg
during the wild chase; S Sgt. Miner
Prylon Roberson 25; P vL Harvey
Carlton Kilpatnrk.lS.
The three were traveling In a
1T..&gt; ohl*mobile that was stolen
hero la«t night and were wanted
for the *201 robbery *ln&gt;ut 3 a. m.
at tlie Georgian Motel, Charlton
County Sheriff J. O.* Sikes A id in
an alarm to Jacksonville dotecUvr
bureau.
*

Bill Collector
Is Arrested In
Beating O f Woman
LIV E OAK UP-A hill eollertor
»r. arrested snd posted *1 000
bond today in tlie ea-e of a Negro
woman who claimed she was beat­
en
He is Henry McCaghren of Williston who wa* charged, however,
only with breaking and rnlcring
tlie homo of Mary Aqp Broun, 18,
who *aid ha Ircal her m a dispute
over a bill.
The ras* was investigated by the
Suwannca County grand Jury yes­
terday slung witli (lie rase of Rich­
ard Cooke, 35, Negro father of nine
children who said a band of men
beat him several weeks ago.

Greyhound Bus f 4
State House Has ^ Strike Vote Is V
Counted By Union
Only 74 Employes

TA LLAH ASSE E UD-The l!ou*e
of Representative* now has only
74 employes and I* expected to
have even fewer a* Ihe eitraordinary reapportionment session
wears on.
Speaker David said the dwin­
CHICAGO (J*—A July 4 weekend
dling payroll amounts to a 50 per
automobile traffic death loll of 380
cent drop In employes since start
was forecast today by Ihe National
of the extraordinary aession June
Safety Council.
6
The estimate covers the period
from 6 p.m. Friday until midnight
Monday and takes into account
only immediate deaths and not
those occurring later from injuries
suffrroJ over tho weekend.
James R. William* Sr., father of
More than 40 million cars will
be on the move over the holiday, James S. William* Jr., thl* City,
* factor that the council aaid will died suddenly in Palatka Monday.
produce an added travel hazard. Funeral service* were held today
at * p. m in Palatka.
Mr Williams will he remrmhered, by hi* many friend*, for
Ihe part he played In the organiz­
ing and developing of Industrial
Insurance Uiroughout the state.

380 Road Deaths
Predicted For
July 4 Weekend

.

James Williams
Taken By Death

'd debate In the Bundestag (low er
bouse). Government sources aaid
new proposala would be readied
but there was considerable doubt
that the legislators could prepare
and pass another hill before the
itart of Iheir scheduled summer re­
cess July 13.
The Chancellor had wanted the
enlistment of volunteer* under way
quickly lo give the free world and
the Rustless additional evidence
before the start o f the Big Four
tummK ta k e nest month that West
Germany la determ in ad to rebuild
ita armed eUeogth.

dren, a polio expcit from N or.
way. (International)

Bandils Captured
At Jacksonville y

German Enlistments
Another Snag
BONN, Wert Germany UP—A new
delay In putting the first West Ger­
mans into uniform was seen today
aa the lower house of Parliament
sen. a bill lo call up the first vol­
unteers to committees for re­
writing.
Although itill approving rearma­
ment In principle, many o f Chaneellor Konrad Adenauer’ s own tupporteri complained that the meas­
ure contained no guarantees of c i­
vilian control over the military and
could lead to a resurgence of Car­
men militarism.
I h e sharp blow to Adenauer Is
BUa * came U u sight altar s l u t ­

Nn. 2?ft.

W ire

- f t * « f c w a t r t 'it is a r .d

3

m.

T V ir r * ) *

mostls-

AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER

Ives Says Demos NewGroup!tesiJ'sM#lol°'
Trying To Climb Will Keep iHas Great Time
On Ike Bandwagon Team Here During U.S. Visil

W a s h i n g t o n u p -rroiM cn t E l­
senhower said today he was *ure
the Russians' shooting down of a
U.S. Navy plane was a local occur­
rence and not a matter of policy.
The President'* statement wa*
n o d e at a new* conference at
which he also chided the DemoeraUc-controlled Congress for leav­
ing undonr, as he pul it, a long list
e f his legislative proposals—some
cA th rm , he declared, vital to the
■at ion.
In discussing the plane Incident,
Eisenhower went somewhat fur­
ther than did Secretary of State
Du lie* who had saM yesterday that
be believed no deliberate Soviet
policy wa* Involved.
Elsenhower said R U very en­
couraging to note the attitude
taken by the Soviet government
which has expressed regret for the
IV id cn t and offered to pay half
the damage,
The United States hat aot ac­
cepted the Soviet otter,'
&gt;
••
1 ■ ■

thronrh

• e d f i f n i n c Ih u n d e r s h o s r f n ( fe w
n'shi sod early m om ini showers
fto n th r a s l r o s v t .

VOLUME X LV I

Downing Of Plane
Local Occurrence,
Eisenhower Feels

flood*scattered

BIG Q U E STIO N
ID AH O F A L L S , Idaho f/P)-The
Idaho Falla Chamber o f Commerce
tourist aid service didn’t have the
answer to nn* queitlon yesterday.
An unidentified woman tourist
ecking information or
Yellow ,
stone National Park asked: When
do they turn on Old Faithful I ”
W O RKER K IL L E D
W EST P A LM BEACH UP-Jamea
Scott, 34, ssaa helping install a
new elevator la a 14-story building
whon ho loaned Into tho odjolning
•haft yesterday. An olevator taktog « BM MOfar down cmahod him.

Humphrey Urges
Pressure On Reds
To Free Airmen

WASHINGTON’ tp_Sen. Humphrey (D-Minn) said Imlay Pre«i.
dent Eisenhower should urge So­
viet Itu-sia lo "bring pleasure'*
mi Communist China for reles.e
of ail American I'eiping ho!d&gt;
Should that fail, he aaid in an
interview, (I k* United States should
be prepared to take tlie matter up
directly with Red China.
He said the Unit.-d Slates sltnuM
press Russian leaders at the July
18 Big Four summit conference
to use tlietr influence toward free,
ing II US. airmen ht-ld m Com­
munist jails and a number of
civilians detained to China.
Without mentioning the piisonep
issue, Secretary ot Stale Dullet
told a new* conference yc-terday
hn doe* not rule out tlie possibility
of direct talks with Red China on
soma matters.

Second Top Aide
Of Peron Quits
BUENOS AIRES t P - A second
top aid* of Argentine President
Juan I). Peron rc|&gt;ort',dly has de­
cided to step out in the aftermath
of tht June Ifl revolt, lie i« Vn;i 1
Gabriel Borlcnghi. who as interior
minister played a mayor role in
the government's antirhurdi cam*

CHARLESTON, W. Va. U P- Un­
ion representatives rounted vote*
today to determine if the to state
strike of some 725 Atlantic Grey­
hound bus drivers mould be on or
off.
Ih e ballot* were marked yes­
terday and lavt night hy drivers
in the system stretching from Pitts­
burgh to Jacksonville, Fla.
They were rxpcrlrd lo favor ac­
ceptance of the tentative contract
signed early .Monday morning hy
representatives of the company and
division 1493 of tlm A FI. Motor
Coach Employe* Union.
The union set a tune of 1 p m.
(E S T » to begin tallying the vote*
at union meetings here, in Roan­
oke and Portsmouth Va., WinstonSalem. Charlotte,
Itateigli and
Asheville, N. C., Columbia. S.C.,
Atlanta, Ga., and Jacksonville,

Reliable sourivs said Ijst ni.l t
that Borlcnghi, 49, has derided t &gt;
retire from public lift* "b e c jii»o
of ill health." The informants said
he told visitors yesterday he would
soon make a trip abroad.
Tho reports of Uorlenghi's re.
tirement rame a «fav after Eduardo
Vuletich, secretary general of tho
powerful General Confederation of
Labor, was said to have stepped
down in favor of hi* assistant.
Hector Hugo de Pietro. Vuletirh
also wa* active in Ihe tight against
Uie Roman Catholic Church.

Woman Acquitted
In Shooting Case

Billy Graham T fi
Visit Netherlan js

paign.

DORTMUND, Germany IP
Billy Graham trained hi* aights
on the Nethcrland* today alter
winding up a six-city revival tour
of West Germany.
The American evangelist cloved
hi* wecklong German crusade last
night, preaching to a crowd of
25.000 in Ihi* industrial Ruhr cityfc
II* speak* in Rotterdam tnmorrowr, in Oslo, Norway, July 3, and
in Gotcberg,
Sweden’ s second
largest city, July 5
READS FIRM
M IAM I BEACH OP-Berlin Kef
He also has scheduled a revival
ton o f Key Wert 1* the new presi­ meeting In Geneva, Switzerland.
d e d e f the Bootheertem Fisheries July IT, on the eve o f the opening
A * * n . succeeding Louse Fischer there of the B ig Four summit
•oafertnee.
Of
•
i
FO R T LAU D ERD ALE UP-Mrs.
Edna Saunders, 29, was found in­
nocent today of charges that site
shot her husband to death.
A Jury returned the verdirt after
more than eight hours of debate.
Five psychiatrists testified thst
Mrs. Saunders could have been
under emotional slreai at the time
the man, Fred Saunders, 4), waa
killed.

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                    <text>1

BEFORE YOU BOY...
ANYWHERE
r

CUT ON DOTTED L IN E ... rn
USE THIS CHECK LIST
'&lt; ! • ' 1 1 1 '/

HOMES:

and

G. E. KITCHEN:

compare
these features
0^ a

G. E. Refrigerator
G. E. Rang*
G. E. Disposal!
G. E. 66-gal Water Heater
G. E. Dishwasher
(2-bath
G. E. Automatic Waaber (2-bath
Formica Counter Tops—Ons piece and rod &lt;
Large Kitchens—Adequate Cabinet Space

I

Vlrola Doors
Vinyl Paint
Roof — Til# or Built-up with W hite1
Venetian Blinds
Fun Ceramic Tile Baths
Exterior Brick SQIs

FOR COMFORT:

Furred and Plastered Walls
Insulated Ceilings
Magle Chef Hester — With Bis
Nutons Kitchen Fan
Large Screened Porch
Silent Switches
Door Chimes

FOR CONVENIENCE:20 or more Double E ls d ib
•

Dreamwold

m

.

Ml

r

FOR BEAUTY:

Phillips Home

7

Many and riried Floor Plans
Varied Elevationi
Varied Roof Lines
Varied Front Doom
Varied Color Combinations
Large Plots
Shrubbery
Sprigged Front and Side Yards
Carport and Screened Porch
Vinyl Plastic Tile Floors
6 Citrus Trees per Hoosex
|
Valencia '(Late?
Pineapple (Early?
Pink Grapefruit
Kumquat
Tangerine

Large Storage
Extra Large Closets
Ceramic Tile SOU
Lights in Closets

FOR SAFETY:

Waterproofing under
Metal Termite Shield
Bui it under FHA and V A !
Sanford Building Cods

CITY FACILITIES:

City Water
City Sewer
Door-to-Door Mafl
Concrete d o t s
Pared Streets

j

f
7

Iff

7

xr

j

m

V

i)

•* r

"

i

�*

Shop and Save
In Sanford

S H f?

§&gt; m \faviX

W eather

f e

A S IN D FFK N PfC N T DAILY N B W SPA PK H

r a l

^

SA N FO R D . FLO R ID A . FR ID A Y , JUNK 24, 1955

1*0*

V O L U M E X LV I

V*• rtf* rlmirtr with scattered
Iv s f t r r n n n n thundershowers
through Saturday; few widely
»i altered nicbt end early morning
showers 'n o lh rstt rn«it and key*;
continued either warm.

A a m ria lrri

IY b w

1 /a .w d

W ire

NO. 21*.

Governor Collins Okays Two-Year Program

State To Spend Record $ 4 2 7 Million
TALLAHASSEE UP)— A
record 4274 mlllton dollar
spending program tliat would
•lmoat empty the xeiieral rev&lt;jfuc till has been approved
for Florida’* state govern­
ment the next two years but
Gov. Collins says there will
be no deficit spending.
Collins said In approving
tha 405 million dollar general approatiunt bill last night without
any trimming o (fund* that there
Were enough safeguards around the
■ p e n d i n g that the government
a w li! he operated on a sound (is*
c in b a n s .

Red T heme
Is Rapped
By Dulles
S A N FRANCISCO (/T»)—
Secretary of State J o h n
Foster Dulles told Russia in
blunt language today th a t
(he way to end the cold war
Is to stop using force against
ether countries and to stop
im porting subversion.
In a slinging attack on
•ommunism, Dulles declnred:
“To bring the cold war to an
end, seven point* are not needed
|h is one is sufficient.”
Tha secretary spoke a t tha U.
K.’a 10th anniveraary meeting*,
Which Wednesday heard Soviet
Foreign Mlnlater B. M. Molotov
topo*e a seven-point program to
quidate the cold war.
d a lle s spoke with President El­
senhower's "full confidence and
concurrence.” Tha President him­
self sqld so on Monday when he
■ddresveJ the opening session. Ha
told the delegatee tha aacratary
Would speak today ”on appropriate
elements in tha foreign policy ef
this nation.”
Dulles pulled no punchei as .ho
Reviewed the role or communism
in recent history, He agreed with
BMolov that some problems had
been settled recently, but ha said
they would have been settled years
earlier except for the Communists.
"We do not forget," he told.
•Nr* daro not forget, th at aoma ef
those who now hall tha recant de­
velopments are precisely those
who for years sought to stop
them ."
Dulles strongly defended the
Nflrth Atlantic Treaty Organisetd iis which Molotov blamed for
much of the trouble todey. These
organisation* were based on the
nplrit of the U. N. Charter, ha said,
•nd It we a Western etrength,
backed by these organisations,
which had lad to tha solution of
major problems.

while ha voted no money items,
he did disapprove four stipulations
which the Legislature had written
into the big money bill for operal.
ing the slate government and fi­
nancing institutional building the
next two years.
In addition to tha General Ap
propriations Act there are spend­
ing measures which will run the
general revenue outlay up la $427,489.067.
*
If all of the appropriated funds
are spent tha tqtal would run close
to the 428 million dollar figure
which Budget Director Harry
Smith estimates will be available
In the general fund the next two

year*.
However, Collins pointed out that
there were several safeguards
which can kwp spending from go­
ing overboard.
One is that the Budget Commis­
sion has authority to review and
adjust appropriations in order that
the state will have at all times
the estimated funds available to
pay appropriations.
He said experience has shown
that all appropriated funds are not
spent, and aome funds were bound
to revert back to the general fund
at the end of the biennium.
Some of the appropriations are
for programs which won't get un­

der way until late in the biennium
and if funds run short some of the
building program can Ih held in
reserve unlit the situation im­
proves, he said.
"The people of Florida may be
assured that the state government
will be operated on a sound fiscal
basis with no deficit spending,” he
said.
The general appropriations act
calls for about 63 million dollars
more than was eser appropriated
before.
One stipulation which the gov­
ernor struck out called for approval
of Ihe chairman nf the House fend
Senate appropriations rommittres

In addition to the budget eommis­
sion of changes in salary increase
allotments and in llii new1 and
unfilled positions in Mate govern­
ment.
Collins said Ally. Gen. Ervin
advised him such a prevision would
constitute unlawful encroachment
of the legislative authority in the
field of executive administration
OtheL* provisions which he vetoed
were ones:
Providing a 83.000 a year salary
for the superintendent of the
Stephen Foster Memorial Commis­
sion. Collins said Ihe superintend­
ent now received mere than this
and he rtinn’l believe it was legis-

M urder Indictment Returned
Jurymen
Finish
Session

FOREIGN MINISTERS FOR THE BIG FOUR powers, atthr United Nstinna’ Tenth annivernary c e le b ra tio n in
San Francisco, confer on detaila of tha scheduled Geneva
meeting of tha heads of their respective governments next
month. Attentive as Antoine Pinay of France apeak* are
(I- or.): V. M. Molotov of RuaaLa: Harold McMillan of Great
Britain, and Joha Footer Dulles of tke United State*. (International)
te n d in g

A first degree murder in­
dictment was returned today POLICE OFFICER John A. Magginnrolda question* William
by the Seminole Circuit Court Jarkson (lop, righl) of l’ago*n Spring*, Colo., who wa* nr*
grand jury against William rcalrtl in llnionloun. I’n., for allegedly firing on cars that did
O. McKendree, i’noln rar- nut dim Iheir hrndlights. Ten nutumoliiles were hit nnd four
ponter, in the fatal shooting | person* Injured, cither liy hullel* or flying gin**. Jackson, 59.
of x Jacksonville man here and another man were pirked up in a truck painted with
JunH **•
,
“ign* (hottom) proclaiming hatred for bright light*, aulomoAt t lie same lime, in wind-'Idle horn* nnd hoodlum*. ( International)
Ing up a two-day session, Ihe

£

Strolling
In Sanford
J ^ e p o r t by Georg* A. Stin* an
the 50th Anniversary Convention
mt Rotary International held re­
cently in Chicago will feature tha
l§ogram of tha Sanford Rotary
Club to be held a t noun Monday,
•8 tha Yacht Club.
s e e s
Tha Sanford Boat and SU Club
will mart tonight la the CAP
Rail st • p. m. Entrance foldtr*
containing application b l a n k s ,
maps, entrance fee and ether
kfornatio n for tha P i r a t e ’s
’ Cruise will be available It was anr
eed by Doe Smith, president.
members are urged to be
jpresen* Visitors and anyona In- f r e t t e d in Joining Urn club are
welcome.

Close Attention Focuses O n New Hampshire Tour

Ike Drops 2nd Term Teaser
WITH EISENHOWER IN NEW
HAMPSHIRE OP—Preeldent Elsen­
hower's “teaser” suggestion be
might seek a second term focused
close attention today on his tour
of New Hampshire—first state to
support him in tha 1931 primaries.

The President has two more again?
There was nn shred of certainly
spas king engagements in the
He dealt with it in only a teasing afterward whether he was Ju*t
Granite State—one a t Lincoln, the
other at Franconia Notch—and
there waa plenty of advance specu­
lation whether he might deal again
with the big question: Will he run

way in a speech late yesterday
at Concord, N.H., but it complete­
ly surprised his police-estimated
audience of &lt;8,000 persons in State
House Plase.

Mansfield Says Russia
Holds Cards At Geneva

By ROWLAND EVANS 11.
WASHINGTON (ft-Sea. Mine­
field (D-Moot) said today the So­
viet Union "bolds all the real
cards” In nest month’s discus­
sions with the West on Germany.
He said administration foreign
policy leader* have "overera
phsttssd the tenuous raiitiooehlp
that now exists between West Ger­
many and Western Europe and
hypnotised themselves that this re­
lationship will ecctinue IndefiniteJy.”
If Rustle really wants a neutral,
reunified Germany, he said in an
interview. Soviet leaden may well
disclose a t the Rig Four summit
conference an intent to advenes
these “ attractive" propositions to
West German Chancellor Konrad
Adenauer:
Invite him to "take over" Soviet
E ast Germany, offer him Sovietcontrolled territory now hold by

Poland and the Ctecbosiovslda and Africa when tha Big Four
Sudetenlind, both of which Ger­ talks begin at Geneva July II.
many once cootrolled; end bold
“This is the most significant por­
out, a guarantee of trade coaces- tion of Molotov's speech,” Mans­
field said.
Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Senate Republican Leader KnowMolotov, Mansfield said, served land of California, meanwhile, de­
notice in his San Francisco speech manded that the United States re­
two days ago that Russian leaders fuse to discuss Far East tension*
will demand the United Stales give at any international meeting until
up Ua air base system in Europe all Americans held by Communist
China are freed.

Touchton Infant
Dies At Hospital

Georg* Quinn Toachlon, infant,
born June a , died last night in
the Fernald Laughton Memorial
Hospital. He was the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Orville W. Touchton of
Sanford and tha grandson of Mr.
and Mrs. H. Q. Touchton and the
Isle Mr. end Mrs. G. L. Sinquefield formerly of L ike Mary.
Other survivors are five aunts:
Mrs. Leu Watsoo, Cocoa; Mrs.
E. W. Rogers, Sanford; Mrs.
Horace M. Cochran, Lake Mary;
Mrs. Johnnie Harman, L a k e
Mery; and Mrs. Annie Rabcrn,
Anaeluvls, Ala. Also two uncles:
Cecil Slaqucfield, Pelham,, Ga.
^PITTSBURGH l* - U. i . Steel
Big steel termed it “ substantial” end M. H. Siaruefieid, Washing­
o rp , iU offer to boost ersfte and said it "should produce e ton D. C.
bout 10 cent* an hour Batty re­ prompt settlement."
McDonald declared:
acted by the CIO United Steel
"We can see no Justification
revhers. today st udied its next
love to head off a thre at ened whatsoever to accept a settlement
gibe a t midnight next Thursday. this year—the most profitable In
Me eegotiaUooe were scheduled, the industry’s history—which is
sides Indicated timt be- approximately am half ef the cost
FORT WORTH, Tex. dv-Amon
talk.' were in tbs of the settlements already made 0 . Carter, who rose from poverty

U.S. Steel Plans Action
ToAvert Looming Strike

Texas Publisher
Taken By Death

' David J. McDonald.
U*w.
■less the*

Sper.fring that each slate prison
employe receive a 823 a month
salary increase Collins said there
wav no reasonable basis for giving
them a blanket raise and the
prison superintendent said money
appropriated wasn't sufficient to
provide the increase (or alt em ­
ployes
Specifying that refund* made to
the state bv certain counties and
other agencies for auditing *crv.
tecs furnished by thr auditing de­
partment be deposited in the gen­
eral fund, if this were allowed to
stand, Collins said this would de­
prive Hie auditing department of
about Sin.noil for Uip biennium.

in tbn antem iini Industry. We will to heeaaea the colorful muUimilh m j* publisher a* the f t *
Worth atar-Tslegrem. on* ef the
nowaverageRR major newspapers ef Uv? United
Stefc* died k a | Aghf *4 U , _ _

having a bit of fun—or whether he
had meant to put across the idea
that he Is in the market for an­
other term. Many of hi* listeners
were inclined to the latter idea.
It came about this way: The
President had been tolling the New
Hampihirc crowd how Sherman
Adami, former governor of Ihe
»!ale and now Elsenhower's chief
aide, boast* about New Hampshire
to the White Houte staff. Eisen­
hower eald his eagerness to find
out for himself wa one of "the
serious reasons” for his visit to
the state.
Then he earn* out with these
remarks:
"People often ask me what my
idess are on how long 1 would
like a residence in 1600 Pennsyl­
vania Ave. (the White House )
“ My own thought is: They
should ask how long is it going
to take Gov. Adams to finish up
his series of lectures on New
Hampshire, because he doesn't
seem to be a third of the way
through them yet."

jury did not return • true hill in
the cass nf a Negro prinoncr who
died in th* rounly jail.
'W, Erneat Hctta was fnremnn
of th* Jury end B. E / Aiken Jr.,
was assistant foreman.
Othsr member* of Uis
the Jury were
Geoigs Hanna.. D.-f
.‘((rr Howard
Allen T. Ilall, llughl
hi flraddy, II.
L. Duhnit, (’. G. Harlrt, A. R. Cop.
lin, Itirhard II. Ivrra, Taylor Roun­
tree, Harry 11. r&gt;lood*worlh, Joo
T. Haggerty, Anthony P. Marrrnelle, Roger Crocker, Carl
Amos*, Raymond lilllaniy and
l larence Henderson.
.MrKrmliec declared Hint his
“consrieneo was eleur’’ nod Dial
Ihe ahouling wan "accidental"
when he wn* rhnrged with the
murder of It. Keith Corhran, 42,
district representative nf Armour
and Co., two week* ago.
Aerording to witnesses, there
had been no quarrel nr warning
immediately prior to thr shooting.
Their account wn* in conflict with
the one McKendree gave officers
about a running argument be­
tween tha two nun all evening,
Cochran wn* shot in th* base
of Ihe nerk while he played table
anufflrboar! in the dining room
shout 20 feet from where MrKendree sal nn a bar stool. The vic­
tim died the next day al (Range
Memorial Hospital, Orlando.
Th* rase in which no indict­
ment was returned involved the
death of Negro prisoner John
Pittman in the county jail on
April II. Pittman died of a frac­
tured skull and brain hemmnrhage,
Dr. W. A. Ilorrirk, Orange Memor­
ial Hospital, pathologist, said after
an autopsy.
BUDGET OKAYED
JACKSONVILLE i* -T h e Slate
Welfare llosrd tonight le n lsth rlr
approved a 884.211,41* budget for
the fiscal year beginning July I
with the largest sums going for
old age assistance and aid to de­
pendent children.

Jackson Assumes
Command At Base

Captain RcIkm'I W. Jackson. U.SN, assumed command
todny of th« Sanford Naval Auxiliary Air -Station from C’ommnndrr Frank K. More, USN.
(Mr. More, who has served n* Arthur Commanding Of.
firer for Ihe pari seven week.*, will resume his duties *.* Exerulive Officer.
-------------------------------------- -—■— —
A vrteian iif more thnn 2 0 1 r
r
«i
D II
year* Na&gt;nl serviie, Capt. Jack- ELX~ J O U I H C IT) D C l l
mm come* to .Sanford from Com- . ,
.
_
,
positp Squadron Elesen, Sun Die- tA rO rk C I* C o n V I C t C U
go, Calif., where lie served In lire
■opacity n( Commanding Officer O f C a b l e C u f f i n a
for over a year.
" " '" " U
Giadonli-il from the Naval Ara-i ORLANDO MS—A former South*
d j my in Juno lP-U. he » ;» com- cm Rdl Telephone Co. worker was
misimitieil K -ig n .."I assign,,. •• I c»nvlr«aMl yesterday nf cutting cathe battleship U88 IVnnsylvnnla. . ,
,
' ,
_
*
In January I'Mo. he was detached Wm d,m nK
C,° (Mmmunicato undergo flight training at NAS lions Worker of Amcnra strike.
IVoaarola.
Criminal Court Judge William
It was during this phase of his Murphy sentenced Donald E. Car*
rn rrrr Hint Cnpt. Jnrkann knew pentcr, 23. to ox mouth* hut al­
and aerved with the atntion'*
former Commanding Officer, Cap- lowed hint freedom on 81,(100 bond
while he appc.tlid.
lain James K. Vane Jr.. US\'.
After designation a* an aviator
on Ore. It, 1!»10, he joined Fighter
Squadron Three. April 1942 »aw Ancient Vessel
him transferred to Composite
Squadron Twelve a* Executive Of­ Yields 14 Cannons
ficer and later as ( onunuliding Of­
FORT PIERCE
Wreckage of
ficer.
an
ancient
ship
found
on a reef
"For nierilimt* achievement , .
a* a member of a Marine Aircraft WO yard* offshore ha* yielded 14
Group in action against enemy rnnnon to Ihnco young treasure
Jnpaneie four* In the Solomon hunter*.
Islands from Kelt. 2 to 12, 1943”
Huger King, ?1-rear old Vero
he was awarded the Air Medal.
Reach soldier on leave, and hi*
Capt. Jackson is married to the two companion*, Jack Carr and
former Mi»a Catherine E. Camp- ; Art McKee Jr., brought up tha
hell. They have four children; Kli- ! rurtnon Wednesday night and rexahnth I ee. Catherine l.ynn. Slim- ported they would try to raise two
nn Dmne and Rolieil Woods Jack-j mole camion and the ll-fnut an&lt;on, Jr.
i rlior of the imidonliRi-d vessel.

'We're Sure Going To Miss Those Little Devils'

Shaffer Yard Is Haven For Birds
. By CLAUDE BOSE

watching a few yeara after the
Herald Feature Writer
War," say* Mr. Shaffer, "When
Birdwatchers are usually a de­ eur nephew stopped here on hie
voted lot. And Mr. and Mrs. Char­ way to the Everglades to study
les Shaffer, 1204 Palmetto Ave., are them. He was a seminary stu­
no exception. They treat th* Pur­ dent and a v a r y ardent bird
ple Martina which live In their watcher. He left us a book on
yard almost aa if the /birds were birds and we went on from
there."
human.
k
Tha Martina began coming to the
The Shaffer* estimate that they
Shaffer's yard about alx or m e n can Immediately idenUfy ovor 100
yeara ago and have been coming birds on sight. “ And if we don't
beck In increasing numbera ever know one, we darn sure go right
since. Thia year to pair* came to to the book and look It up, Mr.
mate and raise their young la the Shaffer adds. They can also Iden­
home* provided them.
tify moat of that number by sound
Th* Shaffers have strung a wire and are ueually sole U. distinguish
between three pole* in th « r yard, between a distress call and idla
Own which are hung m e r e ! hoi- chatter.
’ gourd* to serve as homes far
As an Illustration of their de­
bird families.
votion to the bird*, they built an
to hto* , f • W 1te^t dfiUfcR *• (Bear tot

S

chen so that they could sc* their
feathered friends better. More
lhan half of tha walla in the addi­
tion are mads up of windows.
Two or three pairs of Martins
came to the Shaffers' tha first
year and each year a few more
have been added to the flock. Thia
year was Ihe biggest yet, with some
forty adults and about 70 offspring.
Th# Shaffers said that each pair
rear* I or 4 ;-oung.
The Martins arrived in January
this year and have been coming
back a few weeks earlier each lime.
In Ihe fall, when they migrate to
South America, as many a i 94 have
been counted la the Shaffer yard.
Flocks from farther north Join with
local flocks and they all fly south
together for din ertnvm.

Ashed K tow

than M families next year, tha
Shaffers rrraarkrd, “ He don't
know, the neighbors may object
to any more. Ih e birds do put
up quite a rb allrr sometimes."
When the Martins tom e here In
January, they have not yet mated
but do so soon after arrival. "The
female is boss," says Mrs. Shaffer,
"Since she always defends the
family against trouble. If they are
thinking about moving Into a new
home, it ia always tha female who
goes and take* a look at it first.
Th* male does assist in feeding the
young, though, because that i* a
big Job."
Three families living in different
compartmane of the same bird­
house were killed earlier this
v»wvw*. VHtM« I ft* ecugedy, the

avoid to*

gue. If one of th* younger blrdi
lights on the roof, he Is promptly
knocked off. They all refuse to
R\# there
It is believed that an owl killed
the three families but tinea Mr.
Shaffer set up a floodlight m the
yarxl no further incidents have
occurred.
"The famous bird* of Capistrano
in California are Purple Martins,
Just like these in our yard,” saya
Mr. Shaffer. "Only California bas
a better press agrnt."
“ We're sure g,Mig to ml** those
little devil* when they go." Mr.
Shaffer told bis wife recently.

“And you know,” toe related, “ It's
ao true. W* live with them every
day and w&lt;e really do Ustea far (bars

ad tonton*.-----—
t
.
•

- *

�P ag e 2

T H E SA N FO R D H E R A L D

F rl. Ju n e 24. 1955

S:*9
*29

WDDO TV CMaaXCL a
ORLA.VDO

CHURCH NEWS

10.90

FRIDA V

10:10

A rrcR .voox

All Church Notices muit b« pre-scnteo at
10 a. tn. on the da? befor# publlce-tloa.
CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH
Rev j W Parham, paatur.
Cor. Feorteenlh SC, Oak Are.
Sunday School 8:45 a. m.
Morning Worahlp Service 11:00
B. m.
Training Union 6:30 p. tn. U’a a
family affair.
Evening Worship 1:30 p. m.
“Come thou with ua ana we will
do thee good.”
THE CHURCH OP GOD
of PROPHECY
2503 Elm Ate.
, Biihop A. W. Stover, Peeler
9:45 a m. Sunday School.
11 a.m. Morning Worahlp. Ser­
mon by A. W. Stover.
7:46 p. m. Evangellitie Hour.
7:46 p. m. Tueaday Evening 6er. vice, Prayer Meeting
7:48 p. m. Thruaday Young Peo­
ple meet
Everyone welcome.
THE CHRISTIAN AND MISSION­
ARY ALLIANCE CHURCH
Park Are. at Fourteenth fit.
Paalar, David 8. CarnefU
Sunday School and Morning
Worahlp Combined Service 0:45 a.
m. to 11:50 a. m. "Worahlp Period
begins at 10:40 a. m.“
Alliance Youth Feilowthip 9:50
p. m.
Evening Service 7:45 p. m.
Wednieday Mid-Week B i b l e
Study 7:45 p. m.

to

**

*

10 a.m. Sundiy School.
11 a.m. Morning Worship
Sunday avemng cervices:
6:15 p.m. Training Union.

7:30 p.m. Evening Worship.

—
‘
—
7:30 p.m. Prayer
Wednesday
meeting.
THE FUST BAPTIST CHURCH
OF OVIEDO
Rev. Louis Day, Minister
5:45 a.m. Sunday School.
SOUTH SIDE BAPTIST
CHURCH
Robert E. Lunsford
Paitor
Associate
William L. Stephens
Milton Higginbotham S S SupL
10 oo a. m.
Sundiy School
11:00 a. m.
Morning Worship
8:00 p. m
Evening Vvorship
Prayer Masting Wad. 5:00 p. m.
ELDER SPRINGS BAPTIST
CHAPEL
Elder Springs
Sponsored by First Baptist Church
Sanford, Fla.
Sunday School
10:00 a. m.
tv. O. 8tanaell, Superintandant
Preaching
11:00 a. m.
Dr. H. H. Martin,
Preacher

FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
1407 Sanford Ava.
Sunday School
9:45 a. m.
Morning Worship Service 11:00 a.
THE FREE METHODIST
m.
CHURCH
6:00 p. tn.
Car. W. Fourth SL Laurel Are. C. Y. r . A Chl-Rho
O. Eldoa Kline. MlaLtar
Evening Worahlp Service 7:30 p.
Sunday School 9:45 a. m.
m.
Morning Worahlp 10:45 a. m.
J. O. Y. Junior Class 2:30-4 p- m.
Evening Worahlp 7:30 p. m.
each Thursday.
Prayer Meeting Thufaday 7:90
p. m.
PAOLA WESLEYAN
METHODIST CHURCH
■T. FAULTS LUTHERAN
Luke’a Lutharaa—la
Lutharaa—in Liana
Lievie Six miles wait of Sanford on
I tt., Luke's
{near
(near Oviedo), the Rev. Stephen
Route 48
If. Tuhy, pee tor. Morning worahlp Rav. C. W. Shaffer,
Pastor
Rav.
Leonard
Cotron,
gusat
spea­
■ t^ :N « .m . over^WORX (740 ka)(
ker
Bunt
‘
Sunday Sehool
9:45 a. m.
(All elementary grades and kinder- Morning Worship 10:46 a. m.
8:46 p. m.
fartaa), Monday through Friday, W. Y. P. S.
1:10 axe. Children's program, “SL Evening Worahlp
7:30 p. m.
Luka’a Chapel “ S i m a y AOt i l Pray arms* ting Wednesday 7:30 p.
• J b ever WIRE. (1400 ke.).
m.
LUTHERAN OniRCH
Cottage prayermaatlng a t home
OF THE REDEEMER
Bev. Phillip Schleeeman. Miniatav of Henry Taylor — Friday, 7:30
. Service, at The Yacht CUh
fuiday School 9:15 a.m.
Dally Vacation Bible School 9:00
Church Service 10:90 a.aa.
11:00 a. m. July 5-15
CHURCH OF GOD
Froaeh Ave. end 22ad 8L
FIRST CHURCH OF THE
Rev. H. W. Henderaee, Palter
NAZARENE
Sunday School 9:45 a. m.
“Sanford's Singing Church'*
Evangelistic Service 7:30 p. m.
Mid-Week Service Tueaday 7:90 Comer of Second and Maple
R. H. Spear J r ,
Paator
p, m.
You are invited to attend the
Young People Service Thureday 7:M p. m.
following servlets:
Sunday School M .0:19, Georg*
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Pittard, SupL
Bacoad SL and Elm Ava.
Morning Worahlp at 10:45, Ser­
Ralph Brewer J r , Mlalater
mon by the pailor.
Sunday:
Evening
Evangellatie at 7:80
Bible School 10 a. m.
Binging by Johnny Carter.
Worahlp 11:00 a. m.
Bible Training Groups meat
Worahlp 7:10 p. m.
each Sunday at 6:46 p. m. Thera
iWedneadayi
la a Group for each aga where
Prayer Meatlac 1:00 p. m.
God's Word la taughL
Thuradayi
Prayaraeetlng it held each Wed­
EBXNEZEB METHODIST
nesday at 7:48 p. m.
CHURCH
Courteous uahers will assist you
Clinu Heighta
The sanctuary ia nicely air-cooled.
le v . Edward Msrtta. Paalar A nursery ia open at all timet.
Sunday School 10 a. m.-CUflord
Ja
rd E. John.an.
luperlntendent
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
“ Service U e. m.
CONGREGATIONAL
Prayer
rayar m
meattag, Thursday, 7:90 Cor. Park Ava. aid 94th BL
J. Bernard Root. MisleUr
»&gt; bl
Sunday
School 9:90 a. m.
ASSEMBLY OP GOD C H U R d
Morning Worship 11:00 a. bl
19th BL Bad Laurel Ava.
Sermon: “The Great Aga of
Banday School 9:49 a. m.
Fear"
Morning Worahlp 11 a. a .
Youth Service 1:45 p. m.
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
XvangollaUa Rally 7:45 p. m.
Mlltoa H. WyatL Miaiater
Prayer and Bibla Study Wadnaa9:45 a. tn. Church School. A Class
day a t 7:45 p. bl
“J oin the happy, elaging crowd. for ovary aga.
11:00 a. m. Morning Worahlp
Worahlp the Lard with ua."
Sermon—“If I Worn You"
7:00 p. m. MYF MeeUng.
*9:00 p. m. Evening Worahlp
wmoa— “Blrthdaya”
'(Broadcast aver WTRR)

ii*iT

•x
•«*

Herald office bp

ESS

fffl

•SS&amp; ftB km

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FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
Oak Ava. sad Third BL
Mm. A. « . Melania. Mlalataa
9:41 a. na. Buaday Bahaal
lOtU a. bl Tha Basel aw Batata fag
, Prayer la tha laesles Baoaa
11:00 a. aa. Meralag Warahlp to
ba broadcast aver WTRR
Solo—“Gad la Ever Baald* Mb"
DeRosa—Robert B. Brewa
Aathaaa— “Nat What Mr
Hands Hava Dona"— MartlaNaltoa—Ckaaeat Chair
Ramon—Mr. McInaU
Church N um ry 10:45.19:09 each
Sunday meralag far children up
to five yaaia.
7.00 p. nL Ptoaaar Faliowahip

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Psrk Ave. at Sixth St.
W. P. Brook* J r , Peetor
John I, Miller, .Min, of Ec'airation
Ruth K. Archer, Director of Music
"We've Saved A Place For You"
Early Morning Worship 8:46 a. ra.
Sermon W. P. Brooks Jr.
Sunday School 9:46 a. m.
“Come to Sunday Sehool with
your Family. We provide for
every member of the family—
even the baby."
Morning Worahlp 11:00 a. m.
Sermon—W. P. Brooks Jr.
Training Union 6:46 p.m.
“Training Union is for all the
family—even the baby is pro­
vided tor."
Evening Worahlp 8:00 p. m. /
Sermon—W. P. Brook* Jr.
Faliowahip Hour after the Even­
ing Service aponaored by thhe
Muaic Department. Mils Ruth
Archer tn cherge.
Wednesday Evening Service 7:30
p. m.
Nursery Open at all Services
Earphone* for the hard-of-hear­
ing.
Welcome

lies A d v e atu r* with L'eele
I lit Wild Rill Hickok
r.vr.vi.vo
Site N * w t-W * ath « r .Sport*
s is John Da)/ Ne» a
e.i» Stutical V a r l tt l a t
• III S lu ilc si Varieties
7:09 sum *
T:ie luppar
1 :0.
P la y h o u se of S tare
•tie in * P la y b ac k
l:4l P u l t o n l . a - i s , Jr.
Si 00 T b a L ln -u p

»:J0
10:09
10 19

Governor Signs
^

I VM #

H ill

W alt

Parson To Paraon
T h a Vlaa
D a nxaroua A . i lx n n
,.S*«»-Sport*-x'
___
**tli.
G ta rllxht T h a . t r *

J:4S

SATL-Rner

*&gt;so
•ill
9:49

10:0*

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11:09
11.00
1S:1a
12. 10

12:41

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1:19
4:11
9:99

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7:09

1:09
9:"0
1:1 0
10:00

10:10

11:00

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11:41
1 :0 0

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1:00
1:20

2:09
2:20

2.99
2:11
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4:99
4:29
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1:09
1:29
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11:69
11:14
2liJ9
11:44
12:09
12:29
12:44
12:44
4:19
4:09
t:29
4:14
4:44
9:09
9:49
4:44
7:99
4:09
1:49

t*00
iHU
e.an-Ofr

12:40

HOLY CROSS CHURCH
(Episcopal)
Rev. H. Lyttleton Zimmerman,
B. D , Rector
3rd Sunday after Trinity
8:00 a. m.
Holy Eucharist
9:16 Family Service and Chtffeh
School
No services during tha week.

Head Of Famous Dramatic School Ready To Retire

TELEVISIOI

MOHAI.tr.
■Ian.*
,Qn
Proi
Program
ll.suma

I "0
ti an
4:44
an
»
Av»,
tbsr
Cr. Wiiard
I9:9d
19:14
winky Dink and Ton
10:19
Big Plctura
11:09
Tba Big Top
11129
Soldlar Tarada
APTER.VOOX
19:14
Vlawara Dlf.st
10 10
Had Barbar &gt; Corntr
x
xion
Pra-Oama Warm t-'P
BastbaJl Oama of the Wask 11:14
12:09
Slovta Uatlnaa
12:19
Art Davia
1:09
KVKXI.VO
1:19
Tha Hartman Family
2:09
C.ntral Florida khowrasa
• mn
Amtrlea'a O r.ct.il Bands
1:29
Cumady Hour
H99
Tha Compass
4:19
HU Parsda
4:00
Lifa of iulay
41
an
Lnratta Tounc know
4:00
Dollar A (.cond
f:l»
Htailltht Thaaira
Ti on
Marlliht Thaaira
4:09
tv ratbsr-Navss
1:49
hign-Olf
»i09
al'MMT
1.49
AFTLR.NOO.V
Slsn-un
Progri
Program R a sum e
w aA vaathtr
»w.Av«sth*r
?TT, bia
!»
ha
r Chrlatopbara
~ ■
11:10
la Tha Llfa
I l a c k a t buuad
L a i's T a k a A T rip
Air Fore* D l g t . t
Youth P o p , A Question
tun*
tioldlara o
Aioarlcan ,?w &amp;
Advantur*
A b b o tt A Costallo
W n ta r f r o n t *

Clrel* P Itaoxh
W in k y Dink A Tou
TBA
C a p te la H l d n l f h t
B i r Top
Bid Top
Hid Top
Hid Top
S u p t r Circus

ArrsiRvno*

• ports Itavlew
f u s s y Dsan
Cisvalsnd vs. B a ito a
S u r e t y Sch. Lassoa
Dollar A Second
flsd T arhem
d * .:? h .r
\
IIVC.M.VO
P a ss p o r t To D a n g a r
B a s t T he Clock
i»a*t The Clock
Am erica's Q r a a tsa t Banda
Two F o r T ha Money
Down Tou Cio
Prof. F a t h r r
Damon B u n y o n T h a a tr *
Dam on R unyon T h a a tr *
• t u d l o 47
Studio 47
Ktnp Tha Muale
L et* Show
L a w s A Hldn Off
at* D A T
T s s t P a t te r n
T he Chrlatophar*
bbuthald* Prasbyt - r l a n Church
• t a r Showcase
w i l d Bill H ie kok
om* F a i r
llllen 4 Mov|»
T ha Scar
T his Is T ha Life
F a c e T he .Nation
C a p ta in U e lla n t
D a m i r of t h a J u n e ) *
h* Sun. Lucy Show
eu Ar* Thar*
F o rd T h aa tr*
P v t Sec retary
T o a s t of T own
O.L.T heatr*
bind* 7
A pH . w ith Adv.
W hat'* My Lin*
• u n d e r New* ip ae .
A n t i Bros.
P ublla Dafandar
B id P i c tu r e
k i t h Off

fi

?

LONDON, or— “ Reilly, derllng."
leid e slinky roung u&gt;oman In
tkin-tight alicks, “I eltseyi tay
that to appreciate Shakespeane
truly, you must r**d him with
your shoes off."
“How perfectly divine," ssid an­
other slinky young woman In skin­
tight slicks, "of course one m ust"
Sir Kenneth Barnes, the 77-yearold principal of the Royal Acad­
emy of Dramatic Arts (RADA)
peered over his glatses at the two
lithe figures twinkling down the
corridor of whit he calli the
wond's greatest theatrical school.
“Ah." be said with a nostalgic
sigh, "when I cam* here 48 yeara
ago, young ladies talked Just like
that. They didn't wear alacks, but
they aald the most outrageous
things."
After ell these years and all those
actresses and actora Sir Kenneth
la finally giving up. He's going to
retire in August, to be succeeded
MOTDAT
9:19 T a i l P a t i a r n - a
T:99 M ornlnd Show
• |99 • hopper* Quid*
1:24 N e w ,
9:49 A r t h u r Rodfray
10:29 fairlk* It Rich
11:09 V a lia nt Lady
11:15 Lov* of Life
11:29 Search fo r T 'row
11:41 G u ld in c L ig ht
12:99 K itche n Show
12:29 Wale. T ver*.
1:99 Boh , Q. Lawla
!:|0 l lo u a a p a r ty
2:99 l i l t Pa y o ff
2:29 B od Croib
2:09 H r i e b t t r
1:11 • aerat Storm
2:19 On
ia T our
our Acceuet
4:99 Road
~toad or
e f Llfa
4:11 l a r r y Moore
4:44 Open Hot*

S:09
1:29
2:00
9:20
10:09 Beitno* Fiction T h e a tr e
19:20 Stoll* Of Ivy
21100 T P P layhouse
12:00 N a n a - w a a i h a r
12.0lliga Off

&amp;°&amp;Al

Take - Home Pay
Shows Big Jump
WASHINGTON &lt; * - Living costa
remained uachaaged ia May util*
worker take — bom* pay roes
sharply to a record high.
Secretary of Labor Mitchell ia
announcing (ho bow figures today
acid (t continues the pattern of
over — all aatloeal stability ia re­
tail prices whieh hat “stopped
paycheck — robbing inflation."
“Actually." he add. "The index
of retail price# has chaaged very
little since mid • 1951 end lie
steadiness ia the p u t six months
has rarely been equalled before,
“Thee* two feetort, record high
take • home pay for factory work­
ers ead stable prices to. the
and service# the worker and hU
family buy, along with inercaalng
fob opportunities and
n-*-g m .
•aeloyaaat, are eoacreto artisan#
of ton stream
ra n d
prosperity for
workers and thair families."
Mitchell aald Bet apeodahle earn,
lags warn up 1b May by mora than
a dollar a .week e v e r the April
MveL
TBa take • home pay of tha aver­
age family werker roe* to IT9J9
la May and a single worker's to
MB49. M b ta tbout W mat# a
week more than they earned la
March of this roar, whan tha p c?
view peak was reached.

MORR1RO
tat Pattern

He leaves a long and impressive
list at former students, which in­
cludes Vivien Leigh, Charles
Laughton, Sir Cedric Hardwicke,
Kay Hamm«nd, DoroUiy Tutln,
Robert Murley and Sir John Gid
gud.
The profession is already over
crowded. London alone hai over
1,000 actora and actreia out of
work. Yet. year after year, hun­
dreds of recruits come to RADA
wanting to a c t
"It's always bean that' way."
said Sir. Kenneth, a large lumber­
ing, kindly man. "I'm sure the
profession waa overcrowded 3,000
years ago and 3,000 years from
now it will be overcrowded.”
Asked why so msny young people
want to acL ha thought for e mo­
ment.
"1 always aik them that tim e
question," he replied, touching a
large leather-bound book, "and 1
keep their answers In here."
The most common reason:
"1 acted when 1 waa in ichooL
People told me 1 had talen t" His
finger ran down the list
"Another common one—frustrat­
ed mothera. Mother wanted to be
an actress, but aha got married
instead: So—sb# w'ants to see her
daughter become the a c tm s she
wanted to be."
He (topped at one* name.
“Now this young woman—she
said she wanted to become an aetreia because her boy friend had
left h«r. It gave her such a shock

to be someone elae”
RADA was founded hy famed
actor-manager Sir Herbert Tree
in 1904. Us success was not
stantaneous.
"I've got one of your young men
in my eompeny." a theatrical man­
age: once told Tree.
"You’re lucky," said Tree, 'T v *
got two of them In mine."

Sir Kenneth Joined RADA in 190*.
He bad two ambitions'

To get a royal charter and to
have acting accepted as a tin*
a rt
The charter has been grantetM
and Sir Kenneth feels th« eecona
wish also has been fulfilled.
Americans, deypit# thair eo«
cents, make gc.d aetors.
"When Americans come to ua
as students," be said, "we atk
them if they want British or Amst^
lean accent Nearly all of them
reply—‘give ma a British aecenL'"
He said some Americana, how.
ever, Insist that their secants re­
main unchanged.
%

WELL DRILLING
Howard C. Long
Phone 388
207

E.

C oM srdaJ

9 £l
Sp
TIME T0 PAINT UP
FIX UP

acvasxiRn

Paopla Ar* F u n n y
P r i v a t e Sec retary
T o a s t of th a T o w s
O b T h a a ir a
A pp o lo tm a a t arltk Advantur*

TALLAHASSEE (JPh-Qov. Collino yesterday signed tha road re­ 9:49 atgn-O n
Pregram R e a u a e
form bill deiigned to provide tigh­ 9:44
aw s-w tath er
•
ter controlla over spending of f:oe he
S tornlag Show
road funds and to Uka soma of *&lt;oe s e t P a t te r n
AFTER*0 0 X
tha politics out of road building. 12:49
on
tare m R a s u a e
Road Chairman Wilbur Jonas,
12:44
•w aathar
San. Tapper, Port SL Joe and ties
•t Q. L ew is S h e w
Rep Boyd of Lake County, who inn
ru e
2:09
isnnel
Crossroads"
helped steer tha bill to panagt, Site
i Crasby Show
watched Collins sign tha measure i n i 'Mr. a nd Vfrs.“
2:14 • a e r a t Storm
which brings all post laws and i:if
1:41 &amp;v7.,f,»ucr
rcgulatlona up to data.
One of tha major objectives of
tha law ia to provide for construetlon of roada on tha basic of naed
AFTXRkOOk
Open Jlous*
Instead of political considerations,
W a s ta r n T h a a ir a
Tha law crtaUs tha post of exec­
utive director for tha road depart­
ment to segv# under the chairman
and esiabllshea a merit system for
admlnlstratAa employe*.
Tha law «gaa drafted by tha Leg
lilativa Council after a two year
atudy.
(
h* Llnaue
Colllna alto signed tha bill set­
T h* Llnaup
ting up tha Jacksonville Express­
TV Tbaeue
*wa * W a a th a r
way Authority to Supervise com­
a la Shew
pletion of tha Duval County multi
L aw * 4b Visa Off
million dollar road system.
SATURDAY

hy California-born John Faroald, she couldn't beer to carry OB
through life aa htraell. She had
40

Finance those needed Home Repairs with a low-cost-FHA repair loan—No Down
Piym ent— up to 36 m o n t h s to repay.
Your loan can cover both material and labor. You need not be a depositor to take
advantage of this economical way to repair your home. AnFHA Loan will pay for
the following repairs and many others.
1 iRSOltUOR
CBolktag

Now roof
Eit#iuloo«
PUitOTlBf

BuUt-la-flituroa

I!
laatmll *tUe f*a
i:
floor FlalBhlag
N

Siding and jirim
Toralts control
ss
Concrot* work

Plumbing
Wiring

H o n * w orkshop
R t n o d tl rooflu
Add bow ro o a u
G arage R ep airs

[] Additional bath

n

Chimney repairs
Valleys and gutters
Hsatlng
Porch and stops
Painting
Walks and drives
Outslds walla [ ] Foundation repairs
Add dormer*

H
H

FLORIDA STATE BANK OF SANFORD

e!Je 7a#' On Parade
llh r.

in Hwr*

MEMBER F. D. I. C.

(tot into the Fine-CarClass...

CJflMM CUSTOM CA TA LIN A ^

can easily affordI

�*

1
iffe m M M i fliM V
niv*if TTTtf 9 A ? ? T 0 n P TTET7AT/D
the expectation the Senat* may Fri. June 21, 10.*),'&gt; I’flK* 3
put hack features to which he ob­
jects, regardless of the final form of th* House hill.

'Brooks Predicts
New Reserve Bill
ill Pass House

County Personals

f day* of the acboul were, Mr*., Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Well* of
George It. I’atleiaoti, chauniamn, Greenville, Penna., wera the recent
Mr. and Mra. Fiank Evans, Mr*.1guests of their friends, Mr. and
By ADDIE PREVATT
Jo* Finhtr, ton of.Mr. ami Mm. T. E. Spite*, Mrs. Ed Zimyierman, j Mrs, T. E. Spires.
WASHINGTON ip—Rep Brook*'
£* H. A. FUher left for the Miami Mrs. P. D. Andcwun and Ml*. 11. | Mr. and Mis. Damon Scott and
itv
l.a) predicted today a revised
Rummer Muite Camp a i a coun- M. Gleason.
, family are spending tome time in
version of President Eisenhower’s
arlor. He will be gone for »ix
The Community C huch Ratoc- .Middletown.
stalemated military reserve procue, June lb was held in the Chantweek.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Chiodini and
gram will pas* the house next
Mu* Helen Hampton left last I her uf Cummvtcc, due It. alter* Mr. and Mr*. X. Trudeau »pcnt
week “ with no trouble."
noon
shuwets.
A
good
'cloud
en­
week for M orrii't camp whete
Wednesday at the beach.
But Bop Powell (DAY* dr
joyed this line meat and tnc Build­
•he will act a t a counselor.
Mr. and Mr*. Paul E. Maple*
elated the new measure is "w-orve
Mr*. T. W. Prevatt and child- ing Fund to whicn all piclw went have bought a lot from Mr*. J.
Ilian before ’ and fare* another
ren Carlton and Addie and Mr. | gained 910J.1V. The eliiciant com- II. Cowan and expect to build.
•Irene hgnt over racial segrega­
and Mr*. Cader Hart were dinner l nuttea lor this was headed b&gt; Mr. Meantime, they are occupying
tion i«*oe*.
guaeta of Mrs. Prevatt** daughter, and .Mis. K. \V. Keogh. It will lw Mr*. Cowan's apartment. He is
^
duly with the
A l(ou»e Armed Service* sub­
Valleofl in Orlando Thursday eve- remembered that h . » &lt; chairman ;
ot the liuilding Committee
f Bing.
committee, headed by Brooks,
Navy and is currently stationed
Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Anderson at NAAS, Sanford.
yesterday Vi.led 11-t lo approve a
Mra. Ed Fulford and clti’dren
new compromise bill It is de­
Huai* and Billy returned home leturned Fiiday from a thice
Friend*
of
Mrs.
Irving
Hauser
signed lo break an impa**e croatSunday after spending a few days weeks’ vacation spent in western will be sorry to hear that alt* con­
In Iuk« Wale* with Mra. Ful- Pennsylvania, visiting friends ami tinues srrioutly ill at the Florida HA ITI.K OF TIIK TITAN'S-—llrtlsllck engage* Davy Croc- cd a month ago by Powell's
irlativet in Beaver, Indiana, New
ford'a mother, Mra. Edward*.
Kelt (FKSS PAHKEH) In n Innmhnvvk dtirl in thin scone amendment to bar assignment of
Sanitarium in Orlando.
The firat week of Va-atlon Castle and KllwouJ City. They
frmu Wall Disney's DAVY (K O l’KKTT, KINK OF TDK rr*ervi_*i* to segregated National
The
Rev.
and
Mr*.
I..
W.
Scott
Bib'* School anded lait Friday mad* the tuund trip by air, flying and the Rev. and Mrs. I. M.| W 11,1) FKONTIBK. starring Foss I’nrkcr and Hudtl* Fhen. Guard units.
a t th* First Baptist Chutclt with from Oilando to Filtiburgh
In an effort to svoid thi* i*«ue
Laka Mary friend* ol Mr. and j Thompson left lursday for U m- In color by Technicolor, film is released by llucna Visa. Stnrl•ixty-three enrobed. Tile second
the new measure avo.d all men
lug
nl
(lie
Hit/.
Sunday.
Mis.
K.
J.
Andcraon
will
be
glaa[
«r
“
«ey
will
attend
week la haing continued at the
I.on of the National Guard, al
to hear that be is much belter lh’ ^ ct,n« of s y"oJ. ■n‘t ^
Hilirrest Baptut Church.
though Guard *p«.ke*nirn objected
RESOLVE TO M \KE
} ^ ,” "
Mr and Mr*. John Carhart and
3
Mra. Sam Hampton was hostess ,U n when they returned to E l l . oleettd
I that they neej the additional man­
president of Synodical.
A Will IE COII.Alt YEAR
son, Jay, H*v* returned from s
. to a birthday dinner in honor wood City, neatly • ycai ago.
power.
|
Mr.
and
.Mr*.
Frank
Harry
have
If
you
think
all
the
to-do
made
Tha Rev. J. C. lliannon has
vitiation in Baltimore, Md. and
of hoc grandsons, Donald Hamp­
It «l«o rnutun* *ofter language
rentnl
the
l.ampctt
house.
II*
is
ton and Joa Fiahar, at h tr home acting ms supply pastor of the
several locations in I'enn. with old about the •’little while eollar" in authorizing the Pentagon to
l«»t year mean* that if* on the establish a new «ix months' tramSunday. Thosa anjoying the dinner Ponla Gorda Chutclt of the Naza- with the Navy and stationed at friends and relatives.
...
NAAS, Sanfotd.
with th* honor guest* were Mr. rene while
It* pastor, Rev. AC „
. nd Mff. , , rtbort , , mprrl
Cards were enjoyed at Mr*. I. I wav nut by now. you're wrong. I mu program tor h'cn agers volun
and Mra. Charles Hampton of Or­ Green
ronductcd . very »uccc.- j , nd
Jaf( of Kilmotllh| V« . Ayers las! Saturday evening hv | II'* loo pood In give up, her.iire leering (or the reserves.
lando, Mr. and Mr*. H. A. Fisher. sful Revival In the Cake Mary ^ v i , j tin({ hi„ rnIcnl, Mr&lt; im , Mr*. Harriet, Drseh. Mrs. Flor-1 it's «n flattering, and It pops up I The evident purpo-e Is lo avoid
Roy and Charlie Hampton Mist Church of the N.zaret.e, the past J)r, „ „ b, rt ,
| rnce Suniierltn and Mr. and Mrs. I a winter wardrobe *n nlrelv.
' Ihe parliamentary tar.gte which
Hop# and Helen Hampton and the tu«i
Experiment with drying your House leaders say pel nutted op
J. Hollister.
|
Mr.
and
Mr*.
J.
K.
liiren
b*\*
host**!.
eollar*.
to
see
if
ironing
ran
hr
Mr .and Mrs. E. E.-Cloyd. J r . , | rpnlr)|
Wl|nvt hou, e. Thpy
Mr. amt Mr*. Ward Steven* of
ponents virtually lo kill tIso hill
Mra. T. W. Prevatt and son have te n te d their home and moved , rr for|)Wr re, i(,tn t, of Sanford, Mnlnar St. are spending several | eliminated. Smooth them right ■bc'ote hv • ipp luting Powell’s anti
gj Denton apent two day* in Tall- into a tialter, where housekeeping
Roy Howell Jr., is at home, i«- weeks in Syraeu^e and nearby side down, soaking wet, over the segiegnlion amendment Thts al
ahaa**a attending the State Board tasks will easier for Mrs. Lloyd
rim of the bathtub —and press .mated Southerners iwcded lo pass
ruprrating
from an emergency op- cilie* In New York State
Examination for beautician* with who has not yet regained her
Mr. and Mr*. Charles Searcy hard. 1C* an emergency measure, Ihe measure.
pcndrrtomy
performed
recently
at
Mr*. P resalts’ daughter. Valient. stier.gth following u heart attack
In other respect* Ihe comprom­
th ACL Hospital in Wsycross. Ga. and baby from Hawaii are vt*it- —but if Ihere's ]u*t no lime tor
•
Mr. and Mra. J. I.. Markham of Iasi fail.
Miss Gayle Hurke spent several ing Mr. Searcy'* parent*, Mr ironing, this isn't too bad a tub* ise measure patallel* Ihe *helv«»l
and family left Tuesday for SulThe Itev. L. W. Scott returned days in Fern Park, the guest of I and Mr*. Charles Searcy Sr. ol stitute The main thing i« that hill, which Ei'cnhmver ha* called
lieent, Ala. to visit Mr. Mark- Wednesday
Silver l‘tc«k N. her brother-in-law and sister Mr. West IwngwnoH. Mr. Searcy Jr. 1 Ihe while collar lie white—soap­ ! "vital" to nations’ security The
1 ham*’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. V., where hefrom
flew
to conduct the ami Mrs. Paul Brown.
I* being transferred to Pensacola, suds while So never *kip sudsing mes'iirit goes lo the full Armed
fc. Markham.
it before enrh wearing.
funeial
service
of
a
long
tint*
Fla.
Services Committee Tuesday for
Mr.
and
Mrs.
William
Sharp
Mr*. A. E. Moran of Sanford
frirnd,
Mts.
Helen
Denny,
who
James
Robert
McGrath
and
F.d
I expected approval and epuck rout­
and
daughter
ate
now
located
in!
visited friends here Sunday.
ing to |tn&gt; House.
one of tlie Evans houses on Little die VarFIcet are attending Hihlr completed.
Mra. Lonnie Speer and Mr. and had rrached hcr l)2nd year.
School in Casslcberrv.
Mr and Mr*. William S Pro*.
Powell aid he already has pre­
Mr*. A. L. W alter Is out again) Lake Mary,
a Mr*, tV. |„ Seig left Wciinr-day
Mr. and Mra. C. ft. Chilhlre* | *er ami family have moved from pared an anti segregation amendMr. ami Mr*. Hugh Tilli* re­
• for Bradenton to visit relatives after recent surgery at the Orange
turned Tuesday ftom a varation have moved into their new home their home here to their new home | mrnt which lie declared ran be
Mra. Speer will remain for a Memorial Hospital in Orlando.
nlteiv'd to tlie bill as now written !
visit, th* Seig*' will return.
Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Mill* have spent in and around Nashville, on Mnlnar St. that has just been1 in Orlando tills past week.
purchased one of the Phillips Tcnn.
home* in Little Venice nrar the
Lake Mary News Golf
Course and have moved in.
Long wood News
Mrs. Eugene Seaman has ac­
By VIRGINIA P. ANDERSON'
BY
SIRS. BEVERLY EATON
Fritndi of Frank McBride will cepted a position in the office of
The Auxiliary of the Old Glory
b* sorry to haar that he continue* Dr. Foley, the new vrternanan
seriously III, following recent aut- who i* located on Highway 17-1)2 Post No 183 will hold a card par­
ly at the home of Mr*. D. T. War­
gery a t Oranga Memorial Hospit­ south of Sanfoid.
Friends of Mr. and Mrs. J. I'. ren. Fern Park. This will be the
al. In Orlando. At presrnt he and
Mra. McBride are at the home of Moyer, brother-in-law and sister first in a »crict of benefit rarri
* friend, Mr*. Amelia Mu*i&lt;-k. of p. D. Anderaon. will be sorry parlies In be held during the *um
to hear that he suffered • stroke, mer month*. The proceed* of
1510 Valencia Drive, Sanford.
The Rav. and Mra. Jame* 51. Msy 28 s t hi* home in Ellwood this party will he turned over to
Thompson have returned * from City, Penna., and while hir is im­ the Clara John Fund.
Prire* will he given and refresh
Grove City, Penna., where he a t­ proving has not yet recovered
tended tha 60th Anniversary of full u-o of either hi* speech or mrnt* will be served In Ihose at­
Ilia graduation from that cu'Vge. his right aid* which was affected. tending The public la Invited.
Tha Thompaon* made tha trip by It will be remembered that they
Miss Joan VanDam of Niles,
air and whlla there, visited friends visited the Anderson* in the sinMich. I* spending her varalon
and relatival in weatern Pennsyl­ tr of 11*5 J.
vania.
t
Mi*. Clay Smith hn* accepted with old friends in Longwood.
Th Vacation Ribla School held a position in the Sanford oflirs Mis* VanDam'* parents, Dr. and
recently by tha Preabylerian of Phillips Properties, near the Mrs. Abe VanDam, fnrmarly lived
here.
Church 'was a success with aoma Pinccrcst School.
Mr and Mr*. J. G. Payne and
Mr. and Mrs.L. R. Price and
60 children In attenuanca Mra. L.
W. Scott wa sin charge, a*»Nt'-d children, Judy and L. II. of Wen­ children, Glenda and Darryl. *re
by Mr*. Ted Brooklyn, Mrc. Wil­ dell, N. G\, are visiting her par­ spending their vacation In Humliam I.effler, Mra. C. It. Hone ents,’Mr. and Mi*. Dan Dcsmnr.d. boll, Tcr.n., with Mr*. Payne's
Friends of Mrs. Herman De- parents, Mr. and Mrs. L S. Ham­
Mr*. R. H. Goble, Mra. Birger
Waster, Mra. Ralph William*, Mr*. Laughter, now of Forest City, but ilton.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald llilsman
Dempsey Hamilton, Mra. P.ubert formerly a resident of lotkc Mary,
Geiger, Miss Jean Anna Ntlton will be glad to hear that she i* and son. Gerry, have left to spend
and Harry Waiter. Those furnish­ making • good recovery following a month in Ohio, their former
home.
ing Vafraahmtnta (or tha various lecent aurgery in Orlando.

Genevo

PACEM AKER DEAL

Ch ock

ose

lo w

TIRE

WE RE TRADING HIGH..

4.66 * i i

SIZE
4 .50* 14
4 .4 0 1 IS
4 .7 0 1 IS
7.10 ■IS
7.40* IS

TIRE
SIZE
440&lt;
4 .5 0 1
4.70a
7.10«
7.40 •

1

~ OR MAKING REPAIRS
AND ALTERATIONS TO
TOUR HOME —
KKK US FOR AU; TOUR
BUILDING AND REPAIR
MATERIALS. . .

SHERMAN CONCRETE
PIPE CO.
Phone 2 ISO

Oul W. n th St.
‘' ' VV&gt; •

SALE P ric e s

REG U LA R NO
TRADE-IN PRICE*

S A U P R IC E **
w ith tra d e -in

$14.75
27.25
17.15
11.70
20.70

$ 1 2 .9 5
1 7 .9 3
1 4 .1 S
1 4 .9 5
1 4 .6 0
1 4 .2 5

22M

G O

li
14
IS
IS
IS

R EG U LA R N O
TRADE-IN PR IC E*

S A U P R IC E * *
w ith tra d a -ln

$20.50
27.25
22.90
25 J 5
27.75

$ 1 4 .4 3
2 2 .1 5
1 4 .4 5
2 0 .5 5
2 2 .4 0

m FIm 1m

&gt;

O

D j ^ E A

Super-Cushion..
F I R S T T IM E A T T H IS L O W P R I C E !

Super-Ceshlon White Sidewalls

I

TH IN K ...

Sup«r-Cuihion Block Sidewalls

Chevrolet's biff Pacem aker Contest is in full sw inff. . .

I

— ITS LATER
THAN YOU

Here'* your rh a n rr to save wiih safety! C.lieek m u
new low SALE PRICES on alt lire* of Cioodyear'*
famous Super-Cusliioo li f&lt; ami*-* rxrlm rvy J-T
Til pie Tempered Cord Body for added irren g th —ihe
Mnie Stop-Norrh tread design that fame on America's
fines* 1951 ear*. You can't lose when you choose safer
Supcr-Cuahium at these radically reduced price*.

and m ip p A li lira

AM ■ 14
flut Mr n*(f
Mi *ppobU h(T

ACT N O W . . . OFFER LIMITED

Your old tiros aro tho d o w n p a y m e n t - o n ly *l35 a w e e k fo r TWO tire s !

CHECK THESE MIDSUMMER GOODYEAR SPECIALS

Tell us how much YOU NEED for your car to trade for a

*OV* 1 J| XTRA-MILEAGE

NEW 1955 CHEVROLET

b JT )H N EW

Truckers! A great Value!

Hli-MILER RIB

TREADS

tr C O O D A eA R

by G O O D ^ IA R

POPULAR 440 a 14 SIZE
I (a*44.93 Mdk
S Mr SI.70 aadi
4M
r SB.41 oad*

•tine-

4

This week we're going all out to meet your figure!
YOU’RE IN THE DRIVERS SEAT!. . . LETS G O !!

Mor# p e o p le

phone

mi

"SAVE DOLLARS at HOLLERS"
■

H IB

^

4fl0, ,4
eV
t9tUfpmhh f/.

rfde~on G o o d y e a r Tires than on a n y o th e r k in d !
*."**.« &lt;;\u ~ ~

HOLLER MOTOR SALES
co*. m er. a ra u irrro av*

fo r * 8 . 4 4 « o « fi

T

Big s a v in g ! on a ll o th a r l i i o i to o l

MAIL OR BRING THIS AD IN TO

FOR THE BEST DEAL OF YOUR LIFE!

• Long Tread Ufa
• Mora Recap*
• Proved Perfomwinen

113 SOUTH PARK AVENUE
SANFORD, FLORIDA

GOODYEAR

S E R V IC E S T O R E

PHONES 222-223
&gt;V.

--

\
\

�'

Union Responsibility
by i .
.iating a successful contract with
th* Hor&lt;l Motor Company which indudpd
what U In effect a guaranteed annual wage,
tha United Automobile Worker*. C. I. O.
demonatrated that It la a powerful union.
Yet any organization which cannot maintain
Internal discipline. no m atter how powerful
it might be, is in danger of serious trouble.
Even after the contract was negotiated
with Ford some Ford workers atnged wild­
cat strikes because of some personal dis­
satisfactions they had with its terms. The
General 'Motors Company, which was grant­
ed an extension of contract in the hope that
a settlement could be reached without work
a&lt;.....•,&gt;.■&gt;.». was p'*n fnred with wildcat
itrlltea at some of its plants.
Those who stage these unauthorized
• unions and the cause of
i. •
-•*•»•** iiu»orvlce. Kmnlorera who deal with union lenders must know
i..„. inese leaders m| h:hk lor tlie workers
and If the leaders cannot stop wildcat strikes
tin,!- ..............
ooolfjoo Is weakened.
Tt l« true that the United Automobile
Workers officials were prompt in condcmn,t,„
....**&gt;«••••«. Vet thev should
have been able to prevent them. The great
power that has come to labor unions in re­
cent years enriica with It equally great re­
sponsibility Those responsibilities cannot be
ignored if labor is to keep the gains it has
won.

Soo's Birthday
From June 128th to September 5th Miclti—— gan will observe the 100th anniversary of
tha Soo Canal, connecting Lakes Huron and
Superior.
The project for a ennni began in 1797
when a private company built on the Cana­
dian aide of the rnpids of St. Mary’s River
a one-lock canal big enough to accomodate
o ennuo. In 18.75 the first, two locks were
built bv the stnte. In l«78 the canal wns
transferred to the federal government, which
■

. ................

- ■ ■

“J

The Sanford Herald
(■■blUSe* S a il? r t r r iM * « t e r - t e r a n * S a a S a r
S n | N r&gt; l P I ra t a i.
S i i l t r H aa
r la a a M a ile r O r l« k * r t T . I S I S at
tb a P a s t O f H r * m l S a a f a r S . P la r t S a , a a S r r tb a A r t
ml r a a a r v a a a t M a rrb S. 1ST*
a«&lt;
J A IN
S t lT IIK N I.A K n . N a a a s te s P i l l a r

rnr.n rr.nKin*. Mii«r

NMUkw

B ia a it iir r in x a m : t
U f C a r r ie r

SAr p e r rteefc
O aa a ia a lh
II.* *
T k r a a M a a lk a
l i t M a a lb a
O aa T e a r
U N
U .T I
*11 H
A l l a k lt a a r y a s t l r r a , r a r e r ml I k a a k a . r r a a la lla a a a i t
• • l i r a ml a a t a r t a la a r r a t f a r tk a r i r r m i ml r a l i l a a
tn a * a w ill k a r k a r a x l ta r a t r e s e la r a lt e r n a t e s r a lr a
H a p ra s a a ta A
R a t t e a a l lr
kf
O a aaral
S a n t e e , le a . M l
t i r e r n la
M ila n a
A l l a a l a o r e r a 'a

A S t e r f l- l a a
M a sk
ill*

T k a M a ra lS la a a M k a r m l t k a S a a a H a ta S P ra a a
w k l r k la e a t i t le s a i a l a a l i r l * l a tk a a a a t a r r r a a k l lr a M aa a a a l l t k a le r a l mmmm p e ta l# * la tk le a a w a p a p a r.

Page 4

Friday, June 24, 1955

TODAY’S B1B1.B VKRHK
Our help Is In the name of the Lord, who
made heaven and earth.—Paalm 124:8.—
There ia an explosive power in faith. History
la full of illustrations of this intangible force.
It made a great and powerful people out of
bedawin peasants.

hss added new locks, the latest having Been
built in 194.1.
The Soo Canal has long carried more
shipping than the Panama and Suez Canals
combined During the war it was perhaps
the most carefully guarded locality in the na­
tion. Its existence has done much to make
nation rich.

lii

e u 5 r?-^

“We treat our politicians as unsavory
characters, while at the same time we chnrgp
them with preserving our very civilization.”
This, in the words of Philip L. Graham, a
Washington, I). C., newsraner publisher, is
“fsntastic.” He has in mind the widespread
failure of individual citizens to contribute to
the campaign funds of the nartv nr candi­
dates they support with their votes. Because
good citizen" f.iH to heir, members of the
underworld, pressure grnnns a"'* rl«*h lobseekers by their contributions have bought
generous slices of politicians’ favors. A poll
taken *nst vear shows that only one fnmily
out of every twenty gave funda for political
camnaigna.
Some may say that larger gifts by dis­
interested voters would not prevent cam­
paign managers from continuing to accept
the support of shady elements. This is perhups unduly pessimistic. Many campaign HAL BOYLE
directors dislike and even refuse gifts from
discredited sources, and would prefer to
operate with 100 per cent clean money.
Certainly a total falli re of good citizens
to contribute would leave candidates no CHICAGO Uh-This la ihe time of
cho're blit to accept support from the op­ year the amateur Iron-man type
driver loads his family into Ihe
portunistic.
car and grimly whooshes off to­

Iron Man Puts Miles Behind Him

ward soma far distant vacation
spot.
Will he settle for too, 500 or even
600 miles a day?
Not ihia character, t e'a a timetetled, 700 plus miles a-day demon
who voraciously gobbles up those
tedious dlstancs.
He carts along fruit, sandwiches
and a jug full of roffc* for tha
family. The normal road break for
lunch la not for the likes of him.
He's going places on a light driving
■chedult that runi from sun-up to
sun-down.
Will ha gat Ultra In one piece?
Mr. Iron-man limply ooiai selfconfidence on this point. After all,
he's a top-notch driver, he hasn't
consumed any intoxicating liquor
and hard driving doesn’t make him
feel &lt;tcepy or tired.
But safety experts and icientlata
who hava studied the Insidious ef­
fects of fatigue take a dimmer view
of hi* chances.

Everyone's Debt
The total Indebtedness of this country,
both nubile and private, reached the sum
of 005.5 billion dollars by the end of 1954,
and has gone higher ainr** Private debt has
more than doubled ninre 1040. when It
amounted to approximately 175 billion dol­
lars.
Some economists and government ob­
servers fear this nation has borrowed too
deeply and used credit too liberally. A grow­
ing feeling li *hat precautionary measures
are needed to slow down the growth of pri­
vate debt, which would represent too jjrcat
a burden in the event of a business recession.
At present, the total debt renresents 83.700
for enrh man. womnn and child In the na­
tion. The question of hiw high this indebted­
ness can go must be considered.
Yet, since business in this country Is
geared to easy credit, there Is reluctance
to tamper with the rate of debt. Bo long as
the national income continues to climb, the
increasing debt does not seem dangerous. A
recent survey showed th at In terms of na­
tional Income, public debt 'was 89 per cent
Inh94l, 147 per cent In 1941, and is now 80
peJ cent. According to these terms, present
Indebtedness Is not too high. Finance offic­
ers report thnt people pay off their old
debts as fast a s they assume new ones, and
that the delinquency rate is low.
If Indebtedness ever climbs faster than
national Income, controls might b# applied
Apparently nothing more Is needed now than
caution hy borrows and lenders. Prosperity
Is the only guarantee this debt will not be­
come a ra‘astrophe.

l i S ^

i S S

If ha doesn't dote off momentarily
or run headlong into a emergency
that calls for a hair-trigger deci­
sion and response, the experts con­
cede he'll probably make out all
right.
Rut whether he knnw« It or m»t
Ihe long grind of steady driving
will slow down his reaction macniu
ery and drop his vision and hearing
ability below par.
Knowledge of tiles# slow-down
effects la based on actual field and
laboratory tests of the primary
functions mostly closely related to
hours of driving.
One such study was made by tha
U.S. Public Health Servica. Scien­
tists teated truck driven before and
after a long stint at the wheel and
after sleeping and resting.
Drivers were given intricate
manual task* and then timed with
a stop-watch. They also were
tested for simple reaction time, re
action-coordination time, and man­
ual steadiness.
In one of these testa, Ihe drivers
grasped an object shaped like a
pencil and, as rapidly as possible,

Baby Goes Exploring
His Brand-New World
A CRRRPDfO baby usually la a
try lo t problem for mama. But
maybe t more tberoagh under­
standing tt why your adventure­
some tot eeama to get Into everythine and what you e a t do shout
tt might help matters.
Your eroeptnt youngster e a n l
satisfy hie aaturai aarloaity mat
ly hy looking. Ba a had to ho eo
tout with watching and listening
ta d ooraotonaliy trying oat a low
things In Ms mouth for some
time. By creepiag time, usually
about 10 month* of ago, be must
touch things to team that some
are rough,
are hard, others a n cofti
rip and tear, while others do n o t
Only by aetaally foaling
oaa be learn.
Don’t expect a baby of creepiag
age to understand readily that be
can touch seme things and not
others. Keep your prised pamas
•Ions well beyond his reach.
Explore and L oan
Kipping his hands and repeat­
edly telling him net te tooeh cartaln things w ont solve the peekIt mop keep him nwar treat
these object*
is when you are with
him, but
Is alone hell
probably hs unable te

WASHINGTON UP— Sen. Me-1 asktd tlia Sonata to adopt a reso­ agreemant-befora lb* big meeting
Carthy (R-Wls.), an Increasingly1lution which many senators aald •that it would discus* th* “statue"
obscure American politician, thta would have tied Elsenhower's of Communist control In countries
in Aala and Europe.
weak tried to climb out of the
political basement where he landed hands at the Big Pour meeting If the Senate went along with
July ur perhaps prevented a him, McCarthy could claim he had
•Her the Senate condemned come in
meeting,
dictated to Eisenhower and the
tt Me actiona Isat Dec I.
McCarthy’s resolution w o u l d Ruealane what they should talk
The reaction be got waa worac have
tell th* adminis­ •bout He said he wanted tha
•tea ia December. The vote lor trationthetit Senate
demand of Russia aa Senate to ac t
asademnatiea was ST-SS. Yester­
day the Senate voted against a re­
solution be offered TT-4,
McCarthy alone knows whether
By WRUAM Bin
whet happened tn Mm (set year — —
Central free* ITrMer
Seek the Bght ant of Mm. But.
•hereae la the peat he hit out ia
UTOPIA has ham found - o nly i tlahed In I t volume*. Old Aim
n l directions end had no trouble
It's spells* Madteonvtlte, Ky. cat
had a let af things to hte
Hading material for headlines, this fathers
there,
anneundng
t
•tir eae af them wasn't being a
pear he has beta comparatively eemmuntty didn't need th* rt
'» ef few wwda.
quiet. He baa seldom bean la tbo W in , watielUhad
noil
and
nroeari
^ ^ ^ r v w yw— nwe m v p s i e,
I t I
Unas far ana year.
A relised Panneytoanle peat*
tat limbing back into public view
maa I* gradnared /Tern eeUage
t I I
Jio week, McCarthy repeated
V.
I. population is crease* at w ilt an A. 9. degree. Ow n be
wbat started aim toward the base- rate • / yjH t a day Peofeprnpba.
meat la the Brat piste: he tried to We enepeefed IMaya were felling around/
match strength with President a Itftl* ereieded areand Sere/
t t t

wbllt ha
h waa
ttm rtB M twwe
a iyears, while
^ b l£ i McCarthy
' '
ed
Sn tall Kbew la kaadto
tt
I s Sarste paiicy, iambai
§t Ka -5*1-Sf1* and attaebad an
■mriatfy some tt Ka agoraUses
^ B aT^ehanJ m IK M a/m o Army

More Factory Construction Seen
NEW YORK
Labor's gains
this year in wages and fringe bene­
fits is a boon to the machinery
and toolmakers. The construction
industry also looks for a new round
of factory buikling.
The reason is: as labor coata
climb, industry socks wayi to cut
costa. One way is to week out
present inefficiencies. Another is
to build new. more efficient plants
or install automatic machinery.
That ia why the auto Industry
one week signs costly agreements
with the union ind the next week
announces c o s t l y construction
plans.
There are other reasons, of
course. The Big Three auto makers
believe the American public is go­
ing to buy a lot of cars in coming
years.
To cut labor cost* ia. however,
one of the prime reasons. The
new plants and the new machines
will enable them to turn out more
products per man hour This goes
by the term “increased produc­
tivity."
Auto companies take it into sc-

Paying The Piper

I I t
Democrats a n d Republican*
rallied le
g
the abowdown came Mc­
tab* a let af
didn’t have much
5- &gt;• Carthy
lar tt.

i

'

ALLO U S&amp; M 1 ^

YOU'RE TELLING ME!

.1

SAM DAWSON

O O L b F l C H AWCC. / w

McCarthy's Loss Is Gain For Ike

In :

«rorciNnj»y rooea

O R d A H O T H E J "I

IAMBS MARLOW

1
I

the

d e slra te .....................

th e n again, punishing him
might curb his natural tendency
to explore and to learn. You d ont
want to destroy this desire. Just
remember, lfa your job as parents
te are that your baby doesn't get
Into trouble, not to punish him
after he dace get into tt.
Teaeh your baby which things
ho can hare and which be e a s t
fo r instance, ball probably grab
~ again** off a low shelf or table
M promptly rip them ap art
Place some old newspapers on
this low shelf for him to play with
or tear as be pleases Little by
HU)* he will learn th at this shelf
and the things on tt are his. He
will knew th# other shelves be­
ad to mama and daddy. And bo
will Ware them alone.
R. T.: What precautions could
be taken to proteog the life of a
M-year-old woman who has aa
enlarged heart?
Anower: Tha a u la
f rolanglni the life of a ,------afflicted with heart disease to the
avoidance af mantel and physi­
cal strain at all tlmae. It Is impor­
tant far the pattest te get plenty
t l real and sleep and to avoid
arerea ttng and. tt toons, la ho
M d m tlw a a n a f a

slteraatcly tapped two smsll brass
plates separated by a block of
wood. In another they had to jab
• pointed object through a aeries
of different sized small holes, with­
out touching the sides.
In each of the tests, Ihe men
who had not driven since sleep
made the bc»t showing. Only 0
per cent of this group failed to
measure up to a predetermined
level of driving efficiency. Of the
group which hid driven seven
hours or less, 27 per cent failed to
reach the efficiency level But 42
per cent failed in the group which
had driven 12 or more nours.
Studies conducted for Ihe U.S.
Navy by Dr. Arthur H. Stcinhaui,
professor of physiology and dean
of Georgs Williams College, Chi­
cago, show that fatigue consider­
ably reduces the ability to see,
especially in dim light.
Getting back to Mr. Iron-man,
ths Nstionsl Safety Council says
his first mistake was in not setting
a dally goal of 400 miles, with an
absolute limit of SOO miles.
Dr. Steinhaus belevei another
serious mistake is lo drive through
ths lunch hour. The simple exer­
cise of leaving and reentering the
car causes the heart to nump a
much g re -'-r volume of fatigueerasing bl
,o the brain.
All investigators agree absti­
nence from alcohol is a must oa

count in their contracts with ths
union, where it is called the im­
provement factor. This provision
increase* the hourly pay scale
by about 6 cents each year.
In announcing its new 500-miliiondollar expansion p r t f i a n ,
General Motors stresses tin t “ the
major portion of the expenditures
will be for new machine tools,

M y New York
By MEL HBIMER
NEW YORK - I had Fumiko
and Kikuko in the other forenooa,
telling me about flower arrange­
ment, and it is to them that
owe my new knowledge of tha
startling fact that I am nothing
but a- pine-tree branch, after all.
Fumiko Shiba and Kikubo Ras
aki — they will smile politely
and daintily if you call them Bar
bare and Kay — are Japan Air
I.inea stewardesses, presently wan
dering across the face of the Uni
ted States with word of the tourit*, attractions in their homeland.
They have baen living It up in
New York, visiting Central Park,
Columbus Circle — "W’* recog­
nised that; we saw It in a Judy
Holiday movie" — and the Empire
State Building, and standing in
front of houses. "We stood in
front of the house where Billy
Ros« one* lived with Eleanor
Holm,” Fumiko safd, with delicate
pensiveness, “and also the house
where Irving Berlin lives. We
didn't hear any music, though."
It was when I pinned them down
to talking of their hobbles that the
flower arranging came up. “I
such trips. Numerous Independent
studies all show the reaction-stow­
ing effects from as little as two
ounces of whisky.
The Safety Council offer* these
fatigue-fighting tips:
1. Set a modest goal for a day’s
drive, starting and stopping early.
2. Stop whenever you feel drowsy
or muscle strain. Drink water,
walk around, breathe deeply.
t. Break ths monotony of unin­
teresting stretches by singing, play
ing word games, license piste
games or listening to the car
radio.
4. Keep your c s r well ventilated.
Commenting bn accidents caused
by fatigue, Ned H. Dearborn, pre­
sident of the council, said:
“The .miracle of wonder drugs
has overshadowed the oldest and
one of th* best remsdiss for man­
kind's ills rest. So why not maks
your vacation a lime of rest and
relaxation, instead of an annual
competition to ses who can drive
the farthest and fasteitT”

Try and Stop Ma
-Sy SINNITT CIRFDAMS CAME BACK from • weekend at the Hamptons look*
Ing completely done in. "What the devil have you
doing with all those society folk down there?” asked an
date, “Fishing through th*
Ice,” groaned Adams.
''Fishing through the ice in
June? What for?” scofTed the
assodate.
" C h e r r l a i , ” explalnad
Adsms.
s e e
Tha lata Professor Weaver
one# conducted aa unusual ex­
amination near Um end of on*
tt his English literature courses
at Columbia. Hs aaksd hi* class,
"Pisses writs down th* name
tt the book you have read for
this course that you liked the
least” He waited until the class
r
had compiled, than ordered, "New try to set forth on paper te
defect# ia yownf if you attribute this aad took af res

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$11N

ANN OUN CEM ENT

General Insurance

- w - — ---------

Ths number of U. I. women
working In private households ae
maids dsclinsd from I million ia
1H0 lo less than l * million in

Some Undents insist that their faculty baaete _ w
feseor wbo'e auch a bore that at ana ef tea laetaire. tea
get up aad waBnd out

V i *,

.............
. ’

play the koto, or Japnnsse harp,
•nd paint with crayons, teks care
of children, garden . . . and errang* flowers,” Kikuko said.
"Hssa?” I asked.
• • • e
Well, It developed that sticking
posiet Into a vase ie virtually a
ceremony, a ritual, with Jspanesa
women. Clubwomen who try U
stick some peoniee prettily among
forget-me-nots would be fascinated
by the Oriental version. Every ar­
rangement means something.
“To begin with,” Kikuko point­
ed out, ** you cannot put ga even
number of flowers into a vaee.
It must be one, three, five, aeven
or eo on. Then, there are three
focal points in tsch arrangement—
tha tallast point representing hea­
ven, the middle-sited one repre­
senting man end ths lowsst point
being earth,”
The Japanese liks te make aa
arrangement out ef, say, three
pinetre* branches and five resea.
"The roses stand for woman,” Ki­
kuko said, “and tits harmony of
tha display comes when they era
mingled with the pine branches—
which, because thsy are firm end
strong and tell, are loek*4 on M
man."
"Oh," I said, “that makte me
a pine branch?”
"Well,” Kikuko said. She didn’t
pursue it any further aad there
wasn’t any reason for me to,
•lthsr.
Fumiko was wearing a ftudy
kimono which, I think. Is what
ths girls wsar whan thsy are serv­
ing tea—or dry martinis—in tha
DC-6Bs that ferry them bstwaea
Tokyo, Honolulu and Ban Francis­
co. Klkuka wore tka trim dark
blue itewardessss* uniform- Each
haa been to America M
so.

Caraway &amp; MdGbbh
'

presses and other facilities." This
will bring to a total of four billion
dollars‘the amount GM has spent
on plant spies and new eqiti^
ment since the end of World War
II.
Ford has a similar spending
plan. Its poitwar total comes to
almost It* billion dollars./ Aad
tosre are reports that further
spending Is to be aaaounccd
shortly.
Chrysler has spent SOO mtllioa
dollars for modernisation and he*
sn additional 120 million dollar
program po* under way. Basculives say, “We are constantly Im­
proving plant and equipment.’’
The Impetus which the new
round of wage hikes and fatter
fringe benefits is giving to this
improvement trend s p r a a d ■
throughout many other industries.
Steel companies, dickering with
the union now, are planning nsw,
mors efficient plants to meet a
rising demand for steel they foresee in th* next few yusre and to
cut down th* rieing costa af eperating old squlpmsnt.

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V

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�1
S o c i a l fc v &amp; n J tA ,
Miss B. Brisson
*Feted At Shower
In Grieme Home
A miscellaneous bridal shower
was given recently for popular
June bride-alect, Miss Betty Brisson, a t the home of Mrs. R. D.
Grieme by Mrs. R. 8. Bates, Mrs.
Grieme and Mrs. T. B. Middleton.
Q rink
hlbicsus
were
used
throughout the rooms and around
the punch bowl. Refreshments of
nuts, cake and punch were served.
Games were played with prises
going to Mrs. Harry Watt, Mrs.
Bill Bates, and Mrs. Alma Neese.
Those inrited to be with the
honoree were Mrs. Roy Schmidt,
Mrs W. H. Trapp, Mrs. Alma
Neese, Mrs. Bill Vincent, Mrs. Bill
ajBcll, Mrs. E. Seibert, Mrs. Eddie
C o lb u rn , Mrs. Henry Brown, Mrs.
Jay Sheaffer, Mrs. H. V. Buckn­
er, Mrs. Bill Buckner, Mrs. H.
Haskins, Mrs. W. J Ostman, Mrs.
H. A. Watt, Mrs. W. J. Watt,
Mrs E. Mielke, Mrs. I . P. Wil­
liams.
Mrs. L. Baldroe, Mr*. Cart
Douglas, Mrs. Audrey
Warts,
Mrs. L. H. Shepard, Mrs. W.
Reams, Mrs. W. Pariah, Mrs. R.
■p. Brisson, Miss Mamie Mattoon,
•Ira. Bill Bates, Mrs. R. I. Rates,
Mrs. T. Middleton, Mrs. R. D.
Grieme, Mri. B. Hill, Mrs. C.
Grieme, Mlsq Patty Bell, Miss,
Carol Buckner and Mrs. Audrey
Pattersoa.

M any Parties
Kjiven Bride,
Mrs. W. Meek
Many pre-nuptial parties wore
given far Mrs- William Meek, re­
cent bride, just prior to her margiafs. Mrs. Ruby Combs, of Gene­
va, entertained with a ahower at
Jtar home, the guests being from
0 h e Church of Christ membership.
Mrs. Tommy McLain, Jr., also of
Geneva, entertained with a shower,
guelts being taken from fellow
eo-workers. Mrs. Arthur Reynolds,
ef Oviedo, gave a neighborhood
ahower.
•
Mrs. Charles T. Ntblaek. Mrs.
James Partin, Mrs. James Wilson
and Miss Kathryn Lawton ee-hoated a crystal shower at the home
pf the former. Guests ware give*
lay cellueld
id pastel
pas* colored ambrellas filled with nuU as tavern.
Gifts were presented te the guset
ef honor by the hostesses attired
In raincoats and bearing umbrel­
las. Thirty-five guests wee* invit­
ed te enjoy this festivity with the
guest at honor.
Mrs. Walter A. Tonga* and
Mrs. Merritt Btalay entertained
with a coke party at ths home
Mrs. Teague. Guests worn
V h so l chums of th t popular bride.
Mrs. J. B. Jones, J r , and Mlsa
Esther Belttel entertained at the
home of Mrs. Jones wi'h a kitchen
gadget shower. Guests wart greet­
ed by Mrs. Jones and Mlsa Belstel
at the door. They wore apron*
and chef** cape.
Corsage*, formed of plostle
knives, forks and spoons, tied with
whltt satin b«wt and mlnlatura
Aprons were presented each guest
^ In terestin g games spproprlsU
for ths occasion were enjoyod am
prises awarded to Miss 8hlrlag
Jones and Mias Shirley forth*
Mri. Joaee sad Mias Bolstsi
presented the gifts M aw w iaual
manner. They yrtyared • . , « ) *
■sing all the
Finally protsi------ ------ --

— n— » .» . y - » , -

k*nor. TM M H iN i
p
kiuhea fat mere bmredlaota
t ehelp
hat selva the fMhMaa tnd
returned with a dlehpaa bim w itk
gifts far the heaorea
Aheat t h i r t y ^
were * * * *
•*
with ths gaagt of boast.

M rT lIaaM ifcart,
M »TL. V. * • *

Horton. Mr* i .
Mrs. A. B. J —

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Mrs. Spaulding j
Mary E. Smithson,William Meek
Feted Monday Have Lovely Wedding In Oviedo
OVIKDO—The Foster Memorial Methodist Church war the scene |
beautiful double-ring wedding Sunday, June 'J6 a* fi n. m. when
By Two Ladies jfMissthe Mary
Elisabeth Smithson, daughter of Mr ami Mrs. Pleas M.

FRIDAY
An Absentee Stork Shower, glv- Smithson and William Rader Meek Jr., son of .Mr. ami Sirs. William
The First P.aptist Vacation Bl. ......................
Rader Meek weie united in holy matrimony with Emerson J. Estes
b a School writ meet front t»:J0 to
Miss Brtty Billhlmrr Is spend en by Mrs. L. H. Wynne and Mra. officiating.
| --------------------------------------------It dll a- m.
T.N.
Stafford
in
honor
of
Mrs.
ins ten days with friends in M*
The bride and groom stood ben­ via ami Wanda, of Memphis, Tenn.;
Ths Brow-nlca Ilibla Clase of
plcwood, N. J. On July 1 she will Lourena Cassidy Spaulding, was eath an arch formed of fetn and Donald Smithson of Birmingham,
the Fijst Presbyterian Church will
start her activities as Youth Coun­ held at 8 p. m. Monday at t)14 interlaced with white gladioli and Ala,; Mi, ami Mrs. R. A. Thomas
have a covered dish eupper at tha
mums to exchange their vows. and daughter, Lynn; Mr. and Mrs.
selor at the Hotel Windsor, Elite Laurel Ave.
church at 7 p. nr. Members are in­
Spring flowers were used taste- Princess baskets of white gladioli John E. (ia); Mr. and Mrs. Euvited to come and bring their
bethtown, N. Y. This is the hotel
fully
throughout the room*. Game.
"J"1"*. palm, and randies were wlyn Wiggins; Mr. and Mrs. W.
favorite covered di.-li.
which Frank Mebane ia managing
artistically ananged at points of
The First Baptist Vacation Bi­
were played with winner, being interest. Mrs Ruby Combs, of A. Vines; Robert Vines, all of
thia summer.
lakeland; Mr. and Mrs, P. I..
ble School will begin at 8.30 a. m.
Mra. C. 8. Hawkins, Mist Linda Geneva, was pianist for the occas- v'ines; Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Vines
tor those age three through 13
A. K. Shoemaker Jr., returned Stafford and Mrs. Lloyd J. Lowe ion and played the traditional and Miss Annie Vivian, ail of Oryears
Jr.
i
wedding
marches
and
sungs.
Merhome today from Richmond, \'a.,
iando.
The First Baptist Vacation Bi­
Refreshfcnts wers of cakes, 1;itt Staley rendered the musical
where he attended a District
ble School Commencement pro­
Mr. a n d • Mra. James French,
gram will begin at 8 p. m.
Gainesville; Mr. and Mrs. II. L.
Meeting of National Homes Cor­ nuts, m int, and aoft drinks. The numbers.
The bride, given In marriage White; Mr. ami Mrs. Ralph Branin the Church Auditorium. Tha
table was decorated with a luce
poration.
DRAMA
CRITIC
George
Jean
Nathan,
VI,
and
actress
Ju
tv
Tlxydrn,
radiant
in
a
l.xhihlts will bo open to the pubnan; Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Wright;
table cloth on which the gifts by her fatter, was
41, are shown al-onrtl Ihc Snntn Kotn with ship's captain, Frank
lie at 7 30 p nr.
traditional white wedding gownj Mr. and Mra. Harold Col wells Miss
The many friends of Mrs. Itan- were placed. The honoree ia liv­ of
Kiwik. who married them after the boat sailed fn&gt;m New York. Tb«
Chantilly lace and nylon tulle i Harriett Hill; Mr, and Mr*. T. A.
MONDAY
(International)
couple will honeymoon In Curacao. West Indies.
ley Martin, Colonial Way, will re­ ing in Palmyra, N. Y.
over taffeta. The basque bodice Kimble; Mr. and Mis. G. S.
lb
#
First
Baptist Vacation Bi­
Guests invited vvcie Mra. W. H had a wing neckline ami long
gret to learn that she is aonfined
ble School will be from 8:30 to
Barnet; Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Milli
to ths hospital for a few days. Stafford, Mrs. Mary L. Biuci, molded sleeve* which ended In erj. ,E lvin Kimble; and Jerry
lt:30 a. m. for those ag* i thru
Mra. R. Sessions, Mra. C. F. Haw­ points over the hands. The volumi­
Li p Tip s A rc Given 1lit
years,
Barnet all of Duytuna Beach.
kins,
Mrs.
Lloyd
J.
Lowe
Jr.,
Mrs.
Mr. end Mrs. H. B. Hscksnbach
nous skirt with a handkerchief
The
bride
wore
a
dress
of
aqua
L.
M.
Himes,
Mrs.
W.
D.
Iluwand children, Ann and Jimmy, left
In Summer Outlook Hi* First TUESDAY
pcplum of luce, attached to several
Baptist Vacation Biby plane from Orlando for a two kins, Mrs. Hallie K. Wood, Mrs. layers of tulle ended in a Chapel fashioned on princess lines for
Summer t« a good time to 1hie School will Ix-gin at 8:30 a. m.
weeks visit with his parents, Mr. B. A. Bruce, Mis. A. J. Ahlherg, train. Her finger tip veil of im­ traveling. She wore the removable
i make a clean sweep of old tired &gt; The lot ermedinto Royal Amhasend Mrs. H. B. Heckenbeeh In Mrs. Frank Rocket, Mrs. U. E. ported illusion fell from a clip corsage of tiny white roses from
i i .. i,..
i
will meet at the First Batsher
bride's
bouquet
pinned
on
her
America'*
10
best-hatted
women
King,
Mrs.
Tommy
Cobb,
Miss
cosmetics.
I inki powder
andi ,lip- i! sadora
tj„ chtlrrh
*
Chicago, 111.
at 7:00 p. ttt.
again arc named by III lending stick ran put a fresh new color in !
Shirley Sessions, Mrs. Chariss Unnet of lace and tulle edged left shoulder.
with
pearls.
She
carried
a
heart
The Fast Noble Grand Club of
The bride it a native of Bir­ millinery designers this year.
your fa re.
Mr. aad Mr*. T. B. Moo* left Hayes, Mrs. D. K. McN„b.
shaped bouquet of California roses
tin* Seininola Rehckab Lodge will
The list starts, of course, with
Mra. H. L. Swaggcity, Mrs. and Stephonitis with a removable mingham Ala. but hat made her
Thursday for Long Island, N. Y„
Palo blonde types look well in meet with M ra.’Mamie Ewan, 1305
home in Oviedo for the past sev- Mr*. Dwight D. Eisenhower,
when word reached them of the Raymond Lewis, Miss Barbara corsage of tiny white roses.
pink-beige,
darkhaired girl- with Elm Ave., at 8 p. m.
named
by
Sally
Victor.
Ollier
are:
eial years. She is a graduate in
sudden death ad his brother, Ro­ Gill, Mra. R. L. Brown, Mrs. H.
The Unity Class will meet i«
Miss
Jean
Smithson,
sister
of
fair
complexions
wear It very
Mrs. I.nuiitx Melrlmiil, named
jtho 1!*54 class from the Oviedo
M. Pierce, Mrs. Donald Rigan,
land Moo*.
the
Valdes Hotel at 7:18 p. m.
the
bride,
and
maid
of
honor,
was
Well ton, especially if lb* eves
High School. During her high by John Frederica.
Mrs. Russell Arnold, Mrs. Elita
with Jerry Meaehani as teacher.
Mr and Mrs. Kenneth LeRoy belli Avant, Mrs. Dan W. DeFuor, gowned in an orchid net over |school career she was active in
are
greenish
blue.
Even
dark
Dor«tiiy
Kilgallen,
rolumnist
Tlie public is invited.
taffeta ballerina length frock. It
and children. Patsy, Yvonne, and Mrs. James Thompson, Mrs. Lucy was
many school activities. Since her and TV personality, chosen by olive-skinned beauties wear rosy
The
Sanford
Tourist
ami
basque
along
princes*
line*
Kenny of Tampa are visiting Stafford, Mrs. poruthy Uiuce, and featured an off the shoulder graduation the has been employ­ Mr. John.
powders and lipsticks better than Shuffelboard Club will hnva a
Mr. and Mrs. James Castano al Mrs. Ilonier 8. Bruce, the honore- neckline. She carried a cascade ed in Sanford.
Mr*. I.awrenee Davidson, wife most other shades. Rone-rural covered dish supper at 3 p. in.
r's mother, Mrs. Dolores Guidry
their horns In DeBary.
Mr. Meek received his educa­ of the Metropolitan Opera ha««- s h in ie s seem to go with e\ cry (inmea will be planned,
bouquet
of
carnation*
and
roses.
and the hostesses, Mrs. W. H.
named by Robert Dmi­ I skin type and coloring.
THURSDAY
Mis* Thelma Jean Rnmbo. Mis* tion in the Oviedo elementary and haritone,
try.
Dr. John Wilson left yrsterday Wynns ami Mra. T. N&gt; Stafford.
high
school
being
a
graduate
of
The First Baptist Vacation Bi­
Red heads prefer oranga lip.
Shirley
Ann
Jones
and
Miss
Leona
morning for Villa Pica, Ga. upon
Zita, fashion designer, named stick and wear it gracefully, but ble School will begin at 8:30 a m.
Hart acted as bridesmaids, each the latter in ths class of lllfit.
word of the death of his father,
During hit school career he was by Helen Liebert.
The Junior Rnval Ambassadors
somehow a real orangv lipstick
being
gowned
in
dresses
of
green,
Ulla Wilson.
Mr*. Henry Wanger, aerial i doesn't seem naturnl to the lips, will meet at the First Baptist
with many school ac­
Your Child Needs blue and yellow respectively and associated
worker, named fry Gustavo
j ony in,in, than a deep violet shade church at T p. m.
fashioned like that of the maid of tivities especially athletics. Since
Mrs. John C. Smith left for The Tetanus Shot
Arlene Francis, TV star, named does. Lips should he a rosy pink
hu
graduation
he
has
been
em­
The First Baptist Church Choir
honor.
Headdresses
mad#
of
nst
Jacksonville to visit her ton and
ployed by the Foodniart, of San­ by Kmine.
| to be naturally appealing.
will hold rehearsal at 7:30 p. in.
to
match
their
dresses
and
carna­
family, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson As Safe Precaution
K a t h l e e n Winsor, novelist
One modeling school teaches a
tions wera worn by each, and they ford where he is assistant manager chosen by Lilly Daclie.
8mith.
of
ths
meat
department.
subtle method of mouth makeup
carried
arm
baskets
of
Ivey
with
By DOROTHY V. WHIPPLE, MD
Mury
Bothell,
soprano,
named
tha gives n soft natural look to
Upon thsir return from a two by Rose Saphirr.
Tetanus, or lockjaw, is a nasty carnations and button mums.
Ths many friends of Mrs. L.
the entire fare Here ia the entire
weeks honeymoon ths couple plan
disease.
It's
not
very
common
William
Rader
Meek,
fathsr
of
Mia
Stavrnska,
prima
ballerina
A. Guidry will be glad to hear
that she ii improving in the Fer- these days but since almost every­ the bridegroom, served as best on making their home in Sanfuid. of the Metropolitan Opera, select­ makeup method!
Clean your face, removing all
naid Laughton Memorial Hospital. one who gets it dies with it, It's man for his son while usher
ed by Margnreet Cody.
old cleansing cream residue with
worth quit* a bit of troubls to a- groomsmen were Johnny Jones
tissue. Put with rnttnn soaked
void it.
and Ray Beasley, of Oviedo, and
NEVER TOO YOUNG
«kiu freshener. Pat dry with I'suo.
Tetanus is caused by tha teta­ Melvin Reed, of Sanford.
TO LEARN COOKING
Apply foundation errant over face
nus germ. This germ is present In
Lybb Thomas, eousin of ths
Teach your little girl cooking street dirt and is especially abun­ nrldr, served as flower girl. She
ami neck. Apply eye liner and
and cleanliness a t ths same time. dant around bams where there
cheek makeup (if used). Apply
If the shows an Interest In the are cowa and horse* It is also a- wore a dress of white lare and
powder. Apply lipstick. Powder
kitchen, let her help yo uto plan humlant in manure used to ferti­ tulle over taffeta, fashioned like
over month. Bonk cotton in Ire
that
of
the
bride,
and
rarrlrd
a
the week's menu in advance. Then lise gardens.
water. Wring dry and pat gently
basket lined with satin and filled
over entire face and mouth. I’nt
select one Item a day that she Is
The
tetanus
germ
is
different
with
pink
rose
petals.
powder Now lipstick. Blot lips
able to do—like ready • mi* bis­
Ring bearer was S t e p h e n
from many other kind* of gormawith tissue.
cuits or a salad—and 1s t her
11 has the special ability to form Clouts. He, too, wore whit* and
u rN c im o x s p e c ia l
It "an by herself."
That method of fnc# makeup
■pore* These sporsa are a form carried the rings on • heart shap­
Corned Beef and Cole Slaw
will
keep
your
skin
looking
fresh
But ha sura te stipulate that of tha germ that can live under ed satin pillow.
Sandwiches
as n daisy from early morning
It’s her responsibility to wash the conditions that would kill tha
Whole
Tomato
Mrs.
8
mlthson
ehose
for
her
until evening lipstick, shouldn’t
bowls, pets, pans, and utensils regular germ. They can withstand
Beehive Cookies
ruti off if applied this way and Fresh Fruit
aha a sea. Whether aha washes drying and sunlight and even daughter’s wedding a , ballerina
Beverage
length drees of mulberry Cry
should
keep
its
even
textured
ap­
them with a brush, sponge on
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Rumbtey
boiling.
BEEHIVE. COOKIES
statllne sprinkled with rhinestone*
pearance throughout the day.
stick, or dlheloth, ths soaping and
Tetanus spores can only grow and matching whit* accessories. announce the birth of a son, James
Ingredients:
1 tfrtp sifted flour,
The tpr.S mouth emphasises the
riaalag » u e t be thorough.
when they get into a dark warm She wore pinned on her left Gerald, T lbs. 8 os. June 20 in tho
cup butter or
natural lip line, with nn excuse U teaspoon salt,
Fernxlrf
Laughton
Memorial
llos&gt;
place awsy from air.
shoulder a corsage of white car pltal Mrs. Rumhley will be re­
for a slight deviation with the margarine, ti cup sugar, 1 teasIf there happens to be t tetanus nations.
lipstick to add a little mote charm |mon vanilla, lfi large maraschino
membered as tha former Mist
■pore on soma object that rives
Mr*. Wllllsm Bailer Meek, mo Jackie Dunn.
to the mouth. But the Idea of in­ cherries, lfi blanched toasted whole
you ■ deep puncture wound there ther of the bridegroom was gown
creasing the Up line to twice its almonds, ’i to •» cup shred.led
is danger you might get tetanus. ed in a dress of mauve lare ovsr
coconut (chopped hi very short
normal also is out of fashion.
Mr. and Mra. R. T. Proctor
If you get a wound from which taffeta and matching accessories. announce the birth of a son, Mi­
I’inka, blurs, greens and laven­ lengths before measuring).
there is danger of tetanus and you She also wore a while carnation chael Rory, S lbs 14'4 ox. on
der in the pastel hues as well as Method Sift together (lour and
have never had tetnua and you corsage on her left ehnubler.
the dramatic deep fashion shades salt Cream butter, sugar and
June 19 In Aahton, Neb. They
have never had totanus shots, you
A reception wes held Immediate­ are former residents of Sanford.
take on new rlmriti with a subtle vanilla. Add flour and mix with
mutt have tetanus anti-toxin. It it ly following the wedding at the
lipstick shod,*. Fink is a good In­ I spoon until blended Make a small
the only thing that will act quick­ city hall memorial building. De­
vestment in a lipstick because slit in each cherry opposite slit in
&amp;
*
Mr. and Mrs. J. Gaston Edmon
ly enough to prevent tetanus after corations Included princess baskets son of Auburn, Ala., announce
the color seems to ttccomc nuue stem end; insert an aimond to each
an injury. Wa cannot maka teta­ of white gladioli and mums plac­ Ihe birth of a son, William Er­
vibrant ns y(,ur face tnn deepena | cherry Mold 1 level tablespoon
nus anti-toxin in the laboratory. ed at appropriate spots about the nest. on June 19 at the County
of dough around each cherry to
duiing tlin summer months
Tha only way we can get it ia to room. Mra. Don N. Ulrey and Mrs. Hospital In Opelika. Ala. Mrs.
; form a hall; roll in coconut Flaca
inject horses with the germ and J. E. Brookshire received at the Edmonson Is the former Miss
on iingrcased cookie sheet a roupls
then take blood from the horse.
LIGHT SWITCHES
! of inches apart; do not pres* down.
door. Miss Alice Lee Combs of Joanne Williams of this City.
Washable light - switch plates Bake in slow (325 degrees) oven
Horse serum makes some people Geneva, attended the Rrldc's Bonk,
The infant is the grandson of
made of glass or ceramic tile rnn about 28 minutes or until eocotmt
quite elck.
and tha Misses Lois Ramho, Bet­ County rarm Agent of Montgom­
b« cleaned by sudsing with a is lightly browned and cookies are
We can avoid using horse serum ty Beasley, Helen Hampton, Vs- ery County Ala., L A. Edmon­
cloth o,- sponge. If they are made baked through Remove to rake
If wa give shote of a material lora Moon, Shirley Malcolm, Ann ton Sr,, and Mrs. Edmonson, and
of metal, fidlow tilts washing rack to cool When cold store in
called tetanus toxoid before a I'ierson, Geurgene Parker, Ann of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Williams
with a brisk polishing.
1tightly covered container.
wound occurs. The toxoid is made Leinhart, Cornelia Weltmnn, Mar- Sr. of Sanford.
In tha laboratory and has no hors* tha Jean Hardy, Dorothy Sim­
serum in It. It Is, however, not mons Pat Walksr, Ruth Cullum,
STARTS
FEATURES
powerful enough to us* alone after and Joan Brown acted as float­
WELCOME NEWB
3 BIG
the wound. If we give a person two ing hostesses under tha direction
Woman who meka their owm
1:00
1:12
6.21
shots of tetanus toxoid two months of Mrs. James Partin.
clothes wll welcome * new Dae7.36
9:18
SUNDAY
DAYS
Cutting cake at the Bride's run-and-cotton bland that tupapart he will have a good dsal of
Immunity to tetanus in hia body. table were Mri. A, M. Jones and posed to be the answer to a lot
It won’t be quite enough to com­ Mrs. R. W. Estes while Mrs. Max of requests. Ths 86% Dacron
pletely protect him from a bad I/tinhart, Mr*. A. J. Metcalf, content la supposed to make the
TAPERED BOX JACKET Is
■round, so that at the time of Mrs. Merritt Staley and Mra. Wal­ fabric need little if any Ironing, smart In this suit of brown anil
injury wa boost hla Immunity by ter Trague presided over the
well aa making it creqse and belgs llns tweed — f r o m th»
cotton Harry Frcchtel collection. Slim­
giving him an addiliona. shot of punch bowl. Other* assisting with soil resistant—and the
the serving were Mrs. E. M. Olliff. content adds comfortable absorb­ ness at the hip Is marked by
tetanus toxoid.
*
It's sensible end Intelligent, to Mr*. Joseph Leinhart and Mr*. ancy. Both fibers, of course, wash flat bands that button to Ilia
back.
'
so# that your children, you, and George C. Mean* alternated at the beautifully* in aoap ard water.
the rest of your family too have piano during tha evening.
Out of town gueete for the wed­ = | | | = | | | = | | | = | | | = M I = | | | = | | | = | | I
tetanus shots regularly every two
ding Included Mr. and Mr* Emaryear*
•on J. Eeles and daughtara, 8yl-

BUM ALL TUB WAT la
Nettie ■ ■■■—Isla'a *oet • end * n m n B ia &gt; The Met ia auM
-------- .— - h e m tweed t*

vlth 4 lack «W»h, w
with a * * * *

( TFTT5 S A N F O R D H E R A L D
F ri. J u n e 21 , 1955
Page 5

Vocation Tim*

Twm e*
”

partr Nr aoptaa m u r

/v/./z/i Dutch
Chocolate Drink

if

S

ll&gt;

If
l7

•IB "

IVEY'S

NOTICE
WE WILL BE

CLOSED

ii

Thursday - June 30 f\
To Add Dividend!

To The Savin? Accounts
And On

M onday-July 4
Independence Day

If
IlIS lIlB lIlK llIS lIlB lIlK lIIS S iH :

”,

% cm m
W w EScm tt
fES
SPARKER-BUDDYEBSEN
s m * sbmmi wilt • m . « nnuoauM

�Player Trades Backfire On Richards
last-plain Orioles after leavInR the a* the Indians* trounced the Oriny i :i &gt; w ii .ks
“ '
The Associated Pres*
prnn.int-conlcmlmd‘ Chicago
White ole* 9 2 yesterday.
Byrd, a 30-year-oid right-handIf Baltimore Manager Paul Rich-! Sox, ha* palmed off, amonR other*,
ardv i* keeping a record of the ptrher* Boh Turley and Harry er bundled off to the While Sox
players he has traded away. hejByrd and outfielder Gene Wood- nine days ago, gave just four hits
and blanked Washington 7-0. It was
can call it “ Poor Richards' line.
Diary."
'
I Woodling, traded to Cleveland Ids rvcond victory in two start*
Give a liv k Richard*, who dou- 1**1 week, really hnnmcranged. Hcj since leasing the Orioles.
Wes as general manager for thrlgnt 4 for-4 and batted in four runs| And Turley, the young fire-ball-

er who wrnt to Mew York'* Van-'Hots without any help from Birhkee* in an 18-player deal that | *rd*. The boston* whipped Detroit
whipped Woodling and Byrd to Balb*hlnd ,F r*nk S“'l1iv,n’* U n '
.
, ,
, .
.
. . hitler, moving to within one pertlmorn last winter, fanned six.j ren,asc ,H)lnl o( lhe fourth-place
walked just one and shut out Kan-'Tiger*,
sas City on three tingles 3-0.
I Those results—with each winner
The other American Leagur sweeping a Ihree-game se rie sgame was won hy the Boston Red left the Yanks nut front by two

Carnes over thi White Sox, who
in turn were two ahead of Cleve­
land. Boston and Detroit are both
. . . .
,
10 K" me* ,,c!|lnd Now ' orkIn the national, (irat-place Brook­
lyn swept three from Chicago by
winning 7-4. The Cubs Ir second
place since May 23, slipped one

garnet, now li batting .444 ft)9
Cleveland in aix game*. The In­
dian* hid 15 hits for the second
straight day off Baltimore pitch­
ing while Bob 1 cllcr tossed a fourhitter for his second victory ol
the &gt;ear.
Only one Washington runner
reached second against Byrd, who
had a 3-2 record in 14 games with
Baltimore. The White Sox got 7 of
their It hits off loser Camilo Pa«^
rust. Nellie Fox doubled home t h ^
first two Chicago runs in the third.
Turley, as wild as he is fast
' on most occasions, held off until
the eighth Inning before giving his
mh b m • |
Tal
T a tla la
21 11 I T 12
Beach picked up a full game on I
in nr walk. He retired the first 15
H a r r i a 2h
%
1
4
2 a — l i arn f o r S c h m i t t tn 2 th
men he faced, fanning the first
the leaders with an 11-4 victory I ’r a p p i i
n
r
l
a
a
r
f
*
.
.........
...
1
i
n
t
i
p
2
»
h
»
—
a
2 2
i four. Bobby Shantz waa the loser,
over Gainesville. Bain prevented h««'M*r rf
0 2
baafnnt
____
lift MW IMtt—T
I The only Detroit hits off Sullivan
Lakeland and St. Petersburg from Wi l s o n If
0 2
K— f*nyt1#r,
Millar, ( J ar cl a, D.
were doubles, by Bill Tuttle and
Jit
1 I
f ' o n h l . II—( i n r r l a , U a t i h l D. t ’ook.
playing and thus dropped Lakeland
By GAYLE TALBOT
I l t i l l r r 2,' Wr i t er T r r r r l l &gt;*n&gt;i|rt#
( t at t ' h lh
pinch hitter Ferris Fain, as the'
2 I
from sixth place to seventh.
NEW
YORK
U
T
—
It
will
be
a
I
V
l
e
i
r
n
r
.
I*ia&gt;,
W
•latarillflI—
\VII»
Ca u r l t a s t i rf
1 I
*»»M, i l at t f l t * tit,
Mi l l ar.
Hr hni l l t , long, long time, wc fearlessly pre­ big right-hander made his record
1 7
Bob Arendt pitched his 12th vic­ W a l i r r r
Wr i t er . H n y d t r l »a\ l n.
n a t c h 2- dict. before thi promoters will 9-6. Boston, zipping along with i r
Val ut a* p
A t)
P r a y 1. 2 It— ( l a t r h .
(jaurlrrau,
tory for Daytona Beach. The TVhit a p
b «
.I* If! 21 IQ H* liinltt ni l — P r a y , l i l t - W elter, work up nerve enough tn serve victories in the last 16 games
Gainesville (,-Mrn got only eight 4.% *Tt»lnla
bl l - l l r r i e t , 1 &gt;m\ Is. H— Mi l l er (fl y). the customers another blue plate romped In on a grand-slam homer
M i l l II
I MV la
I»P .Hihniitt t o Mil*
hit* and three of their four runs
ala b a a
r III lM%|p. L e f t —h. t f t f r rd 2, t l r - special between the champions of by Jarkie Jrnaen and a two-run
2 I • J ll ea ml
were unearned. Dan Keith and fI »r a yC omItsW 2&gt;• r f
clout hy Norh Zauchin. Ted Wil­
o ! I I t l l - of f — pr l ors i i t i R, V a l ­ the 160 and 176-pound divisions.
2 1 3
1
Jerry Mirhant each drove in three Mat i r l cl l n e
2 2 7 1 i nas 2 W 111In 2. HO-by— ValniMB
liams was walked three limes and
It
has
long
since
hern
proved
1 b | | 2. Pet er ai t n 7. #W bi t e 3, H O —Val Daytona Beach run* and Gene Ben­ T\ lalrlrkarl l .3If1#
4 t b n t nas 7 In 2 2-3 I nni ng* Wh i t * 4 tn to be an unnatural pairing. Thr singled in his only official trip.
nett smacked a two run tinnier. l l ut l #r i f r f
4 1 1 0 4 1-2 I nn i n g * HA KFt— V' al maa (7-2). 'Heat farce, in which large and
RrnolAyn kept winning as basesP e t e r n n n f€-b&gt;. W P —
hr ol t l r f
4 1 4 1 While
The crowd was 396 at Daytona Sa -rKt
o a b o p e t e m m I . TV— P a t e r s o n ( 9-4) . I*— deadly punching Archie Moore dis­ loaded singles by Pee Wee ‘Reese
i f u l a 2b
Beach,
Mn &gt;il r r *$
4 0 2 1 Vel ma* M l - 2 1 U— I l c t i C a r m a n . patched “little" Bobo Olson with and Gil Hodges scored four run*
I'rlefann p
nn i, a v on
T — 2: IK. A — 372.
2 2 1 2
almost the first good tick he land­ in the seventh tn overhaul the
ed, should serve as a lasting warn­ Cubs and loser Sam Jones, lltl*
ing to the middleweights to stay beaten Clem Lahine won his sixth
with help from Karl Spooner.
in their ctssi.
'
If ever again there is a middle­ The Card* had J2 hits off loser
weight champion whn feels he has llerm Wehmeier and two reliefers,
outgrown his opposition and who including homer* by Wslly Moon
insists upon stepping up a notch, and Bill Virdon. Rookie Floyd
he should at leaat hr forced to Wooidrrdge seauered aeven hil^
abandon his title and declare him- giving the Phils just one after
sell a full-fledged light heavy­ the fifth.
weight before the papers are
By MURRAY ROSE
NEW YORK f/T)— Fik'ht fnnn atill buzzed today over signed. This would automalirally
thn tjutcoma of n September Reeky Mmcinno-Archie Moore deprivr such a match of its fal*e
and mute the ballyhoo. Ol­
heavyweight title fight and the “ happy talk" whs pxpcctcd glitter
son would not have agreed to such
to speed up the negotiation* for tho eagerly awaited match. let mi.
ri.o N iu * static t.KAfirr:
"Rooky’ll murder the old man'*. . . “Archie in too sm art In retrospect—and one ran he
I n l r r S i r 'l aam -1 sal lurl.irtr*
for
thr
Rock and he can hit just
[brilliantly retrospective after see­
W I, r - t
Orlando
«i Si ,«T| as good."
ing a fighter splattered the way
I'fun*
in
.ass
Bobo was—there was less reason
That's the way it’s been going
tlsrlnna B»«rh
X* SI .ill
IV. Palm H«s&lt; h
XV 11 SIT ever since 18-year old Archie pul­
for this mixed grill than there was
PLYMOUTH
&lt;isln*MIII*
II Si .111
for the last previous one between
l .a k - U n d
: • 41 .4ns verized
middleweight champion
Hard Tea
saarnril •
Z* II .i nn
Joey Maxim and Sugar Ray Rob­
St. I ' e U r t h ' i r i
11 I I .111 Holm Olson in the third round at
inson on another ilziilng June
PLYMOUTH
lie Polo Gioumls Wcdnciday
S ttltm u MAI.4*
night In 1962.
Sedan
W I, Prl night.
Pi Pstsrsburs
t • l.iwiti
The Sugar Boy had been a gen­
4&gt;ma
i * l.non
K
i
PLYMOUTH
"Happy talk, that's what it is,"
uine Hitic marvel for years as
Orlando
1 1 .inn
Club Cetip*
I ' l i i u n i ti«ach
t l .inn said Charley Johnston, manager
ha
fought
his
wsy
triumphantly
up
&lt;Uin«-svill«
1 1
Inn of Moore. "That’s music to my
through three weight divisions.
M CHEVROLET
Paafnrd
I I
.arm
CIHCAGO UT — Brooklyn's Roy One even heard silly talk that he
l.-k-ltiml
n 1 .mm cars. We'll do a million easy."
S IDoor
VV. 1*1m. l O s r h
n -i .non
A Broadway bookie, taking note Campanella, who seems to be might give Joe Louts trouble. Ray
•lOStl.TS VKSTKNIMV
£
0
DODGE
\V. Palm Uasi.li a t
Cocoa, mid., nf the intense interest, set up a headcsJ for his seventh all • star waa, verily, -a dreamboat, while
Club Coape
rain
alarting “line" of 2-12 Marciano, baseball catching assignment In Maxim merely waa the belt of a
Usyton* tlssrh It. nalnssvllls e
which mean* undefeated Rocky Is
sad crop of 176-pounders. Joey
«4A44i;a TIIIIAV
DODGE
Orlando at Writ I'nlrn llrsi h
a 11-5 favorite in man-to.man Milwaukee County Stadium July himself candidly conceded that he
Sedan
I’mna nt llnlnrsvllln
12,
look
the
individual
lead
again
odd*.
couldn't punch hard enough to
llaylnna lla.lih al laih-land
- g j DODGE
Saalard al *1. Pslsralmra
New ^ * 'k , Chicago, Los An­ today in the national baseball poll. raise a welt.
Sedan
E trn so, It waa Robinson, not
geles and New Orleans were the
Campanula moved' to the front
ANKNIl'AN LKA44I r.
H i.
DODGE
contending cities for the trout al­ with a deluge of 3)3.173 votes in Maxim, who finally wilted In tho
m
N . w T urk
42 la .14]
Club Ceepe
( ’hlcHHP
40 22 .04 ft though New York appeara to have the latest tabulation. Larry (Yogi) 100-degree heat and practically
40 !4 .io f tho edge.
• 'I r tr in iid
Berra of the New York Yankees, passed out babbling on his stool • J J PONTIAC
llrlri-ll
32 2&lt;) b i t
Al Weill, manager of Marciano, who holds a big lead in the Amer with two more rounds to go. Sugar
ItoMlim
21 31 •H i
Doer
K . n t a s r ii r
21 10 .171 ai-parrntly fevors NVw York so he
lean League catching srramhlc hadn't been hit too much and he
" aslitnatun
:a 40 3«i
was
far
ahead
on
points,
but
the
PLYMOUTH
can
draw
heavily
from
Rocky'*
Usltlniiii*
20 41 .101
took over second plare with 317,
Club Ceupe
NKM.I.TS TP.ITtlH IlA V
New England fans. If he has his 021 ballots to trail Campanella by very physical exertion of tugging
X * » Yoik 4. K anaaa City 0
and hauling with the bigger man
way
it
will
It*
another
theater2,166.
llnatnn T. Iintroll n
g g DODGE
proved too much for him.
I'hli-aa-, 7, tVaahlnalnn S
television hookup for Rocky.
Club Ceupe
Al Kaline, the Detroit Tigers' 20- As for Olson, ha almost seemed
Clsvsland *. Ilaltln inra 1
“ I ain't'saying whera we’re gon­ year-old right Holder, is in third
HANKS TUIIAV
to
realize
from
the
moment
he
r l n y s l a m t at N a w York I.MsIit) na go," said Wcili after talking place in the individual race with
stepped out to face Moore that
—H a r r i s tS-aa *a K urka t * - 3 &gt;
I'lilrapn a t Boston I.MsIit) — with promoter Jim Norris yrstcr- 316,608. Duka Snider, Brooklyn he waa a boy sent on ■ man's
Seminole County
P l a r r a U-41 l a I 'a r n r l l 1 3-] &gt;
day. "I ain’t heard from thoaa renter fickiar, I* fourth with 3J2,errand. He looked pala and ex­
K a n a i a c i t y a t n a ll l n to r s t n l s h l ) guys In New Orleans or I.os An804 and the New York Yankees'
— I 'o r t n c a r r s i o | l - l | &gt;■ l to * o H n
grlrs yet. But I like to listen to klickey Mantle in fifth with 310,483 tremely uneasy and there was no
€a-S *
Motors Inc.
light of batiks in his eyes. He made
l ir t r n l t a t VVaahlnetnn ( n l a h t ) - - uiopositions,
votes.
l i o s l t t i - l l va P m t a r f l a ld |T-S&gt;
no pretans* of moving in and slug­
‘This is a hot fight and I gotta
"Hie balloting, which opened June ging away with both handa, the
n t e . rim sl
S A T I M A L L K A f llK
W I.
P r l get what we can. Rocky'* tha 10, wilt close at midnight one week style of fighting which made him
Uannklvn
4* IS
.7*4 champ, ain 't h*7"
from today.
the scourge of tha middleweight*.
Mtln a ti k r s
i i I*
,1 1 a

Cardinals Journey To St. Pete Tonight
S n n fo rd ’s C a rd in a ls, a f io r error by D U Si.-,drr and a Single Terrell. Dick Snyder forced S,h-

postinp n 7-fl victory over tlio Iby Dave Drapp. Hack to bark dou-|[ni*** l”*1 • "*
,0
eterson
bases.
Orlando
F
iv
e
rs
hero
Inst
jblr*
by
Tony
Hatch
and
Jess
Gnu01,1/
'
*
"
. .
...
.
i linn
Don Prau
Pray hit a liner to right
nip lit, journey to S t. Petersproduced a run in the so
Hint
rlmlrd
Gaudirau for n basrliuiK for n game with the
clenring triple, with Pray scoring
Saints to n ig h t.
The Flyer* took « brief lead when Juan fimvin hobbled the
Only 27.1 fans were present
n ,, tnp of ibe fouith when relay. That was all for Yalmas.
p* Memorial Stadium last .terry Wi-her slummed one iif I'eto The Cardinals will be nt home
night as Sanford exploded Peter,on'* offering* far over the ngain Sunday, when they will
take on Corna In a dmibleheader.
for five Dig rims in the fourth left field wull.
Inning nnd then bung on to edge ! The roof raved in on Joe \n lth r Flyers,
mas in the Sanford fourth. Bub
flrlnndo nnd Sanford both pick-1Miller walked to lend off, Terry
rd up single marker* In tlm ftrd Terrell singled, nnd nfler Connie
anil second innings. The Flyers I llutler hnd forced Miller nt third,
Scored in the first frnme on mil Bon Schmitt singled to scoie

ON RISE IN ROYAL RANKS- By Alan Mover
0O D O

OLSON,

JI/P D l ENE/GHT
C HAM P,
T P /£ : to
P /E E /V
THE POVAL
RAN
,HHEN HE
t P A T T IE S
A R C H IE

Onn game, will be plnyrd ill the
afternoon.
Cocoa rainrd nut of s scheduled
game with West Palm Beach
inched up In 5',j games behind
Orlando. Third place Daytona

\

P O P THE
„ LIGHTHe a v v
T IT L E /N
Ry'EM Yo r k

-

"A

••
:

'

/ ')

cm

.JU N E 2 2 .

Dan Keith Again
On Top Of Heap
in League Hilling
On lop of th« heap again In Flo­
rida Slate hatting la fine hitter
Den Keith of Daytona Beach, this
week owning a robust average of
.416 for his efforts to date. Dan
Is once more on tnp in base hits
with 06, and in 2-base hits with

22.

amnNirt s* I s , r w m lr * s «

Fetchick Leads
In Golf Tourney

4V.-Y

By JIM COIR
PORTLAND. Ora (Jt - More
than a trore of proa and amateurs
were in hnt pursuit today of Mike
Fetchick, the comparative un­
known whn sneakvd In yesterday
with a M to take the first-round
lead in the Western Open Golf
Championship.
Fe.chick, a pro from Mahnpac,
N Y., was only one stroke ahead
of six others in a field of some
170.
Seven more players wera tied
at 70. A total of 20 entrants bet­
tered nr equatrd the course's 3517—72 par yesterday despite show­
ers that elowoJ fairways.
Several others gained contendbtg positions They Included Sam
Enead. the West Virginia favor­
ite, despite an opruing 71
FrtcDlrk tilrnl his rard almost
unnoticed as mosl of the galleries
concentrated on Snead and aucb
ether favorites as Dr. Cary Middla
eoff, Gene LltlLr, Mike Souchak
and Julius Boro*..
Ha acored a spcctarular ala
blndla SI (n the fcr»t round.
I r .U y Quick of Loi Angeles,
alia carded a U hut the rules com
aiittec penalited him two atrokea
•ftci discovering that he carried

t

Red Roberts of West Palm
llrach show* the most total bases
149, but Id snared In a 2-way
deadlock fur n-liase hit honor*
with Hill ipatrisa of Daytona,
carh having 9.
Inn RixJcfgurs of Cocoa I* king
pin in Rbl v again with 72, a fig
lire that reflect* an Increase of
1.1 over last week, and i* poison
to opposing hurler* in the hmnrr
department with hia 13 4-ply
blows.
Orlando Gonxale* of Cocoa seta
a merry pare on the base paths,
and has eluded the tag 20 time*
tn pace the atolen base depart­
ment. Dava Drapp of Orlaado
owns tha most tallies, 71.
On the hill, Orlando Pena of
Daytona spurt* the best earned
run average with a gaudy 1.66
foil 103 innings. Caspar DrIMonta
of 5U Pete Is close on his heels
at 1.72, whila Claude Raymond of
WPO owns a creditable 2.17 mark
for 108 rounds.
Big winner in the league is Alex
Gordy of Orlando with his 13
wins agslnst but 1 aelbseks. R’&gt;.
Undo Ortega of Gainesville dis­
plays tha most complete games,
14, whlta also sharing the sp'-tlight for workhorse honore with
Joe Valmes of Orlande, each hav­
ing toiled 134 rounds.
John Ivory Smith of Daytona
can brag of his Isagut-hlgh 1G4
strikeouts, but must taka tha bit­
ter with the sweat in also owning
tha moat walks, 99. Gordey boast*
the most shutouU, 4, with Gaines­
ville's Norm Hughe* possessing 8-

In his bag IS duba, one over the
limit.
Boros also suffered a two-stroke
penally. Ills caddy touched hia ball
on the sixth hole alter he had
b*rd&lt;ed two of lhe Brat five holes
and appeared on the way to a
g ir .t round, tie finiihcd with a
71
Mtddlecoff; LitUer; Souchak;
Boh McKcndrick, Lake Grove,
Ore; Taut O' Leary. Bismarck,
N.D.; anil Ralph iUomquiat, Glen­
dale, Calif., had 60s.
Betide* Quick tha TO (hooter*
wer# Bob Rosberg, San PrancUeo;
lltlly Maxwell, Odessa, Tex.: Ed
Oliver, Iwmont, III.; Bo Wlnnlnger,
Dee Fondy, first baseman for
Oklahoma City; Kenneth Town*, the Chicago Cubs, erespted 810
Fort Lewla, Wash.; and George fielding chanres before he made
Schnelter, Salt Lake City.
his first error this season.

Briggs To Meet
Another Ex-Chomp
KNOXVILLE, Tean. UB-Seatile's
Chuck Eriigs ,whe eliminated last
7*»r's lillUt Wednesday, mat a»other termer Champion today ai
two more round I wer* scheduled in
tee National Coleglata Golf Touroapant.
and Earl Moeller. IN)
irad tn tha third
from yesterday

Sports

Roundup

Fight Fans Buzz Over Outcome
Of Marciano-Moore Title Bout
THE SANFORD HERALD
Page fi
Fri. June 2i IS.i.'s

,AI O O R £

percentage point behind idle Mil­
waukee.
St. Louis beat I biladclphia 7-1
in the only other game scheduled,
dropping the Phils into sixth place
behind idle Cincinnati.
Woodling, who Richards had
hoped would give the Orioles a
big hat but hit only .221 in 47

Standings

CARS

Campanula Takes
Individual Lead
In Baseball Poll

51

•717

•I IN

12

MM
•I2W
•INI

I 'h l r a s o
14 at
Naw York
I I 11
f l m - ln n a ii
I I 11
Phlladsliil.ls
1* I t
Nt- I .null
37 11
i'ltlsb u rfh
I I 44
k K i r i T I TESTCRnAV
at. I.mil- 7. Philadelphia 1
Brooklyn 7. I'h ica pn 4
DAMES TODAY

.sat
.4*1
.411
411
III*
.11 1

Brooklyn a t M tlwaukaa I s i t M )
-----~ ‘ Ms 44-11
ila h u raghh aatt CCbli-aio—
_______r
b lea s
~F r'l t o S
44-Xi v - a lln n a r t l - S t
N sw T n r k . s t a t _ L n u l s ( n l g h ] l

—4J n m - s

&lt;1-

y» rohoiskr &lt;T-i&gt;

or l a w r m r t ____
P h ilad e lp h ia a t C l n r la n a ll (I.
t w l - n l ( h t ) —N e s r a y ie - * i and Mro
alnekl *S-91 n r k t is a v a t l- S t va
M la arrln 14-1) a n d Niiskall iS-4)

REAL TEAMWORK
LINCOLN. Neb. (A»t—Her*'*
how ■ bit of teamwork helped a
rtp achool hurdler gat his buddy
ito the race.
-The pel was busy with a
field event end It appeared as
thought ha would ha lata for tha
race. 80 the quick-thinking team­
mate jumped the gun and scamp­
ered over three hurdles before the
■tarter could ftag him down. The
■Util we* Just enough to permit
tha Utrdy hurdler to line up for
the second start of tha race.

G

DUPONT
stays like new
for years!
Am -Okan, DUCO Alkyd Kaaunnln a n a l bn bnst lor walk, m adwork nnd furaitaro tn evnry warn,
Wandarfal far kKchnnn. both* nr
•gy nran that fata rrpnatnd wmr
and wmbinffc Thn Glam in kfanl.
ao, far porch and law
DUCO man nano
Jm laan i

D O ELclH G

iD U C O ko*

U ni ("AoH*t embalm may bn
— Hand J m f e f U w flan) d ry in g

nU fo.) Suynr-wnnbabln! D irt,

ponon and pbna

NIGHTLY at 1:15

off b a

J I M L dkfrm w

WUamnmat

lA jjtN E E S Wed. f t Sat, a t 2j
LU M B C K N U U B K X

f r y ft
eliminated defending
CtenaiSn MBDnan rrrhkfaa ol
S m f h l i Mete U Jh o A nt iw nd.
S IS W « l W f i * .

hi D iyt—a B uck
&gt;V.* V&lt;-/. N«

•Jt-

| ’Stt

•-

in

V0« SUDOKU SKftVKS

�1

t

THE SANFORD HERALD Fri. June 24 1935
AT* TOM I A U - » ■-

If It's Worth Anythin*
I t’s Worth Advertising In

Whether buytiyc or eeflliig. It will
pay you to tee:

A « w a n ro s m * - g
AIR CONDITIONING

THE OLD HOME TOW N

MY F O L K S A C T
AWFUL
GACYkBOUTS
A W FU L G
ACW BOUTS

Room or House
J . W. HALL, BKALTOft
H. 3. POPE CO. INC.
Build] ng
florid* SUte Bin*
Bank Buili
see SMth Park 4 n .
P M « 1*48
Phone 1758
‘ Cell Hell"
Footlockers ............ SP*^.*L*7 95‘
Paint ........................... „ M 5°
HEAR THIS!
All site* tarpoulins.
Im m ediite possession on one of
ARMY-NAVY SURPLUS
the most spacious, nearly new.
Phone 1321
3 bedroom homes we h a\e ever 310 Sanford Ave.
uttered. Priced at 5U.S00, this
T H E C U R IO S IT Y S H O P
Is a dindy buy.
17-92 at Hiawatha. Usaa A new
furniture, antiques, brte-a-hrae.
Seminole Realty
Come In and brouse around.
W. DTPTRICKS
T. W. MEMO
lM t Park Aveeee
flo at 27 New arrival* at Trading 1*0*1!
1 mile S. on Orlando Highway
(AYHOND M. BALL. BROKKB 3 Artistic China Cabinets
S. D. Huthleyman, Associate
from .................................... 37.50
104 South Park At*.
Phone M i 2 Piece sectional couch . . . . 40.00
A* new Magic Chef Stove
R n t l l e ......................... . . . .
" 5 00
New Masonry home, well land­
scaped Lot 60' x 130'. Thorns 2 Lounge Chair* A Ottoman 27.50
Beautiful Brecicuay Wicker
23»-R. 2334 Oak Ave.
set ....................................... 30.00
9x12 Axmtnlstar rug and pad 25 oo
For your Real E itata needs:
solid walnut dining set
C ullen a n d H a rk e y , R e a lto rs 9thepiece
i m
finest-cost 850.00 now 285.00
104 N. ParlC Ave. Phone 2313.
Trade in your old furniture
WELACA APABTHKNTS: rnoma,
private hatha. 114 W. First SL
3 bedroom home, corner lo t rea­ Single bed and box springs, 55.
Phone 11U-R. 2121 Magnolia.
sonable down paym ent Low
RoDaway and Baby Beds
monthly payment. M l Rosalia Hotpoin* Electric atove. Excellent
Day, Week or month—TeL 1425.
Drive.
condition. $50. 1513 Palmetto.
Pnrmltuw Cewter 111 West Vint

Open House

Sunday June 24
Avalon Apt*. Efficiency. Phone
425._________________________ _ Lovely 3 bedroom stucco home in
nice neighborhood. Hardwood
floors, extra large living room,
ITJRNISHED ApartmenL 500 Park
separate dining room. Kitchen
Ave._________________________
fullv equipped. On beautiful
Furnished Kitrnenatte apta. Air
75' r 117’ lot with shade tree*.
Condltionad. Slumberland Court.
51.000 Down, monthly payment*
less than rent. May be seen at
South City llmlta Highway 17-12.
an earlier date by appointment.
S Bedroom Horae. H Block from (Follow the smalll arrows from
P ark A 22nd St. lo location)
A
Southslde school. Call 2541.
Tropical Realty
ignolla Ave Phone 1*
SEE Seminole Beelty tor Desir­
able Homes and Apta. Thone 27.
ARTtCLKS rOR SALK - 4
FURNISHED Apt. Phone 432-W.
50th Anniversary
COOL— 5 Room Furnished Apart­
m en t Front and back screened
porches- Garage. Take one
S P EC IA LS
child. No Pets. 608 Palmetto Reg. 3.95 Folding Grill* ....1.00
Ave. Shown by appointment Reg. 4.95 Jumbo Hassocks
Phone 276-J.
Choice, of Colors .. 2.25
Furnished cottage for couple, or Reg. 5.95 Metal
Porch Chairs . . . . 3.88
with baby. 814 Elm Avenue.____
Reg. $.95 9x12
Furnished 2 bedroom apartment.
Linoleum Rug* . . . 6.50
1st floor. 600 Park Avenue. Ax- Reg. 10.95 Plastic Covered
* aarello. Phone 1474._______
Cocktail Chairs . . . . 7.50
Reg. 27.50 Maple Chest
2 Bedroom furnished house. 5MP0
of Drawers ......... 19.50
per month. Phone Mt or 743-W Single Hollywood Bed Complete
afler 6:00 p. m.
_____
with Plastic Covered Headboard ................................... 39.95
t room apertment. ground floor.
J
completely furnished. Hot A Reg. 88.50 8Pc Dinette Suite
Choice of Colors .. 58 50
* *; Cold water included, rhonc
2392, 313 Palmetto.
Phone 127
A 2 bedroom house, nicely furnished 203-M E. l i t SL
*
Porch, carporte and large lawn
VENETIAN BLINDS
*
Longwood, J. R. Grant. Call
tMatioaaUy Adv. BoUa-Head)
263692.
Manufactured In Sanford
UNFURNISHED 4 Room House Sa t h u to Tenet I— B ind O n
with 2 Bedrooms. Phone 1326-J
0 8 Waal M BL
Phase I
LARGE. Clean Apartment. Down­
stairs. Small one, $35.00 611 Small Dining Room Suite, Bed
with springs also good kuy in
Park Ave.
other miscellaneous furniture.
Phone 762-W. 2535 Palmetto Ave.
2 Bedroom Furnished house. 1200
Myrtle Ave. Phone 448-J.
FREE
# Navy couple only. 3 room apt, A Paring Knife for the Ladies,
Ballons for the kids at^
furnished. Daslrabla location.
Phone 2969-J.
Be**erjy Apelleses Caster
"Your WesfagaeuM Dealer"
' 2 room furnished apartment.
Maytag Washer*
Phone 206.
111 MagnaMa A n .
fk saa 1787
Apartment, 3 rooms completely
USED
TRACTORS
furnished. 1400 Park Avenue.
Brttt Trader C*.
NICE Bedroom, Private entrance ■ w a y 1 7 4
and bath. Phone 2029-W.

=
- - A NDDUTMHBEEYS T
s E" ,'r » '
~
THE---- * ■SITTE'reS F O R y
_ _

M

E - -

,

n
12

! -*-

13
it

-

s■ ■ . __~
" -^ '_/ / W
•

n

2 Room^ g t . 100 Avtcado.
Hutchison OCEAN FRONT A part
meats 23* South Atlantic Devtons Beach, Fla. Phone 2374-W.

acnoss
Fissure
Ches!*
for tiered
utensils
(CUs*.
Antiq »
Ftreirro
B-iy
window
Corroded
A female
coat
Branch

16 Question
I F 'x t D U C O U L D W V

.G E T A S IT T E R FOR.^
? H E R , Y O U C O U LP
, A T L E A S T HAVE
C L O S E O THE
W IN D O W ///

A BARGAIN!
ALL CHANNEL TV ANTENNA
WITH ROTOR AND TELESCO­
PIC MAST. Coat new — $125.
Will sacrifice fer $71. Call A. T.
Ball, 131, or can be teen et
2402 DeCotUa Ave., Wynnewood.

2 Bunk bed* with link springs,
ST 7L M 1
W H A T W IL L T H E /M E IO H B O e S S A Y ?
Thane 411-M.
( m in*, ktmo n i n i u m m i r * r a t » . m m
i
6 -2 S
NEW LOAD — Used Furniture.
Fancy Desks, Hat Racks, Wash
Stand* and ChesU. The Curio*ity Shop.
PM M LI
i7-A im &gt; m bB it.E A -T *A hjn*
24BEAUTY PARLORS -24
2 PARAKEETS and Nice Cage.
Phone 221$.
---------------- z m -------------P. M. CAMPBELL
For Lovelier H*ir
BOUGHT SOLD TRADED
15 ft Speed Boat and Tecnea Trai­
General Centraclor
GET PROFESSIONAL CARE!
Roy Reel’s Usee Car*
ler 3150 00. Phone 1424 or
"Homes of Distinction"
Santord Ave. A 11th SL
E va-lte** H cnuty Shop
294. J. M. Blythe.___________ Bl-Way 17-92
PkMO 1447
P h o n r 543
1953— DUO 42 ft. House Trailer.
Oemptete TELEVISION SERVICE
Air conditioner. TV. wall tn SANFORDS M O S T MODERN
on all makes end models.
wall rarpeting. Must Sell. 55.000.
BEAUTY SALON. Specialising
Highest CASH, TRADE-IN price* SANFORD ELECTRIC CO.
Ph Orange City, Spring. 44-352.
in ah phase* of Beauty Culture
paid fer used furniture Call 958. Ua Magnolia 4»e.
Orange City Mobile Home Park.
Phene
442
including Gyrnlatnr Reducing
Wilson-Malar Furniture Co. I ll
and Treatments by REGISTER­
E. let SL
FOR SALE — 19.M Chevrolet
PLUMBING
ED Ma**iie.«p.
Pickup Truck. Good condition.
Contract
end
r«tv*ir
work.
Free
T-7
H A R R IE T T S *
.too Elm Ave.______ _______
estimates. R. L Harvey. 204
B E A U T Y NOOK
Sanford
Ave.
Phone
1828
.
19—
BOATS - MOTOR!
-49
For Sale — A.K.C. registered
(Air CondlUoned)
Boxer puppies, brlndle and
1954—
For Retter Plurnnmg
195 So. Oak Ave. Phone 971.
faun ralor, six weeks old. Call
3 6 IIP SCOTT-ATWATER 68 .V)
See or Call
2325-J.3.
5 Horse SCOTT-ATWATER 89 00
IAUNDRV BE R W IC K
W. J . K IN G
S Horse SEA-BEE ............... 68 .Ml
2880 South Park Phase M
fi Horse WIZARD
79 95 • On* hour • Was* and Damp
DOGS LOVE THIS NEW FOOD.
Watch your dog dive Into his Dragline service, Lakrfront* A 1952 — 7 'j Horse KE Rocket
Dry
MERCURY ..................... 115.00 • On* hoar % • Wash sad Dry
meal with enjoyment, when you
ditching. Estimstes given. Phone
7‘»
Horse
Rocket
feed PURINA DOG CHOW.
Geneva 2464, Orlando 52504.
Fold
MERCURY ..................... toooo • Finished laundry
Thrifty, easy-tofred, contains
Sanford 2221.
The following motors will pull • Sanltone Dry Clceelag
everything normal dog* nrrd
*kii* nirely.
to maintain sturdy vigor. Get FLOOR sanding and finishing.
N oath id de
L eaadrw w iet
Cleaning, waxing. Serving Semi­ 10 llor-r SCOTT-ATWATER.
DOC. CHOW at
Beatt Mdn P o^ esert Bldg.
nole
County
smrn
1925.
11.
M
Helm'll
—
Good
Condition
ton
no
Simpson Farm Supply
Gleason, Lake Mary.
12 Horse SEA-KING ........ ltnoo _____ t*« Beet 2Stt HL
l t l W. 2nd SL
Phone 1458
12 Horse ELTO Speedster .. 89.50
8KRV1CK
-a '
Mattres* A Box Springs
25 Hor.«e JOHNSON ____ 312 00
ir^ R L ^ K w B p T K ejrB eM M
Renovated
L'fed CENTURY 14 Ft. Runabout. L. I . Sill—Plano Technirlan
"Free Estimate"
Complete with Steering and
Phono 2I6L Houle 1. Sanford
Avon Cosmetic* lnlrrrulrd In la­
ECHOLS BEDDING CO.
Cannpv .......................... 225.00
dies with sale* ability. Steady Corner 2nd A Magnnlia Ph. 1232
llow will you swap?
income, pleasant work, chance
"Bud" Bamberger, Mgr.
It’* So Easy
Ilnw will *ou TraJeT
for advancement. Contact Mrs.
Open Monday 111 9 p. m.
Ynur old Motor for a
To PUca A Want Ad
Juanita Russell, P. O. Box- 975,
Belter grade — EVINRUDE!
Ju*t Call 1821 end nsk for
Orlando.
LAWNMOWERS a n a r p e n e d
RODSON
S p o rtin g Goods
Bicycle A General Repair
tha V.'ant Ad department
Fvlnrude
Sale*
A
Service
'$20.00 Deity, Sell Luminous Door
Stanley^ Dike Shop
Sanford Herald
304 E. I»l St.
Pboar *88
Plates. Write Reeves, Attle310 E. 4th SL Tel. 2431
boro. Mass. Free Sample A
W A N T AD
&gt;• FURNITURE- I Tm48 O—d*-m
Details."
LAWN and Shruhherv SPRAYED.
uy your Furniture al Berrv’*
Phone 2408-M. W. H. Pringle.
THREE WOMEN
Warehouse Furn., Co., at 901 W.
RATES
1st. St. Alt nationally adv. fut^
(between 30 and 55) for outside ENVELOPES, letterheads, state­
aurvey work in Sanford. E iments, Invoices, hand hill*, and _ndiire »t ware home prire*.____
The Want Ad Department Is
CONCRETE
Hence not necessary. Must
p r o g r a m s , etc. Progressive 21— IJ)ST~ANn~ FOUND —2t open
from 8:30 a. m. until 5:30 p.
Ready Mixed Concrete. Concrete
neat In appearance, .have a
Printing C o, Phone
*"
408 — 403
m. each business day except Sat­
Block, Send. Gravel, Cement
pleating personality, and a de­ West 11th St.
LOST — White SpR* dog with tan urday afternoon. Deadline for
“ ncrete Pipe to
...............
.. QuellConcrete
Meet'AS
sire to serve the public. P erm a­
spots, named ; Mike". Vicinity week-day insertions la 2:00 p. m
aUona.
nent work. Short hours, 9-1 , .1 FLOOR SAKDtmi • Finishing;
of Lake Mary, 2 week* ago, the dav preceding publication
248$
&lt;Hy« • " ? * * •
• week to
reward. Call Orlando 52729.
Oak floors furnished, laid A fin'
Any eat coming
eoming In hleter then
start. Write qualification* and
8 h an u u i Concrete Pipe Cl
Uhed In business since 1920. LOST - WALLET - VALUABLE 2:00
2:00 p. m. will he puhliibed unde
Phone
number
to
Box
RL
c/o
Out West lMfe SL
E. F. Stevens; Route 2, Box 227;
PA PER S- PLEASE RETURN Too Late To Classify.
Call 716-R-4 before 7 a. m. or
TO
L V SMITH, 512 MYRTLE.
after a p. m.
REWARD.
2 Pe. Sectional Sofa PLUS Cor22—ELECTRICAL 8KRV7CXA—a
ner Table.......................... $149.95 DOH SCHOOL BOY with Power life __ 2 E S 2 2 L
Mowar^wiata mowing. Phone
Day or Nlxhter Sofa, Platform
SBE Your General Eteetrte dealer
Rocker. TV chair (choice of
fer TV and AnnlJanree.
DAY, weak — Housework. 70X
B u fo rd Blaetrle Co.
' e c h &amp;l s BE DDING ( S ' 1* Cypress.
1M Megoelle Avo.
Phaee 442

Mather of Sanford

0 IB - ' BEACH RgNTAlB - IB

DAILY CROSSWORD

- “ O U T E V E W Y A llS H T

CLASSIFIED ADS

I

By STANLEY

tpfmtwrWU 1 N*eal OHlcm

K

Pago 7

17 Stilor
(slangs
18. Division
of * play
19 To the
ughl*
22. Tho.se
making
undue
pretensions
to wisdom
23 Teople of
a superior
tribe
iNiV. India)
27 Endures
23. Found on
*hlps*
bottoms
30 Sum up
31 Girls
nickname
32. Sure (diet.)
35. Viper
36 Entreaty
37. African
antelope
40 Man's
name
ipos.O
41 Aftermath
42 Missile
weapon
43. Thr*&gt;hea
44 Mountains
(So. Am )

DOWN
1 Top of a
wav*
2 Lariat
3 Subse­
quently
4 Man'*
nickname
.5 Know
i Scot.)
6 rohcemin
7. Kingdom
in Asia
« Transgress
9 Denary
10 Cunning
16 One-spot
card
16. Killer*
19 Large,
grassy
tract
\

20 Ever
(poet)
2! Large
worm
23 Tavern
24 Letter
of
t he
alpha­
bet
25 Sleeve.
less
K»i ment
i At ah t
26 A small
mass
29 Drink, ng
* essel
33 Therefore
31 Fertile
spots in
deserts

T ~ A

■3“

I
^
4
f
t
%

II

t r i t r r d l s ' l A*, »»f

33 Incite
36 Scheme
37 Sphere
33 Spawn
of fish
39. The frigate'
bird
(Hawaii)

40 A wing
7“

T —

9

o

12

&gt;•

•t

.1

%

%%

10

%
ii

4*3

It*

21

-I

29

%
%%

i%

M

'/ / .

ty .

20

;4

2S

hi

?'&gt;

19

Ai

AS

y)

%
JJ

34

40

1
%
4L

* \

%
A-l

HANSBROUGH

6-2A

ABSOLUTE

T I P M ) %V* J l
7M— TtlA r M,
F A I t A M S MOTr. l . I M H t n I 11 m* N
4 Twf 5 t r i t u f l
i : \ • t i»* i • i
t • t s ti,i 11 ^ .ii .i | t r op#r t l «a ■•Hh 1 * e n m*
it * l Hv f it r at I•&gt;It»&lt;| ni)Mv I,UK"
f r*» AttrBUl w III' l « n yp i i p p r i l
Liie ii Fit . lien tit iful am • # p ^
*11 Iii4ira. $r r m m l t r t i f n i t o n r y
r n n i l n i i l l n n | ,ri»|*FM) I m 400 f» fr«. 4 , **r r*n
H w ) 1.
ft. on L r 4 utif.il I ndi a n U i v r r . D i o ft i l r pt h, p r o v i i l l n c o u u t m d i n r
oppot t u n l t t (.it # \ | . 4i nmon. i n i C A l t o n m f .i . t r u i l r r 4*nurt e r l o t
&lt;U\ e l o| t mr nt .
*i i i m i w . j i 5 i : a r — a t i r - ur i xf *
n n i i A M » f &gt; — A I Hi | t| r \ t • a»»i| i
i p | 6 /apt i r* P i r « | | r t i t t f r i U o n ,
In e r i | i .» iilow ti, hi gh Ipi »"tir n 11 h hr t \ \ t r r»14 1 drm.ifli1. 1 . j n J*. M.
fitlliviB 4 l i u p i f k i i
i n an * , \ t i : r,.» p ni. Du p l e x
■ f’i K*r •*» a p t . i on. ! t2 W. 1 r r l r r ur . nr l St
1)08 L u c r r n * T f r r i c * .
All Rjit*. er i l i r ' t r o m p l f i r l v f u r n u h M J l Mgr o n l y 1 '
4n«i 1 4
ol d. m a i o n r v
-MiBtrurtlnn. Wi l l h r B»ld t«* enAbl * t h e p i rc t i a i t r Co Huy *rpnr»ir|&gt;* 4 r in gr oup*.
1111 i i %i i 1 \ , .11 m : .n» — m n i i \ m .
Ul I I . A. M' i l - II4*.11 11f til N•41&lt; «r 1 I .» Kr Dn pl r t
I ’O 4t t ni *| | U| « 9,
I deal home , r e n t a l a n d l i i v f i i m i n t
Z *70 7 ' b a i t c ^ n i t r u r t l n n ;
r i ich a pi ^ i i h l i r u l l v l n c rhnni 3 bad iom bat h* kt t chat t »dl nft 4a«
nt ot fr i u f.illx j pi j ti 11 r 1
« |iilppr&lt;l R r p a r a t r r n t n n r r
ri ft j r . *!! y
a .r . r nndl f loTird u j r h
.Wa l . ' r a i r * l i r e * l 40 d * r a p » d g r ^ u n d h
t an-i in* i r r m m i i i *# i Or !&lt;* I . a ka , i *i ot #i i ^d i w t m m t n i b a t c h .
b.3»»!n*. f •• h i p *- .4ml vs itrj- »pr*tf*
T I . PMb "D^i. I 4$h 4 r &lt;• 11 \ i* li nn*. bj 1«nc# i n n o t i m ^ d .
r%ih
|l
d t 'i»
'M i" i . rt' i e
4|i
. i h f prritti
i i | 8 f d i u of
u rallirr ur
W t i i r f" «1e«&lt; vipttx* lifo* h u r r a .
&lt;» i ii i.ii u r i n e s n m i K i . h
M a n r M * n r \ucli«'»i»
n&lt;*»» ti'»oK*d ot l m i i r * « j l . u l i l i ^ C o t i t
p t np # r i i f 9 D a y t o n i h. *. \.i»'»4hla b i ' i i n n * p r o p r t t y j. &lt;i g#uood
-Ak* i t F
C a t i l r . l M«, u l u i b t l f urpl ahai j i pt . on T i r k Av$.
1 1 7• **)| in s a n f n r t l . metrla.* liu*in#»» p r o p a r l v . #pt a n d h o m r a In
h i i r k a , flnrikt | #7*r | oyt ai i r# Ilf. ful ly t r i ul ppad, O p ^ t g f l r j . i l t n
fi omr , u i i nr ai
ni
ml b u l l d l n c l'1** l l a i n r a cii&gt;*« W, r o « f t
h' »nt f v Mi mr l mr r t* *•» M. r n 7 i * l n i 7 | #»• \N .Ht*h p. t pr r# f or
•»‘»l I f I mII#. If ) i'll I.4SS SSI»rl Itss It 11r f a i l M i l l . ,.f ||() *1# a «•r Ipi! n 71
you t ft al l i old
i n l a t r u i K unci ......... i dn P h 3 ) i ) | N*|iaa JPI 79
T h « I I A N o r i l l o l G I I « j y i, H i . t i AKl - KABT - S L 1:l. l . M I t K i r
l o buV »?ld Hfll

'r s r s &amp; s n ig i&amp; v *
nt UT t a n f u k

fk iM T

t For Rent: Dailraabla uptown of'
i f lice space.
Two bedroom FURNISHED home,
12 minutes from base, will
I LEASE to Navy Couple with
Going business —community pro-

ass
t

•ABY’ srrrwo — Housework.
Rachel Hicks, Pk. 15tl-J. TOP

— Factory, to Yee

FRIGID AIRB
■alee
end aerrlee. O. R°Hlgh, Oviedo,
l i e . Phone 4251 a r Saafcrt
I642-W after a p.m.

Cypres*

iy__

Ta

R a n d a ll E teetgte Co.

T h e T id e ?

as?*-

an
LFI will Pro-cut to customer's
A m M cJ ranttartfag end r*»atr*
own
plans,
and
specifications.
aorta,
112 M agooIia A va. P h a S T l l I
This ‘ custom" service gives
f lte k a r
P e h r t Co.
the builder exactly whet he
UP-114 Waal Pad
wants in a house package that i f a i m g g g g g
TKAfrEBA
®eeta the Individual requireHAYNKS Office MaafetM Oo.
ments of his own locality. It I t win way YOU t s u i l B before
oraig* Woods.
NaUva i
unusual omortunlQ 5 8 S L 1 Jfsu a c %
jou^ buy. Opaa Evenings end
frsfb'x,
*Tpersou
U L3S8S
dealers and quellfled
persons
S k a ra u a
y re ie P tp e C a ^
Interested In beeominr factnrv-caprei
a lette, Fla.
Representatives,
jeators. Inc.,
R E D -l-M IX C O N 0 E T E
complete
details
Mlreelo Gaecrato C t.
m Elm At*.
“
Ma k e
li
f. a 3 /
reyee U;

Priced to sell — owner leaving
town —two, bedroom. CB, mod-

* I «™

d iy . tio*S, Down,

mm v i M i r M
Baeitor — f i m r i l . I w r a a e t

n S tE

Park Ai

LOW IL L ■. o d e r

la

3 Bedroom Homo in Wyn­
newood. 2 Years Old.

This home has Oak Floom,
Ceramic Tile Bath, Dining
Area, Largo Living Room
and Kitchen Equipped with
G. E. AppliancesTelephone 111 after * T. M.
for appointment to aoo this
home.

T I L E

PIT FOR A QUEENre a m Rubber Maltreat**, Inoarr l n g M aurauaa, Couchoa,

(h ad A n i t a n . e Milanese. letta.

ROOFING

p-y Crimp - I t t *
veyer

• ramS mat
m S L JS S S m
I R atert

A. W

i lu a a i e
’ Km un

u v

RADIO

BARGAIN!

SUPER

D U P E R S P E C IA L S

Per Friday A Saturday
Ladies rayon &amp; cotton slips.. JP
Dresses,. V tJ
-95
fueat
*oP
W um .______
ssndeleall alaoaM er
yaulta alias 940 .. A
■
ta
. full cut........... JS
you buy la our gtarela

.

M. G . H O D G E S

On

"W K E H T
HELECTRIC
TTC EET1C E

ra n d a ll

_____ eaUa e

(Afl snafcaa as
UP Meg. Am

CO.

Servie*

m. ttfl P f . ■
models)

1 iitif s e I f

When you want to pick up
lumber or building m ater­
ials . • call 83 first. Every­
thin* will ba ready to pick
up un the double-quick
when you come in. This is
another of our helpful
service* to make 83 the
num ber.to call for lumber
and materials.

HILL LUMBER
fr SUPPLY YARD
111 W . 3 rd 81.

rtAve

P I i o m S3

FURNISHED AND INSTALLED
BY

D IC K M A P E S
GENERAL TILE CONTRACTOR
T E L . 21tS*W

F i ^ O L U M

B E R ;

AND B U / I O I N D M E E D S

^

SHERMAN CONCRETE
PIPE CO.
Oot West 13th SL

2439

W T U H -1 *5rnHl&gt;
1400 K I L n r Y C L C *

1

^*^r l d At K i n a
r v ri r h o n a *r a
f c u r dl ei vy M o r n il na g M u t t r a ' *
s*nm *r
l« Srt • i nr pe l
« | IPI (.’hur« I, .uer, I «
CVIAIMI
a on I Vor M At Hit
l.’.OO b u n i l i v Her eu. t i e
i. i* T w i l l « h » Hnugi
AITCII.5U05
h ..M
t - |tA'*k
•
! ,)d V e n .
, i, X t u e k e t T i m
4
.
Kumi av S e r e n a d e
7.nn J .
r l t t i n f On A C l " u d .I
F r e d o m Hi ory
7:15 j w *» r - r a L s u y
1\ M.nral Pam7 19 r &gt; m " j i " F " r Mu»ie
3
Fi -ocft Mui lr
a on •taiTS* F o r u m
4 » O t i i t Kdl t or
« so r&gt;:»l ••.*!' F o r Xluilo
• M 1 ' l t n i e Sl t i tuel F , t U n »
* 00 V, k I. e JMI.Ion
1 I . Alo.li- I ' t t r ' t I’t l U
*: 15 I ii I l , *t N . l i o n .
2 0*1 s , e M e n a ll-otr
»:Sn II*. I M n r l M m ,
«•
. J*i F u r w e r d Mur.-li
IOi SO At H e m e Wi l l , Mu i l o
I .SX. MSO
10 . . 5 «n t
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11 OO L t r m t n ' e Ca l l T o T r a j e r
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U . O t H « ; ( 0 Of f
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•
NORMM.
TtO'3 G u e i t S t a r
« no F l g n On
7 n H e r e To V e ' i
4:Ol L a s e e t n * Tal l T o J’r a r * e
?
n I’r n u d l y We Ha i l
a " , Iiawn Drtak ett
%*»n r ' h u r e h Ser vi ce
4.30 K,
»»
V Qb H t l e r r t C n n n e l !
I S , n r i i i r n Jamboree
A Look A&lt; Aue l r a l l A i
i t s Nee •
t id f i l l &gt;!• r o e M u i l r
f
T.nn S e v e n O' c l o c k C l u b
: o ni A t A H o m e s v i t h M u l t *
T *1 Ne we
10.id Midnight M in ut er
S on 5 p o r n Al A O t a s e e
ll o»i N e e •
I : o \ J n r V e y ' a Chol r e
U .oila M g n Of f
I : SO N o r n . n r P e e o s . n n *
5HI5IMT
I I i M o r n . n c N ' l ndlc*
t no t VM Id At N' ne
SIUU.5I.5 0
S I S Xluslo F o r I . ua. i e
r ** F i g n Cn
» JO H y m n T i m e
a ft! L e v m e n • C a l l T n P . i v e * j
1100 Cl ub
A.O* F&gt;a* n L r e a k e r a
t
10 S6 N e w t
a 10 Vsere
in is l i n o Cl u b
h
%
\
We,iern Jsmoree
11 on Cb ' l t l r e n • C l a n l o H o u r
•'» *»i N e w t
l l : SO 5 a r l e t l r t
T
H e , r t , O' c l oc k C l u b
*11:4) T o w n A F o ' i n t r e
7 IS N e e e
* f t s : ii 5 o o * r
l
oo
H p c r u At A C l a t c e
l l ; n q VVort l At Noon
l&gt; M . l e c k e s ' e F h o l c e
11 :1 5 Ttad'.o F a r m I Mf e a t
Mnr ni p. * I ' e v o t l o n a
l.io
l l SO B r o o k l y n D o d r e r a
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5Vorld *t Ni ne
a.no
4 : SO N - « a
) \\ Mu, I n F o r L a d i e ,
4;SS l i n o r i n h
30 H y m n T i m e
5 on T h e n h , t h m H o u r
&gt; l\ F e r L , 1 1ea On l y
Via
t.Vb W oi l o
1
ft
;00
MuiU For Tou
r.vrviso
i n : IS 1400 C l u b
« 1* T n t t l c h t S o n g a
N'aw*
10:10
&lt; SO s p o r t . De s k
10 )&amp; 14C0 C l u b
t IS Mu i i r a l F r r a
G , m a Of M * ! e 4 r
T:00 D r i f t i n g o n A C l # u «
ii oo Wf i rl d At N'emn
t I ) H u n d a v School L e t t o n
AF T r UNOO . V
t : 30 . l uke I t o, Hal. M e h t
I? l ' H a d l u I ' a r n , O l g e a l
a oo M * h l Kd l l l o n
51.unl ay M a t l n t e
i:
to
S I S J u k e Boa Hel N i f h t
)0 N e e ’S
10 : n ai H o m e w i t h M u i i o
I:', Ii B a r N o n e r a n c h
JO;)'. .Noe a
L e y m t r ' , Call T o I ' r a y e r

11,04'*

?r
a. #i
T •»
t./r
___
fiat

tl'XDAT
MOn.5l.5f.

. uiletl F t m
llvmn Tima
T b # P r a t e * M* » *
&lt;)*a««a f4^aaT

l
Sunday Morning Muilcila
I to J. £ . Cola

The National Educatiaa A nn.
saya adequate classrooms provide
30 square feet of floor space for
ric h elementary school pupil and
kn iqtb** j u fe r caclv. to ih
school student

�m.*

'

AND DADS/V.

. .. \ J to STA/ MO-U

TO
GET MADPi EO
m a m a ? ------m adden

«*T$Y''T AND Sir IN
AND TALK

f f f v ? ) TVEPAOtrO

SA2GE,: THINK THAT
PAINT you GA'/E *•*£

^ -7 P3R

GEE, COOKIE- IT VMS
LUGO/ POP VOU THAT
«—( IT RAINED THAT r
v----- NIGHT |----

ff5t&gt;eT*« EVENING
WAS OV£P o x c o v
~-r PPOPOSED AND
•» v-*W E DECIDED
^ Y l V I,
TO GET
? rr j Z t M A PC EO

w « c o jl d n t g o c x r;
----- --------f W E JU S T Hf A

mcwdovou

6S?N 3 IT H = c e

the

I WET. v-

Shoplifting Game
To Become Harder

I GOT THAT a n
CA PAINT FROM

.“ 7 2 ; W R O N 3

: p.COUOR

THE SUPPLY
.

OFFICES.

*— U T T L » W u r T a
0 0 3 A N SV .E R .V 3

CABEPULf
IT S STILL

AND LET ME
SEE IT.
-

r—2 IS TVS " 7--- IMPOSSIBLE’

rORIJ HERALD

r"

&amp;XI-SDP5 EPCED M V H A M A
r o v r o . H O tY / L I 7 7PV7T3 ,
V G V &amp; S. t - t— B ------- -

L00□
Under p» n's
SPELL, OM.E TUSS
TOE HEAW POPE*
TOE GIANT BELL
P f i l S OUT A

' WITH HIS HEARING '
NOW. MV C M P ' PUU. TVS
A D TUNED UP MS
CCPD A».D SET VOIR EELOVED CAM eMJOV TVS
SOUND CP PAPTUPCUI
HASH TO RINGING THE
3t TONCR BELLS.'
m u s ic /
j

*

10UD, ECHOING
TONE THAT
SHRIEKS IN

,

HASH’S EARS'

TVtg BOWERPUL
SOUNDVIBRATIONS
SEND HIM
SWINGINGTOWARD
ACLUSTEROP HIGH
PITCHEDBELLS/
i r N me c a n j u s t
PCf lEPOV~ACUB
g it t h is l a s t m a n
BATTER t r i p l e d
WITH TlSO OUT IN
OUT,AT LEAST HELL
TH* LAST INNIN’ T1
Bu s t u p h s n o IITTUM,

ORLANDO UP—Shoplifters, who
nave been costing Florida mer­
chants mure than 4*4 million dol­
lar* a year, will find their game
harder after July 1.
On that date a new state law,
seriously cramping their varied
styles of operation, becomes ef­
fective
Apprehension, detention and ar­
rest will be easier under the new
law, spupsored In the recent Leg­
islature by the Florida Stato Re­
tailers Assn Larceny penalties
will apply, .maximum* being im­
prisonment for five years and
fines of tl.OOO.
The very existence of the new
law will cut Florida's losses in
half, the association says.
It explajied "most shoplifters,
especially professionals, will think
twice before risking the new handi­
caps. And amateurs soon will learn
their pilfering suddenly has be­
come much nure haiardota.'*
The new law permit* a peace
officer, merchant or merchant's
employe-to take i suspected shop­
lifter Ints custody in a reasonable
manner for a reasonable time and,
if necessary, to cause arrest, without being civilly or criminally
liable for (also arrest, false im­
prisonment or unlawful detention.
Heretofore, the retailers group
aavt, shr pliftcr* thrived on the
willingness of reta‘lers to accept
Uie ios; .if their mc.chandlse

HVlEFIRST

Jockey tam m y Boulmatla wfll
be trying for hit third Capital
Handicap victory on April I t,
opening day at Laurel race track.
BoulmeUi won oa Suleiman In
1IS1 and Algasir in 1#M.

Phone 417

DID

YOU

K N O W ? ...........

We Serve Breakfast In Informal, Air-Conditioned
Dining Rooms.
HOT CAKES. WAFFLES, HAM, BACON, SAUSAGE.
EGGS as you like ’em . . . fresh from a local farm.
Come In For A Snack Or A Meal
You’re Always Welcome at

MRS. APPLEBY'S R ESTA U RA N TS
Valdes Hotel

• A. M. Til

I

|

106 S. Park At*.

4:tS A. M. TU

G e n e ral Insurance
AMOS ALONZO HAOO, K , Ar­
rives In Chicago from California
for the 90th anniversary eelebraUon of his 10OS championship
fnotbeU and track teams at tha
U niversity of Chicago. Tha
“grand old man of football” was
accompanied by hi* wifa, Stella,
to tha acana of his former tri­
umph*. Stars coached at tha
unhrarrity from ISM to IMS.

a

JAMES GUT AGENCY
SIS EAST FIRST STREET
PHONE 78

INNING

- tuat j |

cue

Three S o u t h e a a t Conference
schools — Alabama, Georgia Tech
and Tennessee — have played
twice in the annual Cotton Bowl
football game. Each has won and
lost.

BEARS
SPECIAL
ATTENTION
AS A
DANGEROUS
THREAT-A

“

RUNNER
ON THIRD
ISTRYIK? &lt;
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PiTC-ER

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ILL HOP INTOA
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Legal Notice
.

A’ATU*K IS M E R K R T . G IV E N
t h a t «■* a r e c n y r t a d In h u a l n o e a t
l t i C m i t i h P i., S a n fo rd . F ie r ie.
*-» lin liiA u p n a m e of
•H U T T F -It BCCJ PTl.’DIOP a n * th a t
w * I n lr 'id in r » ( H i a r aald n a m a
w ith
Ih*
C la rk nf t h a - C lra u lt
C o u r t, 8 -m ln M a C o u n ty , F lo rid a .
In a c c o rd a n c e w ith th e p rn v ly ln n
o f th a r !-U tlo u »
N atn a
C la lu la ,
lo iw ll
M H t F lo r id a 8 1a-

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J o e T. L u m p k in
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S H E GAVE M E SUCH
AN A Q G U M EN f — .
WHAT COULD FTtii
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LETTING ETTA GO TO THE
DANCE I I SEE SWE &lt;
7\TWISTED MX) ACooNO
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A P P P .A N

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Biaa P tr a a t, B o c h a a ta r. N. T .
A C w o ro C o m p la in t b a t l n a baan
riled a c a i n a t y o u i n m a c ir c u it
!*ourt In a n d f o r g a m ln o U C o u n ty .
F lo rid a . In C h a n c a ry , f o r P lv o r r o .
ha a h o r t t i t l e o r a t l d o c ilo n b a ­
in* F flA N K A. THOM AP. P la in tiff ,
raT J E f B I E L E E
TH O M A S. D ar a a d a n t.
th o o e , p r a a a a i a a r a ta

A 1,672-fnnt televlalon tower at
Oklahoma City ia claimed a» the
world's talleat structure by its
users, comparing It with the 1,472foot Emplra State Building.
c a u a a a n d r e q u ire y o u t e f ile your
w r itte n d afan aaa. I f a n y , to th a
C o m p la in t file d
h e re in , a n d ta
» n « a copy th e r e o f u p o n P la in llf f 'a a t l o r n a y o n o r b e fo re th a
t l r d d ay of J u ly , t a i l , o ih a rw la a
a P » c r» a P ro C o nfaaao w ill be an ta r a d a g a ln a t yo u a n d t h a c a u a a
or&lt;* ceil a* p a r la .
W IT V K S * m y h a n d a n d o ffic ia l
Vaal a l H an fo rd . H am lnnta C o u n ty ,
Ih la l i r a d ay of Ju n o . t a i l .
/ a / O- F. H arn d o n
C la rk a t t h a rT ro u lt C o u r t
b a m in o la C o u n ty , F lo rid a

Almont the entire world'a sup­
ply of Mexican jumping bean* is
grown at Alomos in southern So­
nora, Mexico, taya the National
Geographic Society.

Tag, hide-and-seek and blind •
man's bluff aria children'* gamei
which are known all ever the
world, saye the National Geogra­
phic Society.

LAST TIME TONIGHT
l m x a a n a n e n w r u o u a a*—

tobumclean
No p aoliae, bo matter bow high the octane,
cut keep on giving you full power from your
engine uatec* it bums dees.
That'i why New Gulf NO-NOX U your beat
fuoline buy. In nuking new NO-NOX, Gulf
refines out thewdirty-burning tail-end" ofguo*
baa, the No. 1 troublemaker in today's high*

- STARTS 7:45
LEAVE HER TO
HEAVEN"
S U r r la g

Oo*rdon
F rc d a rlc k
A tlo r n a y f o r r i a l n t l t f
4 N o r t h P o rk A vonuo
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a fo rd . F lo rid a

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Cornea Wilde
Gene Tierney
•*60 Only

CARTOON

RATURDAY ONLY— STARTS 7:41

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SUNDAY5

MONDAY 5 lTARTETi4i

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Shop and Save
In Sanlord

S H i? H a n f o r d
Ah

lb fa M h tlw J 190K

VOLUME XLVI

Geneva Parley
.Likely To Get
Disarming Plan
Bv JOHN ,M. HIGHTOWER

WASHINGTON (.Pj—'The United States. Britain and
France probably will prupo.xe at next month’s Big Four sum­
mit talks that Russlu consider a formula for reversing the
w arms raca in Europe.
The idea is one which Secretary of States Dulles con­

Airman Is Sought
For Questioning
, In Slaying 013
DICKINSON, Tex., bPi— The
search for a tall, young 100pound airman officers believe
may have killed three persons
here turned to California today.
The airman, described as about
55. ii wanted for questioning
In the slaying* of Mr*. Ruby C.
McPheron. 44; her son, George
Richard McPherson. 12; and Mrs.
. Zola Norman, about 05, the mo* ther of Mrs. McPherson.
All were found shot to death
Saturday night In the pine-shaded
McPherson home near the tra­
ffic heavy Houaton-Galveaton Gulf
Freeway.
Mrs. McPherson’s 105.1 automobile was missing, but police
said nothing apparently had been
taken from the home, and Texas
Ranger Johnny Klevenhagen said
there was no evidence of a sex
crime.
Early today, Los Angeles po­
lice were checking on a vehicle,
described as "almost matching"
the teletyped decription of the
supposed slay’er* car, the M053
Fonl stolen from the McPherson
home.
R. E. Plummer of the Los An­
geles detective force said tha
automobile vraa found parked on
| an Inglewood street, its engine
■till hot.
Local and tta U .p e llc b o th -aid ,
they could find no ntotlve for
the slayings, believed to have
occurred late Wednesday or early
Thursday.

sidered with British Foreign Secn-tary Harold Macmillan and
French Foreign Minister Antoine
I’inay during the past 10 days at
New York and San Francisco.
Dulles relumed yesterday from
the United Nations 10th anniver­
sary ceremonies at San Francisco
lie said he was gratified at
Soviet Foreign Minister V. M
Molotov's response to American
demands for compensation in the
case of a U. S. Navy patrol plane
shot down by Soviet jet fighter*
between Alaska and Siberia last
Wednesday.
Landing on an Island, the plane
burned. Seven of the 11 crewmen
suffered burnt or injuries.
The State Department made
public yesterday a note Molotov
handed Dulles just before both
men left Stn Francisco Saturday.
The Soviets said the airplane had
violated Russia'* "state frontier."
The Ameiican government aaid
Soviet MIGs blasted it in a sur­
prise assault over international
waters. The State Department
said yesterday there was "no
possibility cf error” as to the
U. S. planes location.
Molotov also said there was an
“exchange" of gunfire, but the
United States said the U. S. plane
did not fire.
However, Molotov expressed re­
gret at the incident and offered
to pay one half the damage—an
unprecedented offer in such casts.
"It it gratifying that he ex­
pressed regret," Dulles comment­
ed, "and at least expressed will­
ingness to mak* some reparation,
but it is not what we asked for.”
Apparently he Intends to discuss
with President Elsenhower wheth­
er ana;
■nd'KSte
prees a oemanu
demand
»r
n°*r te
io press
lu ^
T i e BWlatedatt, despite Its modcrate tone, sought to place blame
for the incident on this country,
saying the United States had not
taken atep* which Russia had
urged previously to prevent "a
repetition of undesirable Inci­
dents.”

Maine Governor
Due To Welcome
Eisenhower Today
PARMACHENEE LAKE, Maine
41—President Elsenhower, happy
over a successful weekend of fish­
ing, gets an official welcome late
today to traditionally Republican
Maine from Democratic Gav. Ed­
mund S. Muikie.
The governor, the first Demo­
crat to be elected the state a chief
executive in 20 years, will greet
the President at Skowhegan, home
of Republican Sen. Margaret Chase
Smith of Maine. Muskie and Ei­
senhower will attend a clambake
at Sirs. Smith's home.
A few hours later Eisenhower
will fly back to Washington, end­
ing a six-day tour of northern New
England, and go to a late evening
White House conference with Sec­
retary o( State Dulles on the shoot­
ing down of a U.S. Navy palrol
plane by Soviet aircraft.
After Dulles had reached Elsen­
hower by telephone here Saturday
night, the State Department s.ud
the secretary had "iccepted with
satisfaction the Soviet govern­
ment's expressions of regret," but
felt Russia's offer "fell short of
whst he hsd requested . . . in
the light of the Information he hsd
received."
Elsenhower fisheJ for about six
hours yesterday and caught two
salmon and a mess of trout in the
Magalloway River at Little Boy
Falls. One of the salmon was an
18-incher w e i g h i n g about two
pounds. The other was under the
legal "keeping" size of M inches
and the President threw It back.

INDfCPKNDENT DAILT N E W SP A P E R

i&amp; e t a lh

r»rtly

cloudy

Ihroorh

with local i f l n o i m

Tuesday

and evening

Ihundrrshn* rra.

^

RANEORO. FLORIDA. MONDAY, JU N K 27, 1955

A m o rU ltd

P ram

W irt

No. 21*.

Last Ditch Fight Set
To Keep Baseball Club
Two Persons Die
In Desert Ordeal

TWENTYNINE PALMS, Calif. (/Ft— Murderous heal, walking
sarglt and shivering nights were a grim memory todav for a survivor
of a desert jeep ride that .daimrd two lives. •
•'It'* the worst thing I've been through in 20 veats on the desert.”
said Chester Bunker, 67, Inoat real estate promoter, lie recalled watch------------------------------------------“ “ ling one man walk to his death and
another die of exposure on the
blistering desert when their jeep
| nroke dow n on an outing last
Wednesday.
Bunker, recovering in a hospital
here, told this story:
He and three others set o u t In
the jeep to inspect the Amazon
Valley aiea, which Bunker describThey carried water hut no food
ed as “ ripe for development."
for the half-tiny journey.
The jeep sank In drifting sand
A Sanford man was shot at a
tavern her# early Saturday and in Amnion Canyon, about .'10 miles
another Sanford man wa* later
^ere, a lid the differential
arrested In Dcl.and In cnm.ce- ™
nightfall, Calvert Wilson,
lion with the shooting, Constable t'J, prominent southern California
Q. (Slim) Galloway reported. Democratic politician, set out on
Galloway, who Investigated the foot for the highway about 15
rase, said Mose Holts, about SO, miles away.
His aun-tdackened body was
was picked up by police at the found by seatcher* two days later
Ill-Land bus station following the b|,out five miles from the jeep,
shooting of Woodrow Simpson, where he had died of exposure anil
29. Dcl.and police had been alert- thirst,
cd by Galloway.
Bunker; James Thompson, 75,
Galluway said Simpson was rrtiied Joshua tree businessman;
shot in the right side with a 32- ..nd Lyle W. Robertson, 4'J, lorad
calibcr pistol during an argu­ hardwnre store owner, remained
ment at Ozcll Vickers' tavern on rloscr to the jeep.
Their water, ran out the next
West 18th St. Holts shot Simpson
as Simpson argued with Willie B. day. The temperature hit 120 de­
Holts, Hose’s brother, the officer grees. Bunker and Robertson lay
said. The shooting occurred about on the desert and covered their
heads with their shirt*.
1:30 a. m. Saturday.
Holla -ftrd tha • scene, Gel.1
Thompson got W W to rn
aid, and was taken to the &gt;'• »nd aUrtcd ruhnlrig In drtlea,
loway said
DcLand bus station by another Bunker aatd. He died a few hours
brother, Albert Holts, who was tatar.
later arrested on a charge of es­
cape. When arrested, Mose had a
ticket to Fitzgerald, Ga . In his
possession, Galloway said.
Mosa lx being held In the Vo­
lusia County Jail at Del.and on
a concealed weapons charge, the
officer said, pending the outcome
uf Simpson's condition. Albert
Holts is being held in Jail here
under $500 bond, Galloway con­
MIAMI 41 —A young uniformed
tinued.
motorcycle policeman, arrested
fur Investigation of a series of
holdups, has denied he was the
Flood Control
brains of a gang of four men.
Peter V. Raima, 27. was called
Experts Seeking
in by Police Chief Walter Headley
and suspended. Then he was a r­
Trouble Spots
rested by Police Capt. Chester
JACKSONVILLE (/II— Reprc- Eldrcdge Saturday night.
rentatives of the Jacksonville Dis­
Police also arrested Gerald Castrict Corps of Eingineert and the sclll, 42, on the same charge.
Central 'and Southern Florida
The arrests followed the stigy of
Flood Control District today be­ a third man, l^noy Horne, now in
gan an inspection to find trouble state prison at Haiford.
spots that rould develop during the
Horne told Jane Wood, a Miami
coming hurricane season.
Daily News reporter, and ElEdwin W. Eden Jr„ Anthony dredge that Raima was tha brains
Nard and Charles Wirsenfield re­ of a gang which pulled four hold
present tha engineer*. They are
accompanied by B. Arnold and upi last year.
Ills story also named another
other operating personnel of the
policeman, I.cwj» Womack who
ftood control district.
was killed in an unexpected boat
The field party will Inspect
explosion
last year. Eldrcdge said
flood-control works In the Lake
two
other
men have been orderd
Okeechobee • Everglades • Lower
Eaat Coast area for possible dan­ arrested but said they were not
ger If unusual rainfall conditions now In town.
Balma, after his arrest, said the
should aria*.
charges were "lies".

Local Man
Is Shot
At Tavern

V

p S T lA W M N C E

,

A last-ditch effort lo keep
I lie hnneliall club in Sanford
will be made at a meeting a t
7 :.'10 p. m. tomorrow at City
Hall.
Members of n local group
which i.s in tores toil iu takinyr
over the irnnclmc from tho
present nrjraniznlinn will be
oil bund anil the .situation

will lie fully discussed.
If enough public enthusiasm it
■
. . 1 ^
1
shown, there is a possibility tha
THIS MAI' show* tha Bering Strait where two Russian MIG fighter | * ^olinal* v.*11 continue to play
planes made an "unprovoked attack" on a II. 8. Nnvv P tiol plane off kero after June .10, the deadline
Alaska fmeing the American d a ft to crash-land iu flames on S t , set by the present b a s e b a ll organi.awrem-e Island (arrows), -to mile* fiom Russian Sibrrin. Seven of ration headed by It. J. Bauman,
the II rrew members aboard the plum were injured. (Intnm itiom ill
Florida Stale League president
John hrider exhibited optimism
and pointed out tint) other cities
. ii the league have been confront­
ed with siItiitinr difficulties and
have in most cases worked then*
out satisfactorily.
Sanford has played in the
league every year since 193(5 with
with the exception of 11*54 Kridcr
said. "We have never failed to
W A S II I N G T O N l/Pi— The
finish a season," he added.
Elsenhower administration report­
If the other local group lake*
edly has decided to go along with a
oxer the franchise and continues
Demorrutir-sponsorrd proposal fot
a hipaitisnn commission to study l T o ll It INC,TON, Wyo i.tl-Cloud playing for the remainder of the
the controversial federal employe I burst* which dumped up to 20 season, Sanford can probably get
By CLAUDE ROHE
aeeurity program.
j indies ol rain and halt on south- bark in the league next year.
Sunken treasure has started men
The nieasute, sponsored by Hen-1 t.a&gt;(t.rn Wyoming caused hundreds Kridcr emphasized. If Hnnfonl
does not finish the season, he said,
ntor* Humphry (D-Mmni and I
,
. , „
dreaming for centuries and In raprofessional baseball is doomed
Biennia &lt;I)-M!*i|. wax scheduled "l
cent years a lot of those dreams
for Hinale debate today with nil. &lt;"
beet wops in the North here.
hava coma trus off Florida coasts.
*ii:nn
Bauman ami other members of
sign* pointing to ovvi whclmiitK HnMu \ alloy last night.
Remains of an old vessel were
Towns Mini
uays were flood the present organization have ex*
brought up roff
t f Vero Beach
passage.
Beaeh lata
late
As the Ronate. took op the mut­ rd. rommuuicatiun* were rut oil, ptciacd their willingness to turn
•«* * * tom pkln of The
ter, informed souicea reported the ami in.inv motorists were stranded over the franchise to another
Herald was on hand to cover the
administration — a f t e r several as Die storms moved through j 75 group and lo lend their help in
story.
weeks of apparent indecision—hut mile wide area.
currying out the baseball progtuin.
Twrenty-one-ysar old R o g a r
decided to suppolt the proposal,
No (Iciilhs of serious injuries
King of Vero Beach, on leave from
Up to now, President Eisenhow­ wise reported.
the U. 8, Army In Alaska, called
er and Ally. Grn. Brownell have
'Mu- National Guard was ralted
on veteran treasure h lite r Art
indicated they felt there was no out at Turrington as travel was
McKee Jr., to help him bring up
need for such a study.
ciil olf miiiIIi ami west of Die city.
the remalna of w-hat Is believed
The proposed 12-meinhcr com­ The North I’lalte received thou
to be a Spanish vessel which was
mission would make recommenda­ sands of second leet of water from
Students Visit
wrecked around 1658.
tions to improve the functioning ereeKx and Irrigation ditches.
No treasuta has been found so
of
the security program,
Sanford Herald
Similar conditions were reported
far but 13 cannons, each weighing
A House committee already has 1( j.,,,., |„.,ram |,.
Liugle ami
The Third Year Junltra of the 2000.3000 pounds, have b e e n
approved a companion mens*, re Guernsey, farther north in Die
Methodist Church Bible 8chool brought up. They hoped to find
• ponsored by Hep. Walter (D-I'a.l Valjey.
enjoyed a trip through tha San­ tha brass bow and stem chasers
SAN FRANCISCO 41 — Russia
Sen. Mundt (It-KD), who with­
and
the Western Powers wei#
Tile
rain
and
hail
fell
for
right
Past president of the Sanford ford Herald Friday morning over the weekend. If they were
held his vote on the proposal
hours. It stopped about an hour agreed today that the U.N.’s Itl'h
Rotary Club Georgs A. Stina was watching, with interest the var­ successful, it we.s believed they
when
tha
Government
Operations
anniversary session had been well
quite surprised a t tha weekly ious processes of making up a would establish the name of the
Committee approved it 10 0 last after midnight.
ship and substantiate their claimi
•
Shortly after. Dm Wyoming worthwhile.
meeting of the club a t the Yacht newspaper.
week, said in an Interview he now
Roth acknowledged Pi.it tha
ter bail receded on U. S. 26 &gt;o
Club this noon just as he was In- The group comprised the fol­ concerning the date of the wreck.
knows of no opposition.
Believed to have washed up on
(pi troduced as tha speaker of the lowing: Suianne Jones, Rosemary
"I'm going to support it on the Highway Patrol re;&gt;orH-tl the wa- weeklong meetings had pruvhted
excellent opportunity for diplo.
day by program chairman J. Ed Southward, Evie Dossy, Rebecca a reef during a hurricane the re­
basis that we ran never he too c a i s rould move from Fort Lara­ an
Best. As tha applause subsided, Massey, Leslie Jones, Margaret mains are in about 20 feet of
cautious or inrrful in making cer­ mie into Turrington, which had malic contacts ami that th? big
power speeches had given eirli
a member of the club called at­ Jones, Jud Burtchaetl, Vicki For- water a mile off shore. Nothing is
tain that tho federal security ma­ facilities to accomodate them.
side a better understanding of
tention to the fact that today was guson, Buddy Kirk and Duana left of the wooden hull of the
chinery i« functioning effective­
what lo expect at the summit talks
Uocmbell. Their teacher, Mrs. C. vostel: only the cannons and the
George's birthday, a fact that
ly," he said.
in Geneva next month
Blood Sets Off
was trying to keep a secret de»- R. Jones and Mra. Ray Herron, anchor remain.
The anniversary session ended
pita the fact that he admitted to superintendent of the Junior De­
MrKee, who Is a professional
Sights Of Vienna
10 years after thf
New Hunt In Case yesteiday—Just
being "39". After the club sang partment acted as chaperones.
treasure hunter, will go after
signing of Hie U N Charter—with
"happy birthday" to him, Mr.
even bigger gam* In mid-July
Viewed By Nehru
a declaration by its president. Dr.
Of Missing Pair
Stina proceeded to give a compre- Firemen Answer
when he starts work off Plantation
Kelco N. Van Kleffens, reaffirming
VIENNA,
— Indian Prime
Key on tha first of eight ”plate"
hensive and factual report of the
WEST PALM REACH 41 — A the determination of the 60 na­
Minister Neliru saw the sight* of small (Mini of blood found on Die
ships which went down in the year
• proceedings a t the 50th Annivsr- Fruit Co. Alarm
Vienna today ns he continued his paveinenl of a rood tourlied off tions "to save succeeding genera­
sary of Rotary International held
The Sanford Fire Department 1733 with thousand* of dollars
tions from the sceurgu of war."
European tour.
recently In Chicago which he and today answered an alarm at 11:05 worth of illrer aboard.
an intensive searrli near hero yes­
Thousands
of
Australn*
lined
The declaration also pledged
"Mom" 8 tins attended. In fact,
A fleet of 21 ships left Vera
terday, County Investigator John
lliu U.N. to pros* forw ird with
the road lu cheer the Aslan leader Hiatt said.
Georgs admitted that the nice from the Patrick Fruit Co. loca­ Crux early In 1733 bound for
ted on French Ave, between 12
on his arrival yesterday from
disarmament efforts which have
acrap-book was “Mom’s” handi­ and 13tb Streets.
Spain. In July they replenished
The deputy sheriff, who Is work­ Just icrcntly begun to make pro­
Warsaw
aboard
a
ipcrial
Soviet
work and not hip- •
ing on tho dissappeuranre of gress.
The cause of the blase was an in Havana and a fttr leaving there
• • • .*
plane.
they ran Into a hurricane which
Nehru leaves the Austrian cap­ Judge E. E. Chiliingwortli and hi,
Tha Sanford Tourist and Shuf- electric rutting torch in the North claimed eight of them.
The session had a le v rough
ital lute tonight for Sulrhurg io wife, look 18 offirers and two m o m e n t a , when the president
fclboard dob will not have Ibe wing. Chief Cleveland stated that
preside at a conference there ol bloo d hou nd s lo jtlie scene- a few wielded the gavel ami cautioned
covered dish supper at 6:30 in there was only alight damage.
Indian diplomatic envoys in Eu­ miles northwesr of Boca Raton restraint, but behind thc-iceuc re*
^ tha Club housa this Tuesday.
They searched an area one lelliii* between Itus-ia and Ilia
rope.
•
fourth mile square hut found noth­ Wcx'crn Rowers were unu.uxlly
Evans, Nashville
Argentina Frees
ing that would u«count lor the cordial
blond, Hiatt said. About hall a
Publisher, Dies
19 Party Members an isolated urea west of Die YaFORT WORTH. Tex. f/V&gt;— SilllIIUKNOS AIIIE.S f/P&gt;— Argen- ruii was splashed oil the road at Meeting Slated
man Evans the N'ashvi'lc Tennes­ (ins today relca.md IU loaders of malu community, Hiatt said the
. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
sean president-publisher aim was the Radical party who had Iicon slain was no mure than two days On Right-Of-Way
At least 10 parsons met death
called a key politic si figure, was detained since the June 16 revolt old.
la Florida accidentally and vio­
found dead In ii.s bed yesterday, against President Junn Ii. Peron'a
For U.S. 17-92
lently during the weekend n sur­
victim of ■ heart attark.
regime. Four other parly mem­
A propno-d resolution to pro*
vey early today showed
Kangaroo Bounces vent
Tha body, will be flown to Nash- bers were still held.
any niw construction along
m Traffic victims included Mrs.
villa tonight after resting at a
Simultaneously, |«)llcc al Eva
the propose,: right-of-way for Ini*
'^M ay B. Boll insen, 74, of Fort Lau­
Around
Baltimore
funeral home here.
Peron. in Buenos Aires province
provemrnt o ' Highway 17-t»2 will
derdale, Matthew I. Donohue. 40,
Evans, 61, died In his sleep In eastern Argentina, announced
Ra At IMOIIK OPi — A mother lo- discussed 1 hursday night at a
Miami; and Mrs. Virginia Savage,
Sutunity night a few hour* after the arrest of two persons identi­ kangaroo broke loose from its meeting at the Ameiican Legion
gs, Panama City.
attending the funrral of hit old fied at Communists and two handleix after a television appear- hut at Piaiiic Lake. The meeting
TWo persons drowned on a fish­
mrmlirr* on ance and went bouncing about the will lu-gin at 7 o'clock.
friend and former employer Anion Radical p a r t y
ing trip at Stuart Saturday. Little
G. Carter, publisher of the Fort charges of spreading rumors. The city for a full hour last night.
John Fox, county right-of-way
Tommy Hightower. 11, Ml Into
Once she rh-ared the hood of an agent, said interested persons will
Worth, 8t*r-Telegram, who died nature of tha rumor* was nut dis­
the St. Lucie River. Die’ father,
closed. *
Thursday.
automobile with a beautiful leap. he given an oppoitunity to spealc
John T. Hightower, 61, plunged in
Everywhere she went traffic was their mind* on the Issue.
to save him. Both .drowned.
disrupted. Children leaned goggleDovy
Crockett's
Fox pointed out that additional
Donald Barringer, 32, of Largo,
Contest Judges
eyed out of car windows. Women right-of-way for four-laning of
fdrownod yesterday while water
screamed.
Popularity Fails
17-92 will not be needed in tha
skiing at Lake Tarpon near Tar­
Prefer Blondes
Three attendant* from tho too, thickly-built up commercial area
ROANOKE,
Va.
f/P
)Tha
folk*
pon Springs. Ho apparently be­
MIAMI BEACH 4) — Contest
well past th* age for sprinting, south of Casselberry, through
came tangled in the tow rope,
judges prefer blondes in Florida. at a Roanoke theater don’t know were in valiant pursuit. They were Cassclhciry. or from Onorn St*
who stole their property Saturday
it pilots
killed
The two wlnnen and the two night but they’re pretty sure it joined by six policemen.
north to Flench Ave. her*.
Friday tight when ti
their training
runnert-up in the M in Florida was 1 male and t no child.
■teat era shad hi tha Atlantic
and M in Miami Beach contrit to
ROSE ELECTED
RTItlhR CONTINUES
The atoli n property was a
betaa. They wen Ena. Charles
ehooia M in Univena rrpreiant- seven-foot cardboard picture, of
TAMPA 41 — Herbert Rote ol
LOS
ANGELES
(Al—
Th*
Los
E. Dkkaraoa, tt, Frrnkitetou, N.
ativci all ware honey blondet. # ifarilyn Monroe, skirts a-flying, Angeles Transit Lines atrikr, af­ St. Petersburg was elected com*
C-, aad LL (j.g.) R. F Rtsdclph,
Marteli C enter, 20, of Talla- which had be*n set In the lobby to fecting about a million riders, mandaat of the Marine Corpa
0. Philadelphia.
h a n e e won the itate conteit and advertise her newest film.
moved Into its second week and league of Florida yesterday. Mra.
- - Miami Electrician James Yalta,
will be in Long Beach, Calif., In
Nearby was an equally hlg pic­ police planned today to combat Margaret Uaodlry, ala* of S t
IfUm
i*0
A
M
A
N
C
IE
N
T
C
A
M
H
O
M
a
b
o
a
r
d
a
w
r
e
;k
*
r
a
r
e
R
o
w
e
r
K
in
#
(r
ig
h
t),
m
e
m
b
e
r
o
f
a
s
a
l
v
a
g
e
XaBL t r u accidentally electrocuted expedition which uncovered II cannons In tho wrocuoc* of a Spanish galleon off Ft. Plant and tha July when tha M lu Universe con ture of Davy Crockett. It was ever-inrrratiny traffic problems In Petersburg, wa* alerted
A w in . drivtf aftkawittkaa, Otfcai iw a i mm ha taps a* M
af tea carps' auxiliary.
mym. UM* w -------Ignored by Um thief.
tha downtown ares.

Strolling
In Sanford

Sunken Treasure
Makes Men Dream

Policeman Denies
Charge 01 Being
Brains For Gang

Ike's Regime Set Wyoming
To Go Along With
Hard Hit
Security Study

By Floods

United Nations
Session Hailed
As Big Success

Stale Accidents
Claim 10 Lives

I

______

_

/ I V%J|

J

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rtf* t

Reds Driving Hard To Upset Law A nd Oreter

Maureen O'Hara
Denies Charges

ingapore Is Trouble Spot
SINGAPORE (!F )~ Ma­
laya's Communists aro driv­
ing hard to upset law and or­
der in this rich British crown
co lo n y .

Strikes a r e spreading. Riotin? is being fomented. Com­
munist-inspired Chinese high

Sparking the threatened n elence [ to the gro-rrn merit Tl.ry lead the
is the most lntons.ve subversive open defiance of police orders,
cam paign the Red Chinese under­ march in picket lines, urge stri­
ground has waged on the island kers to fight on until their de­
colony since it unleasod guerrilla mands arc met. When thu govern­
w arfare in the jungles upcountry ment threatened to expel ringlead­
in the spring of 10U. The Commu­ ers and close three of their sehonls,
nists apparently f-*l that Mar­ the students threatened "serious
shall's "go easy” pdLey leaves the trouble" and the authorities backed
door wide open to a determined down
effort against law and order.
Police final'y did arrest 1!T pick­
On the Malayan mainland, the ets for obstructing them. But big
Communists have slackened direct gatherings of students and strikers
armed attacks on villages, towns, still go on.
highway convoys and com munica­
The students s iy they want no
tions. But In Singapore they ap­ Interference with the P.ed Chinese
pear set upon getting the upper doctrines, th f 7 are being taught in
hand by wile and subversive tac­ many of their classes. They have
tics. They are infiltration labor forced teachers to quit when they
unions and student groups.
tr.ed to teach courses prescribed
About T.noo of the St .000 students by the government. They have
in private Chinese high schools staged "sit-in" strikes or refused
(orm the hard core ol resistance to attend classes.

Turn. Jtfne 2 f, T95S ceeded to g r f fru n lr and talc* the

THE BAN FORD HERALD

The government. wlUch pay* for to aee th a t it ia.
p art of the Initruotioo, feels Eng­
M arshall's young regim e also la
lish and principles o ' democracy being plagued by spreading indus­
must be taught But Marshall and
his minis’e r i haven't found a way trial unrest which a t tim es th reat­
ens lo paralyze the city’s tra n s­
port and com m ercial life. As fast
as one walkout appears- settled,
another Is started. A general strike
lis t week brought out le st than a
seventh of the colony's labor force.
TOKYO. &lt;JN_Ameriean consular But the unions m ade c le a r they
officials at Hong Kong were re ­ would try again.

U. S. Officials
Watching Border
For 3 Turncoats

school students i r e openly defying
the police.
Businessmen in tjus crest F ar
E a ite m port n ly —erne of the
world's busiest—fare the future
With undisguised fear end skepti­
ported today keeping a border
there kept a three-hour w atch yes­
cism.
watch for three form er American
The IT,oon flu te s on Singapore
terday. Hong Kong dispatches said
soldiers who have grown weary of
T*!and .tre beginning In fear lor
a su n d e r watch would Jvc kept for
life in Communist China.
their li\es.
a "few more d^ya, if necesssry. '
Peiping radio said Saturday the
A storm of protest u rising swift­
The throe A m ericana a re Wil­
three Americana — only two of
ly against the new Labor Front
liam A Cowart, of Dalton, Ga.,
whom want to come home — and
government headed by David Mar­
who asked to go to Ja p an : and
two Belgians had been given per­
shall. a Singapore attorney. Civic
Otho G. Bell, of Olympia, Wash.,
mission lo leave China. The broad­ and Lewis W. G nggs, of Jackson­
organization* and indr-kfuals are
cast g iv e no time or plac^ for ville, Tex., both of whom w ant to
dem and.n? that industrial unrest
their departure. H said merely go to the Vnitcd Styles.
and lavbreaking be curbed lest
they would leave when "all neces­
th .i rubber and tin metropolis be­
sary arrangem ents" have . been
comes "a lawless City."
U. 5. fire losses In 18S4 w ere
completed.
.
Of (he city's 1 167.000 people,
JI70.9|J,000 compered to 1903,810,000 are Chinese. Marshall. with
Hong turns is Lhe i/sual jvxnt d JOO.OOO in 1953 and *784,953,000
an e-e tn elecUmia four years
exit far W esterners leaving Red in 1352, says the N ational Board
hence, is rcluetant to hit' trouble­
China. The American consulate of F i n U nderw riters.
m akers h a r d -a n d m ast of them
a re Chinese He says now 1* the
W A S H IN G T O N (*P)— P r e s i d e n t E if.e n h o w e r to d a y a r ­
tim e fer "nursing" rather than
whipping the studcnU who. siding r a n g e d to s ip n In to law th e hill j i v i n j h im th e n e w t a r i f f With strikers, have spearheaded e u ttln j; p o w e r h e a s k e d — o n e o f t h e to p m e a s u r e s o f h is
rioting the hnm le dem onstrations 1955 le g is la tiv e p r o g ra m .
against the g o v ern ren t.
The hill extends the 21 year old reciprocal trade agreemnnls law for three y a r t . U» June
M. lOSg, and perm its the President reductions or other concessions.
to cut tariffs up to S per cent la The United Stales must use up the
each of those years m negotutlng first * per ran t reduction authority
TH n STATE OF FLORIDA TO
TRANK nONOFT.HO. PULLMAN for sim ilar concessions from other in th» year starting July l, or it
&gt; 2' *„ STATV-TRUNT HOTEL. countries.
will lapse. The sam e la true in
THLNTON. NEW JCRIEVl
A rwurn O n p ltln ' for divorce
It is the first new grant of power each of the two succeeding years.
b sv lrc t.* n fll.J *,.ilnrt you |n l/&gt; reduro import duties since 1043,
In addition, the m easure per­
th« Clri-uii ro n ri in »n/j for fs.mip.")' Coii'ity, Florid*, by KCI.LIK and also is Ihc longest extension mits the President to reduce to
KATHRYN DONOFCpO, th» rbort of the law la a decade.
.V) per cent of value all tariffs
r i'lf. ef " hlch |. N'KLI.IC KATHP JN DONOTCRO. P I « I n M f f. v*
In its basic essentials, the bill now shave that figure.
TRANK DONOTERO. p*r*nit»n». contains the authority which Eisen­
S h u t prrtrnl* *re tn rnnum n i
oti to »iip»»r sod fils your wrll- hower originally asked Iasi year.
DEES CAUSE JAM
*n d rlro irr h .r.ln on or brfors However, when his propositi ran
l o k g b r a n c h , N. J . ftP) —
th* : “rd day of Julv, a D n is ,
or ol hr r* |, n S D*rr** t*ro CoRfso- into resistance In the Republican- Thousands of bees swarmed over
ao -Mil 1» rn irrrd a tiln r l you.
To* 1 „rford
Hrrsld Is 4**1,- controlled Congress, he sent word Mrs. George Richter's car, Pfrkcd
es*»d ** s nra’fpaprr of nrntrel he would settle then for a simple on Broadway yesterday, Nohody
clreulsilon In whirh this citation
tXsll br fiubllihrd onrr rt-h wash one-year extension without new knew where they ram a from. T raf­
for four conrcputlv* «-.»k*
powers to ru t tariffs. That is what fic jammed. Crowds gathered. Mr*.
WITVLrH mv bind and offlcl.l
Richter, afraid to mova tha ear,
»rsl of ih* r |r r k of lbs oircuTl Congress voted last year.
got a rummons for overtlma park­
To irl. on (Sir tbs Jfilh day ot
A
lengthy
fight
preceded
passage
J ura, a D. tssi.
of the bill this year, with Demo­ ing. Finally, her impatience con­
it ' O. P. ItsrndoR
Clrrk of |h* circuit Court crats providing the President more quering her fear, tha drove sway.
ScmlnoU County, Florid*
support than did members of his What happened to the SeeaT "T h a /
Just flew off," aha said.
{lark N n*v«|*nd. Jr.
own p arty on some key votes.
/( lo r n r v at Law
The provisions which the P resi­
1’ O b‘ e* tin, Mnrnrd. Florida
In 1054, tha natural incressa In
AMornay for Plaintiff
dent lik e d w ere voted substan­
tially Intact, although the Seoate population of tha United States
K IITirn TO DEFEND
To- JeKcraon Davla U D,i F airs wrote In several provisions de­ was 2,000,000 and the total in­
ctnih. c/o Darrell Talrrloih,
_ . . ................ D o n Including
immigration,
eral Dtllvary, A n d r e w * C o u n ty . signed to assure American in­ crease,
was 2,130,000.
Teas*
dustry
of
g
r
e
a
t
e
r
safeguards
_ Veil— Jefferaon Devla CJ.p.)
F alrrlrth. Defendant In (hi* aylt. against cheap imports. Final pow­
*r* hereby rot if led lhal null In ers rem ain In the hands of the
divorce has been Inatltuled annlnal
you by your wife, the Plaint Iff. chief executive, and the White
Barbara Taircloih Full te benun House accepted the changes.
in ' ih
lh« Circuit Court. Ninth ClrEisenhower told Congress in ask­
cult fienunnle
rtnrlda.
yl# County.
FlorU
ritual* In Sanford. Florida. Tnu ing tor the bill that broadened
are rrnulred In file your nleAdtnr
and or anawer to the null In tha world trade ia essential to build
abov* Court and file a ropy thorn. up the economic strength of the
i
“J
Of upon Lerlrr Harrle. Attorney
for Ih* Plalntirr, at h it nfflren free world. Opponents argued that
r lu a te ai 111 P Main (I, Orlan­ some segments of A m eririn in­
do. Florida, on or before July
if, MIS or a desref pro ronlaaao dustry already have been seriously
w in b» entrrrd acalnat you and dam aged by choap imports.
Ih* rat* will proreod i t part*.
1955 C hevrolet D ela ix e 4-door
The Stale D epartment Is expect­
Company
Wltnaea my hand and seal th is
teth day of June, 1MI. a* tTlerk, ed to begin at once In plan for
Clrouli Court.
Hrmlnnl* County.
Fully aqulpp*d; new c a r fuarm nlea
Demon* tra to r
an Internationa] conference at
Florida
O P„ H 'rndon
which 30-odd nations will negotiate
. *1 I *• . . 1
Circuit Court Clark.
new agreem ent! Involving tariff
(Real).

Ike Set To Sign
Tariff Bill Today

child on a w-Jd automobile ride
in which ha had an accident."
Miss O 'H ara't attorney William
A. Dues said tLat Price was in­
formed last week th a t he could
visit the child a t the private school
she attends. But when he called
there the child refused to te e him,
Duce said.

HOLLYWOOD (Tv—A ctrers Msure*n O 'H ara has flatty denied her
form er husband's accusation that
she. haa been "openly living and
consorting" with a wealthy Mex­
ico City buainassman.
And, through her attorney, »he
added a few charges of h er own.
Tha charges against tha redhaired actress were m ade yester­
day when Willis m H. P n ce, New
York TV producer, filed a Super­
ior Court affidavit in which he
sought full custody of thei ■II-yearold d au ghter Bronwyn Bridget.
In K ’ Vice said he “ was in­
formed arid believes" his farm er
wife went to Mexico City in 1953
and 1954 to see one Enrico P arra,
described as a m arried man with
two grown daughters.
P fice . and Miss O 'H ara were
diva;rod in 19S3. P rice aikod that
the court hold the Irish-born
beauty In contem pt for violating
the conditions under which she ob­
tained custody of the girl and that
the child be turned over lo him.
He agld he bad been denied visita­
tion rights granted a t the divorce.
Through her a t t o r n e y , M’vs
O 'H ara denied the charges of m is­
conduct and said th a t Bronwyn
had visited with P rice within the
peat y ea r so d th a t P ric e " pro­

Buee ta*d f l a t hi* effest V d
"good friend" ot P arra but that
be ia not living in her house and
never b is. P rice had charged that
P a r - i has been living with the
actress in h er home and that he
h as been "seen (here a t all hour*
of the day and night."
________________________________ ■J

NOW
HOW ING

M W k M M .M k U ir o

2 COLOR
CARTOON

FEA TURES
1:16 3:19 5:22
7:25
8:2S

&amp;

PA R . NEW S

ANNIVERSARY

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Continuing This Tremendous Sale. . . D on't Miss It!

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Stock No. 727 A

1950 P a c k a rd 4-door S edan

&gt;tock No. T it

Good T n u u p o rtatio n

$555

Fully Equipped—Look a t thin price

Chevrolet Belair 2-door Sedan

T W P u ifk W

a s a a a

1947 Nash Ambassador 4-door Sedan
^

3

3

ffrd T o p

$1188
MFoi
Ford Convertible
A Vi
r^ U a n

•; . „

_ 1951 Ford Custom 2-door Sedan

Stack Na. T3S B 1200 under priced at
stack Na* 743 A

$789
stock Ne. tso a

1951 Oldemobile Super 88 4-door Sedan

1950 P ontiac 1-door S edan a .
Fully Equipped! Excellent Condition \
S

Stock No. R-4

$1088

$288

Local owner. W orth m ore than

jr

1953 Chevrolet DeLuxe 4-door Sedan

International Cab
Truck

$ 6 6 6

&amp;

Chassis 1-ton

$588

D n a l W h e e ls

i i r i K . M i l Chevrolet 2-Ton Stake Body

$647

3

for week

$1188

t r

For Your Convenience, O ur Used Car Lot W ill Remain
O pen Until 9 :0 0 O'clock Each Night This W eek

AND

FO R

YO U R

YO U R

FO RD

LLER M O T O R S A LES

5 5 IKSUV Util THURSDAY 5 S

mi

IARGAIN SALE!

A1

H O LLER S

M O R R IS O N , le e
- .I

f

-----fra-*

m

Naw Hint. Naw Ttrea, Rawer Steer- a a m A
in* Buck tao lew at

REPA IRED D U R IN G T H IS S E N S A T IO N A L

■ - *• r-

gm *

■i*.l v* an * 195j Ford V-8 2-door Sedan
lu c k «•* w&gt; A KqdWaad Heeler. Tkje won’t 1^41

TUESDAY-THRU-THURSDAY
*

PowtffUdo—Naw Paint 9500-00
(radar)ricad at

Sedan

Beautiful Black Finish. Local Owncr
sto ck No. 753 A

$ 1 3 2 3

ON
BOTH FORD PARTS A N D LABOR
W iles Work On Fojd Products
U Dose I s Our Shop

dr

sto ck No. 675 A

1954 Chevrolet DeLuxe 2-door Sedan

Slock No. 703 A 1 9 f t
Baev

Cash Discount

★

Slock No- 60S A

$600

stock No. 748 B 1 9 4 9 F ord 4-door
Lota of mile* left-

$188

Rood transportation

Stock No. 650 A

S edan

•

.
-

i&lt; '
■'

i
-

: . •'»

5
1 ■ -

—

�1' - \

r

i

"TPeetfe?

^mtford

Shop and Save
In Sanford

F ir**1.- rt'Miir,

AN W n fP B N T &gt; K N T DATI.T H Y .W S r k r W
VOLUME XLVf

SANFORD. FLORIDA.

E stablished IW1V

meUnow!

through FriH*t ; t(*ttf*r*d ihn»»m
or iHtiM&lt;*r*hn» Pr*
ntj^irp*
o»je in Afternoon* mrf •• r # v # n In** n%*r north portion mif at*
*r»-wn Mttih;
►r«ttrr*4
• hon rf i r l*»f her#.

T H U R S D A Y , J U N E 2.1, lO.Vv

V s 'iv l.ilfH

P erm

l-rn.ned

W ire

N O . 21 &lt;

DeLand O r Miami May Get Franchise
**

• •»

DeLand or Miami may take Ihe Florida State Lrxsue
franrisa off the hand* of the Sanford baseball organization.
It appeared today.
A spokesman for th* organization said Del and "ha'*
• hrut *11.000 nr 121.000'* m it* baseball fund and "if it
doesn’t te t a franehiia now, it may not je t one next year."
.Miami ha* been hiddina furiouily for a (ranrhise, tint
haa not had any luck in yetting one. The door mar be open
now.
I orrvhadouing the fold-no of lha toeal orir.rnirat ion **■the low allendanee at la«t night'* home gar.ie. Onlv 31" fa " 1'
turned out and gale receipt! totaled $165.35. The gloom "**
erident.

The situation "111 he di*rusted hr memhrra nf tha organif.-ilinn at a meeting nhirh "ill probahlv follow tonight •
came. lnl«»s a miruele happen*, June 10 "ill see Ihe end of
ihe &gt;an(oid t'ardiltal*.
lust « h al heln michl He forlhrnm int from lh« SI. I.nui*
Cardinal* «a» not known today, and the oreanitatinn eonttnned eflo rtr to ront.iet George Silvey Cardinal farm director for
C'lav* It baseball.
“ H r'v r had a telephone eall hi for Sileev «inre Mondaa.’*
Ih*&gt; s p o k e s m a n reported, "hut " f 'r r had no lurk in rrarhing
him.''
p ilir *

i* in tnho»nn C ity. Venn

Del.and, **hirh ha* plated In Ihe league nn gntil thia

"Tha first I knew about li -a* whew 1 read H ha tha
Herald Vvsleidav." kr.rfer -aid.
Me .aid he liidn’i thiol, Miami -a* iniete.lrrt In Ihe rloh.
and he at.n ruled ool i*r a large ealrnl the po.aibllllt of fie.
la n d la k 'n r narr the fra o th i.r,
"If Mel anil « i* lolrre.led in il." he def lated. **lhea
"oulrln’t have lei il e m the flral plare. would Ihe*?''
Ilrfore letting Ihe rloli he laketi nor i»f Ion o, Krider
•»id the lenglle would explore the rhaOrr of anolher loral
•&gt;r caoi-alioli -clrlrp the rein.. He .rented in think there waa
a gottd po«*iliilita of till* In open &gt;ng
II Sanford poll* mil. ihe Iragoe »&lt;lt h . • r In hr redt|r.d In
«t» • Inlaw, h inter .aid Mi.I »h ith olhrr rloh would he taken
ool of plav waa not known

year, » aa eiewed •« lha logics rlta to taka m ee the franehiae. “They can't lore muth thi* je a r,” Ihe *piikr»m«n ds
elared.
The spokesman attributed ihe H.-msI allendanee Ihi*
• ea*nn In Ihe poor standing of the Sanfoid rto'i arol char ted
that lh* St. Lout* Cardinal* didn't come through with »
firsldiv|*ion tram a* ther promised the* "oolil.
"Inalead of being i.a Ihe first division, Ihe club lias been
nest to 1**1 p lair roost of the lime.'* he deflated.
le ag u e pre*idenl John h iid r r told *ltie t i m i d tods'
that he hadn't been otftriaMv nnlilied h* the Sanford rlob lh *t
it plannrd to quit nor had he been in rilrd in meet » ilh club
official*.

City Council Minutes Provide Interesting Glimpse Of Past

aiiford Had Troubles In Old Days, Too
ijv

hose

Herald I'cnlurp W riter
Sonic interest in if, and off&gt; n nmuHititr.
incidents in
Sanford
history
are contiiiinil in several old books
nf City ( tinned minutes now
in the possession of Police
Chief Hoy Williams.
Thu minutes, w hich rover
Ihe latter part of the 1800’s
•ire w ritten in lotijt hand and
ip o very well preserved. Chief
Will lama hut them on file in hi*

o ffi'e a* Felice Headquarter*.
In ronlraat lo Ihe eily’» pre­
sent-day financial .lain*. It I*
recorded that aa nf January t,
I SHU, ihe city had a bank bal­
ance of M.tmj.Itt. In addition,
Ihe r&lt;ty wax Indebted lo Ihe
First National flank for *2,P00.
City official* apparently con­
sidered their pny adequate even
tnough an
ordinance presen’ed
on November If. I8SI railed for
a salary of $100 per annum for
the mayor, and Hie city Inspector
drew the
magnificent sum of
forty dollar* a monlh. IniTdcnMy.

Governor
Studies
Flogging
TALLAHASSEE (/l1)—Gov.

*

Court Battles
Feature Strike
PLA N T CITY (/F )-L egnl battle*
over court injunrliona began de­
veloping today In the phosphate
strike which waa beact with an
a ir of uncatncsi.
Three anonymoua calls were
m ade to the Lakeland Ledger yes­
terday and the caller threatened
to blatt the Seaboard Air Line
Railroad if H moved any phos-

Strolling
In Sanford
£
Tha lum m er recreation program
- fo r Lyman School and ririn ity will
hegin a t 0 a. m. July 11. Coach
Jim Payne will be in charge and
will be assisted by Mlaa Hetty
Lou Carden. All youngsters ere
urged to attend as a very enter­
taining program haa been arran g ­
ed and planned for Utie season.

Grand Jury Opens
Two-Day Session
The Seminole Circuit Court
grand Jury opened a two-day aeaaiun today. Rtate's A ttorney Mur­
ray O verstreet le assisting the
ju ry.
The ju ry wrill consider such res­
e t aa th a t of William O. Me Ken
dree,
Paola,
charged
with
m urder in the ehootln* of R.
Keith Cochran, Jacksonville, a t
A nnrtta'a Bar and Grill, Juna 4.
W. E m eat Bette waa named
furrm an of the Jury and B. E.
Aiken Jr., was appointed assistant
foreman. O thers members aret
George Mannas, D. C. Howard,
Allen T. Ball, Hugh Braddy, H.
L- Duhart, C. G. Hart* A. B.
Coplin, Richard H. lvers, Taylor
Rountree, H arry H. Bloods worth,
Joe T. Bsggerly, Anthony P. Marcenrlle, Roger Croeker, Car! Amoxa, Raymond BUlamy and Clar&lt;
•nee Henderaon.
QUEEN E U Z A B K m BAILS
LONDONUT— The Queen E lla *
Beth sailed today for New York,
carrying I.31S passenger* end
Bopes of the Funsrd lint of braakB g a three week seam(t*'l atrike
~ it has crippled Britain's luxury

sr-^ -4 P

pbate from strikebound plants.
Officials of the International
Chemical Worker* Union (A FI.)
said they bellveJ the rails were
made by a clunk, and offered their
aaalsUnco In tracking them down.
A third court Injunction went
Into effect yesterday, dissolving
the picket tinea at Coronet phos­
phate plant here. W alter L. Mit­
chell of A tlanta, international
vice president of the union, intii-d
the pickets off the gates but said
the union would go to court over
the Injunction.
Mitchell aLo sold
attorney*
are preparing legal fight* against
art other injunction v h irh tc*• Irams union member* from in ter­
fering with movement of Sea­
board trains Into tho Coronet
plant.
Mitchell said the chemical work­
ers and railroad brotherhood*
would attack litis injunction be­
cause It has the effert of ortb rIng railroad w orkeri lo cross
picket lines.
•
In anolher development, Solici­
tor Paul B. Johns-on of Hillsbor­
ough County questioned
seven
strikers «t Coronet who took part
In tha violence Tuetday v-hen one
striker wu* shot in the leg and a
deputy beaten over the head.

The governor paid neither
he nor Sheriff Hugh Lewis

Black Marketeer
Found Murdered
chest.
There were reports that the 48year-old Koenig had been allotted
some buokmskmg telephones by a
race betting syndicate and these
were lite r taken away, causing
him to c o m p l a i n of being
• i bused
Koenig on Dec. 21, 191.1, was
arrested w i t h
five other St.
Louisans by federal agents who
sclird $25.0uo tn whisky destined
for "black m arket” channels. At
the time ho was active in Repub­
lican politics In St. Louis.
He pleaded guilty to the whisky
charges and was sentenced to U
months imprisonm ent but placed
on probation on a plea of Uw
New York office of the federal
Aioohul Tex U o it

..

Irnell* e

•'planked with I Inch plank, aix

lots.

WEST PALM BEACH

KXI'EI.LED by the Communixt
government In I9IB, Simeon II.
Bulgarian king-in-eiilr, read* a
prnrlsinallon at a reception In
Madrid on Ihe occasion of bis
coming of age. The proclam a­
tion, addressed lo the Bulgarian
pw ple, pointed on! that Simeon
nevrr abdicated and that he "till
maintains rights la Urn throne.
(International.)

Deputy Sentenced
In Assault Case
DELAND Av- Form er Deputy
Sheriff Jack Ssfir wax aenlenced
today to pay a fine of $100 nr serve
30 days in jail for striking a woman
prisoner in her Jail cell.
County Judge Thomas N. Tsppy
also imposed a suspended threemonth jail term contingent on
"your future good behavior."
Safir was eonvicted of an assnult
no Mr*. Kva Dreggorv, 42, of l»el,and. when she was a prisoner in
the rnunly jail Ma- 2* She lertifjed he entered her ret) and "slug­
ged me four or five tim ri." She
was hospitalized briefly,
Safir resigned as a deputy after
the Vnluvia County Commission be­
gan an inquiry into the beaUngi.
IIx fmdingx were turned over U&gt;
Slate Ally. 5!array Sams.

League All-Stars
To Be Selected
SANFORD (Jh — Sports writers
and broadcasters will plrk Hie
Florida Slate Lrague all-star tram
by July 1.
John Krider, league president,
yesterday asked the writers and
broadcasters In league cities to
east their baliulx by that date for
four pitchers and two players at
each other posifon
The team will meet the leading
Orlando Flyer* at Orlando July 14.

BOMBER CRASHES
FAIRBANKS, A la s k a '* - A Navy
patrol bomber rra ih ed on remote
St. Lawrence Island In the Bering
Sea yesterday and Air Force fliers
reported they spotted four injured

.

- &gt; j v*,~ q*7‘ ***y

■ ■ •* - - •

Tennessee Governor Speaks

Judge And Wife
Still Believed
Kidnap Victims

white men.

Body Stuffed In Cor TrunF

EAST ST. LOUIS, rU* JT—Pollca
found the body of j . Fred Koenig,
convicted black m arketeer and
onetime St.
IauAs politician,
stuufed in the trunk of his new
Cadillac yesterday.
Ha apparently hail been stain
elsewhere and then Jammed into
the trunk.
Koenig's slaying followed by Hi­
ll* more than a month the May ’7
shouting here in which (he cars
of Bimey T. (Chick) Hsvcy, J r.
and Kenneth Mueller were riddled
with bullets. Mueller was wound­
ed in the shooting.
Havey and Mueller, friend* of
Koenig, IB, were former associates
of Frank Buster Woiltnan, an
«x-convict and reputed boss of the
rackets In the ares.
was shot in the head and

-

ca.-tc o f a Live Onk Negro
tobacco farmer who reported
In: won flopped by a band of

of Suwaneo County were satisfied
with tho investigation so fa r and
lhal (urliier inquiry would be
made.
I.oxir conferred with Collins
yesterday and left with hint a
w ritten report of Ids findings,
la tte r tho governor said ha had
received assurance from State
Ally William Randolph Slaughter
th a t he vvuuhl aid.
Lewis said Richard Cooks, 35,
fath er of nine children, reported
hr* wax flogged the night of June I
by a group of white men who came
resting him, but that tie wasn’t
to his haute mi the prrlcttre vf “ r *
a hie to Identify the voice* of any
of the men.
Collins said Lewis told hint
Cooks ws* of Ute opinion the rnen
who bea* him w rre "farm ers who
were dissatisfied with his work ”
ThTere is a light labor situation
in that North Florida farming
area at this time.
Cooks reported to the Sheriff
that the men railed at his house,
p u l a sack over his head and drove
him to a spot believed U&gt; be the
bark of the .Suwnnec River where
they flogged him, ,
"I have r d n l Lewis to confer
with the state attorney and he
expects the two of them to mske
a mon exhaustive lnv*rtigstinn
and a more complete report,’’ Col­
lins said.

la gex noutd rnmr In its from | FirM if aft, lliry drew tip an feet wide, laid e roysu*vs on S
xurh annexalmn. hut addllional old,i.ante prohibiting hog. frmn -Inngcrs nf 3vl vtilhm g "
expenses and harm iuoutd). . miming .*t large wilhm the town
A tew sears later, in tu x ,
He Iheirfore respectfully rrlimits
tills
ployed
In
be
a
Oise
Ihr
cits council dreidrd In branquesl that you dismiss said pe­
mote, no doubt, in Ihe light ot life Sanford esen more. Mnly
tition as largely unaiilhorirrd
and against the positive wish Hie rising |* u e of pork
this lintr, they trl ihr property
ol. . . iMgnalurex nf petition
li s pe »i!i!r that Hie m ajo r's owner* dn Ihe work, — — and
er»)."
wife yy.is splattered with mint
paj for It, loo! Il wax required
Muring Hu* fall of IKiP Hie while shopping on Firs I SI reel
that everyone who owned pro­
council may have gotten the ink­ that fall, too, because the conn
ling that Florida was a future eil decided to put sidewalks along perty within the rily limit*
tourist attraction \i aov rate, both aides from
Palmetto (to
most plant shade Iter* In lha
they began a series of improve­ "h ero Ihe minute* do not claboi- flout and on lh* aide* nf their
ment* to make the city more at- atn .) The walk* were It* he

Eisenhower Laughs
At 2nd Term Plea

HISTORY IS IN THE HANDS or Chief of Police Itny Wil- ColliiH pays ho is ilolorminotl
a Hams, shown taming through one of several old book* of to not the real farts and arc
* City Council minutes. (Photo by Claude Hose)
that justice in done in tht
Vdr - x'■f *■*'

Ihe inspector hat! to act a . Mi l i ­
tary tnapeclm, *tieet eninmlssinner end a member of Ihr po­
lice forte.
The tree n t annexation proh
trm lx h) no mean* the firxt
time Ihe quextlon hax enm r up
Inratly. Ill IMS, the City 4'nun
til reeelved a petition from xrveral eitlrenx of the F ast (ieorgeInwn area which opposed the
annexation of their xertion.
Il xaid In part: "We are nage
earner* and Unit our tnrome
barely auffirlenl lo meet our
dally eipenaexT Ne real ad van-

tie-

waixls reached tllR.Vst today hot
authorities apparently were no
nearer a solution of tha Chitling
worth mystery Hi an they were
when the prominent Circuit Judge
and his wife disappeared nine days
ago.
T ie Vanguaid llu h , a Negro o r­
ganization. added $’&gt;00 to the re
ward money jevterday after the
Broward County Bai As&gt;n. put up
$5,000. T ie State Cabinet previ­
ously put up $50,000, the family
$25,000 and Ihe rem ainder came
from organizations and individu­
als.
So far a t cmihl be drlcim m cd
it waa the largest sum ever of­
fered f o r two missing person*.
When Joseph F. Crater, a Justice
nf the Supreme Court in New York
vanished on Aug *, 1911. ■ reward
of $10,000 was offered lor Ins re ­
turn.
Authorities still Iran on the
theory that Hie couple may have
been kidnaped, basing the opinion
on the finding of two partly used
roll* of adhesive tape, lliry bclirvr
It may h iv e been used lo bind
and gag Judge (.’. E. C-hillingwortii,
58; ami his wife, Marjorie, 57.
Sheriff John Kirk »«*d mvesligalora are still working on a rlurthe nature of whirh he declined
tn divulge—which could Irad U)
identification of povvible kidnap­
ers.
Kirk said U»! night that blond
stains found at the scene were
of ths t a m e type "A" as Mrs
ChlUingworth’a. A record of her
blood typo waa obtained from
among tho«# who had donated
blood to the arm ed forces during

the Korean War.

Specialists Vote
For Continuance
O f Polio Program
WASHINGTON OB— A panel of
medical •Xpert* voted 1-2 today
to continue the present program
of inoculating youngsters with Hie
Salk polio vaccine.
The vote was taken at a meet­
ing of the medical men before a
House Commerce subcommittee.
In addition to those present and
voting, there waa a letter from
Dr. William Mcd . Hammon of the
Univerady of Pittsburgh, who was
not present, favoring a halt to the
program . Counting M, the vota waa

Jaycees Request
Full Senate Probe
O f Sports Crime

Continues
His Tour
R U TLA N D , V t

(A P )

—

Ureniilcnt Ki enhovver trnvel*
into N ew Hampshire
after laughing o f f a
pica— veil h a .xerion.x
lo n e — t itnl he seekx a

today
jovial
nmlrrsecond

te rm .

A TLA N TA — kT i Melt tfiitox to llu* Titli rimittnl conven­
It was in New ILunp.xliire'g
tion nf I lie li. S, .In nine t ’linmluT nf t nniitim t' Unlay ciilleil 1**."»—piesidi nl ml jtfiinaty flint
for It foil Semite i H’ CHIt Kill it III (il (Time tn - | ioi 1h
With ltd voiced (i|&gt;| limit ion, tin Jaycee.w ii|i|ii’o\ oil .t re- he Rot an early boost toward
auliitinii ileploiiiiK the activities of p iiite.-minmil fixers and the While Hou c,
gam bler-

Holiday Inn Losr
In Morning Fire
A fir* this morning eompleialv
dextinyisl ths Holiday Inn Ior*l**d
on Highway 17-92.
It apparently sta rtn l In the id chen and modi- headway through
tiinni of ili, huililing wlitui it w t
ilitcnvcri'd by a motorist gotri.'
to Sanfoid. Tho motorist had to
awaken Hirer fnmilip* In fore u
phone could he reached to rail lint
Longwood Firo Dept.
Lotlgwoud’* Dept responded Slid
pumped from tin* uouihy Lha, toil
dun to 4hr- headway the fin- had
made they w rie iiitahir to save the
hiiildins*. Allamotiti Spring- mol
Casselberry Fir* It* pi- ale* *&lt;aisled a* did the Florida Forrest
Ranger*.

s ft* ( the doleg.*l*'- he icd tVooe- to Concord, N. II , this afternoon
*&lt;■*■* (iov Frank (lemi-itl urge
inrreaM'd participation in p u h l.o (or jo a dd iv ss from the Me pi of
the Stale Capitol.
by young men.
lie
arrived tn Rutland from
J.iycet - also appn'vetl resolu­
Washington je -lrrd a y . At lh* fair­
tion* which:
Entlor-rd ,m active military' rr ground* hr told a crowd estim ated
■a-rve ot J.iaal.UKi .t- pidpo.cd Ity li) police at 15,000 Ih.d \ incur a
|'r* uh id E im' iiIiowi-f , tirgi-l an -Hway* wit! extend ' the olivo
end lo move* toward putitle de branch ot [■ a te "to all who teJI
velopmeiil ol N iagara iniwer; call Like U in imne-ty and Integrity."
e&lt;| for adoption ol the world calen- ILil he ilre--cd tlu t the Unde.f
d.if, requested im re.i-ed lugtiway ( Stales al-o intemlv to remain
i-&lt;m-lrucllon on all govenuiietitol i xtnmg.
Irvei* with cMipliaMx on expres*
T ic plea that the !’ro*!denl *» ek
ways and tiill toad-; commended ,i second term w,i* voiced bv Sen.
Mr. Jonas Salk lor tlcwdopnicni of \iken lit VC), who in m tioJucin x
tile |ai|lu v a n me; oppo-ed pen I . nliuwir referiixt in him a* "a
'o n - lo n -leran - toi noii vrrvtre part-tim e farm er." The allusion
mruiii-.l di-alt I tie- and moved w i» lo In* farm al C ell)-burg,
(nr (h i tiler di -eininalii n &gt;&gt;f m I ' i \\ rtli j broad untile, Aiken
hn mat ton aboui llmiver to m m added
isslnn i* pt rlv
it tv mi eatne-H hope th at h«
.will remain a port time farm er
for some lime In ronie—say
il mind five or six je a rs "
That brought s b.g round nf
applause Aiken then went on in
*«y that much p ra g m a Inward
ta-ling Win Id | .earn has been mad*
under Eisenhower.
Eisenhower h u g tix l heartily but
in hiv talk a moment la lrr gas a
not the tligliest lent of his 1954
school* propoted for resolution.
plans.
Th« resolution was Maryland's
Within an hour after he left lha
first statewide h am -hinetit ol tiie
color bar in schools. College* a f­ Hag-bedecked platform he waa
fect. d am former while schools casting happ.ly for Irout in fastat Fiostburg, Kahshury and Tow- running Furnace Brook near h it
*on, and Negro schools at Bowie overnight headquarters at Moun­
tain Top Inn, Chittenden, li*
anil Baltimore.
At a three-state rally of mem­ caught three in about 75 minute*
bers of white Citizens Councils lint decided they were too small
last night a t helma, Ala., tho L. to keep
S. Supreme Court justices who
Last night, at a dinner at Chit­
handed down the school segrega­ tenden, Vermont'* Gov. Joseph B.
tion ruling were called ''faw ning Johnson named the President
politicians" and a Mississippi cjr . colonel com mandant o! the Green
coil judge recommended their im­ Mountain Boy* Brigade.
peach rnent.
Ethan Alton, Vermont hero of
Form er Gov. Herman Talmadgs tire Revolutionary War, headed tha
of Georgia said the nine justices brigade in (host days. Johnson
"are not fit to em pty the waste told the guests—about 7$ warn
baskets" of past Supreme Court prevent—the unit la being, pa­
s s honorary bngada.
justice* whs upheld aeg u g atio n activated

Maryland Bows
To Integration
B* TltP. ASSOCIATED FIIF-SS
Maryland slate Irarliet* colleges
have bowed to rneiul Irlegratiuli
but Ulteranrca ftom the
Deep
South continued the theme of a
fight to the finish ovrr the U. 8.
Supreme ( o u t t ‘a ruling on the
touchy question.
Ami a liuuii-i in lh* National
Assn, for the Advancement of
Colored People , ailed for com pute
school integration "by not iatar
than . • • -September 1955."
The Maryland State Board of
Educatiun and the Board of T ru s­
tees of the teacher* colleges met
a t Baltimore yesterday and unan­
imously adopted a resolution de­
claring th a t racial segregation in
the five teacher* " it hereby abolishwd." Dr. Thomas G. Pullen Jr.,
a v y w lk u iid w
&gt;J
U aialand

r.isrmiower on a lour of north­
Elsenhower,

Ihe action w .i * t.ikn, shortly ern N*'w England, arrangi-d to fly

�I
THE SANFORD HERALD

Sfiakeup In Command Looms

Page 2

Ceremonial Troops Due
To Welcome Gen. Taylor

How To Produce
Best Polio Serum
Is Latest Issue

WASHINGTON LPl — Th* A r ­ the fire had gone out of the dis­ both from the W hite House end
Wilson, metchnd by Steven*' sta te ­
There wn* expression of regret^ ment th a t
today to welcotr.* Gan Maxwell D.
he was "extrem ely
T aylor, who?* arrival In W ath lrg sorry" th a t compelling personnl
ton to be Armv Chief of Sinff
reasons forced Mm to leave the
signals a shskeup in it* top civil­
adm inistration.
ian-m ilitary command.
Taylor’* arrival to take over the
joh held by Gen. Matthew B. Ridzway follow* elo»*!y the re»lim ition of Robert T. Suven* a* lecr tta r y of th* Army.
Ridgw ar. approaching retirement »r*. '•■*» not rho*en by Pre•ident Eilenhower fop a second
BLENOS AIKEEf/P1—Barked by
two-year term a t m m rnjnder . f new p ltd je t of m ilitary and polittha Army. Ter general's si&lt;"«s a- ir*l u p p o rt. pretident Jusn Teron
bout the need for a continuing P’Jihe-i a dual campaign
today
b lc Arm y conflicted with thn«# of
‘bote who tried to ovrrF.lisnho-ver and S arreU ry of D*-i*-hrow him in last '***k'» bloody
fem e W ilton. The- President ar.d revolt end p e r u n t
spreading
defam e chief dertried to rnr.ttnue rumor* of u p te tt still to com*.
To counter one persistent rumor
reduction in Army manpower.
R idfw ay made speeches m aittin j that Army Minister Franklin LuPeron as
th a t the advent of a*omir ag* cam had supplanted
w eapont required more, not fewer A rgentina's strong man, a govern­
ment spokesman predicted
last
aotdler*.
The White Houte and Defense night that the President mmi
D epartm ent quickly picked a sue- end Lucero's sperial poilrevolt
ro t to r to Steven* yesterday, noti­ powers av tem porary chieftain of
fying W iiber II. Brucker of his al! armed services
Gen. Lucero himself in a broianomination almost w ithin minutes
o f the arrival of a formal resig­ cast last night stlu ted Peron as
nation from Steven*. Rucker haa "the President of the nation and
been general counsel of the De­ commander in th ief of all the
armed forers." The genera! railed
fense Dep*rtmcnt.
„
.
,
.
. , on the troops to "obey loyally *nd
Rumor* of 6»*'*oa reugnatsnn pcnnAnfntly th , mandate of tha
had persisted for mora than n sovereign people.!'
y ear, ever since ha fell into the
Statem ents pledging loyalty to
prolonged and often sharp wrangle Peron weie issued yesterday by
ADMIRAL A rthur W. Radford,
with te n . McCarthy (R-UTis) over the au-mtllion-member
General
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
th a lattar'a charges th a t Commu­ Labor Confederation (OGTl, tha
StafT, declare* the free world
nists war* being "coddled'' in the Presidant’a chief political bulwark,
cannot allow the Communists to
A m y . However, the adm tnlstrs- and by both tha men's and wom­
taka over any more countries as
tion apparently waited for the en's Peronista parties.
he appears before the House
Steven* resignation until inoit of
Foreign Adairs Committee in
The roundup of rumor mongers
Washington. He spoke in sup­
a
a at , •
fallowed repeated statem ents by
p o rt of th e A d m in istratio n '*
Lucero th at numerous false report*
three-and-a-half billion foreign
w ere circulating and ahould ba
aid program.
ffntemntionoM
■ c o o t o r T ar, COP*TV ignored.
j r n o e , SEwrvot.r. c o u n t y .
Federal police announced 14
BT4TK n r n on t t u .
IV n r THF, e s t a t k n r
persons were arrested for spreadKMMLTT *1 H IN T H im Vr.ewn
ing untruths In Buenos Aires
a* EMMETT MO.VItOE HUNT).
Province, which surrounds the
* n NALL0 ^ v i t 5 « TT MAT CON- capital city but does co t include
CE BN;
N otice t* herefcr flv « e
that it. Tha progovem m ent newspaper
Jjf'A IE t, XABBOEfl HUNT tiled
her fln*1 r*pert •• E n c u tr l* »f La Epora reported a t Uaat ala
the t t t l t a o f EMMKTT M HUNT
&lt;*J»n known a* EMMETT MON­ a rie tta in th* capital.
ROME i.P— P reiident Giovenni
R O * l l i U T l . d tceaied; H u t the
The Supreme W ar Council,
filed her petition ter ( m il rtl*Gronchi began his search today
meanwhile,
continued
daily
setah trge. and that the artlf sp rl* to
th e
Honorable
E B N E tT HOUS- alone in judgm ent of those a r r e s t­ for a prem ier to replace Mario
MOLDED. Countr Judge o f t e n i a Scelba, Italy** fourth government
e l* County, yiorld*. on the Ith ed for complicity in the revolt. It
d ev at July. tIM . for approval Of announced th a t "num erous" Ma­ chief in the past two years.
■ icon
aam e and for fin d dlirbarae
«»
The pugnacious little anU-ComJCiscutrie of the o u t * of e m - rines, conscript*, noncommission­ munlst quit yesterday after IS
PtETT M. HUNT i»l»o known *a ed officers who hadeha
hAd
EMMETT MONROE
HUNT.i de­
ed officer* and officera who had month* in office, a victim of re­
fe a te d .
.................
“• “jrfel Ttermld Hunt
been perform ing th eir d u tiia a t volt within his own Christian Dem­
I .le
t r d t r u of th* #*t*te
ocrat party Following parlia­
KM
MMETT M. HUNT (Si­ tha NeVy M iniitry w hen the figh^.
lo
known a*
EMMETT Ing broke out had been freed ye*. m entary custom, the President
MONKOE HUNT),
asked Scelba an.l his Cabinet to
deceaaed. tenlay. The m in iitry wan the
headquarter* for the revolutionists, stay on until a successor la found.
Gronchi scheduled a series of!
N o rtc r To n r s r s n
who mainly were Navy penonnei
OF FLORIDA TO:
There wa» no announcement to conferences on the crisis with lead­
BOTD a n d
ALDINA
* treat, f a r of how m any pat»on» had been ing political bgures, starting with
______
XoV dT_la w ife, of II trb o ei I*tr*et,
Cnuntv,
_____ _
__
..te e *
couety,
awtucket.
Frovidfeea
............
in ex-Preaident Enrico de Nicola.
thod* Idand; CLA U bn HAZEN, found guilty of participating
•Inal*, and
rH A M .r.J
HAZES, the plot or w h tt punishment* had Next to be received waa Gulseppe
•In a it both e f 111* w * » f Mon­
Pella, leader of Ihe rebellious right
ro* a t , Cktceap. Cook
County. been allotted..

By ALTON L. DLAKER LEE

my ord«r*d raramtmlsl troops out pute.

Argentine Police
Launch Round-Up
Of Rumor Mongers

L egal iNOflCG

Italy Launches
Hunt For Premier

V

r - -• -

Illln o lii XTr&gt; BOTD and O UVIA
BOTD. hi* w ife, of U tn ttllia. Oreion ; FREDD IE BOTD and JAN-

* ■ A

Bulganin, Nehru

- ™

Toudo u , Eurta Coun­
ty , Ohio; BETTT ROTn ITHOU
»OHT and l»AM WHOLFORT. htr
huatund. of III Bnvir.g A 'enu*.
!.*n reaitr F alrfltH C ouofr. Ohio;

THB UNKNOWN HEIR*, devlitaa.

r ee ie t* . e iiig n e t* . liaaor*. eradior* ena trust*** e f J. K BOTD.
arasasd. or a n y end ail peraona
claim ing by,
threuab. under or
aaalnat (lid nafandanta; end* any
and all persons h sv in t. or rlslm
le a to have, tn y rl
right, title or in
te re tt i* te d te the follow ing
tfeacrlbeA land. Ir

S

fa leaiitiele Coeatv. * rftJVtds1**-0*
..
Ill*
of ■•etloa I*. Te1
w athla 1* Routb.
liana* II M M , ,

\is*.

ir m Vf twvt

You. le d **fh
hp n e llfiid that
rougbt eeaalesL
ferpuffet
g e le s t

oui “ court, le

or yen,
e eutt
you la
end fee
fer

er* here
h o been
the C ip
Bemlnn

is;

/eid g ar, gad veu. i* l each el
rile, re a r eao.alalatlffe' Cample let ertth

|r » l

Iture ef this eult la to
ter head eed leal ef

ikF m
&gt; « '!i
Herad**- *
&amp;¥ ffil?2"'

MOSCOW OP—'Th* fremler* of
Rustle end India cim a out jointly
today for the surrender of Formo**
to the Chinese Reds
They aUo urjel a U.N. »*st
for Communist Chini end a bgn
on atomic weapons
The declaration was *.in«i list
night by ladia'i prime Minister
Nehru end Soviet Premier Buiginln. and published this morning
at Ibt end of Nehru'* ll-d»y viiit
to the Soviet Union
The ititement conttuied little
that the two men or their govern­
ment* had not Hid before. But it
wee the finA tune they hid laid
it together.
Nehru end Bulganin called alto
for a "almulUneou* and substan­
tial reduction of convention arma­
ment!" with "effective interna­
tional control " They cited the re­
cent Soviet disarmament proposal*
«l a "aubitantial contribution to
peace."
The document wet published lets
thin three hour* before Nehru
boarded e plane for Warsaw to
apend ‘three days before puihinx
on to Belgrade, Vienna, Borne and
Lotrdon.
The crowd* which lined the
»treat* this morning to see Nehru
off numbered fag las* than the

Thur*. Ju n e 23, 1953

A P Scien ce R tp ortrr

NEW YORK (A*!— An h u b in'the
latest Salk vaccine discussion
seems to be a scientific one on
how to make the best polio vac­
cine.
Dr. Jonas E- Ealk believes the
safest way i t to use killed virus
th at cannot cause polio, but can
produce antibodies against it.
Killed virua vaccine cannot cause
polio when properly made
Dr A lbert Sabin, of Cincinnati,
favors using live-vim s vaccine and
is testing his vaccine on a small
numb»r of humans
He uses
strains of live virus which cannot
cause paralytie polio He believes
th* live viruses will produce entibodies against polio lasting fa r
longer than *he protection con*
and perhaps for a lifetime,
and perh*ps fn ra lifetime.
Sabin eiipreise* concern over
use of the 1 Mahoney" strain of
virus in the Salk vaccine
To explain, there are three
types or "fam ilies" of virus which
cause human
paralytic
polio.
There are many members in each
fam ily. Mahoney is on* member
of Typ* I family.
Rabin calls Mahoney the "mo*t
virulent" nf Type I viruses and
seems to imply w orry w hether it
can he safely killed lie prefers—
and uses — a nnnvirulent T i t * 1
virus in hi* vaccine.
Salk expresses confidence that,
when proparly made, hi* vaccinn
containing Mahoney virus is safe.
The Public H ealth Service an •
dorse* the safety of Salk vaccine
—even using Mehoney strain —with
the safety requirem ents asked of
manufacturers.
Salk end others agree th a t a
different Type I virus is ultim ately
desirable, and Ealk ssys these ere
some candidates now for this joh.
It m ust be a Type I virus which
can take the chemical-killing tre a t­
ment and still produce sufficient
antibodies. Meanwhile, he sty e
there is no danger from Mahoney
strain in the vaccine whan it is
properly made.
An argum ent produced n g ain it
any live-virus vaccine ix tb s possi­
bility th a t the "tam e" virus m ight
change and become virulent—able
to cause polio itself.
Numerous scientists, including
many who endorsed Ealk vaccine
as completely safe, think tha jilti
mate answer will he « live-virus
vaccine. Rut they say th a t ja a
few years away, th a t the eomplats
safety of the live-virus vaccinemust be proved. Meanwhile, they
say, the Salk vaccine is a prac­
tical and safe way to prevent much
polio now.

My-flick Sumter
, STROP* U

A qo*rr*l »!ta hu rlrt. ChrljtU
Tstaaa. bid *tst Kerry Fiord** from
U)« Brokrn Spur r*nfb Into (rum on
« iprte that had U ittd for dart, and
brought him bl-k (n th* ranch mtnui
fund* and in debt. To far* "(he mu,ic"
w th hu tourh. hut cenoroua hontlactnr, Robb Mallory, who denounce* ntzn
roundly n * fool, pomtln* out to him
that th* rerthy little neater girl. Lit*
Divinn. with whom h*. Kerry- bed
t-»-n con on-nr i* "p-.iaor •• To b*
dorr with ell thli Kerry decide* to
n-arry Chrlati* Toland *1 once, but
wr.eo h* -alia *n h-r he nndi her -with
• nrw tya-i one W art* Cameron. *n
ley-eyed iLrtnger who wdll -v e r t her
(o th* community'* w*»k-*r.i dtnre.
Ro. fpttefull)-. Kerry r'.dn over to th*
Diweon el-ode * mlaerabl* eharh
where he l* erdently welcomed by
Li’*, whil* her drunken old falh*r
roles about aon-rwher* in back ef ih*
»*- t;k- Lite'* wild * dr* ore* tnvard
K*rry rnsUaue ea h* lnvitre hrr to be
h a pertnrr at lee danco. tad prondea
h** with money so the may purchase
a pretty, near dreia.

CHAPTER SIX
THERE was no m istaking the
ol-itr man'* hesitation when Ker­
ri' asked for a drink of water, but
th* law* of hospitality won out.
With stilt politeness he held tha
gala open for K erry to rid*
through, stood silently while he
climbed down and ailed a tin eup
a t tha pump. K erry drank off the
cold w ater a t a gulp, than turned
and faced Larrabeo squarely.
“W hat'a th* m a ttir, Joe? Why"*
everybody looking at mo like I had
something catching?"
"Nobody’s got anything against
you personal. Kerry." Larrabee an*we red slowly. "But you're Broken
Epur. Come trouble, you're bound
to mdo with them.1*
"Why should there bo trouble?"
Kerry demanded. T h e ro never
has been."
"No. I been here for five years,
N ats Cullen for ala. moat of the
others about as long, and we've
never had trouble with anybody.
We minded our own bualneta, and
aaked nothing but th a t other folk*
should mind theirs. But now it
xeama th a t Sir. Mallory,” th e n
was bitterness In his uea of the
formal title, "is claiming we're on
hii land."
Tha tin cup dropped with a clat­
te r from K erry's hand, as ha stared
Into the homesteader’s level. Iceblu-e eye a "You m ust ba mistaken,
Joa. I've never heard Rob say anyth in g like that."
"Docs he tell you everything?"
Kerry flushed and dodged the
uncomfortshla question. "Who did
you g et It from ?"

Larrabee hesitated. T d sooner
not tay.”
"W as It anybody from Broken
S p u rt"

The homesteader cleared hts
th ro at with a definitely uncomfort­
able look. “N ot—not d irec t"
"Well, if Rob doesn't tall ma his
plans,-it isn't likely he'd tell them
to anybody else. I wouldn’t pay
any mind to th a t kind of story till
you hear it from him."
I-arrabea didn't answer. It . nclear he waa reserving his Judg­
ment. The su n pause was broken
by the appearance of Larrc-'ce's
son. Tun, who came striding -svtly through the gate and r
icd
short a t sight of Kerry.
Tim was a massive young man
with blocky shoulders and a barrel
chest. His heavy black brows and
the u n rjly black cowlick th a t dan­
gled perpetually over his forehead
gave him a look of sullenneaa that
might have been misleading. But
there waa no m istaking the temper
th at smouldered in hla deep-sock­
eted eyea as he looked a t Kerry.
The thin voice of Larrabee's in­
valid wife called from the house,
"Joe. come hart- I w ant you."
"Well, got to be going." The
words were a diamlaaai. "You com­
ing in. T im ?"
"In a minute."
-Remember what I told yan,
Joe,'* Kerry called after him.
"I'll r e m e m b e r . " Larrabee's
tone, as he disappeared into the
house, promised nothing.
Tim mads a lumbering stride
toward K erry, big fiats knotting.
"W hat you mean by th a t? W hal'd
you tell dad?"
"N ot to believe everything he
hears."
'T h a t all? You w eren't tailin’
him Broken Spur alma to ru n us
o u t? "
"W hy would I be telling him
something th a t’s not so ? If you’ve
been listening to th a t kind of talk.
I ’ll tell you w hat I told him- F ar
as I know, Broken Spur hasn’t
any such Idea."
"W ouldn't do you any good If
you had," Tim growled. "This Is
our land, an' we ain 't aimin' to let
any high an' m ighty cattlem an
make us run with our tails be­
tween our legs. Tou can tell Rob
Mallory that."
"I'll tell him." K erry agreed,
"but since he's not aiming to try
It, I don't know th a t ha'll be
specially Interested." He moved to
swing onto hla horse, but Tim
blocked hla way.
"I w ant e word with you, Rlordan."
"Nobody's stopping you," K erry
answered shortly. Tim’s belligerent

air waa beginning to get on hts
narvea.
Tun drew a deep breath. "I
w ant you to stay away from my
girl! You hear m e?"
K erry's eye brews went up. "Does
she know she'* your g irl? ”
Tim flushed an angry brick red.
"Never mind that! She's not for
you, or any of your kind! Ju st
'cause she s only a kid. with no
m other—an' the old man net seem'
w hat's goin’ on under his nose—
you needn't think she’s got no­
body to look after her an' you or
anyhody like you can do w hat you
plrase until her. See?”
Kerry coildn't help feeling a
little sorry for this tig , clumsy hot­
head. A ha by could have seen that
he was crazy over U ta. His voice
waa almost gentle ea he asked,
“Don't you think L ila's old enough
to know w hat she w ants?"
"W hat does a kid like her know
about men Lke you an' M allory?”
"W hat the devil's Rob got to do
w ith it? " K rrry spoke with sud­
den sharpness, and fo r the first
time saw Tim falter.
"You're two of a kind, I reckon,"
he m uttered sullenly. "He raised
you. didn't h e? Cowman!" he spat
out tha word. ‘T hink you own the
earth an* everything on it—think
you ju st got to reach out your
hand an' lake whatever you got a
notion to. Well, you can 't taka
our land—an' you c a n t take L ite
—a n ' any tim e you feel like tryln',
ju st remember you cowmen a in t
the only ones can use guns!"
Be flung off into the house.
K erry mounted soberly and rode
to m s There seemed to be a new
chill In the spring evening, and hla
thought! made poor company and
left a sour taste In hla mouth.
Tim 's wild talk about Lite
didn't disturb him particularly.
She waa a sweet kid. and a pretty
one. b u t hla interest In her wouldn't
have kept him from dancing a t
her wedding with only a mild pang
of Jealousy. If Tim wanted to m ar­
ry her, good luck to him! I t waa
Joe'e story th a t really filled him
with a dull, gnawing imsetHisee
A rum or like th a t could m ake
trouble if people—especially hot­
heads like Tim—believed it. And
now be waa alone, he owned to
himself th a t he wasn’t aa confi­
dent *a ha had tried to sound about
there being no tru th In it. Who
knew enough of the dark, secret
workings of Rob's mind to predict
w hat he would do?
(T o Be OoefiaeedJ

cetetunllnn.

fjnternotteeolj

I dream ed I bared
m y shoulders
In

0P■
{ denfi^

Fight Is Looming
wing of the Christian Democrats
and nne of the chief architect* of On Aid Proposal
Scelbt'a downfall

The next Premier almost cer­
tainly will come from tha Chris­
tian Democratt—the largest sin­
gle faction it the Chamber of Deputiei—despite the differences be­
tween right end left uinga end tha
personal feuds that have strained
party unity.
He could be any one or several
leading political figures Pela, exPremier Ammtore ranfani and
Budget Minister EtJo Vanoni were
moat frequently mentioned
He almoat certainly will follow
Ihe same basic foreign policy as
Scelba and bis predecessors—
friandship with the West within
the framework of tha Atlantic
pact
Whoever be u , Gronchi will have
an important voice in choosing
him. Under the Italian coastltu
Uon, the President has little res)
MW-er except In times of crisis
like this Then he steps forward
as 4n els mint rf stability

SOVIIT Foreign Minister Y. M.
Molotov (right) is shown with'
A A Sobolev, Russian delegit*
to the United Kittens, after con*
ferring in San Francisco with
Beg Hammarskjold, U.N. Secre­
tary General. Molotov Is attend-:
lng the UN. 10th anniversary;

Etude Strapless v

WASHINGTON LP- President
Eisenhower's proposal to continue
aid to Yugoslavia and India headed
for a House fight today after win­
ning a close decision m the Forelgn Affairs Committee
The committee approved funds
for both countries without change
but lopped 11.19,200.000 from other
programs, approving a foreign aid
budget for next year of S3.2U.800 000
Then th* group approved the
rogram 30-4 and started it toward
[ouse action probably next week.
The Senate already his aulhoriied
tl.42i.000.000. about what Eisen­
hower requested, for tha year be­
ginning July 1
In th* only major reduction, the
committee slashed 141 million
dollars from military aid for U. 6
allies, without specifying any area
for the cut. This brought the new
military total to 8UU.000.000. The
rest of the program it economic
help nf vinous kinds.
A bookkeeping reduction of
tia.2no.ooo was offset by th* com
miUee'a recommendation that an­
other 33 million dollars in eco­
nomic aid bo given to Ipsln. This
brought net reductions to *lia,200..

S

AT A WMTI H04N8 CtMMONY, President Elsen­
hower presents AMVET Memorial Scholarship
Medals to a group o1 teen-age students lor their
achtevwnenta in *oh«t«—hip and leadership. The
four-year, 83,000 scholarships go annually to chil­
dren of veterans who w en killed or permanently
disabled in World War n or In Korea. Shown

with the Pres blent at the Washington presentation
(L to r.) ere: Gall Ottlngar. San Diego, Calif.;
Katherine Norem, Mensfleld, Ohio; Betty Nlsivoceta. Louisville, Ky.; Sheila Miller, East Greenbush,
N.Y.; Peter Kemble. Dee Motoee, la ; Juanita
Keeton, Miami, 71a, and Sandra Hodgson, of Man­
hattan, Kama*
ffetemeMonel Sound photo)

Titanium, a metal the use cl
which la expanding at a specta­
coal Canadian air lowered tern cular rate, is 40 per cent lighter
peraturea m ar the central part
by an average of a degrees today, thin steel and Us alloya are stron­
A band of thunderstorms during ger than moil steel alloys.
the night extended from northern
More than fl? per cent of the
Texas northeastward lute tha resident* of the United States
Ohio Valley, and more widely scat­ weir spectacles, compared to 88
tered showers fell over the South' per cent te England.
cist. Showers were reported over
New England earlier In the night
About 34 million U. S housebut skies were clearing te that holds
use natural gaa.

Rain Falls Over Most O f Nation
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Rain fell aver most of the eastof amendments to reduce or apply
ccmdibona to aid for Yugoslavia
and India. Marshal Tito's Commu­
nist government is earmarked for
40i* million dollars in economic
help, plus unspecified military
esiistance; India is down for 81
million in economic end Foist Four
aid.

Who ever dreamed of rorjA ,
r e
comfort in a strapless
hr*? Only exciting Etude*
Strapless gives you dc-tac-togi
glitching for perfect control,
plus t fosMvihbarlined bend
. and covered center-wire
for luxurious comfort. Choot^
it in black or white
broadcloth, at 150
*

estun sled million which tumid out
far his arrival.
Nehru was accompanied to the
airport by Bulggnln, Soviet Com­
munist party chief Nikite 6.
Khrushchev, D e p u t y Premier
Georgi Malenkov, Defense Minister 000.
Georgi Zhukov god other Soviet By vtrtoa announced only as
close, the group detested a senes
leaders
Bidding the Indian Wader fir*well. Bulganin hailed the joint doc­
ument at "a solid basis for further
development between our two
countries and as an eggmpia to
the rest of the wertd ad peaceful
coexiateace."

fir WriUs« AS
F ir x s

ef
« ! ■ PHARMACISTS A LW A Tl ON DUTY

Raymond M. Bell

ie -L lllI

ReoniNat &amp; Anderson

a o *K T

WslMrm* A g ia c r Drug Star*

fflSUBK SUSS a§MM CO.
m w .* !* .

by the CUc**

-IS4T

9tm»IN
iic iu i:

m
AJWV

\

�f

So cia l fcviwJbu
The 'Shape Of Things' New Summer
•Trend, Says Agent, Myrtie Wilson
The ‘‘Shape of things” U the “ H" look is the leading tilhounew thing in Hummer fashions, ette.
ray* M yrtie Wilson. Home Demon*
In the “ II” look we see the
■tratlon Agent. The Mini-trim gentle curves and longer lines—
the long toiao, squill c necklines,
and pleated or gathered skirls.
lAer-blouses, low waistline em­
phasise with low fitted belts and
bloused fullness at the backv.aist. Tho shoulders are narrow
and fitted Jackets a little longer.
The W are Bible Class of the Box jackets are still fairly short.
f i r s t Methodist Church met Tues­ The dress and the coat being
day night at T p. m., in McKinley long and lean and eoat ensemble
Hall. A turkey dinner was served is very popular — often buttoned
by the ladies of the r!a*s in hon­ to below tile waist-line. Jum pers,
ihc.ith drcs.cs with Jackets and
o r of th* men for fa th e r's Day.
suits of lightweight fabiics arc
Kntertainm ent included a show
entitled “The Hleh Young Rule.", “ “ If™ *
„
aliown hy Rolwtt Hal.er. A fte r-!. The new look . a r t s with he
'foumlaltion garm ents. The bunt l*
wards a short bus.ness meettng |iulnilrd „ nil iai4ed, the m idriff
w a i t held, presided over by Mis. ,
. . . .
■:
. ..
Ih-ngcr with unbroken line at
Moran.
, Thc waj&gt;t ,inc j5 ca, c.|
About £0 members and y j e s t s '#ri, h(p, l;tlTowrj .
attended.
| shoes: 1 .m il in style is to
make the foot look lighter. More
open sandals. Cutouts in pumps.
Slender heels and tapered toes.
Hose tome in various shades to
Mend with shoes, dt esses, etc.
Hose with less reinforcement in
heels and toes (In some, none a t
all) and nu seam s popular h*
open sandals. Stretch hose h ate
moved cm to the m arket. I’rnper
sine is Im portant for good service.
Notice size scale carefully,
Hals ci,me in various lorms —
deep crowns, shallow crown-,
large brims, turbans, narrow
brims with shallow crowns worn
Hat on top of head; berets, bre
tons — tilted .backward.
(iloves—Short glove* most pop­
ular. Stretch gloves nlso found on
m arket and pastels as well as
white.
Rags — I.argp recrptahles that
hang close against thc body are
fashion news. Thc tote bag con­
tinues in popularity.

Men Of Ware Class
Honored By Ladies
v With Turkey Dinner

WEDNESDAY
The F irs t B aptist Vacation Bi­
ble School is from S . j O to 11:50
a. m.
The F irst Baptist l’ray er Meet­
ing service begins at 7:30 p m.
The F irst B plist Sunday School
Cabinet meeting will he held fol­
lowing tho P rayer .Meeting service.
The F iist Baptist Vacation Bi­
ble School will he from 8:30 to
H:.'iO a. m., for those age .1 thru
16 years.
The F irst B aptist Ti aiding Uni­
on W inkers Council meeting will
begin tonight at 7:IHl p. in. with
a covered dish supper.
The F irst Baptist Prayer Meet­
ing will begin a t 7:30 p. m. B ung
your Bibles.
THURSDAY
The F irst Baptist T raining Uni*
bln School begins a t 8:50 a. m.
The F irst Baptist Junior Royal
Ambassadot* will meet at 7 p. in.
The F'irst Baptist T iaiuing Uni­
on Members will meet at the
church at 7:50 p. m., for lhu:r
monthly Visitation Program .
FRIDAY
The F'irst P.aptist Vacation Bi­
ll e School veil* meet fiom 8'50 to
It 50 a. m.
The Brownlee Bible Class i.f
thc F irst Presbyterian Chuich will
have a covered dish supper at the
church a t 7 p. tu. .Members are in­
vited to come and bring their
favorite covered dish.
MONDAY
The F irst Baptist Vacation Bi­
ble School will lie from 8:30 t.i
11:311 a. m. for those age 5 Ihtu
Id years.
TUESDAY
‘Ih e Unity Class will meet a t
the Valdez Hotel a t 8 p. in. with
the Itev. Carolyn Parsons as tea­
cher. Study lesson will be con­
tinued and tile public is invited.
The F irs t Baptist Vacation Bi­
ble School will licgin at 8:50 a. in.
Thc Interm ediate Royal Ambas­
sadors will mret at tho F irst Bap­
tist Church at 7:00 p. m.

Little W. Mixon
Six Years Old,
Honored Tuesday

B I R T H S
Mr. and Mrs. Orville W. Touchton announce the birth of a son
George Quinn, 5 lbs. 14 or. in
the Fernald Laughton Memorial
Hospital
on June 22. Mr*.
Toucltton I* the form er Miss Nell
Simiucficld.
SLACKLY fitted reefer of
oatm eal Foritm ann tweed la
from the H arry Frechtel spring
0 1953 collection. Tabbed alrevea
ju st tip the wrlatbona and ara
• e t Into narrow sloped shoulder*.

MEMORY 11ELI*
BRENHAM, Tex. 1/13 -O ffe re d
ehoice of automobile license
mini beta, a woman lieie said, “ I'll
take 3535. It will he easy to re ­
member, the first two being the
size and the latter two the age
I’d like to be.”

Mrs. Cecil Mixon honnied her
daughter, Wanda, on her sixth
birthday Tuesday at 3 p. m. at
their home in Lake Maty.
Balloons w ere hung hi mind the
window* in the moms mid games
weip played. After opening her
many lovely gift* Wanda and her
guests had refreshm ents of cake,
ico ri cam cones and punch. 1 he
children »ang “ Happy Birthday”
to the honuree as she blew out her
birthday caudles.
F'avors of balloons and bubble
gum were given each rhild. The
birthday cake was decorated in
white and was lopped with a bou­
quet of (towers made ftom cake
coloring.
Those invited to 1* with Wanda
were Benny and l.isajo Davis, Pal,
Gary, Ellen and Dutch Omcy; Su­
san and Timothy Brooklyn; Bec­
ky, Judy and Susie Mills; Gail
Roberts; Gary and Roy Del Ches­
te r; Janice and llaio ld Dunlap;
Mctanie Williams; Jean and David
Seaman; Steven, Peggy and llerkey G rier; Billy and Wayne
Smith and Ronnie and Billy Mixon.
Those helping to rn tcitain and
served were Mr*. Omey,
Mrs.
Brooklyn, Mrs. Smith and Mrs.
Grier. Pictures were also taken.

Mfs. B. CoffrerT's 1
Miss A.
Group Is In Charge
Reveals
For Fidclis Class
Mr*. Berta Cottrell and her
K'oup were hostrsses for the te g u ­
lar meeting of the Fidclis Class
of the F irst Baptist Church at the
home of Mr*. Cottrell on Sanford
Ave., Tuesday evening.
Mrs. John Rogers presided ovci
the business session and the de­
votional was given hy Mr*. J M.
Moye. For her topic. Mrs. Move
chove excerpts from the Spliitiinl
Diary of Mr*. Dale Evans Rogers
Report* were given hy the group
leaders and plans made to visit
n h 'cn tres on Thursday afternoon
and evening. A Icltrr was read
from Mrs. Clara Jobe thanking
the class for its gift to her.
Following the business session
a social hour wa* enjoyed and a
plize vsas piesented to Sirs. Guy
Bishop for excelling in the con­
test. Refreshment* of cake and
pinpapple punch weie setved to
those present including:
Mr s. F ortest Gatehel, Mr*. Verne
Messenger, Mrs. Uortaine Giaham, Mrs. Geneva VanBuskirk,
Mrs. Moye, Mrs. H. M« Pearce,
Mr*. W, A. K ratzcit, Mi*. R oget*,
Mr*. H. E. Turner, Mr*. F\ E.
Cooper, Jr., Mis. George Steele,
Mrs. Bishop, Mr*. J. M. W hita­
ker, Mrs. Harold Davis, Mrs. Bert
Couse, Mr*. 6 . C. Bors.lorf, Mrs
O. G. Roller, Mis. Cottrell, Mrs.
Yirgi# P ra tt, Miss Myrtie Wilson,
and Mrs. I.otrne Franklin.

Golden Circle
Of Baptist Church
Meets On Tuesday
The Golden Circle Class of the
F irst Baptist Church met Tuesday
night at the home of Mr*. Curtis
J. Green with Mr*. Carol Mc­
W horter a* co-hostess.
The meeting opened svith prayer
hy the teacher, Mrs. M. N. Cleve­
land. and was followed hy tha de­
votional using the 13th Chapter of
F irst Corinthians as tile topic,
A fler a short husines* session
game* were played under the di­
rection of Mr*. II. A. Colbert with
Mrs. Curtis J. G in n and Mrs, J.
K. D avit a* winner*.
Delicious
jefieshm ent*
were
reived to Mrs. N. C- Booth, Mrs.
Charles A. I.ewis, Mrs. 11. T. Col­
bert, Mr*. W. W. Herne, Mrs. J.
K. Davis, Mr*. M. N. Cleveland
and tha hostesses.
The next meeting will lie held
Ju ly 1!) a t the home of Mrs. 01ire
Johnson with Mrs. R. E. Sotlerblom a* co-hostess.
good w ish e r

— on n.\n

PHILADELPHIA (A3 — A
newspaper rep o tter who envei*
th# federal building received *
post cmd from a form er federal
court defendant now in Lewisburg, Pa., penitentiary.
It said: “Thank* for the exrellent story, Hope to *cp jou
soon. Wish you were here!”
COURSE IN MANNERS
FREDERICKSBURG, V*. (-13
Mrs. John P. H arris Jr., dean of
women a t Mary W ashington Col­
lege, *ays inform ality a* aymbolir.ed hy supper in Ihe living room
around the TV set it making many
young git!* insccuia in a foinial
situation.
Seeking to do something about
it sha atarted a voluntary course
in formal manner* to teach fresh­
men to he a t ea*e. Of tho 70(1 enmlled 320 attended tha
seioud
and th u d .
nnW .T O .W A 8H TAGS
If you aver have doubt* about
laundering an article, save your
how-to-wash laga for fu rth er
reference. Describe the garment on
earh on* for quick idrnlifiration
and keep near
your waahing
equipment.

Andes
Plans
Of Coming Rites

'Officers Installed
At CWF Meeting
Held In DcBary

(pnA A jonah '

T W ff
TTKH A liD
T lm r a . .Tune 21, 1!»5A r.tR e ,1

Atr. and Mrs, Charles Mueller
*ud daughter*, Linda Su*an and
Thr rW F nf the l it *t O ni*tinn A n b ara au iv ed Sunday aflerrmnn
Chinch nirt jit th r home of Mm. I from Brooklyn, N. Y., and arc the
ru r-t* of Mr*. Mueller's giaiulH nny Knlk in PrIViry for th r an­ paients, Mr. and Mrs. J. II. Wjrnn.
Miss Alice M rani Audi-*, daugh­
^h snipper, I ' oIIimvter of Mr. and Mr*. John 0. ,\n- nual rn v rm l
Mr. and Mr*. R obctt Reel)* have
de, of this City and bride-elect of ir.jr tlie supper, uliich \\n% &gt; m o l
Clayton J. Beaulieu annuum «■* the buffet ntyli* ind tsiicn from unutH hist returned from Miami where
final plans for her forthcoming table* on tho lawn, n bu&lt;dnr*s they took their son, Boh Jr., to Ihe
tu rn in g un&lt; held in the h u n g annual Hand Camp in Coral Gn!&gt;wedding.
I Ic* which it sponsoied hy the Mi.
Mis* Andes and the «&gt;n of Mr. room*
Thr* iti'Uilliftr officer, Mrt r , r u t Iirni University. While there they
and Mr*. Jesse Beaulieu me lieing married at the home of t lif in^tai! In I th r officer* fi»f th r coni* 1visited her pnrenls( Mr ard Mr*.
hi ide-elecl’a gmnilmolher, ,VvV. J. in I! yr.tr with n henutifid and im- Charles II. S trlfu n i in llom eslead.
0 . Andes, dlbl West 201h St., at piv**iv&lt;* ftoM-vr m u dm in* t Jilin*
Tommy W yatt left Sunday foi
«-1\ itiisagrta on
10:00 a. m. Ju n e 31*. The Rev. t ion, pi tin in ir
Tallahassee to attend summer
John O. Andes J i., of Make l or- thr ifuminttk uffterm.
m ii.fr ram p, lie will he there (tv.c»t, N. C-, the bride-elect's liruI’1r offu
a t .1% f.&gt;l!iuk
ihet, vs ill pcifoim the ccicmony. p?i -tilrnt. M»« V. ]l (itnnthnni, weeks.
Mr. Andes will give his daugh­ an \m n ifn n Br.tuty roar enm aer;
Mr. and Mr*. I!. W. W alker an
M u.
Clm rlrt
te r m mat tinge mid Mias Oiu Ray Vi*** pri'«lilrnt.
daughter,
Jill, arrived Tuesdrv
tiiiim r, n ho \ii l W m*t oiled in
will not a* maid of honor.
flora Interlarhcn 1o spend several
S
rpinnhor
upon
h
rr
rot
urn
to
Mike Biown will p u f ” ini the
day* with his brother, sister-induties of best malt for Mr. Beau­ Sanford; Mrv •!. ! ,\ndcr*on* arc- law unit family, Mr. and Mrs
rrtiify,
i
coruiiio
of
orchid
mums;
lieu.
E. Walker.
No invitations a ir being aenl tiro aiirrr. Ml*, l.ra trr Tharp, a
Golden unini rarnairr; Mr*. lVn.rlull nil friend* and leU llxes of Min. vMii dup chairmnn, pink a id
Four youngster* from here «&gt;e
the couple ate invited to the cere­ " h u e idim r.im iy amt th r outco­ attending The Baylor Rummci
Camp* at Chattanooga, Torn*, and
mony and reception.
me prp.-idrnt, Mis l.andrraA was
will r"tu m home July 2'.*. The*e
otrM 'ntrd with a beautiful lavrn* youngsters are n n tce W. Anderdet oivhtd.
s oi J r , Glynn and Roger Hodge*,
Mm . Grantham w*« *1*0 prif- Pnot-i Road and Roy W right, 4 1(&gt;
Acutrd o lilt a pst» kn»;r **f mitt* Elliott Avenue.
cold frcib nmdi* into .i nu nipt* of
ribbon and mn.imonlnl hull*. Thr*c
i*rrda a ir in hr plantrd and writ
The I.uthem u Church l.n tic* r a m i fur a* thuy rrprrf&gt;rttl all
Aid Society i* planning a social i th r u ium n in the KVIlowahip, 1 hr
hour fur ihcir next two meeting*
11 in’ wiiN ciunluilrtl with a mr&lt;The i rg u lar session of the I Ji ■ •ngr and p ia y n o ffrtrd hy Mr a.
dies Aid wa* held n» the home of
Mr*. John Fenkatik. Mis. Jerry \\ lf, Y«
T hr mooting « .n tiirnr*l nvrr
Settkarik wa* in elinrc-- of the
HOT w \ith rr costume of o \ldevotional, her topic being *‘liiinl- to Mia. &lt;»rnnthnm hy Mm . Ian
♦in*'* and tin? huaiti«M« m tfl'ii;
ilizwl gray vs it. r mark lo t’ q
hlo Yourself**.
Is trorvi Halt ic Carncgtc’s v-prmj
Thr next meeting will lie on roiiidttifrd.
1P.V) collection. Tin) ( - - ' t -s.
Thu -r on joy ftii* thr i wiling s.itli
July 21.
Ihe u-aiJdlltic jgrl-ci XnndS
were Mv*.
Mr. anti Mi ^ Talk
away a liltt* from the stitchS.
lim iC f Kolatid, Mr*. Mabel
fitv-atv i hiphniv of the vlr, , . 3 ho
Schw ann, Min. IV. P V ests), Mv*.
rlrrss is sleeveless n--,| lu a .v
It, Ik I’rjii wt»n, Ml &gt;. it I). 1.nu­
coolly cut-out invklm r.
ttrrs* ll i v B. II. William*. Mi*.
\ m i: coffee riKi:
*». I An.lv-i -on. Mr*. J I Hot mu.
Itigtcdicnl*: 2 iiirdiuin apple*. 2
Mi*. L ester Th*rp, Mis. V, It tablespoon* sugar, 'i
leaspoon
It AHA H I h RATTLE
t vi.i’ithaiu, Mi
J. W. Knight, cinnamon. 2 cu|'.« packaged biscuit
nt*SlH N I 13
| t ‘s nkny to o*a
A* bride* glow younger, wed- Mi*. J. Earl Evans, -sn.l Mrs.
mix. 2 tablespoon* *itgar, '* C lip an vc,.» Uotial “it-y tuts)1 rim” v&gt;n
ding govvna gri&gt;w simpler and Chandler Vail.
undiluted evaporated milk, *i cup
prettier.
I your hub)-, »ny* Dr. Jam es Marvin
water, one egg.
Ttm statuesque lirido who goes
Bl'lsy, pi ofe*«ivr of pevliuti li s s i
Method
Fare,
core
and
slice
np
up the aisle in ancestral lace mid
pics. (To picvcm apples from stir* Tufts College Mmlb-al School ami
antique satin t« becoming a lurity,
eolnring, place in howl with I ehirf physician at Boston Floating
outnumbered Ivy the bright-eyed
tablespoon vinegar amt enough Hospital.
young bride* who ctluo e an mwater to rover tlum .) Mix toge­
espei: ive dress cu( on simple,
Him. Fny I at u n» hnnnrril r»»A Itttlo m otherly clucking, tha
youthful line*, for the most im­ irtitlv u il|i h liirthdny ilinnrr nt ther 2 tnlvlcspoivn* su g ar nml
portant occasion of their lives. tlui hnmr nf b rr *i«ln in In", cinnamon in a small howl (or top­ doctor ray*, l* govul for thu mental
though there are many new 'Irn. Kffir Mti*lkc pt 1SU5 \i*r* ping. Measure biscuit mix and 2 and rmntmual well Iveing of in­
Isldc-pswi’s sugar into a medium fant* despite austere pm .tires id mirarle fabrics available for 1o- iimn^ti Avi*.
■ire mixing howl. VI.i tlm milk,
day's bride, the old favorites
Tito** i m i l H R tm Mr«, Fny water and egg. breaking yolk. Mix cuninmmled by aomit antlmrillc*.
remain as rohweli-sheer organdie, I .i t . Ml** .Vliiiy I j i rso ii, M i* , runt
eyelet-embroidered sheer cotton — Mi s Wiillt r It. Tripp* I'u tn - just until Idrndcd, about 25 strok­
alt as woll-liiveil in gi andinuther'* p r i up; Mr. n,1111 Mi %„ I n \ 11»r n it*1 es, TTlin into a greased 8-ltpTi
leaking pan. spreading evenly.
day a* today.
itJiuuhtiM* Flixabrih, Mr. unit Mi x.
New finishes ami treatm ents J . |&gt; Mavid, nntl ilnM rui. Mr. Flare apple slice* in rows aero**
tonka these traditional wi-vluing* nml Mm \V. J. Wnit, Mr* Irn tr top. Sprinkle topping over apples.
Bake in moderately hot i |t)0 de
gown fabrics even more beautiful WiiH, .Inyui' Mirlkr.
I’nmrlii grev ) oven for about 25 Hi 30
and durable today. The new Swiss MIrik* .1 M.I .Mrs Jnili* Knipple.
minute*. Make* 4 to 6 servings.
organdie* ronto in many vei .ions
—embroidered, embossed or ptnin,
in snowy w hite or a range of de­
W IHST IaK I I U T
N 01’IC K
licate pastel*, Kyelri embroider­
tVIMXUISTOtVK, ,Mm»r* i n ed batiste »l*o I* newly popular, F em, if
trill* ilriiu ,h limin*
All Calendar
and even old-fashinned lawn i- V'IiIaIIuS it a "lltr ^tfl III flirt MIII
staging a emneliack.
UstiiiRR And
Maii£ of loilny * biivl.il gowns
Mc-t Itiiston a lid M-ithrt l u f f M
Society News
are so desigtvi-vl (hut they may hr pm«NMi|; flu*
II U.v,
limiin
nf
transform ed into summ er dance l.onninc Tulro mmiiiiI lh&lt;i r u h h ilAre
Requested
di esses afler th r ceremony, by r &gt;» hr i i Ait hi I** tu flh* ^ n l v Iin has
( t i mf ot l — Apitpuninre
sueh expedient* as removing a hrtrtii mi mvnlitl *liurt liirlli.
8 ( idtirw— S | Q !)."*
By
5
p.
m.
The
bottom tier of ruffles or linio.
Shrt
iriirtfi
fi
H
|»r*
ial
nvntion
subtracting a bolero or switching
Day Preceding
wll
skirl* nr lops, the case of tlir in- mi h i r l!»ih tin f lul.iv,
l
mini*
hlrtw
n
fi’vv
hU
^lt
I*
*
ill**
Publication
creasing!)’ popular w•-•tiling sepa­
aiit nt hi'f wiijiiiiw.
rate*.
Hit
ilnyn nf i In i u h l r n r t d
hy
The short riiiu ln r veil of avion
tulle, attached to a .imp]* head­ \ \ ii \ i 11if I.iii 1 1a. i li i"l v \ \ a 1 11 %\ h nu
dress, i* tile choice of most bride* •In* li a i hrti'Miiin kltiivui «* Ml h r
tovlny, rath e r than th r long veil k’n l mi i hi* window.**
of priceless lace.
Sllire so many current loldr*
are still under 2U, youthful charm
ra th e r th*n ostentation ha* be­
come (he pew fashion lit wedding
gown* and veils.

Ladies Society
Lutheran Church
Plans Social Hour

Try This One

Crispy Organdy
Choice Of Brides

Mrs. F. Lee Feted
Recently At Dinner

Vocation Time

IVEY'S

CLEARA
YEA R

ARO UN D

BRO O KFIELD

METAL TO TOWELS
Metallie yarn* lend a new look
to towel*. A wt.la stiip la done hi
gold on pink, honey, while, green,
chocolate,
black,
aqua.
Tho
towels may b* washed a t high
tem perature.

• O n i.n iM ,N .b d im r n * n r r

and SOM

h e r aiactiaa m Mlsa D u U d e l*
phla. Sha w ill com pete in C a lifornte for Dm Utle nl Mtsa Unilnd
State* and (hen, If ahe is eurrr na lu L t o f U a M iM Ua l w a q g o w n .

m e n 's
CCfl LAST ritlS T

w e a r

fULNFORD

TUONE t y Z J

�Thera la n problem peculiar to tho aummertlme when wlndowa ara open. Tt la a
problem that announcea 11 a o I f when tho
aounda of radio and TV wafl, or, more ac­
curately, roar through th# night.
It la the peculiarly fruatratlni problem
of what to do. The victim acldom haa any
aatiafactnry way of diming the noise. He
can telephone the noise makera If he know*
them, but thla leads to neighborly friction.
Or he can call the police a move certain to
Invite un*nelgbborly wrath.
Why the problem should arise In the first
place la ore of the mysteries of life, since
too loud reception distorts every program,
musical or otherwise. Kven the nicest people
are often guilty of this, prnctlce. perhaps
became thev want all their neighbors to en­
joy the program they're henring.
Apparently there Is no easy solution. If
ear manufacturers won't limit speed, producers of radio and TV seta certainly won't
limit volume Elimination of this nuisance
depends on common courtesy.
Come to th'nk of It. the program that’s
on now Is verv Interesting. "Hey. would you
mind turning the volume up so I can hear? A
little louder, plense."____________________

The Sanford Herald
PalHUM* Calls •«r»s« •■tarSar aa*
mi « h i

r i r . i *•.

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Aflaala f.rarala

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llaah
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Tha NaralJ la a raaaifcar af Ihr AaaaHalaJ Trraa
arhlrh la pallllaC airlaalialr la Ihr aaa far rrpahllratlaa aa all lha laral a r a * arlalr* la fhla &gt; * » • , * , * * .

Page 4

I JAMES MARLOW

Pushtoonlstan

The Wee Night Nolsea

Thursday June 23, 1055

lODAY’H Hllfl.K VERSE
Let us search and try our ways, and
turn again to the Lord.—Lam. 3.40.—We
lied to reorient ourselves, by neglect we drift
• long way from the straight and narrow
path. We never drift upstream.
*

There la no use looking for Pushtoonlstan
on the map. It Is not there, am | may never
be. but It Is mnking trouble between Pakis­
tan and Afghanistan.
Taklstan, created to give India’s Mos­
lem! a land of their own. has 7.000,000 Af­
ghans or Pushtoos Inhabiting a region along
Pakistan’? west border the size of Michigan,
Minnesota and Wisconsin combined.
The Afghans would like to annex this
area. Pakistan has refused. As a compromise
the Afghans have asked that the Pnkistan
Afghans be allowed to choose between union
with Pakistan and independence. This sug­
gestion brought the talks to a standstill and
the dispute has been referred to Saudi Ara­
bia for Arbitration.
Tin* turmoil In the Hast for finding
and fixing boundaries, allegiance and nation­
alism Is rart of the shifting pattern of today.
The dinpute between Pakistan and Afghanis­
tan seems part of this shifting and fixing.
It looks as though what Is Involved is more
a cry of. "Afghanistan for Afghans," than
land grab motives.
How effectively s struggle between na­
tionalism and territorial dianutes can be medialed remains to be seen. To bring such a
quarrel to a peaceful arbitration Is of Itself
an admirable part of the new East’s pat­
tern.

Writing On The Wall
In .lohonneeburg, South Africa, someone
painted in large letters on the wall of a pub­
lic MliHfV the message:
"Let us black folks read. "
Workmen labored diligently to sandblast
the wall clean. The next day. In the same
spac* snd in the same scrawling band was
anotbet message:
"We black folks ain’t reading yet."
It is Impossible to condone the defacing
of public pronorty. Yet there Is something
about this story thnt stimulates curiosity
and sympathy.
Did snvone who read the words grasp
the significance of what they said, annreclate the charm and the svmbollsm of thp
band writing on the wall’ And what of the
person who wrote them—what kind of a nnet
is he? Whnt kind of s grent writer might lie
become, what new truths might he reveal In
his simple, lucid style, If Johannesburg
should heed his message and let the "black
folks read"?

SdAf DAWSON

Sights Raised On Business Boom
NEW YORK &lt;/F)-Once mora
tha slghta ara being raised on lha
business boom. This time hulnee*
la faedlng an IU awn growing
tonfldtrcii
Consumers led the way with
purchases that mora than made up
for the drop In govern mant spend­
ing for defanae. Now Induatrlal
leader* ara aiming higher than a
law month* back and thalr spendbig for new plant* and modernlied equipment la puahlng general
prosperity to new peak*.
Summer with It* heat and vaca­
tion* may alow tha economy down
for a apall. But now, almoat daily,
coma report* of new record* in
•utoe, atecl. aluminum, machine
tool ordtrtng hpe making, eonetructlon, Incomes, stock prices, in
industrial output in general.
BualAMsmen’s own spending la

nuw hacking up the galni In con­
sumer, spending, the Department
ol Commerce ivport*. fed by
higher Incomes, tha wlUlngncaa of
Americana In general to spend
more thla year has given business­
men the confidence necessary to
plan for Increased capacity to
produce.
General Motors, for example,
haa just announced a new 500
million dollar expansion program
for more floor space, new machine
tool* and presses.
Tha Commerce and Labor De­
partments join in boosting their
previous guesses on total construc­
tion expenditure this year. They
now think the total will come to
about 42 billion dollars, a record
for any year, and at least II per
cant above last year’* mark, tha
previous record. About &gt;1 par rent

An Infection Common
To School-Age Group
STRICT attention to personal
elsanllne** U tm n tlil tor any• m suffering tn m pin worm lalection. It'a eepoetolly Important
t or parenta to know what to do
for ft, tinea about 41 par cant of
eeliool-ag* children baoocaa to*
lee ted with pinworms.
amorally, tbaaa amah whit#
woraa a n found la tha upper

ahowar aaeh moraine, washing
especially wall around the reeled
and genitalia area*. Tollat aaata
ahould ba aerubbad altar uaa.
Uaa a aaparata towal and waah*
aloth for tha faca.
Waar anui cotton undarpanto
to bad aaeh night.

mora will be spent for new hornet
this year. Tha departments note
"a trend toward larger and mora
expensive borne*."
Spending on new commercial
buildings will be up aa per cent,
on induatrlal plants up • par cent
and on private utltltiaa up 4 per
cent.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce
It even more optimistic than
two government department* It
tee* the speedup In construction
assuring that current good time*
will laat wall Into IM
Borne aolld backing for the
optimlam cornea from currant In­
dustrial report*.
•
tiled masters this week are turn­
ing out the greatest tonnage of
kny week In hUtory. Blast fur­
nace* making pig Iron also report
a record—the ateel-maktng Ingre­
dient poured ‘from tho furnace*
In May al a record total of 6,504,935
net torn.
Aluminum la aalling to wall that
th* Offlct of Dcfenso Mobillaatlon
aaya demand will top auppiy thla
aummar, even though M

Two Big Men Take Time To Answer
WASHINGTON Of - Two vener­
able men—Sit Winston Churchill
and Konrad Adenauer—in moving
across the Wiuhingtot scene have
taken Ume out to answer newsmen's questions.
A d e n a u e r , here this week,
ducked nothing he wet asked al
a giant news conference in the
same hotel where Churchill, in
time past, had also faced a ball­
room full of newsmen
Both men. Churchill as Britain’*
prime minister snd Adenauer as
chancellor of West Germany, had
these things in common: they had
character and vision and led their
country out oi the ruins of war
Into new confidence.
They are not far apart in age:
Churchill la SO. Adenauer 79. Just
about there the similarity ends.
Churchill, bred out by year*, re
signed as prime minister this year
Adenauer I* still the driving force
•if the German government.
Round,* rosy cheeked Churchill
was witty jovial, a master of the
English language. The squareshouldered Adenauer has high

HAL BOYLE

A Look At The Oddity Almanac
NEW YORK UP-The oddity al­
manac:
An executive looking for ■ ste­
nographer who can spell might do
well to hire a deaf one.
As a matter of fact, many em­
ployer* now are doing just that.
They have found that office
worker* with hearing impairment*
have a large vocabulary and know
how to use It because they learned
to spell properly early In life.
Tha reason: deaf children, un­
disturbed by distracting nolsea,
develop a good vltual memory of
words and letter*. Those with nor­
mal hearing often learn to spell
the M basic sounds of English
speech by ear Insteai ot by tight.
Big crisia in Industry note:
Australian rabbits aren't multiply­
ing at well at they did—and that
may add up to ynui paying a
higher prlre for your hat, mister.
Tlie faraway bunnies have* been
riddled by a disease called myxomatoiii, and the orice of their
pelts haa risen from 97 a pound
to M.
•‘If Uiit keep* un we'll all be
wearing beaver* again' aaya t.
Benjamin Parreli, president of
Adam Hat Manufarturers, Inc.,
which convert* nearly 10 million
Australian rabbit pelli a year Into
fait toppers.
It now take* ab&gt;ut flvt skins
to make a hat. but at a result of
tho disease epidemic the Austral­
ian hoppers are growing smaller
end toon H may tabo tlx to tight
Pai-retl's plant It In Corsicana,
pounds la being diverted from
shipment to the government stock­
pile.
Auto maker* have i l r a i d y
turned out their four millionth new
car thla year. In thtir previous
record year It took them until
August to rtach that mark.
In tha stock market new alltime highs are being Ml regularly
of late.
. How long can H laat? Soma
caution against overconfidence.
Ona, Henry H. Helmann, executive
Vlct

president

of

tile

National

Aaan. of Credit Men, wems:
"Ono mistake that could set ui
back for quite eome time would
be to aieumt that bualneaa can
continue without pauto at Ita
present high apeed. Or that th*
stock market can go In only one
direction—up. Or that debt la
Illimitable."

YOU'RE TELLING
ME!
muiAM ton—— — -■

w « . S rrv r B m k t u t

la

Inform al,' A lr-C o-dlU oori

■"

ly

FRANKFURT, Germany tri
Rllly Graham's revival series In
Germany got off to a flying start
Iasi night before a crowd of 30.000
In a Frankfurt football stadium.
An estimated 1,500 persona-in­
cluding tome American service­
men —answered the American
evangelist'* call for "decision* for
Christ"
The arena waa one third full.
The crowd waa
considerably
smaller than those which atten­
ded opens Ir meeting* Graham
held earlier this year In Scotland
and England, but huge compared
to Ihoie who turned out for his
recent one-week aeries in Paris.

BKNNKTT C IH F -

BANKER, back on hi* college campus for •
A SUCCESSFUL
da** reunion, visited his old economics prof, and picked

up the current aemeater'a Anal exam, "Holy imokc!" he ex*
claimed, "these ere precisely
the question* you asked our
data fifteen years ago. If you
always atk the same ques­
tion*, don’t you know the
•tudenta will get wise, and
paaa them on from data to
class?"
"Sure," answered the prof
blandly, "but in economic*,
y o u a e o , we’ro constantly
changing th* answers."

s e e
ta b Mope aweeit there'* a
sign to toe dub bouse af one
o**«|i*A golf dub that reads:
" * * * * • » • ••m torei N* gotf ball eaa to considered lo* until *
•

•

checkbcnci In a face done over
by plastic r:rgeont alter a shat­
tering auto accident
a
Churchill'* voice was warm aa
crandy Adenauer, sturdy at Iron,
was pleasant enough but direct,
terse, unsmiling, and be spoke in
Gtrmsn
Adenauer, onetime mayor of Co­
logne, who lived in obscurity un­
der Hitler, has led hit country back
into the sun since he to came head
of its first postwar government in
1949.
Now It hat Aot only been given
Independence again but has been
allowed to rearm and la brought
into the Western Alliance, which
needs ita brain* and manpower in
the defense against Russia.
The Russians have Invited Aden­
auer to Moscow, presumably about

My

e

FR
TOUR

a

e

The Police, Naturally, Are Baf­
fled. I have been conducting an
amateur Investigation of the
great disappearance, and acqua­
intances of mine have come up
frith eome explanations.
They’re not lost," "ne friend
•aid. "They’re Just misplaced. Do
you kgow that underground sec­
tion at 14th etreet, where, if you
have a miner*' cap lamp and a
road map, you can get off the
IRT and head west through the
labyrinth of tunnels and, with
luck, arrive at the BMT7
"Somehow, these 33,000 bewild­
ered souls, unused to traveling
under the earth like mole* have
been taught up in that mate. If
you go down and look, I’m sure
you’ll find them there yet, crawl­
ing along the ground, gulping for
air and crying ‘watort*
Another friend suggested a
solution that I* first cousiq to
thla one. He too, claimi that the
mining one* are wandering in
limbo, or purgatory, but h* stye
the wandering li being done on
Fifth avenue buss*.
-"When was th* last time," he
demanded, " that you were able
to get off a Fifth avenue but at
the corner you wanted? You pull
the signal cord, you head for the
exit door—and by the time the
Infernal machine slows down to
an Impatient stop, it's 17th street
instead of 24th.
'These people, whs weren’t
warned, are (till In the buses,
riding up to the Cloisters In
Washington Heights and then
bark to Washington Square In the
Village, unable to get out. Tb«y
must to rather hungry."
*

the future of Germany. He and
68 million of hit countrymen have
a goal: tha reunification of West
Germany with Communist • held
East Germany.
But Adenauer save it la ont ^
goal to be bought at any price.
What if the Russians offered a
reunited Germany if the German*
would abandon their Western Alii,
ance and stand neutral In Europe?
Long ag,. Adenauer said any Ger­
man who proposed that waa a
"dumbbell or a traitor." Asked
about It at hit new* conference,
he said Germany would wind up
a Russian satetllta If It let Itself^
be neutralised.
W
Adenauer has the reputation of
oeing a tough customer to bargain
with, even when tha bargainers
were American occupation author­
ities. The Russians are not find­
ing him an easy mark either.
He has let them eool their heels
and guest by delaying a direct
answer to their invitatioa to Motcow.
There are tome misgiving* heiM
about Germany's future policy
once Adenauer diet or grows too
feeble for office. He said tore this
week Germany would live up to ita
obligations to the Weet. He looks
like a man who win keep his

NewYork

NEW YORK—I realise that in
thla day and age, when time,
•pace and money mean nothing,
the word "thousands” means
less. B • s t-e • 111 n g books are
bought by the movie* for a mil­
lion dollar*. Hit records go two,
three million copies. A etar Is
only so many billion light years
•way and so on. You say to
your neighbor, "I made a thou­
sand buck* on a 3-to-2 ahot yes­
terday" and he yawrns. A thous­
and anything ia hen food.
Nonethleaa. there are 83,000
people missing in New York and
I claim that’* worth a thought
or two.
Their disappearance coincided
with tha recent shutting-down of
that Idiots' delight, the Third Ave­
nue El, the overhead railway
which eoursed Ita reckety way
past downtown Manhattan'* bed­
rooms and Bowery flophouse* un­
til May 12.
In Its final, dying momenta, th*
El used to carry 52.000 daring
customers a day. After It ahut
down, the New York Authority,
which hovers over things like thi*
with pad and pencil, waited for
the 52,000 to show up on other
transit lines, like eutovaya and
buses. Only 19,000 did. Suddenly,
swiftly, ominously, 33.000 New
Yorker*—adventurous New York­
ers, obviously, since they chanced
the highflying shaky El d aily had vanished.

#

put a half million mere ears (n
th* street* here and It wouldn't
makt any difference. The traffic
don’t move ender any eireumstancee." He scowled. "Now, if #
they only got those buses off the
streets . . . ” I didn’t think it waa
the right time to discuss with
him my campaign to gat the text,
cabs off the etreeta, so I didn't.
Where can they have genet r»&lt;*
you suppose they're all In th*
downstair* lounge at Radio City
Music (it'e big enough) watching
TV? I discount the rum en that
they have set up light house*
keeping In tin shacks along th a#
thons of the Hudeoa, the way
the unemployed men did during*
tha Depnsslon, thus Inspiring tg£
Carol* Lomhard-Wllliam PowoW
movie, My Men Gedfrey. Perhaps
they boarded a train for New
Jersep by mistake. If so of
course, they a n gone far good.
No one returns from New Jeney.
Bwifty O'Brien, the boa srivanl
and demon tout, had a simple ex­
planation, when I nailed him ia f
front of Llndy'e. Ha aald they
wen all suicide*. "That waa tha
day," a* aald morosely, "when a
2-to-S shot at Belmont run out
of the money. They all ekot them,
•elves. It figures." I asked him
why he hadn't shot himself. "I
did," he said.
CREWMEN ESCAPE
ORLANDO (ri- All throe crew­
men escaped from ■ B4? jet tomb-%
er la the few eatond* after tt crash
Isnded and before tt burst Into
flames at Pines a*tie Air Force
Base yesterday.
Average U. B. production far
each persoa la tha country par
year la ITS pounds of aulphuria
acid, 4P pounds of caustic aod*
and 55 pounds of chlorine.

B U IC K
Trade-Ins
C learance Sal#
i S ilt

Itia i,

('IMB. |«w

■ llaa aa

a

I Asked A Cab Driver If k*
thought there were UJXK) mere
autos on New York’s streets and
to just shrugged. "How could you
toll?" to said sadly. "You eould

Sanford Arm ory

PER
PERSON

M Of

PER
PERSON

DAY
U N E 24th
30 TO 30 P M
TICKET

FROM

ANY

KJWAN IAN

M y * J m m M U l Dm C a H to rt*

4m i of S u f tH far the pant t fo are w fl ho
w ith owr otoro. twohMo t oo to ( b e th e poopli of

RCSTA U RA N TS

Billy Graham's
Revival Gets Off
To Flvinq Start

Try and Stop Me

•

Baeh day ahanga any aotlod
undarwaar, bad clothes, waah*
cloth* and towala. You can allhar
boll all linen wall or aaak It In a
aolotioa of houaaboto ammonU
for ona hour and than rlnaa
thoroughly. Make thla aolutloa by
adding two traewpa of rrrTirnta
to aaeh 10 gallon* of water.
Air out all room* in your houaa
for two hour* aaeh day.

K N O W ? ............

career waa plotting steps for the
50 dancing elephants In the Ringling Bros. Circus. Th* problem
they had to overcome: an ele­
phant'* front feet follow a different
rhythm than its hind feet.
By the way, there are no "chorus
boys" in the herd. Most circuses
got rid of their male elephants
years ago The big boys get too
bad-tempered during certain aratorn. And you can't sell a customer
popcorn or pink cotton candy after
an elephant uses him for a rug.
Th* cheer-up dept: Do you al­
ways feel lost on Blue Monday?
Well, here'* a quote from Matthew
Arnold to carry you through the
week:

AM Sheridan, recalling to r eUrtot period la Hollywood) "All I
knew when I cam# out here waa what a 97-year-old gal leama an •
matlar af aouree to a email town: Wbat to to till, tha minister eomaal"
.............

F re a k NooH Jew eler la k a | f ? U

YOU

Tcx.,\where plenty of wild rabbit*
abound nearby. But this la no con­
solation to him.
"They're Texas Jackrabbita and
no good for hats," ha said. "Too
tough."
la there a magician in the
house?
Almanac editorial: Many of our
readers have complained that Uie
7itli anniversary of Thomas A.
Edison's invention of the electric
light caught them flat-footed, and
they didn't have time to get prop­
erly lit iip in tribute to this im­
portant occasion.
Well, our friends in the Industry
have let us in on another rloscly
held secret—next Aug. 1st is the
ISth anniversary of the photoflash
bulb In America.
Now is the time to atari planning
your own celebration of this his­
toric event. Why don't you and
your neighbor* hold ■ block party
in tribute to the dear old flash­
bulb?
Incidentally, now that Americans
apend almost la much time In
aulomobilea ai they do in their
hornet, did you know motor cart
now use more 1‘ght bulb* than
houses do?
The average motor car had only
9W bulbs In 1925. now haa 22 8
(one 1955 model hei 321). The
typical home contains only about
19 (And If your house Is like mine,
(hey all teemed to ba turned on
■11 the timat)
Odd jobs department: Richard
and Edith Baratow, the brothersister team of choreographer*, say
th* 'most difficult job of their

Mop# rolUnf*

ANNOUNCEMENT
D ID

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S T A G IE
SHOW

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Rythmn Riders

SANFORD KJWANIf C LU B

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S

GOING TD BECOME J

Rewards Boosted
To $118,000 For
Judge And Wife

you

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g r/o c m u A o o « v 'M q &lt; y z &gt;
apt

AKXV G T A P r DSGG/H'
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lO O ^ y Z Z Z T (

Thurs. June 23, 1955 Pane 5

TIIE SANFORD HETT \T D

rt/w r O S A O T V O U B ir.A N 'H G lL ££A\1T &gt;xx/ A

V H#t '

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Legal Notice
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m i l l e r , tf
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WEST PALM BEACIl LP -T im .ii «! - rh of thorn: rtti.t nil parti*I ’ l r r k o f fh o C i r c u i t C o u r t .
l i i t i i n t t *-r r t a l m l m
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IK J17DSON II WALKHll' JU.
nii;11p |,
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stitl now stand* at $118.POO, one f lU , VI ,1 l l i f \ l »% i f |t in S t ! ' , o f f\ff"t o rKn a yHo
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2 1 S -Ml h Itn n c o Jrt l i * i , iv lrt i? In
A n n in * * !* F o u n t s , F l o r l A n , h im h r r n
lory.
MITII R
l i r m i t h t H K H ln u t y o u it' Mi# t ’
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- f n• rlt 1re.iJ&lt;* F.*tititv, rinrM | S K M I N O l .r IM C .N T Y
f i .o i u p a .
The Broward County Bar Assn lli I’hancrf)
V * ■' In nLii*5in
Jtina -1 rtf \ |»
last night put up an additional t* t i l l s th t't ft o f h ftlflK % .1 T I I O N o ile 't I* I m i r h y f f l v r n t h a t p u r *
H r c H o t i *»
of
I 'lin p t P r
$5,000. The state Cabinet offered M NS .H i . t • 1. p i i i n t i f K A* F L A - •I *u ;n' Ai t to
I n t** nf
K lm r M i, .V- t» o f
i : i : . \ i «•* L
M i l . I K K . »• i t . 4 r f # n 4 $50,000 yesterday. The fam ily e a r­
I'M ?
k i i5 ii ii &lt;t * ( h r M u rp h y
A« 1
f *'H u w I f i is 4•*#* » l h r 4 In fill
In
lier hnrl offered $25,000 and the i n Yn o ri it'l i n • i n : i i O F T n i» A K I'- 11-*'
s
s-iititii
'
l*
(
'
t
i
t
i
n
h
'
,
Filler
ii
4
i
i
,
m
i
l
l
L«• in f l i t li i ,i nr
rest cam e from organlrallotts and A vi* iftt'i- o r o l p i t p* 41 mu « a f rt- o f ! pt r , | f o r
lit p t iM l r m il, m
l l • 4 ii j i,( t t . m iH 1h** I ’ lp rk of
f o r i I ms h liih P R t ft n il I pi* i f on *1* h i 4
Individuals, mostly In the West tIlu
h r i f " t »».ii*l t 'o iir i on or t * fo r*
• u h j r . t Is. t h r r l K h t o f 111# T f U I’nlm Resell area.
l r * * i i f tls# i M o r n u l Im p r o r o n m n t
J u lt ? Ml* IftSS. Rtul • ffftr# ft s o p t

^VESTERK^

AUTO
ASS0CIATEJ
STORE

Wizard “MASTER 9"
Now only . . ,

199.95

A fully ••quipped, advance stvlcd 0 eti. ft, refrigerator. Y*s , ,
15’» lli. full width frev7.tl. L’tl qt. crisper draw er, meal trav,
pins two extra handy door racks, ice-blue trim und 6 r&lt; ar unit
guarante*. all at Ibis new low piicu. 2J1502.
Automatic defrosting mode!* ns low as $259 95.
I

IVisani deluxe automatic svsshcr. Automatic from fill to finish!
I wnv wu-hing action and ilti'ii ovctfiuw ru n e get clothe*
cleaner, faster. Reg, 25‘,'Ufi
tdJ'J.fO
I'nh button control*.

Safe tcm prrnturc for any fabric. Reg. 1711,95 ........___ 159.95

GAIN FOR TEXAS LEAGUE
DALLAS (fP)—Thing* are look­
ing up in the Tcxnt League if
the attendance figure* are any in­
dication.
The league drew 2117,299 for the
first quarter. Thi* It an inrreaia
of 23,883 over last season claim*
Dick Butler, league president.
Dallas and Houston, the two
larg est cities in the loop, show­
ed the biggest gaint.

k11 In. • tit la t nil# half of all
fp iim
ft n 4
th r r
f o u r t h a -*f
'ihor n* s*«*r ,t|i 3t U hr. rf'pfVfiL
matrrl.t 1 1* r«\\\ fi** ion jhlo
*,-13*i i
L.»t .&gt; Illo. k A flt ftvtAr 16i Sub*
4 !V1*
ll.it II k $ l.itf ft li.
At iti im K 9 • ft l lilork it.
Of Va ?.»t L-xk*' u iTifftr Ilntriftfli
H’thil !3j ■non, r u 1 HiMik t rate*
Itl l IS A. 11rt
| .1 1 1(took rt Itoftftltafl Uriel, 11
11 it It* k 3 I'lg r IT
Lot !» !Ulock 11 flpurllhtc • lit J |.
i n*n vuitt Ilook 2 Fftktft 117
1. »t A. Stihjrct to 1 13ftm»m to
f'li* of sartf-tri on Kftftl 7 (e*t)
IK k K. liitMi 4i VI f t ft I'lISIrs
l*l4t It k S ivi
1 A i
Tilt* Til:i sTFITfl 0 |- IS*.
1I KILWV1, 1MI'IKI VKMT7NT
1 I Vl» t i ‘ fl r.VTK Ot' l-'UIIt 11*A
H&gt;
*&gt;.
1*
lU r n d o q
Au**nt Tru»t* r* of 1. L
Fund. Hrmlnol# County

p rti

bijr refrigerator convenience
for as little as $5 down!

ns little nit
?2() down

n i l h (lie W irn rrl d e lu x e
n u ln n m l lr lu u m lry tw in s

LOBT TRIPLE PLAYS •
ABERDEEN, S.D. {£*&gt;—The
AliiTitrrn Pheasants of lli« North­
ern League executed two triple
playa within five day* — and yet
lost both garnet.
The PheetanU made their
ffrat triple killing against Eati
Claire but lost 6-4. Five days
later they came up wlta another
such fielding gem and again loti
the contest. This time the score
waa I-l.

jeet any and all bt4a

RED T A G
SALE SPECIA

say pood live to washday work
and weather worries

Mulching electric drver

Fund t..

»t I h r r .u illt A U M
r s ttlnnlna n t
1 1' O' o i i i i f k A
M . o n th a I S t h
d.sy
l J u l y A I* in &amp;
l n il* 14a o f M u n lc l p n l t t l r *
F*«# t n *• tit f o r ton. 4 r -* h t; mf w ft f 30#
f r o I w ii'lo w i l l h r r r r a f v r i l f r o m
a tiy
p s i i . r l th r-u m h
w h ic h
th a ra
k
.in i3 ! » H n K h in t # H o a d , A a iff

GIRL HOWLER HITS
70(1 AGAIN
C I. E V F. l.A S’ D bPi—Marge
Slogar, who bowled a 300 game
11 years ago, rolled her third 700
series here. Her first game was
235, the second a 258 and the
third 218 for a sensational 17(1.
It was the first 700 series rolled
by any woman In Cleveland this
year.

Glamorize Your Meals
with tempting desserts
mad#

FREE $19 95 llnwork
97.56 Ruto.Dully

69.95

“ Swivel Top" . . save* tlmfl . . saves work
■nd rtenn* more thoroughly. 1(1 ea«yeletn tools take hard work nut of cleaning.
Snrxv gun and moth crystal holder includ­
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w ithout touching diiL 2J356U

full alre. Mr fenlure
Wiznrd 67" Rim range

99.95

New cooking save! A price that will •» ••
budget I Safe, dependable automatic top
burner lighting, Big oven and roller-bear­
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apnea for pans. Kuhertshaw automatic
oven control 2.1115011-7.
21" apartm ent git* tango 89.95.

Wtrnrd "Super 10"
really r M&gt; up and riii'm!

259.50
less trade-in

For planing along at 35 ninb or trolling n |
1 mph, thi* is your motor. Six gallon ruinnte tank feeds gns to nmtor through »
(iinpliragm pump. Two-piece cowl for easy
engine aecca»ibllltv. 2(I(ti|.'lt
lV itard “ 1‘osvermntic 12"
...... $319,50

PERFECTION
MILK
n trs s s
sTHAW.
HKKSt
p i m i l ao

t . 1 package
Instant
va­
nilla pudding
|. Perfection
Jlomor* nlsad milk
I I pt. f r e a k
etrawberriea
&lt;or froian)

Mix pudding according In directions on
package using rich, delicious Perfection
Homogenised milk. Clean and slice
strawberries, reserving t few for gar­
nish. Add berrit-s to nuddmg. pour into
individual serving dishes garnish with
whole benies. Serve very cold.

WRENCH SET. 6 no. set
give* you ten most useful
•its* of open end wrench* *,
i / I 6 " to $ » Carbon steel.
Including metal clip.
112342 Reg. 1.10
.._ ,79u
Other set* from 65*

DELUXE RALL HEARING
TIUKKS. Truss rods, adiustsblc seat*. Sturdily built.
Gleaming solor* ....— $129

APPLIANCE CORD. Avoid
danger of "shorting1. Re­
place worn cords now! 6 ft.
cord with connector and
molded plug.
4J.1118 Reg. 60c --------- .10*

PICK-UP CART. For year
’round lawn and garden u*«.
All steel, big 10" wheels.
18" i 27" top, holds about
£ bushels.
X 1101 Reg. 8.15 ____ 6.93
Lawn K u k r i f r o m ___ 9NS

W ESTERN
A U TO
ASSOCIATE STORE

WIZARD 8" HUSKY FAN.
Really economical! Non-tip

bat* haa slot for wall moun­
ting, Quiet, troublefrea mo­
tor.
BJ240O. Reg. 5.26 ....... 8 98

10" o scillatin g --------991

JUST SPRAY IT! Wltard
snray paint—no brush, no
fuss. Sparkling finish. 8
colors. Including plattia and
aluminum.
12 or. ran PU P S

I 29

I'atnt supplies lot tfvery ne«d

UTILITY F L O O R MAT.
Fits all cars. Idtal for homo
us*, tool 17"*17" with nonskid baek. Choir* of color.
On* of Western's complete.
Ups . £N 1105-8_____ .75*

Htm 0 m * J w d OpwwW

FRED M. SMITH
212 E. 1st SL
Ph. 1568

�Cardinals Drop First Game Of Series, 6-4

Orlando To Play Here Again Tonight
frame* with Dwight Cook driving
In both run*. Ha doubled Don
Pray aer»*t in the fourth and
I *ingl#d with two down in th#
eighth to »rore Jark Kotula.
Sanford rallied briefly in the
ninth when Huh Miller led off
with a double and Terry Terrell
walked, (iordey retired the ne*t
two hatter*, hut Kotula «ingled to
drive the la«l Cardinal tun*
vjrtoiy of the ........... »K»i»»t arroo the plat*.
In other same* last night Cocoa
cnlv two lo&gt;•••*,
The i'*nliri!il« picked up lone blanked We«t Palm Beaeh * 0 on
mniker* In ti e fourth end citrhth, the two-h.t pilrhing of Craig Hoy-

Sanford’* Cardinal* w i l l
tak«* on thn Orlando Flyer*
a train tonVM at Memorial
Stadium after losing to tlm
Florida State I&lt;eajrue'*'flralhalf winner*, 0-4, Inst night
lx fora 317 fans.
Alex Gordey s e a t t e r e d
seven Cardinal blow* in go­
ing the route to post hi* 14th

at; last • place St. reter«hurg
whipped lakeland 7 2; and Caine*villa conquered Daytona Beaeh
9-5.
We»l Palm Beaeh hit JfoyaT*
first two pitches but couldn't touch
him the rest of the way. Double*
by Inocencia Rodriquez and man­
ager Doug William* gave Cocoa
it* firtl run in the fourth. The at­
tendance at Cocoa was 425.
|y&gt;n Pecou i.omered with one
aboard in the third to apark St.
Pete lo tla victory, the Sainti'
second atraight. I.akeland h a d

gone ahead briefly In tha teennd
on Jo* Jarque*' two-run homer.
The fray, at I.akeland, attracted
only 178.
Gainesville ran its winning
streak to *|g atraight hy beating
Daytona Reach before * Daytona
audience of 540. Four run* In th#
eighth turned the trick. Rocky
Border*' haae* loaded tingle bring­
ing in three runt was the big blow.
fill I. A \ Ilf I
• S k a *
l|.al&gt;nrl&gt; Ih
f i l l
Mranp aa
f l i t
ef
| a s *
tv It ann ll

,

f i t s

Roberts Gets Hit The Hardest
But Wins The Most Ball Games

n Ihs first.
It) KD WII.KH
That's Robin's way. He get* hit
The ,\a»orlaled I'resa
Robin Rotieila may l«' the only the hardest, yet wins the mn»t.
liven *n, the are of Ihs Phil­
pit cher In baseliall who figures to
l,e around for t 1m* second inning adelphia Phils' staff must giva
after getting rlnbbeied f&lt;&gt;. tiiree Manager Mayo Smith fit*.
Iui*t night at St. l.ouia,
he
home run* sod blowing a .1-0 lead

CLICKING FOR CUBS

By Alan Mover

f o f P tP H r
STA RT A
g a m e u h t /L
RAVE, 0 V T
BEFO RE

7 * e MoHT/t
was o v e n
HAP HIT /o
h o m e r s, a
te w o f them

EXTRA •MN/HP.
6AM ERiHHiHG CLOUTS.
LEP THE TEAM
/H PEL'S ff/TH 32.

0019

S P E A K E .or
7HE C H / C A G O C U B S ,

l 24-YEAR.O i.P IMF/ELPER
TURHEP OUTFlELPER
THeV P/PHT TH/HK
REAP/ FOR THEMAJORS.
HAS PE EH MAR/HO
'
Lir e th e r o o r /s -o f •
THE y eA R WHILE
THE CUPS MAPS THElR
PtHSATtQHAL SPURT.

A i s r pasemah p /
TRAPE.THE/ S TA M P
H/M PLATOOH/HC
!H LEFT FiELP WITH
HAHR SAUER MAHAOER STAH
HACK IS WELL PLlASip
With H/s improve?
OUTF/ELP PLAT.

Th at's The Rumor

Will Leo Manage
St. Louis Cards?
MLNNKAPOUS un-Rumors that
lie would leave the New York
Giant* to manage the fit. Louis
Cardinal* followed I.en Durncher
to Minneapolis today where hit
tram inrela the MiUera in an ex­
hibition game.
"It juit hat to he no comment,"
Durncher laid when aiked If he
hid heard rrporti circulating In
New York that ho was going to
leave the Gianta.
"I've had Jo to 40 rail* from
all over the country, and that's
what 1'va told all of 'em .What'i
tha tut of trying In a y anything
eli*. One story would Juil start
another one, so I'm lust saying
nothing."
The report was that BiU-Rtgrer,

DONT

*v

S A C R IF IC E
Quality and Safety
FOR PRICE
c Qm e i n
m

• Giant infielder for eight yean
and minager of the Minneapolis
rluh—a Giant farjn—would move
Into Durocher'a post at the Pate
Ground*.
Hurare fitonehgm, president at
the Gianta, la euppoeed te be is
Minneapolis for tonight's exhibi­
tion game, la New York last night
be aald:
"There la absolutely nothing to
tha story. I have never mentioned
Leo's name to any of the officials
of tha Cardinals excapt In the
uiual course of baseball chit-chat."
Rlgney also said he was In the
dark on the report.
d a thing," said
aald
"I haven't heard
Minneapolis pilot
the 15-year-old Minnas
r.. Va., where the
at Charlaatown, W
Miller* played x dou
last night
I
"I think the rumor U • phony"
The IM4 world champions de­
feated Cincinnati 4 5 last night In
snap a six-game toeing streak,
with pitcher Joheey AoUmetll in­
effective, Willie Mere la a aiiNep
sad Davey Williams nursing a had
hark, the Giaeia era in fourth
place, tatk games hack aI tha
pilet of the Dodger.

?. NATURAL! auaaNa

la the past Dncnchar has said
repeatedly that "whan t'm through
wtth the Giants I'm through with
harebell."

ta r thraw

He became mananor ai the
Gianta July 11 1N I. reeipiaf aa

4 Wt m laR JTM i b m i

UCE TRBADft m.pm
17 TRAM

'

trailed 4-5 after tha Cards whacked
him for three homers, two In sueresiinn, in the first frame. Yet
lie stayed around and wound up
with hi* 1.1th romplet* game and
10th victory of tlie »ea«on, 9-41.
That pul the Phils hack in fifth

~t h k s a n f o k o U k r a i . d
I'nge &lt;5 T hure. Ju n e 2.1. 19.15

Sports
Roundup
Hy GAYI.K TALBOT
NKW YGRK &lt;*—Bobo Olson had
In learn the hard way, but he
know* now 'hat there'* a great
deal of difference between fighting
middlewcighti and (he larger,
more lethal gent* In the neat
division up. auch a* Archie Moore.
The 160-pound champion from
San Kranclaco will quit dreaming
now of facing Rocky Marciano for
lho heavyweight title anJ go back
lo tha group where he belongs.
Moure will in all probability meet
Rocky for tha grand prize in Sep­
tember, and off that right hand
with which ha Marled OI*on crash­
ing down in the third round last
night we wouldn't be surprised If
he give* Rocky a very heavy even­
ing.
The big Negro, packing perhaps
a 10-pound weight advantage over
hit pate and sweating opponent,
merely hided hi* limr until he
could sucker Bobo inlo giving him
a quick target for hi* right, and
the fight was over lo all intenta.
Tits general .guess wa* that
Moore had pul on at least five
pounds since he h(t the agreed
limit of 175 pounds exactly on the
head at the noon weigh-in. Olson
probably did not add a pound to
his 170tt.
Bobo perspired so copiously In
his cornar before the bell that hia
handlers had to swab hia face down
several times. Moore looked as
cool aa ah autumn breeu before
tha action began, and he fought
the isme way. There never waa
any real reason to think Itnbo
ruuM pull It off once they had
touched gloves, and that goes even
though all threo ring officials
awarded the Brat round to the
lighter man.

plare, a pnrentaga point ahead
nf Cincinnati in tha National
League. Th» Red Legs lost 4-1 to
the New York Gianta, who ended
a six-gain# losing Mreak. Firatplare llionklyn edged Chicago 3-2,
leaving tji# Cuh* just half a game
ahead of the third-place Milwau­
kee Rravrs, who whipped Pittahurg 6-0.
In the American, th# New York
Yankee* held their two-gam* lead
hy heating Kama* City R-l. Run­
ner-up Chirago trimmed Washing­
ton .1-0 and third-place Cleveland
rapped Baltimore 6-0. Ka»t-climhing Boston defeated Detroit 12-7,
leaving the Red Sox just a gain#
short of the fourth-plareTigers.
Roberta, trailing off with a dou­
ble for tha Phil*, got a threa-run
rally going in the seventh that
derided Ilia game. Th# Phil* had
14 hit*—three hy Roheita—off all
Ht. I.mi ia pitchers.
The Card* got in from Robin,
Including another homrr—second
nf the night for 8tan Musial, who
also tripled.
Th# Dodger* won behind Kd
Roebuck'* relief work after scor­
ing an unearned run in tha eighth
on an error by Hal Jeffcoat, who
lost in relief.
Home runs hy Hank Thompson
and llohby Hofman broke a 2-2
tie for the Giant* in tha ninth aa
Sal Maglie heat Gerry Ktalcy for
hi* eighth atraight victory.
Warren Spahn kept tha Bravea
rolling, blanking the Ruca on ala
hit* while contributing a one-on
homer, Ballennat* Dal Crandall
iao homared off laser Max Buront, who left In tha seventh.
Tha Whit* Box hrresrd behind
Dirk Donovan'* four-hitter. Walt
Dtopo knocked In two of tha Box
runs. Loser Dean Blone and Rob
Banin* stopped Nelli# Fox'* hit­
ting atreak at 17 game*.
Karly Wynn won hia ninth whlla
handing Baltimore lla sixth shut­
out In the last nina games. Cl* reland had 16 hit*, four by Al Smith.
Detroit rookie Frank Lary waa
rocked hy th* first of Ted Willlama' three double! and Norb
Zauchln'i three-run homer and
left th* gam* aa tha Red Box went
on to score six run* in tha first
Inning. Winner Tom Brewer and
Leo Klaly gave 11 hits, but eased
In a* Boston mad* It 13 out of 16.
Mickey Mantle hit hie 18th
honter with a man on and Yogi
Berra lined a haaea-loaded alngle,
driving homa two Ylnkeo runs in
support of Ed Ford, who scattered
nina Kansas City hits. Art Ditmar
waa tha loser.

J

5 • a a
j o la it
4 « ft a
a n a a
1 1 0 1
Al a if f«
• %m o im
ah
4
Pr»r th
(». rook rf
4
Nutl*r rf
4
5
MllUr In
Tetreli If
9
Nn&gt;d*| ••
4
Thnrnuli «
4 • 14 1
4 12 1
KotiiU th
I^Bifnrd p
1 ftft ftft
II 1'ink p
1
i a ft
Manfred l p
a-N» Hniltt
i • a
ft
b-M••irirlt*
i
T«tPla
14 f If
ft-Jlgf* on
#hn|ra for R.
rook In 9th.
h-ri
out for Manfradl In 9th.
f»rl ■•&lt;*&lt;- ..______ loo «*»4
BanfitrH
__ «... OOP IMl •!
K Kotula. Ilnnauk net ht 2. Mil­
lar. Mn)dar. n —llouaaknorht, KaawatiUn Pray. WiUon. I&gt;avla, Hatch,
«]«&lt;j«ttee »i, Kotula Millar, Tarrall
MMI -tvilion 2. n rook 2. Ohiiilraa'i. NM.ar 2. IlftuMknftrht. Kotnla 2. 211—llouaaknae'hl, P Hook.
Millar Nil —- Ka»»alilan. I.#ft —
Itr|a*do |ft, Nanford 9. nil-off —
Idinifnril I, tloidry I. FI. Cook 4,
Xanfre-ril I. IIO—I-• n* foul 1 In I
1*2 innini*: It. Conk 2 In 2 2-2
trni* *■ Manfr^dl « Iti 1 Innlnr.
HAKIt—l^incford tft-4l. H fToole
in-fti MmifrrtJl (ft-0) Uorriof (4*9)
Pit Thortiall- tv— Horifay 714-21
I. I.antfonl t2-l&gt;. I*—Carman A
Halt T—2:1ft. A—247.
DbvIb th
ijatih lb
rf
CfDrift* rf
\\ ahar c
II«»r*1*t p
lulila

Standings
and
Results
n .l l N I I I A

STATIC l . t . U l '

U la
47 72
4ft 21
It 2t
3ft Si
21 29
2*» 12
2H 41
22 49
4 i .p
W fa
I
1

.*rTf
*i i
.*17
.iil
.4*1
.41'*
4«e
.114
im i.A it n
Prl
1 tins
Orla»»do
l.sns
f*or«»a
liiltllln
t on*
l.noa
PI. Pato
I
.lino
IV. P II.
ft
ftaafssrd
•
in,*
P at. II *h
ft
leAkffland
•• I .0**
VIKiri.TB V M T r .M I I A T
Toroa ft. Waal Talm llcach ft
Ctflaadaa ft. ftasiford 4
Nt. Patarabutv 7, l.akalanrf
lialnaavllla ft. Pnpnna llraih
HAMP.ft TIIIIAY
flrlaadm at ftanfsard
llaliiai»« Ilia at Paytona
Hi. Prlttahiirr at l^kaland
\\. Palm ftaa* h at (V«»
4t4i:ail'lX LKAIII K
Orlando
fore*a
Pa&gt;inna R*arh
IV. Palm Heath
tialnw« \ lilt
U k rU n d
ftftafaard
IP. Patcrnh'irt

NSW Talk __
r i i li s * .!
rt»\.l.ii&lt;l ___________
listrnil _____________

11,1.1011 .

W
44
1*
is
ii

I.
21
21

Pel
.«ij
.*21
.in*
in

:*
2*
—........... si IS ,i»i

K . e . s s IIIY ..._________ 14 1*
U 'e st iln k lo n _____________ 1* 1*
UaltlnH.ie ,
2* 44
M M l i .T I V t:»rK *l»4 V
N'.w Vnii *, Kansas I’ lly 1
II.i.Inn 12, llsirull 7
••lev#lsi.il I. II 'tlnmrs a
Chlc**o S. \V»i tilnsit.il, n

.lit
.271
.111

u*wt:« itiiMV
fhlrsio si IVastilneton — flzrd
(4-21 «s I'esrel 12-41

l'l**sliip,1 at llalllninr* — (Isri-I*
t l - l l *». Itoeovln &lt;1-01 or Behailurk 42-l|
Kansas
City at Nsw Tork —
Bhaiits t l - l l va Turlsy i l - « i
ti n mil al llntiun — llaas (1-1)
vs Bulllvsn (*•«)
M T io m

7

Moore's Victory
Earns Him Crack
A t Rocky's Crown
NEW YOPK (/T)— Archie Mooro'n oxploalvo punches
hnve accomplished what all hia oratory could noU-earn him
a shot at Rocky Marciano’s heavyweight crown.
The 38-year old lipht heavyweight champion did it with
three punches. Thu right, right and left to the jaw demol­
ished middleweight king Bobo Ol
■on in 1:19 of th* third round a t
the (teaming Polo Groundi last
n'ght and art ageing Archl* on
th# path to a September heavy­
weight tills scrap.
"1 guest that's It, th* end ef
my long campaign," ha aald.
"They can't duck mt now. Matriano is a great fighter. But any
man I ran hit, I ran lick—and
tnera's not a man I can't hit.
That goes fot Marciano. I think I
can heat him and knock him out."
There'a still a littl# dickering
l) do hut promoter Jim Norria
left no doubt aa to what'i coming
next:
"It'a got to he tho*e two," said
the preaident of tha International
quarteri of a million dollar*. I'll
ait down and talk to Al Weill
Marciano'a manager and Char­
ley Johnston Moore'a manager
in the next few day*."
Marrinnn, who watched th* fight
on telrviiion at hi* Brockton,
Man., home, *aiil, “There'a no
queition that arrangrmenta will
he made fur me to defend my
rrnwn against Moure In Septem­
ber."
While Moon wa* looking ahead
to the "climax fight of my ca­
reer," rreatfallen Bobo, beaten for
the first tlm* in over three yean,,
moved heck into hi* own divitlon.
He didn't weit around long enough
to talk to newimen hut ruihed
from the ballpark to IdlewiM
Meld for a plana to San Francisco,
Th* f1r*t real hard blow of the
fight Started the blow-up middleweigh king on th* way out. It
wa* a jarring right to th* jaw.
Another awift r i g h t thuddrd
against Hobo'* jaw and then a
left hook dropped th* jiggling Ha­
waiian on his hark.
He turned eidewaye and tried
desperately to get to hie feet. Rut
hie brain waa numbed and hia
legs wouldn't respond aa Refer**

Ruby Goldstein tolled th* full
count.
Nothing much had happened In
th* first twe round* oxcapt that
OUnn, heavieat of hia career 'a t
17014 pounds, hackad and eldastapped away Instaad ef piling on
the preaaur* aa he normally does.
Arrhfa went after him, hut he
didn’t catch solidly vntil tha fetal
third.
CALL HF.R COACH
WALTHAM, Maas. (/P)—Adding
fencing to a college sports agenda
la not newe. But when th* coach
it a woman — that's new*.
It happened at Rrandrie Univ­
ersity when Mrs. I.ltel Oppenheim wa» hired to eoach both
the men's and women’s fencing
teams.
Mr*. Oppenheim ha* been fenc­
ing instructor at th* Boston YW­
CA for 10 years and has been
a charter member of th* Boston
Fencing since 1939.
A mother of two children,
Mr*. Oppenheim wilt assume her
new duties this fall.
Danny Dlnoff of Detroit made
two holet-ln-ono withia 10 daya
at suburban Redford Municipal
Golf Course. They were on differ­
ent holes

VALLEY FORGE, Fa. IB-THe
hulking, square-cut man with the
face like ■ benevolent gorilla
stomped onto the stage and the
•udienee rippled epprertatively.
"There he la," aakl a man, el­
bowing the portly blonde next to
him. "That’s Two-Toe Tony.”
The foreeful identification wae
unneeded. Scarcely a man in the h.
overtired tent pitched on a muddy
hillside near the Valley Forge
Revolutionary War C ent l a g
ground waa unaware ef the actor's
name.
Thte wee the eerime ■metrical
debut ef Tony Galento, wrestler of
octopuses and bear*, heavyweight
title challenger, barkeeper and
butcher of tha King's English.
"Gaea," aald Twu-Ton In hia ,
drailing room before tbe opening ^
act. “Thl* ia tougher then meet­
ing Joe Louis."
*
He wai sweating and pacing tbe
floor of the temporary dr***tug
room.
"Never had any i t u n remem­
bering line*," he said.
He bad aeen tha show in ques­
tion— "Guye and Dotta"— several
lime* In New York and elsewhere,
he said.
"So I already got • htad Mart *
memorizing the lines. AQ I got ta
do ia rehearse two, three days,
and I go it eold."
But Tony had tbe ueoal mj*t'.vinga before the curtain went
up at the Valley Forge Musts Fair.
Tu eU Intenta end purposes,
Tony Galento—"etar" ef tha rem­
itter stock show under canvas—
was suffering stag* (right.
But when the orchestr aa trurk .
up the opening number end the**
house lights were ihmined, TwoTon Tony waa John Barrymore
with a black forest ef hair ea hie
cheat and mammoth arms, a kingsited Edwin Booth with a slightly
used cigar ia Urn cornar at hia
mouth.

..irjK

Foe QutoJc Ef***! cveehn

Dixie Crys
Sugar

liillll

LRant H

w la
41 l«
Rronhlva
2« 2ft
ChirNin
22 2ft
MllwauW-o
N#w T«ffc
22 29
•ft 14
l'lill*d#l|ihla
&lt;■lnilnm.ll
2ft 99
at Loiii*
i f 21
r itte tiu n h
21 44
a i t i i X T i Y r s T a in n x v
nmnfclvn 9, Chicago 1
Phllad#l|»hlft t, Ht. I^iula a
Sew Tnt It 4 , rtnrlnn*tt a
MllwAuke#* ft. I'lli-l.iirati it

ciawK* Timer

tlreeklzn at Chlrage
(S-*l *• Jnn»« &lt;T-S•

—

M
,7sa
.SIS
.t s t
■i»:
.4*0
.44*
,4 2«
.111

PACEMAKER

DEAL

C hevrolet’s b ig P ace m ak e r C ontest is in fu ll sw in g * *«

W E RE TR A D IN G H IG H ..

I^bln*

riilltit-lphla at ft Lent* (Nt —
Wehm*l*r «S-4) va Wooldridge
(t-ll
(Onljr I - m u

'Two • Ton Tony'
Galenfo Makes
Theatrical Debut &lt;•

Can Knock Him Out'

■ckeduledt.

YOU

* Tell us how much YOU NEED for your car to trade for m y

N E W 19 55 C H EV R O LET

If fm i grt tarried m g r W ■
youU
aa OK Uaad Car! Thg u t Tag m arts
a read car that daren't look (or a rt) Uka a re .
Thonm iM r tnapertsd and m n niM ilniii, OK
Used C a n carry dm faao t

Thl* week we’re eolog all out to meet your figure!
YOU’RE IN THE DRIVERS SEAT!. . . LETS GO!!
M A IL O R

pUot at the Dodgers ,

BRIN G T H IS AD

IN

TO

'

H O LLER M O T O R S A LES
FO R T H E B EST
r.aP A U isn o*ve

D EA L O F Y O U R L IF E !
monk um

-

—w

-

•

t

*; ■
_____________ a n —

anew j

____________91
___

.

_ _

a

U A i i m

f n

�|

*

THE SANFORD HERALD Thur*. June 21, 11.13 P ip e
If I t ’s W orth A nything
I t ’* W orth A dvertising In

9—REAL ESTATE FOE B A fE -l
For your Beat Eilate need*:

Cullen and Harkey, Realtors
1M N. Park Ave. Phone 2313.

* CLASSIFIED ADS

Sicknev* causes tell or lease of
combinalion grocery. meat mar­
ket A- gas station. Good termi.
Shown by appointment, Phone
332

ABT1CLEB FOR M U
-4
DOUBLE DECKER Beds and
Mattresi. ‘s price- 2404 Park
Ave.
Single bed and bos springs, $3.
Phone llll-R. 2121 Magnolia.
Hotpotnr Electric stove Excellent
condition. $30 1313 Palmetto

New Maiotirv home, well landreaped. Lot 60’ x 130‘. Phone
2«6-R. 2334 Oak Ave.

H O M E T O W N

By STA N LEY

DAILY

«fi -■

f

K

O

9 Bedroom Home in Wynnawood. 2 Years Old.

J5 T -S T

fe a

ad K.
1ST3

A U * a ttriM k « 5
FOB SALE - 3
H Block from '
Cell
*JRAYIIONp m. BALL. BROOK

■yum m rnmsg. 1 vffl
■A U l R l i L M

C I*r
The

E C H O L S B E D D IN G C O .

in i

«U GOwd^AVE

J furniture,
S antiques,SSBPIL'WL
brie-a-bree.
Cyme In end brouse around.
New nrrtvata at TrsdR
1 atfla S. on Orlande ■
L J Jw j
I .Artistic China Cabinets

8 2 . Metknul couch '.! i 30.00
Magic Chef Stove
__ ......................... 75.00

Chair* A Oka*an 21A0

Broeatway wicker
............................... 30.00
d 35 00

m

8- 3th SL TeL 2434

’t H m s p s

f o v n r l l

CRtlN

LI GHT

Chanpea are that you have
a Hat of tavern) home im­
provements you w a n t to
make. Why not fiv e yourfelf the “green light'’ by
giving us a call. Do thin
now and you'll noon b« en­
joying those improvements
instead of still thinking
about them.

g f ’^ a y i i s s

‘Ta.T tap tfrg aff0

ttiiH rrn
9. G ill's
n im e

H IL L LUM BER
&amp; SU P P LY YA R D
s ts

v

.

m

h

.

Ph. ss

Thin home has Oak Floor*.
Ceramic Til* B ath. Dthing
Area, Lat|* Living Boom
and Kitchen Equipped with
G. E . Appliances-

l i A Marshal

o f F ringe

1J Cubf i
i 7 f r ic io 'is

1* Nouri-h fd

14 P u t

IT Dock for

) Mlfttii'i Sr- r.f
.12 Summon

i* C .m u sof
» « ine
t Eur 4
nrm * for
E m it E u n te

Marie

*cs god

i

IT E-stuped

melding
: s r rm tin g
errors
39. M erest
31. rrrform cra
31. W riting

fluid
3*. Eillurds

7-

J

40. Similar

i 4.V

y/\
//.
’\

vs

*

%
ib

■li
'1C

*7

7/.

V4 • o

%

% %

w1 1 1 IS

;4

;&gt;

41. Sphere of
action

’»

through
water

It

%

42 Mirlaid
43 .W alk

A %
.it*

%
Si

H

DOWN
prison
2. Source
of aid

it

i)

41

io

V
A
&gt;/y

41

3. Indian
living
in Utah

" a jj

% %

\;

1. A ship s

L

&gt;v i

-A

this

One hour • Wasn and Damp
Dry
• One hour Vi • Wash and Dry
Fold
• Finished Laundry
• Samlnne Dry Cleaning
S o u th rtd e
la u n d ro m a t
Seelh Side Food mart Bid*.
________ tee r a n zsua s i
n F U ltO HKRVIfH
-a

*4

Vi
/ / to
/ft

IT %

shot
35. Men ure

•

3&gt; N ot any
36 A siatic
isthm us
35. Uncooked
39 ConstelU*
lion

1? Ureal

26 Teutonic

2.V- IJUINURT BERWICK

33 Group o f
Ihrce

memoranda

13 A winding
»hee*
:i Frcili'y
r&gt; putsout

45

%

\Y&lt;

L
Sill—Plano T crhnirian
Phone 2164. Route 1. Sanford

I t’s So Kwiy
To Place A Want Ad
/unt. Call 1821 and ask for
the Want Ad department
Sanford Herald

W A N T AD
RATES
The Want Ad Department Is
open Irnm 8:30 a. m until 3:30 n.
m. each husmesj dav except Sat
urday afternoon. Deadline for
ueek-day injections is 2:(&gt;o p m
the dav preceding publication
Anv ana coming in later than
2:00 n. m. will he published undrr
Too Late To Classify.
Advertiser* ere requested in d»
Ufy thn WanLAd Depsrtoiant lmmrctistclv nf any error* in their
ids. as The Sanford Hrrild will lie
responsible (or only one incorrect
insertion.

A JACKFT AND CAP exhibitnl at the 2,Mh National 4-H Club mnetins
trv Washington attract the allrntion o( two joung women attending
the gathering. They are Nancy Day (left), 19, of Anderson, Catif., and
Mtrilyn Elliott, 17,of Wlnthrop,N.Y.“Rural ambasssdort** from fo a
uuLons will study American agricultural methods (/n!crr.atlcr.at)

SAMPLE 3-LINE AD
GET ern e eaih for articles you
no longer use. Place your ad to­
day. Phone 1821.
A 3-line ad, such aa Use one above
is only 38o per day nn our low 3
day earned rate economy plen, 45r
““ di
day (or 3 days end 14c for
per
itU y .

TELEVISION
* -a A1' i i ' .rs v\ i*n tJarU M all

C ir»e#r C*r« Ml
gtktv* ' »4
H• Al« to*
4 PI H’siih 'f'N * '' - l i t *
• Ik Jfihr D lly
s
Huntluc in&lt;2 Fublnr
* h flnn
I.t'nm jtihg*e
«
i tv A '»*f:*i l'rrA«nia

Cell ui about our austeeas rates.
A littla spate like this will gel
your message before our more
Lr in 10,000 readers. Tell 'em to
dayl Pnona 1821.
• I Mil
ArrifB •«* And:*
The shove 4-line ad ran be run
and Al'rn
5 full days for only 32 40. 3 days 1 D Iiurfii
M l a 'ir
Jv* » u *
fer only 11.30 and one day (or 72r !o f”» lit pg* M* vT iih
!w4A. ara
#to » * 5 ♦f*W*i f{ear
II f
11 IS F fir lifh t Ir.pstfA
12 U IiEr* O ff
1.51
« IV
I 01
11 II
12 M
1;«i

P llfffq r
H flliM M i

fit*

Frcigf i m lit auiti•
K«w#*vv •«1 f. 3r
r f^ w

tg g i r i t i t r i
i:\E -M no
f If AvBK

Pffirim Friumi *

Nf »
f«t h#r
Kilm Kir*

* t»m •'CbBfinti t&gt; 'i»i r o id i1'

A bosk reeding fool
Thinks our cloatifted'i are
1
More eoUftoenlng (bon KheoL

TOO
CAN
SELL
Aartkiag
VUf A

TeUakaee t i t after 3 P. H.
for appointment to a*o (hi*

R a d io

w o rn r t u ^ ^ c t «
o r l iNtm
T M lH ID %Y
tVEMMi

v i
&gt;n

BARGAIN!

For Friday A Saturday
irflald Wil Ladies rayon It cotton slips.. .39
Dresses, values to 8.3$ ........ l.oo
moo fenth Path Fim a a
' Earn*. A.
DoudatP. L u d J £ Children's sandals all sixes 33c pr
veyor.
Girl's ptaysuitj sisv 3-10 .. .69 Dra
Man’s Shirts, full cut ............... 93
El
Oalar - Waller E m m , toe. Any thing you buy in our store is di:
G e n e v a __
a real bargain.
'J f
General CrtWracting
Sanford 8321.
The Bargain Center.
• Commercial—Custom £ Zrtv
307 Sanford Ave
C «t Homes
Mattresi A Box Springe
Renovated
FooUockere ............ Special $T.39.
. .. “Free Estimate"
Pnint
7
7
/.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
^
....U
J
O
gei.
Robert A.

3 Conxcio n
6 T yrsn m ir j
8 Chat

i s Lively
16 Vnprr*
reived

i:75V "" * ia *

SU PER DUPER SPECIALS

M in 's
n ic knim o

7 MiKhtevous

frmsin

3 bedroom houae, Garage St wash
house 2 attic (an; A Real Buy.
$6300.00. Phone 1620-J-3.
3 bedroom home, comer lo t rea­ NEW LOAD — Used Furniture.
Fanev Desks. Hit Racks. Wash
sonable down payment. Low
Stand* and Chests. The Curio­
monthly payment. 801 Roialia
sity Shop.
Drive.
A R 1K U 8 WANTED
Open House
Sunday
June
28
- 1 Lovely 3 bedroom atueco home in Highest CASH. TRADE-IN prices
paid for used furniture Call 938,
nice neighborhood. Hardwood
WTLaXA APABTMENTS: room*,
Wilson-Malar Furniture Co. Ill
floors. extra large living room,
E. 1st SL
private hatha. 114 T . First S t
separate dining room, Kitchen
fully equipped. On beautiful 7—
_i
RoDaway a n d Baby Beds
"S' r I l f ' lot with shade trees.
Day. Week or swath—TeL 1425.
$1,000. Down, monthly payments
- 1U Wert Ftrrt
leu than rent. May be seen at For Sale — AXC. registered
Boxer puppies. , brindle and
an earliar date by appointment.
faun color, six weeks eld. Call
(Fallow the imalll arrows from
2323-J.3.
Park St 12nd St. to location)
4&amp;
Tropical Really
DOCS LOVE THIS NEW FOOD
MO Park _iOT_jfjj:nnlia Ave Pnnne 16
nnum azD
Watch your dog dive into his
Ave.
ABTKXKA r o n BALK
meal with enjoyment, when von
feed PURINA DOG CHOW.
Furnished K it n m f t * art*. Air
VENETIAN BLINDS
r^itiHwwxt Slumberlana Court
Thrifty, eaiy-to-feed. contains
rvemhing normal dog* need
South City limits Highway 17-92. fMatioaally Adv. Boll a-Head)
to maintain sturdy vigor Gel
Manufactured in Sanford
Dfir,
CHOW at
9 Bedroom Hornet H Block from S a t i n at* Venetiea BKnd Cm.
Simpson Farm Supplv
330 Wert 3rd S t
Phone 3B3
Southaide school. Call 2S4L
110 W 2*4 SL
Phone *1438
a, §XE Seminole Realty for Daslr- Small Dining Room Suite, Bed
(f able Homaa and Apts. Phone 2T,
with springs also good buy in IbA R E tP WANTED (Female) ISA
other miscellaneous furniture.
i s - uricraAi, BEBwinpi t i - ta - n J t N m i iK - 1
Onede-m
FURNISHED A pt Phone 432-W
Phone 762-W, 2333 ralmetlo Ave. Avon Co*metici interested in la­
ENVELOI'ES,
Jetlerhrad*.
itatryour Furniture' a l Rerrv \
dies with sales ability. Steady
C O O t- S Room Furnished Apart­
menls. invoices, hand bills, ami J'K srebouse
FR EE
Furn . Co., at 901 W
income, plaasant work, chance
m ent Front and hack screened
p r o g r a m s , elc. Progressive
A
Paring
Knife
for
the
Ladies,
1st, St. All nationally adv. furfor advancement Contact .Mrs.
porches- Garage. Take one
Pruning C o, Phone 408 — 403 m
Ballons
for
the
kids
at
'urr
at
warehouse
prtres.
Juanita
Russell.
P
O.
Box975
,
S lid . No Peta. 806 Palmetto
West 13th S
i ________
Orlando
B i t te r l y Appliance C enter
Ave. Shown by appointment
LOST AND POUND —21
—1 4 a 2 i"Your Weetinghouse Dealer"
INSURANCE
Phone 274J.
_____ _
THREE WOMEN
Maytag Washers
Furnished cottage for couple, or 111 Magnolia Ave.
FOUND — Gold studded diamond
Phene ITT7 (between 30 and $3) for outside
with baby. 814 Elm Avenue.
iin Owner may have same by
survey work In Sanford Ex- m OLKj H T0 ‘* n Su R a ’-'CE
utlher discriptmn and pay for
One S. C. Case tractor A drag
f'HC^E 31 ’
nance not necessary. Must
Furnished 2 bedroom apartment,
.
ad plu* reward Call W. C. Lynu.
t|g* harrow. 3300.00. Phone
neat in appearanca. .have a
A TL ANT C b A‘J*v B*- D ;
to 1st
floor, 600
As
j». *wu»,
-M Park Avenue.
/
Ph 2172. find Elm Ave
Pleasing personality- and a de­
lareilo, Phone 1474.
USED TRACTORS
sire to serve the public. PrrmaLOST
— While Spill dog with Ian
Brttt Trader Cs.
nent work. Short hours. !»-i, $
3 Bedroom furnished house. Mono
*pol;. named "Mike. Vicinity
Ml
per month. Phone 998 or 743-W. ■way 1742 South
d.lv *.
120 00 « week I"
ol Lake Mary, 2 weeks ago.
start. Write qualification* and
after 6:00 p. m.
_______
Rates to
reward Call Orlando 32729
CONCRETE
Phone cumber to Box RL c/o
Policyholders
S room apartment, ground floor, Ready Mixed Concrete. Concrete ,_Herald.
23-EI-KCnfCAL
SERVICES—21
John
Williams
Ion.
completely furnished. Hot St
Block, Send. Gravel, Cement I I WORK to A*
411
Cold water included. Phone
-II
Concrete Pipe to Meet All Quali­
SEE Your General Electric deaJef
33
2392. 313 Palmetto._______
fications.
for TV and AopUanrea.
high school bo
Power
Phene 2489
Mower wente m
Sanford Fleet tic Co.
2 bedroom house, nicely furnished.
Phone
Sherm
an
Concrete
Pipe
Co.
716-AM,
Porch, carporte and large lawn.
113 Magnolia Ave.
PhMS 442
Oet
Weit
m
b
S
t
IT - AUTOMOBILES - TRAILERS
Longwood, J. R. Grant, Call
Wilt
Take
care
of
children
26302.
It wiT. nay YOU L* see US bcfnrn FRUtlDAlRF. appliances, sales
Inneripring Mattress, Box Spring
end service. C, It. High, Oviedo.
you buy. Open Evenings and
“ m -W®* *** or Blfht' phone
and Beautiful Headboard $49.30
UNFURNISHED ,4 Boom House
Fla. Pbnno 4131 or Sanford
Sundays.
2 Pc. Sectional Sofa PLUS Cor­
with 2 Bedrooma. Phono 1328-J.
1412-W after 8 p.m.
Eastslrtc Trailer Sales,
ner Table.
............. gltl-M DAY, week — Housework. 70t
cypress.
Palatka, Fla.
LARGE. Clean Apartment. Down
Day or Nighter Sofa. Platform
Randall Electric Co.
stairs Small one, $33.00 611
Rocker. TV Chair (choice al
CARS
. ys* m&gt;
covering.) ____ .
Beadix and Croaley Appliance*
Park Ave
BOUGHT
SOLI)
TRADED
Youngitovr Kitchen*
ECHOLS BEDDING COi
Roy Krel'a t'seo Cara
Fhunbleg. Kncty Healing
2 Bedroom Furnished house. 1200 Corner
Elertnral contracting and repair*
tod A MagnoUa Ph. 1232
Myrtle Ave. Phone 448-J.
Sanford
Ava.
A
lllb
SL
M. G. HODGES
112 Magnolia Ave. Phone 119
^ o d " Bamberaer. Mgr.
■ Open Monday tD 9 p. aa.
umpi
4 Room House and Bath. Two
1333— DUO 42 ft. House Trailer. *4- OFFICE EQUIPMENT
acreen porches. Nawly re-decorAir conditionar. TV. wall lo
— Factory to You —
Paola Read
78
a ted. Shady and cool. Ph. 1103-J.
wall carpeting. Mu*t Sell. $3 000.
Office Machine Ce..
Al u m la u t
Ph. Orange City, Spring. 44-332. HAYNES
Typewriters, adding maeaines,
Navy couple only, 3 room e p t
■—
BUb Rb
Orange
City
Mobile
Home
Park.
Salea-Kentali, 314 Magnolia, Pk
furnished. Desirable location. ^*?33ad head. Sag-proof botraas
Phone 2343-J.
FOR SALE — 1331 Chevrolet
rail wtth pleetle ends. Plr -fit er
Pick-up Truck. Good condition.
rayoa tapes. Cotton or ayU* ■ a w b a l l e l e c t r i c c a
3 room furnished apartment
cordi,
307 Elm Ave_______________ 24— BEAtmr PARLORS -34
Phone 306.
T
V
S
E
R
V
IC
E
C
E
N
T
E
R
Sankartk Gtaaa u d Pnlat Co.
For Lovelier H air
ItROATS MOTORS
-19
• Feetorr fcipetvtaed Sendee
Apartment 3 rooms completely 113-114 Wort fad 81
Phono t»
GET PROFESSIONAL t’AREI
• Haas* tail* a a. m. till 3 p. m 1934—
furtmhtd 1(00 Park Avenue.
makes end models)
Eva-Bewn Reality Shop
41 VARIETIES PANELING
3 4 HP 8COTT-ATWATER *830
U3 Mag. Are.
Phone 3400 5 Horn SCOTT-ATWATER sson
NICE Bedroom. Private entrance
Pbnne 363
Native
end
Foreign
Woods
_and bjth. Pnona 3023-W.___
3
Horse
SEA-BEE
M
vi
See Them At
M O ST MODERN
USED PLUMBING FIXTURES. 6 Horse WiZAltD
7933SANFOItDS
Sherm an Concrete Pipe Co.
BEAUTY SALON. Spccialmng
1332 — 7&gt;v Hnrso KE Rocket
Oat West 13th SL
“
“
in
al.
phase*
of Beauty Culture
MERCURY
11500 including Gyvolitor
Botchlaoo OCEAN FRONT ApartReducing
1
M
7
'i
Horse
Rocket
RED-l-MIX CONCRETE
menta. 33* Smith Atlantic Davand TrcalmenU by REGISTER.
MERCURY
loo
no
Miracle Concrete Co.
tons Beach, Fla, Phone 2374-W.
ED Ma**uc;e
The following motors will puli
3M Elm Ave.
Phene ism loor ftanmrd Avn.
HARRIETT’S
U13
ikils nic/ly
S-REAL EWATW FOB
10
Horse
SCOTT-ATWATER.
BEAUTY
d’OOK
fewtnr Machines, and Repairing
FRA
Rebuilt — Good Condition inn no
IF IT IS REAL E«5T*TE
(Air Conditioned)
R U r s 134 A Park Phan4 17CL
ask Crualey A Mr t- i*j
12 Horse SEA-KING
lin o o
194 So. Oak Ave. Phone fit.
FIT FOR A QUEENaxsa ELTO Speedster 8130
at U! forte Perk Pu r j
Foam Rubber Mattressaa, Innerone JOHNSON
311oo
sh
5 p r l « f j Mattresses. Diuches.
Free CUy A Ceaety Maps
Baby Beds, Renovating, Uphoi- Oet Wart lMh
Complete
CENTURY II
Ft. Runabout.
Steering
and
W .J L -E ffl-n fflM P R i
atering and Slip Cover work/
Canopy
223 00
Ho« will you twin?
P .N .
M X BEDDING MFC. CO* ? 2 S i£ g
How will you Trade?
1131 fanferd Ave.
111 N ark Ave.
Your old Motor for a
Ceed furniture, appliances, tool*.
Better grade - EVINRUDEI
LOW ELL K. OKIES
ROBSON Sporting Good*
Reflfer — P i n t 13U
ea ell makes end model*
»
AIH CONDITIONING
iANFORD ELECTRIC CO.
Room or House
Ilf Mi gmdio Ave.
F b a»3ii
C. A* W m O DO N. SR.
CALL 1321
H. a . PO PE C O . IN C
AND tKQUIU
118 S^^Ntfk*1 r 11,11 9 p £ arm
■MALL BURINEB*
„
METAL BOOFINa
W n i r e f f A Siagfetary
It yea have a email business ta a
Now In Stock. f-V Crimp —m
secluded p v t of towo end ere
Comigatod- m * Corrugated.
—
ta gektng customers.
Get ell Your roofing needs at FLOOR __
A**'*!"!
end fialehing
n
»
.
«
f
j
__
k a m a a C a a o e te Pipe Cm
•
a tta rJT U #
.......
ima ef the
Out West 13th 6L
Phone 341*
Herein Can UB.
Phone l

4

.1 Mine
entrance
9 P jIC-4
m ountain
crest
10 An adult

ALL CHANNEL TV ANTENNA
WITH ROTOR AND TELESCO­
PIC .MAST. Cost new — 8125.
Will sacrifice for $73. Call A. T.
Ball, 131, or can be seen at
2402 DeCottes Ave., Wynnewood.
2 Bunk bpds with link springs.
Phone 418-M

a n a n a a ss

CROSSWORD

ACROSS
1 Of '-viner,
veil’ dr&gt;’

A BARGAIN!

‘ RAY E . PECK. Realtor
Denary, Fla.

THE O L D

2 31 VjF^vfr#
2 4V *JIr. ir d Mr*.
t ! V Ffcf«, £torm
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C r.^ g jr* Ar/'tind
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w u n n - tv
TIM VIM&gt; %V
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MOrniP.r * b o w
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* .*i s' Now*
* je O i r t r Moor*
n no f i i r r r Monro
le IS (lurry Morn
|e ;o Ptrik* It Rich
It no \ oli*nt L i d y
M ilt law* Of Lit*
Mile £&lt;*rch F o r T 'ro w
11 41 C u i a i r r Lif hr
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s ea Urtrhtor r » r
111* fte tt t Sterm •
H i Oa Tour A - e e u s t
4.44 B a td Of i : f *
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L it Op«B U out*

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M tMI fif I lei fl! lrt(5||

Mirnlna JI.lo.ltta
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S'u.in h r L a lit i

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l jo
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1 11
4 10
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Kan-a
l»oo C! jb
Grina Of M-lfit-XVnr IirTI'.HVilllX
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PiiTo P.rm IJlcrat
Krlilay Hallo.s« -» »
l.ar Sont Faarh
XVorU at Thra*
r . « ( u r » pax*
I f * Ctu*
1*0* r i ’rh

Tii* Hhrtlim Hour

J a y c e e s S ta g e
G ig a n tic

P a rad e

ATLANTA '.B — Crowds lined
Peachtree St here taodiy to watch
member* nf the U.S Junior Cham­
ber nf Commerce itrut their stuff.
The p a r a d e was billed as th*
largest in the city's history.
Tbe Javcees have already sat
one record here; Between 6 000 asri
9.not) delegates showed up for their
36th annual convention.
Publicists for the organization
say the parade will rank at Lhe
third or fourth largest ever itaged
in this country by a single organ­
ization.
In Japan about IS per cent al
i Th* people m under IS years o il

�i

r

BEFORE YOU BUY
ANYWHERE
C U T O N D O TTED L I N E . . ;

U SE T H IS C H E C K L IS T

r

1m • 1 ;

M any and varied Floor Plano
Varied Elevations
Varied Hoof Lines
Varied F ront Doors
Varied Color Combinations
L arge Plots
Shrubbery
Sprigged F ro n t and Side Y ard s
C arport and Screened Porch
Vinyl Plastic TDe Floors
6 Citrus Trees per H o n sst
|
Valencia (LateJ*
Pineapple (Early)'
Pink G rapefruit
Kum quat
Tangerine

H O M ES:

consider

G. E. R efrigerator
G. E. Rang*
G. E. Disposal!
G. E. 69-gal W ater H a a tar
G. E. D ishw asher
(2-bath
G. E. Autom atic W asher (2-bath
Form ica Counter Tope—One piece and
L arge Kitchens—A dequate Cabinet

G . E. K IT C H E N :

and
compare

FO R B E A U T Y :

these features
0; a

Tt

i
y

Phillips Home

nr

Jr
Jr

Vi*
r

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—

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—

mm

-

=

■«

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rod

V

l

VIrola Doors
Vinyl P ain t
Roof — Tile or Built-up w ith W hite
Venetian Blinds
Full Ceramic Tile B aths
E xterior Brick Sills

FO R C O M FO R T:

•

•
t

7

Furred and Plastered W alls
_
Insulated Ceilings
. Magic Chef . H ester — W ith
Nutona Kitchen F an
* L arge Screened Porch
Silent Switches
Door Chimes

7

FO R C O N V E N IE N C E : 2 0
^

I

*

r

o r m ore Double Electric
#
Storage
E x tra L arge Cloeeta
Ceramic Tfle Sills
L ights fat Closets

g

*

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I

Dreamwold

FO R S A F E T Y :

I --------------------

j

T

C IT Y F A C IL IT IE S :

City Water
City Sewer
DooMn-Door Mall
Concrete Carte
Paved Streets

F IN A N C IN G :

FH A and VA

I

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*I

1

5 B

i.

W aterproofing under Flool
M etal Term ite Shield
B uilt under FH A and VA
Sanford Building Coda

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*

Since 1949 SA N FO RD 'S
LE A D IN G B U ILD ER
mb

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Off|pe: Comer Ooceolo Drho

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N O DOW N P A YM EN T
C L O S IN G C O S T O N L Y

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A S LO W A S
G I FINANCING

- _________________
_____________ ____

-

.

. .

•. •

&amp;

�Weather

Shop and Save
In Sanford

a
rINDKrWNPICNT
a n m t w n c N T DAILY
ntn.v N
K WSPAPER
S P A F im
AN
NEW

hU hhW

VOLUME XLVI

*

A— ffatU d P ro w

HANFORDT FLORIDA. n tlO A Y 7 jU N K 2l.~U&gt;r.5

IBP*

T in t* rlmirtr with scattered m***k
H s f t r r n n n n (hirnrlcrihawcr*
•hm ufh Saturday; few widely
scattered night and early morning
showers southeast roast and key*;
continued rath e r warm.

l.ea.ied Wire

NO~21fi."

Governor Collins Okays Two-Year Program.

State To Spend Record $ 4 2 7 Million
TALLAHASSEE (/Pj— A
record 427 H million dollar
■pending program that would
almost empty the general re­
venue till has been approved
for Florida’* state govern­
ment the next two years but
Gov. Collins says there will
be no deficit spending.
Collins said in approving
th# 406 million dollar general approatluns bill laal night w ithout
any trim m ing o ffunda th a t there
were enough aafeguarda around the
■ p e n d i n g that the government
« w !d be operated on a sound fi»esiP baiii.

Red Theme
Is Rapped
By Dulles
S A N FRANCISCO (A V Secretary of State J o h n
Foster Dulles told Russia in
blunt language today that
th a way to end the cold war
la to stop using force against
other countries and to atop
im porting subversion.
In a stinging attack on
•ommunistn, Dulles declared:
**To bring the cold war to an
•nd, seven points ar* not needed
|hia one Is sufficient,”
The secretary spoke at the U.
K .'l 10th annlveraary meeting*.
Which Wednesday heard Soviet
Foreign Minister B. M. Molotov
ropote a seven-point program lo
nuldate the cold war.
(Salles spoke with President El­
se nhower'a “full confidence and
concurrence.'' Tha President him­
self cqid »o on Monday whan ha
■ddreateJ the opening teaalon. He
told the delegate* tha secretary
would apeak today **on appropriate
■lainenti In the foreign policy of
(this nation.”
Dulles pulled no punches aa .he
Reviewed the role or communism
in recent history. He agreed with
IMlotov that aome problems had
been eettled recently, but he said
they would have bean Battled year*
■artier except for tho Communist#.
“We do not forget." he eaid.
*Sre daro not forget, that tome of
thoac who now hall th# recant de­
velopment* ar# precisely those
who for years sought to stop
tham."
Dulles strongly defandad th*
Nfirth Atlantic Treaty OrganliatA u which Molotov blamed for
much of th* trouble today. The**
organisation* were baaed on th#
spirit of tha U. N. Charter, he said,
•nd it was Weetem strength,
backed by these organisation*,
which had lad to tha solution of
major problems.

while ha voted no money ltema,
he did disapprove tour atlpulation*
which the LegHlature had written
into the big money bill fo- operal.
ing the elate government and fi­
nancing institutional building the
next two year*.
In addition to tha General Ap
propriationa Act there are spending measure* which will run the
general revenue outlay up lo 3427,459.057.
*
If all of th* appropriated fund*
are spent th* tqtal would run cloie
to the 428 million dollar figure
which
Budget D irector H arry
Smith estim ates will be available
in the general fund the next two

year*.
However, CoUlni pointed out that
there were *ev*ral safeguard!
which can krep spending from go­
ing overboard.
One la that the Budget Commisaion h ai authority lo review and
adjust appropriations In order that
the atate will have at all tim ra
the estim ated funds available to
pay appropriations.
He said experience has shown
th a t all appropriated funds are not
spent, and some funds were bound
to rev ert back to the general fund
at the end of the biennium.
Some of the appropriations are
for program a which won't get un­

der way until late In the biennium
and if funds -un short some of the
building program can t* held in
r e s e n t until the situation im­
proves, he said.
•‘The people of Florida may be
assured that the state government
will be operated on a sound fiscal
basts with no deficit spending,** he
said.
The general appropriations act
calls for about 63 million dollars
more than was ever appropriated
before.
One stipulation which the gov­
ernor struck out called for approval
of the chairm an of the House *nd
Senate appropriations com m ittees

In addition to the budget rommisnon of changes in salary in r rr a -r
allotments and in Ihi new and
unfilled positions in slate govern­
ment.
Collins said Atty. Gen. Ervin
advised him such a prevision would
constitute unlawful encroachment
of the legislative authority in the
field of executive adm inistration
OthCL* provisions which he vetoed
were ones:
Providing a *3,000 * year salary
for the superintendent of the
Stephen Foster Memorial Commis­
sion. Collins said the superintend­
ent now received m ire than this
and hss (l;nn'l believe It was legis-

Murder Indictment Returned
Jurymen
Finish
Session

FOREIGN MINISTERS FOR TH E BIG FOUR power*, a ttending the United Natinna’ T enlh m nnivtraary celebration in
San Francisco, confer on details of (ha scheduled Geneva
meeting of (ha heads or (h eir retp tcU v t governm ents next
month. A ttentive as Antoine Pinny of France speaks are
(I. o r.): V. M. Mololnv of R ussia: Harold McMillan of G reat
B ritain, and John Footer Dulleo o f Uw United S tates. (In te rnational)

A first degree murder in­
dictment wns returned today I’OLICE OFFICER John A. Mngglnnroldn questions William
by the Seminole Circuit Court Jackson (Hip, right) of !'ng«isn Springs, Colo., wlm was ar­
grand jury against William rested in linionlown. Pa., for allegedly firing on rnrs that did
O. McKendrco, 1’aota rar- not dim (heir headlights, Ten nulumohiles were hit nnd four
penter, in the fntal shooting persons Injured, either l»y bullets or flying glnss, Jackson, rill,
of a Jacksonville man here'and another man were picked up In n truck painted wlih
Junn J. . .
j -xiiinM (bottom) proclaiming hatred for bright lights, autumnAt the same lime, in wind- Idle horns nnd hoodlums. ( liiterniiHnnnl)
Ing up a two-day session, the

S

Strolling
In Sanford
J ^ e p o rt by Gaorgs A. S tin t en
the 50th Anniversary Convention
mt Rotary Internationa! held re­
cently In Chicago will feature tho
Aegrsm of tha Banford Rotary
Club to be held at noun Monday,
a* tha Yacht Club.

* a • *

Tha Sanford Boat and SH Club
will meet tonight tn tha CAP
Hall at 8 p. m. Entrance folder*
containing application b l a n k a,
'■ a p t, entrance (ea and other
Information for tha P l r a t a ’a
’ Cruise will be available It wai an■ounced by Don Smith, president.
C l members a rt urged to be
jrrs e n ' Visitors and anyone In‘3 * rested in Joining tha dub art
Wtlcoma.

Close Attention Focuses On New Hampshire Tour

Ike Drops 2nd Term Teaser
WITH EISENHOWER IN NEW
HAMPSHIRE (lU^Preaidtat Eisen­
hower’# '‘teaser” sufieatlon he
might seek a aecond term focused
cloie attention today oa his tour
of New Hampshira~fint its la to
support him in tha IMS primaries.

Uw President hai two more
speaking engagements in the
Granite State—on# at Lincoln, th*
othar at Franconia Notch—and
there was plenty of advance specu­
lation whether h* might deal again
with tha big question: Will he run

t a p . , It# offer to boost wage*
•bout 10 cents an hour flatly re-jMted by the CIO United Steel
faster*, today studied Be next
mere to head off n threatened
gtrika at midnight next Thursday.
Me MgotlatiMM were a ch edited.
“ . both sites Indicated that betalkr were in the
, David j . McDonald.
1 UBW, turned

t less

again?
He dealt with It in only a teasing
way in a speech late yesterday
at Concord, N.H., but it complete­
ly surprised hi* police-estimated
audience of &lt;3,000 persons in Stale
House Plata,

Mansfield Says Russia
Holds Cards At Geneva
By ROWLAND EVAN* IB .
WASHINGTON ll*-*en. Mans­
field (D-Moot) said today tha So­
viet Uakm "bold! all the real
cards” in next month’s discus­
sions with tha West on Germany.
Ha laid administration foreign
policy leaders have "overem­
phasised tha tenuous relationship
that now exists between West Ger­
many and Western Europe and
hypnotised themselves that this re­
lationship will continue Indefinite-

}y."

If Russia really wants a neutral,
reunified Germany, he Mid In ea
interview. Soviet Madera may well
disclose at the Big Pour summit
conference so Intent to advance
these "attractive” propositions le
West German Chancellor Konrad
Adenauer:
Invite him to "take ever" Soviet
East Germany, offer him Sovietcontrolled territory now held by

Poland and tha Ctecbostovalda and Africa when the Big Four
gudetenlaud, both of which Ger­ talki begin at Geneva July IB.
many once cootrotted; and hold "This is tho most significant por­
out, a guarantee of trade com.es- tion of Molotov’s speech," Manafield said.
Scviet Foreign Minister V. M. Senate Republican Leader KnowMolotov, Mansfield said, served land of California, meanwhile, de­
notice in his San Prsncisco speech manded that tha United State* re­
two days ago that Russian leaders fuse to diicusa Far East tension*
will demand the United States give at any international meeting until
up its air baas system in Europe all Americans held by Communist
China are freed.

Touchton Infant
Dies A t Hospital

George Quinn Touchlon, Infant,
born June a , died last night in
the Ftrnsld Laughton Memorial
Hospital. He wai the ion of Mr.
and Mrs. Orville W. Touchton of
Sanford and tha grandson of Mr,
and Mrs. H. Q. Touchton and tha
late Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Sinquefield form arty of Lake Mary,
Othar airvlvors are five aunts:
Mrs. Leu Watson. Cocoa; Mrs.
E. W. Rogers, Sanford; Mr*.
Horace M. Cochran, Lake Mary;
Mrs Johnnia Harman, L a k e
Mary; and Mrs. Annie Rabarn,
Annalusla, Ala. Also two uncles:
Cedi Sinquaflald, Pelham,, Ga.
Big steel termed It "substantial" and M. H. Slaruefield, Washing­
and said It "should produce a ton D. C.
prompt settlement."
McDonald declared:

"We can see no justification
Publisher
whatsoever to accept a ictUamant
this year—tha moat profitable In
By Death
th# industry's history—which la
approximately one half of the eest FORT WORTH, T n . (B-Amon
ef the settlements already mate Q. Certor, who rose from poverty
in the intern abOi Industry. We will te become the celerhd multimil-

Texas
Taken

hmn fra ptihtitear ef

the

There was mi shred of certainly
afterw ard whether he was Ju»t
having a bit of fun—or whether he
had m eant to put across the idea
that he is in Die m arket for an ­
other term . Many of his listener*
were inclined to the teller idea.
It cam e about this way: The
Prc-ldent had been tolling the New
Hampshire crowd how Sherman
Adam*, form er governor of the
slat* *nd now Elsenhower's chief
arte, boast* about New' Hampshire
to the White flou*e staff. Eisen­
hower Mid his eagerness tn find
out for blm ielf wn on* of “the
serious reason*” for hi* visit to
the state.
Then he cam e out with these
rem arks:
"People often ask mo what my
ideas are on how long I would
like a residence in 16UO Pennsyl­
vania Ave. (the While House.)
"My own thought is: They
should ask bow long is it guing
to take Gov. Adams to finish up
h u aerie* of lecture* on New
H ampshire, because he doesn't
seem to he a third of tho way
through them yet.”

,‘ury did not retu rn a Iru* hill in
the rax* nf a Negro prisoner who
died in th* county jail,
'W. E rnest Rett* wa* foreman
nf th# Jury and R. E ,' Aiken Jr.,
wa* a ssista n t foreman.
Q th tr m tm kara of th* Jury were
Geuiga H anna.. iW tT . * Howard,
Allen T. Pull, Hugh! flraddy, II.
h. D uhnit, t \ G. Ilarr, A. It. Pop­
lin, Kir hard H. Ivors, T*iy[nr Itnuntr**, H arry 11. Rloodswoilh, Joe
T. B aggrrly, Anthony P. Mareenelle,
Roger
Crocker, Carl
A m ou, Raymond ilillam y and
1 1*rent* Henderson,
McKemltee d ertern l Hint his
"conscience wns rtcai'” and th at
the shouting was “nrriHcntnl"
when h i was rhnrged with lh«
m urder of It. Keith Cochran, 42,
district representative nf Armour
ami Co., two week* ago,
Arrordm g to w itnesses, there
had hern no quarrel or warning
Immediately prior to the shooting.
Their account wns in conflict with
the one McKrndree pave officers
shout a running argum ent be­
tween tha two nn n all evening.
Cochran was shot in III* base
of the nerk white he played table
snufflehnart in th# dining room
about 20 feet from wher* MeKendre* snt on a liar stool. The vic­
tim dird the next day at Oiaitg*
Memorial H ospital, Orlando.
Th* cas* in which no indict­
ment was returned involved th*
death of N egro prisoner John
Pittm an in th* eounty Jail on
April II. P ittm an died of a frac­
tured skull and brain hemmorhag*,
llr. W. A. Derrick, O range Memor­
ial H ospital, pathologist, said after
an autopsy.
M IDGET OKAYED

JACKSONVILLE in -T h e Slate
Welfare Board tonight tentatively
approved a tel. 211,tin budget for
the fiscal year beginning July I
with the largest sums going for
nld age ssslslanrr and aid Ui de­
pendent children.

Jackson Assumes
Command A t Base

( upturn R obert W, Jneksim- USN, nasiimoil com m and
to day of tho S an fo rd N aval A uxiliary A ir S tatio n from Com­
m an d er F ra n k K. More, USN.
(Mr. Morn, who bait servptl n* Act i ng ro m m aitd ln g O f.
firc r fo r I ho p art seven weeks, will resum e hiss (lutio.* its F.x-

eculite D ffircr.
' ------------ -—-- ------------------------- — A v e in nil of more than ’2 0 1 rp
,i
D II
years Nnwil service, ('a p t. Jink- L X- j O U t i l C Til DCl l
son route* In Sanford from Com­
posite Squadron Eleven, Sun Die­
go, Calif., where he solved in llio
rapacity nf Cnimnniidiitg Officer
fur over * year.
Graduated ftum the Nav.it .VrnORLANDO MX—A former Southd*my in Julln I!I'I5, he Will ciiin- ero Hell Telephone Co worker was
niisKiiuifd Ensign nnd assigned to com tried yesterday of cutting ca­
the hatlle«hip UGH Pennsylvania.
In .Inmiaty UNO, he was detached b i n during the CIO Communica­
tn undergo flight nam ing at NAS tion \ Worker of America strike.
Criminal Court Judge William
Pensarola.
It was during Ihi* phase nf his Murphy xetiienced Donald E. Car*
rnreer that ("apt. Jacksnn knew iwrilor. 23, to ait month* but al­
and served with the slntinli's
funner Commanding Officer, Cap- lowed him freedom un $l,P0U bond
while he appealed.
lain .Ihuips K. Yiise Jr., USN,
A fter designation ** an aviator
an Dec. (I, ItitO, hr Joined Fighter
Squadron Tlir*r, April 1942 n w
him transferred tn Composite
Squadron Twelve as Executive Of­
ficer and later a* t ummunding O f­
FORT PIERCE
Wreckage of
ficer.
"F o r nieriliiui* achievement • . an anrienl ship found on a reef
yard* nftelmre hat yielded !4
a* a member of a Marine Aircraft
Croup in action against enemy cannon to ihrvo young Ires turn
Japanese fence* In the Solomon hunter*.
Island* from Kelt. 2 to 12, It)IT*
Roger Khig, ? :-yesr*old Toro
he was awarded the Air Medal.
Reach soldier on lease, and hi*
('apt. Jarkson i* m arried to the two companion*, Jack C arr and
form er Mha C athriin* E. Camp- j let McKee J r , brought up th#
hell. Thi-y have four children: Eli-1 rarmun Wednesday night and i*.
xnhoth I ec, Catherine Lynn Slim- j |Kirti-,i they won hi try to raise tw*»
on Diane and R o Iicil Woods Jack-j mole c.inu ui and the It fool an&lt;on, Jr.
Ichor of the imldonlitPil vcs*el.

Worker Convicted
Of Cable Cutting

Ancient Vessel
Yields 14 Cannons

'Were Sure Going To Miss Those Little Devils'

U.S. Steel Plans Action
ToAvert LoomingStrike
^PITTSBURGH IB - U. B. BUM

Specifring that each state prison
employe receive a *25 a month
salary increase Collins said th rrr
was no icason.shlo basis for giving
them a blanket raise anil ihr
prison superintendent said money
appropriated wasn't sufficient to
provide the increase for all em ­
ployes
Specifying that refunds m ade to
the stale bv eertain counties and
other agencirs for audi'.tnc serv­
ice* furnished by the auditing de­
partm ent hr deposited in the gen­
eral lund. If this were allowed to
stand, Collins said Hus would d e­
prive Ihr auditing departm ent ol
about *10,000 for the hirnnium.

Fort

Worth Star-Telegram, one ef the

major Mwapapen ef Dm United

State* teed k al teghl 14 « . __

Shaffer Yard Is Haven For Birds
. By CLAUDE BOSE
Herald Feature Writrr
Birdwatchers art usually a de­
voted lot. And Mr. and Mrs. Charlas Shaffer, 1204 Palmetto Ava., are
uo exception. They treat tha Purpla Martina which live In their
yard almost u U the /birds were
human.
k
Tha Martina began coming te the
bhaffar's yard about alx or seven
year* ago and hsv# been coming
b«ck In Increasing numbers aver
since. This year M pain cam# te
mate and raJst their young In Um
homes provided them.
Tho Shaffers have strung a wire
between three poles in U w yard,
Item which are bung several hob
lpw gourds te serva as bomai for
the bird families.

watching a few years after ihe
War," says Mr. Shaffer, “When
our nephew slopped here on his
way te Iha Everglade* lo study
them. Ha was a seminary stu­
dent and a v a r y ardent bird
watcher. H* left ua a hook o«
birds and wa went oa from
Uwre."
The Shaffer* estimate that they
can immediately Identify o\or 100
birds on sight. "And If we don’t
know out, we darn sure go right
te tha book and look U up, Mr.
Shaffer adds. They can also Iden­
tify moat of that number by sound
and are usually aUc U. distinguish
between a distress call and idle
chatter.
Aa an Illustration nf their de­
votion te the birds, they built an

lilM 'i r ■ » '

fittltitt m «aar tab

chen an that they could see their
feathered friend* better. More
than half of the walla in th* addi­
tion ar* made up of window*.
Two or three paira of Martina
cam* te th* Shaffer*’ tha first
year and each year a few more
have been added to tha flock. This
year was the biggest yet. with aome
forty adults and about 70 offspring.
Th# Shaffer* laid that each pair
rears 1 or 4 .xmng.
The Martins arrived tn January
this year and have been coming
back a few weeks earlier each time.
In tha fall, when they migrate to
South America, as many aa M have
been counted In th# Shaffer yard.
Flocks from farther north Jots write
local flocks and they all fly south
together for #)* wrtavm.
Asked M tom

than to families next year, tha
Khaffcr* remarked, "We dun'l
know, tea neighbor* may object
lo any more. Ih r birds do put
up quite a chatter aometimrs."
When the Martins come here in
January, they have not yet mated
but do so soon after arrival. "The
female is boss,” says Mrs. Shaffer,
"Since she always defends the
family against trouble. If they are
thinking about moving Into a new
home, It is always the female who
goes and take* a took at it first.
Th* male does assist in feeding the
young, though, because that i* a
big Job."
Three families living in different

gue. If one of tha younger bird*
light* on th* roof, hr Is promptly
knock til o(f. They all refuse lo
Live therr
It is believed that an owl kilte.t
the three families but sine* Mr,
Shaffer set up a floodlight tn the
yard no further incidents have
occurred.
"The famous birds of Capistrano
In California ar* Purple Martina,
just like these in our y ard ," says
Mr, Shaffer. “ Only California baa
a better press agent."
"W «'re sure g&lt;sug te mi** those
little devils when they go." Mr,
Shaffer told hia wife recently.

compart man* of the Mm* bird­ "And you know," she related, "It's
house were kitted earlier tela so true. Wa live with them every
***%■■. WkK« I f te ertrtftdy, the day and wa realty *0 listen lo t team

a road *

#11 tea ttme.’* - - — —
t

‘

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Stamps?

But International Body Has Bee/f Useful

U. N. World Very Much Like O ld World
crly cooperation.
The world of the U.N. is now
10 years old. It resembles very
much the old world of hatreds,
distrusts, wars and fears. Yet,
while the U.N. has not worked per­
fectly, it has been useful.
This week its members' foreign
ministers meet in San rtancisco
to celebrate the anniversary.
The U.N. is a meeting round for
nations—a place where to some
extent they can influence each
other for good through the pres­
sure of world opinion publicly ex­
pressed.
The U.N. has failed to produce,
ns was intended, an international
WASHINGTON OP—An Air Force armed force to prevent war. There
spokesman says a false germ war­ have been more wars, some of
fare confession was obtained by which the U.N. helpeo sente, but
Chinese Communist*, from one of
four returned American ict pilots,
but no disciplinary action against
the officer is planned.
He named the flier as Capt
Harold Fischer Jr., of Swca City.
Iowa, a douhle jet ace of the Ko­
COLOMBO, Ceylon
— The
rean War who was released Slay moon totally eclipsed the sun over
31 after mire than two years in South As‘a today.
Chinese prison camps
Heavy untca.'onal rain clouds
The spokesman said Fischer blocked the view of the eclipse
and three othor flies released with from observation posts set up by
him also ••confessed" to crossing most foreign and Ceylonese sci­
the Yalu River tnto Chinese ter­ entists.
ritory under Air Force orders. But
But only a light cloud was over
he sain no such orders had been the central Ceylon- spot guarded
given.
by an American torn from Har­
The spokesman said the actions vard University. A spokesman said
of all four men are under study, the phenomenon was fully visible
but be indicated they probably (or the (our minutes that the
‘‘ will be given a clean bill of eclipse was total, beginning about
fl:10 a m
health.”
The Air Force has declined to
"We are quite happy," one of
discipline any of its men for ac­
tions while they were Chinese
prisoners. on toe around they were
acting under pressure of Communirt mistreatment.
The Marine Corps likewise de­
clined to bring court-martial pro­
ceedings a g a i n s t Col. Frank
Schu able, a flier who made a false
germ warfare confession. T h e
Army, on the other hand, has con­
victed four former prisoners of
PARIS Ws—Hilf of France's up­
war on charges of collaborating
with the enemy, and has filed per house was renewed yesterday
c'arres agamst a n u m b e r of in the nation's biggest electoral
test before the 1B33 national as­
others.
The o f f l e e r s released with sembly e l e c t i o n s . The results
Fischer are IA. Col. Edwin Heller, showed little chang’ In the politi­
Wynnewood, Pa.; Lt. LvV! Cam­ cal climate, with'Ih* major French
eron, Lincoln. Neb.; and Lt. Ro- parties swapping only six seats so
lirifC.Parks. Omaha, Neb. The far.
The vole for members of the
tour w gr»'Hied Way.2t on Com­
munist charge^ of "Intruding Into Council of the Republic (Senate)
China for harassment and provoca­ went almost unnoticed. It was an
tive attack." Heller told a news indirect election with the public
conference in Honolulu June 2 that having no part.
The campaign h a s been ex­
all four pleaded guilty and were
ordered "deported" to the United tremely quiet—confined mostly to
luncheons and small get-togethers
States.
The Air Force spokesman an­ among professional politicians.
The Senate is the advisory up­
nounced the "confessions" in com­
menting on a copyrighted story
published today In the Minneap­
olis Tribune.
Fiseher, now In San Francisco
for an appearance at a United Na­
tions anniversary ceremony, was
not reached Immediately for com­
ment.

WASHINGTON OP — There *1 1
almost an exhilaration in thoac
June days in 1943 at San Francisco
when the United Nations was bom.
There was a sense of a new world
born: a world of peace and broth-

Reds Got False
Germ Confession
From U. S. Pi

no major war.
Some optimists believe a big
war may be prevented as long
as the nations can meet, if only
to revile each other. But if a big
war begins, there would be no
more U.N.
The U.N has spread some feel­
ings of cooperation and brother­
hood through ‘ he health, educa­
tion and agricultural programs of
its various agencies.
It seems certain the world would
be different if the United States,
unable to depend on the U. N.’s
inuncxistent international army,
had not gone outside the U.N. to
protect itself.
That was done through the al­
liances this country made with its
non Communist friends in Europe

and Asia. Russia also went out­
side the U.N. to make its Com­
munist alliances.
In 1913 the Allies. In blood and
mutual sacrifice, had won the
Hitlerian war which ended tn
May. It did not seem far-fetched
at the time to think they might,
with less effort, stick together to
keep peace.
The wishful may have thought
so. The realistic kept their fingers
crossed. No one at San Francisco
was more realistic than the rep­
resentatives of the United States
and Russia.
They put the veto into the U.N.
Charter, useful both as a fire es­
cape and as a roadblock they
could employ against each other
when they wished.

Without the veto, a two-thirds
vote of the U.N. members could
have obligated them to act in a
crucial situation contrary to their
desires or their interests. Neither
would take a chance on that. Rus­
sia, in fact, has used the veto 60
times to block what it didn't like,
until now it has rendered the Se­
curity Council all but helpless
whenever Russia wants to make it
helpless.
And the United Slates not know­
ing what the future held, wasn't
giving the U.N. a blark check ei­
ther. Both nations reserved the
right to say no and block action
on a major issue before the Se­
curity Council.

Total Eclipse Falls Over Asia
•he Americans said. "Our experi­
ments were very successful."
German technicians attached to
a combined British-Ceylonest team
wept copiously when a single black
cloud obscured their view. The
team was trying to check theories
of the late Albert Einstein and
had brought with them a telescope
designed for Fotsdam University,
where Einstein once taught.
The Harvard team took pictures
of the sun's infrared spectrum
and another of the corona—the
ring of incandescent hydrogen gas
from the sun outlining the moon's
shadow—in an effort to determine

its precise shade.
In the Philippines, an American
scientist was flown in a U.S. Air
Force jet trainer to record the
event on special cameras.
The eclipse began at sunris in
the Indian Ocean, along the east­
ern coast of Africa and southern
Arabia. As the earth rotated, It
streaked at 24 miles a minutevisible entirely or in part—across
India, China, the Indochinese and
M a l a y a n peninsulas, Indonesia,
northern Australia and the Philip­
pines.
The 180-mile-widc path of total
darkness s t r e a k e d 7,200 miles

Only Few Seats Exchanged
In French Electoral Test

P ain t a room
In
h alf a d a y

per house of the French Parlia
ment. It's members arc elected
for six-year terms, with half the
group named each three years. It
can delay legislation, but cannot
finally veto actions of the domi­
nant assembly.
The electing was done by depu­
ties of the lower house, members
of the municipal councils, mem­
bers of regional councils and some
supplementary electors represent­
ing larger towns.
Up (or renewal yesterday were
133 seats—123 from metropolitan
France, 3 from Algeria and 23
from overseas areas. The Nations!
Assembly will name six additional
senators next month to represent

Frenchmen living in Morocco, Tu­
nisia and other foreign territories.
TOY TELEPHONE FATAL
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (/P) — A
6-mnnth-nld boy, just learning to
crawl, jammed a toy telephone
into his throat and died before it
could be withdrawn.
Mrs. Karl G. Frcdebei! said ahe
left her son Joseph alone yester­
day for only a few momenta.
When she returned she found the
toy in his throat
Efforta to pull the toy out
brought on severe bleeding, so the
tot was rushed to a hospital. He
was dead on arrival.

across Ceylon, south Sia m,central
Indochina and the Philippines.
The longest totality lasted 7 min­
utes 7.9 seconds, at one point in
the South China Sea. New York’s
Hayden Planetarium said many
scientists think it was the longest
since 717 A. D.
The American continents didn’ t
see it. The last total eclipse was
June 30, 1934. It's path crossed the
upper United States and eastern
Canada. The next visible in the
United States will come Oct. 2.
1939, and will be seen only in some
of New England.

Weekend Mishaps
Kill 4 In State
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Violent accidents killed four per­
sons in Florid* over the weekend.
Three of them were the result of
highway traffic.
Th toll, however, was fa&gt; below
the 20 persons who died in many
types of violence the wceknd be­
fore. Twelve were victims of traf­
fic then.
Highway patrolmen at Tallahas­
see sa&gt;d they were unable to ac­
count for ths sudden slowdown in
traffic deaths but reported that
the entire state apparently was
"quite."
A 20-ycar-old sailor crashed a
motorcycle tnto a telephone pole
near Jacksonville yesterday. He
was Marshall Ray Webb, of Kan­
sas City, Kan., from the aircraft
carrier USS Lake Champlain.

PRE-INVENTORY SALE

ENTIRE STOCK OF:
LADIES DRESSES

LADIES SU ITS

LADIES HATS

LADIES SKIRTS

M E N 'S SU ITS

M E N 'S S U C K S

M E N 'S SPORT C O A T S

M E N 'S HATS

CED TO CLEAR
SELECTED ITEMS:
LUGGAGE

PIECE GOODS

LIN G ERIE

U D I E S BLOUSES

C H ILD R E N 'S DRESSES

BOY'S S U C K S

M E N 'S S W IM T R U N K S

M E N 'S T-SH IRTS

M E N 'S W A L K IN G SHORTS

FO AM RUBBER SEAT PADS

CONTINUES THRU WEDNESDAY M0RNIIK
SHOP NOW AND SAVE

P urs 8

Mon. Juna 20, 1955 THE SANFORD TTERALD

(Continued 1-Ton Page One)
I’ll ge tit,” he chuckle*.
,
Probably hi* favorite coin, and
no doubt the most valuable, is a
memorative half dollar minted in
Hawaiian lflOth anniversary com1928. It w*» given to him in 193.3
by th* late John If. Mackey,
former Florida state labor inspec­
tor, with the following note:
"Friend Gail. Please accept
with my friendship this coin, the
smallest number ever issued of a
commemorative U. S. coin, only
W 000. The entire lot sold out in
1 hour at 12 each. In 2 weeks
later after Issue they sold at $5
ard in 1930 sold up to $17. Value
today $10 tut this coin will lie
one of rarest and one of the
most valuable. Yours. Mackey"
And Mr. Mackey'.* visions seem
to have come true in grand style.
According to the latest informa­
tion which “ Friday" has the coin
i* now worth $97.50.

DAYTONA BEACH!

low

rtt rmoM
pousii o cc

MODIFIED AMERICAN PLAN
$3.50 per parson oddltionol
Delkiovt Breokfatl and Dinner
F.niny Dayton* Beach's Urges* •"*! •«•** bofcl
with 11* specious room*. eicsUent cuiain*. _
golf course, two private pools, cabanas, pefcsale
|M ch. putting frsrn, intiraat* curktiU
lounge, dancing. pUnned entertainment a d
ftohrrraMn'B p tn d iiP . For rrerrvslioes ■ ^
brochure ami* or wire direct Me
•

“ Friday" was horn In State
Center, Iowa, in 1878 and hi* par­
ent* named him Gail Borden
Ross, after hi* father’s employer,
the founder of the Borden Co. "My
father worked for Mr. Borden
for 15 years when he was ju»t
starting out,” he says. Friday
gained his nicknantrr in Jackson­
ville many years ago because he
■vas "always everybody's mnn
Friday."
"If I had it tn do all over again,
I’d never get started in this fool­
ish stamp business," he says. “ I’ve
accumulated so much Junk I can't
even try to keep track of it any­
more."

L/autona %
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Weather

Shop and Save
In Sanford
•J

firM - eiend-v todir »«d
&lt;tov; •p(H»rM morning shower*
southeast r«s*t; se*tter»d after■Ann thundershower* m n s 11 J
south and en t portion*.

•

Ah

d a il y

SAN FDR D, FLORIDA,

Established 190R

VOLUME XLVI

in d e p e n d e n t

9

new spaper

TUESDAY, JUNE 21. IMS

A^wiatfd Prem I.rased Wir*

Italian Police Seek Group In $ 3 0 5 ,0 0 0 New York Robbery
»

-—

■

. . .

Geneva Parley
Plans Approved
By
W
est,

'

5 Holdup Suspects Hunted
ROME i/Ti— An order * »» flashed lo polire throughout
Italy today to k*cp a clo*c watch for four men and • PJ*1''J
flri, auapccted of complicity In New York’* darlnc IJO.i.OOO
robbery of the Chase Manhattan Hank branch tost April.
There vas no arred order Hut the word went out to find
the •ii«pert« and trail them until further order*.
Interpol, the little— puhlirired International Police Hrfanitatloti which acta at a U. N. acainat crime. gave the
W° Pollea aald the leader of the r r o up- l a belietrd to he
fiiuaeppe He Taro, alao knonn aa .John Michael di Tarco, a
S7.year.old New Yorker.
.
The* ya«e the name* of lhn»e with him a* John Tw oHty O'Connell. 35. Ilaniel William MacGnire. 2*. frier Jerome

Kirrlam. SI, of Manchnter, Eniland, and Jeanette Foreel. 17.
of Montreal, Canada.
* Police apeculated that If they are tryina to act away
through Italy, they probably hop* to alip through to
Africa nr the Middle Fast in a »matl whip.
No rnadhlnek* nr olhei rat ranrdinat a nteaatire* hare
been ordered. They are not nrre««»ry in Italr. No one— nnl
e«en an llalion—can get oubllr lodging ■ithout filling nut a
pnlire lorm. Kach of thr*e I* checked within Itnura. Foreignera
mu*t ahnw pa«»pnrte. rVanted peraona uaually are turned up
within 21 to 48 hour*.
V North Italian police nffirrr reported the lipnff ram*
when Hi Taero *rnt a cable l» New 1 iirl June 17 asking a

"•n under auraeilance there In h*In him rrarh an Italian contart.
I.a»t night Naple* pnlire were told In he on Ihe lookout.
'I .day the order wa« broadened
lint police rrophr.iied there were no charge* again.I
Ihr group ami that Ihe* h*d nit arrr.l oirler Ihri .tntpl,
■ «nt to locale them and keep them undrt *ui«eillanrr a*
ln»g aa they »tar in Italr.
The hunt centered lodar In Naple*. It ha* hern a ren­
ter for deported \merican hoodlum* with Italian rontart*.
The tjnecn* robhery »*• «killfnllar -i a--.it h&gt; four men
o* April 8 Their haul or* ntoall* In
in and 2u dollar bill*
which Ihe hank tied on n*od to meet a par roll that rlar

It*

1nttarm* *1 t|iiai' I -

hour meeting that at fir«t sight !■•
i *aw n o r r . i M in to o t i i r r t In j » rri« M
I "f pi oivual* they h.ul agirrd on In
V.- . Nrrk 14 •* d
II' '• n u n ( lc r « t r * v | to t iJ A # t o ' I

Harry Bridges
Due To Again
Testify Today
fA N FRANCISCO UP)— Harry Bridges reaumea the
witness stand today at trial o f the government's citizenship
cancellation auit against him.
Already in th# federal court record, through surpriso
government strategy, U the labor loader's latest sworn

Strolling
In Sanford
The taaford KiwanUas a n
apoosorlag. Friday atternooo from
1:30 to T:M la the Sanford Armary, a Fish Fry and a dance plua
a atage ahow starring Art Davii
and hia Rhythm Rider*. Wednes­
day sight from 1:30 In 7 p. m.
David Satchel will appear on
television with Art Davii to make
an announcement of the coming
i event. M. R. Strickland, preal•dent, aald that “ you could eat a*
much fiah aa you eould hold hr
the admission charged.”
• • • •
Miss Donna Loo Harper, dau­
ghter of Mr. sad Mrs D. L Har­
per, la a recent graduate of FSU
and for her summer vacation is
enjoying a European tour. Donna
Lou set sail from Montreal,
Thursday with a group at atudenU
who art aponaored by Dr. Wil­
i. liam T. Martin Jr., a Presbyter­
ian minister of Tallahassee. Be­
fore returning on August g they
• ill v i e i t England. Holland.
Germany. Austria, Italy, France
and gwiUcrland.

Chamber Manager
Attends Meeting
Forrest Brecktnridge,
eenting tha Seminole County
Chamber eg Commerce, la at
tha University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill etwwdtag the ltth
annual Southeastern Institute far
Chamber of Commerce Executive*
and Ruff.
The annual meeting got under­
way Sunday, June It, and will
■atarday, *

testimony that he never has been
a (ember of the Communist party
This trial la a civil* action to
cancel Bridges' citizenship on the
ground that ha obtained it by fraud
on Sept. IT, IMS. after falsely
swearing he never had belonged
to the Communist party.
Bridges and hia trio of lawyers
•(changed startled looks yester­
day when Lynn J. GiUard. chief
assistant U.S. attorney, suddenly
summoned him to the stand as
an adverse government witness on
the opening day of trial.
Defense attorney Richard Gladatein protested the move wai “ un­
fair surprise" but Federal Judge
Louis E. Goodman overruled the
objection.

Two Men Rescue
Child On Roof
la a passing ear to­
day narrowly averted a tragedy
•he* they reamed a rhlld who
wai ea the perch roof of a Park
Arcane heme.
The child, who wee net Identi­
fied. had wandered ont on the
reef rlimbed ont a errand finer
wtodow onto the reef nklk the
maid was downstairs.
One of the men stood nader
the reef as that he might catch
the chid U she should fell while
the Mkrr man went Into Ihe
henae aad took the child off Ihe
The men vara Talley Hettaway aad L H. Andrews, both
of Fern Parh.
Male Traoper Mark Mark
eaid the men were to be mm■••dad far thetr fact Ihleking.
VIOLENCE FLARES
NICOSIA. CYPriJ&amp;yv- Violence
leia d on this Bntith-ruled ModiUrranean island again last night.
Terrorists l e a k i n g union wrth
Greece launched a series of bomb

~-j —

block a proposed 13,000 man reduclion in the Marine Corps. This
amendment was adopted 40-39. II
was President Eisenhower's fir^J
reversal on a major military rec­
ommendation since he entered the
While House.
The bill would provide funds In
arm and support a military force
scheduled lo be trimmed from
2,901,300 men a* of June 30 to
2,881.000 a year later.
It rarrie* 338 million dollars
more than Ihe IlniMr voted In slrp
up p r o d u c t i o n of long-range
bombers.
Left intact were House-appro­
ved provisions to reduce Ihe Arina
by 17.000 men to a new level of
1.027,000, to rut the Navy h.v 8 000
mrn to 884.000 and lo increase
Ihe Air Force from 970,000 in 975,000 men.

R. Lee Wheeler
Taken By Death
OVIEDO — R. Lee Wheeler, e
resident here for approximately
80 year*, died early this morning
in an Orlando hospital after be­
ing In III health for about five
year*. He was * member of the
First Baptist Church here.
Survivor* include th* widow,
Mr*. Mattie Wheeler, two daugh­
ter*, Mr*. P. M. Campbell, Mre.
R. L. Kemp, of Jacksonville; and
one granddaughter, Mias June
Kemp, Jacksonville.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced at a later date.

Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas, Ute
Democratic leader, could encour
age other assault* on the Eisen­
hower program.
It might signal a shift in strat­
WASHINGTON *JT— Secretary of
egy, supplanting what has become
Wrlfare Hubby said last night she
the general Democratic theme that
hears no responsibility for the gov­
the President i* a man of stature
ernment's actions in Ihe Salk polio
but can’ t lead a divided Republi­ vgrcinc situation She said the law
can party.
plm-rs that burden on Surgeon
Sen. Symington (D-Mo&gt; wrote (Jtm-ral Leonard A Srhe*-le.
the amendment to give the Ma­ 1 In a radio interview, Mi* Hobby
rines 4(1 million dollars more than omphasised that she wav not titstlie President asked and thus .null
__. .sgti»fied with Srheele's actions.
Ify the cut
she made repeated distinctions
by Eisenhowver within tlie conum; k*,Wfw|
responsibilities of her
year. The Senate action it sun department and those of the Public
subject to a conference with the Htalth Service, a Welfare DepartHouse.
i Went agency headed by Scheele.
Symington, who dropped t'**ns Asked If she had »ny apologies
aimed at canceling Army ruthack* fa th* way the vareme program
a* well, said tn an interview:
hi* been handled, or would with
"I don't think the senator* who hindsight have acted differently,
voted to reduce the Marine Corp*. 4 * said:
which 1* composed of volunteers,
‘■There it nothing I could have
are going lo be able tn explain done difforcnlly. The law (on ronthat when they »re questioned by t*r&gt;l of biological* *uch as Ihe Salk
the parent* of men who are draft­ vaccine) charged tlie Public Health
ed for other services.”
Sendee and not the secretary."
Symington aimed directly at Ei­ At another point, she said she
senhower. He suggested the Presi­ wihiM be legally powerless to over­
dent wasn't infallible when, as a rule Scheele If she thought he had
consultant, he approved a low mili­ made a mistake.
tary budget before the Korean
She said she did not think it
War.
would be known “ whether or if
Sen Margaret Chase Smith (R- the health service had been negli­
Malne) took Symington tn task for gent until a final report is mailc
what she railed an attcini* tn r* vaccine produced by Cutter
“ discredit the President's military Laboratories, Berkeley, Calif.
fulgment." Sen. Goldwater (RArti ) said no one could have fore­
seen the attack In Korea.

Jaycees Get Serious

Hot Politicking
Marks Convention
ATLANTA (JR - With elections
coming up Thursday, delegates to
the Uth annual convention of the
U.S. Junior Chamber of Commerce
prepared today to settle down to
serious politicking.
About 0,000 delegates and Iheir
wives swarmed into Atlanta from
throughout the nation and immedi­
ately started lining up behind fa­
vorite candidates.
Scheduled (or today, to addition
to state raucuset, are the semi­
finals m th* “ Speak Up Jaycee”
contest.
William Roger*, deputy U.S. at­
torney general, planned to deliver
the ronventmn’a keynote addrest
this afternoon He it scheduled to
follow the presentation of national
awards by Ira Kaye, Jaycee vie*
president.

Mrs. Hobby Says
Vaccine Burden
Rests On Scheele

office* will be presented tonight.
Throughout yesterday colorful
caravans moved into the city.
Floridians distributed thousands
of orange* on famed Peachtree
Street and in the lobbies of hotels.
They even brought along an alli­
gator and a black snake.
Most Western delegates wore le­
gation hats, spurs and blank-loaded
ait-guns which they discharged at
random.
Virginian* wore plumed hats end
capes, and Georgia'* women raised
ant* bellum-style white lace um­
brellas.
Jaycee* runmng for president arc
Van Richardson of Greenwood,
Mias.; Edwin H. May Jr. of Hartlord. Conn ; Howard E. Norris at
Madison, Wis., and Hugh McKenna
fc* optional Jafooo o d liM ta b N o k

BILL* SIGNED
TALLAHASSEE up Bills auth­
orising studies of the feasibility
of locating ■ m w slat* university
or branches of a state university In
branrhes of a state university In
Tampa or in the Palm Brarh area
were signed into law yesterday
by Gov Collins who repeated his
conviction th*r* ti no need now
for establishing a naw four year
sUto aoUag* ajyw ksn Is Florid*.

■- —*

p ro c h t* I
-te rn
tt e r r !
th gf |

rn fctm ; &gt; a
s r-s t *;c d
D i p l a f n 1 s at the m e e t in g k J'ff
o f S ta te
Jo h t.
) fA’-t r i
V rrv tJ irv

f-D -

Pat ten found ihr 25-ymr-oId
convict sane here yesterday

after llvli-ning to a report by two
Jacksonville psychiatrist* who had
been named to examine him.
Dr*. William Ingram Jr. and
William II Mci'iitlagli said Herons
vv*« mentally competent lo stand
trial.
Th* court deferred ruling on a
motion by iMi-n.vt- counsel John E.
Santma Jr. of Jacksonville for a
change of Hie trial silc. The at­
torney *ii!d il would he difficult
to obtain jury men who had no
formed an opinion in Ihi* county
whore tlie stale prison is located
Heroux. arraigned on * mutdoi
indlrtmenl after Ihr court's ruling
listened impassively while Ihe
charge wav read Ho laid noth mg
and his attorney entered a plr.v
of innocent for Ihe heavily guarded
prisoner.
Two guards wore wounded in the
rxcapr atlrmpl Dial look place m
* corridor outside Hie office of
Supt. L. F. Chapman. Heroux'
former wife Bulb and her husband
Raymond Stuff* of Miami, have
pleaded guilty lo smuggling Ihr
gun In him.
Heroux, serving a 2Jye*r form
al Ihe lime for a Miami armed
robbery, la also under 2.A years
sentence for robbery of twsi Kan­
sas hank* in ITM.

Dulles, Rnti'h Fore
Seoreturv
llarold MarmiUan and French
v'o-cirn Wtoi-ic- Vn'oui* Pina)
hid p-njvv e l that.
t Th* purpi' * of 'he summit
t!f*itng ihmild he to *i&lt;« world
tension and not tn nciniivlr the
cttlcmrnt nf specific prohtcinj.
7 The meetings should last from
four in x x day*
J PresrVnt F.uenhoi cr should
he the first presiding oft rer, lo
he followed hv Kronen Premier
Tdgar F.mre nrii;*h Tunic Min
I'lcr Sit Anthony Eden and Snvicl
Premier Nikolai Rulgamn
4 Tlie meetings should he hold
m lit# Palais dcs Nations, U.N
lieadnuartcrs m Crncva, and that
Ihe It N. should l&lt;e reque.»le&lt;| tn
service th* session .
I No council n&lt; foreign minis­
ter* should be hold before Ihe
chief* of government meet.
Hi* four furc-cn ministers will
have il.nnor together tonight witli
Pmay as hnsl, tint no serum* ill*russinns weir planned.
flic -e slevelopmrnt* came as
Hie f N * 10,ii anniversary meet­
ing pot down tn its long program
hi speeches on the wm.il oulhMik
Macmillan was scheduled to de­
liver • policy declaration for Hut*iti—the first major foreign policy
pronouncement since last inonlh's
llrilish eleclions.
President Eisenhower's o|»eiilng
address wav praised hv oilier dele
gales as excellent and inspua
tIo n a I
Tlie I’ revldeiil. s |h-. king y*-»lerilav allernonn. pledged that he
would uphold the principles o( the
II N i luiter at tin- lirnrva con
ference lie declared tin* i* a "■••a
son of high hope" for world peace
''Ihe l illicit Slate will lease
n" *,0"e unliiriK'il In work for
peace," he aid “ Wo shall retool
no method, however novel. Ih.il
holds out any hope however fault.'

Robert M. Angas,
Engineer, Dies
Robert Al. Angus. H, well known
engineer who handled Ihe Sanford
•ewer program and was connect­
ed with many other ronstrurtinn
tcojecta Ihroiighoul Florida, died
today in Jacksonville.

Cancer Unit Set
To Give Service
To Out-Patients

Th* Feminol* County Unit nf the
Vyurrir* Cancer Roelety, thrmigh
rrrenlly urganited .Service
•T'nmittne, i, now- preparing to
cancer
* roun» Dingidrnt. "We
noiiiir* the
nfganitalion nf * .Service Commitl«r with Mrs. David Bach and
Airs. Donald Bale* a* co-chairman,"
•aid Mr*. Dingfrlder. “ It* purpose
i« to supply raneer out-palienl*
irf Seminole Counly wdlh xtorile
•leela, hospilal gown*, hn-pilal
Ud». and wheel rhairs. II will also
establish a I&lt;oan and Gift Closet
in Uia naar future.

-------

^ u rth rr

Gcorjri' A
llrro u x .lr. i*
ich n liilcd to go on trial M on­
day for llio filial sh ootin g o f
J G. Godwin, assistant sta ir
prison sui-rriiitciiilrnt, nt HaiWASHINGTON (A*)— Democrat* took a »lcp yrstcnlny fo n l April 4.
toward open attack on President Kinenhower with the I0-.19
Circuit .linlgo G rorgo L.

W A S H I N G T O N (/D—
Senntor* R.vril (P-Vn) nnti
Syminjrton (l)-Mn) -dtirl to­
day n ?:il.882,000,000 defense
money bill will help keep
America abend of Husain in
long-range a e r i a l striking Scnntc vote aimed al canceling hit cut in M a r i n e Corps
VICE PRESIDENT Richard M. Nison (nrrow) is tnnlihrri power.
strength.
by booster* at a Detroit hotel after he had addressed Ihe
The Senate pa**c&lt;l the bill
It was Ihe first ■ncc**fafu major challenge in Congrats
biennial convention of the Young Republican Federation. The 80-0 yesterday nnd nent it
of
Eisenhower
a* a military' nun
young politicians era carrying ‘'Draft Ike and Dick for ’ 56” back to the House, where a some­
signs. Nison said that the “ great Issue" of the 1956 Presi­ what diflrrcnt version was appro­ and demonstrated to some Demo­
crats that on this score the Presi­
dential election race would be: “ Shall we continue ihe Risen- ved some time ago.
1hower economic policies, or shall we go back to the Truman
One of ihe major difference* was dent is not in&lt; uinerablt.
Tim m ult, engineered b f Sett.
a jtenal* amendment designed to
economic pofeka?’' (International)_____________. &lt;■ -

h*

Ih e
n iM lt d
« IU d y
m ov c c a r o f iil lv a n
glv
r o p f v in ^ l| &lt; Ol t w o T lie \\ r
f«v r J i m ot 1,
a p p a rc n ilv
liy r r ^ t 4»n o f h iv
ar re p ta n ce

Heroux Is Sane
Judge Informed
By Psychiatrists
LAKE HI T L E R

till So\ rut l-'aarpinn Minister V. M,

M.dolov told I'li* Western tltpl limit.* at the end of * four*

Trial Set For Convict
In Killing Of Official
Democrats Edge
Toward Attack
On Eisenhower

M \ \ II W illK l.S iIV

SAN' I'll W l'I S t (• I’ - lti|j&lt;’ .i iiml i 1 •&gt; \\i'«t*&gt;rn Provora
VVPI i- iv|tiu t .I to 1&lt; •\r* iruii lt ul virinnl n-,-i content cnrlv today
•it a i ranvi'nii'iit &lt; fn- t lie 'o p 1*»\*-l ta ll.. m t i«»nr*\ a next iiiotii h.

lh **m

Budget Promises
Air Superiority,
Senators Assert’

No. 214.

POI ND 8I.AIN to • wooded p*r«
in Hvalltsille, Alii., « r n A|irh*rl
A It van (lop*. II, dmighlrr of *
polirrman. and Nanev At. Shorn*
rile (hoilorn), 18, d.suchirr nf *
liolhlri. I’oliir lirlirv* Ihe pair
nrrr *hol In dr»lh whrn llu-y
look * short rut through lh*
wood* on Iheir w*y to *ehool,
( Inlrrnalinnal)

Suwannee
Negro Is
Flogged
TA.MI’ A ( T i — A Fm snunc*
County N cpn» Avan flogg cil
mill hi1n Ion liv s liamt o f moil
nft«T luring him from h it
small farm , t he Tam ps T r i­
bune report*.
The nounpupor *nld R irh iii il Conk*, .'15. fat her o f nimx
rh ililm i, hull l.opl ijuipt nhoiih,
Ih** heating until a T ribune
reporter qiiejiioncd him.
Cooks said he had kept quicA
tu-raii-e he had torn ordered hv
itv Itogger* nnl to talk lie sa'd
one of the leaders of the mob told
him “ Next time mavh- son'll 1«4
your kids po son the tobacco.”
Suwannee County Is in the l/s.
baeco^wetion of Florida -nui growi-r.v u-e Hie term “ poison" for tho
sprinkling of insecticides on lh*
plants.
Sheriff Hugh Lewis **&gt;i he heard
of Ihe whipping the day after it
happened, June I; was still in­
vestigating bill could maka UHI*
headway because "we rouldn't get
anything out of Cook*."
Cook* »aul the men who cams
to his larni hoiioe right miles north
«»f I..VC Dak were white men. They
got him from hit home on the him
of talking about * Job on a lobace*
larm.

Mack dies Need
For Safe Driving

A FORTUNATE FELINE Is Tiger, n cut uhime little mi*.
tre»*«. Debnrnh Mnslro, 6, of Nutlev, N. I.. feels that n nwiling dish is appreciated in the hot days of June. So -lie shares
A
alraighl from-the-»houM»p
her ire cream rone with her pel, who fines the treat is talk on safe diiving nnd i»n nlbunt
right up hm alley. (International)
of pirlurr* •bowing *ume of lh*

Longest Day Of Year

Spring Bows Out
AAhsf L in rare
• (toy in June? Or. mi(h( • • MV I**
•'ca t. »h*l i* *o rare »* Imi*)?
S p r in t take* il* f in i l hnw lo d iy and c it e * tin lh * » U f r t*
•o m m rr. I hi* i* *l*n Ihe Inner*! day nf Ihe ye ar.

K.iprrt* »*y w* could hat* IS hour* nf light rounling Iwlbght and *un*»l.
Scatterw t a h o n r r i were reported to m a n y p a r t i n f lh a
cou ntry. W a rm w e ather continued n c rc m ost o f the K a *( and
S n o lh . but (o olcc a ir • • • m o u n r e o u lh w a rd oeve l h * p in n a
« * d u p p e r Mlaalaatppt V a llr y .

Rainfall was reported from aach widaly *«par*t«d point*
Eldorado. Ark.; t.ircoln. Neb.: Dv* Mote**. Io w a ; Elmira,
Ohio: and Houston Tex. In most rasa* th* rainfall amounted
to to** U m s m ss tot a4 M M*k
■a

12 wreck* in Sentinel* Countyr so
f«r ihi* year was prcsenle.1 la
Ihe Bolary Club •( il* weekly
meeting at H,r Y«, hi Club yes­
terday noon by Trooper T. Mark
'lack of tha Florida Highway
Patrol.
Areofdmg to Ate. Mack, ther*
wer# ten fatal accident* In tht*
section last year and to date,
three people have lost their livea
in Saminolc County with 19 being
seriously injured.
With orar six yeara serelr* tn
th* Highway Patrol, of which n
year has been tn this are*. Troop•r Mack left no doubt in th*
mind* of his hrarrr* aa to th*
seriousness with sshtrh he regard*
hi* Job. H* road from * bat of
over 100 posalbk* traffic viola­
tions, many of srhieh were quite
s*w to bt* liatea*!*.

�THE HANFORD HER*
\ O K A Y - I LL

'L tP S J

P LA Y H O U SE.
ELM O r

t h e

p a p a

BE

NOW, BE SUPEAND A
CLEAN UP TN6 MESS

.Y O U

*• BE THE MAMA
ANOELVEPW LL
Y BEO U » LITTLE
V
-r BO V ____

NOW, BE CAREFUL’ DON T SPILL THAT
Y, TEA ON OUR /
V, NEW PUC \-S

W-mEM v ou n c through
a n o p u t e v e p v thing
■&gt;------ - PACK ----------- '

ZERO'S ON
&gt;THS CLEAN­
UP S&lt;X1AO
. CVER THERE

XZ TOOAV/
A

TOOAV
without

X t/A/BE HE
COULD

I^Jbndou T!

•I'M SOPPY ‘
BUT l C A N T
STAND M V ,
1 IN-LAW S T

TEW). DO YOU
SUPPOSE YOU
COULD GET &lt;■

the war on
th* captain

3300

H*V| \V*TCW FT,
L lT T L l FEUJk.

Could Ruin Life Forever

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HMTIR/ A tm tS T TOHELP
V O V C P O O ta PECOHEJ9 s
S T O t E N A fO V E i'O i— , /

erzati stzmapopm m m . e r fsh ' you aho ytXAp

V 2 1 " ------------ 1 »'

J

J

DEC13:O.V
;».SIDE
3 30
MEMPHIS, Tenn. lB— Who’*
head of your house? The husbandor the wife? Think it over. The
answer may cost you money.
Consider: Mr. and Mrs. Irving
Bogatln decided to fly to Philadel­
phia last week under the "family
plan,"’ used by airlines under gov­
ernment regulations.
The plan allows husband and
wife to travel on a fare and a
half, instead of two fares—under
certain conditions.
They must begin the trip togeth­
er nn a Monday. Tuesday or a
Wednesday. Holder of the half fare
must return on a Monday, Tues­

hart he known then whit he knows
today?
"I would not have yielded my
statu* as held of the family even
for the sake of convenience," hi
boomed fearlessly.
£
He can afford to talk hie. Mrs.
Bojalm, traveling on her half fire,
won’t get home until next Monday.

day or Wednesday, Full fare can [ ride the half-fare ticket, leaving
return any day.
full fare for his wile?
Bogatln wanted to come home
Why, no, said the young ladv
on a Wednesday. His wife,had to at the American Airlines ticket of­
stay over until Saturday. Could he fice. The head of the houso was
the one who traveled full fare.
Since arriving oack in town,
Bogatin, a lawyer, has been glee­
fully citing this as an example
that, even in this modem age,
man’s superiority and domestic au­
thority is conceded. Turns out. It’s
•’Making
not that simple.
"Way 1 understand the regula­
Paint Historyn [
tions," said Pres Oliver, district
LONDON US
Orson Welles sales manager, "either the hus­
brought the epic sea story of Moby band or the wife can ‘ravel on
Dick to the Duke of York's theater half fare—depending on who they
last night In a stage version writ­ agree is head of the family. If
ten by Orson Welles, produced by the ycome to ui and represent
WE SPECIALIZE IN PAINTS
Orson Welles and with the two that the wife is the head, she gets
FOR THE PAINTERS
the
full
fire
and
can
return
when
top roles acted by—that's right.
WHOLESALE * RETAIL
she
pleases.
That**
government
Its impact left the critics reeling,
407 W. FIRST ST.
WASHINGTON UB_The Senate, some in raptures but all at least regulations. We aren't going to
deelde who'a boss.”
FREE PARKING
adding 193 million dollars to the Impressed.
What would Bogatin Jiive dona
House-approved figure, has voted
Welles produced the Herman
11,317,000.000 to operate the Com­ Melville classic as If it were heing
merce Department during the year rehearsed on a bare stage by a
starting July 1.
19th century American theater
Before passing the measure by company. He played both the com­
voice vote yesterday, tha Senate pany's minagar and Captain Ahab
rejected efforts to cut airline and Melville's one-legged whaler skipship construction subsidies back to per.
the amounts voted by thn House,
With no props except a few pack­
and upproved o'hcr increases r«v’•mmended by its own Appropila- ing cases and a tingle of fly ropes,
Welles set out to create the drama
lions Commifee
A Senate Hjuse conference com­ of Ahab's ferocious search for
mittee will be named to work out Moby Dick, the fabuloui white
whale. The climax ot the story—
tha difficulties.
Ahab's fatal battle with the whale
—he fought out standing on a table
set down from the stage among
tlie(
seats. The whale didn't show.
o o u flfi-T
J t^ n a rs
rn n a T ,
■k w i y o m 'i r o r x T t , r i . n n i u s
But Welles himself spewed and
KHTATAl or* K D IT II XI l- K n i i r ,
I-KCKAMIID. roarpd to such effect that he
___ a u t i l h t o c n h i i i r o n ft
sputtered a direct hit in the eye
TO ALT*
PEliSfisH
HA VIST*
of Daily Muror cr.llc Fergus CnhtL
'iU
M
v
'!
.
0
?
J
I
KMANDS
a g a in s t
• Triple pigment fora oh
RAID K tT A TK i
In sitting m e n ru-ea back. Casain
Tou and earh nf yen arr h . r .
• Specially m e te d o il vehicle,
i
nntlfltd and rrqulrrd In rile any laid he forgave the spit because
rla lm . and drm and . which you, the performance " w m a magnifi­
• H igh opacity
*
or r lt h .r nf you . may hare a ia ln .t cent effort, tremendously exciting
.» M eeiate tn the n ffly . of ||&gt;,n.
•
Up
to
930
sq.ft,
pet
gallon
ceren^e
Ktl.VliHT
IKJfMMOI.nilrt. County and e.'f-rlivc."
• Brilliant whiteness
Judea nf Rfmlnote County, at hla
The News Chron'c&gt; critic ceiled
nfflee In tha Court lleuaa In Ran• Self-cleaning
fnrd, F lorida. w ithin elaht M ie n , the whole thing "outrageous and
dar mnnih* frnm the time o f the
• Reasonably priced
flrat
nuhtlratlnn n f thla
nnilre, Impossible . . . But It comes o f f . . .
Karh rlalm o r demand m g il l*a In It left me breathless with idm-raw-tUlna And con tain the plain nf
re.ld en re and poet nfflre addre.a Uon."
□ &gt;H 41 C 0 U F R W A A l i n s t
w
nf tha &lt;ln lin.n l and n iu .t he .w orn
“ ‘
‘ he rlalm alit. hla a a .n t nr
The U. N, Food and Agriculture
J
MILDEW-RESISTANT
, o r the
eame ahall be
void.
Organisation says that the averJohn W*. r . r r r
Aa Adm lntetrater nf tsld age diet of the world’shuman be­
ings was inadequata before World
F .t S .r and ^li.lttneh aua
War II and that It got worse dur­
Attorney* for the Estate o f
407 W. FIRST ST.
Kdlth XI. Prrry
ing tha war and sUli worse alter
S L v p sr Bide.
FREE PARKING
tha war.
W inter Park. H p rld s

Epic Sea Story
Brought To Life
By Orson Welles

FRISCO
PAINTS

SANFORD
P A I N T CO.

Operation Money
Voted Department

A nd wh* t or S w rw A u * j c k i s. whcm
SLASH FREED SKIM WAN'S SWELLT

OPMy MUSICALEOWEWf HEFRIED. ALL
VEX! SHALLAKJ* ME
RESISTANCE
CRUSHSLASHGORDON&lt;A TOMY RULE
_____ ^ M W I I L END' j
^

OH, MAN -N /I'M
OETTlN’ NEAL 1
NERVOUS WAITIN'
FOR SLASH TO ,
MAKE IT BACK
FROM THE CITY'

AVF/lOOKIT
THAT CRAZY
SHELL' M

LOOKS
LIKE A
CONCH.,

'J l»H »/
AT WOULD Y O U ^
HAL TOR IN A, ■

n

L IK E T H IS ,

MB. MORAN

■

I , THERE-A SUHT TO
I
I .

D

-AMD B i W KYPHiM S
TAKES THIRD OV
THE SACRIFICE-.

S E r - A LONS
FLY.' BLINKY
WILL SCORE

S

EASILY *

( AFTER THE
l
CATCH*

sB^fEUNOAMEMTAL
STRATEGY,
DiNAH_ .

THELAST
OF the •
FOURTH-,

/ AN’ TH*
V. JUNIOR.
&gt; eu as■
WILL „
LEAD 7-C
D fiB B y S Un c l e
15 VI5ITIWG 7VCM.
S he SAYS HE'S

f EN'eCyrwi'JO.'y

A fter
TAWIN3 A
P E 8 .h 3 l D
V0UR OLOvE
IN FRONT
or and
LEVEL WITH
THE 6 A a AND A
RUNNER
V.ILLTAO

HIMSELF
A S ME
SLIDES INTO
THE BASE?

IMAGINE lAWAf 1— '
"A TECCiRIC FATHER

LA DOLL.? &amp;UVS
■ MEQ E lM P LV

^Ty

TOO &amp; A O
HE M i VC©
M A O Q iE D /

A M A N l ik e THAT
- l VVOULD HIaicF f l F *

Legal Notice

SANFORD

PAINT

with tha mast advancad
•rack features tha
Industry has avar saanl

iJ U ll^ U ll4 M a » iu u a ■

i m

i

ut

4

* M

» it

■**&gt;

CO

�So cia L fcvtwLdu

★

MRS. CHARLES H. TETENUAUM
★
★
* ★
★
★

Arlene Jacobson, C. Tetenbaum
U nited In Afternoon Wedding
In a beautiful afternoon wed­
ding on June 12 a t -4 p. m. In the
Temple IsraeL Orlando, with Rab­
bi Schnairaon officiating, Mlta Ar­
lene Myra Jacobson, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Jacobson
and Lt. Charles' Herman Teten­
baum, son of Mr. and Mrs. Morris
Tetenbaum of Orlando were unit­
e d in holy matrimony.
The Temple was artistically de
eornted in white gladioli, pom
poms, fern and potted palms. Ed
l.ord, Orlando, was organist for
the event and ptayed the tradi­
tional wedding marches and aongs.
The bride, given in marriage
by her father, waa radiant In a
traditional while wedding gown of
chantiily lace. The neckline waa
appliqued with embroidered lace
£ n d the short sleeves were soft
Mold* of nylon tulle. The long
princess style bodice and akirt
were imported chantiily lace over
satin. Inseta of bouffant nylon
tullo with chantiily laca cascading
Into a cathedral train were placed
at intervale on tho voluminous
akirt. Iter tiered veil of ailk illu
aloh fall from a crown of oranga
blossoms. Sha caried a whita Bi­
ble topped with a corsage of pink
ossa and Ullea-of-tha-valley. Her
nly jewelry was a single strand
of pearls, gift of the bridegroom
litre. Sherwood A. Jaeobaon,
sister-in-law of the bride and
matron of honor, waa gowned in
a pink cotton tucked ballerina
length dreea, accented by white
lace insets. Around her walat was
• pink taffeta sash gathritd at
the back U form a bustle effect
Sha wore pink accessories and
f aried a nosegay enterspereed
^vith satin ribbon that cascaded
from the item.
Mias Gabrieli# Wee inner, Miss
Sarah Jacobson, cousin of tba
bride, Mias Louisa Jacobson, cou­
sin of the bride from Winter Hav­
en and Mrs. Nail Wedman, Or­
lando acted aa bridesmaids, all
wearing gowns of blue chiffon
ballerina length featuring nrinresa waists and plaatad thiffon
form in g rows around tho skirt
All wore blue hats and carried
pink koeegsya.
Oscar Tetenbaum, the groom’s
brother, acted as beat man while
groomsmen included Or. 8her •
wood A. Jacobsen, brether of the
bride, Stanley Tetenbaum the
groom's brother, Arthur Greenburg.
Orlando and Robert Roth, Orlnndo.
Ushers were Samuel Jacobson,
brlds’s cousin, Kell Wedman, OrV s into, Arthur Bark and Tony
Roth.
Meg Jessie Jacobson, nleco of
the bride, and Leslie Beth Teten­
baum, niece of the groom, were
the flower girl*. Their street
length dresses wero ef blue chif­
fon fashioned with tiered lace
ruffles. They wore the usual "lit­
tle girt fashion" of high n«. kllnss and a Pater pan oilier. Each
lad n basket Unad with pink

f

NOTICE
TO A LL REALTORS
1H i Hally
withdrawn frsa Uw Market,

n

Miss Sylvia Hayes, July brideMrs.. Harold
H- Kastncr cuterelect, was honored with an infor,
mal tea Friday afternoon by Miss ,“ " 'ed ,hf Jun,.or hostesses cl the
I1
CSU,
men of the banGreUhcn Klrrhhotf.
1
SM and service
--------*h“
Radiant roses, daisies, pentus ford Naval Air Station on Sunday,
and gladioli were used through­ June It) with a Father's Day
out the rooms to give a summer Party at the Eoghanvio’.a Ken­
nels on Tw in Luke. Swimming
stmosphere.
A gift of crystal was pit sealed and boating were enjoyed tin nighto the honoreo from the hostess. out the entire day and early ev­
Those present were Mrs. W. M. ening together with dancing on
Musselwhite, the honorcc's mother, llie patio. Refreshments wore serv­
Miss Gall Hitting, Mis* Ann Un­ ed during the entire afternoon and
born, Miss Jean Wilson. Miss an early supper was prepared by
Alice Brown. Mis* Joan Wright, the junior hostesses.
Those piesrnt were Mr. and
Miss Caroline Mclnnis, Miss Nor­
ma Faye Harvey, Miss Mil lied Mrs. Harold H Kastner, Eoghan
Miller, Miss Ada Adams, Miss Newman Kelley, Putty Bounman,
Nelsonville
Patty Itatigan, Miss Beverly Gray, Allen K. Lundgren,
Miss Margaret Malloy, Miss Bebe Wis.; Mary Frances Henderson,
Bisbee. Miss Bet*)* Ann Carter, John G. Mcaney, I.ynnfield, Mass.;
Miss Margaret Morrison and Miss Roy Hilligos*, Bartlesville, Okla.j
Bonifono Palma, Santonin, Covitc:
Jo Ann Moore,
Buddy Toonc V.C.-9; R a m i e
Ramirez V.C.-O; Pat Cassube,
Mary Ann Michels, Betty Mich.-Is,
t.eborio Ilasel, U. S. N. A. A.
Russell T. Gamlet, U. S. N. A. A.
S.; V.C.-S; K B Shuhan, BOQ
l'. S. N. A. A. F.; Dun C. Tavlor,
TUESDAY
The Unity Class will meet in Camden 2, N. J,; Hetty Jean Mc­
the Valdes Hotrl at 7:15 p. m , Laughlin, Mary Lou Ihi wen. Lots
with Jerry Mcncham a* teacher. Muse, Russell J. Kowinsky, Tren­
ton, N. J.; ami Stewart Baker,
The public is invited.
The Ware Bible Class of tne Lexington, Ky.
First Methodist Church will hi.se
n covered dish supine at 7 p. m. trell, 2008 Sanford Ave., nt 6 p.
in McKinley lln’ l with the Indies in. Member* of Group No. Three
acting as hostesses for the men in will he hostesses with Mrs. Cot­
trell n* chairman.
honor of Fother's Day.
The First Baptist Vacation Bi­
The Fideli* (Tax* nf tiie First
ble School, far hoys and girls age Baptist Church will meet with
thice thru 1(5 years of age, is Mrs. llerta Cottrell at 201H 8,
Sanford Ave., at 8 p. nt. with
front 6:30 to 11:30 a. nr.
The First Baptist intermediate Group Three r.s co-hnstcxres.
Royal Ambassadors will meet at
The Fl.T Club will meet in the
lOOF Hull nt 7:30 p. m.
7 p. m.
Tho Fidelia Class of the First
WEDNESDAY
Baptist Sunday School will meet
Tho First Baptist Vacation Bi­
at tho home of Mrs, llerta Colble School is from 8:30 to 11:30
a. m.
Tho First Baptist Prayer Meet­
ing service In-gins at 7:30 p. m
Tim First Hptisl Sunday School
Cabinet meeting will ho held fol­
lowing the Prayer Meeting service.

Gleaners Class
Has Monthly Meet
At Newman Home

The Mothers’ Circle of the Com
munlty Presbyterian Church of Upaala held its annual meeting
Thursday, June 16. Tba neat meet­
ing will be held an September 16,
Adults present were Mrs. C. C,
White, *Mrs, Jack R on man, Mrs.
L» C. Hobby, Mm. L. Lloyd, Mrs.
Lucy DeYoung and Mrs. Luxcn.
Children present, Carol Hobby,
Ratty Hobby, Crystal Hobby, and
A m o s Resaman.

weidieg picture*

In Willow, the Far Eait’a lophiiticaud uu e ! nature forms; in Theme.
Scandinavia's love for clean-swept gleaming surfaces. In both, the
new kind of American Modern design that makes each piece work
overtime for you. Example: new size knife and fork is elegant for
formal dinners, yet carefully proportioned for casual snacks, too.
Knife also h u Gorham's famous one piece knife handle that resists
dents, never ranks. A six-piece piece setting (consisting o f teaspoon, new site piece knife, fork, and spoon, hollow handle spreader
Md salad fork) coats only JJ2AQ Federal Tax ioduefcd.

Wm E. KADER, Jeweler

n O H M I T A R BANK M J X L — IH I

V

t

Brisson
i. Reveals Plans

(Psaadjw I a

Mr* Nancy Brock i» spending Orlando for deaf people. Mrs.
seven weeks in Columbia, Ohio, \V. Carrkk acts as interpreter.
with ter daughter and son-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Lessing.
Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Maddox of
Atlanta, Ga., visited Mr. ana Mrs.
Miss francos Bright has re­ B. 1', Mills for a fc-.v lav*. The
turned to Blytheville, Ark., where Maddox’ * were school mates of
she will he married to
Robert the couple.
Sandberg of Maitland on July 15.
Mr. and Mn. Thomas C.
Mb* Laura Ford left oxer tho Vaughn left Thursday for Charweekend for North Beach, Md.. lottsville, Va., where they will
where *he will spend the summer make their home. Mr. Vaughn will
attend the University of Vir­
with her parents.
ginia.
Mr. tnd Mrs. Frank Wilson
have zone to Gainesville where lie
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Mognusson
ha* rntcred the University of and Jimmy Jackson left for
Newark, N'. V. lust week where
Florida.
they will spend the summer.
Mr». G. II. Davis and daughter
Mils Jane Davis have gone to
Mr. ami Mrs. Edward Keith
Green Cove Spring* to join Mr left Sunday for a week’s vaca­
Davi* where they will make their tion in Minneapolis, Mir.n.
home
Mr*. Ellen Roebuck arrived vc
Mist Mary Bortree 1* spending cently from Odessa, T ex, on her
the simmer in DayUma Beach fiist platir trip where she wu*
with her parents befuiu leaving visiting relatives, Mr. and Mrs.
August 15 for Japan where sho John Garvilloe. Mr*. Roebuck, who
will teach next year.
it “ S &gt;ear» obi, was accompanied
home by Mr. Garvilhie.
ML. Florence Thompson )»
spending the summer in Moultrie,
Captain and Mrs. Marion Jam
Gn., with her parents.
mo* and children, Shirley and
Vance of Atlanta have been (he
Mk . Helen Hrokeiuihiie and recent guests of Mr. anil Mrs
Mis* Dorothy Chamher* are spend­ John D Abrahams. Captain Jam
ing the summer at their home in mes and family will sail next
Orange City.
week from New York fi-c I'uri*.
France where they will reside for
Mi*. Kiwood Edwards has gone
three jear*.
to Columbia, 8. C., to Join her
husb.nd who has been serving
The ninny friends o( Mrs. John
as an Army rhaplaln in Kurr-a. He
retuned after 18 months service D Abrahams will he glad It*
and flans to move to Ft. Texas know she t* improving and that
wher, he will enter the Baptist she has returned from Orlando
where she underwent surgery.
Seminary.
Mm. C. A. Anderson Jr., spent
tho weekend ill Columbia 8. C.

Jerrie Cobb, Girl
Pilot, Sees World

Mn. Ed Shinholser lias return­
I ' O N C A c m ’ , okta
IP ed f rmu Moultrie, Ga., where her
father has been seriously ill. He Flying 1* the life fur Jerrie Cobb
She’ s been doing lt almost half of
is math improved now.
her 24 years.
E"cliam Newman Kelly, archi­
One of the few women who ferry
tectural student University c f Flo­ planes over the world for an air­
rida, has just returned from I'arris craft delivery service, she ha*
Island, South Carolina, where he just completed her longrxt flight.
was a guest of Colonel and Mr*. It vva* an 8,500-mile trip from
Wiliam McKean for tho past 10 California to Asuncion, Faraguay,
days Koglmn designed a recrea­ flying a single-engine, rigid pas­
tional building for l'FC's during senger plane 'Dili Irip Involved a
his ihnrt stay with the McKean*. hazardous stretch over the Andes
He returned to the University of Mountain*, which required the u»e
Flatila yesterday.
of oxygen st times.
Jerrie (pel* that she I* more st
Mr. and Mr*. B. F. Mill* attend­ home in llie air than on the ground
ed Ike First Methodist Church in and her Iob Itook prove* it. She has
marked up over 4,200 air hour* ami
lias flown over a half million mile*.
A slender, self-reliant blonde,
*he ean serviee planes as well as
By them.
J c t Io ha* no home base. The
company office Is In Burbank,
Calif., and she ha* ctotlic* In
Burbank, Miami arid nt the home
of tier parent*, Mr. and Mr*. Har­
vey Cobb In Pone* City.
Working for a Fleelway Aircraft
Delivery Corp , she ha* flown all
over the America* and ha* made
llirre trip* to Europe.
Jerrie laugh* nt people who
describe her a* s woman of cour­
age doing dangemu* work. She In­
Hr. and Mrs. Edwin Jennings sists she "just flies," It il t she
art the proud parents of t son, admit* she always tries to figure
J'lii Robert, 8 Ihi. DH in. born mit in advance what she would do
Jii|e 15 at 8:15 a. m. In tho Or- In an emergency. She *ay.*t
laitlu Air Korea Base Hospital.
"When something happens, It
Mr, Jennings I* with Detachment happen* fust ami you have to know
l."jn in \J-CI and resides at 2HH rxnctly what to do right then."
Luke Drive.
At (he end of her flight she al­
ways dutifully semi* a telegram or
Jr. and Mrs. William Graham cablegram lo her parriil*. Her
trlnndn announce the birth of father, a car dealer and former
on on June IT. Mrs. Graham Air Force Colonel, taught her to
he remembered a* the for- fly when she wa* 12 She received
her pilot's license at Id.
Miss Martha Junes.

B I R T H S

ttfrat .d

Miss Betty Jean Brisson is re­
vealing final plans for her June
'Jfl wedding to Robert Ernest Mc­
Kee, son of Elder and Mrs. A. D.
McKee of Greenville, Ten".
The S p. m. wedding wdl be held
at the Seventh-Day Adventist
Church w ith the groom's father
officiating.
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
It. Gordon Brisson will he attend­
ed by Miss Constanco Ludwig a.,
maid of honor. Mies Celia Toll­
mans of Tallahassee will bo her
only other attendant and Rebecca
Patterson will act a* flower gill.
Morris Swinton of Tampa will
serve the prospective groom as
best man, and groomsmen will inelude Robert Rrisson and Jame.i
Cochran of Ft. Myers.
A reception will he held at th*
home of the bride-elect’s parents.

Page .1

Upsala Church Has
Successful School
A succe ssf ut \. ten! ion Bible
Fchool was held at this I.'Praia
Community I'rohytcrlan Church,
with Mrs. C. C White and M l».
Jack Res.man a- leader*.
Hie following had [lerlfcvt oU
tendance: Mrs. Ja--k Rossn an,
Mrs. Josephine \\ hite, Tat Ros*man, Ruth Nettle*, Carol A n
Carroll, Carol
D'.gln*
Braswell, Wands Hr.iswtdl Linda
Rossman, Darlene Carroll and Bet­
ty Hobby.
Tho school wa* closed' with a
program of mu*i ■, scriptuio Kin­
dergarten
Band.
Refreshment*
" rrc
al* S**"""*
The population of Morocco, new
more Ilian eight million, ha* dou­
bled in the past 55 years.

Vacation Time

Missionary Union
Official Committee
To Hold Session
The Seminole Associationnl Wo­
man's Mtssfoimiy Union Execu­
tive Committee will meet Thurs­
day nt 10 a. in., at the Fit*-1 Bap­
tist Church. Everyone i« axled to
bring a bug lunch nnd the drink*
will be furnished by thg hostes*
church.
All officer* of the Seminole •
Association, president* m.t Voting j
IVople's 1,ruder* of Ioral church" *
and member* at large nro urged
to lie present.

Cmn furl — Apprnrnnce
S Culms-

IVEY'S

P e n n e y ’s
R ST Q U ALI T Y^

A L W A Y S

ON

SALE

WEDNESDAY

MORNING

BIG T A B L E
I

OVER 400

REMNANTS
AT

REDUCED

PRICES

• lilt; VSHOUT.MKNT OF IWHIUCS
• 1110 SAVINOS FOIl YOU
• 1IIO ASSOUTMKNT OF COI.OIIS

Shop PENNEY'S You'll Save

In the M e d iu m -P ric e F ie ld -

head o f its class in everything..?
IT,a clip per leaib It* M d in lire where It count*! O uhide.
nearly 18 feet of lm|itn aive r U iwmiz. Iniide. im c tin n -d .
turn uw d a l tjvii o fur hips, h-gi, brail* ami slwuldusl

Clipper's 215 and 225 hor*rj*»w.v \ 8 engine* develop morn
I*is,,, Rian any irtlwr luulium priced coil
Q U A t.irr
,
. . .
Budl fry IV lard craftsmen, Clin&gt;er I* the nutslamling car
In It* •lo t lo* fine car quslitir* and sheet value
Ylie Clip|»cf i* llie Mg butt . . . hw It gi'is &gt;ou tin imnl ear
ledium price
lUive Iliildl
money la the medium

fsrttflak Gm elttlefl

*V j a/

i

|4I HOH»klM*IH

j 6 r th o s e w h o d e s ir e
in d iv id u a lity .

Z lu ilt b y I \ ic h a n l C n tfs tn r n

A N D SMM

SAN FO RD M O T O R CO., INC.

iunruis Jtstuti

USB.Pack Ave.

CtirPt* CO*4»T¥ltATXX|

tN V /T W Y O U TO C O M M tN T O O A T • • • TAKM THM K M Y (^

Us

R A Y M O N D ST U D IO
fc'

'

•m r sA V F on p

Tuc.n. June 21, 1955

Church Has Meet

Wv Guarante# Their Permanency
For A lifetim e
I

uso

satin and bearing pink ruse pet­
als.
Mrs. Jacobson those for her
daughter's wedding, a put it, length
dress of mauve pink chiffon over
taffeta with matchirg accessories.
On her left shoulder was pinned
a corsage of bronze baby orchids.
THURSDAY
The groom's mother was gown­
The First Baptist Training Unied in n blue lace budicej gown
bio School begins at 8:3(1 a. m.
which showed to full effect the
Tho First Baptist Junior Itoyat
chiffon skirt over taffeta. Her
Amhnssadors will meet at 7 p. nt.
accessories were slso matching
The First Baptist Truining Uni­
and sha wort a white orchid.
on Members will meet ut the
church at 7:30 p. hi., for their
A reception was held immedlste.
monthly Vlsltatlun Program.
ly after ths ceremonies in ths Ssn
Jusn Ball Room.
FRIDAY
Decorations
Included
bride's
Tho First Baptist Vacation Hi­
flowers in silver vnrci placed in
lda School will meet fiom b’30 to
appropriate spots about tho room.
11.30 a. in.
Mrs. Bob Roth attended the
Bride's Book and Mrs. Herman
Jacobson, Mrs. Oscar Tetenbaum
and Mrs. Stanley Tetenbaum were
floating hostesses.
A buffet dinner was served dur.
ing the course of ecenU.
For a wedding trip to Miami
Tho Gleaners Class of the First
Mrs. Tetenbaum woie a Navy
Baptist Church held Us monthly
blue dotted tie silk dress with a
business and social meeting nt the
matching navy blue duster. Her
home of Mrs. H. 11. Newman on
accessories were white accented
Tuesday evening with Mrs. F. L.
by a blue and white hat. She
Dampier and Mrs. R. H. Fairclolli
wore the corsage of rosebuds
nt ro-hostesses.
from hsr bridal flowers.
Mrs. E. C. Kumbley presided
Upon returning the young eouami Mrs. H. W. Rucker led the de­
P&gt;* witt reside at TOT Greenwood
votional using as her topic, ‘ Grace
Art., In Orlando.
and Gratitude". This was followed
Out-of-town guests included Dr,
by prayer led by Mrs. A. J. Peter,
and Mrs. S. A. Jacobson, New
son.
Yerk| Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Teten­
After the business session, a
baum, Maryland) Mr, and Mr*. A.
social period
followed
during
8warts, New York; Mrs. Carl
which time members enjoyed beau,
Mailman, New Jenny; Mrs. Abo
tifui piano selections played by
Bennstt, New Jersey; Miss CaMr*. Charles Muirhead.
brialla Weehaner, New
York;
INDIAN RED 8U.K ftAnr
Refreshments were served to
Charles Goldman, Kentucky; and
ImbrohjereJ with gold and ,5 !
Morris Bloomberg, Georgia.
Mrs. M. N. Cleveland, Mrs. J. E.
Hcmmerle, Mrs. Rumldcy, Mrs.
The bride is a native of Sanford Yer b u l li o n is used for an
Fred Myers, Mrs. J. E. Jackson,
and graduated from Seminole Anthony Blotta dinner costume
High School with the class of 1061, fh# bo* jacket la d e s i g n ^
Mrs. H. W. Rucker, Mr*. V. G.
Sha attended Duke University and that tha most elaborate” "
Hasty, Mis, A- Kendall, Mrs. C,
A. Anderson, Jr., Mrs. M. Hoff­
graduated la June with an A. B. broldeiy makes tuxedo panels
man, Mrs. A. J. Walker, Mrs.
degree In history- Sha was a mem­
,runL Th* b e lt s (t
Charles Muirhead and Mr*. R, T.
ber ef the Alpha Epsilon Phi, be­ birTha.* *lcfVrW* nn|J has a
high bateau neckline.
Humphrey,
ing president this year.
In high school sha was active
la tha Thespians, president of the
Latin Club, treasurer of the Flo
NO W : T H E A M E R I C A N M O D E R N LOOK
rida Speech League, president of
the Debate Club, and a member
IN TWO B R I L L I A N T NEW S T E R L I N G
of the Sally Stu f. She made her
debut in Orlando In 1064 at the
Uoodfallows Ball.
P A T T E R N S BY
Mr. Tetenbaum recelvad his
education la Orlando school* and
gr^duatad with a Bachelor of
Science in buslnees administration
from tha University of Florida.
He waa a member of the Tau Ep­
silon Phi social fraternity, and th*
Beta Alpha PI national honorary
accounting aocisty. At present he
la a Lieutenant in tha Air Force,
static*#' *3 Orlando.

BRIDES

You will **i*jr jrwr
ull your Ufa, H n w i

Sylvia Hayes
Bride-Elect
Is Given Tea

t Betty

t

S57-W

A ys .

rh an A V t

�*-

. it-

l'X ^ T "■ ,v

-.* p M W im n

I 'l 'i M x

tl

A Tumbling Biddle

Historical Hand-Sight

Millionaires are nut necessarily stuffy.
Anthony .l'&gt;soph Drcxcl i’ itldlc. who rlictl in
1018. wrs far from It, ns Is revealed by “ My
Phl’adelphin Father" n blojtrnphy by his
daughter, Mr*. Cordelia llobertaon. He was
a boxer, s teacher nf jujitsu, an actor, nn
explore!, n Bible tchcher with 200,01)0 pupils,
an nulhor and a cluhnmn.
At sixty-seven he tnuRht our Marines the
art of rotiyh ar.d tumble. flRhting- As one of
the men remarked who had nt first regarded
him as a kindly, grandfntherly type, "That
old geezer knows more wsya to kill you with
his hare handa than any man alive."
Once he wns dlnlnp with a friend in
Philadelphia’s most expensive hotel. The
topic of juiilsu came up, and to illustrate a
point, Biddle said, "Stab me with your din­
ner knife.” "What, here?" asked his aston­
ished friend. "Why not1" said Biddle. His
friend made a motion with his knife, and
the next .moment, without knowing how it
happened, he found himself flat on his hack.
Biddle’s money did not fence him from
the rough and tumble aspects of life. To say
he contributed much to both thnt rough and
tumhle would he the kind o f description he
would heartily approve.
______________

If anyone sweeps over the entir* field
of history front its beginning to the present
day. it is Arnold J. Toynbee, the English­
man who In his six-volume "Study of His­
tory" attempted to explain the rise and
fall of ait the world’s great civilisations.
Writing *n the New York Times Magazine on
"What World V*'ur II Did— and Didn’t—
Settle ’ he staled that the recent war ac­
complished one. good.
It settled once and for all that the Nazis
were not going to conquer the world. With­
out this war. Toynbee believes they would
certain)'' have done so, by piecemeal gob­
bling of lesser powers anu by military might,
coupled with spies ami sabotage In the lands
of their enemies. That, he says, would have
betfu even worse than the triumph of Com­
munism.
Certainly for the Jews, the Asians, the
Africans and the Indians of the two Ameri­
cas, the race theories of tha Nazis would
have m.'ant extermination; whereas Com­
munism, with all its horrors, at least has nut
demonstrated that rncial difference is a
reason for wholesale destruction. In this re­
spect World War II may he considered as
not a total disaster.

The Sanford Herald

Tuesday, June 21, 1055
TODAY'S

BIBLE

VERSE

Be still rthd Know that I am find.— Psalm
40:10.—-Thoro Is an instinctive recognition
o f the presence of God- liis kingdom Is with­
in us.

Summer Jobs
A aymlirated columnist report* that
eight out of every ten teen-agers will take
summer Jole. Some of them will work a
few hours a \v»ek In an effort to earn their
own spewllii* money. Others will work fulllime at rathpr hard jobs to raise money to
help their fnm'Ile* or to save toward paying
for future education.
This is encouraging. With so much em­
phasis being placed on the youths who stray,
who earn the name "juvenile delinquents",
it is reassuring to know Hint the majority of
youngsterr wnnl to use their leisure time
constructively
For the teen-agers who sre continuing
their educations summer employment can
be particularly valuable They learn how
necessary it is to carry out responsibilities,
to start sod finish a task even If It is some­
times difficult or distasteful.
Fly spending part of the year working
(n the world and part of the year studying
abuiit It youngsters have a chance to ex­
amine the advantages of practical as well
as academic learning.

THAT OLD SWEETHEART OF MINB

Don't Go Abroad Without Passport

SMAf DAWSON

If every white collar man ware
forced to wMr overalle and a halloween malk on thr job?
I ratio these questions only becaute my earlier campaign lo put
the American storking girl &gt;in
bloomer* hat fallen (let.
Why Ihe campaign? Well, a
Survey showed that on an avarage
day American men were waiting
go million hour* of company time
doing nothing but daydreaming
over the therms of their pretty
girl coworkert.
My theory was that If all workIng girls were compelled to wear
the same drah uniform they woulJ
become so repulsive rebody would
Waste time looking at 'em. The
Suggested uniform- Black cotton
s t o c k i n g s , oid&lt;te«tk&gt;ned blsck
bloomers, and ta^Nty* middy or
high-necked blofie;-.

jssesi-up

NEW YORK fePr—The food
industry plans to taka still moie
of the drudgery out of Utthen
work. It counts on using the atom
to makt baiter food and sstamiHtion to providt cheaper fn*4.
Americans will spend fnf jfood
about tl&amp; billion dollars this] cmfour limes as much as befar Ihe
war. Even allowing for dolUi de­
valuation, that*a still twin as
much as IS years ago.
Leaders of The Grocery K mufactuier* of America, say l ine
thing! are in slots for us:
Lower priest ran be avU ved
through greator production, hey
btllavo new machinery and raw
machinery and new nid ods
methods should boost prod lion
by cutting present high cork
Tba revolution In tha kitek i is
to rontinua and may be an ded
up la tha near future. Wha tha
industry calls convaniance J ods
have brought about the revolt on.
Packaged foods that slimiuab the
kitchen drudgery by pr*|| mg
vegetables and fruit and i ren
meats ahead of time are to I In-

creased in number ami volume.
Since WorlJ War ft processed
food* have increased « per centwhile population ciin.lied IS per
cent.
Research is going to be the
watchword of the industry frojn
now, in the opinion of G.M.V*
president, Paul 8. Willis. He de­
scribes some of Ihe pinjrcts un­
der consideration now as “ breath­
taking."
A tom ic radiation Is expected to

play a double rnie. FlrM, it's be- offl&lt;
Sieved Uiul in Ihe yearn ahead r»- Inal
tin nclivity will allow ihe farmer Von
bow to produce bat lei food stuffs, righ
and more cheaply. It la also count\\
rd upon to combat the insect* and not
disease that plague the farmer nist
now. Second, atomic science is ex* [ no
reded to have a major impact on gCt
food processing.
p as
There Is a good chance thnt ln|d
soon manufacturers will be expos- linn
iiiir various foods to atomic radio- only
lion to eliminate bacteria and
Ci
thereby greatly Increase shelf life re&lt;c
of their products.
wilt

D ID

YOU

Compounding prescrip­
tions is often a siow pro­
cess. First, we carefully
r e a d e a e h prescription
slowly to make certain we
understand exactly what
y o u r Physician specifies,
The Ingredients are assem­
bled nrni checked for iden­
tity. Next, we cnrefully
compound and label with
instructions for use.
Once more we check
every operation to make
certain everything is oerfect, and then we "Alike
Haste" to see that you get
your prescription as speed­
ily aa possible.

K N O W ? ........

TOUCHTON
DRUG CO.
Cer. 1st A Mi rootle
PRESCRIPTION
CHEMISTS

MRS. APPLEBY'S RESTAURANTS
I
I

WASHINGTON, i* _ President
Eisenhower yesterday aakad the
Senate to approve permanent
four-star rank for Gen. Matthew
R Riggs*ay, effertlv. when RidgV ,jr- r*,Ur** Jun* 1,0 ■» Army
chief of staff.
Ridgtvay has had the temporary
rank of full general during h i*
term ir the tup Army post, but
^perm an ent r*»k &lt;• major gen-

MAKE HASTE
SLOWLY"

We Serve Breakfast In Informal Air-Conditioned
Dining Rooms.
HOT CAKES. WAFFLES HAM BACON, SAUSAGE.
EGGS as you like *oin . . . fresh from a local farm.
Come lu For A Snack Or A Meal
You're Always Welcome at
Valdti Hotel
• A. M. TU

Eisenhower Asks
Four-Star Rank
*
For Gen. Ridgway

Hf would Hum be Jumped two
»l»r» In retirement status.
The higher r*nk will have no «f.
l&gt;cl on RJdgway'a retirement pay.
The retirement pay of a full gen­
eral and e major general are the
m me—19 GST a year In the case of
an otllrer of Ridgway'a length nf
service
1
Oen. Maxwell Taylor hai been
named to succeed P'-Gway ( l
Army chief of staff. '

Friendship Drive
Started BySoviets
Centers On Greece Winn TV

ATHVNf Greece bP — Greece
Is the latest* target of the Krem­
lin's new friendship campaign.
The Russians say they would like
In ?ee an Improvement in Alhen's relations with both Moscow
and Soviet aalelite Mates.
This waa disclosed recently
by Foreign Minister Stephanos
Slephanopoulas following a dinner
he attended at Hie Soviet embassy.
Stcphanopoulos told newsmen he
baa exchanged views with Rus­
sian Ambaaaador Mikhail G. Ser­
geev and other envoya on the Im
iienl nf Greek-Soviet rela­
tion!.
»ci dinner gueata also dliruiied
the normallaatlon of Greece'* re
latlons wllh the aatellita states,
he edded. Athens his eceused her
neigiiborlng Communist atatei of
aiding Red guerrillas who at­
tempted to seUe power In Greece
following World War 11. The rebel­
lion was finally qucllad in IMS.

the State Dcpariment to give any
persun refused a passport a full
evidence In his own behalf, hear
represented by counsel, and far*
all the evidence against him, til
his accusers.
In the other case Carliner will
challenge ihe right of the Slat*
Department to withhold a pass­
port. w.th or without a hearing,
becausa a man participated ia
polities abroad.

10S ft Park Ava,
4:11 A. M, Til

• Q u o t a t io n

hr

D lr lt ln to a

■Copyright H IM

Mother, Daughter
Killed By Blast
FERNANDO BEACH (* - A
cookinf-gai explosion st e Yulee
motor court Sundey night fo u l­
ly injurd a young mothar and
har l-ytar-old daughter.
The dead are Mrs. Janniu
Evans White, » , and Elelae White.
Cecil Wh'is, two months old, le In
"fair1* condition at Nassau Genoral Hospital aa a result of tha
blast. AuUierttlsi are trying to
reach Ihe woman's husband, Hen­
ry H. Whits,.who sailed (ram Farnandlna Beach last week as •
crewman aboard e private yacht
bound for Boston.
Nassau Deputy Ihtrlff George
W. Courson said the Whites w ;-e
permanent residents of the motor
eourt. He said ihe email building
was demolished.

v sn u rr

Ury acidly. "To me most men look
Uks they are wearing Halloween
masks anyway, but In this civilisa­
tion there la nothing you can do
to make men repulsive—heels that
they are—simply because there
aren't enough of them to go,
around."
I can have in Office of my own end
n iood-iookin| leerotary. Quit Ulk
tag like • wife, Will you? Let weD
enough alone."
An offtte supervisor remarked:
'•You’re putting Use cart before
the boras, son There are more
women than men in Ihe average
office u&gt;day, and believe me meet
of them Alb man-era sy.
"If men ere wasting gg million
bourn a day
witching, mm

Irttinz a certain Individual go
abroad is in this country'* bi.t
interests. This gives Ihe depart­
ment wide latitude.
The official *ald:,tn cates which
fall under No. 2 the State Depart­
ment uses its own discretion. For
ixample: in individual who wants
to go to Latin America may, in
Ihe department's op.nion, have
links with revolutionists there. He
wouldn’t get a pi.sspurt.
'David Carllner, ACLU attorney.!
says a person may be refuso.1 a
passport an tne grounds that he
said something considered dis­
paraging abuul Ihe United States.
lie gave an example- One man's
passport was held up hecaute he
wat accused, among other things,
of having said when last abroad
that this country was full nf cap­
italist! who exploited labor, lie
finally got it.
What appeal does an Individual
have—and whil chance to lice his
accusers and refute them—if he
is refused a passport' The pass­
port official said everyone is told
why he can't get a passport. Car
liner says only some are told.

Kitchen Work To Become Easier

Deaf Stenographers Have Big Vocabularies
most forcibly by Den ftaucri, pres­
ident of aomelhlni called the
American Society of Girl Wetchori
lac. Sauers aeya girl watching may
reduce office efficieacy but boosts
effioo morals.
"I recommand that sach A m ir
icea working girl bo given ■ apecitl income Us deduction of lioo
per year for coamaUct," ho wrote.
"And I auggest the hiring of one
beautiful glrl-fac every 14 male

WASHINGTON i*—The State De­
partment *sn let American* travel
abroad or foice them to stay home
by granting or withholding pass­
ports Any citizen who goes abroad
without a passport commits a
crime.
This week the American Civi
Liberties Union (ACLUj geos into
federal court seeking lo force the
department to modify its reason*
for refusing passport* and lo let
persons denied them have a chance
to appeal.
Lait year over 400.000 passports
were granted How many appli­
cations were turr.ed down? An offi­
cial of the Passport Division said
yesterday he does not know be­
cause the division keeps no record
on the number of denials.
He said the department can re­
fuse to grant a passport because:
1. An applicant Is a Communist
or has Communist ties, has ■ crim­
inal record is *n*anr or can’t pay
his way; nr
2. Thr department doesn't think

tU W S O M e
SPTAKTO TM
CO UPtEDO M ’ T B v i- B U M
|
Y O U T v iiN k
B A C K IN

HAL BOYLE

the girls thamaalvos must be
houra a day girl watching, Utea
watting SO million working houra
atsrtng at the men In their offices.
The res) problem Is how to makt
"**}* coU« '
•t*
U’acUvo.
I • cheeked Into this and-4&gt;y
golly—the supervisor waa right,
America's white toller men are
getting downright irresistible. Evory stenographer and secretary I
Wked
admlttcd-of; the record,
eourse—thit there was at least
one man In her office she couldn't
beep her mind and ayes from,
‘ There la a junior esecutlve la
our piece who has bean promoted
lo a desk with two telephones,"
»• * one "And he's ai happy aa
* baby with a new rattle. Every
Um* \ P*‘ * his desk It'a all I can
do to keep from reaching over and
P eking his little fat merry
cheeks."
What about s standard uniform
l«r man office workers then-overalia or Bermuda shorts, plus blind-

JAMES M A R L O W '

The rase against putting office
girls in bloomers was eapreised

l#SII .IM S Iif

I

M

I

S

t

*••••, k „ , t s

Don't let adventure p ass you b y !
Q

W N Q U FSf

WSPfl C l

w m m n ii

f t a f l M . . M ooro'a Cxtonnr Mn»
•BRiy Paint mokoafh* (oh natylThia
JU, iL[|jk tmtog Iktouaumgu|||j|§ Amto maim
b
f
VNHOT gWBPWvi
’^Ptw
Aitlnlilij AtsAf -Hkidnjndhi IkjIralL o a u r iM m
^visKlf f w PMCCv# I W | C ln C W f

m i tM M i ^ifiicvlsrty fru h M
maMLjnA

mmAllssm
pW
K ip Wf kPlig
Vtop/in
R Af ##•

mumt M %mt iM-oi r# fumM m i
fHMl Woodtriul choic# ol colon*

Perhaps jm ’ ve stood o o • street com er ne n sleek D o d jn
Custom loyal U a e a r Snahed b y . la its wnke, a tin gliai
m m of cdtaaneotl And tf you ’ve fait aa Irrraiatiblt urge
to Mbom"n Lon ear ground, it’a perfectly understandable.
Beenuee hsw'n the ear thot puts adventure book into motor-

linen only kink
at the thrilling performnnee you'll
wheel. S o d on 't ntnnd on the afdeHi
poan you by. Pick u p the keys to n Dadga

IT f l

�I

TITE R A N T O n n H E R A L D T ups, June 21. 193S
□

IN V IT I W IS T A M M A N
C H A N C U IO I AO EN AUEt
TO VISIT MOSCOW

r

h’y -Xirt Suumtr
•
hT
i .N
v iO
i i rn*il
»

jr

ChHrtt#
A eiumrel with dir tsrl Oi
f_f l U M had *«nt K^rry Rturdan (rtiii*
Utr Broken S(&gt;t*r . aotlt inlu towu on

e hprte *.hhi n*d * ai*«! for d n » . anil
brought him t»a a to the ntuh mint,*
fuede tod im dtbt To fert th# ntutw’
wHb hit tough, but gpoFfou* b#B#lir«
ter Rftbb MfiCery. mho (ttenuerfs him
rmildhr e# » foot

pointtnx out to him

tint the ttetihy HHIt
newerie.

with

whom he

girl. I**m

M#trr.

hid

hM i coBeerftng. »• " ew4»od. ' To Ik
dene with ell ihl* Berry dwi*|M i«
Mirry Chruttt Teiintt *t nnr*. but
wt:#* he relit oa h#r h» find* lift e l t i

b#i'i nun Wavin' t'ftfnftfcfl, tn
t to#w
* r t 4 e t r t i f t r w h o w ill # w « r t h e r
fee hhe e e w n e u e ity • w #ek-#n4 O eiK#.

CHAPTKR r o i m
TH* CONVERSATION among
tea Utraa rtrifte.1 tntn snail talk.
Cameron ihnuxl no Inlanlton o#
kaarias
ream* Incraaaingly
elew t&gt;that he wasn't goteg t&gt;
aaa Chnatia alone,
nn4 &gt;1laaare lor any more
m Ui
* Diamond man's
■pa.

He r&lt;

&lt;•■, Juat dropped lu

aa 1 waa
ng. I'd better be g e t­
t he'd had any hopes
tin g sioaig
th a t Clsnst.i- would urge him to
Stay, Shay &lt;u n i to nothing.
C am eron roaa and held nut hla
har’ d, and good m anners dragged
Wit a# K erry. “ O lad tn'va made
p o u r acquaiataitca, Cam eron. Hop*
W e'll meet again som etim e ”
*1 ax pact w* will, ‘ efore long
T on 'll be at Iha aanra In Mundown
Saturday eigh t, w on 't ymi T C hris­
tie prom ised to g o with mr and
h elp ma meat pome m ore o f m y
n e ig h b o rs.”
“ la that another case o f m akin g
y o u r ow n luck ? ”
AO ha rode aw ay, K rrry w as
hot with m isery and resentm ent,
j S om ehow , this hit him harder then
an yth in g. N ever In the ln*t three
|yrara h td O r l s l l e attended a
(flR n re with anyone but him. He
to ld hlmaelt she w as tr y in g to
eh ow him ha w asn't the on ly Bsh
In th e o ce a n — but, he knew th at!
W e i . If aha th ought he w as g ote g ta g o t o tha Hanr* alone, and
rnooa a fter her like a m otherless
r s lf, she had another guess co m ­
in g ! I f aha w as ou t la show her
I.
Copyright. ISM.

r*»%’•.«♦i tm »mhat *.w**r

a P— &gt;- l •

I . U . SM «•

independence— well, that was a from brightness Into ahedow. The
gam e tw o could play! He touched one window of tu ts a com bined
im patient s p u n to his horse a bedroom and living room adm itted
sides, and reined him in tha d irec­ hardly enough ligh t to show the
dirt on th* floor and the few alicka
tion ol the Forks.
Th* Forks was a tittle cliu te r o f o f rick ety furniture, or to reveal
plow ed fields, earn with its shack how lone tt had been emra the
—tha usual Aral tim id en croa ch ­ place han last been sw ept. Hut no
ment o f the farm er on lha edge of man w ould have been apt to notice
lha ca illeiu sn ■ dom ain.
K erry th at, with I .it a Uawann right bew as cow m an enough to h a ts no lor# hi* eye«.
"H ello. Kerry." She ga ve hlVn
particular a ffection tot ncatera as
in ch , though ha didn’t favnr push­ her alow , w elcom ing sm ile. “ YouU
ing them off their pstrhea o f land have to a c u te tha look* o' Uir
by force. T here'd been none of place. 1 h aven't g ot round to flam
that kind o f violence in M escalero it up to d a y ."
cou n ty aa yet. The sm aller ra n ch ­
K erry laughed and put out an
ers w eren 't a id to do anything arm to pull her to him. Hii# w a ­
draalle unless Broken Spur or ft full-bodied girl, with eurvee in
Slash T lo o k the lead, and The ftll th* right places, and flesh Ihr.'
Tolanda were all for law and order, w as to ft but Brin, like a rip.
while llnb w asn't rnnrerned ns pearh.
long aa iha aealsr* atayed alear of
-ISlad to se# hie. a o g s r ? " hi
lua rang*.
tended dow n at her.
The liawaun aim. k lay at the
-C ount* t am. T h ough I reckon
ou tskirts o f tha llltls settlem ent, I hadn't ou gh ta tell y ou to. II •
huddling dow n Into tha cotton - w a y you been n eglectin' me lately,
w oods as though It wer# ashamed t don 't think you like me en&gt;
of lleclf, aa It had reason to be m a rt." * h « turned her ey re up to
T h ou gh It had been standing lea* him , brow n and liquid, w ith the
Than a year, lha unpainted bnatds special, slim ing w ay she had u.
had already begun to w arp, and looking at a man. I.ila w as all
looked as though one good shove w om an. K erry th ou ght: »he took a
woulih topple them Into a heap like man th* w ay ah* found him, not
so m any loosely piled mati hslicka. alw ays w anting to m ake him over,
|Ami tha ground around It, where lik e —tom e people. Then, aa her
It hsd
been ' h a l f - h e a r t e d l y lips parted wide in Invitation, he
scratched w ith a plow , w as c r a c k ­ abruptly stopped thinking about
ing and pow dering Into dust that anyone alse.
show ed no sign s o f aver bearing
"W e ll," he raised his lipa from
a crop .
her*, "atlll Ihink t don 't like you 7"
•’I reckon you do. honey lamb.
A a K erry rode up to the aback,
he had an uneasy feeling o f rye* And I reckon I like y o u — I Just
w atching him Irom liehind the c o t ­ ca n 't help it. Y ou sure vre a awee-t
ton w oods. He was sure ha heard a boy, K erry .’*
"S w eet y o u r s e lf* K erry preened
slick cra ck as he *rl a foot on the
bottom step, but he shrugged his hi* fa ce against Hie loose softness
uneasiness aalde by telling him self o f her brow n hair.
"N o w onder all Hie girls are
that luta had probably rhaaed her
father. C orny, out of th* house a fter you. Hut you like me better n
V h e n she heard hpn ride up. Shr any oth er girl 7”
If a m em ory o f etrcl-W ue tytm
w a sn 't keen on h aving the old coot
u nderfoot when aha had com pany. and hair Uka a n lv e r-g ilt crow n
HI* rap on lha door brought a rote to trouble K erry'* rontentca ll o f 'C o m e m .“ In a w arm , m rnt, h* shut it out o f his mind.
fT o B* C on tin ued/
husky lazy voice, and he stepped
hr Nkk Itumaer. Distributed by King Veaturaa Srndusts.

T h e ir « ei e 869, 000 babies born

A C R ES ON PEACE
TREATY E O I AUSTRIA

N tG O llA T IO N S IN ION DON
r o t JA PA N ESE PEACE PACT

in Franca

in 1019

631,000 in

19 !6

com pared

and

81‘J .ooo

liepemlliiK

in co w will drink from 10 to 30 f i l »

1031.

i Iona o f w ater a day.

MOSCOW O

DAYTONA BEACH!
PROPOSE DISARM AM ENT PIA N
W HICH INCLUDES MANY
M ATURES PAVORED I V WEST

b ie c r a d e \

mi

n noN

town I occ.
MOOIEIEO AMERICAN PIAN
S 3 5 0 per p f f io a q d d ib o n o l

Dtluiow titaWlail and Dinner
F.njnv Ih v M M Hear h i U rfra l Ind Anee*
• Oh i l l iparinu* rooms, eicelleol ruietne,
|r&gt;lf ro tirir, iw n p n v a ls pool*. cabana*. pneaR*
heath p u llin g graca, Intimate m t t U it
lmmgr. dancing. plan rw l enleiUm m eet and
ath e tn u n 'l paiadtae. Far rroervaliqn* A
beothute n r tlr or e t n direr* ta;

KHRUSHCHEV. lU tC A N IN ,
OTHER SOVHT LEADERS
P-.Y A "HAT IN HANDVISIT TO ASAM HAl TITO
MAP HIUSTIATIS flv* m ajor m ove’ Russia has mart* In the "p ea r* offen sive" category sine# mliS# --it
T-- .1
r i « t* ** **«*r^*pfh**Nr* f
“ at tit#fiinifiilt.*

Communist China Makes New Bid For Seat In UN
TOKYO

ijv— Com m u n is'

China

m ade a new open l.id y r ’ trrdn y
fo r n sent in tiie I'n itcd N ations.
The hid c a m r m s Peiping radio
bru sdeast w hich q io t r J excerp ts
from sn editorial in the IVipinff
P eop le ’ s D a . l ; , orga n o f Iho lied

Chinese government.

•'The San Francisco mcellng
Hi ’ .lid he able in make rnniribut i'it to carry forward the cause of
lltr l). N and achieve Hie ohjt'rlivrv
Isul down in it• charter," It said.
"The l*. N -hmild translate Inin
rnllly International cooperation
and peaee among countries of dif­

ferent social and politics! »y»leni’
'I1il&gt; Humid verve as s guide in
il* p m lice,
"The People's Hepuhllc of China,
which truly rrprcM.’ nt» the film mil­
lion t’hincve people, has been de­
prived of its legitimate status ind
rights m the t? N

Dayto,na
0 ii at tip on

comer*. Then on Jin. 3, 1944, aft­ 1 In addition to his son. Boyington
er (hooting down hit Mth Japmese ha* two daughters. He and hit
plane, Boyington waa hit. Severely ) first wife were divorced In 1941
wounded, he m a m g e d to parachute and he gained custody of the chil­
before hi* ptrne hit the water. A dren.
Jap aubrairiiu picked him up and
hla lighting waa over.
Twenty months later he wai
freed from a priion camp and re­
turned home &gt;o receive the Navy
(’rot* and the nation'* highest
award, the Medal of Honor lie
FORT LAUDERDALE UR-Poalio wai promoted from major to
lice were looking today for ■ palm
lieutenant colonel.
Retired beeauaa of battle w oun d*, reader who swindled an Indiana
Boyington had a tough lime *et- widow- out of 114,430 on a promise
Iting down. Hie marriage to the to cure her mother of an Illness,
Thomas F. Tompkins Jr., assist­
former actren France*' Baker aft­
er he Jilted another w o m an h a * ant county solicitor, said the name
widely publicized; two traffic acci­ of the victim was being withheld
dent* coat him heavily; and he because others might hare born
wai arretted a couple of time* for duped and If we can prevent em­
barrassment of the vlrtim* we
over imbibing.
might get additional evidence of
Boyington aayi ha mined flying time fraud*.“
right after the war but “ aa time
The Indiana wtrnisn visited the
went on and intcreat in my Job In­
creased I didn't ml** it io much." paim reader, identified only as
Ha tried hii hand at refereeing, Madame Lena, and mentioned dur­
ajnc* he'd been a college wrestler. ing the reading that her mother
"1 could spend about three eve­ was 111.
Madame Lena told her to wrap
nings a week at it, have a hooby,
get exercise, fun and pick up some the m.ney in a package and her
dough. Then arenas began closing mother would be cured by throw­
and they'd chif t you from San ing the package in the ocean be­
Diego to Bakerifield for Jobs and cause " money la evil and •« throw
there wasn't much money so | the money in the ocean would cast
out the evil ilcknesi."
quit."
He became a do-it-yourself en­
Before driving the victim to a
thusiast and saya:
bridge officer? said Madams Lens
“ I’ve owned two homes sinew the switched packages, keeping the
war and I've fixed them both up, money end tossing a dummy bun­
even added rooms. I’m getting a dle n the eea.
kick out of that. Might even be­
Her husband. George Johnson,
come a contractor after I get the S3, was arrested and U 000 of the
kids through ichool."
ce»li was recovered from him. Ha
waa charged with grand larceny.
Madame Lena and the rest of the
money are still mlasiog.

Daytona I noth NorUo

The "World's Most Famous Bm c Ii

if you act this month!
9JH

til

!

Commission Can't
Put Up Reward, *
Ervin Declares

The only all-purpose
station wagon!

tom.

SHOP
* - ■ ■ me.

TALLAN AM EE
Atty. Gen
Richard W. Enin ruled yesterday
the Palm Reach County Cormnlatlen couldn’t legally post a 11,000
reward for Information on the
whereabouts *f Circuit Judge C.
E. Chfllingworth end hla wife.
But Ervin suggested that the
sheriff af Palm Beach County
could poet tee reward and pay K
out af Am receipt* of his office.
The ruling went to State Audi­
tor Bryan Willia. who made the
request far the Palm Beach Coun­
ty CoamlaeJap.
Ih a attorney general said he
found letetPg in the Florida lewe
expressly outborUtaf county com­
missioners to pay reward* for ap­
prehension and eenvictiM af per­
sona chirped srtte a crime.
A suhatnnttel amount af reward
money has been put up far infor­
mation an tee Klsotaf Jurist end
hi* wtfo, who iiilp p f if ld ffpm
their b e e * heme et West Palm
Beuh a weeh spa. The Palm
Beach Oom m Uilm offered to put
up IM M if such action would be
legal.
U another opinion to Merton
County Atty. Vtryfl L. MUbrath,
Ervin held that tee Marion County
Commission could net legally pay
the hotter af an agrkuitural ecboi•rahip tee full nmount of the reels
of a toer-year eehrtnratep if be
graduated to three yean. Th*
scholarship amounts to food «

....
And leek whet m
ry d e a l In slu deii E xclu sive stylin g, shared b y no
oth er car; a o u r an iwqUK V-A engine (1AH h p in th e C u stom s and
h lon tera ys; IBS hp &gt; the M on U teira j; special sa tra -va lu e (awlures a t

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You can cash in on Mercury's

Palm Reader Is
Sought By Police
In $14,500 Fraud

Ul# •*

to m ount o f m ilk ih a it p ro d u cin g, A

Post W ar Period Mellows Pappy
LOS ANGELES UP- He wai a
fighting terror ai a Marin* aco
#&lt; acoa baforo being (hot down
and iagriMDcd. but th« poit world
War U period hi* mellowed Greg
•ry Pn&gt;W Bopinglon.
tt baa teea lour years ilnce a
Boytegtea ftecoe made headlines
He haa port Joined the do-it-your­
self home fixing brlgede and aayi
I 'll leave flying to the younger
k neratlon.
In particular hr hop** tea strap­
ping son will bo ta th* first dais
at lha new Air Fore* Academy.
Young Gregory. SO, automatically
get* ag appointment to a service
ichool ilnce hii father wear* the
Medal of Honor.
Boyington, now 42, *ay* he hatn't
"don* any flying to »peak o f ' in
recent year*. He'i • aaleaman ter
a brewery and until recently a
part-time wreilllng referee.
A* commanding officer of the
Marine!' Black Sheep Squadron,
Boyington wrote a fiery chapter
la aerial combat over the Salo­
mon*. The barrel-eheited flier had
quit the Marines once to go with
the Flying Tiger* and then re­
turned to the service titer the
Tigers dtabeaded.
Hi* squadron was formed of rwplacemtnta and citric from other
unit*, hence the Black Sheep title.
Bui Beylngtoa, known a* Peppy
eince at U he wai an elder flier,
molded the group into one of the
war'* most effective units.
Boytegtea loved a fight and a
party, la three month* ho knocked
1* Japaaoeo piano* out of the ikies.
He'd w e e the enemy, daring him
Into eoatbet tad taking *■ all

ivw i and

P u t ft J

�T i r e n A 't r m i T ) m m

ra g e *

alt&gt;

Tuen. June 21, 1955

Daytona
Defeats
Orlando

M o ore Owns It And Olson Is Seeking It Tomorrow Night, But

BY JACK HAND

NEW YORK (IP)— Any­
Making errors, and a lot ol body want a slightly used
them, ta a good way to lose a l i g h t heavyweight crown?
baseball game. That 1*«ion » i '
Impressed last night upon leading Are hi a Moore owns it and
Orlando, Lakeland and lart-plsre middleweight champion Bo­
Ft. Petersburg of the Florida Stale bo Olson is challenging for it
tomorrow night. Rut nobody
league
The Daytona Beach Islanders really wants it. Ancient Ar­
took advantage of tlwee mi'ciies. ' chie. anry at -IS. wanla to

combined with II hits, to whip'
Orlando 16; Gainesville protileii
from seven Lakeland sins lo win
114; and St. Teler'bcrg had eiglu |
fumbles- three of them in the de 1
cisive ninth, as Cocoa won 9 1
A meeting between Sanfoid amt
BY F.ll WIMCff
West Palm Beath was rained out
IHE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Islanders scored clusters of
four runs in the futirlh and fifth
Manager I-e n Durocher
Innings, only three of which were may have d i a g n o s e d the
earned. Boh Tommy, who went ini the whole. National League
during a fifth inning Orlando rally, |,inmanl rar e when he explain­
look credit for the victory, Howie
Tresp, trying for his inih triumph ed why he benched Willie
took hi* 7th lo«s as Sit homcfolk .Maya, the darling of the New
York Giants a year ago.
looked on.
Only two Gainesville run* we;e
"Confused," is the way Leo
earned. Ilia G-Men, however, pegged Willie’s trouble. And
pounded two Lakeland pitcher, if that doesn't describe the
for 13 hits. Ronald Bloodworth.
11-yea:-old righthander, spaced FINE AND DANDY
out seven to Lakeland. The atten­
dance at Gainesville was 741.
An estimated UO at SI. Peters­
01G D O N
burg aaw the Saints get 10 Mia
HKWCOMBL
and lead 6-3 going into tha eighth,
O P TUB
only to lost away the game, ('o
0
0
O
O
A O .V A / - , j
eoa’a hitting .star wai Jim Miller
PO
PG
BRS,
A
who had a triple and two singles
pav/x o
s( - ,4m

From Foursome
FOBT LAUDERDALE f/Pi The 1966 Florida Open Golf Cham­
pion may come from Ihe four some o f Don Riiplinghoff, Jim
McCoy, Skip Alexander or W. A.
(Dub) Pagan.
Observers figure ene of the,*
a n y be low man In tha 72-holr
tournament starling Thursday al
tha Plantation Golf Club where
M r la 72Blaplinghoff, Ike 20-year-old
Orlando belter, la n tournam nttougfcanod amateur who haa the
confidence and espeiicnia . to
snatch many professional*. Ha won
the Florida Amateur here two
*ioaU»e ago and alaaa then ha*
played wall hi England and Franca.
MeCey ad U ka Worth la deter a.
Ini the*pirn. Ha turned back tha
hast the etale had la offer last
year aad haa hla game at its peak
•gain.
Alexander, tha It, Petersburg
pro, k l i t ad tha •loagait hitters
ia tha field ad MB and they tay It
•dll Uka • toasr knacker to wla
•ho title •• thla layout.
*
Tha ether 196 proa aad amateurs
fctekda 61 aerateh player* who
•soha this oaa od th* best lbs

'p /N e '
* b a $ oJ
Mt
MORB

Flaherty has told the press at ened to J-l yesterday when It was with Clint Bacon and may box a
final (raining for his 11-round de­
fight Rocky Marciano for the he said. "A Moore match would
the Asbury Park, N. J., training generally accepted that he wa» couple more today. Olson shadowfense
against
Olson
at
the
Polo
be very desirable if he wins. But
heavyweight title in September.
Olson talks of 1 Marciano, 2 middleweighls.
Jim Nurri«, president of the Internslional Boxing flub, tossed ■
mile wood on the fire yesterday
when he spoke of Marciano's Sep­
tember plans.
• I will talk with Al Weill Mar­
ciano's menagrr slier the fight,"

way Ihe National league Is be­
having, it'll do until something
better romei along.
This wan supposed to ba one of
those "dream" races, with every­
body getting into the art. Trouble
it. the Brooklyn Dodgers rocketed
away out front and have shown
no signs of faltering while the
other seven clubs grope around
looking for a way out
ir is a pretty dandy race al
Ihrl, if you exclude the Dodgers—

W
tS .
A fv ,

Okv

tfAYS \

C K
J B

rp A *
o x f.

it all depends on how he wins it.
••If Olson should win and look
real good, I'd like to match him
with Marciano. I never talked lo
Weill about that match but I have
talked to Sid Flaherty Olson’s
manager."
Moore eats, drinks and sleeps

Grounds. He carried on a winter
long campaign to convince fans
and sports writers that he de­
served the shot. When Don Cockcll was given the chance, Archie
picked no a little change beating
Nino Valdes, the No. 1 heavy con­
tender and signed for Olson. But
Rocky U what he wants.

Milwaukee. ‘Ihe Gianla aru another two games back and two
game* ahead of fifth place Cinciwiati. Philadelphia and St. Lfluli
arc a virtual lie for sixth another
game baek. Only Pitlaburgh, 21
games behind the Dodgers, is
solidly In the cellar.
Milwaukee moved hp on the
Cuba aa Gene Conley won tus ninth
decision lest night. 2-1 over Pitts­
burgh.
Cincinnati,
meanwhile,
made it five straight defeats for
the Maya-lesa Giants .V3, and St.
Louis topped Philadelphia 4 1 with
Rookie Luis Arroyo winning his
eighth.
Brooklyn and the Cub* were
idle. So was tha entire Americas
league.
The Braves made it (our straight
b e h i n d Conley's four-hitter, al­
though getting just four hits them­
selves off loaer Vem Lew and
Boh Turkey B.dy Bruton singled
and stole s e c o n d to icorc on
Johnny lagan's double in the
fourti Inning, then got aU the way
lo thud on an error in the sixth
to icore the other run on Logan'i
sacrifice fly.
Only one of the runs scored al
St. Louis wai earned. It came la
the first for the Cerda, who put

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A r m K u m t&lt; o pA rr/ cm t

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F a t . r . h u ir

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.

H. N- Sayer, City Clerk

i
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■ u a t iL T * T R a T R n u a r
Darlnrta *, O rt.iido *
S a a la ri al
W ait
I'alai
* &gt; » ,.,
» » e .. rata
O a ln ..villa It. lah.tanO I
C ocoa f. at. P .t .r .h u r r *
•iAMS-.a TOU.IV
n a .tn n s a) Orlando
C om a at St. Palerahlira

W tM M P tO A v MMOOMLyM.
new* prrcHMP a o s e - *
JP A Y M eW A * A/MAP
By tub ib a o jb at Beat

( . M

IV

S’ IT
H m h

The 1954 Delinquent Real Estate tax Hat o f the
City of Sanford Florida is posted at the front
door (on bulletin board) o f the Seminole County
Court House, and will remain so posted for a
period of four consecutive weeks.
All Real Eatntts upon which the 1954 taxes have
not benn paid, and against which tax certificate
has not already been issued will be sold at public
auction on the 23rd day of June A. D. 1955, com*
mcncinff at 10 o’clock A. M. at the front door o f
the City Hall in the City of Sanford, Florida.

C O N T IN U E S

n stp 'A M P
PAMDf j

IT
SUM*

boxed and worked on the light bag
yesterday. He will do nothing
more strenuous than taking a
walk tomorrow.

N O T IC E TO PROPERTY OW NERS

Cincinnati broke Jim HeJra'a
hitlcsi spell In a four-nma filth In­
ning Hearn contributed a run-,
scoring error as the Rcdlega got
four tingles and a double by Stan
Palys In the frame.
Art Fowler went the route for
the lin t time this season, winning
hit seepnd. Dusty Rhodes and
pinch hitter Bill Taylor (cored
New York's runs with homers.

r re tin a

f

camp that Balding Bobo will risk down to, weight at about 171
his middleweight title against thu pounds
winner of the July IS San FrancisMoon boxed two rounds yeatcrand Rocky Castellan). He Ignores day at his Summit, N. J „ camp
co match between Ray Robinson
the bossibllity that his 160-pound
title will be declared vacated i(
he beats Moore under New York
and National Boxing Assn, rules.
The odds favoring Moore length-

SaafarO a l Waa l h l a

4 ^ * 2

AM p/M a/m /to'*
m acs

arm?Ate

PrrtM iAa. rw *ca A m M p M tr*

" * * * &amp; - - A ll OMmeAMAA
pu r

m/m

/Mi m e

mop

9 o MB PM dhM im Xa OUT/.

Lakeland a t O slnesvlll*

III

Gena Mori, Hialeah race track’s
new president, I* also the head of
two other major race tracks —
Garden Stole Park in New Jersey
and Tanforan In California.

you enn’t buy a finer tire
than a Davis Luxury Ride
&lt;.70x15, Rap- 24.95

avoid battery failure!
be sure, buy Wizard!

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Or Us regular pressure companion, Daria Super Safety. Both
carry 24 month road hiaard and service guarantee. Super Baf*.
ty 6.00x18. Reg. 22.76 ------ 16.92*. Davis Wearwclla 6.00x16,
12.66 ------ 10.96*.

t uo show you how — v
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Rtf. 15415 outright •. •

Long type Deluxe nattery only ---------- —......
WUard ‘ ’•O’*. 1 yr. guar. Ora 1 ------------------

*P!ua tax and old roeaarable tlra. *

RED TAG

I V t i

Group 1: Cher. 40-66) Dodgt &gt;6-63; Ply*. 83-53
Fraser 46-32, otheia. SLt Ford A Mart. 47*63)
64 Ford, others.
IF : Ford * More. 40-46; Packard 61-62. ether*.

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CWer • Welkr

FOE BALH —■
rcwuu machines, and Repairing
BERTS 101 S. Park Phone 1762.

THE OLD HOMETOWN

THE SANFORD HERALD Ttirs. June 21. 1955

By STANLEY

DA I L Y

General Contractlag
• Commercial—Custom A Low
FIT FOR A QUEENCost Homes
Foim Rubber Mattresses, Inner1200 Mellonviile Ave. Phoae 19)1
S p r i n g Mattresses. Couches,
Baby Beds. Renovating. Uphol­
Hebert A. William*. Realtor stering and Slip Cover work.
Raymond E. Leadqnlat Associate NIX BEDDING MFC. COPhone 1673 Atlantic Bank Bldg. 1361 Sanford Are.
Phoae 564*2.
FOR SALE — 3 Bcnronm Home.
Used
furniture,
appliances,
tools,
4 Block from South Side ichool.
etc, Bought-iold. Larry's Mart,
Call 254L
321 E u t 1st St. Phone 1631.
RAYMOND M. BALL. BROKER
AIR CONDITIONING
S. D. Higbleyman. Associate
Room or House
104 South Park Ave.
Phone 660

H. a. POPE CO, INC.

Whether buying or telling. K will
pay you to see:

Math Perk Ave.

Phene 1444

J. W. HALL, REALTOR •
METAL ROOFING
Florida SUta Bank Building
In Stock. 5-V Crimp - 1 U "
‘ Call Hail"
Phone 171 Now
Corrugated— 2 4 " Corrugated.

" » » P L
WELa KA APARTMENT*: ncm t,
private hathl. u t W. First St.

RoDaway sad Baby Beds
Sir. Weak or month—Tel. 1425.
Fermitere center
Avalos Apts.

111 Wert Firat

Efficiency. f t s o i

415._______________________
FURNISHED Apartment. 500 park
Ave.
____
yorniihtd Kitchenette apta. Air
Conditioned. Slumberland Court.
South City limita Highway 17-92.
S Bedroom Home. H BIm * from
Southalde ichool. Call 2541SEE Seminole Realty for Deiirablc Homes and Apt*. Phone 27.
FURNISHED Apt. Thono 432-W.
COOL— 5 Room Furnished Apart­
ment Front and back screened
porches- Garage. Take one
child. No Peis. BOA Palmetto
Ave, Shown by appointment.
Thono 27W-J.___________________
17034 Magnolia 3 b e d r o o m ,
screened porch. Furnished. $55.
Phone 1*73.
___________
Two bedroom furnished epL *J01
Magnolia $55 monthly. Phone
1673.
______________
Nlca sleeping room. 313 Oak.
Phone 1068-V.
F u rn ish ed cottage for
™
with baby. Available 22nd $14
Elm Avenue.
Furniahed 2 bedroom apartment.
1st floor, 600 Park Avenue. Axxarello, Phone 14T4.___________
2 Bedroom furolshed house. WO^OO
pet month. Phono *96 or 1IAW.
after 6:00 p. m.
Furnished garage epertment. 1*12
Sanford Avenue. Phone 000.
Furnished apartment, private en­
trance, Utilities furnished, near
Naval Base. Phone 247-w.
2 room apartment- ground floor,
completely furnished. Hot *
Cold water included. Phone
2392. 313 Palmetto.
_____
S bedroom houae. nleely furniahed.
porch, carporte end large lawn.
7/urjwood, i . R. Grant, Call
Garage
three rooms
iarage apartment,
apai
and
ana bath,
bain, unfurnished, Apply
117 Holly Avenue, Phone 3*2-M.
Re-decorated ground floor duplex
nlshed. See Mrs.
for couple, furnished.
Scott after five, 217 West 12th
Street
UNFURNISHED 4 Room House
sms. Phone 1326-J.
with I Bedroot
LARGE, Clean Apartment. Down*
stairs. Small one, $35.00 111
park Ave.
Bedroom Furnished house. 1200
Myrtle Ave. Phono

Get all Your roofing needs at
BUY ME1
1 have 2 Bedrooms, am nicely Sherman Concretn Pipe Co.
I'hooo 2489
furnished, and Incited in a very Out West 13tb SL
happy neighborhood. It only re­
quires $1750.00 down, balance Black-eyed peas, bring your con
tainer and pick them. Il.tw bu$75.00 per month, and the total
_______
_____
rhlsc
shel.
R. U.
Hutchison,
Cameron
price is only $9650.00.
City. Phono 1564-2.
THREE BEDROOM, well eonstrurtrd home at HOI Sanford Ave* SUPER DUPER SPECIALS
For Friday A Saturday
nur, large rooms, kitchen equip­
ped, lirge yard, citrus, seper- Ladies rayon A cotton slips.. .59
ate garaga, $10,000.00, with Drams, Values to 8 95 ........ 1 oo
t e r m a available. Exclusive! Children's ssndels all slits 69c pr
Broken co-operation invited. Girl's playsuits sizes 6-10 .. .69
Men's Shtrts, full cut ............... 93
We have the keys.
Any thing you buy in our store is
a real bargain.
The Bargain Center.
W. DIETRICHS
T. W. MCRO
307 Sanford Ava
1161 Park A rrow
rh aw 21
Power
mower
A R. C. Allen Cash
6 rooms and bath frame house
register. Phone 1279-W.
with 3 acres cleared, on paved
road. Call II. S. ••Lew" Arnold, 20 ft. commercial 2-door deep
Winter Park 272671: Nitcs: San­
freeze. 3I00.0n. Pig &amp; Whistle.
ford 1286-R.
Footlockers ............ Special $7.95.
Paint ............................ *2.50 gal.
TERRIFIC VALUE
All sizes tarpoulins.
An older home In fine condition
ARMY-NAVY SURPLUS
with the interior remodeled in
w g a i,
Phone 1321
excellent taste. Combining old- 810 Sanford Ave.
fashioned comfort with modern
sanding and finishing
appearance. Two bedrooms, Piano, small upright $150.00. FLOOR
Cleaning, waxing. Serving Semi­
2423 Laural- Phopa 606-W.
spacious living room and din­
nole County since 1025. H. M
ing room, hardwood floors. On
Gleason. Lake Mary.
THE
large corner lot shaded by oaks.
CURIOSITY SHOP
PLUS: 3 room A balh garage
For Better PUimnmg
apt. will offer nice income to 17-92 at Hiawatha, Used A new
Sec or Cali
owner. Complete price only
furniture, antiques, bric-a-brac
W. J. KING
17500 with good terms. Troplesl
Conte in and brousa around.
Booth Park Phene 56
Rtslty, 107 Magnolia Ava. Ph.
DOUBLE DECKER Beds and
Mattress. 4 price- 2404 Park Dragline service, Lakcfronta A
For year Real Estate peed*:
ditching. Estimates given. Phono
Ave.
Geneve 24C4, Orlando 52564.
Cullen gnd Harkey, Realtor!
BATHINETTE — Very good conSanford 2221.
19* N. Park Avr. Phone 2313.
diiion, High-chair pad. Car-bed
All for $$.00 Cali 2M9-M.
Sickness causes sell or lease of
Mattress A Box Springs
combination grocery, meat mar­ New arrival! at Trading Post!
Renovated
ket A gai station. Good terms. 1 mile S. on Orlando Highway
"Free Estimate"
Shown by appointment, Phone
ECHOLS REDDING CO.
2 Artistic China Cabinets
553.
from ................................... 37.50 Comer 2nd A Magnolia Ph. 1232
RAY E. PECK, Realtor
Bud” Bamberger, Mgr.
2 Piecesectionalcouch _____ 40.00
DeBary, Fla.
p. m.
Open Monday
As new Magic Cbaf Stove
Bottle ............................... 75.00
New Masonry home, well land­ 2 Lounge Chairs AOttoman 27.50 LAWNMOWERS s h a r p e n e d
scaped. Lot 60’. x 150’. Phont Beautiful Breezaway Wicker
Bicycle A General Repair.
'
R. 2534 Oak Ave.
set ...................................... 30.00
Stanley's Bike Shop
9x12
Axminister
rug
and
pad
25.00
310 E. 4th St. TeL 2434
3 bedroom house. Garage A wash 9 piece solid walnut dining set
J«2“ « F ■Wc fans. A Rial Buy. tha finest-cost $50.00 now 2S3.00
FLOOR SAND [NO a Finishing.
$6900.00. Phone 1620-J-3.
Trade in your old furniture
Oak floors furnished, laid A fn
3 bedroom home, corner lot. rea­
isbed. In business since 1920.
A R tlC lJ a WANTED - 4
sonable down payment. Low %K. F. Stevens: Route 2, Box 227;
monthly payment. 801 Rosalia Highest CASH, TRADE-IN prices
Call 716-R-4 before 7 a. m. or
Drive.
after 6 p. m.
paid for used furniture Cali 856,
Wllson-Maier Furniture Co. Ill
Small Dining Room Suite, Bed
Hollywood Beds. Custom UpholUphol­
E, Dt SL
with springs alio good buy in
stering. MATTRESSES RENO
other miscellaneous furniture. T—
VATED. Over Size Hollywood
Phone 763-W, 2535 Palmatto Ave.
Beds Foam nubber Mattresses
_ ,A PEHFECT DOG DINNER
Couches — Made To Order.
U rn* and Four Bedroom Homes PURINA DOG CHOW with taste
SANFORD WAITRESS &amp;
with One And Two Baths and ful
texture. A nutritious, crunchy
UPHOLSTERY CO.
equipment. Available in Dream
combination of kibbled meal
Phone 1121
your dog will like. Packed with
wold, Wynnewood and Loch Arbor
energy-buildior Ingredients,
Call For Pete Echols, Gen.
tub-divisions. FHA and VA
matpioa
F
i
“
Mgr., 20 Years Experience.
Financing.
HO West'znd street. Phone* 1458.
Factory located Ml Celery Ave.
Wellborn C. Phillip* Jr„
""
(Across from Ne lli Bottling
Sale — A.K.C. registered
Builder
Co.)
Boxer puppfes, briadia and
Phone 1564
feuncolor, six weeks old. Cali LAWN and Shrubbery SPRAYED.
Sales Office on comer Osceola Dr
Phone 2408-M. W. If. Pringle.
end Mohawk Am in Dreamwrtd.
MEfF WANTED
- l a ENVELOPES, letterhead*. statemenu, invoices, hand bills, and
Collector-Salesman
p r o g r a m s , etc. Progressive
Foe established colored debit.
Printing Co., l’ hono 408 — 401
Married. Home owner pra/wrad.
West 13th St.
_____
No experience necessary. $90
am m A M M
- jt j
weekly guarantee, Contest Mr. I4J
Metrhik, Valdez Holel, Tues.
evening or Wed. 'evening, be-

Seminole Realty

4 Room House and Bath. Two
FREE
screen porches. Newly re-decorShady end cool. Ph. 1MBJ. A Paring Knife for the Ladies,
Ballons for tha kids at

s a r t f la w s ?

Dealer"
Maytag Withers
11$ MagnetU Ave.
1717

One g. c. Caae tractor A drag
type harrow. $3004)0, Phone

SB

r » figB gjk U u y ™ * * ..
ffim E a
112 N. Par* Awn!

LOWELL « . ODER
F*and Florida

CONCRETE
Ready Mixed ^Concrete. Concrete

E M &amp;OKtigKi

_ jj

Will Take rare of children in
d iy o f Hl* ht* Ph™“

^

Mhsay IT-gg

w, n . *bw* i T t i r d i

WORE WANTED

HIGH SCHOOL BOY With pMeer
u e -T ii * u U B#wia** H o m

U T O t w m a

Shermaa Ow a i t? Pip* C*.
M Wert 12th at.
RANDALL ELECTRIC CO.
T V SERVICE CENTER

1U1

n u

» ecroe apprexli
feed dtrui am
■ear
ia v e a sail and

u rn

Gearva. We

IW M iN M a

tel TAROms PAMKUHQ

One hour • W an and Damp
Dry
One hour 4 • Wash aad Dry
Fold
Finished laundry
Sanltnne Dry Cleaning
Bouthnide
la u n d ro m a t
Beetk Side Foodmart M g .

Sporting

“Men who hgva learned to
use tools. . , build things . .
make homo repairs and im­
provements &lt;— arc respect*
ed in thia m e c h a n i c a l
“ building’ ’ world of oura.
Beat way to leant ia to
make things with lumber.
Let’* atup in at 213 W. 3rd
SL and pick up lumber for
a workbench.”

47 Property
iLt
45 Kind of
dance
music

31. AnRlo-

,t |

s.tMin
seif t
."•2 Exclama­
tion
34 Yount bear
3A. Thfsr are
Used in n
winter
sport
37 Flees from
40 Northeast
i abbr.i
41. Uprising
42. Achieve
4.i. Sand dune
i Eng i
46 Rendence
of Wilhelm
tl niter Ills
niidlcution
i po.vi 1

It’a So
To
Place
A
Buy your Furniture al Terry’s
Warehouse Furn., Co., at 901 W. lust Cali 1821
the Want Ad
1st. St. All nationally adv. fur­
niture at warehouse prices.
Sanford

a - n j w m w t . jjM jf Oaade-26

4

4

ill

1.

iA

is

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lj
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43 4-4

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&amp;

t&gt;21

V k iu id a im b apeUmcti,
Advertisers are requested to noand aarvtca. G. if. High,'Oviedo. Ufy the Want-Ad Department Im­
Fla. Phone 4151 or Seated mediately of any errors In their
I642-W after 6 ora.
ads, as Tha Sanford iicrsld will be
responsible for only one incorrect
Randall Etoetrle Ca,
Insertion.
Bandiz and CToslay AppUaaoas
Youngstovx Kitchen'
■AMPLE 6 LINE AD
eetrleal contracting and repairs
n12 Magnolia Ave. Phone 113 GET eraa cash for articles you
no longer use. Place your ad t»
ft.*- O F F IC E 9C4MJ1PMKN1 - U
day. Phone 1821.
HAYNES Office Machine Oa.J
Typewriters, adding machlaes, A 3-line ed. such ■■ the one above
Salsa-RobULi , 314 Magnolia, Ph is only 36c per day on our low 5
day earned rata economy plan, 45c
per day for 8 days and Me foi
1 day.
itKAimr PA tuiaH
Call us spout our ttusfceaa rates.
For Lovelier Hair
GET PHOFESSIONAL CARE!
A little spate like this wtU get
Evb-Bcm Beauty £Uu»p
your message before nur more
than 10,000 readers. TclJ 'em to
Phone 543
dayt Phone 1821.
lANFOnOS M U S T MODERN
! IIEAUTY SALON. Specializing Tha above 4-line ad can be run
• in aL phases of flcauly Culture 3 ful! days for only 12.40. 5 days
including' Gyroiator 'Reducing fee only I1J0 and eee day (or 12c
and Treatments by REGISTER­
ED Maxsuesp.

an.

BARGAIN!
3 Bedroom Home in Wyn*
newood. 2 Years Old.
TTtla home hta Oak Floera,
Ceramic Tile Bath, Dining
Area, Larg* Living Room
and Kitchen Equipped with
G. E. ApplUaca*.
Telrphon* 131 after * P. M.
fee m a i a l o i a l te eee Ikia
heat.

VAlUfD AT MOSE lb.111 tfi.OOO, "Pcnat.ik U.m" survey! the situation
from the top of a gangplank as he arrives by air in Now York from
I/indnn. The throe-yoar-olil prize bull, weighing a booty 1.701
pounds, was shipped to Fred Lucas, ot Nashville. (International)

TELEVISION
iviiihi t v r iriAM ’.i. a
t i t :hii t V
A FTliH AIMIN'
Adsentur* w ftu C aci* (Vail
►« I » lv First
Csrrnea C s » l»* l

s ns
k s»
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A 1X1
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7: mi
7 1.a
7.1*1
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f».2n
liiiDd
l» :3d
11;««
n r.
13:15

Jnl n t u ly X*ws
l&gt;uh M uii's I'nrarr

SllultllHSU'S I'lul.

T..lk uf il.n T-init
Musical V s r lt ll.i
Librrace
I L*a Thr** Live*

■Fsd fVsRnn

Tirssids T h u lr s
Hhsclnw fitumi-MS
T-M rn In A- iion
li.tslun lllaoKlo
\rwn-H ptl M ssllie r
n iiirlliiH T lieallo
U lsn-ulf

WEUXUDSr
XOI.1ISQ

T est t'«iM'rn
A P T K llM JO *
6lxn -on

13:5®
K ill

\ nt&gt;
2 (Ml
2 .Id
3i4’»
S r»
.7 J'7
3-4S

CAN
SELL

Anything

with

W»sthsr-N's*&gt; ••fipis.

« 5*1 a jrn .o ii
r r o c r s m Itrsam*
ft:ll X s h i - W . s IIii r
Ti*i*l Tim Mtn ti Inu Hlian-

A keek sending feel
Thinks ewr classified'* &lt;

Froarsm Fssum*
Ks»s.svssthsr

Turn F srs
"O in n nsl Crossroads'*
V!« wet s I ilu r-l
-Mr. n nd Mis.'*
j&lt;-, r M 81 oriu
l l r . j»iuu Around
Sins la Ms tines
w s s sin T V CIS A A ACL 4

TUESDAY
5 *&gt;*t Opus llousa
5 10 r u m Kul
ft f»d K f s » , Wtli*r. Fpts.
*.:
CHP TV \ i » s
9*4.i • ViraHiM U tcr
7 I'd
Irlsiiavland
8:if«| Men Ml tl i•
5 3ft Ktd Skslton
$.an SSs.Ono Quastlaa
9 3d
It Now
1*1(0 » Toby I'o w x y
Iri.3d I Led Three I.lvsa
1»:«*d News A \\.alhsr
1111 a •*l,ala Hlir-rs"
13:15 S t . s a i. M a n Oft

a

JUST CALL

W C D S U D iV

MOB.MXQ
Tsst Pattern
f 100 Murnlna ghurr
•:oo Ah.ipiitra Oulda
9:3d
Id 3d

ll|

S3

J

10 D evotes

23 Oignnua
tion
25 Jerk
2S, Fishing
with n
large net
29 German
city
tpois I
32 Flock

-= 2 i
FOUND — Gold studded diamond
pin. Owner may have same by
further disruption and pay for
.id plus reward. Call W. 0. L,
Lynn,
The Want Ad Department Is
l*h. 5172, (loo Elm Ave.
____ open
from 8:30 a. m. unlit 5:30 n
zj^ELECTKICAL BF.MVICES—22 m. each business dav except Satorday afternoon. Deadline for
BEE Your General Electric dealer week-day insertions is 2:00 p. m.
the day preceding publication.
(or TV and AoDUances.
Any ids coming In later than
Sanford Ktectrfc Co.
3:00 n. m. will be published undur
I l l MagwaUa Ava.
Fhaoa 642 Too Late To Classify.

SUPPLY Y A R D
rh.

L

•-a*
Y o lirln 'l Astara
3J. Variety
of « iltowe
3 i Necklac*
35. Shell for
cecrtana
39. Pack
nwav
43 Biblical''
n.irne
41 The j Met
tree
IScot t

W A N T AD
RATES

LOST AND FOUND

UilHl

I N 81.

*

an rcn.
insula
15 Egyp­
tian
goddess

Easy
Want Ad
and ask fur
department
Herald

H IL L LUM BER &amp;
III « W

■ Mohammed
3 cushion
1 Sacled
picture
iKuss.Ch.)
5 Weird
6 Joyless
7. Covering
of the
lies.I
S A sharp
edge
»arch t

in Canadi­

r — —

9:2k

all laabM aad medSa
■ANFORD EUBCIRIC (Xk

Him N
1 Funda­
mental
Son-in-D'v

0 Soft
cover­
ing
ot a
mam­
mal
tt Costly

I« Sill—Plano Technician
Phone 1164. Houle i. Sanford

^m zaanan^i
It WiE nay YOU to sao US before
you,buy. Open Evenings
Sundays.
EaalaMo Trailer gala*,
Pais the, Fla.

CROSSWORD

.\&lt; iton-a
1 An Asian
perennial
6 Mandarin
lea
9. Home of
it king
jo Finn
12 N f " , piper
director
13 Irish
K
Republic
It Measure
iChin i
13 Ruti-n
colony
in Africa
17 Tart
2 0 . Audience C
:t Senior
«
&gt;.shht i
N
22 TilKf- idly i
iVan;i
24 Cunning
26. Lease off.
ns .a
svllsble
27 Pluial
of pea''
i Brit 1
39 rerch

Goods L.

Ftlnrudr Sales A Service
m : . Ki bi.
Phone tea

21-

Page 7

—27

:

imr'uStirs

O r te M a X T le S :

IlORSON

(Air Conditioned)
165 So. Oak Ave. Phoae

SSO LR Ettfftt

1M

h k b w ic k

HARRIETTS
BEAUTY NOOK

S Pc------(All makes aa4 Models)
■er Table
$148.85
XU Mag. Ave.
Phase MM
Day. or Nl^hter Sofa
Rocker. _ .
USED PLUMBING FIXTURES.
covering.) .......................

ECHOLS BEDDING

LAUNDBT

1953— DUO 42 ft. House Trailer.
Air conditioner. TV. wall to
wall carpeting. Must Sell. LYnno.
Ph. Orange City. Spring. 41-332
^ In n ie ^ It^ lo tillM in m e ^ ^ r ^ .
_____tee Kaet uth at.
16 BOATS MOTOEA
—d» W PUiVO SKBV1CK

Rates to _
Policy holdera

—»*

M. G .% o S g E 8
« " All WaUr Pum p*Weila Drilled — Fxrtiia
PaeLa Read Pbean 7M

it—A U T o*oB n.its-TB A n.ra«
1
■
" —
BOUGHT SOLD TRADED
Roy Keel's Used Can
Saniord Ave. A 11th St.

l&gt;

PIPE C0.I

Waai UUi fiL

13:3d
I .(mi

2489

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3 «d lirlsh te r tie r
' it s s crs i fto tia
I SO On Tou r Account

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Radio

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s«so k i i . n m i .i . s
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SHI News
s i3 1 M i.t t r a Janibotoo
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M -utis A t A G tanco
J o ck e y 's Choice
M oraine Pevnttono
Mnrnltic Melodies
H i.i!d At Nine
Muslo F o r lotdlea
llim n Tim s
&gt; ,ir laidles Only
Stuetc K'»r Tuu
ii m Club
Now*
ls o o Club
Clems ot S fttoo?
W orld at Noon
A llfc u x u n v
Ithdln Form D ls »s l
W ednesday Matins*
News
tier Non* Ranch
W orld at Thres
United N tiiuns
1400 Club
Nema
I ecu Club

Nets .

A rih ur O odfrey
Kirika It lint*
Valiant Lsdv
Lsisre o f Lite
gaarh ter T*row
O u ld m c Llaht

Mot! than 20,000 U. 5. tou rists
visited Ireland in 1954 and spent
as averaga of $200 each.

\V*lc. T*vor»
I Inti rj. I.ta la
lln u irp yri X
liia 1‘a intr

In many primitiva tribes a max
is fni hidden to spstak 1? bis me*
tber-ln-law.

Xtlrban Hhow

Bob Crosby

„

-4

�'f

r tf* t
Turn. Jtfne 2f, T95S ceeded to grf frunlr and talc* the
Buee ta*d flat hi* effest V d
THE BAN FORD HERALD child on a w-Jd automobile ride "good friend" ot Parra but that

Reds Driving Hard To Upset Law And Oreter

Maureen O'Hara
Denies Charges

ingapore Is Trouble Spot
SINGAPORE (!F)~ Ma­
laya's Communists aro driv­
ing hard to upset law and or­
der in this rich British crown
colony.

Strikes are spreading. Riotin? is being fomented. Com­
munist-inspired Chinese high

Sparking the threatened nelence [ to the gro-rrn merit Tl.ry lead the
is the most lntons.ve subversive open defiance of police orders,
campaign the Red Chinese under­ march in picket lines, urge stri­
ground has waged on the island kers to fight on until their de­
colony since it unleasod guerrilla mands arc met. When thu govern­
warfare in the jungles upcountry ment threatened to expel ringlead­
in the spring of 10U. The Commu­ ers and close three of their sehonls,
nists apparently f-*l that Mar­ the students threatened "serious
shall's "go easy” pdLey leaves the trouble" and the authorities backed
door wide open to a determined down
effort against law and order.
Police final'y did arrest 1!T pick­
On the Malayan mainland, the ets for obstructing them. But big
Communists have slackened direct gatherings of students and strikers
armed attacks on villages, towns, still go on.
highway convoys and communica­
The students siy they want no
tions. But In Singapore they ap­ Interference with the P.ed Chinese
pear set upon getting the upper doctrines, thf7 are being taught in
hand by wile and subversive tac­ many of their classes. They have
tics. They are infiltration labor forced teachers to quit when they
unions and student groups.
tr.ed to teach courses prescribed
About T.noo of the St .000 students by the government. They have
in private Chinese high schools staged "sit-in" strikes or refused
(orm the hard core ol resistance to attend classes.

The government. wlUch pay* for to aee that it ia.
part of the Initruotioo, feels Eng­
Marshall's young regime also la
lish and principles o' democracy being plagued by spreading indus­
must be taught But Marshall and
his minis’ eri haven't found a way trial unrest which at times threat­
ens lo paralyze the city’s trans­
port and commercial life. As fast
as one walkout appears- settled,
another Is started. A general strike
list week brought out lest than a
seventh of the colony's labor force.
TOKYO. &lt;JN_Ameriean consular But the unions made clear they
officials at Hong Kong were re­ would try again.

U. S. Officials
Watching Border
For 3 Turncoats

school students ire openly defying
the police.
Businessmen in tjus crest Far
E aitem port nly—erne of the
world's busiest—fare the future
With undisguised fear end skepti­
ported today keeping a border
there kept a three-hour watch yes­
cism.
watch for three former American
The IT,oon flutes on Singapore
terday. Hong Kong dispatches said
soldiers who have grown weary of
T*!and .tre beginning In fear lor
a sunder watch would Jvc kept for
life in Communist China.
their li\es.
a "few more d^ya, if necesssry. '
Peiping radio said Saturday the
A storm of protest u rising swift­
The throe Americana are Wil­
three Americana — only two of
ly against the new Labor Front
liam A Cowart, of Dalton, Ga.,
whom want to come home — and
government headed by David Mar­
who asked to go to Japan: and
two Belgians had been given per­
shall. a Singapore attorney. Civic
Otho G. Bell, of Olympia, Wash.,
mission lo leave China. The broad­ and Lewis W. Gnggs, of Jackson­
organization* and indr-kfuals are
cast give no time or plac^ for ville, Tex., both of whom want to
demand.n? that industrial unrest
their departure. H said merely go to the Vnitcd Styles.
and lavbreaking be curbed lest
they would leave when "all neces­
th.i rubber and tin metropolis be­
sary arrangements" have . been
comes "a lawless City."
U. 5. fire losses In 18S4 were
completed.
.
Of (he city's 1 167.000 people,
JI70.9|J,000 compered to 1903,810,000 are Chinese. Marshall. with
Hong turns is Lhe i/sual jvxnt d JOO.OOO in 1953 and *784,953,000
an e-e tn elecUmia four years
exit far Westerners leaving Red in 1352, says the National Board
hence, is rcluetant to hit' trouble­
China. The American consulate of F in Underwriters.
makers hard-and mast of them
are Chinese He says now 1* the
W A SH IN G T O N (*P)— P resident Eif.enhower tod ay ar­
time fer "nursing" rather than
whipping the studcnU who. siding ranged to sipn Into law the hill j i v i n j him the new ta r iffWith strikers, have spearheaded euttlnj; pow er he asked— one o f the top m easures o f his
rioting the hnmle demonstrations 1955 legislative program .
against the governrent.
The hill extends the 21 year old reciprocal trade agreemnnls law for three y a rt. U» June
M. lOSg, and permits the President reductions or other concessions.
to cut tariffs up to S per cent la The United Stales must use up the
each of those years m negotutlng first * per rant reduction authority
THn STATE OF FLORIDA TO
TRANK nONOFT.HO. PULLMAN for similar concessions from other in th» year starting July l, or it
&gt;2' *„ STATV-TRUNT HOTEL. countries.
will lapse. The same la true in
THLNTON. NEW JCRIEVl
A rwurn O n p l t l n ' for divorce
It is the first new grant of power each of the two succeeding years.
b s v l r c t . * n f l l . J * , . i l n r t y o u |n
In addition, the measure per­
l/&gt; reduro import duties since 1043,
t h « Clri-uii r o n r i in »n /j f o r fs.mip.")' Coii'ity, Florid*, by KCI.LIK and also is Ihc longest extension mits the President to reduce to
KATHRYN DONOFCpO, th» rbort of the law la a decade.
.V) per cent of value all tariffs
ri'lf. ef " hlch |. N'KLI.IC KATHPJN DONOTCRO. P I « I n M f f. v*
In its basic essentials, the bill now shave that figure.
TRANK DONOTERO. p*r*nit»n». contains the authority which Eisen­
Shut prrtrn l* *re tn rnnumni
oti to »iip »»r sod fils your w rll- hower originally asked Iasi year.
DEES CAUSE JAM
*n d r lr o ir r h .r .ln on or b rfors However, when his propositi ran
l o k g b r a n c h , N. J. ftP) —
th* : “rd day of Julv, a D nis,
or ol hr r* |, n S D*rr** t*ro CoRfso- into resistance In the Republican- Thousands of bees swarmed over
ao -Mil 1» rn irrrd a t iln r l you.
To* 1 „r fo r d
H rrsld Is 4**1,- controlled Congress, he sent word Mrs. George Richter's car, Pfrkcd
es*»d ** s nra’fpa prr o f nrntrel he would settle then for a simple on Broadway yesterday, Nohody
clreulsilon In whirh this citation
knew where they rama from. Traf­
tX sll br fiubllihrd onrr r t -h wash one-year extension without new
fo r four conrcputlv* « -.» k *
powers to rut tariffs. That is what fic jammed. Crowds gathered. Mr*.
WITVLrH mv bind and offlcl.l
Richter, afraid to mova tha ear,
»rsl of ih* r|rrk of lbs oircuTl Congress voted last year.
got a rummons for overtlma park­
To irl. on (Sir tbs Jfilh day ot
A
lengthy
fight
preceded
passage
J ura, a D. tssi.
of the bill this year, with Demo­ ing. Finally, her impatience con­
it ' O. P. ItsrndoR
Clrrk of |h* circu it Court crats providing the President more quering her fear, tha drove sway.
S c m ln o U
County, Florid*
support than did members of his What happened to the SeeaT "Tha/
Just flew off," aha said.
{la rk N n *v«| *n d . Jr.
own party on some key votes.
/ ( l o r n r v at Law
The provisions which the Presi­
1’ O b
‘ e* tin, Mnrnrd. Florida
In 1054, tha natural incressa In
AMornay for Plaintiff
dent liked were voted substan­
tially Intact, although the Seoate population of tha United States
K I I T ir n TO D E F E N D
To- JeKcraon Davla U D,i Fairs wrote In several provisions de­ was 2,000,000 and the total in­
ctnih. c/o Darrell Talrrloih,
_ . . ............D oncrease,
Including
immigration,
eral Dtllvary, Andrew* County. signed to assure American in­
was 2,130,000.
Teas*
dustry
of
g
r
e
a
t
e
r
safeguards
_ Veil— Jefferaon Devla CJ.p.)
Falrrlrth. Defendant In (hi* aylt. against cheap imports. Final pow­
*r* hereby rot if led lhal null In ers remain In the hands of the
divorce has been Inatltuled annlnal
you by your wife, the Plaint Iff. chief executive, and the White
Barbara Taircloih Full te benun House accepted the changes.
in ' ih
lh« Circuit Court. Ninth ClrEisenhower told Congress in ask­
cult fienunnle
yl# County. rtnrlda.
FlorU
ritual* In Sanford. Florida. Tnu ing tor the bill that broadened
are rrnulred In file your nleAdtnr
and or anawer to the null In tha world trade ia essential to build
abov* Court and file a ropy thorn. up the economic strength of the
i
“J
Of upon Lerlrr Harrle. Attorney
for Ih* Plalntirr, at hit nfflren free world. Opponents argued that
rluate ai 111 P Main (I, Orlan­ some segments of Ameririn in­
do. Florida, on or before July
if, MIS or a desref pro ronlaaao dustry already have been seriously
w in b» entrrrd acalnat you and damaged by choap imports.
Ih* rat* will proreod it part*.
1955 Chevrolet Delaixe 4-door
The Stale Department Is expect­
Company
Wltnaea my hand and seal this
teth day of June, 1M I. a* tTlerk, ed to begin at once In plan for
Clrouli Court.
Hrmlnnl* County.
Fully aqulpp*d; new car fuarmnlea
Demon*trator
an Internationa] conference at
Florida
O P„ H 'rn don
which 30-odd nations will negotiate
. *1 I
*• . . 1
Circuit Court Clark.
new agreement! Involving tariff
(Real).

Ike Set To Sign
Tariff Bill Today

in which ha had an accident."
Miss O'Hara't attorney William
A. Dues said tLat Price was in­
formed last week that he could
visit the child at the private school
she attends. But when he called
there the child refused to tee him,
Duce said.

HOLLYWOOD (Tv—Actrers Msure*n O'Hara has flatty denied her
former husband's accusation that
she. haa been "openly living and
consorting" with a wealthy Mex­
ico City buainassman.
And, through her attorney, »he
added a few charges of her own.
Tha charges against tha redhaired actress were made yester­
day when Willis m H. Pnce, New
York TV producer, filed a Super­
ior Court affidavit in which he
sought full custody of thei ■II-yearold daughter Bronwyn Bridget.
In K ’ Vice said he “ was in­
formed arid believes" his farmer
wife went to Mexico City in 1953
and 1954 to see one Enrico Parra,
described as a married man with
two grown daughters.
Pfice . and Miss O'Hara were
diva;rod in 19S3. Price aikod that
the court hold the Irish-born
beauty In contempt for violating
the conditions under which she ob­
tained custody of the girl and that
the child be turned over lo him.
He agld he bad been denied visita­
tion rights granted at the divorce.
Through her a t t o r n e y , M’ vs
O'Hara denied the charges of mis­
conduct and said that Bronwyn
had visited with Price within the
peat year sod that Price " pro­

be ia not living in her house and
never bis. Price had charged that
Par-i has been living with the
actress in her home and that he
has been "seen (here at all hour*
of the day and night."
________________________________ ■J

NOW
HOWING

M W k M M .M k U i r o

2 COLOR
CARTOON
&amp;

PAR. NEWS

FEATURES
1:16
3:19
5:22
7:25
8:2S

ANNIVERSARY

Legal Notice

r

i

II

Due To Our New Car Volume This Month, We Are
Continuing This Tremendous Sale... Don't Miss It!

B BSS

$600

E R » * ?

stock No. 631 b 1946 Mercury Coupe

1954 Chevrolet DeLuxe 2-door Sedan

TUESDAY-THRU -THURSDAY
W e O ffer
ill
All

$

PARTS

AND

..

l

T O BE
TO

H APPIER IN

*

.

★

LABOR

MORE

M ONEY

V A C A T IO N

TRIP,

H AVE

...

*

*

$1188

■i*.l v* an * 195j Ford V-8 2-door Sedan
MFoi
Ford Convertible

stock Ne. tso a

A Vi
r^ U an

YO U R

FORD

REPAIRED D U R IN G T H IS S E N S A T IO N A L

5 5 IKSUV Util THURSDAY5 S

mi

IARGAIN SALE!

MORRISON, lee
-.I

f
■ - *• r-

-----fra-*

stock No. 753 A 1952

Pontiac 4-door Sedan

Local owner. Worth more than

$888

Stock No. R-4

1950 Pontiac 1-door Sedan a . z ,
Fully Equipped! Excellent Condition \ S Q Q

Stock No. 727 A

1950 Packard 4-door Sedan

&gt;tock No. Tit

Good Tnuuportation

$555

Fully Equipped—Look at thin price

1947 Nash Ambassador 4-door Sedan
^

3 3

•; . „

_ 1951 Ford Custom 2-door Sedan

Stack Na. T3S B 1200 under priced at

stack Na* 743 A International Cab &amp;
Truck

$ 6 6 6

Chassis 1-ton

$588

Dnal Wheels

i i r i K . M i l Chevrolet 2-Ton Stake Body
3

for week

$1188

For Your Convenience, O ur Used Car Lot W ill Remain
O p en Until 9:00 O'clock Each N ight This W ee k

AND
YOUR

$789
$647

t r

FOR

$288

a T W P u ifk W v iiM ffr d T o p

luck «•* w&gt; A KqdWaad Heeler. Tkje won’t 1^41

Y O U R FORD

H AVE

v v

f(nek No, i l l A

TUESDAY-THRU-THURSDAY
dr

Slock No- 60S A 1953 Chevrolet DeLuxe 4-door Sedan
Naw Hint. Naw Ttrea, Rawer Steer- a a m A a
in* Buck tao lew at

Sedan

stock No. 675 A 1951 Oldemobile Super 88 4-door Sedan
Beautiful Black Finish. Local Owncr

gm*

$ 1 3 2 3

W iles Work On Fojd Products
U Dose Is Our Shop

★

m jr
^ 1 2 0 0

stock No. 748 B 1949 Ford 4-door
Lota of mile* left-

Slock No. 703 A 19ft Chevrolet Belair 2-door Sedan
Baev u! Two Tana Hint, (nogl a s a a a

ON

FORD

Stock No. 650 A PowtffUdo—Naw Paint 9500-00
(radar)ricad at

$1088

1 0 %
$
Cash Discount

BOTH

$188

Rood transportation

T-T-T

Sedan

•

.
-

i&lt; '
■'

i
-

LLER MOTOR SALES
HOLLERS

: . •'»

A1

5
1 ■ -

—

�1' - \

r

i

"TPeetfe?

^m tford

Shop and Save
In Sanford

F ir**1.- rt'Miir,

or iHtiM&lt;*r*hn» Pr*
o»je

I n**

n%*r

north

Mttih;

•hon r f i r l*»f

T H U R S D A Y , JU N E 2.1, lO.Vv

SA N FO RD . FLORIDA.

Established IW1V

Vs'ivl.ilfH

Perm

ntj^irp*

in Afternoon* mrf •• r # v # n -

*r»-wn

AN W n fP B N T &gt; K N T DATI.T H Y .W S r k r W
VOLUM E X L V f

meUnow!

through F riH *t ; t(*ttf*r*d ih n » » m

l-rn.ned Wire

portion

m if

at*

►r«ttrr*4

her#.

NO.

21 &lt;

DeLand Or Miami M ay Get Franchise
**

• •»

DeLand or Miami may take Ihe Florida State Lrxsue
franrisa off the hand* of the Sanford baseball organization.
It appeared today.
A spokesman for th* organization said Del and "ha'*
•hrut *11.000 nr 121.000'* m it* baseball fund and "if it
doesn’t tet a franehiia now, it may not jet one next year."
.Miami ha* been hiddina furiouily for a (ranrhise, tint
haa not had any luck in yetting one. The door mar be open
now.
I orrvhadouing the fold-no of lha toeal orir.rnirat ion **■the low allendanee at la«t night'* home gar.ie. Onlv 31" fa "1'
turned out and gale receipt! totaled $165.35. The gloom "**
erident.

The situation "111 he di*rusted hr memhrra nf tha organif.-ilinn at a meeting nhirh "ill probahlv follow tonight •
came. lnl«»s a miruele happen*, June 10 "ill see Ihe end of
ihe &gt;an(oid t'ardiltal*.
lust «hal heln michl He forlhrnmint from lh« SI. I.nui*
Cardinal* «a » not known today, and the oreanitatinn eonttnned eflortr to ront.iet George Silvey Cardinal farm director for
C'lav* It baseball.
“ H r'vr had a telephone eall hi for Sileev «inre Mondaa.’ *
Ih*&gt; spokesman reported, "hut " f 'r r had no lurk in rrarhing
him.''
p ilir *

i* in tnho»nn C ity. Venn

Del.and, **hirh ha* plated In Ihe league nn gntil thia

"T h a first I knew about li - a * whew 1 read H ha tha
Herald V vsle id a v ." kr.rfer -aid.
Me .a id he liidn’ i thiol, Miami - a * in iete.lrrt In Ihe rloh .
and he at.n ruled ool i*r a large ealrn l the p o .a ib llllt o f fie .
la n d la k 'n r narr the fr a o th i.r ,
" I f Mel anil « i * lo lr r e .le d in il." he def lated. **lhea
"o u lrln ’ t have lei il e m the flral plare. would I h e * ? ''
Ilrfore letting Ihe rloli he laketi nor i»f Ion o, K rider
•»id the lenglle w ould exp lore the rhaOrr of anolher loral
•&gt;r c a o i-a lio li - c lr lr p the rein .. He .rented in think there waa
a gottd po«*iliilita of till* In open &gt;ng
II S a n ford poll* m il. ihe Iragoe »&lt;lt h . •r In hr redt|r .d In
«t» •Inlaw, h inter .a id Mi.I » h it h o lh rr rloh would he taken
o o l of plav waa not known

year, » a a eiew ed •« lha lo g ics rlta to taka m e e the fra n ehiae. “ They can't lore muth thi* je a r ,” Ihe *piikr»m «n ds
elared.
T h e spokesm an attributed ihe H.-msI a llen danee Ihi*
•ea*nn In Ihe poor standing o f the S a n fo id rto'i arol char te d
that lh* S t. Lout* C ardinal* didn't com e through with »
firsldiv|*ion tram a* ther prom ised the* " o o lil.
"In a lea d o f being i.a Ihe first division, Ihe clu b lias been
nest to 1**1 p la ir roost o f the lime.'* he de fla te d .
le a g u e pre*idenl John h iid r r told *ltie t i m i d to d s '
that he hadn't been otftriaM v nnlilied h* the S a n ford rlo b lh *t
it plannrd to quit nor had he been in rilrd in meet » i l h club
o ffic ia l* .

City Council Minutes Provide Interesting Glimpse Of Past

aiiford Had Troubles In Old Days, Too
ijv

offi'e a* Felice Headquarter*.
In ronlraat lo Ihe eily’» pre­
sent-day financial .lain*. It I*
recorded that aa nf January t,
ISHU, ihe city had a bank bal­
ance of M.tmj.Itt. In addition,
Ihe r&lt;ty wax Indebted lo Ihe
First National flank for *2,P00.
City official* apparently con­
sidered their pny adequate even
tnough an ordinance presen’ ed
on November If. I8SI railed for
a salary of $100 per annum for
the mayor, and Hie city Inspector
magnificent sum of
ip o very well preserved. Chief drew the
Will lama hut them on file in hi* forty dollar* a monlh. IniTdcnMy.
h ose

Herald I'cnlurp Writer
Sonic interest in if, and off&gt; n nmuHititr. incidents in
Sanford
history
are contiiiinil in several old books
nf City ( tinned minutes now
in the possession of Police
Chief Hoy Williams.
Thu minutes, which rover
Ihe latter part of the 1800’s
•ire written in lotijt hand and

Governor
Studies
Flogging
TALLAHASSEE (/l1)— Gov.

*

Court Battles
Feature Strike
PLANT CITY (/F)-Legnl battle*
over court injunrliona began de­
veloping today In the phosphate
strike which waa beact with an
air of uncatncsi.
Three anonymoua calls were
made to the Lakeland Ledger yes­
terday and the caller threatened
to blatt the Seaboard Air Line
Railroad if H moved any phos-

Strolling
In Sanford
£
Tha lummer recreation program
- for Lyman School and ririnity will
hegin at 0 a. m. July 11. Coach
Jim Payne will be in charge and
will be assisted by Mlaa Hetty
Lou Carden. All youngsters ere
urged to attend as a very enter­
taining program haa been arrang­
ed and planned for Utie season.

Grand Jury Opens
Two-Day Session
The Seminole Circuit Court
grand Jury opened a two-day aeaaiun today. Rtate's Attorney Mur­
ray Overstreet le assisting the
jury.
The jury wrill consider such res­
et aa that of William O. Me Ken
dree,
Paola,
charged
with
murder in the ehootln* of R.
Keith Cochran, Jacksonville, at
Annrtta'a Bar and Grill, Juna 4.
W. Emeat Bette waa named
furrman of the Jury and B. E.
Aiken Jr., was appointed assistant
foreman. Others members aret
George Mannas, D. C. Howard,
Allen T. Ball, Hugh Braddy, H.
L- Duhart, C. G. Hart* A. B.
Coplin, Richard H. lvers, Taylor
Rountree, Harry H. Bloods worth,
Joe T. Bsggerly, Anthony P. Marcenrlle, Roger Croeker, Car! Amoxa, Raymond BUlamy and Clar&lt;
•nee Henderaon.
QUEEN EUZABKm BAILS
LONDONUT— The Queen Ella*
Beth sailed today for New York,
carrying I.31S passenger* end
Bopes of the Funsrd lint of braakB g a three week seam(t*'l atrike
~ it has crippled Britain's luxury

s r-^ -4 P

pbate from strikebound plants.
Officials of the International
Chemical Worker* Union (AFI.)
said they bellveJ the rails were
made by a clunk, and offered their
aaalsUnco In tracking them down.
A third court Injunction went
Into effect yesterday, dissolving
the picket tinea at Coronet phos­
phate plant here. Walter L. Mit­
chell of Atlanta, international
vice president of the union, intii-d
the pickets off the gates but said
the union would go to court over
the Injunction.
Mitchell aLo sold attorney*
are preparing legal fight* against
art other injunction vhirh tc*•Irams union member* from inter­
fering with movement of Sea­
board trains Into tho Coronet
plant.
Mitchell said the chemical work­
ers and railroad brotherhood*
would attack litis injunction be­
cause It has the effert of ortb rIng railroad workeri lo cross
picket lines.
•
In anolher development, Solici­
tor Paul B. Johns-on of Hillsbor­
ough County questioned
seven
strikers «t Coronet who took part
In tha violence Tuetday v-hen one
striker wu* shot in the leg and a
deputy beaten over the head.

The governor paid neither
he nor Sheriff Hugh Lewis

Black Marketeer
Found Murdered
chest.
There were reports that the 48year-old Koenig had been allotted
some buokmskmg telephones by a
race betting syndicate and these
were liter taken away, causing
him to c o m p l a i n of being
•i bused
Koenig on Dec. 21, 191.1, was
arrested w i t h five other St.
Louisans by federal agents who
sclird $25.0uo tn whisky destined
for "black market” channels. At
the time ho was active in Repub­
lican politics In St. Louis.
He pleaded guilty to the whisky
charges and was sentenced to U
months imprisonment but placed
on probation on a plea of Uw
New York office of the federal
Aioohul Tex Uoit

..

Judge And Wife
Still Believed
Kidnap Victims

white men.

Body Stuffed In Cor TrunF

EAST ST. LOUIS, rU* JT—Pollca
found the body of j. Fred Koenig,
convicted black marketeer and
onetime St. IauAs politician,
stuufed in the trunk of his new
Cadillac yesterday.
Ha apparently hail been stain
elsewhere and then Jammed into
the trunk.
Koenig's slaying followed by Hi­
ll* more than a month the May ’ 7
shouting here in which (he cars
of Bimey T. (Chick) Hsvcy, Jr.
and Kenneth Mueller were riddled
with bullets. Mueller was wound­
ed in the shooting.
Havey and Mueller, friend* of
Koenig, IB, were former associates
of Frank Buster Woiltnan, an
«x-convict and reputed boss of the
rackets In the ares.
was shot in the head and

-

ca.-tc o f a Live Onk Negro
tobacco farmer who reported
In: won flopped by a band of

of Suwaneo County were satisfied
with tho investigation so far and
lhal (urliier inquiry would be
made.
I.oxir conferred with Collins
yesterday and left with hint a
written report of Ids findings,
latter tho governor said ha had
received assurance from State
Ally William Randolph Slaughter
that he vvuuhl aid.
Lewis said Richard Cooks, 35,
father of nine children, reported
hr* wax flogged the night of June I
by a group of white men who came
resting him, but that tie wasn’t
to his haute mi the prrlcttre vf “ r*
ahie to Identify the voice* of any
of the men.
Collins said Lewis told hint
Cooks ws* of Ute opinion the rnen
who bea* him wrre "farmers who
were dissatisfied with his work ”
ThTere is a light labor situation
in that North Florida farming
area at this time.
Cooks reported to the Sheriff
that the men railed at his house,
pul a sack over his head and drove
him to a spot believed U&gt; be the
bark of the .Suwnnec River where
they flogged him, ,
"I have r d n l Lewis to confer
with the state attorney and he
expects the two of them to mske
a mon exhaustive lnv*rtigstinn
and a more complete report,’’ Col­
lins said.

la gex noutd rnmr In its from | FirM if aft, lliry drew tip an feet wide, laid eroysu*vs on S
xurh annexalmn. hut addllional old,i.ante prohibiting hog. frmn -In n g crs nf 3vl v tilh m g "
expenses and harm iuoutd). . miming .*t large wilhm the town
A tew sears later, in tux,
He Iheirfore respectfully rrlimits
tills
ployed
In
be
a
Oise
Ihr
cits council dreidrd In branquesl that you dismiss said pe­
tition as largely unaiilhorirrd mote, no doubt, in Ihe light ot life Sanford esen more. Mnly
and against the positive wish Hie rising |* ue of pork
this lintr, they trl ihr property
ol. . . iMgnalurex nf petition
li s pe »i!i!r that Hie major's o w n e r * dn Ihe work, — — and
er»)."
wife yy.is splattered with mint
Muring Hu* fall of IKiP Hie while shopping on Firs I SI reel paj for It, loo! Il wax required
that everyone who owned pro­
council may have gotten the ink­ that fall, too, because the conn
ling that Florida was a future eil decided to put sidewalks along perty within the rily limit*
tourist attraction \i aov rate, both aides from Palmetto (to most plant shade Iter* In lha
they began a series of improve­ "hero Ihe minute* do not claboi- flout and on lh* aide* nf their
ment* to make the city more at- atn.) The walk* were It* he
Irnell* e

•'planked with I Inch plank, aix

lots.

Eisenhower Laughs
At 2nd Term Plea

HISTORY IS IN THE HANDS or Chief of Police Itny Wil- ColliiH pays ho is ilolorminotl
a Hams, shown taming through one of several old book* of to not the real farts and arc
* City Council minutes. (Photo by Claude Hose)
that justice in done in tht
Vdr- x'■f *■*'

Ihe inspector hat! to act a. Mili­
tary tnapeclm, *tieet eninmlssinner end a member of Ihr po­
lice forte.
The treent annexation proh
trm lx h) no mean* the firxt
time Ihe quextlon hax enmr up
Inratly. Ill IMS, the City 4'nun
til reeelved a petition from xrveral eitlrenx of the Fast (ieorgeInwn area which opposed the
annexation of their xertion.
Il xaid In part: "We are nage
earner* and Unit our tnrome
barely auffirlenl lo meet our
dally eipenaexT Ne real advan-

KXI'EI.LED by the Communixt
government In I9IB, Simeon II.
Bulgarian king-in-eiilr, read* a
prnrlsinallon at a reception In
Madrid on Ihe occasion of bis
coming of age. The proclama­
tion, addressed lo the Bulgarian
pwple, pointed on! that Simeon
nevrr abdicated and that he "till
maintains rights la Urn throne.
(International.)

Deputy Sentenced
In Assault Case
DELAND Av- Former Deputy
Sheriff Jack Ssfir wax aenlenced
today to pay a fine of $100 nr serve
30 days in jail for striking a woman
prisoner in her Jail cell.
County Judge Thomas N. Tsppy
also imposed a suspended threemonth jail term contingent on
"your future good behavior."
Safir was eonvicted of an assnult
no Mr*. Kva Dreggorv, 42, of l»el,and. when she was a prisoner in
the rnunly jail Ma- 2* She lertifjed he entered her ret) and "slug­
ged me four or five timri." She
was hospitalized briefly,
Safir resigned as a deputy after
the Vnluvia County Commission be­
gan an inquiry into the beaUngi.
IIx fmdingx were turned over U&gt;
Slate Ally. 5!array Sams.

League All-Stars
To Be Selected
SANFORD (Jh— Sports writers
and broadcasters will plrk Hie
Florida Slate Lrague all-star tram
by July 1.
John Krider, league president,
yesterday asked the writers and
broadcasters In league cities to
east their baliulx by that date for
four pitchers and two players at
each other posifon
The team will meet the leading
Orlando Flyer* at Orlando July 14.
BOMBER CRASHES
FAIRBANKS, Alaska'*- A Navy
patrol bomber rraihed on remote
St. Lawrence Island In the Bering
Sea yesterday and Air Force fliers
reported they spotted four injured

WEST PALM BEACH
tiewaixls reached tllR.Vst today hot
authorities apparently were no
nearer a solution of tha Chitling
worth mystery Hi an they were
when the prominent Circuit Judge
and his wife disappeared nine days
ago.
T ie Vanguaid lluh, a Negro or­
ganization. added $’&gt;00 to the re
ward money jevterday after the
Broward County Bai As&gt;n. put up
$5,000. Tie State Cabinet previ­
ously put up $50,000, the family
$25,000 and Ihe remainder came
from organizations and individu­
als.
So far at cmihl be drlcimmcd
it waa the largest sum ever of­
fered f o r two missing person*.
When Joseph F. Crater, a Justice
nf the Supreme Court in New York
vanished on Aug *, 1911. ■ reward
of $10,000 was offered lor Ins re­
turn.
Authorities still Iran on the
theory that Hie couple may have
been kidnaped, basing the opinion
on the finding of two partly used
roll* of adhesive tape, lliry bclirvr
It may hive been used lo bind
and gag Judge (.’. E. C-hillingwortii,
58; ami his wife, Marjorie, 57.
Sheriff John Kirk »«*d mvesligalora are still working on a rlurthe nature of whirh he declined
tn divulge—which could Irad U)
identification of povvible kidnap­
ers.
Kirk said U»! night that blond
stains found at the scene were
of ths t a m e type "A " as Mrs
ChlUingworth’a. A record of her
blood typo waa obtained from
among tho«# who had donated
blood to the armed forces during
the Korean War.

Specialists Vote
For Continuance
Of Polio Program
WASHINGTON OB— A panel of
medical •Xpert* voted 1-2 today
to continue the present program
of inoculating youngsters with Hie
Salk polio vaccine.
The vote was taken at a meet­
ing of the medical men before a
House Commerce subcommittee.
In addition to those present and
voting, there waa a letter from
Dr. William Mcd . Hammon of the
Univerady of Pittsburgh, who was
not present, favoring a halt to the
program. Counting M, the vota waa

.

-

&gt; j v * , ~ q*7‘ ***y

■ ■ •* - - •

Tennessee Governor Speaks

Jaycees Request
Full Senate Probe
Of Sports Crime

Continues
His Tour
RUTLAND, V t (A P ) —
Ureniilcnt Ki enhovver trnvel*
into New Hampshire today
after laughing o f f a jovial
pica— veil h a .xerion.x nmlrrlone— t itnl he seekx a second
term.

ATLANTA — kT i Melt tfiitox to llu* Titli rimittnl conven­
It was in New ILunp.xliire'g
tion nf Ilie li. S, .In nine t’ linmluT nf t nniitimt' Unlay ciilleil 1**."»—piesidi nl ml jtfiinaty flint
for It foil Semite i H’ CHIt Kill it III (il (Time tn - |ioi 1h
With ltd voiced (i|&gt;|limit ion, tin Jaycee.w ii|i|ii’o\ oil .t re- he Rot an early boost toward
auliitinii ileploiiiiK the activities of piiite.-minmil fixers and the While Hou c,
gambler-

Holiday Inn Losr
In Morning Fire

r.isrmiower on a lour of north­
Elsenhower,

Ihe action w .i * t.ikn, shortly ern N*'w England, arrangi-d to fly

( the doleg.*l*'- he i cd t V o o e - to Concord, N. II , this afternoon
*&lt;■*■* (iov Frank (lemi-itl urge
inrreaM'd participation in puhl.o (or jo add iv ss from the Me pi of
the Stale Capitol.
A fir* this m orning eom p leia lv by young men.
lie
arrived tn Rutland from
J.iycet - a lso app n'vetl resolu ­
dextinyisl ths H oliday Inn Ior*l**d
Washington je-lrrday. At lh* fair­
tion* w hich:
on H ighw ay 17-92.
Entlor-rd ,m active military' rr ground* hr told a crowd estimated
It a pparently sta rtn l In the i d - ■a-rve ot J.iaal.UKi .t- pidpo.cd Ity li) police at 15,000 Ih.d \incur a
chen and modi- headway through |'r* uh id Eim' iiIiowi-f , tirgi-l an -Hway* wit! extend ' the olivo
tiinni of ili, huililing wlitui it w t end lo move* toward putitle de branch ot [■ ate "to all who teJI
ilitcnvcri'd by a motorist gotri.' velopmeiil ol Niagara iniwer; call Like U in imne-ty and Integrity."
to Sanfoid. Tho motorist had to e&lt;| for adoption ol the world calen- ILil he ilre--cd tlut the Unde.f
awaken Hirer fnmilip* In fore
u d.if, requested im re.i-ed lugtiway ( Stales al-o intemlv to remain
phone could he reached to rail lint i-&lt;m-lrucllon on all govenuiietitol i xtnmg.
Longwood Firo Dept.
Irvei* with cMipliaMx on expres*
Tic plea that the !’ ro*!denl *» ek
Lotlgwoud’* Dept responded Slid ways and tiill toad-; commended ,i second term w,i* voiced bv Sen.
pumped from tin* uouihy Lha, toil Mr. Jonas Salk lor tlcwdopnicni of \iken lit VC), who in mtioJucinx
dun to 4hr- headway the fin- had tile |ai|lu van me; oppo-ed pen I . nliuwir referiixt in him a* "a
made they wrie iiitahir to save the ' on- lo n-leran- toi noii vrrvtre part-time farmer." The allusion
hiiildins*. Allamotiti Spring- mol mruiii-.l di-alt I tie- and moved w i» lo In* farm al Cell)-burg,
Casselberry Fir* It* pi- ale* *&lt;- (nr (hitiler di -eininalii n &gt;&gt;f m I ' i \\rtli j broad untile, Aiken
aisled a* did the Florida Forrest hn mat ton aboui llmiver tomm added
isslnn i* pt rlv
Ranger*.
it tv mi eatne-H hope that h«
.will remain a port time farmer
for some lime In ronie—say
il mind five or six jears "
That brought s b.g round nf
applause Aiken then went on in
*«y that much pragma Inward
ta-ling Win Id |.earn has been mad*
under Eisenhower.
Eisenhower hugtixl heartily but
in hiv talk a moment lalrr gas a
not the tligliest lent of his 1954
B* TltP. ASSOCIATED FIIF-SS school* propoted for resolution.
plans.
Maryland slate Irarliet* colleges
Th« resolution was Maryland's
Within an hour after he left lha
have bowed to rneiul Irlegratiuli first statewide ham-hinetit ol tiie
but Ulteranrca ftom the Deep color bar in schools. College* af­ Hag-bedecked platform he waa
South continued the theme of a fect. d am former while schools casting happ.ly for Irout in fastfight to the finish ovrr the U. 8. at Fiostburg, Kahshury and Tow- running Furnace Brook near hit
Supreme (outt‘a ruling on the *on, and Negro schools at Bowie overnight headquarters at Moun­
tain Top Inn, Chittenden, li*
anil Baltimore.
touchy question.
Ami a liuuii-i in lh* National
At a three-state rally of mem­ caught three in about 75 minute*
Assn, for the Advancement of bers of white Citizens Councils lint decided they were too small
Colored People , ailed for compute last night at helma, Ala., tho L. to keep
school integration "by not iatar S. Supreme Court justices who
Last night, at a dinner at Chit­
than . • • -September 1955."
handed down the school segrega­ tenden, Vermont'* Gov. Joseph B.
The Maryland State Board of tion ruling were called ''fawning Johnson named the President
Educatiun and the Board of Trus­ politicians" and a Mississippi cjr. colonel commandant o! the Green
tees of the teacher* colleges met coil judge recommended their im­ Mountain Boy* Brigade.
at Baltimore yesterday and unan­ peach rnent.
Ethan Alton, Vermont hero of
imously adopted a resolution de­
Former Gov. Herman Talmadgs tire Revolutionary War, headed tha
claring that racial segregation in of Georgia said the nine justices brigade in (host days. Johnson
the five teacher* "it hereby abol- "are not fit to empty the waste told the guests—about 7$ warn
ishwd." Dr. Thomas G. Pullen Jr., baskets" of past Supreme Court prevent—the unit la being, pa­
avyw lkuiidw
&gt;J
Uaialand justice* whs upheld aegugation activated
ss honorary bngada.
s ft*

Maryland Bows
To Integration

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— '

r

See what we mean by Royal Tfelcome Service”

i

(you’ll like the friendly service, too)
V .
■V

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 of new
friends. He's doing it now by giving the best 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"!

'1
f t ;

!

’ N

.
N ow , m ore than
ever, you c a n . . .

l

‘ .

�Weeffier

Shop and Save
In Sanford

r j rll&gt; tlnudv through Tuesday
with few scattered morning show*rrs nn southeast rn.nt and srattcrnl aftorn-in ihnnitrr showers csst
erntrat anil evtrrtnf south portions.
AN INDKDKNIIF.NT OAI1.Y

V O I.I'M K X I.VI

N E W SP A P E R

SANFORD. F I jOHUIA. MONDAY, JUNK 20, 19.%.%

Established 1908

Associated

Prr*w I .eased

Nn. 21.1.

Wirt*

Defense Program Faces Senat
Today's Interesting Personality

Stamps? He's Got Lots Of 'Em
★

IIj CLAUDE HOSE
Herald Feature Writer
'

' V S - - -

: r* v .

l

*

V

i

:

ii

RTIIX A MYSTERY Is the file n(
Judge Curtis E. ChlUingyvnrlh,
|M, anil his wife. Marjorie, ST,
who disappeared from their cott*
a&lt;e al West Palm lleach.
(International)

★

★

★

Rewards
Continue
To Climb
WEST PALM BEACH (VP)
—Rewards for the return or
f o r information concerning
the-fute of Judge and Mrs. C.
E. Ch Illingworth totaled at
£nst $43,000 today but the in­
vestigation of their disappear­
ance has apparently made lit­
tle progress.
Members of the wealthy
Judge's family last night offered
935,000 for the return of either
ut both for "information resulting
In the arrest ami ronvietion of
the party or parties responsible
for their disappearance."
A The announcement camo from
Loren I). Mmon, a Palm Bearh
attorney who it the judge'a bro­
ther-in-law;
and George
W.
Wright, the misalng couple'* *onin-law.
Sheriff John Kirk, meanwhile,
aaid the five-day investigation of
the couple’* disappearance “ la at
• standstill."
“ We’ra out of clue*," he said,
“ This Is a difficult case hut wa're
J*ill scratching around for new
lead*."
A tractor drawn plow turned up
the aandy bench at Chllllngworth'a
ocean front horns at Manalapan
yesterday without uncovering any­
thing to indicate how they van­
ished, Kirk laid.
Ha aaid hla officer* are now
trying to determine who bought
t\.o roll* of adhesive tape which
were found at the home. He aaid
A e man from whom the tape w*»
bought could not remember who
bought them.

Local DAV Unit
To Receive Award

t
\

ir
5
.

A national citation of ths Dis­
abled American Veterans will be
awarded the Sanford Chapter No.
An for surpassing its membership
Ruots for 1K4-U. As of Juae 1 It
had 33 members.
Judge Alfred L. English, Na­
tional Crmmander of the DAV,
commended local Chapter officials
In a message received here to­
day from the organisation'! na­
tional headquarters in Cincinnati.
The DAV nationally seeks to reach
a goal of 110,000 mamben by
nest July and his reached a new
.national record lor the 14th roo•dSeutive year.
■ED FLEET ATTACKED
TAIPEI, Formosa UR— National­
ist China anooaoced today Ms war­
planes attacked a fleet of
than 400 Chlneoo Comm uniat veaaris about 11 mile* from Mats*,
a Nationalist islted, and aanfc
■son than &gt;0. The vernal* pre­
sumably were wppty convoy.
Jhis was tha Untest number of
Wad vessel* yet

He has nr record of how ninny
stamps he has collected in the past
t!'l years, but estimate* that 150,000 or more have been in his pos­
session at one timo or anothr. Hi*
collection at present is worth sevu.l thousand dollars ami he has
tne bulk of it in safe keeping.
"If you’re botn a collector,"
&gt;ays "Friday," who will eelelnate his 7Tlh birthday Wednes­
day, "you save everything. Take
tnosu tobacco lax slumps. Only a
foot would save those,"
Included in the portion of his
collection which he keeps in his
loom, in addition io both domestic
and foreign postage stamps, uru
federal tux stamps for alcoholic
beverages, cigar*, cigarettes, oleo­
margarine, and narcotics which
date back to nearly the turn of
,he century. He also''ha* scverul
coins but sold most of that col­
lection many years ago.
Every single issue of 1c, 2c and
3c stamp* printed since HHHI is in­
cluded in hi* collection and there
are very few other denominations
of which he does not have at least
a single one.
Nowadays he doesn’t buy a*
Many a* he used to but otill or­
ders a few sheets occasionally
front the American Philatelic
Agency in Washington, D. C. in
catlier day*, he was in the habit
of buying 10 sheet* of 60 stamps
etch evary time a new issue cam*
out. He ha* mud* no plan* for leav­
ing his collection to anyone when
nc pa***’* on- However, he adda
mat "my brolhrr will probably
gel it and no doubt he’ll throw it
away. Ho won’t know what's good
and what isn’t.’
” 1 had no particular reason for
starling In this craiy business,"
Friday relates, "Hut U all started
with thu Columbian Exposition
series In ’02. They put out a *era-s of them in 10 different de­
nomination* from 1c to |5 and 1
just said to myself, ‘Cues* 1 bet­
ter start savin’ a few stamp*’
and I’ve been at It ever since.
"Tlitce year* later, In 1806,
someone ’ stole three album* from
him, Including those original Co­
lumbia issue*, and ho was a little
oiscuuragvd. Hut, true collector
he was, he went right back and
started again.
The most valuable stamps ho
own* ale a rpecial souvenir sheet
of four uneancelled Austrian
stamp* issued In 1033 jn commemo­
ration of the International Phila­
telic Exhibition in Vienna. He
paid *5 for tha set and it is now
worth approximately |176. "Fm
holding for 1200 on them, and
(Continued On Page Eight)
RUB ARRIVES
TOKYO tft — The U. R. subma­
rine Pick err11 arrived In Yukosuka today lo begin her third low
01 duly In the Far East with the
U. 8. 7Ut Fleet.

mm

★

★

^ -* Ja T

i - i

^
~d —

r

.

r

Watch Out, Drivers Told

V

k V A S I I I .W .T O N ( V I — S u p
porter:* m' IV i's iilv n l I'i-o n h o w o r's ii* fi’tiso p n ig r n m ftu*t'il :i Im ftie in th e S e m ite t o ­
d a y mi e f fo r t - n f sn m e IV tu o r r n t s to e x p a n d a ir p o w e r f u r ­
t h e r and p ro v e n ! a cut b a ck in
th e g n in th 1 fnret*.!.
t 'p
fo r
ilr ii.- io n .
m ille r

S

c?

Cr

'iniltrd il,..Or that could tiling
i pa **agv *••••• by tonight, w i the

!V
l»u? flio ifriv f?
.f 11
••If.
Ifitirpr
ll * !
Cl ivllTUlpUE
w lio gel s f
in ja il!
money hill.
Sen. S y m u i’tlu n iD M.t l . fu rn i
This want ill: u i- r \\ i'll i i it! ' .[ i lorists toilny* by
• r si'irrln rj of the \ ir I'uin* in ( liir t it
:
&gt; an nll-ut effort.
’ IrnHi ■ v ■i
l!nv
the T iim in i Niliniiiististion. «u* In 1*00 that till fill
l.u lk y

* :t 1 .8 :U v .2 l, I3ii

il ■ ( n n

■
-

*prnrhrailiiu' what appeared •" I"'
i«.it mar tins j t . n ’* In.!.
M&gt; uphill til Ivr fm tilin ' in ii
Dry eeh lu ..l v n .
•'hiUliirv
i mid tin"Tile Police llep.it!
t Aililith.i nf nhnitt hi toilliuTi
si**ttn&gt;w in prevent u cntlinck of Nattuiial S ttll&gt; (‘nil
III
annul I2.IHK. m tin- manpower nf *»*rm
«|rivmtr
ir n Mifp \nn
tin Marino I ’mps lu-iwi-i-n iium H|lj*1ItHI Mill lilt? JilU ,'' i iiit-!r w ii
slid J iiiio dll uf next vent.
mitt* ‘:u&lt;!1 *TUU i$u.«tmm «lr &gt;1*1\4*M

2, ViliUlluii id nWul 2I&gt;it md IInn ■ Ik*
mt 4if nil 4"It! *4*!!?.. IMVt
:n prevent a slinilui toiluetiun of , .*..* 4*it11 •him 4’ ti ( I!t1J*!’'»a1it4M
t*i s Ut)'
8H,000 in lli« leiruhir Army,
th4i Binit 1
H»hl
«*f “iifi* nn«1 .4II4‘ .ln\
\v I
lars to «|hvi1 up prixliirUoil uf nitp n»t »*'*r Ihv VS4’i'k11tt*l **f 1l|4"
orwonle Jot fiytilor uirnnft.
''out l Ii,*'
Tim first two pinposat* n
I)
An n'Ti? IV- Ivt’U htil4jM-ml*' nt ut
b u io broil defeated in tile Appru- lilmle tin the parl uf drivel" I
priatiuns 4’niii sitit t i*i- I*v a 2-1 nun
Itutind In lend tu at *ident-, I liief
gin Normally tho Senat’ accept* Williams said. He pointed nut tluil
it- derMon*.
tirivet . must rtiioe tile mad with
Sen. Cluivvr (11 N M ', flour nmn- .nil oilier driver* nrnl witli p&gt; de*
TH IS IS NOT A DOST O F FIC E C L E R K , but ‘ Friday* lln m broking over a Hhcri o f 2110
16-cent apodal delivery stam ps printed in 1935 an a c o lle clo r’H item. T h e sheet 1* now n«ei for the luni-ure, was on Hie j l ( 1 | i f ||,..y*,,- loo iiiM-teiil
losing side in lloote tests but told i ,M )()|.|,
, „ lt y „ dup tin
worth about $1110. &lt;Photo by Claude Rone)
Die Senate Friday he now will the tdimildi'i mto*l of the time,
vote to uphold the committee tie they'ie inviting tumble.
pistons
(■minus.
.. . . . .
. ,
"Make
‘ Make cmnlesy
roortesy ymn code of the
hen SalV'nstall (It-Maas), fur(|l,
f rtlUj„ |)S
,„er chalnonn of the B«w»»e
fllu) ,,w, ywll*|| i... mti
Atmnl Snvirrfl ( oiumlttiM*, ua*
,
,,
v ri'lntrt! ulo'ii )o»n tup Ia
rijKH'll'il to Hill (liavctt lii ii|»|M&gt;a- |,nnl 4
* ' ,n
.
.
,
,
tv«r, «««• yuan n«JIVI* si V111li fl Wt*
inu mltHtiiinol yinra^f*.
.
.....
.
*
..........
f
t
Ll
lllllfWt* mcr hoi *kttinliij; «mii HiJit*
\*41| ll.
DAYTONA DEACII IT— Three
big strength by the change* in
"Arid It may
pi
,
persons were jailed yesterday here
minilwr* of men iiiiwt of wlimn find. In-added, that nlher tin.t i
in connection with the death last
e .me front supporting unlli,' ho wltl tolurn yonr eourtr &gt; al
October of a newborn baby girl
jvt ry tone.
QtlANAH, Tex UP - A frantic 9, all drowned.
,&lt;uid.
whose body was founds wrapped father dived Inin a dark flooded
T1 0 chief i Nn warned a g a in '
family.had taken tefugc In
in rag*, al Uie city dump.
tyi'ig to covet tiio many tulle* in
storm cellar yesterday in a futile tho cellar about t a.m,, when Mrs.
tm sliitrt a Dine anil tliiviiu- at
The arrest* climaxed a nine- effort to save three of hi* chU- Keeney iaw Ihrea toning cloud *
speoti* Ion fa-t for eondltlnu
and awakened her husband. They
month investigation.
dn-n.
r (\e the fnllmving Dp* for •
Deputy Sheriff Buddy Young said
"I heard my little boy call out. feared a tornado.
those Jailed were Ruhy Iwe Itett*. ‘Help, Daddy,' and that was all,"
trip :
Keeney told reporter* he o|N*ncd
23, Iho child's mother; Mr*. Pearl mid farmer Ira Keeney. "I dov* the cellar's horizontal door to in­
1 Don't u y to cover Dm man)
Jones Mc-Kinsie, S3, the grand- hack in there and tried to save vest ivale a trickle of water. A
Damage totaling nn estimated rnile*.
molhcr, and Fred Clark, 3C, a them, but I Just couldn't find flood poured in u|xtn him.
JIB.) was retwirtial In two Irolfic i 2. Be prepared fur heavy hot!
friend of the family.
them."
"My wife and one of Iho billies accidents h.*rc Sunday, City Police' .Ui) tiaffic.
Young said an examination of
Tho three K e e n e y children, was standing right there by me," sill|
Del an tally -tail, pull 0 f
the child's body by a pa timing tst Doris, 3, Thomas, 4, anti Alma, he saul. "I grabbed Ihe baby and
One of the accidents occurred at ,,-^1 ... usltuiully.
showed she had Iteon born dead.
4, Don't sprid.
set lice outside. When I turned li;M ,1 m. nn French Ave . 115
The mother was rhargrd with con­
bark water was already almost feet south Ilf tlii'1 K’th SI inter­
5 . Dllll't ill ink befiira &lt;1| viiH%
cealing tiie death of a child and
up lo llie top of Iho cellar.
ti. lb imuid'cr tluil Ihe H|i|»li* n
section. wliili* the other took place
held under 1500 bond. The other*
"Tho lantern went out and there at 1U:4il a. m. on Park Ave , 350 tlmi uf riimmmi eiiurtesy iu tinfwww held under $200 bond on ac­
was a hit of itlck* and trash on feel smith of H i p 12th St Inter­ flc sltuutioll* w ill pievt i»l tmtny
cessory charges.
top ol Iho water, t tried lo dive section.
.licit lent*.
back into Iho cellar to (md my
Involved in Hie French Ave ac
t.'tiirf Williams &gt; aab! it SStiillfl ’I**1
babies, but I Just couldn't gel cidcnl were a ID*7 Mercury coii|«‘ 41 K'1*•44B ilia'll fair tit iVfl * Ifl |1tt*S|41
back far enough."
till July hlu^.kli, i &gt;i . . 1Iti A iils*'
Keeney walked to a neighbor'*
AUv v ; ‘lnw lifts1hi and i ,1V4*!", UII
and called (Riaiiah, 20 miles south- Monroe. Iiackcil min tin* parketl tIt* ii1 tla *h liiislt
easi, fur help lly thu tunc an Ford, j'ldice sail! Driver nf Iho
With only shout 50 per ccnl of ambulance could get over Ihe Kuril was tistnl us Emily Marie
(
M. K. Strickland, president of the Seminole County children who muddy road* wiln the help of a Spivey. 17. of ’ 032 W 2nd St. ' p Q y y
tho Rnnford Kiwnnia Club, and A. received the first polio shot show­ wrccki r, it was judged useless to Sanford The Mercury wav 1111/
I.. Wilson, president-elect of tho ing up for the second, the inocula­ try to revive the trapped rhiklren.
hill the Kuril sustained B u r q l a r S o u a l i t
(oral organisation, will attrnd the tion program continued today at Their bodies were taken from the damaged,
*n estlinatnl $55 dnmagr.
'J
"
annual convention of Kiwanl* In­ Westside school.
flooded cellar about 9 a.m.
Tlie
other
accident
rnv.dvml
a
Rw
O
r
l
n
n
d
o
P o liC C
ternational which I* being held
Parochial school students were
A sudden, .Mfc-inrh rain caused j»w Pontia!’ L-tlan. driven by
’
this year in Cleveland, Ohio, on also invited lo receive their shots a dike on u nearby draw to break Eugenia lav Wind. 3«. of 2. South 1 *»r»an«!«i D — F»V ■•"btc •"
Juno 20-30 representing th« San­ there.
and Food the storm rellar, located Halifax Ave.. Daytona Beach, anti day art looking lor an unknown
ford group.
The recent vaccine scare and in a low sunt, Hardeman County a l!M9 Chrysler sedan driven by 1 l” 11 'lar wliu sppaienlli »•»!its&gt;
They will hear, a* nno of th* the problem of transportation "de­ Sheriff M. C. Owen said today.
Vcruvra Harjicr Taylor. 37, of 1430 beatiti«; himself sing Ihe ballad
four star speakers, Dr. Reulwn finitely" have something lo do
Hie torrent aI thunderstorm in South Peninsula Drive, Daytona u( liavy Frurkett.
K. Youngdahl, pastor of Mt. Ovi- with the low turnout for the se­ this northwest Texas area was one Hearh.
The burglar broke Into a
et Lutheran Church In Minneapolis, cond shot. Dr. Terry Bird, Coun­ of a series of squall* that poumh-,1
lumber riimpanv last iiighl. nl
Damage to the Pontine was 1
Minn., and leader In many ad­ ty Health Officer, said.
the itale from Dallas to far west timatiul al $15 ami tu the Clirysier tempted to jimmy open a wall
visory matter* along with Kxru
Ho said the flrsl shot offer* Texas and across the northwest al $C.T llotli curs were going sale ami took $1 wmth id small
Taft Henson, U, 8. Secretary of protection for probably three nr Panhandle-p'aiiis region. Murii of smith on I'.nk Avn.
nrliitev.
Commerce, A. 1&gt;. P. Heeney, Ca­ four months, although tha exact tha area I* among the stale’*
nadian Ambassador to the U. S. period l« not known.
worst drought country.
and General Nathan Twining, Air
Tomorrow, abienlre* will be
J-’orte Chief of Staff.
given shots at Ihe County Health
Unit.

3 Persons Jailed
In Baby's Death

Two Sanford Men
Plan To Attend
Kiwanis Meeting

.ft](W '

i

Hi,

• ■

HUBERT NANI
ir
j
/

Funerol Rites
For Mrs McKay
Vending Machines
Held In Miami
Found In Woods
Funeral services fur Mrs

Goodrich Company
Strike Averted
CHICAGO oft— A strike of »ome
11,500 production and maintenance
workera at nine B. F. Goodrich
Co plants have been averted.
Company and CIO United Rub­
ber Worker* officials came to
terms ait night on a five-year
contract after two weeka of secret
negotiations. A strike had
ceiled lor last midnight,

Kathat the Comb’s Chapel. Miami,
Wednesday at 4 p m. by Hpv.
crine McMahon McKay were held
Terry Thorp. As a courtesy to
Seminole Chapter No. 2 OES,
Eastern Star graveside service
was eonducle.i by Fort Dallas
Chapter No. 170 Oi-21, Miami.
Mr*. McKay was Fast Grand
Matron of the Grand Chapter of
Florida in 1932 ai&gt; 1 1033 For se­
ven yean she was a member ol
the Board of Trustee* of the Ma­
sonic Home in St. Petersburg She
was a life member of Seminole
Chapter No. 2 OES, and member
of the Hast Matron’s Club, which
the organiaes).
She was a Fast President of the
Sanford Women'* Club and Pasl
President of the County Federation
of Women's Club*. Mrs McKay
was a past noble grand of ScmlnoU
Hcbckab lodge and past deputy
president of District 10 of Uie
Ilebekahs.
Mrs. Strlla Moore, representing
Seminole Chapter No. I OES, and
Mr*. Louise Bills, President of
Seminole Past Mskraa’i dub
lUeoded tee fwmreL

ir

f3
f ( ) f | .S

f

*

r
C) '
/ L l, ^ L

/
I

Robert N.m.' a nicniher of tha
Inin id l itmid.i I'hi niiv!* and En*
■ineers In . orlntido, will he Ihtl
Ki l e &lt;
1 speaker III Ihe weekly lull1 tu mt mi l lin of the I ions Chili
loin, rrow, \\ 11111:Ii Duncan, club
.&lt;1 ei &gt;Ia1 y atilimiiirnl.
Nana wli i mil peak uii Ilia
in.lii-iii.il luime ol this scctem,
.mi tie would cvplit.ii in iii* talk
. .iw in i.lern tmlii-lrs’ s - pa n- in11
I- directly n l.it l '&gt; the expan­
sion ol tonimen ial Indu trie*.
eheliiienl
A mill.tier of new
lie
uianufaetiiiiiig anil prori'*stnif
,t .ui. ate under con irortion .it
the pie till time ami -everal rr1 mis built plants are already
iilocink, N .m / pmided nut.
*' Mi i&lt; 1 niatnifartin 1
..&gt;k 11
Die south is a place In locate,’*
lie raid
A* Ihe slide grows thu rhrrn-

1*1 ’ 'hi I lie itlT.il l. till I I Will ht)

.1 ti1-.-if for tlie 1 il.h«1imenl of

additional firms to munit ictuio
I lllll/er lllgirdinut.. III. tat, and
plastic ciuistrucUon materials,
and tlie marlnuc* tu make tin a
product*.
"Ili onrcli In cliemie.il and en! 1 1,1
labnt.it.u 1
must ll

. I.eurr. t vs(111

. 1 Hi ett
aii'n'

(i

r

'

1 private In-

»iicli ri&gt; o industries.

Methodist Church
}| At Jacksonville
Gets Milton Ware

' . .
•
IIOSIMI A L I/.K I) a fte r hLs 1951 Ford sedan went over the
embarkm ent at the railroad cro w in g on Eighth St. yeslerday waa H arvey II. (.’ ore, 31, Luke M onroe. He was released
from Fernutd-Laughton Meinoria! Hospital a fte r treatment
fo r m inor injuries. Dam age to the cur was estim ated at $500.

(I'holo by Lumpkin)

1 that la*

( !|

.

:

1 r span.,.

..

■u li
t' . ’ with winch
trial n l serve
such a
horat iiy (.I

C -’

★

1 I o Hear

Westside Pupils
Get Second Shots
Of Polio Vaccine

Seven peanut vending machines,
five of which were smashed, were
found yeiterday in the woods near
West 20th St., Constable J. Q.
(Slim) Callow.y reported. The
coin boxes were missing from Ute
machines.
Calloway said two hoyx came
across the machines and reported
them. The machine* had been
there for some time, he added.
Galloway *a&lt;d he had no report*
of so large a number of machines
being milling, but was checking
the possibility they might have been
stolen in another town.

&gt; f ii*

Vi

CrOCKCtt

District, trill accept Wakulla Coun­
ty but is dead set agamst Liberty
Clark, who has served longer
m the Senate than any other mem­
ber, is so influential that it is dif­
ficult to pass a bill over his objec­
tions.
There may be a fight in the
House on behalf of the Senate bill
but II faces opposition from Rep.
Bryant of Marion County who has
prepared an amendment which
would rewrite It to conform with
the measure tho representative*
passed Saturday
Even if It should pass without
being amended, It would have to
be approved by Gov. Collins who
might or might not consider It
fair reapportionment.
It meets his demand that the
present »U&gt; District at Citrus and
Hernando counties be broken up
and that Bay have a senator of
it* own but it atlll would leave
populous Sarasota end Manatee
a aeoalf v

lari'.
-

3 Children Drown
In Storm Cellar

T ra ffic Mishaps
Result In Damage
Totaling $165

Reapportionment
Battle To Resume
TALLAHASSEE UP- House and
Senate return to the reapportion*
meat war Wednesday after a three
day respite from the problem
which has had them hopelessly
deadlocked for two weeks.
Each has before it a bill passed
by the other branch before ad­
journment Saturday. The bill ap­
proved by the Senate and sent to
the House would reshuffle the 31
senatorial districts lo give Bay
■ad Monroe counties senators of
their own.
Th* House measure which now
la before the Senate would shake
things up even more and give Bay
Monroe, Sarasota and Maoatee
their own senator*.
The House measure is not ex­
pected to stand much of a chance
el Senate passage. It would com­
bine Jefferson, Wakulla and Lib­
erty counties into one senatorial
district. Sen clarkt of Monheello
wto now represents the single
MUMr «d JeSfereon to (be

★

★
^

"It just goes to show you
bow foolish a fellow can get,"
said Hail "Friday" Boss, one
of Sanford's most ardent
stamp collectors. He was look­
ing around the small room at
the Valdes Hotel where he
lives, surveying the boxes and
albums filled with stamps he
started collecting in 1892.

,i

★

Supporters Seek
To Preve.il Cuts
In Ground Forces

The IIev. IT Mellon Ware, son
uf Judge iim1 Mr It W. Ware of
Sitnftird, h»is tuu■n a i d 'nod to tha
First Mclhndist 1 htirrh In Jack*oti villa after serving fur n.i a
years in the Miithodlat church in
•
Vcro Hisuch.
Hcv Here sprnt nin&lt;t of hi*
life in fuinfnnl gratliuling from
Semi niiir&gt; ID th isell ‘t 1 In 19.1? .ind
Hie University of Florida tn Drill
where he w.i« a member of ths
football squad.
He then graduated from Can­
dler school nf Theology uf Emory
University ami did his post gra­
duate work at Columbia Universi­
ty In New York. He went into the
Florida Conference in 1938 and
served at Hailing* and UaynDio
Beach.
In 1942 ha enli-led a* a chap­
lain tn the U. S, Army after which
he was assigned to Vcro Beach.
Rrv. Bare is married to tha
former Advl.dde Stvcn* of fo r .
fast City, Aik.

_ _ j

�THE SANTORO IfKRAI.Tl
MERCYV. HAT'S
GOING
ON IN
THERE?

PA DO/, ELMO AND
CURE-)
t ARE PLAYING
I’M
*«
H O U S C - W IL L
'COMPLIMENTED
VOU S in g t o r
— v — '
OUR BABY Jr ^
R3R US f /S fZ

7* HEX EVERYBODY'-COmE **t

C- WA-

W A-M A ‘
TEE-HEE-HCE
/
H A-H A
( te e - hee- hce

USTEN TO THIS POEM I WROTE
■------- ABOUT THE DOSS ,— S

'MR DITHERO THINKS UTS BRIGHT
- r * . ____ MIS STOMACHS HEAVY
m
V — A BUT Hts BRAIN
3
v ------- IS LIGHT-*

[O U R B A B Y W A S
&gt; n au g h ty and ■
W6T?£ PUNISHING
------- - HER

" BOW ES

WE'D BSTTtC 3 0
OuT ANO CB5C.E
f THAT uAT . , * ! —
-

'YOU MAY BE THE OFFICE
CLOWN, BUT TRY AN* r
LAjGM WHEN VOU j—'
SIT DOV.'N ’ t~Z Q.

THe NEXT TIME I
WANT EYE*CIGE,IVL
\ JUST STAY HOME
X ANO FALL DOWN
?y / xT = r 7
THE
f ,. X C.
CTAIRS! .

SP O R T S BUILD
. HEALTH/

l!
Il-------Tl
1
T W 5H
U
6 0 Y.EHODy
WOULD TUPN UP ANt? C -A a \ THAT
r i- iii ■ ■
-------- 1 LITTLE 0 0 3 '. )

I GAVE THE
s.
, NEIGHBOR GIOL
A D IA C Y TOC HER
B iC T H D A V /
X 1

f THATIS'

BUT TM AFCAID
SOMETH iNO m a y
HAPPEN TO TkE i
POOC UTTlE Th :nS.

EASY, &lt;3:Cl- . . , L
THE CAT ALONE
TTT N O W ...! I—

[ M A O ONC WHEN
t W A S ABOUT
-E L E V E N .'
&lt;

A B O U T WHAT ^
AGE d o e s a o c l
START A D IA R Y ?

' — ■* Tu a o r t a t o
\
OWE EACH OF YOU A
\
CHANCE TO TRY DPX.UNQ,
D T X COMPANY. F r i r T t r . *
j ~ T BEETLEiS ; H h F ! . f |
V K FIRST. X i % \ I A

W

LVrU *

^

lCW

A S S O O N A S SHE
KNOWS E N O U G H ,
A B O U T MEN T O
FILL A B O O K - )

'APtM EM BEQ
' ‘- A THE O N E S
/ &gt;OU K E F T ?

W M A T D YOU
&gt;
D O WITH THE OLD
BOY i Tu C N IT IN*

J W A T S ALL W e CAN DO,
FEAST YOuR EVES
ON MOM’S N EW
.
R6F0GECATOR f

OM. I PUNNO...I TWIN* i
TAHS CARS o e HHR6BLF

•2 £ !? 5 £ S 3 iv 4

ITLL c o m e in
HANDY TO HIDE
. FOOD IN -

S- |SNT irUTTBZV

EMAIL 1 TELL
’ EM TO, HALT
. YET OARGG ?

C O L l * ^ 6^ # *
)
\

I)
/
^

n n

H Ag^t

F iO ^ O g i!^ *

hup hoop
tm e r
m

THAT
ICS \ LEROY
?
DE &gt; STILL
h
H' 4 HAS A J i
OF \
HO- ^
F W / HITTER
r—a i COIN'
C E W AGAINST '
TKCUBS/

' LtROY PUSHES

: w r o fiC L O
'AV li\E\P£CTCD
’
A /v r ..

&gt; !

GOTTA GET
THE BALL
OVER TO ,
FIRST IN A
HURRY. OR
I'LL LOSE
MY H O - ,

IN cver
CUTOMA

*&gt;A

HITTER!

o w r «an re»

■YCilli/ilVtOH

\ KU31 HAIvEAfV

\ a cru w A V F

Hna,cnnmmr

WICK SKCIA1 a Doer, t foiungcr t . tro, Modal (it

Nowcfane wastedfighting lead deposits
Some'refiners have'found that tho'cheapest and easiest way to increase
octane rating is by adding lead. But lead in an automobile engine can leave
harmful deposits.'And lead deposits waste power, cut down usable octane on
the road where it “counts. That calls for higher octane at the pump. And still!
more lead. Except in the case o f the new Amoco-Gas!
tvho have moved Hulck more aolidty than ever Into
the charmed circle of America's lop beat acllera.

Fon.n say success makes succeia-but we say
$npt» make aucceii, and how!
It's people—just like you-w ho are snowballing
Buick aalca this year to an ati-time peak.

P

It'a people-juit like your neighbors dawn the street
—who are snapping up these gorgeous new Buicka
almost as fust ns we get them from the factory,
and causing Iluick production lo climb to new levels
every' nioniji, to handle the unparalleled demand.
And*it's people-just about from every walk of life
-w h o keep iluick tales soaring without latup-and

But why? Why ihla phenomenal swing lo Bulck
on the pari of people whn can chooie any new ear?
Uerauie Hutck'a • huy-definitely.
And beeaute it's a bold beauty that catches the eye
and holds it-that's for sure.
And certainly because it's supremely level of ride
—and a aweet ]oy lo handle—and a mighty bundle
of high-voltage V8 power to melt away the miles
and the high hilla.
*
But moat of all, beeauae Bulck thla year 1&gt;a perform*
cr like no earth-bound vc blete ever was before. , .
Because Buick-and only Butck-has the airplaneprincipled magic of Variable Pilch DvnaBow* where
you awitch the pitch for big gas aavinga in cruising
- o r for whip-quick getaway rciponie and accel­
eration when you need a sudden aafety-surge.
It'i sheer thrill, and pure pleasure, end a big boo«
to your gasolina budgat-and you really ou g b r
to try it
Gome vialt ua aoon-thls week, at the leteat-and
ece for yourself why thla is the car folks Just won't
do without-the biggcst*eelling Buick of ell time.
•Djwgwp*# U KmdirJ m S ttJmdiitr, o^o’o—10 matt rtM

,

0

A great new Amoco-Gas
with an Octane BONUS

---------------- *——

*t a jf t t jl ! ITMMUn ME-CYLMKI J
It’s a white, unleaded gas, made by
i i r a j UMtATOtYTESTPfiM W tho patented Ultraforming Processsi/ A • Q
n.Lwumwi‘tvuhn.l»i“
with such natural high octano that it
q O
«««"Miy dnonMaootho Kj doesn’t need lead!
W
amrn M
S I
S3
L very blt of octane-energy m the
^
K j m m w
Kg new Amoco-Gas is used to run your'
W(&lt;
nuso ••(}imho&lt;o*im« itorj Py car. Because every drop can bum. No'
J I lead deposits form to waste octane—it
all reaches the road. The result is an
i rr m
■■ ■i
exclusive Octane Bonus that no gaa
’■*-T'n T * * ---------- ---------■----- :
containing lead can match.
REMEMBER THIS! No matter]
".m
.
TK
Till (MINE IS
how much octane you pay for at the’
,QV
* WBB
■M*l
pump,* the only octane you get is the
&gt;»ooM«M,o^woiho«»Mo . ■tj usable octane that reaches the road!
- ‘
W
WithimlMdedAmoco-GM,that'sh»io&lt;
,|SK
a »ctM «. . . worth trying, worth buyin|l
p i Coma in—try something wonderfullj

1

3

tmrnSm Stttm.

The white-gas, with1the

i f j j C *'!' .«•

�Tire SANTORO HERA t I)

Man. Jane 20, 1055

News Of Men In Service
rORT BUCKNER, OKINAWA
—Army CapL Richard S. Hartlino, whoa* wif*, HarrUt, llvra
at 297 Union St., Sharon Mai*.,
recently arrived on Okinawa and
ta now a member of th* Okinawa
Engineer Diatrlrt.
Captain Hartline, ion of Mr.
and Mr*. Trank L. Hartline, D*Bary. entered th* Army in Jun*
194$. The captain ia a 194S grad­
uate of th* U. S. Military Acade­
my at Wtat Point.
GREAT LAKES, 111. IFHTNC)
— Among tho»e who reported in
Jun* for duty at tha Naval
Training Center here waa Paul
M. Elliott, seaman apprentice,

Legal Notice
»

the

r o im r .
C IR C riT . I I

c ir c u it

JUDICIAL

ro t

h iw t r

countt,

ik n u d l c

AND

ru n .

RIDA, m CMARCRRT HO. ITM
NAuMI CRAIN,

Plaintiff,

IIARRT R. CRAIN.

P it iD lia t
NOTICE TO D R m O

♦

* 0 : IIA R R T R. CRAIN.
TII A C SW
Sad. c / o
P eitm **ter. Seettl*. Waehlngtnn.
TOU A R E H E R K B i NOTIFIED
that ■ Complaint lor Dlvorc*o ha*
k u i file* t f i l a a l yog, and you
ar* required la
aorvo n copy of
yo u r Anawar o r Pleading* to tha
Complaint an th* p la in tiff* a ttir nay. J R UBS ELL HORNS OT 110
North Wain Strati, Orlando, F lo ­
rida, and 111* th* orlsln a l Anawar
ar Ploadlngo In th* artlc* o f th*
Clark o l I t * Circuit Court on or
hafor* tha dth day of July, H it.
I f you fall to d o to, judgment by
dafautt w ill ha takan agalnet you
fo r th* rallaf damaadad In th*
Complaint.
DONE AND O RDERED at San.
ford, Florida, thla tth day at Juna
A

' n ! ' F. Herndon,
Clark of
lrcult
C o u r t , Samlnol*
aunty. Florid*.
F J. R ota tll Hornahy,

g

Attorney for Plaintiff,
11* N. Main Street,
Orlando. Florlda-

D ID
We Sene

s o n cm
SUPKRVt
ELECTION OP TWO
HORS FOR TERMS OF
FODIS
YEARn EACH FOR SEMINOI.I
SOIL CONSERVATION DISTRU
July 11. l i l t
P u rtu in t to th* Boll C*n*»r
tlan Act. Chapter l i t . Florid*
tut** of ISAS and Chapter
or 1 1 1 1 , nolle* I* h*r*by gl&gt;
an election to b* held on J
1 1 1 1 for th* *l*ctlon o f l «
auptrvlsrr* for ttrm i of fuui i l l
«arh.
f ear*
oiling D i c e ! * )
O fflc* of Samlnol* County Chamb «r o f Commarc* Sanford. F lori­
da
Oviedo R aialt Star*
Orlado, Florida
Oardaore Stora
Lak* Monro*. Florida
Lyman High School
. . ,. FFlorida
Long
------wool
M
ng i,_______
p la ce!*) w
ill b*. opan
Polling
___
. . . b*l**«n_ th* hourt of ItOO A. M. ond
IlOO P. M.
All qualified
*l*ctor*
residing
within th* D istrict shall b » sliglbl* to vot# In this *l*ctlon.
A qualified elector a* defined
In th* Florid* Soli Conservation
Act include* any person qualified
to vote In general election* under
Ih* Coretltutlon and Btatula* of
thla elate w ho I* tie* a landowaar
In th* herein named district.
It. (I Clayton, Ad ml n il*
t rat or S ta ll Soil Conserva­
tion Board

ANNOUNCEMENT
Frank Noell, Jeweler Is happy to annouce thnt ns of
today, June 20lly Dan Capehnrt, watchmaker and Hm I&gt;
dent of Sanford for the past 2 years will be associated

e d it o r a r r e s t e d

HAVANA. Cuba IT) - Police
arrested Lult Orlando Rndriguat,
editor of the newspaper La C*ll*,
tait night and took over the pa­
per'* office*. A member of th*
opposition Orthodox faction, Rod­
rigue* recently had puhllthtd ar­
ticle* government official* tatd
were “ offensive to the arm ad
force*."

with our store. Enabling us to give the people of San*
ford and Seminole County belter service.
• We have also just secured the franchise for Grucn
watch and genuine Hummel Figurines-

when you buy Perfection
■'VV,

YO U

K N O W ? ..........

Breakfast In Informal, Air-Conditioned

HOt ’ c AK pS*' WAFFLES, HAM, BACPN, SAUSAGE.
EGGS as you like ’em . . . fresh from a local farm.
Come In For A Snack Or A Meal
You’re Always Welcome at

MRS. APPLEBY'S RESTAURANTS

YOU
HELP

1M 8. Psrk Av*.
4:41 A. M. TU

Veldes Hotel
« A. M.

USN, ton of Mr. and Mra.
Georg* W. Elliott of 2713 Myrtle
Ave., Sanford, Fla.
Flliott hat been aaaigned dutie*
with the Chaplain Department.
Before reporting here on June
3, he served at Recruit Training
Command, Great Lakes.

nru

SANFORD
*

GROW
IF W ! MISS
BUTTON *. •

BECAUSE

?

7

Perfection Cooperative it the only Dairy paying local real
estate tax

N *

• Pasteurised whole m ill

o KonMgenked,
milk
ft k tha only Dairy htrfcy a laoal peyrefl
&gt; .

3

^

tha only Daily handling locaOy prsdueed a f t

^

ft U tha only Dairy purrhaaiag sappUss lacaQy far Ha

• Lo-fst mQk
• Buttermilk
• Half ’n Half
• Coffee Cream

Yea. U we return a shirt
with o button missing we’ll
Wtaade* FREE that shirt

5

M IN U S

914

SEMINOLE CO. LAUNDRY
• I 9 W .M M .

Perfection Coaparativa Dairies k owned and

*
*
Patronize your neighbor a n d
help yourself!.

DOWNTOWN CLEANERS
AND LAUNDRY
m
m

It k tho only Dairy supporting local ntOitke

• Creamed Cottage
• Mel-0-Whip

^

•e

• Whipping
• Choeekta Dairy Drink

*I

•

Page 5

a*

47S

• Farm fraah Eggs

CHOOSE PERFECTION
AND YOU CHOOSE TH E
BEST!

�»

Self Made Lawyers

Tenth UN Birthday

The New York Court of Appeals has de­
cided *o retain the custom which permits
persons to qualify as lawyers hy “ reading”
In law offices and passing the bar examina­
tions.
At onp time a grrat many excellent law­
yers won the right to practice the profes■ion by study ing In the offices of established
attorneys and serving an Apprenticeship, liecause It la easier to get formal education
these davs only a few are admitted to tlie
bar by taking advantage of this opportunity.
Some bar associations and law schools
favored abolishment of the "rending” rule.
Their argument* were answered hy those
who held that to do away with the "reading”
rule would he a break with the tradition
that permitted figurea like Abraham Llnroln
to practice law.
Apparently the New York Court of Ap­
peals agrees that a person who Is willing
to make the sacrifices of time and energy
called for In qualifying as a lawyer under the
"reading” rule, and who can pass the liar
examinations, deserves the right to hang
out his shingle

The President ha* announced hi* deci*ion t&gt;, go to S*n Francisco and w e l c o m e
the delegate* to tlie tenth anniversary ae*aion of the United Nations to bcf(iii today,
lie aaid that he thought the time had come
for people to review the accomplishments
and faihrcs of the UN and to fix in our
mind* our expectations for its future.
A decr.de has passed since the United
Nations was burn with so much hope. A
great deal of the optimism which greeted Its
birth has disappeared. Merely forming an
international body did not solve the problems
t,hat came out of World War II. Yet this is
not to sav that it has fniled or that it will
fail in its aims.
The staunchest supporters of UN will
not maintain that it is a perfect organisa­
tion. Hut it has survived for ten years—ten
of the most trying year* in the history of
mnnkind. It still exists, still retains the
confidence of the leaders of the free world
and still provides a forum where world pro­
blems can be discussrd. This is something
for which to be- grateful.
The troubles that beset the world are
deep-seated and cent uric* old. It is too much
to expect that any organisation could settle
tlirm in nn» brief decade. That one exists to
SERMON ItOf.ltS TIM K
dare to try is juHlflra'Ini for hope aland (lie
TOLEDO, Ohio i/tb - The Rev.
future of mankind.
John T .Mitchell, 7.‘l, finished a

The Sanford Herald

'A M A T E U R

S T EEP LE

funeral sermon entitled “ The Un­
expectedness of Death" yestalday, aat down and died nf n
heait attack at St. Paul's A. M. E.
A jne.it deal nf npoculntion I* being done Church.

Convention Suggestion
• 1 MM l l i m n *

R IT K I

R im .R

*SAM D A W S O N

Business Scumming Prosperity Tune
NEW i’ ORK UTBusiness nears
the official start ot summer hum
ming a prosperity tune
Industrial output Is at an alltime high, sayi the Federal Re­
verse Roird. after adjusting its
Index to the weather.
Retail tales are running S per
cent higher than a year ago
Construction activity—also after
being adjusted for seasonal Influ­
ences—it at a record high and
one eighth larger than last year.
The coming of hot weathei it
pushing electric power output to
an all-itmc hign It was within
a whisker of it last week The Edi­
son Klrctrir Instdute says the use
of electricity fur air conditioning
U rising and a new rerord It prob­
ably Just day- away.
Rrlinrriet are turning nut 26
million barrels of gasoline a week
now. Rut America', motorists arc
using even more than that.
American families rating well.
The US. Department of Agricul­
ture says that meat production ia
running I per cent above a .year
ago, with heel even higher.
Coffe# drinking ta on the In­
crease, according to Jhe &gt;'an.. Amrrican t offer Bureau. It says a
_ recent nationwide survey shows
* the average Amrricai of coffeei- drinking age downs 2.87 cup. a
,t day hast year It was 160 cups.
Ristr.g Incomes are given the
rl I credit lot all the buying and conj turning. Average weekly factory

rarnuigi have touched a new high
of $76 11, about IA ahead ot • year
agu Employment hat been ru­
ing and unemployment drurping
Summer’! onslaugh' may uunge
some of tnu pleavanl picture.
While American? will u*c more

gaioiint end eiecuicuy iwr iravei
and comfort. hev’ U itop produc­
ing at much In the factories dur­
ing vacation dajra. Induvtrial out!
put U expret-.’d t&gt; alack off a
little in May and tune fo nt Ita
Apri peak.

G e n e ra l In su ran ce
H.

JAMES

(JUT

AGENCY

SI 2 EAST FIKST STREET
PHONE 78

II. JAMES GUT

SA V IN G

JAMKR *. GUT

IN

CO ST

Yen! DivUend* from 15.15'e on
Fire-Wind Homeowners Insurance

BOYD-WALLACE

about who will seek the major party presi­
dential nominations In the conventions next
summer. Lenders of both parties might do
well to postpone surh speculation for a
lime and concentrate on findinjf way* to run
more efficient and Intelligent convention*.
Progress In news coverage techniques
hy newspapers, radio and televlalon have
rreated a great deal more interest In con­
ventions and in some degree have made It
possible for people at home to get a better
idea of what is going on than if they attend­
ed as observers. Yet both parties cling to
the samo dull hokum, tha endless and often
meaninglp** apecchea, the rehearsed "spoil(Ancons” demonstration* that fool no one.
It aliould not he difficult for the two part­
ies, both of whom maintain that they can
do a good job of running the country, to
hold a contention in which time and money
la spent economically and whare dignity and
reaped for the Important work before it
will aupplant the circus atmosphere that ha*
prevailed In the past-

Hr Carrier
M f M f RMli
Oar maatk
0I.M
T krrr Mnallii
fit
Oar \ tar
•&amp;**
lift
til M
All afcltaarr naflrrr. ear** af tfcaalit. rrrrla lla ar aatf
M llrr #»f ratrrfalataral far ffct purpart af ralrlap
f a a ft al|t Kr r b a r iM far af rraatar a ft r r flr la p rairr

runAY*s

JAG'

v k r .s e

God resisteth the proud, and giveth grace
to the humble.—I Peter R:5.—Little men are
apt to be proud. They do great harm, and
cause hntred of prospermia and powerful na­
tion* and people. Powerful ones should be
Chriatlike and try to help humanity, not look
dotott on the weak and poor.

I

I

tae-M iLR RIKR

RTARTED BY SCOUTS
KENEDY, Tax. (At - Two do«•n Krnedy Boy Seoul* yeatarday
•tarted what they rail tho longest
Scout hike ever tried la Texas—
ISO mllea to Indian Creek Camp
near Kemrille, in the Texae hill
country. They mad* It ta Fashing,
20 mllea eouthwest af here, the
firet day. Thry are carrying nil
equipment and food on their hack*.
A eroutmaater la going a lon gwalking too.

CARRAWAY 6
GENERAL INSURANCE
B ond*
Automobile

COUPl.B GETS MONEY
CHICAGO (At — A young eouplo walked into e loan office and
•aid they wanted e loan "ta get
married." The man, aaked for Identlfieatlon, pulled out a pUtnl
took |14l ead find with Ida "flan-

Outboard Motorboat*
p. 8.— We «Jm write Home Owners Policies
i &lt;0*

114 N. Park Ate.

hy Gulfs axduaive Akhlor Pmoaai ie available ia J
fnulaa to gtvn you tha fine* protection, tha be* e i
mileage for your asks of efir—P every m m *

poaiu that build up oa aagiae pans. Kama bydea*.
lie valve liftera qut* sad fteweedaf.

Cash D iscount
ON

BOTH

FORD

PARTS AND

LABOR

When Work On Ford Products
I* Done In Our Shop

&gt; BE

HAPPIER IN

YOUR FORD

• HAVE

MORE

MONEY

CATIO N

TR IF,

HAVE

AND

FOR

YOUR

YOUR

FORD

PAIRED DURING TH IS SEN SATIO N AL

-A -la

S S TUESDAY THRU THURSDAY J J
BARGAIN SALE!

perfanTianoBand engine prataeden.
ahMQftunGulflaupf-Bfiarignei

I

\

«

�S ocia l fcvswldu

BPW Selects Heads
For Committees;
Discusses Theme

Mrs. R. McNab
Given Shower
By Two Ladies

The regular meeting of the
Rusiness and Profeaaional Women’s
Club waa held Wednesday evening
at th* Yacht Club beginning at
*:I0 p. m., with a covered dish
supper, lira. C. E. Hunter presid­
ed over the session.
Mrs. O. T. Pearson, chairman of
the Dental Clinic reported emer­
gency work for thildren will be
rented on through the aurnmtr. A
round table diseunlon waa held
concerning BPW programs and
themem. It was announced thal the
next meeting will he a picnic nip­
per on July 20 at 5:30 p. m. at the*
heme of Betty Raker.
Mra. Hunter announced thal *he
committee chairman had been cho­
sen and are aa follows: Public
affairs. Mias (Sene Nunnelly: flu cation and vocation. Mra. E. H.
Carter; finance, Mra. W. E. Raker;
health and aafely, Mra, E. J.
(tenth;
international
relations,
Mrs. Marguerite (Inborn; legislatuie, Mra. J. T. Brady; mfmherschlp, Mrs. W. O. Brinson; proprom conductor, Mi*p Ritly NV^lfram; news service. Mra. W. W.
Harvey; USO ehalimon, Mra. Lor­
raine Graham; dental clinic, Mr*.
T. Peanon: scrap booh. Mra.

TITS SANFORD HERALD Mon. June 20, IMS

Pay# |

School Food Service Association
Has Meeting, Installs New Officers

Mrs. J. P. Thurmond*and Mr*.
The School Food Service A«-to the members.
C. R. Rowes were hostess** at a (delation met at Rnuthsld* Rchool
Thai* present were Mrs. Batty
miscellaneous
shower honoring Thursday at 2 p. rn. at which Uni*
Mr*. Richard K, McNab, s recent Mis, J. C. Mitchell installed the Glenn also Mrs. Ruby M Daria,
bride, on Thursday eiemtig at the Incoming officers. Thsy ar* at Mrs. Remir* Hughes ef Bauth*
Thurmond home on Elm Ave.
follows: president, Mrs. Ruhy M. side; Mrs. Irene Sewa’ I, Mias Sa­
Spring flowers
were
used Davis; vire president, Mrs. Irene rah Sewell of Jr. High; Miss An­
throughout the living and dining Sewell; secietary, Mr*. Ann l.#f- na Nelson ef Grammar Sehoott
Hr CLAUDE ROSE
•h* bought tht has# of an aid
rooms where the guests assembled. flot; and reporter, Mr*. Rtmica Mrs. Clari:* Dekle, Mr*. Ehba
Herald Feature Writer
! vtnud stove and after cleaning and
Lee. of Westsida; Mr*. Mtrcalla
Mrs. McNab wn* presented a cor. Hughes.
Navy famlliaa, and others mho application of a roat at paint,
sage of rosebuds.
Th* new president, Mrs. Davis, Benham of Seminal* High School.
tnnv* often «r need to live on a placed a &gt;lab of marble on top.
Mra Ann Leffler, Gerava; lira.
Following several game*, gift* conducted a short business meet­
eln** budget, can get some valuable b'he had many fatorab.o rantaianti
were presented to the honor** in ing at which time plans were dit. Rlanrhe Partin, Mr*. Franca* Carttipi from Mri. Harold Hall. Sh on it from frlemla and eUltori.
cussed rnnertning a trip to the ledge nf Oviedo; lire. Freida
• novel airforce cap and wings.
and her hu*hnnd, LCDR Hall,
Her five children, Edie, ft, Alan,
NAAS ipecial services officer, I, Andy, 3, Danny, JO montht,
Refreshment* of punch, petit Tallahassee short course on Au­ Muir, Mr*. Cook and Mra. Ellis,
Lyman; Mrs. Mildred Wltdarhold
have moved about 18 timet in 9 and Randy, 4 montht have kept
fours, sandwiches and nuta were gust 1.
served by the hostcsie* who were
yeara and each time (ha hat fui- her mighty buty in the paal few
A program eommiitee was ap­ of Lake Mary; Mr*. Rosa La*
nithad their apartment or home yeara but aim haa alia managed
pointed rompeied af Mrs. Ehba Hamilton. Lake Manra* and Mr*.
aslsted by Mrs. Bam Thurmond.
with uaod furniture which the ha* to take tinging, art and guitar
The dining room tahlo was over, Lee, rhairntan Mrs. Mildred Wie- Lucille Lee and guest of th* Wil­
roatored.
leaaont. She takaa an active part
laid wilh a hand-crocheted table derhold ami Mrs. Ro*a I.e* Ham­ son Rchool,
"I have vaty complete filet of in church affalra and Navy wives’
cloth centered with a milk glass ilton. At the close of the meeting
dtcorating idea*, thing! to make organiaationa at tht vJtioua b u ­
punrh howl flanked hy crys­ refreshment* of ic* cream, soft
for the home, and method! of re- tt where they have been.
tal randelholdtrs and green tapcis. drinks and rookie* w*i# served
________________ a-------------Her hobby of "flxing-up" old
atoring furniture which ate avail­
Tho*, Invited to he with the
able to anyone interfiled,”
the furniture and interior decorating
honorse were Mrs. D. K. McNab,
aaya. ” 1 don't claim to be an in- developed into a btiaineaa tht*
mother of the groom. Mrs. Lucy
tailor decoration expert, but I've month when aha opened the “ Curi
.MrNNh. Ihe groom's grandmothrr,
had enough practical experience oalty Shop” on Rt. 17-93, juil
The C. P. O. Wives held Its first
Mrs, 11. U. Echols, Mrs. L. F.
to be able to help young couplet south of the city.
meeting at SNAA8 June 14 in
Gainer, Mrs. A. D. Rountree, Miss
In the new ahop the haa all anrte
who want to make their home at­
the CPO Club. It was decided thal
Nancy Rountree, Mrs. (’ . D. For­
tractive and coiy on a alim bud­ of old and odd thiuga. Theie'a
The Home Demonvtratlnn Coun- a tilting servic* and transporta­
rester. Mrs. Roy Reel, Mrs. Jack
everything fiom a pearl handled
get
Russell, Mrs. Edgar Whitten, Mrs ty CoumR held d* regular meet­ tion service for Incoming person­
After
Mabel Alexander, Mis. O. (1. ing on Thursday ai th* public nel looking for rent units In tha
the
wilh th* .Sanford area should t&gt;* formed.
Smith,
Mis* Pat Smith, Mrs, C, L. il’.ir.try in Lorcvo-d
Air
|.i
nvwood
Club
acting
as
hntli.
Anyone wishing to rsnt bouses
Echols.
Mrs
Sam
Thurmond,
Mrs.
Forre
Herman Swaggerty of Pel.and.
T te meeting w.i* called to order or apaitmeuU for sorvicansax ar 1
Coco
Mis. A. It Hatcher Jr., Mis. V. liy Mr*. J M 1Hug inapi, council thcir families pleas*! gall Mts.
,
____,
Those
present
A.
f-peer, Miss Sadie Sodertilnum, pie (blent. Mr*. Margaret Tlndell Neil I'rtiden, 416-R or Mrs. Bawtip” bug until IU47 when Mr.! ?“ r* **°&gt; “
■■
second-hand furniture. It lin’t Hunter. Mlsa Betty WotfrAm. Mra.
Miss Tommy Methvin, M is Em­ led the gioun io Hie ituh cieed. aril Wolfs, 270- R. Woman toluxHall wan released from active duB. E. True, Mra. W. E. Baker,
ma .lean Melhvln, Mrs. Alice D -• Betty Jesn Kobtnsnn of Long- j leering 1hair serricss to ehaufftkr
ty and they bought a restaurant strictly an antique shop nor it it Mra. W. L. Harvey, Mra. Maigvie1Mina Mnr.v Ju Under, rinughlrr nf Mr. and Mr*. K n r l r M. Rrine, Mrs. Wallace Tyre, M is. wood
in Orlando. They woi ked hard to a second-hand store,
led the pledge to the flog ' Incoming personnel a n Mr*. J.
T. Peeieon Karirr of Minntl hfriuns thr bride of James Dewey llnnuun I'on Ralten. Mr*. John Keeling
Rhe eptly seyt of herealf, ” 1 rit. Graham. Mrs.
redecorate it themselves.
which
w*« followed with group Shuler. Mrs, David Now-berry,
and Mra. V. H. Grafflham.
non of Mr. and Mr«. Mnrrin llnnsnn of I’noln Saturday at Jr., Mrs Floyd Cooper, Mrs. singing of IV Mur Spangle Ran- Mis. Richard Steward and Mr*.
Whan ha was recallad to active like to be ertive In meny things.
Geoige I'ittard, M iss
Jeanette ncr. Mrs. 11 C. Murioy gave the Russell Spencer.
7 p. m. in Ihe Ilndrr Methodist Church.
duty in 1948 and they went to That's th« way to really enjoy
The CPO Club will hold its next
Wolfer, Mi*. Julian Vain, Mrs. J. devotional and Mis. Geoige Otto
Whining Field, near Pensacola,the life, end 1 enjoy it very much.'*
P. Renson, Mrs. fa il Echols, Mra, welcomed tho other club members meeting on June 28 ut 8 p. ni. in
bug hod bitten hard and flora
the club house.
Kd Smith, Mrs. W. F. Garner, to l.ongwood.
then on R haa been i r a y enjoy­
Mrs, J, P. Hates. Mis. W. C. I.ynn,
able, and praetiral hobby for her.
Mrs. John Griffif, Seminole
Mer huabnnd helps her * greet
Mrs. Turned Lodge and Steve and County 411 Y ntth Leader, gave
Dwight Rnwr*.
deal.
HOLLYWOOD iT-Th* beII rtni
a irport of 4-H shot: course that
SAINESV1I.LE - Florida gar- end the actor* **m* out
a in.
MONDAY
They have ftarnlahed a
tem­
tn*'f
wii* hehl recently in Tiillnlian*er
dewing
enthusiasts
regiatared
ai
The
Fint
Baptist
Prayer
Merl­
plate home hi Orlando, three a*
comers. But this w»a no ordinary
The Dependable Clara of the
sftrr which MG* Tat«y Trslo of
the
University
of
Florida,
today,
ins
service
begins
at
7
so
p
m.
aartmenla In Ran Diego, and two
fight-they exchanged real blows First Methodist Church will meet
Lake Mary and Belly Robinson
Mis* neh* Blsbee recently r#»
■•mas la Sanford with restored for their rleventh annuel abort
After « couple of minutes of hef­ with Mrs. Iloscoe Taylor at her The First BpUst Sunday School
nf l.ongwood gave their reports tinned from a trip to Annapolia,
ST
LOUIS
U
P
•
Mr*.
Ethan
A
course,
Dean
Emeritus
Hume
of
furniture aince 1980. Ei lends say
ty slugging, Ihe bell rang again home on 21111 Orange Ave., at 8 Cabinet meeting will he held fol­
of activities ni tho 4-H course in Md., where sli* attended Juna
that the home which they built the U. ef F. College of Agricul­ Even the hardened crowd of movie p. m., fnr a regular monthly Imsi- lowing the Prayer Meeting service. H. Shrplev, wife of the chancellor Tallahassee.
Week at the U. R. Naval Acade­
ture,
Henry
P.
Orr,
Auburn,
Ala
o|
Washington
University,
says
at First and Mallonville ia very
extrai applauded the fighting.
nrss and social meeting.
Th* Comity Council conducted my. She was the guest of Midship
THURSDAY
hama
Polytechnic
Institute,
and
she wa* shocked when she read a
ariginal and attractive
The CWF of the First Chria
One of the fighter*, war hern
a white elephant sale with Mrs. ninn G. B. Stephenson.
The First Baptist Training UuiMrs. Clifford E. Cyphers, noted
proposed rnnstltulion for a worn .1. M. Pingman acting as auc­
Aa (warnpie of her work le a New Jersey Dower arranger, will actor Audlf Murphy, sported red Han Church will meet at the home blc School begins at 8:3(1 a. m.
anipue toffee table which ehe headline the three-day program. on bis cheek. Thi* wss no make nf Mr*. Harry Falk in Dellary
Mrs. W. T. Gaughf laft by plana
tioneer. Aft*i a covered
dish
The First Raptist Junior Huyal an'* dub al thr univrrsily.
for a covered tilth supper anil in­ Ambassadors will meet at 7 p, m.
aaade hi Ren Diego. For f i or M
Article III read in pari: "Thr lunch Mrs. Clyde Kerre of Cassel­ Saturday for Rochester, Minn,
"From Blue Print to Blue Rih- up; K waa the real thing.
(the doesn't remember exactly) ben" le the aubjlct of tha 1911
He didn't eomplatn. A stickler stallation of offirer* and will meet
Hie First Baptist Ttainlng Uni­ wiv*s of the Chanrellor. , .(hall berry gave a demonstration of where tho will anter ths May*
Clinic.
flower arranging.
on Members will meet at the he honorary members."
event for which more than 4M far reality, he had trained for nine at the church at ft p. m.
The First Raptist Vacation Bi­ fhutrh at 7:30 p. m , for their
Floridians have registered. The waaka to gel himself down to wel­
General Extension Division af terweight end into shape for hi* ble School begins this morning at monthly Visitation Program.
Florida ie conducting tha emirto rate at • boxer in "World in My 8:30 a. m. All boys and girls age
FRIDAY
ia eweperedan with the University CUrwr." Ho looked to top condi three thru ltl are invited to at­
The First Baptist Vacation niaf Florida College af Agriculture lion aad wai Mill slugging after tend.
h'e School will meet Rom fc-JO to
aad Experiment RUtlen aad tha thru* grueling day* of fight ecenes.
TUESDAY
11 .0 a. m.
Weddtaf beds atill abbae merrily Florida redoes Kan af Garde*
Mia opponent waa wen chosen
The Unity Class will meet In
for the m b c - l l group while Clubs. „
lor the nda. He 1* Chico Vcjir, the Valdrx Hotel at 7:45 p, m ,
parents peak a at the thought ef
Registrant* from this area In net only *n* ef the country'i top Vith Jerry Meacham as teacher.
darling dattghtere meeting aew chide Mr*. I. Fleischer, Mrs. F- E. waiter*eights, hut also a drama The puhtlc ia invited.
res po risibility.
Gases. Mrs. M. A. Moreland, Mra. Me aria major at Hew York Uni
The War* Hilda Class of the
Marriage ie a eerioue proposi­ L. E. Bpoarer aad Mrs. J. A. m alty.
First .Methodist Church will hava
While
Chlen
we*
to
the
ring,
hla
tion ae area go Idea aanirereary ee- Yeung.________________
* covered dish supper at 7 p. in.
M1st Dial Gray Boyle, I* among
manager tour* Eli* provided In MrKfnlsy Hall with the ladles
labranU will admit. Bat kxpoiaaoo
w a s background on the lad. Man­ acting aa hostesses for Ihe men in more than 100 Duke University
may be bad by any iatalligaat
slu.lent* named rn'ipicnta of spe­
aging le "on evocation’’ with El- honor of Father's Day.
young married coeRla.
Pal your mattress la
Ug. Ht’ a also a top-fight announ­
The prescription la atoiplo. . .
cial honor* and awards at the Uni­
Th*
First
Baptist
Vacation
Blcer, broadcasting the weakly bouts
aRapact far year spouse ia the if checking netful sleep
ble School, for Ixiys and girls age versity's 103rd Commencement on
It H lumpy? Does It tag la the an ABC radio.
first
lagredieat asceeakry la
three thru Ift years of age, is June ft.
"Chico came to me about five from 8:30 to 11:3(1 a. m.
wsddad bliea. That maana guarrala middle? Are than broken stitches,
Mis* Boyle was selected for
belaag in tha borne, if at all. missing buttnaa er tufU, lata years age,” recounted EUlt. "He
The First Baptist hilermeillale membership in Phi Beta Kappa,
handles
or
droopy
harden?
■aid
ha
wanted
me
to
menage
him
Ditto criticism, and if it la glvea
Royal Aliihaasadiira will meet at national liunmary schlastlc fra­
If iprlngi show braked
Ha waa anly’ IT and had dropped 7 p. m.
m It should be constructive. No bo*
ternity. She is a resident nf 2(U4
aaggiac
edges,
these
tea
aut af high school. I told him the
m HtUta' ad your ataa to other* withTh* Fiddle Class of the First Mclliiliville Ave.
can lead la dlituibed alaap. if only way I would consider it was
bi or without hie presence.
Some .11 different honors wcie
•me axlat td If ha would return to hi* home Baptist Sunday School wilt meet
No one le perfect — geed to any af thesei arobltmi
!, be aura la gat a to Stamford, Conn., aad finish St tha home of Mrs. Her Ia Cot­ announced by the Commencement.
remember when you become in­ your
trell, 2008 Sanford Avr., at 8 p. They ranre from Phi Beta happa
tolerant of on# ad your help mate’s naw miltrees.
taheal."
Chico, who ha* Mcxican-ltillan m. Mi-mhers of Group No. Three to award* In tho acienrrs aim hu­
faults. If you can’t resist the
blood, returned to ichooi. When will lie hosteiaes with Mrs. Cot­ manities and iru lints inemhei&gt;hip
impulae to let off itoam, meditate you spend at H.
In various professional honorary
for just ana moment on one af
ba wat graduated. Kill* Marled trell a* chairman.
Be interested la his
The Fidelia Class of tho Firat fraternities.
your own faulta that might Irritate whatever it la. Help him to
him in a* a fighter. Hit record
mount ahatael oa ae that ha might ha* been Impressive: four losses Raptist Church will meet with
him before yea spout off.
A lotal of 001 students from 39
ahead la whatever he want! to In M fight*. He’* now in line fnr Mrs. Berts Cottrell at 2018 S. slates and 10 foreign countries
Encourage him te family doSanford
Ave.,
at
8
p
.'
ni.
with
m votlon Instead ef weaning him
a (hot at tha title.
received degrees at the (Indusaway from his sisters, hrethere er
Whea things go
HI* many TV appearance* drew Group Three as ro-ho*trs*es.
tinn exercises, which fraluied an
WEDNESDAY
even mother aad father. Peaaea* eympathetic underttondlng hutend Chlen to toe attention of producer
addrrs* by nationally-known edi­
eivenOsa ega rule a marriage.
ef elding with hie critics.
Aaron Boeonburg and director
Die First Baptist Vacation Bi- tor and author Hoddlng Carter
-If he enjoys a religion, different
Jealousy eaa't exist la a happy Jee* Hlbbe. And whan they bla School ia from 1:30 to 11GtO of Greenville, Miss.
from yeara, reaped hit point of home. Ba mature and curb your loomed bo waa alio a drama ma­
view, rather than trying to get him tandeney to ba suspicious af bis jor at NYU, ha wa* a cinch for
the job.
to conform-to yours.
raring glance er af
Feed him to the beet ef your alsa'a in hla direction.
After flllthlag ■ nigged round,
ability. Laani bow to took in­
Cooperate ea money prebleaas. Chico peuaed to talk. He ihruggod
terestingly. Anybody wbe can read Eeep within tha budget you’ve net off an ays cut that Audi* bad
a cook bosk should ho able te aad help him to buy a paw cult or apanad the day before.
A cencod well-balanced tasty meals shoes when he need
Jew m M to really mix it vp,
without too much hysterics.
If you must scrimp.
I that's what wa'va done.’' ha
Men are not aoceaearity nret
Be selfless. You'll find H eaa Mid. 'T o o seen tbs rushes and
(because their mother* picked up of the keys to happiness, married tha stuff looks greet. It’s the first
a fu r them ae children) so don’t or not—a better egample to set time I’ve over aeon a fight (A t
k V i S 60M
hackle him because ha leaves hie for a selfish mat* than heckling took* real to a movie."
aheea hi tha Bring ream eeeeaiei- him because of neglect, IneoaII Tilt CIHPICH HOME UUNDIY PACKAIE
sidoratoaoos, unthoughtfulness.
•iiy.
Keep your hens clean, neat and
Don’t bo op af these wives
SANTA FE. N. M. iM - For ■
cheerful. If it la aa stiff looking who alts waiting to sea If hat man
aa a window display hi a furniture ia going to forget a birthday er short Umo New Mexico had it*
■tore, how *«t your man he com- annlveraary. Bather, give a gentle s tn t women governor in year*.
Secretary ef Mato Natalia Smith
f ferUble?
hint a coupla af days before, and
Bo a good hbaUoa. Even a are yourself the despair. You'll Buck mevad tots tha executive's
• Thaoaly maftratilaRv* wariJ J*tlga*4
AVOID THI "ILUMBIIblase men likes to brag that hie never know than whether ha might chair whan both Gov. John F.
la seoparalian with leading orthopisdU
1AG" MATTIII1I It promlimma and LL Gov. Joseph
wife ia a good cook ai
have fergettou Hand you am
lass to "conform" to your
surpoos* to yo« to o l sleep latorrastlyl
Mao toy* ware out of the state.
maker. Encourage him la hriag his him tha benefit af the doubt
body hut manly lets you
•
latlutlvs
COM
8
ORT0
AID
(Monti
About
tha
Brat
thing
she
did
friends aad buainaae
A good memory never baa beta
down into an 8-hour alumButtao
Fro*
topi
•
*
•
No
Iwttaai,
No
ber-ssg with vital muacloa
to tho homo.
aa iadleatioa ef greater lava any­ while governor was have her
Bumps, N* lumpal
atraiosd all sight long!
Your good appearance Is
way. Soma people are more prone picture takaa at tha executive
ilfo-liM
caasirurtiaal,
,
.
N*
shlWny
desk with ker fact aa the desk.
impertant la balding year
to
sentimental
of moMross poddingI
thsa getting him to V*o
»*»ao. others — that’s i
I
You
stoop eoiroeliy . • . the way you
AVOID THI "tlUMBIBMake a regular routine af ;
sloop tomfortoMyl
I I A l ” M A T T IIIII It
beauty (without oierd e i t It)
"Ilvo-Actlea" Coils foe pestur* adius*claims "firmnam" but is
man should object to Urn time
me a*I
nally only "hxrdeoad up"
W t b m d t fM
'
. . . aggravala* and dW• ItlooNflt BrniMea . . • Help* rallavu
lorts your body so yon
"Morning Batk-Adsa" du* to slaaping
can't ralail
on n tou-aafl moBrosst
• Matching Feslurepudli Call-Oa-Cell
cm oo u U A ir porrutiFoundnNan, far iomptoto Pesturo-Pae■rT ' ' - " * L / r S
PEDICI Exclusive Btaly
•*** M t Mem
Comfort-Gard automatCleskes tepeitry Tho* **r New oaX l e Hds
IcaUy adjusts your body
Moo* Olfcsc AolswWt! UvaXfy Petieg* A*
M N to
owk
to comfortably-oorract
•leaping p o s tu r a l. , ,
(BINE t i l l sitrw length
Vm t Dm Ibt
Prov te Site ping on a Sealy
In U. S.
Fasturanadla at no
P A IN T S |
Ie Lika Sleeping an o
ontso aoal.)
to
Cloud!

Looking For An Iron Bed Head?
Mrs. Harold Hall May Have It

5 Local Gordtncrs
Attending Course

Real Blows Thrown
In Fighting Scant
With Little Audie

C. P. 0 . Wives Club
Home Demo Group To Help Navy Men
Find Living Units
Invites Delegates
To Give Reports

Calendar

(P&amp;Ji&amp;onjnlA

Tsk!

Young Folks Study
Plans In Marriaga,
Toko Rtsponsi bility

Miss Dial Boyle
Gets Duke Award

Sloop Tight

V0U CANT S LEE P IN C0RRECU ' «'N "

S eed y P O S T U R E P E D IC
with exclusive C0MF0RT 0 A R D .

r*

Lady Governor

CHOOSE &amp; USE

BUYING
A CA R?

FO R D

FMSF

J

s r &amp; v s j&amp; r n
SANFORD
P A I N T CO.

«sr w.Open Fpr

TOTAL VALUE *260?* ( M A H
LIMITED TIME ONLY* I T T

i •IA1IKIHII
to t « f 4

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11« Maxnollx Ay*.

Phone 442

FU R N ITU R E CENTER
l i t WEST lit ST.

PHONE 1421

�t

I

Br ED rORBIGAN
Th* AccocictH I’ rr-.*

t

The New York Yankees
'rched atop the American'
:ajfue aj;uin today in the
sec-saw battle for first place.
They got there by whipping
their No. 1 rivals, the Chi­
cago White Sox, twice.
That’s never been any pro­
blem for the Yanks, who
could always fight the pre-

C

tenders to their thront on oven
terms.
In tht view of Manager Casey
Stengel, it's the league have-nots
that make the difference. After
SHOWN IN THE LATEST PICTURE OF THE SANFORDrietlo, manager; thin! r o t, Dwight C®olt, Roger Cook, Miller, Cleveland yrabbed the pennant
year, he complained that the
BASEBAI.1 TEAM are, left to right, front row, Manfred!, Butler and Petemoo. Th* hay boy wan unidentified. (Staff last
Indians had managed to fatten
Ilartek. Terrell, Kutola, Thornell and Kaplan; necond row.Photo)
themselves on the second division
h
■
v
M Pray,
ffl_&gt; ,, Schmitt.
CaUmltt Franria
Vowwoto and
man.*! *“*Red"
If m#1** Mau
Aimif*
Snyder',
Lankford,
clubs.
That maker Boston's 11-7 victory
" T i i e ^ a n f o r i i*1i e r a l i T
over Cleveland yesterday ilgnifiPnire 6
Mon. June 20, 19SS f t f t
I I ______
rant. The Red Sox couldn’t lick
ths Indians in Boston at ail last
year and, in fact, beat them only
twice in 22 games.
It’s different this year. The
fifth-place Red Sox have won 7
of 12 from Cleveland, and have
Ukrn three #f a four-game set.
Ted Williams blasted a pair of
home runs yesterday as the Sox
SAN FRANCISCO (/Pj— Tournament golf hia seen the
teed off on Indian rookie ace Herb
|last of Ben Hogan, he says, but it’ll see a lot morn of a
Score for eight hits in the four
hitherto unknown Iowan who used the old master's atyle—
plus Innings he lasted. Mel Tar'even hia clubs—to win the National Open Golf championship
nell and Tom Ilurd bandied the
By GAYLE TALBOT
yesterday.
,
Sox pitching.
NEW YORK UV- The most in­
Jack Fleck, 32, operator nf two municipal golf courses at
The Yanks beat the White Sox
triguing aspect of Wednesday Davenport, Iowa, played the four- —
7-1 and 6-2, using the home run
night’s title fight Is the possibility, time links king off hit feet in the sura on the llth, with a suddento good advantage, Elston How­
seemingly not loo remote, tbit first 18-hole playoff of the Open death finish facing him if he fellard and Bill Skowmn homered in
Archie lloorc has put over a fast in five years. He took the Iced on td to hold h!s lead. He was on
the opener and Gil McDougald
one on Bobo Olson snd hi* ad­ th* fifth hole end Held it grimly, easily in 3 end was down in 4, but
and Mickey Mantle in the night­
visers, hiving to do with the posting e 11-undtr-ptr 69 as lto- not so with Hogan. Th* veteran
cap.
amount of weight Archie has h*d ran skidded la a 72 over th* bee- competitor drove Into the rough,
There was no other action in the
to shuck off lo come in at the vily roughed end lightning-feet then moved his ball only four feat
American league.
1 7.Vpound limit.
greens of th* Olympic Country with two swings, end finally made
In the National League, the
the fairway with his fourth. He
For the 'past week t whi»p*T Club'a lake couri*.
Las been rustling through locsl Flerk's triumph was e dandy— was on in 8 end one-putted for a
Ha pleas Lakeland battera were
fight circle* that Moore, who is and a heartbreaker. It was the double bogey windup.
'known lo btK-a.eych-one,•didn't first tournament of any kind he'd The Fleck swing-flet with a unable to connect with Joe Vslactually Utah* S ' l n r f w m i i ever won putright and It appar- long follow— through— and the mas’ pitches. Ha allowed only five
pounds for hia .twiilgW-vlftart fatly marked the decline of the hunched-shoulders- a n d b o w e d hits and hia infield alow handled
head putting atence had .specte- seven popup*.
over Nino Valdaa last May I In Reran via in goir.
Las Vegas. All Artbls ■aafually V'*Tm through with eerioiit com- *®r* oommenllng^ on how much Some good pitching was aaess by
weighed, the rumor goes(.pas paiiuva
tiiiilivi ton
(o lf ,** Hoian
ft
\ooUdJ.u*
Ilka ••
H ofin a m -v**.. ■U fans at Daytona Beach as tlie
noftin laid iii ■
w is.it.
IMHs
* *f ;
Islanders' aee, Bob Areadt, coast­
ed to hia llth victory 13-0 over
The promoter of the Las Vegan
venture Just happened to have
West Palm Beach. He gave up
three hits, struck out niao aad
been on* Jack (Doe) Keanu, who
walked two.
aa Jark Dempsey's manager one*
pillaged the little city of Ihelby,
Bdl Patrlas led a 17-Mow Dey
Mont., and who has been trying
toaa barrage with a triple aad sin­
to Improve upon that performance
gle good for three runs batted in.
ever since. And one of those who
Right Daytona aafetiaa earn* In
has been most active la tpread- discouraged at hia failure te reeeh
tha eight run third inning that
Ing the late of Moore's weight du- the eovete.l honor of being the
routed starter Claud* Raymond.
piicity Just happens to be close first man in history to win five
Tha victory enabled Daytona to
to Kearns. For (hat reason the Open titles. The feeling wag that
pull even with West Palm in third
fight crowd is more than a little ha might—probahly would—make
place.
inclined to credit the yarn.
another hid for the crown by th#
In other action, second place
Th* angle it, natch, that Olson, lime next year roll* around.
Cocoa whipped Sanford 34 before
Fleck'* victory mad# him top
who UUJ is only a heavy middle­
441 fen* and Gsinesvilla defeated
weight, was tuckered Into the man in the nation's golf picture
M. Petersburg 44 before IBS.
match in the belief that he would and netted him M.000 in cash
Cocoa’s Jack Heriiby scattered
prise
money
ptus
thousende
more
be fighting a veteran who had
seven Sanford hit*. His mates took
been forced to punish himself from ether source*. U# le the
St «T
advantage ef two singles aad an
cruelly in melting off eloea to S3 longest shot to win th# Open tlth at, relersbure
tM T U tM T 'l B S S V iri
error to sew up the game ha the
pounds In a month's training. In since Bern Parke pulled the trick Oslsetvlll* S. at- Petersburg
fourth Inning.
Daytona Beach II, West 1
•Iher words, if you beliav* th* 20 year* ego.
Bserti |
OrlsitSe S, t c k s l i s l •
whispers, ltoho was lured into Hogan won |8,800.
c
m
n a M its fi a
Shortstop Willie Miranda of the
Tlie actual triumph wee almost
thinking Archie would rome in too
TODAY’S ICHKDtll.1
Orioles made 11 error* in his
wesk to swing a cat with any au­ too easy, an anticlimax to th* sen- D a rla s* Reach at Orlando
easier* at Wees Poles #••**
first M gatnta. No other shortstop
thority.
rational eurg# of birdie* flaek neons
si at Petersburg
had more than six at tha time.
rod* into e 887 tie with Hogan LsksUse at Uaieeevlil*
l*fa Saturday t* fore# th# playRookie pitcher Larry Jackaon
RBSCUBBB SAFETY RBC1PB
N O R F O L K . V*. OP)—The of the Cardinal* played football
°*yitck took command on tho
fifth holt whin Hogan decided to Coeat Guard effort thee* safety in th* little Rose Bowl game al
play hi* second ehot safe after tips far flshermeni Before you Paeaden*. Calif, In 1881.
By T1IP. ASSOCIATED PBESS slicing hia driv# Into tho rough and depart tell eomtom when you
Mrmplii* took aver tho ever • wound up with a bogey I- The one- will fish end what time you will
chancing Southern Aim. lead yes­ stroke load was all Fleek
return. Make* aura yeu beat con­
terday with a sharp 44 victory
Hogan blrdlod th* abort eighth
over Chattanooga, but the Chleke —end Fllrk did th# earn*. Tw* fer eeeh person ee beard, an ad­
were trailing by II nmi when the more birdie* on tueeeaelv# hole* equate f i n esUagulaher, *an aad
curfew prevented their return to put Fleck three etreked ahead af­
the No. g spot.
ter 10 hole*.
• Chattanooga awoke from a bat­
He bogey*4 the llth, but Hegma
ting slump, erupted far 13 rima la gave the stroke rUht hath by
the third inning aad led tha tribe fluffing a 12&gt;lnch puU #* tha 1Mb.
lS-1 after lix tiujpgi la th* aee ted
The gtlra-faced Hagan. •■‘ •WBR
game of a •doublobuder wbea the
eurfew struck. The seven • inslag
nightcap will be completed Tues­
day night 7b* Lookouts and
Chick! already had a twia kH an
Up for toaight.

Did Moore
Put Over
Fast One?

Cardinals
Defeated
By Cocoa

Memphis Seizes
Lead In Leaque

A rcade

Only two active ptayera la the
major league* have bit m en than
4M doubles. TVay a n Mickey
Vernon e f the San*te n and Stan
Mnelal ef tha CeadUali,

Package

D O N 'T
SACRIFICE

QaeMy a id Safety
FOB PUCK

Brooklyn Dodgers stretched their
lead to II games by beating the
St. Louis Cardinals 7-4 while the
second-place Chicago Cubs were
splitting a double-header with the
Philadelphia Phillies. The Phillies
won the first 1-0 behind Ron Nejrray and Jack Meyer, and the
Culis took tbe nightcap B-7, a cur­

THE ASSOCIATED PBESS
Bobo 01*on bids for a spot
among the ring's super cnampioni
Wednesday night when he chal­
lenges Archie Moore for the world
light heavyweight title at New
York's Pqjo Grounds.
,
The balding middleweight king
from San Francisco i» a 9-5 under­
dog, however, against Archie the
Gypsy who will be making hit
fourth defense.
Weight is the big problem for
Moore, who had to boil down to
175 pounds. His weight at Las
Vegas. May 2, when he whipped
Nino Valdes, was announced at
196W pounds although tome claim
he really weighed Id pounds less.
Olson, normally a 1M-pounder
who has to work hard to make
the 160-pound middleweight limit,
will come in at about 170 pounds.
The bout will be carried by ABC
radio and TV.
A victory far Archie will put
him In line (ct a hept. 22 date
with heavy weight champion Rocky
Marciano.
Gene rolrier, already mentioned

tailed Ali-inning affair became of
aarknesl.
Milwaukee whipped New York
8-7, and Pittsburgh and Cincinnati
split a pair, the Pirates taking the
&gt;&lt;rst o-2 ami the Redlcgs the sec­
ond 4-0 with Joe Kuxhall wielding
the whitewash brush.
The Rrooke peppered an aasort-

as a “ Rookie of tha Year" can­
didate, boxes Oscar Pita of Ar­
gentina tonight at St. Nicholas
Arena. The Niagara Falla, N. Y.,
welter will be gunning for hit
fourth straight knockout. His rec­
ord ii 12-1-2 for 15 pro itarta.
Pita hat 24 knockouta in his
perfect 41-0 record. Ha has fought
only once in the United States,
winning a decision over Fred
Montforte at Brockton, Mas*.,
April 23.

tnent of five S t Louis pitched^
for 15 hits—ineluding a home rue
by Sandy Amoroa— In their vie*
tory. Carl Furillo was the only re*
gulsr except pltchsrs Carl Ertkine
and Karl Spooner, who didn't gel
a hit Spooner, who relieved Ere*
kine in the fifth, was ths winner,
Ths Phils won ths first game
in the 15th when Mare Blaylock
single-' and Willie Jones doubled
him Lome. Cub reliefer Ed Jeffcost’s slx-g«me winning streak waflf
oroken, while Meyer, who gaes rtf
only 'four kita in ths last elgM
Innings, snapped a six-gams losing
skein.
•
Michigan State athletic team*
acquired the nickname “ Spartans’*
in 1B25.
Sanford Ledge
No. 62 F A A M
Tuesday June t l
Fcliowcraft Dearee
7:30 P. M.
A. F. Ramsay
W. M.

MIMEOGRAPH PRINTING -

TYPING

CREDIT INVESTIGATIONS MADE
ANYWHERE IN UNITED STATES OR
FOREIGN COUNTRIES

C R E D IT BU REA U O F SANFORD
TELEPHONES IN aad 1671

�1
&lt;SJ

I_REAL agfTATK g »

If It’s Worth Anything
It’s Worth Advertising In

CLASSIFIED ADS

WELa KA APARTMENTS: room*,
private baths. I ll W. KratSL

I.

Rollaway and Baby Bed*

Day. Week or month—Tel. 1113.
Furniture Ccttcr I l f Wtit Firit
Avaloa
425.

Apia.

Ktflclcncy. Phone

FURNISHED Apartment. MO Park
AV*.
Furnished Kitchenette apts. Air
Conditioned. Slumberland Court.
South City limit* Highway 17-92.
9 2 Bedroom, n i c e l y furnished
Apartment. Phono 2164.________
3 Bedroom Home. &gt;4
*rom
Southildc school. Call 2541.____
SEE Seminole Realty for Desir­
able Home* and Apt*. 1 hone 27.
FURNISHED Apt.- Phone 432-W.
COOL— 5 Room Furnished Apart­
ment Front and back screened
| porehei. Cara Re. Take one
J child. No Pels. 606 Palmetto
*! Ave. Shown by appointment.
Phone 9 7 6 - J . _________ _
Apartment. 3 rooms Completely
furnished. 1400 Park Avenue.

Furnished garage apartment. 1912
Sanford Avenue. Phone 800.
Furnished apartment, private en
IIMULCa Utilities
iMIlltl* 8 furnished,
IUI tlinin »f» near
tranre.
Naval Base. Phono 247-W.
3 roam apartment- ground floor.
completely furnished. Hot &amp;
Cold water included. Phone
2392, 313 Palmetto.
2 bedroom house, nlrrlv furnished.
Porch, carporte and large lawn.
Longwood, J. n. Grant, Call
263632.
Garage apartment, three rooms
and bath, unfurnished, Apply
217 Holly Avenue, Phone 382-31.
Ur-decorated
l tor couple,
Scott after
Street.
!■ -

ground floor duplex
furnished. Bee Air*.
ft
five, 217 West 12th

BEACB RE NTAIR

-

1R

Hutchison OCEAN FRONT Apart
menu, 236 South Atlantic. DayUui» Beach. Fla Phono Itei-J

fcfiB U
IF IT IS REAL ESTATE
ask Craalcy A MeateUh
•t U? Boota^Vart

-»

By STANLEY

THE OLD HOME TOWN

METAL ROOFING
Now In Stock. 5-V Crimp —t*4“
General Contracting
Corrugated— 2 'i " Corrugated.
• Commercial—Custom &amp; Liw
Get all Your roofing needs at
Cost Homes
18WI Mellonville Ave. rhonc 1931 Shcrmnn Concrete Pipe Co.
Out West Uth S t
Phono 2489

Ozler • Weller nomes, Inc.

DAILY CROSSWORD
ACItOS*

Raymond E. I.undqutst. Aisoelale Buy. Sell. Rent, Hire with want
ads, the buviftt talesman in
Phone 1673 Atlantic Bank Bide.
town. Tut one to work (or you.
FOR SALE — 3 Bedroom Home.
Phone 1R2L Wo will bo glad to
Block from South Sido school.
charge tL
Call 2311.
RAYMOND It. DAIJ, BROKER For only $3 no the shove i-Hne *&lt;t
is on the job for you or 5 lull
S. D. Highlryman, Associate
lot South Park Ave.
Phona 960 days. Only $2.25 keeps it working
for you tor 3 days. 1 day Is only
Whether boytng or selling. tt will 90c.
*
pay you to see:
J. W. HALL, REALTOR
The Super Trading Post.
Florida State Bank Building
Just arrived full load of extra
‘ Call Hall’*
Phone 1758
line furniture
Solid Walnut
Dining Suite, Twin Walnut Bed­
BUY ME!
, ,
room suite, double walnut bed­
I have 2 Bedrooms, am nirrly
room suite, 8 ft. G.E. Refrigera­
furnished, and located in a very
tor, Max-tag Washing Machine,
hapnv neighborhood. It only rc$30 no. Metal Clothes Cabinet.
utrcs $175000 down, balanre
$12.00. Davenport makes Into
75 00 per month, and the total
bed. $1000. upholstered Occas­
price is only $3850.00.
ional Chairs. $15 00, Baby Bed,
•ery clean llooo, Dinette Set
THREE BEDROOM, well constru­
Porcelain lop, $15 00. All ehromc
cted home at HOI Sanford Ave­
haby stroller $10,50. Yes we
nue, largo rooms, kitrhen equip­
trade. Phone 2212-R., 1 mile S.
ped, large yard, citrus, separ­
on 17-92.
ate garage, $t0,000.no, with
t e r m s available. Exclusive! Black-eyed neas, bring your con­
Brokers co-operation invited.
tainer in1! pirk them. $1.00 bu­
Wo have the keys.
shel. R U. Hulrhison, Cameron
City. Phone 13Gt-J,

771

Frao CMy A ____
W, H. “ BUI" STi

ssiar £ v&amp;’m&amp;N,Pisxi*
park Ave.

o
rhonc 2122

LOWELL E. ODER
Custom1
Ftork
Bulkier low coat home*

C A. WHIDDON, SB.

Reg. Real Rotate Broker
119 &amp; Park
Pk. m
W o o d ru ff A

Bsgifrljr Appliance Center

Phone 1158.

fo r Sale — A.K.C. registered
Boxer pupplei, brlndfe ,vid
faun rotor, six week* old. Call
2.725-J.3,

Sherman Concrete Pipe Cn.
“

RED-I-MIX CONKRETE
MIRACLE CONCRETE CO.
Are.

Phone 1328

sad repairs.
Payauato
O m e n t a Cm.
2489

P. M. CAMPBELL
“ Homes t t DisUaetion"
B-Way 11-99
Fheae 1447

FIT. FOR A QUEEN^Lols l .k . HLU. AJ^Btoek8??; „
uoit 9.
a, Block
shock u
LotI ae,
24. awoca
Block ie:T U
12.. fo im Rubber Mattresses, InnerTKLKVBPON SERVICE
S p r i n g If attresies. Couchrs.
rkhart'l Sub “ Write 443 Brieon all makes and models.
Baby Beds. Renovating, UpbolB Ave^ MtaaU 22- Fla.
SANFORD ELECTRIC CO.
sterlng and Site Cover wort.
ft s a s 441
40 a c m approximately 23 acres NIX BEDDING MFG. CO- 114 Mi garili Avm.
good citrus anar Oeoeva. We 1911 l u t e d Ave.
Phan*
M
4
-J.
have a sail and capability nap

a a w s a s t ja s u :

Price $3000.00. $1730 cash, bal­
ance $ yr*.

PLUMBING
NEW
Coatract aa rn x lr work. Free
aaUmataa. _l . _ L Harvey. 2M
AND
An
SECOND HAND
Dcaha end Chain

PowelTa Office Supply
u* Mamedli Ave. PhcneM
A I R C O N D IT IO N IN G

&amp; a j u r o r i B COU*INCL
M M h M A n ,
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14— t » -

Fur liettcr Plumunig
See or Cali

KOATS ""m o to r s

KOKSON

Spurring

I vinnnfe Sales A Service
r.nt I . Kt St.
I'hoiM' 99$

W. J. KING

2800 Souih Park Pbonn 53

•4-f

--

Pete

Echols,

Gen.

For

A

" N e w - Weekend
Stop In and pick up (ho
mntcrinl* you need for
that h o m e improvement
you’ve been thinking of—■
new hooktdieir, s l i d i n g
door closet, built-in desk,
corner cupboard. Do it
now And you'll bo all set
to add that new touch to
your home thin weekend.

HILL LUMBER
b SUPPLY YARD
213 W- 3rd 8L

Ph. 83

K vh-Ucsh llcauty Shop
Pbunr 563

SAN FOIIDS M O ST MODERN
BEAUTY SALON. Specializing
in :d. phases of Beauty Culture
tie ludmg (ijrolatiir Redui-ing
airl Treatments by REGISTER­
ED Ma itiese

ii a him u r r s
BEAUTY NOOK

(Air londiltonedl
ln.t So. Oak Ave. Phonr 971.
24— lAIIMIRY BERWICK

1 1. Grows

old
12 P&lt;ii-'im

of l- md

Telrphnn* 131 aflrr 6 P. M.
far appointment la aea this
e.

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f !f»‘l K10ht FHMon

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SHERMAN CONCRETE
PIPE CO.

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SMAIJ. BUNINKBit
U you have a small business to a
secluded part of town and are
interested In getting customers,
list the scrvle* you offer to the
Classified column of the Sanford
Herald. Cali U8E

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YOU
CAR
SELL
Anything
With A
Classified
Ad
JUST CALL

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M*ro onllghlanlng than trhooL

Thin hnme hm Oak Hoorn,
Ceramic Tile Hath, Dining
Aren, Largo Living Itoom
and Kitchen Equipped with
G. E. Appliances-

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32. Kellrvra
34. Shore

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22 Mill! irv

A lilllo spare like this will get
your message before our mure
than J0.000 readers. Tell 'em todayl Phone 1821.__________ -

Erne

os t .11.4

• v u .t

Call us about our tmslnrsi rates.

PIANO TUNING and Repairing.
Fartory Method. II. wester.
Phone 1725 It.

3 Heilroum Home in Wynnewnud. 2 Years Old.

P.ii cd •

13 bend foilll,

i MctC )
25 G ii l a
name
27. D.itiuitl
i .\ nt &gt;
7 ' Unlit
liter 1
r. i Exhibition
31. c.ilm
33. Fortify
31 &lt;lifer
3 ’e \ iprr
flu (..in.it l
5 Egypt i iu
t-.-l.le i

Itlir4i|fi
29,T»11lKt
I i’
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t lovely
7. Build by
ag:;ritila-

12. Men's
me knumo

21 R u b b e r
lir e

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check

1 1 Flint nun

17. Cllr

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lio n
9 l n u ii il.il urn

itt The
■Tin re
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M.-n"
2 i M i iiu turn

A 3 lino ad. Mirh as the one above
It only 36c per day on our law 5
nay earned rate economy plan, 45c
per day for 2 days and 54c for
I day.

w—
riAtvo sKKVicr
—rr
L. J. Sill—Plano Toehnirlan
Phono 2161. Route 1. Sanford

19 Of
the

3 Avoid

tt Irka
1 1 Put - II
15 Male
off*
spring
lit Atmliube
liquor

GET extra cash for articles you
no longrr use. Place your ad to­
day. Phone 1821.

The
in i; h e r
of
tu n
b u n ’-i i
le o llu q )

turn

sleig h t

Dry
5 ful! days for only $2.40, 3 days
One hour H • Wash u d Dry fee only ll.BQ and one day fur 77r
Fold
Finished (.sundry
Sanitone Dry Cleaning
Foulhnide
lau n d rom a t
South Side Food mart Bldg,
to* Kavt 25lb Kt.

BARGAIN!

H'hm i

in. immense

KAMFI.K 1IJNE AD

Ht'Gl*
lau I

. ( Ill l e e l
3 C r n n :io f
s w in e
lE u t *
i c .- n ju n t -

I Aam t

Want Ail
ami n$k for
department
Herald

of

I A temple

tt ttivrr

One Hour • Want and Damp The above 4-llne ad can bo run

OgtSKIFlKD I1ISPI.AY

*•5

15 People

DllVI V

5 1 Tall

The Want Ad Department Is
Itandall Electric Co.
open from 8:30 a. m. until 5:30 p
Bendtz and Crus'.ey Appliances m. each business dav except Sat­
Youngslovt. Kilrhcaurday afternoon. Deadline for
Eli-etrtr..l rn-'trarting and rrpslrv urck-day insertions is 2:no p. m
112 Magnolia Ave. Phone 113 the day prerrdiug publication
Anv ads roming in later than
a . - OFFICE FOUIPMF.Vt —23 2:00 p. ill. will be published uudtr
Too l.ale To Classify.
HAYNES Olltee Machine Co.,
Advirtisers are requested in mv
Tyt&gt;ewriteri, adding maehteex,
Safes-RcnUls, 314 Magnolia, Ph. tlfy the Want-Ad Department Im­
mediately of any errors to their
44
BedSj lo a m Ituhher Mnttrpssps,
ads, *s The Sanford Herald will lie
Cl IIIr lie* — Made To Order.
!l— BEAUTY PARU4RS —24 responsible fur only one incurred
insertion.
SANFORD MATTRESS x*
For

t.’ Rivrt
(Ki i

doll ii r

W A N T AD
RATES

Call

0v.

i id

\l II41M4

2 2 -1:1.1 4*1 It 11'A I. SEH VICES—22
MalLress A Box Springs
To Plarr A
Benovntril
SEE
Your General Etectrtc dealer Jitet Call 1821
"Free E-uimnte"
for TV and AnDlianrcs.
tho Want Ad
E C H O IC REDDIN G CO.
Sanford Electric Co.
Sanford
Cortirr 2i:d A .Magnolia I’h. 1232
lit Maennila Ave.
I'hnae 442
"B od" Bamhereer, Mgr.
Open .Monday til 9 p. m.
amitiances
sales
and service. G. It. Uigh, Oviedo,
LAWNMOWERS r x n a r p e n e d
l l j . Phone 4151 or Sanford
Uiryelo A General Repair
ti-l.' W alter 6 u m.

e r r PROFESSIONAL CARE!

*

1 .Mevlenn

It’s tio Knay

I'or Lovelier Hair

//,

DAI LY C R O S S W O R D I?

Id ■ FtlKNITIIKK- t 'tmM jjjr is M

Dragline srrvice, I.akefronts A Buy your Furniture at Berry’s
ditching Estimates given, rhonc
Wnrihottse Fttrn., Cn , at !K)t W.
Geneva 2464, Ur (undo 52504.
St. All nidinnally adv. fur­
Kunturd 2231.
niture at warehouse prices.

UPHOLSTERY CO.
Pimne 1121

VP
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Kilted
Perth
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Flowers

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Phone »

Grease Traps
Septic Tanka
“ COLORED FOLKS! Wo are li­ _ Window SHU Lin tell.
quidating the following lots at Sand, Bock, Cement, Steel Mortar
1.2. aad I. Block U; Lota I A 4

Simpson Farm Supply

110 West 2nd Strcel

•1 VARIETIES PANELING 1607
Qn4 West uth St

Masculine

Slanley’M Hike Simp
Highest CASH, TRADE-IN prices
paid for used furniture Call 958.
31U E. 4th St. Tel. 2434
Wilson-Maler Furniture Co. 311
E. 1st SL
FLOOR SANDING A Finishing,
Oak floors furnished, laid A (n
7_— Pelo-LlTf tach-Hppplifa —7
Ixhcd. In business store 1920.
K. F. Stevens: Route 2, Box 227;
A PERFECT DOG DINNER
Call 7115 It - 4 bciuro 7 a. in. or
PURINA DOG CHOW with la*tr
after 6 p, hi.
texture. A nulritinus. crunchy
rombinalinn of kihhied meal HoMvwtNii) Beds, Custom t'ldmlyour dog will like. Parked with
slerine. MATTRESSES RENO­
energy-building ingredirnls.
VATED. Over Sizo Itoltywomt

Senkarik Gtaan and Paint Ca.
Native and Foreign Woods.
So* Them At

35 M-.isif.it
instrument
in Thus

l Mui *
Kmd of
t herie

smarting

Mgr.,
Hi Years
Experience,
■EJJ» WANTED
-1 6
“ Your Weatinghousa Dealer"
l-'aclory located 50| Celery Ave.
Maytag Washers
Collector-Salesman
(Across
from Ne-lti
Bottling
111 Magnolia Ave.
Phono 1717 For established colored debit.
C o.)
Married,
Home
owner
preferred.
One S. C. Case Irirlnr A drag
No experience necessary. $nq LAWN and Shrubbery SPRAYED.
type harrow. $300.00, Phono
Phone 2408 M. W. It. Pringle.
Y.erkly. *&lt;i«rantee, Conlacl Mr.
‘2166,
Metchlk, Valdez Hotel. Tues.
USED TRACTORS
ENVELOPES,
letterhead-', state­
evening or Wed. evening, bcBn*l Tractor Cn
ments. invoices, hand bills, and
tueen 8 A 10:30Jn m.
Btway 17-vl ftoeth
Panne $91
p r n z r s m i, etc. Progressive
teA HELP WANTED (Femalot HA
Printing Co., Phone 408 — 403
CONCRETE
West l.7lh SI.
Experienced
W
altrenei
wanted.
T-9
Ready Mixed Concrete. Concrete
^ l ^ A ^ t e b y ' . Restaurant. 14-B—
in s u k a n t k '
—14 k
Bloek. Sand. Gravel, Cement
Concrete Pipe to Meet AU Quali­
fications,
IIWORK WANTED
-tl
MOUGHTON INSURANCE
f l m 2iff
PHONE 8H
Sherman Concrete Pip* Co. IHUII SCHOOL BOY with Power
Oal Weal 11 Ik S t
ATLANTIC
PANK Bl O G '
7I6-1M W*DU “ owta** 1&gt;faon«
lnnertpring Mattress, Box Spring
SPECIAL I W W n t
—14
and Beautiful Headboard $40.50 I f 2 Pc. Sectional Sofa PLUS Cor­
riembiag.
K
reoy
lleatteg
ner Table
.................. $149.95
Rates tn
M. G. HODGES
Day or Nlghler Sofa, Platform
Policyholder*
Serrice on All Wal/r Pumps—
Rocker. TV Chair (choice of
John Williams Ian. Agrarj
Wells Drilled — Pumps
covering.) ........... ........... $99.54
417 Hamjaed AUaatte Bank
Paris Road Ffcoaa 796
ECHOLS BEDDING CO.
14
Comer 2nd A Magnolia Ph. 12a
“ Bu4” Bamhereer. Mgr.
Open Monday (1 9 p. m.
17- AUTOMOBILKS TKAM.FILS
Used furniture, appliances, tools,
etc. BoughUsold. Larry's Mart RANDALL ELECTRIC CO. It wIK nay YOU to see US before
T V SERVICE CENTER
321 East 1st St. Phone 1631.
you buy. Open Evenings and
• Factory Supervised Servlet
bundays,
— Factory to Tea —
• Uocaa call* I a. a . till l p. n .
Easuide Trailer Sales,
Aluminum
(AU makes u d models)
Palalka, FI*.
,
V«
111 Mag. Avo.
Phono 2400
CARS
En rioted bead. Saysnroal
_
BOUGHT SOLD TRADED
rail with piaetle ends. Plastic „ USED PLUMBING FIXTURES.
Roy
keel's
Used Cara
rayon topes. Cotton or nyka
Sanford Ave. * 11th SL.
cords,

U9-114 West had St

Alter tho
order of
C \n (Jap )
Eating
utensil
Thrice

(N or.)
P ro p h e t

IS A sharp,

Seminole Realty

W. DIETRIOIS
T. W. MERO SU PE R D liP E ll S P E C IA L S
For Friday. A- Saturday
tlfll Park Avenue
rhoee 27
Ladies rayon A collon slips... .59
1 iso
S rooms and bath Irame house Dresses. Values to 895
with 2 acres cleared, on paved Children's sandcls all sires C9c pr
road. Call 11. S. "Lew" Arnold, Girl's playsuiis sizes 6-tO , .09
Winter Park 272671: Nltes: San Men’s Shirts, full c u t ...............95
ford 1288-R.
Any thing you buy in our store is
a real bargain.
The Bargain Center.
TERRIFIC VALUE
307 Sanford Ave
An older home in fine condition
with the Interior remodeled in Power mower A It. C. Allen Cash
rscellent taste. Combining old
register. Phone 1279-W,
fashioned comfort with modern
appearance.
Two bedrooms, 20 ft. commercial 2-dnor deep
spacious living room and din­
freeze. glonno Pig * Whistle.
ing room, hardwood floors. On
large corner lot shsdrd by oaks. Footlockots ........... Special $7 95.
PLUS: 3 room A- hath garage Paint ......................... $2 SO gat.
apt. will offer nice Income to
A1! sizes tarpaulin*.
owner. Complete price only
ARMY-NAVY SURPLUS
$7500 with good terms. Tropiral 310 Sanford Ave.
Phono 1321
Realty, 107 Magnolia Ave. Ph.
16.
Piano, small upright
$150 00.
2423 Laurel- Plume fiOfi-W.
For vour Real Estate needs:
THE
Cullen and Hnrkcv, Henllnrs
CURIOSITY SHOP
106 N. Park Ave. Phone 2313.
17-92 at Hiawatha. Used A new
furniture, antiques, hrie-a-hrae.
Slckncs* causes sell or lease of
Come in and brouse around.
combination grocery, meat mar­
ket A gas station. Good terms. t—
ARTICLTH WANTED —«
Shown by appointment. Phone

Capita!

1. Thn*e who
entritain
r punches
1 1 . River (Kr 5
12. Foot lever
13. Gather
grain after
reapern
1 1 Rdii scarf
( Eerl i

17. Bountf
0 cal
makes

3

Large, clean, furnished apt. be­
low, small one $33. 611 Park
Avenue.
1703'4 Magnolia 2 b e d rji o^m
screened porch. Furnished. $53.
screen
Phone 1673.
a Two bedroom furnished apt. 2(01
W Magnolia $35 monthly. Phone
1673.____________
RAY E. PECK. Realtor
2 Bedroom houae, furniture, with
DeBary, Ft*.
window fan for cooling. Call
•U8-J.
New Masonry home, well land­
scaped. Lot 60* a 150\ Phone
Nice sleeping room. 312 Osk.
2526 n. 2534 Oak Ave.
Phone IOM-m .
ARTICLES FOR SALK
Furnished cottage for couple, or
with baby. Available 22nd. 814
V E N E T IA N BLIN DS
Elm Avenue.
(Nationally Adv. Rolia-llead)
.Furnlibed 2 bedroom apartment,
Manufactured In Sanford
I 1st floor, 600 Park Avenue. A l­ Sem inole Venetian Blind Ca .
ia rello, Phone 1474.
UO West 3rd St
Phone tU
2 Bedroom furnished house. $80.00 Sewing Machines, and Repairing
per month. Phono 098 or 743-W BERTS (94 8. Park flume 17«L
after 6:00 p. m.

•

AKTIClJgt f O I M l - I

Robert A. Williams. Realtor

—i

fob b e n t

SALE—a &gt; -

17:1 * ft * din F o r m D tif f t l
Hilt lir u u k ly n l»«»dffio
I SO l U r N o d o H o u v h
ft SO N*wt
4.il l l v « clu b
I F Y O U K A D W E R E IN T T H *
S P A C E I T WOU L D A T T 1 U C T
E V E k Y O K E ’S A T T E N T IO N A 1

IHU'UAB AXTEACTED YOUI

�f

Stamps?

But International Body Has Bee/f Useful

U. N. World Very Much Like Old World
crly cooperation.
The world of the U.N. is now
10 years old. It resembles very
much the old world of hatreds,
distrusts, wars and fears. Yet,
while the U.N. has not worked per­
fectly, it has been useful.
This week its members' foreign
ministers meet in San rtancisco
to celebrate the anniversary.
The U.N. is a meeting round for
nations—a place where to some
extent they can influence each
other for good through the pres­
sure of world opinion publicly ex­
pressed.
The U.N. has failed to produce,
ns was intended, an international
WASHINGTON OP—An Air Force armed force to prevent war. There
spokesman says a false germ war­ have been more wars, some of
fare confession was obtained by which the U.N. helpeo sente, but
Chinese Communist*, from one of
four returned American ict pilots,
but no disciplinary action against
the officer is planned.
He named the flier as Capt
Harold Fischer Jr., of Swca City.
Iowa, a douhle jet ace of the Ko­
COLOMBO, Ceylon
— The
rean War who was released Slay moon totally eclipsed the sun over
31 after mire than two years in South As‘a today.
Chinese prison camps
Heavy untca.'onal rain clouds
The spokesman said Fischer blocked the view of the eclipse
and three othor flies released with from observation posts set up by
him also ••confessed" to crossing most foreign and Ceylonese sci­
the Yalu River tnto Chinese ter­ entists.
ritory under Air Force orders. But
But only a light cloud was over
he sain no such orders had been the central Ceylon- spot guarded
given.
by an American torn from Har­
The spokesman said the actions vard University. A spokesman said
of all four men are under study, the phenomenon was fully visible
but be indicated they probably (or the (our minutes that the
‘‘ will be given a clean bill of eclipse was total, beginning about
fl:10 a m
health.”
The Air Force has declined to
"We are quite happy," one of
discipline any of its men for ac­
tions while they were Chinese
prisoners. on toe around they were
acting under pressure of Communirt mistreatment.
The Marine Corps likewise de­
clined to bring court-martial pro­
ceedings a g a i n s t Col. Frank
Schu able, a flier who made a false
germ warfare confession. T h e
Army, on the other hand, has con­
victed four former prisoners of
PARIS Ws—Hilf of France's up­
war on charges of collaborating
with the enemy, and has filed per house was renewed yesterday
c'arres agamst a n u m b e r of in the nation's biggest electoral
test before the 1B33 national as­
others.
The o f f l e e r s released with sembly e l e c t i o n s . The results
Fischer are IA. Col. Edwin Heller, showed little chang’ In the politi­
Wynnewood, Pa.; Lt. LvV! Cam­ cal climate, with'Ih* major French
eron, Lincoln. Neb.; and Lt. Ro- parties swapping only six seats so
lirifC.Parks. Omaha, Neb. The far.
The vole for members of the
tour w gr»'Hied Way.2t on Com­
munist charge^ of "Intruding Into Council of the Republic (Senate)
China for harassment and provoca­ went almost unnoticed. It was an
tive attack." Heller told a news indirect election with the public
conference in Honolulu June 2 that having no part.
The campaign h a s been ex­
all four pleaded guilty and were
ordered "deported" to the United tremely quiet—confined mostly to
luncheons and small get-togethers
States.
The Air Force spokesman an­ among professional politicians.
The Senate is the advisory up­
nounced the "confessions" in com­
menting on a copyrighted story
published today In the Minneap­
olis Tribune.
Fiseher, now In San Francisco
for an appearance at a United Na­
tions anniversary ceremony, was
not reached Immediately for com­
ment.

WASHINGTON OP — There * 11
almost an exhilaration in thoac
June days in 1943 at San Francisco
when the United Nations was bom.
There was a sense of a new world
born: a world of peace and broth-

Reds Got False
Germ Confession
From U. S. Pi

no major war.
Some optimists believe a big
war may be prevented as long
as the nations can meet, if only
to revile each other. But if a big
war begins, there would be no
more U.N.
The U.N has spread some feel­
ings of cooperation and brother­
hood through ‘ he health, educa­
tion and agricultural programs of
its various agencies.
It seems certain the world would
be different if the United States,
unable to depend on the U. N.’s
inuncxistent international army,
had not gone outside the U.N. to
protect itself.
That was done through the al­
liances this country made with its
non Communist friends in Europe

and Asia. Russia also went out­
side the U.N. to make its Com­
munist alliances.
In 1913 the Allies. In blood and
mutual sacrifice, had won the
Hitlerian war which ended tn
May. It did not seem far-fetched
at the time to think they might,
with less effort, stick together to
keep peace.
The wishful may have thought
so. The realistic kept their fingers
crossed. No one at San Francisco
was more realistic than the rep­
resentatives of the United States
and Russia.
They put the veto into the U.N.
Charter, useful both as a fire es­
cape and as a roadblock they
could employ against each other
when they wished.

Without the veto, a two-thirds
vote of the U.N. members could
have obligated them to act in a
crucial situation contrary to their
desires or their interests. Neither
would take a chance on that. Rus­
sia, in fact, has used the veto 60
times to block what it didn't like,
until now it has rendered the Se­
curity Council all but helpless
whenever Russia wants to make it
helpless.
And the United Slates not know­
ing what the future held, wasn't
giving the U.N. a blark check ei­
ther. Both nations reserved the
right to say no and block action
on a major issue before the Se­
curity Council.

Total Eclipse Falls Over Asia
•he Americans said. "Our experi­
ments were very successful."
German technicians attached to
a combined British-Ceylonest team
wept copiously when a single black
cloud obscured their view. The
team was trying to check theories
of the late Albert Einstein and
had brought with them a telescope
designed for Fotsdam University,
where Einstein once taught.
The Harvard team took pictures
of the sun's infrared spectrum
and another of the corona—the
ring of incandescent hydrogen gas
from the sun outlining the moon's
shadow—in an effort to determine

its precise shade.
In the Philippines, an American
scientist was flown in a U.S. Air
Force jet trainer to record the
event on special cameras.
The eclipse began at sunris in
the Indian Ocean, along the east­
ern coast of Africa and southern
Arabia. As the earth rotated, It
streaked at 24 miles a minutevisible entirely or in part—across
India, China, the Indochinese and
M a l a y a n peninsulas, Indonesia,
northern Australia and the Philip­
pines.
The 180-mile-widc path of total
darkness s t r e a k e d 7,200 miles

Only Few Seats Exchanged
In French Electoral Test

Paint a room
In
half a day

per house of the French Parlia
ment. It's members arc elected
for six-year terms, with half the
group named each three years. It
can delay legislation, but cannot
finally veto actions of the domi­
nant assembly.
The electing was done by depu­
ties of the lower house, members
of the municipal councils, mem­
bers of regional councils and some
supplementary electors represent­
ing larger towns.
Up (or renewal yesterday were
133 seats—123 from metropolitan
France, 3 from Algeria and 23
from overseas areas. The Nations!
Assembly will name six additional
senators next month to represent

Frenchmen living in Morocco, Tu­
nisia and other foreign territories.
TOY TELEPHONE FATAL
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (/P) — A
6-mnnth-nld boy, just learning to
crawl, jammed a toy telephone
into his throat and died before it
could be withdrawn.
Mrs. Karl G. Frcdebei! said ahe
left her son Joseph alone yester­
day for only a few momenta.
When she returned she found the
toy in his throat
Efforta to pull the toy out
brought on severe bleeding, so the
tot was rushed to a hospital. He
was dead on arrival.

across Ceylon, south Sia m,central
Indochina and the Philippines.
The longest totality lasted 7 min­
utes 7.9 seconds, at one point in
the South China Sea. New York’s
Hayden Planetarium said many
scientists think it was the longest
since 717 A. D.
The American continents didn’ t
see it. The last total eclipse was
June 30, 1934. It's path crossed the
upper United States and eastern
Canada. The next visible in the
United States will come Oct. 2.
1939, and will be seen only in some
of New England.

Weekend Mishaps
Kill 4 In State
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Violent accidents killed four per­
sons in Florid* over the weekend.
Three of them were the result of
highway traffic.
Th toll, however, was fa&gt; below
the 20 persons who died in many
types of violence the wceknd be­
fore. Twelve were victims of traf­
fic then.
Highway patrolmen at Tallahas­
see sa&gt;d they were unable to ac­
count for ths sudden slowdown in
traffic deaths but reported that
the entire state apparently was
"quite."
A 20-ycar-old sailor crashed a
motorcycle tnto a telephone pole
near Jacksonville yesterday. He
was Marshall Ray Webb, of Kan­
sas City, Kan., from the aircraft
carrier USS Lake Champlain.

PRE-INVENTORY SALE

EN T IR E STOCK O F :
LADIES DRESSES
LADIES HATS
MEN'S SUITS
MEN'S SPORT COATS

LADIES SUITS
LADIES SKIRTS
MEN'S SU C K S
MEN'S HATS

CED TO CLEAR
SELECTED ITEMS:
LUGGAGE

PIECE GOODS

LIN GERIE

U D IE S BLOUSES

CHILDREN'S DRESSES

BOY'S S U C K S

MEN'S SWIM TRUNKS

MEN'S T-SHIRTS

MEN'S W ALKING SHORTS

FOAM RUBBER SEAT PADS

CONTINUES THRU W EDNESDAY M 0 R N IIK

SHOP NO W A N D SAVE

P urs 8

Mon. Juna 20, 1955 TH E SANFORD TTERALD

(Continued 1-Ton Page One)
I’ll ge tit,” he chuckle*.
,
Probably hi* favorite coin, and
no doubt the most valuable, is a
memorative half dollar minted in
Hawaiian lflOth anniversary com1928. It w*» given to him in 193.3
by th* late John If. Mackey,
former Florida state labor inspec­
tor, with the following note:
"Friend Gail. Please accept
with my friendship this coin, the
smallest number ever issued of a
commemorative U. S. coin, only
W 000. The entire lot sold out in
1 hour at 12 each. In 2 weeks
later after Issue they sold at $5
ard in 1930 sold up to $17. Value
today $10 tut this coin will lie
one of rarest and one of the
most valuable. Yours. Mackey"
And Mr. Mackey'.* visions seem
to have come true in grand style.
According to the latest informa­
tion which “ Friday" has the coin
i* now worth $97.50.

DAYTONA BEACH!

low

rtt rmoM
pousii occ

MODIFIED AMERICAN PLAN
$ 3.50 per parson oddltionol
Delkiovt Breokfatl and Dinner
F.niny Dayton* Beach's Urges* •"*! •«•** bofcl
with 11* specious room*. eicsUent cuiain*. _
golf course, two private pools, cabanas, pefcsale
|M ch. putting frsrn, intiraat* curktiU
lounge, dancing. pUnned entertainment a d
ftohrrraMn'B p t n d i i P . For rrerrvslioes ■ ^
brochure ami* or wire direct Me
•

“ Friday" was horn In State
Center, Iowa, in 1878 and hi* par­
ent* named him Gail Borden
Ross, after hi* father’s employer,
the founder of the Borden Co. "My
father worked for Mr. Borden
for 15 years when he was ju»t
starting out,” he says. Friday
gained his nicknantrr in Jackson­
ville many years ago because he
■vas "always everybody's mnn
Friday."
"If I had it tn do all over again,
I’d never get started in this fool­
ish stamp business," he says. “ I’ve
accumulated so much Junk I can't
even try to keep track of it any­
more."

L/autona %
¥

aW

fTre$toite
Appliance!

FREE!
FIZZ CAPS

.

M i|li Ilf* preserver!

A for carbonated baser*
f axes! N o com . . . N o
' obligation!

ftidiWial

mu

�\

W eather

Shop and Save
In Sanford
•J

firM - eiend-v todir »«d
&lt;tov; •p(H»rM morning shower*
southeast r«s*t; se*tter»d after■Ann thundershower* m n s 11 J
south and en t portion*.

•

Ah in d epen d en t daily new spaper
SA N FD R D, FLO R ID A ,

E stablished 190R

VOLUME XLVI

9

TUESDAY, JUNE 21. IMS

A ^ w ia tfd

Italian Police Seek Group In $305,000 New York Robbery
»

-—

■

. . .

W° Pollea aald the leader of the r r o up- l a belietrd to he
fiiuaeppe He Taro, alao knonn aa .John Michael di Tarco, a
S7.year.old New Yorker.
.
The* ya«e the name* of lhn»e with him a* John Tw oHty O'Connell. 35. Ilaniel William MacGnire. 2*. frier Jerome

Kirrlam. SI, of Manchnter, Eniland, and Jeanette Foreel. 17.
of Montreal, Canada.
* Police apeculated that If they are tryina to act away
through Italy, they probably hop* to alip through to
Africa nr the Middle Fast in a »matl whip.
No rnadhlnek* nr olhei rat ranrdinat a nteaatire* hare
been ordered. They are not nrre««»ry in Italr. No one— nnl
e«en an llalion—can get oubllr lodging ■ithout filling nut a
pnlire lorm. Kach of thr*e I* checked within Itnura. Foreignera
mu*t ahnw pa«»pnrte. rVanted peraona uaually are turned up
within 21 to 48 hour*.
V North Italian police nffirrr reported the lipnff ram*
when Hi Taero *rnt a cable l» New 1 iirl June 17 asking a

" • n under auraeilance there In h*In him rra rh an Italian contart.
I.a»t night N aple* pnlire were told In he on Ihe lookout.
'I .d a y the order wa« broadened
lint police rro p h r.iie d there were no charge* a g a in .I
Ihr group ami that Ihe* h*d nit a r r r .l oirler
I h r i .tn tp l,
■ «nt to locale them and keep them undrt * u i« e illa n rr a*
ln»g aa they »tar in It a lr .
T he hunt centered lodar In N aple*. It ha* hern a re n ­
ter for deported \m erican hoodlum* with Ita lia n ro n tart*.
T he tjnecn* robhery » * • «killfnllar -i a--.it h&gt; four men
o* April 8 T h e ir haul o r * ntoall* In
in and 2u dollar bill*
which Ihe hank tied on n*od to meet a par roll that rlar

Democrats Edge
Toward Attack
On Eisenhower

Harry Bridges
Due To Again
Testify Today
fA N FRANCISCO UP)— Harry Bridges reaumea the
witness stand today at trial of the government's citizenship
cancellation auit against him.
Already in th# federal court record, through surpriso
government strategy, U the labor loader's latest sworn

Strolling
In Sanford
The taaford KiwanUas a n
apoosorlag. Friday atternooo from
1:30 to T:M la the Sanford Armary, a Fish Fry and a dance plua
a atage ahow starring Art Davii
and hia Rhythm Rider*. Wednes­
day sight from 1:30 In 7 p. m.
David Satchel will appear on
television with Art Davii to make
an announcement of the coming
i event. M. R. Strickland, preal•dent, aald that “ you could eat a*
much fiah aa you eould hold h r
the admission charged.”
• • • •
Miss Donna Loo Harper, dau­
ghter of Mr. sad Mrs D. L Har­
per, la a recent graduate of FSU
and for her summer vacation is
enjoying a European tour. Donna
Lou set sail from Montreal,
Thursday with a group at atudenU
who art aponaored by Dr. Wil­
i. liam T. Martin Jr., a Presbyter­
ian minister of Tallahassee. Be­
fore returning on August g they
• ill v i e i t England. Holland.
Germany. Austria, Italy, France
and gwiUcrland.

Chamber Manager
Attends Meeting
Forrest Brecktnridge,
eenting tha Seminole County
Chamber eg Commerce, la at
tha University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill etwwdtag the ltth
annual Southeastern Institute far
Chamber of Commerce Executive*
and Ruff.
The annual meeting got under­
way Sunday, June It, and will
■atarday, *

testimony that he never has been
a (ember of the Communist party
This trial la a civil* action to
cancel Bridges' citizenship on the
ground that ha obtained it by fraud
on Sept. IT, IMS. after falsely
swearing he never had belonged
to the Communist party.
Bridges and hia trio of lawyers
•(changed startled looks yester­
day when Lynn J. GiUard. chief
assistant U.S. attorney, suddenly
summoned him to the stand as
an adverse government witness on
the opening day of trial.
Defense attorney Richard Gladatein protested the move wai “ un­
fair surprise" but Federal Judge
Louis E. Goodman overruled the
objection.

Two Men Rescue
Child On Roof
la a passing ear to­
day narrowly averted a tragedy
•he* they reamed a rhlld who
wai ea the perch roof of a Park
Arcane heme.
The child, who wee net Identi­
fied. had wandered ont on the
reef rlimbed ont a errand finer
wtodow onto the reef nklk the
maid was downstairs.
One of the men stood nader
the reef as that he might catch
the chid U she should fell while
the Mkrr man went Into Ihe
henae aad took the child off Ihe
The men vara Talley Hettaway aad L H. Andrews, both
of Fern Parh.
Male Traoper Mark Mark
eaid the men were to be mm■••dad far thetr fact Ihleking.
VIOLENCE FLARES
NICOSIA. CYPriJ&amp;yv- Violence
leia d on this Bntith-ruled ModiUrranean island again last night.
Terrorists l e a k i n g union wrth
Greece launched a series of bomb

~-j —

block a proposed 13,000 man reduclion in the Marine Corps. This
amendment was adopted 40-39. II
was President Eisenhower's fir^J
reversal on a major military rec­
ommendation since he entered the
While House.
The bill would provide funds In
arm and support a military force
scheduled lo be trimmed from
2,901,300 men a* of June 30 to
2,881.000 a year later.
It rarrie* 338 million dollars
more than Ihe IlniMr voted In slrp
up p r o d u c t i o n of long-range
bombers.
Left intact were House-appro­
ved provisions to reduce Ihe Arina
by 17.000 men to a new level of
1.027,000, to rut the Navy h.v 8 000
mrn to 884.000 and lo increase
Ihe Air Force from 970,000 in 975,000 men.

R. Lee Wheeler
Taken By Death
OVIEDO — R. Lee Wheeler, e
resident here for approximately
80 year*, died early this morning
in an Orlando hospital after be­
ing In III health for about five
year*. He was * member of the
First Baptist Church here.
Survivor* include th* widow,
Mr*. Mattie Wheeler, two daugh­
ter*, Mr*. P. M. Campbell, Mre.
R. L. Kemp, of Jacksonville; and
one granddaughter, Mias June
Kemp, Jacksonville.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced at a later date.

Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas, Ute
Democratic leader, could encour
age other assault* on the Eisen­
hower program.
It might signal a shift in strat­
WASHINGTON *JT— Secretary of
egy, supplanting what has become
Wrlfare Hubby said last night she
the general Democratic theme that
hears no responsibility for the gov­
the President i* a man of stature
ernment's actions in Ihe Salk polio
but can’ t lead a divided Republi­ vgrcinc situation She said the law
can party.
plm-rs that burden on Surgeon
Sen. Symington (D-Mo&gt; wrote (Jtm-ral Leonard A Srhe*-le.
the amendment to give the Ma­ 1 In a radio interview, Mi* Hobby
rines 4(1 million dollars more than omphasised that she wav not titstlie President asked and thus .null
__. .sgti»fied with Srheele's actions.
Ify the cut
she made repeated distinctions
by Eisenhowver within tlie conum; k*,Wfw|
responsibilities of her
year. The Senate action it sun department and those of the Public
subject to a conference with the Htalth Service, a Welfare DepartHouse.
i Went agency headed by Scheele.
Symington, who dropped t'**ns Asked If she had »ny apologies
aimed at canceling Army ruthack* fa th* way the vareme program
a* well, said tn an interview:
hi* been handled, or would with
"I don't think the senator* who hindsight have acted differently,
voted to reduce the Marine Corp*. 4 * said:
which 1* composed of volunteers,
‘■There it nothing I could have
are going lo be able tn explain done difforcnlly. The law (on ronthat when they »re questioned by t*r&gt;l of biological* *uch as Ihe Salk
the parent* of men who are draft­ vaccine) charged tlie Public Health
ed for other services.”
Sendee and not the secretary."
Symington aimed directly at Ei­ At another point, she said she
senhower. He suggested the Presi­ wihiM be legally powerless to over­
dent wasn't infallible when, as a rule Scheele If she thought he had
consultant, he approved a low mili­ made a mistake.
tary budget before the Korean
She said she did not think it
War.
would be known “ whether or if
Sen Margaret Chase Smith (R- the health service had been negli­
Malne) took Symington tn task for gent until a final report is mailc
what she railed an attcini* tn r* vaccine produced by Cutter
“ discredit the President's military Laboratories, Berkeley, Calif.
fulgment." Sen. Goldwater (RArti ) said no one could have fore­
seen the attack In Korea.

Jaycees Get Serious

Hot Politicking
M arks Convention
ATLANTA (JR - With elections
coming up Thursday, delegates to
the Uth annual convention of the
U.S. Junior Chamber of Commerce
prepared today to settle down to
serious politicking.
About 0,000 delegates and Iheir
wives swarmed into Atlanta from
throughout the nation and immedi­
ately started lining up behind fa­
vorite candidates.
Scheduled (or today, to addition
to state raucuset, are the semi­
finals m th* “ Speak Up Jaycee”
contest.
William Roger*, deputy U.S. at­
torney general, planned to deliver
the ronventmn’a keynote addrest
this afternoon He it scheduled to
follow the presentation of national
awards by Ira Kaye, Jaycee vie*
president.

Mrs. Hobby Says
Vaccine Burden
Rests On Scheele

office* will be presented tonight.
Throughout yesterday colorful
caravans moved into the city.
Floridians distributed thousands
of orange* on famed Peachtree
Street and in the lobbies of hotels.
They even brought along an alli­
gator and a black snake.
Most Western delegates wore le­
gation hats, spurs and blank-loaded
ait-guns which they discharged at
random.
Virginian* wore plumed hats end
capes, and Georgia'* women raised
ant* bellum-style white lace um­
brellas.
Jaycee* runmng for president arc
Van Richardson of Greenwood,
Mias.; Edwin H. May Jr. of Hartlord. Conn ; Howard E. Norris at
Madison, Wis., and Hugh McKenna
fc* optional Jafooo o d liM ta b N o k

I’ -

1nttarm* *1 t|iia i' I -

till So\ rut l-'aarpinn M in iste r V . M,

M.d olov told I'li* Western tltpl limit.* at the end of * four*
hour meeting that at fir«t sight !■•
i *aw no rr.iM in to o tiir r t In j »rri«M
I " f pi oivual* they h.ul agirrd on In
V.- . Nrrk 14 •* d
II' '• n u n (lcr« tr*v | to tiJA# t o ' I
lh**m

BILL* SIGNED
TALLAHASSEE up Bills auth­
orising studies of the feasibility
of locating ■ m w slat* university
or branches of a state university In
branrhes of a state university In
Tampa or in the Palm Brarh area
were signed into law yesterday
by Gov Collins who repeated his
conviction th*r* ti no need now
for establishing a naw four year
sUto aoUag* ajyw ksn Is Florid*.

---------

■ - —*

niMltd «IU dy Ihe promov c c a ro fiillv an glv c ht* I
ropfv in ^ l| &lt; Ol two T lie \\ r -tern
f«v r J i m ot 1,
a p p a rcn ilv tt e r r !
liy rr^ t 4»n of hiv ar reptance th gf |
^ urthrr r n f c t m ; &gt; a s r - s t * ;c d
D i p l a f n 1s at the m eeting k J'ff
V r r v t J i r v of State Jo h t. ) fA’-tri

Heroux Is Sane
Judge Informed
By Psychiatrists
LAKE HI T L E R

f-D -

Pat ten found ihr 25-ymr-oId
convict sane here yesterday

after llvli-ning to a report by two
Jacksonville psychiatrist* who had
been named to examine him.
Dr*. William Ingram Jr. and
William II Mci'iitlagli said Herons
vv*« mentally competent lo stand
trial.
Th* court deferred ruling on a
motion by iMi-n.vt- counsel John E.

Santma Jr. of Jacksonville for a
change of Hie trial silc. The at­
torney *ii!d il would he difficult
to obtain jury men who had no
formed an opinion in Ihi* county
whore tlie stale prison is located
Heroux. arraigned on * mutdoi
indlrtmenl after Ihr court's ruling
listened impassively while Ihe
charge wav read Ho laid noth mg
and his attorney entered a plr.v
of innocent for Ihe heavily guarded
prisoner.
Two guards wore wounded in the
rxcapr atlrmpl Dial look place m
* corridor outside Hie office of
Supt. L. F. Chapman. Heroux'
former wife Bulb and her husband
Raymond Stuff* of Miami, have
pleaded guilty lo smuggling Ihr
gun In him.
Heroux, serving a 2Jye*r form
al Ihe lime for a Miami armed
robbery, la also under 2.A years
sentence for robbery of twsi Kan­
sas hank* in ITM.

h*

Dulles, Rnti'h Fore
Seoreturv
llarold MarmiUan and French
v'o-cirn Wtoi-ic- Vn'oui* Pina)
hid p-njvv e l that.
t Th* purpi' * of 'he summit
t!f*itng ihmild he to *i&lt;« world
tension and not tn nciniivlr the
cttlcmrnt nf specific prohtcinj.
7 The meetings should last from
four in x x day*
J PresrVnt F.uenhoi cr should
he the first presiding oft rer, lo
he followed hv Kronen Premier
Tdgar F.mre nrii;*h Tunic Min
I'lcr Sit Anthony Eden and Snvicl
Premier Nikolai Rulgamn
4 Tlie meetings should he hold
m lit# Palais dcs Nations, U.N
lieadnuartcrs m Crncva, and that
Ihe It N. should l&lt;e reque.»le&lt;| tn
service th* session .
I No council n&lt; foreign minis­
ter* should be hold before Ihe
chief* of government meet.
Hi* four furc-cn ministers will
have il.nnor together tonight witli
Pmay as hnsl, tint no serum* ill*russinns weir planned.
flic -e slevelopmrnt* came as
Hie f N * 10,ii anniversary meet­
ing pot down tn its long program
hi speeches on the wm.il oulhMik
Macmillan was scheduled to de­
liver • policy declaration for Hut*iti—the first major foreign policy
pronouncement since last inonlh's
llrilish eleclions.
President Eisenhower's o|»eiilng
address wav praised hv oilier dele
gales as excellent and inspua
tIona I
Tlie I’ revldeiil. s | h -. king y*-»lerilav allernonn. pledged that he
would uphold the principles o( the
II N i luiter at tin- lirnrva con
ference lie declared tin* i* a "■••a
son of high hope" for world peace
''Ihe l illicit Slate will lease
n" *,0"e unliiriK'il In work for
peace," he aid “ Wo shall retool
no method, however novel. Ih.il
holds out any hope however fault.'

Robert M. Angas,
Engineer, Dies
Robert Al. Angus. H, well known
engineer who handled Ihe Sanford
•ewer program and was connect­
ed with many other ronstrurtinn
tcojecta Ihroiighoul Florida, died
today in Jacksonville.

P O I N D 8 I .A I N to • wooded p * r«
in H v a llt s ille , Alii., « r n A |irh * rl
A It van (lo p *. I I , d m ig h lrr of *
polirrm an. and Nanev At. Shorn*
r il e (h o ilo rn ), 18, d .su ch irr nf *
lio lh lri. I’o liir lir lir v * Ih e p a ir
n r r r *hol In d r» lh w hrn llu-y
look * short rut through lh *
wood* on Ih eir w *y to *ehool,
( In lr rn a lin n a l)

Suwannee

Negro Is
Flogged
TA.MI’ A ( T i — A Fm snunc*
County N cpn» Avan flogg cil
mill hi1n Ion liv s liamt o f moil
nft«T luring him from h it
small farm , t he Tam ps T r i­
bune report*.
The nounpupor *nld R irh iii il Conk*, .'15. fat her o f nimx
rh ililm i, hull l.opl ijuipt nhoiih,
Ih** heating until a T ribune
reporter qiiejiioncd him.
Cooks said he had kept quicA
tu-raii-e he had torn ordered hv
itv Itogger* nnl to talk lie sa'd
one of the leaders of the mob told
him “ Next time m avh- son'll 1«4
your kids po son the tobacco.”
Suwannee County Is in the l/s.
baeco^wetion of Florida -nui growi-r.v u-e Hie term “ poison" for tho
sprinkling of insecticides on lh*
plants.
Sheriff Hugh Lewis **&gt;i he heard
of Ihe whipping the day after it
happened, June I ; was still in­
vestigating bill could maka UHI*
headway because "w e rouldn't get
anything out of Cook*."
Cook* »aul the men who cam s
to his larni hoiioe right miles north
«»f I..VC Dak were white men. They
got him from hit home on the him
of talking about * Job on a lobace*
larm.

Cancer Unit Set
To Give Service
To Out-Patients

Th* Feminol* County Unit nf the
Vyurrir* Cancer Roelety, thrmigh
rrrenlly urganited .Service
•T'nmittne, i, now- preparing to
cancer
* roun» Dingidrnt. "We
noiiiir* the
nfganitalion nf * .Service Commitl«r with Mrs. David Bach and
Airs. Donald Bale* a* co-chairman,"
•aid Mr*. Dingfrlder. “ It* purpose
i« to supply raneer out-palienl*
irf Seminole Counly wdlh xtorile
•leela, hospilal gown*, hn-pilal
Ud». and wheel rhairs. II will also
establish a I&lt;oan and Gift Closet
in Uia naar future.

lt i|j&lt; ’.i iim l i 1 •&gt; \\i'«t*&gt;rn Pro vo ra

VVPI i- iv|tiu t .I to 1&lt; •\ r* iruii lt ul v irin n l n-,-i content c n rlv to d a y
•it a i ranvi'nii'iit &lt; fn- t lie 'o p 1*»\*-l t a l l . . m t i«»nr*\ a n ex t iiiotii h.

Gcorjri' A
llrro u x .lr. i*
ich n liilcd to go on trial M on­
day for llio filial sh ootin g o f
J G. Godwin, assistant sta ir
prison sui-rriiitciiilrnt, nt HaiWASHINGTON (A*)— Democrat* took a »lcp yrstcnlny fo n l April 4.
toward open attack on President Kinenhower with the I0-.19
Circuit .linlgo G rorgo L.

W A S H I N G T O N (/D—
Senntor* R.vril (P-Vn) nnti
Syminjrton (l)-Mn) -dtirl to­
day n ?:il.882,000,000 defense
money bill will help keep
America abend of Husain in
long-range a e r i a l striking Scnntc vote aimed al canceling hit cut in M a r i n e Corps
VICE PRESIDENT Richard M. Nison (nrrow) is tnnlihrri power.
strength.
by booster* at a Detroit hotel after he had addressed Ihe
The Senate pa**c&lt;l the bill
It was Ihe first ■ncc**fafu major challenge in Congrats
biennial convention of the Young Republican Federation. The 80-0 yesterday nnd nent it
of
Eisenhower
a* a military' nun
young politicians era carrying ‘'Draft Ike and Dick for ’ 56” back to the House, where a some­
signs. Nison said that the “ great Issue" of the 1956 Presi­ what diflrrcnt version was appro­ and demonstrated to some Demo­
crats that on this score the Presi­
dential election race would be: “ Shall we continue ihe Risen- ved some time ago.
1hower economic policies, or shall we go back to the Truman
One of ihe major difference* was dent is not in&lt; uinerablt.
Tim m ult, engineered b f Sett.
a jtenal* amendment designed to
economic pofeka?’' (International)_____________. &lt;■ -

No. 214.

W ir*

It* M \ \ II W illK l.S iIV

SA N ' I 'l l W l ' I S t (•

Trial Set For Convict
In Killing Of Official
Budget Promises
Air Superiority,
Senators Assert’

I.rased

Geneva Parley
Plans Approved
By
W
est,

'

5 Holdup Suspects Hunted
ROME i/Ti— An order * »» flashed lo polire throughout
Italy today to k*cp a clo*c watch for four men and • PJ*1''J
flri, auapccted of complicity In New York’* darlnc IJO.i.OOO
robbery of the Chase Manhattan Hank branch tost April.
There vas no arred order Hut the word went out to find
the •ii«pert« and trail them until further order*.
Interpol, the little— puhlirired International Police Hrfanitatloti which acta at a U. N. acainat crime. gave the

P rem

Mack dies Need
For Safe Driving

A FORTUNATE FELINE Is Tiger, n cut uhime little mi*.
tre»*«. Debnrnh Mnslro, 6, of Nutlev, N. I.. feels that n nwiling dish is appreciated in the hot days of June. So -lie shares
A
alraighl from-the-»houM»p
her ire cream rone with her pel, who fines the treat is talk on safe diiving nnd i»n nlbunt
right up hm alley. (International)
of pirlurr* •bowing *ume of lh*

Longest Day O f Year

Spring Bows O ut
AAhsf L in rare
•'ca t. » h * l

• (toy in June? Or. mi(h( • • MV I**

i* *o rare »* Im i* ) ?

Sprint take* il* fin il hnw lo d iy and cite* tin lh* » U f r t*
•ommrr. I hi* i* *l*n Ihe Inner*! day nf Ihe year.
K .ip rrt* »*y w* could h a t* IS hour* nf ligh t ro u n lin g Iw lbght and *un*»l.
Scatterw t a h o n r r i were reported to m any p a r ti nf lh a
country. W arm w eather continued n crc most of the Ka*( and
Sn o lh . but (oolcc a ir • • • m o u n r eoulhw ard oeve lh * p in n a
«*d upper Mlaalaatppt V a llr y .

Rainfall was reported from aach widaly *«par*t«d point*
Eldorado. Ark.; t.ircoln. Neb.: Dv* Mote**. Io w a ; Elmira,
Ohio: and Houston Tex. In most rasa* th* rainfall amounted
to to** U m s m ss tot a4 M M*k
■a

12 wreck* in Sentinel* Countyr so
f«r ihi* year was prcsenle.1 la
Ihe Bolary Club •( il* w ee k ly
meeting at H,r Y«, hi Club yes­
terday noon by Trooper T. Mark
'lack of tha Florida Highway
Patrol.
Areofdmg to Ate. Mack, ther*
wer# ten fatal accident* In tht*
section last year and to date,
three people have lost their livea
in Saminolc County with 19 being
seriously injured.
With orar six yeara serelr* tn
th* Highway Patrol, of which n
year has been tn this are*. Troop•r Mack left no doubt in th*
mind* of his hrarrr* aa to th*
seriousness with sshtrh he regard*
hi* Job. H* road from * bat of
over 100 posalbk* traffic viola­
tions, many of srhieh were quite
s*w to bt* liatea*!*.

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